Live updates: Iran warns the US against a ground invasion as regional powers meet in Pakistan

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Live updates: Iran warns the US against a ground invasion as regional powers meet in Pakistan
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Regional powers plan to meet Sunday in Pakistan to discuss how to end the fighting in the Middle East as about 2,500 U.S. Marines arrived in the region and Iranian-backed Houthi rebels entered the monthlong war.

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More states are looking at itElectric bikes can be fast and dangerous. Here's how to stay safeOne Tech Tip: Here's how AI can help you in your job huntThe future of fish is looking a lot like meatPope Leo XIV rejects claims that God justifies war in Palm Sunday Mass messageTras un mes de guerra con Irán, Trump no cumple algunos de sus objetivos y busca ponerle fin More states are looking at itElectric bikes can be fast and dangerous. Here's how to stay safeOne Tech Tip: Here's how AI can help you in your job huntThe future of fish is looking a lot like meatPope Leo XIV rejects claims that God justifies war in Palm Sunday Mass messageTras un mes de guerra con Irán, Trump no cumple algunos de sus objetivos y busca ponerle finThe country’s Revolutionary Guard warned that Iran would consider Israeli universities and branches of U.S. universities in the region “legitimate targets” unless offered safety assurances for Iranian universities, state media reported.announced Sunday that it will host talks between the U.S. and Iran, though there was no immediate word from Washington or Tehran, and it was unclear whether the talks would be direct or indirect.trained in amphibious landings arrived in the Middle East. He said Iranian forces were “waiting for the arrival of American troops on the ground to set them on fire and punish their regional partners forever,” according to state media. U.S. universities in the Middle East responded to Iran’s threat to attack them after Israeli airstrikes hit universities there.moved classes online, and the U.S. Embassy in Iraq said the American Universities in Baghdad, Sulaymaniyah, and Dohuk could be targeted.Brent crude was just over $70 a barrel when the war started on Feb. 28. Prices have spiked by over 50% since.Kuwait said early Monday an Iranian attack on a power and desalination plant in the small, oil-rich nation killed an Indian worker there.Authorities said power and water supplies remained constant despite the attack.U.S. President Donald Trump has raised the idea of American forces seizing Iran’s Kharg Island, its main oil terminal in the Persian Gulf.“Maybe we take Kharg Island, maybe we don’t. We have a lot of options,” Trump told the newspaper. “It would also mean we had to be there for a while.” Asked about Iranian defenses there, he said: “I don’t think they have any defense. We could take it very easily.” The U.S. already launched airstrikes once it said targeted military positions on the island. Iran has threatened to launch its own ground invasion of Gulf Arab countries and new attacks if U.S. troops land on its territory.U.S. President Donald Trump says that Iran’s parliament speaker authorized the passage of oil tankers through the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow mouth of the Persian Gulf. The comment by Trump in an interview published early Monday by The Financial Times is the latest signal by the Americans of Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf’s importance within Iran’s theocracy. “They gave us 10” Pakistani-flagged tankers, he said. “Now they’re giving 20 and the 20 have already started and they’re going right up the middle of the Strait.” “He’s the one who authorized the ships to me,” Trump told the newspaper about Qalibaf. “Remember I said they’re giving me a present? And everyone said: ‘What’s the present?’ ... When they heard about that they kept their mouth shut and the negotiations are going very well.” Qalibaf has maintained a combative personality through his X account in the war, mocking the Americans and issuing threats. But the former Revolutionary Guard commander has seen his profile rise as senior members of its theocracy have been killed.The president said that Iran had agreed to allow 20 ships carrying oil through the Strait of Hormuz starting Monday morning and continuing over the next few days “out of a sign of respect.” “I would only say that we’re doing extremely well in that negotiation but you never know with Iran because we negotiate with them and then we always have to blow them up,” Trump told reporters Sunday night board Air Force One as he flew to Washington. Trump was asked if Iran had responded to the 15-point ceasefire plan the U.S. has proposed and he said, they did and added: “They gave us most of the points. Why wouldn’t they?” But Trump didn’t offer details when asked about Iran, by his telling, appearing to make major concessions.A U.N. peacekeeper was killed and another critically injured when a projectile exploded in their position near a village in southern Lebanon, UNIFIL said in a statement early Monday. Israel and Lebanon’s Hezbollah militants fought a full-scale war in 2024 and are fighting again since Hezbollah joined Iran at firing into Israel in the current war.Israeli soldiers shot at two men who they assessed were posing a threat to them in separate incidents in the occupied West Bank overnight, killing one and “neutralizing” the other, Israel’s military said early Monday. According