Iran's Missiles Hit Arad and Dimona, and Israel Declared Its First Mass Casualty Event
Two Israeli interceptors failed, a 450-kg Iranian warhead hit a residential building in Arad, and Israel declared its first mass casualty event of the war.
The news. The narrative. The timeline.
Two Israeli interceptors failed, a 450-kg Iranian warhead hit a residential building in Arad, and Israel declared its first mass casualty event of the war.
The Pentagon put a ground invasion of Iran on the president's desk — 82nd Airborne, 2,500 Marines, Kharg Island seizure — and the president says he's 'not putting troops anywhere.'
Iran struck the world's largest LNG facility and knocked out 17 percent of Qatar's export capacity — the war has now broken a country that wanted no part of it.
UNICEF counts 335 children killed and 1,529 injured across four countries in 22 days — and Amnesty says a single American bomb on a school in Minab killed more than 100 of them.
Iran proved it can hit Diego Garcia at 4,000 kilometers — a range that covers Rome, Berlin, and Paris — and the UK Parliament has not held a single dedicated debate on the implications.
Iran's foreign minister publicly thanked Russia and China for 'military cooperation' — while both countries continue to deny any direct arms transfers and vote for restraint at the United Nations.
The IAEA confirmed a second strike on Iran's Natanz enrichment facility with no detected radiation increase, but the phrase 'for now' is doing a lot of load-bearing work.
Commercial shipping through the Strait of Hormuz has collapsed to a trickle, and Iran's parliament is now drafting legislation to charge transit fees on the wreckage.
Iran's Revolutionary Guard told 2,500 US Marines by name to expect 'unexpected retaliation' — then invoked the Roman legions who never came home.
At least 26 people are dead and curfews remain in force across northern Pakistan as Shia protests over the killing of Ayatollah Khamenei enter a third week with no sign of subsiding.
Iraq declared force majeure on all foreign-operated oilfields on March 20, formalizing what the Hormuz blockade already made inevitable — the world's second-largest OPEC producer cannot ship its oil.