THE UNREPORTED BRIEF — Days 26-28

The Unreported Brief
THE UNREPORTED BRIEF
Independent Strategic Analysis  |  US–Iran Conflict
Days 26–28  •  March 25–27, 2026  •  Strategy • Diplomacy • History
⚠ AI DISCLOSURE & DISCLAIMER: This newsletter was generated by artificial intelligence (Claude by Anthropic) and draws exclusively on publicly available news reporting. It is not an authoritative source of truth, does not represent any government, military, intelligence agency, or news organisation, and should not be relied upon as a substitute for primary sources. All analysis is interpretive and speculative. Historical figure commentary in the War Council is entirely fictional. Any depictions of named historical persons are hypothetical intellectual exercises only. Independent verification of all claims is strongly encouraged before sharing or acting on this content.
Thus it is that in war the victorious strategist only seeks battle after the victory has been decided, whereas he who is destined to defeat first fights and afterwards looks for victory.
— Sun Tzu, The Art of War
“I don’t know why we are fighting if we have never been attacked.”
— Joshua Byers, 26, document clerk, Charlotte NC (Washington Post focus group)

Part One
Beyond The Headlines

The narrative between the data points. What the news reports but does not connect. Days 26–28 of Operation Epic Fury.

I. The Toll Booth and the Yuan

Iran is no longer blocking the Strait of Hormuz. It is owning it.

Lloyd’s List Intelligence confirmed this week what the shipping industry already knew from bitter experience: the IRGC has established a de facto “toll booth” regime in the world’s most critical energy chokepoint. Ships entering the Strait must now navigate a northern route around Larak Island, placing them in Iranian territorial waters. They must submit vessel details—cargo, owners, destination, complete crew list—to IRGC-approved intermediaries. Approved vessels receive a code and are escorted by an Iranian vessel. Oil is prioritised. Ships undergo “geopolitical vetting.”

At least two vessels have paid for passage. The payment was settled in yuan—China’s currency.

Iran’s Parliament is now drafting legislation to formalise this into permanent law, codifying “Iran’s sovereignty, control and oversight over the Strait of Hormuz, while also creating a source of revenue through the collection of fees.” Traffic through the Strait has fallen 90% since the war began. Nearly 3,000 vessels are waiting on either side. But Iran’s own Kharg Island terminal loaded 1.6 million barrels in March—largely unchanged from prewar totals. Iran-affiliated vessels now account for approximately 90% of recent transits.

This is not a blockade. It is a customs authority. Each transit under Iranian terms implicitly recognises Iran’s sovereignty over the waterway. Each yuan payment is a small crack in dollar hegemony over global energy markets. If this system persists beyond the war, it creates a permanent non-dollar payment channel for Gulf oil transit—exactly the infrastructure China has been trying to build for a decade.

Sun Tzu called it the “ground of intersecting highways”—territory whose control gives dominion over three adjacent states. Iran occupied it on Day 1 and has held it for 28 days. Now it is converting occupation into administration. The Python’s masterpiece.

On Day 28, Iran turned back two Chinese-owned container ships—a hardening even against its closest economic partner. The IRGC declared the Strait “closed” as a designated corridor, warning that unauthorised traffic would face “severe action.” Secretary of State Rubio, speaking at the G7 in Paris, called the toll system “illegal.” But legality requires enforcement, and the enforcer is busy fighting the war.

II. The Dueling Proposals and the Sliding Deadline

On March 24, Pakistan’s Army Commander Asim Munir delivered a US 15-point peace proposal to Iran. The terms read like a surrender document: dismantle the nuclear programme, end uranium enrichment, hand over enriched uranium stockpiles, grant full IAEA access, limit missile capabilities, cease support for the Axis of Resistance, and ensure freedom of navigation through Hormuz.

Iran rejected it within 24 hours and issued five counter-conditions: a complete halt to aggression and assassinations, concrete guarantees preventing recurrence of war, guaranteed payment of war reparations, a comprehensive end to hostilities including against all resistance groups, and recognition of Iranian sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz.

The gap between these two positions is the gap between performance and reality. The US demands are the terms you present to a defeated enemy. Iran’s demands are the terms of an undefeated one. The 15-point plan is the first formal US acknowledgment that the war must end through negotiation. But it offers Iran nothing except the cessation of bombing—in exchange for total strategic capitulation.