to the military’s statement, one man armed with a knife ran toward soldiers near Dura, in the southern West Bank, and was killed. Another accelerated toward them in his vehicle near a village just north of Jerusalem, and troops also fired at him.Israel’s police say it has approved a “limited prayer framework” to open worship at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem as the sacred season of Holy Week gets underway.Earlier this month, shrapnel from the interception of an Iranian missile fell on a rooftop just steps from the church, which Christians revere as the place where Jesus was crucified.a tiny group of Catholic faith leaders from entering the church in order to celebrate a private Mass on the Christian holiday of Palm Sunday., the Latin Patriarch whose entry they had barred, and more details on what activities would be permitted would be forthcoming.Israel’s military said it would suspend the operational deployment of a reserve battalion in the occupied West Bank that was involved in an incident with a CNN crew the previous Thursday. The journalists were targeted and detained for about two hours while working near Tayasir, in the northern West Bank, according to a complaint lodged by Foreign Press Association, which represents international journalists working in Israel and the Palestinian territories. A photojournalist was placed in a chokehold and slammed to the ground and rifles were pointed at the team, which was documenting the aftermath of a settler attack in the area. According to Israel’s military, the battalion would first “undergo a process aimed at reinforcing its professional and ethical foundations,” and then return to service.After trading resumed Sunday evening on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, the price of U.S. crude oil climbed 2.9% to $102.52 per barrel. It was $99.64 on Friday. A barrel of Brent crude, the international standard, was trading at $108.31 on Sunday. That’s up 2.8% from $105.32 on Friday.Iran responded to U.S. and Israeli strikes on Feb. 28 by effectively restricting tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, warning vessels that attempted passage could be targeted. Brent prices have since surged at times to around $120 per barrel. Iran’s tightening control over the narrow transit point for roughly a fifth of global oil shipments has rattled markets and prices since the start of the conflict, when Brent was about $70 per barrel.The Iranian-backed Houthi rebels claimed responsibility for launching their first attack in the current war - a missile fired at Israel that was also intercepted - early Saturday morning.Iranian media reported early Monday that one of the facilities of Tabriz Petrochemical was struck in the country’s north. They said no hazardous materials had been released. The company takes oil or natural gas and processes it into chemical products used to make everyday materials like plastics and chemicals.An Associated Press video shot shortly before midnight showed the huge plume of smoke rising from a fire following strikes in Iran’s capital.Iran’s joint military command spokesperson declared on Sunday that the private residences of U.S. and Israeli officials have now become legitimate targets for Iran, as the war in the Middle East enters its first month and continues to widen across the region. The threat was aimed at U.S. and Israeli military and political officials living in the Middle East, including Israel. Ebrahim Zolfaghari said that this decision has been made after the U.S. and Israel have targeted residential homes of Iranians in various cities across Iran.Israel’s military on Sunday night said Iran had launched another salvo of missiles at the country. Sirens went off in the Beersheba area, which has been targeted repeatedly in the last days.Late on Sunday, Israel’s military said that over the past 24 hours its fighter jets had dropped more than 120 munitions in Tehran, targeting sites used for weapons research, development and production. Around the same time, Iran’s state television said power was back in areas of Tehran that had experienced outages.The U.N. nuclear watchdog said Sunday that satellite imagery confirmed severe damage to the Khondab heavy water production plant near Arak The International Atomic Energy Agency added that the installation has no declared nuclear material. Iran’s Atomic Energy Organization reported on Friday that the facility was hit and Israel claimed responsibility for the strike.The foreign ministers of Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Egypt departed late Sunday night for their respective capitals after attending a meeting convened by Pakistan to review progress in bringing the United States and Iran to the negotiating table to end war in the region, the ministry of Foreign Affairs said.Pakistan earlier said that top diplomats from Egypt, Turkey and Saudi Arabia would visit Islamabad from March 29 to 30 for in-depth discussions on a range of issues, including efforts to de-escalate regional tensions.Israel’s Fire and Rescue Services responded to a massive blaze that began around 3:30 pm from an Iranian missile or shrapnel fragments. The company, ADAMA, said the damage accorded at its Makhteshim plant in the town of Ramot Hovav, on the outskirts of Beersheba, and there was no damage to production facilities. ADAMA said its workers evacuated according to instructions from the emergency services. Israel’s Fire and Rescue said the evacuation included the immediate plant as well as a nearby highway and the evacuation was lifted after about an hour. Dramatic footage after the strike showed pillars of smoke and billowing flames reaching high into the sky. There were no injuries, according to Israel’s rescue services.Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had said the Israeli military is expanding its security zone in the tiny Mediterranean country. Ground forces are clashing with the Hezbollah militant group in their ongoing invasion, intent to create what officials have called a “security zone”. Mohammad Doghman who fled the southern city of Nabatieh slammed Netanyahu, calling Israel “an expansionist state.” Over one million Lebanese have been displaced in the latest war between Israel and the Hezbollah militant group, sheltering in public schools or in tents pitched on the side of the road. Israel says its aim is to protect the country from Hezbollah rocket attacks. Displaced Lebanese fear that this invasion would be a pretext to a new occupation, but some are still hopeful they will return home. “They take it, and we take it back again, like every time,” said Mohammad Wansa, a displaced Lebanese from the village of Dibbeen living in a tent in central Beirut. “We will return to our homes; we will return to them.”In a message attributed to Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei, he expressed his appreciation to senior religious authorities in Iraq for their supportive stance toward Iran during the war, according to two semi-official Iranian news agencies. Since he was named third supreme leader of Iran, Khamenei has made no public appearance, but has conveyed only rare messages. Iran-backed militias in Iraq have claimed responsibility for several attacks on U.S. bases in the country in solidarity with Tehran.The U.S. Embassy in Baghdad, in a statement posted on X Sunday, warned that Iran and allied militias “may intend to target the American Universities in Baghdad, Sulaymaniyah, and Dohuk, along with other universities perceived to be associated with the United States,” after Iran threatened American universities across the Middle East. The statement added that Iran and affiliated militias have already carried out “widespread attacks on U.S. citizens, targets associated with the United States throughout Iraq” and the “Iraqi government has not prevented terrorist attacks against the United States and regional countries from Iraqi territory.”Many universities around the region have already moved to teaching online since the U.S. and Israeli attacks on Iran triggered the ongoing war in the Middle East.Iran’s energy ministry says power was cut in Tehran and Alborz provinces after attacks on electricity facilities. The state media reports late Sunday did not say who attacked.Israel’s Fire and Rescue Services warned that a missile or missile fragment that hit a factory near the southern Israeli city of Beersheba had set a massive blaze and was upgraded to a hazardous materials incident.Israel’s fire and rescue services said the fragment set a pesticide tank on fire, sending plumes of smoke high over the entire city of Beersheba, the largest city in Israel’s Negev desert. Additional waves of launches of missiles from Iran hit over 20 sites in Beersheba but did not create major damage nor injuries, according to Israel’s emergency rescue service Magen David Adom.Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar made the announcement Sunday. He did not specify whether the talks would be direct or indirect. There was no immediate word from the U.S. or Iran. “Pakistan is very happy that both Iran and the U.S. have expressed their confidence in Pakistan’s facilitation” of the talks, which will happen in the “coming days,” Dar said in a televised speech after top diplomats from regional countries met in Islamabad. He said the foreign ministers of Turkey, Egypt and Saudi Arabia endorsed Pakistan’s peace efforts. The ministers are expected to meet again Monday. Pakistan has emerged as a mediator, having relatively good ties with both Washington and Tehran. Pakistani officials have said their public effort follows weeks of quiet diplomacy.The announcement from the university in the heart of the Lebanese capital comes as American universities and schools across the Mideast fear strikes that may target their facilities. President Fadlo Khuri in an announcement Sunday said it was a precautionary measure and that there was “no evidence of direct threats” to the prestigious university and its renowned hospital. “The American University of Beirut has stood for the peaceful emancipation and progress of the people we educate and serve for more than a century and a half,” said Khuri. The threat from Iran’s elite Revolutionary Guard comes after comes after recent U.S. and Israeli strikes on two campuses in the Islamic Republic.The head of the U.S. oil and natural industry’s top lobbying group says “the only real solution” to rising energy and consumer prices as a result of the war with Iran is to get the Strait of Hormuz open. “If we can do that this week with targeted regime actions, I think we have to take that opportunity because it’s only going to get worse over time,” said Mike Sommers, president and CEO of the American Petroleum Institute. Sommers told Fox News Channel’s “The Sunday Briefing” that “that artery has to be reopened and fast” because “the longer this goes on, the higher prices are going to go.”