Meanwhile, the deadline keeps moving. On Friday morning, Trump said Iran should “get serious soon, before it is too late, because once that happens, there is NO TURNING BACK.” Markets crashed—the worst day since the war started. Then, minutes after the closing bell, Trump softened: he extended his threat to destroy Iran’s power plants by 10 days, to April 6, saying talks are “ongoing” and “going very well.”

Iran says no talks are happening. Trump says they are going well. Both positions cannot be true.

Al Jazeera’s Teresa Bo, reporting from Washington, mapped the contradiction sequence: Friday last week Trump said the US was not ready for a ceasefire. Later that day he said he was ready to start winding down. Saturday he gave Iran 48 hours to open Hormuz or face power plant destruction. Monday he extended to five days. Thursday he extended to ten. “Many here are perceiving that this change of tone by Trump is related to lack of planning, and that he’s trying to find a way out of this war.”

A deadline that moves is not a deadline. It is a negotiating tell. The Python has learned the Hippo’s bluff threshold.

III. The $580 Million Tell

Between 6:49 and 6:51 AM Eastern Time on Monday, March 23, approximately 6,200 Brent and WTI crude futures contracts were sold in a two-minute window. Notional value: approximately $580 million, per Financial Times calculations based on Bloomberg data. Simultaneously, $1.5 billion in S&P 500 e-Mini futures were purchased. German DAX and Euro Stoxx 50 futures also spiked.

Fifteen minutes later, at 7:05 AM, President Trump posted on Truth Social announcing “very good and productive conversations” with Iran and a five-day pause on energy infrastructure strikes.

Oil dropped 10%. S&P rallied. Whoever sold oil and bought equities in that two-minute window captured a fortune.

Senator Chris Murphy: “$1.5 BILLION. Let me say it again—a $1.5 BILLION BET. Bigger than any futures purchases made at the time. 5 minutes before Trump’s post. Who was it? Trump? A family member? A White House staffer? This is corruption. Mind blowing corruption.”

The White House denied any profiteering, calling it “baseless and irresponsible reporting.” But the evidence is the trade data itself—timestamped to the minute.

This is not an isolated incident. CNN reported that one person has made $1 million since 2024 from well-timed bets predicting US and Israeli military action against Iran. A mystery gambler made more than $400,000 on Polymarket in January by correctly forecasting the Maduro removal hours before it happened. Polymarket and Kalshi announced new insider trading restrictions the same day.

Closer to Congress: Rep. Kelly Morrison (D-MN) bought $15,001–$50,000 in Saronic Technologies—a privately held autonomous warship company with a $392 million Navy contract—nine days into the war. Morrison, who has publicly called the war “illegal” and demanded Congress “end this today,” has made approximately 90 trades during the 119th Congress. Her spokesperson said an “investment adviser” made the trade without her knowledge. Government watchdogs called it “a pretty clear conflict of interest.”

The war’s financial beneficiaries now include four distinct categories: the anonymous pre-dawn trader with foreknowledge of presidential announcements; members of Congress trading defence stocks while voting on war funding; defence contractors who spent $140 million lobbying in 2025; and oil majors profiting from volatility the president himself creates.

Sun Tzu said foreknowledge is the most valuable weapon. In this war, foreknowledge is being monetised. The question is not whether someone profited. The question is whether the timing and content of presidential announcements are being shaped by the trading positions.

IV. The Conservative Crackup

The coalition that launched this war is fracturing along three fault lines.

The hawks who want competence. Noah Rothman, one of National Review’s most consistent pro-war voices, published a piece this week that reads less like criticism than a warning siren. He does not argue against the war. He argues the president is losing the war he supports—not militarily, but politically—because Trump will not do the basic work of democratic legitimacy: address the nation, ask for congressional authorisation, define the sacrifice. “War is serious business,” Rothman writes. “The public-facing elements of this White House are not acting like serious people, the president included.” The Wall Street Journal reports Trump told an associate the war was “distracting from his other priorities” and he’s ready to “shift to his next big challenge”—without saying what that might be.

The sceptics who predicted this. Michael Brendan Dougherty, also at National Review, dismantles Bret Stephens’s argument that the war is going historically well. Americans aren’t worried about whether the military can destroy things, Dougherty writes. They’re worried about what comes after the destruction. Iraq was a military victory that produced a strategic disaster. Libya was regime change that produced a failed state. “I think most generations before ours wanted their government to act like a democracy and respect the limits of American public opinion, rather than act in behalf of democracy as a global ideological project.”