“If the Houthis start attacking ships going through the Red Sea, that could really put us on the cusp of a major energy crisis throughout the world. That is a top concern this week, as well,” he says.Over 3,500 people were also wounded since the start of this latest military escalation, according to the Lebanese Health Ministry. Among the killed are 52 health workers. Israel launched intense airstrikes over Lebanon after the Hezbollah militant group fired rockets towards northern Israel in solidarity with Iran on March 2.“We are determined to fundamentally change the situation in the north,” he said on a visit to northern Israel, adding that “Hezbollah still has residual capability to fire rockets at us.”The Houthis joined the war over the weekend with a missile attack on Israel. Their entry has raised concerns that they could resume attacks on vessels in the Red Sea further disrupting the global shipping industry and sending oil prices much higher. Nomi Bar-Yaacov, fellow at the Geneva Centre for Security Policy, said the Houthis’ potential disruption of oil export in the Red Sea will create a “point where we have not been before.”Kuwait’s Foreign Minister Sheikh Jarrah Jaber Al Sabah said Sunday that what the region is witnessing is “systematic pattern of undermining regional stability led by Iran”, as the monthlong war continues to destabilize the region. In a statement reported by the state-run Kuna news agency, Al Sabah said that Iran is destabilizing the region through “exploiting chaos and terrorism as tools of influence.” Kuwait’s Armed Forces said Sunday that projectile attacks injured 10 members of its forces, and its Defense Ministry said that the warehouses of a private logistics company were hit, resulting in only material damage, as the country intercepted 26 other Iranian missiles and drones over the past 24 hours.Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy arrived in Jordan Sunday, part of his tour of Gulf Arab states as Kyiv continues to offer its“Security is the top priority, and it is important that all partners make the necessary efforts toward it. Ukraine is doing its part. Important meetings ahead,” Zelenskyy wrote on his social media channels, alongside a video that showed him arriving by air. Jordan’s state news agency reported that Zelenskyy would meet with King Abdullah II for talks on regional developments and bilateral relations.Nearly a thousand people gathered in central Istanbul Sunday afternoon despite heavy rains to protest the ongoing conflicts in Iran, Lebanon and Palestine. Organized by several religious conservative NGOs, the rally featured slogans like, “Resist, Gaza will prevail” and “Muslims don’t bow to oppression,” as well as signs saying, “Killer Israel, Killer United States” and criticizing the Israeli closure of Al-Aqsa Mosque. “We are here for all the oppressed in the world. Lebanon, Iran, Palestine, yesterday it was Venezuela, tomorrow it will probably be Cuba, we are here for all of them,” protester Mehmet Yilmaz told The Associated Press. “When Iran launches a missile, despite claiming no one can hurt them with their Iron Dome, they all scurry into their holes like mice the second the sirens blare,” Ekrem Saylan told AP. “What do the Iranians do? They take to the streets. This is about belief, faith. If they had faith they wouldn’t be afraid of death.”Dozens of Christian faithful gathered Sunday in the Holy Family Church in Gaza to celebrate Palm Sunday, marking the first time for the sacred celebration in the war-torn territory where a fragile ceasefire was reached in October. “Many of our Christian relatives are missing this year. We lost 6% of our Latin and Greek Orthodox Christians in the war, and this is a great loss, a very great sorrow,” said the Rev. Gabriel Romanelli, the parish priest of the Catholic community based at Holy Family Church in Gaza. While weapons have largely fallen silent in Gaza, Christians are celebrating among near-daily Israeli strikes and heightened regional tension. Inside the church, altar servers waved branches and fronds, and the Palestinians attended the mass in silence and reverence. “We pray for the people of Jerusalem, for all of Palestine, and for the entire region, that God Almighty may grant peace, justice, and reconciliation to all the peoples of the region,” Romanelli said.Pakistan’s prime minister on Sunday pledged continued support for Saudi Arabia during talks with the kingdom’s foreign minister, as both countries discussed regional stability and efforts to end ongoing conflict. Shehbaz Sharif renewed Pakistan’s support to the kingdom during a meeting with Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan, who is visiting Islamabad to attend a meeting of top diplomats from Islamic countries to discuss how to end the Iran war. According to statement from Sharif’s office, Sharif “appreciated the remarkable restraint exercised by Saudi Arabia amid the current crisis” and said Pakistan would “always stand shoulder to shoulder” with the kingdom. Sharif briefed the Saudi foreign minister on Islamabad’s diplomatic efforts aimed at helping end the war in the region.A missile fragment that fell on a factory outside of the southern Israeli city of Beersheba on Sunday set a pesticide tank on fire, according to Israel’s Fire and Rescue, sending black plumes of smoke and billowing flames high into the air. Fire and Rescue services said there were no injuries from the fire and no danger to the public, but evacuated people nearby as a precaution as multiple crews attempted to get the fire under control.Iranians crossing into southern Iraq on Sunday urged the United States to end the war, describing relentless airstrikes, rising prices and worsening living conditions, but insisting they would not leave their country. “A message to America: Stop the war,” said Atef al-Fatlawi, 30, who arrived from Ahvaz with her husband and young son. She said daily life had deteriorated sharply, with insecurity replacing what she described as previous stability. The family crossed into Iraq via the Shalamcha crossing in Basra. Al-Fatlawi crossed into Iraq to buy groceries, including rice, which is now cheaper than in Iran due to soaring costs. She said an explosion near her home shattered windows and frightened her child.Others made brief trips for basic needs. Fatima Ghaffari, 39, said she crossed the border mainly to access the internet before returning to her home in Abadan. “It’s scary, so scary,” she said of daily life in Ahvaz.Italy formally protested to Israel on Sunday after Jerusalem police prevented top Catholic officials from reaching the Church of the Holy Sepulchre to celebrate Palm Sunday Mass. Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani instructed Italy’s ambassador to Israel to convey the protest “and to reaffirm Italy’s commitment to protecting religious freedom at all times and under all circumstances.” Tajani also summoned the Israeli ambassador to Italy for talks Monday at the foreign ministry to seek clarification for the decision. “It is unacceptable that they were prevented from entering the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem,” Tajani said in a statement posted on X. “For the first time, Israeli police denied the leaders of the Catholic Church the opportunity to celebrate Palm Sunday Mass in one of the holiest sites for millions of faithful around the world.”Iranians crossed into Iraq via the Shalamcha border on Sunday, hours after an airstrike hit near the Iranian side, cutting power and halting trade for several hours, said Haider Abdul Samad, the crossing’s deputy director. The strike occurred around 3 a.m. and was not the first since the war began, he said, without providing details on casualties or the strike. Electricity was restored and trade resumed by mid-morning, but Abdul Samad said such disruptions have become routine amid the ongoing war. Cross-border movement has significantly declined, though dozens of Iranians continue to enter Iraq seeking cheaper goods, internet access and brief family visits before returning to nearby cities such as Abadan and Ahvaz. Many described the U.S. and Israeli strikes as relentless and frightening but said they would not leave. “There is no reassurance. We don’t know when our homes could be targeted,” said Razzak Saghir Al-Mousawi, 71, who entered Iraq from Iran on Sunday.Asif Durrani, a senior defense analyst in Pakistan, said his country’s mediation efforts are gaining credible regional backing, pointing to the presence of foreign ministers from Turkey, Egypt and Saudi Arabia in the capital.Durrani said Tehran’s overnight decision to allow 20 additional Pakistani-flagged ships through the Strait of Hormuz reflects its trust in Pakistan and confidence in its mediatory role. “It also sends a clear signal that Iran remains open for business with the world, provided the United States abandons coercion,” he said, adding that any meaningful progress in the peace process would require Washington to demonstrate “sincerity” in the proposed negotiations being facilitated by Pakistan.Foreign ministers from key regional powers are meeting in Pakistan’s capital to discuss ways to end the fighting in the Middle East, officials said. State-run Pakistan Television showed Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar receiving Egypt’s Badr Abdelatty, Turkey’s Hakan Fidan and Saudi Arabia’s Prince Faisal bin Farhan at the Foreign Ministry ahead of Sunday’s meeting. The talks will review progress in the ongoing indirect contacts between Washington and Tehran and explore ways to advance diplomatic efforts to end the conflict, officials said. Sunday’s meeting comes a day after Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif spoke with Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian and held what officials described as “extensive discussions” on the evolving regional situation.Its defense ministry said that sounds heard across the country on Sunday were from interception efforts.Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan arrived in Pakistan on Sunday to attend a meeting of diplomats from Islamic countries focused on ongoing efforts to end war in the Middle East. According to a statement from Pakistan’s Foreign Ministry, the two sides will hold talks on the evolving regional situation.An adviser to the United Arab Emirates has called for any settlement to the war in the Middle East to include “clear guarantees” that Iranian attacks on its neighbors won’t be repeated. In a social media post, Anwar Gargash said the Iranian government has become “the main threat” to the Persian Gulf security.Leo dedicated his Palm Sunday homily in St. Peter’s Square to insist that God is the “king of peace” who rejects violence and comforts those who are oppressed. “Brothers and sisters, this is our God: Jesus, King of Peace, who rejects war, whom no one can use to justify war,” Leo said. “He does not listen to the prayers of those who wage war, but rejects them.” He said he was praying for Christians “suffering the consequences of an atrocious conflict. In many cases, they cannot live fully the rites of these holy days.”

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