The MAGA base purists. Steve Bannon at CPAC warned that if this becomes “a hard slog, the party will bleed support.” Armed Services Committee chairman Mike Rogers emerged from a classified briefing expressing rare frustration at the administration’s failure to provide even basic details about scope and direction. Nancy Mace walked out of the briefing entirely.

None of these three camps aligns with the White House’s posture of “resounding military triumph.” The hawks want seriousness. The sceptics want restraint. The base wants to go home. The Nate Silver polling aggregate: 52.1% oppose the war, 39.5% support. This war has never had majority support at any point in its existence.

V. The Chess Grandmaster’s Clock

Israeli Chief of Staff Eyal Zamir told the security cabinet this week that the IDF will “collapse in on itself” due to growing demand and a shortfall of manpower as it fights multiple fronts. He raised “10 red flags.” He said it would not be long before the military was unable to perform routine missions. He called for new conscription laws, a reserve duty law, and a law to extend mandatory service.

This is the most significant Israeli military admission of the entire war. The Chess Grandmaster is running out of pieces. Netanyahu responded by ordering the IDF to destroy as much of Iran’s arms industry as possible “over the next 48 hours”—racing a clock his own chief of staff told the cabinet is nearly expired.

On the American side, the Pentagon is considering deployment of up to 10,000 additional ground troops to the Middle East—infantry and armoured vehicles—to be added to the roughly 5,000 Marines and 2,000 paratroopers from the 82nd Airborne already ordered to the region. Total potential ground force: 17,000.

Secretary Rubio, speaking at the G7 on Friday, said the US can achieve its goals “without any ground troops” and the operation would last “weeks, not months.” These statements came within 12 hours of the WSJ report on ground troop planning. Either Rubio was not briefed on his own Pentagon’s plans, or he was providing diplomatic cover for the positioning.

The Silver Bulletin poll: only 7% of Americans support large-scale ground operations. 65% expect Trump will send ground troops anyway. The gap between those two numbers is the most dangerous number in American politics right now.

VI. The Nasdaq Correction and the Wallet Vote

Thursday, March 26, was Wall Street’s worst day since the war began. The S&P 500 slumped 1.7%—its worst day since January—and is back on track for a fifth straight losing week, stretching back to before the war began. The Dow dropped 469 points. The Nasdaq sank 2.4% to fall more than 10% below its all-time high—officially entering “correction” territory.

Brent crude settled at $101.89, up from roughly $70 before the war. US crude rose to $94.48. German DAX lost 1.5%. South Korea’s Kospi dropped 3.2%.

Hopes have cratered on Wall Street for any Fed rate cuts this year. The oil price spike has heightened inflation fears, trapping the Fed between a slowing economy and rising prices. The University of Michigan consumer sentiment index dropped to 53.3 from 56.6 in February—lowest reading this year. The survey director warned sentiment has “worsened more abruptly among higher-end consumers” because more of their wealth is in the stock market.

Americans do not need to follow the geopolitics. They check their 401(k). They check the gas price. The war is coming home through the wallet, and the wallet votes.

The Python does not need to win a single engagement. It needs oil above $100, the Nasdaq in correction, the Fed paralysed, and American public opinion sliding past 55% opposition. Time is Iran’s weapon, and time is denominated in dollars.

The Energy Future the War Is Building

The war simultaneously proves the case for renewable energy and accelerates fossil fuel expansion. Spain and Portugal have seen electricity prices decline during the crisis because of wind and solar penetration. Pakistan’s rooftop solar surge is insulating households. China and Nepal, where EV adoption is highest, are partially buffered from gasoline price spikes.

But Asian countries dependent on LNG through Hormuz are burning more coal. India, Thailand, Vietnam—all increasing coal generation. The White House paid a French company $1 billion to abandon offshore wind plans and pursue fossil fuel projects instead.

An Ember analyst states: “This is the first oil shock in history where oil faces a superior alternative.” But a Columbia University analyst warns: “Renewables are winners here, but so is coal.” The risk of “carbon lock-in”—crisis-driven fossil fuel infrastructure staying online for decades—is real and growing.

The AI Company and the Pentagon

A federal judge in San Francisco blocked a Pentagon order branding Anthropic—the AI company whose Claude system generates this newsletter—a national security risk. The dispute: the Pentagon wanted unrestricted use of Claude for any lawful purpose. Anthropic wanted restrictions on mass domestic surveillance and fully autonomous weapons. When Anthropic spoke publicly about those concerns, the administration retaliated.

The Washington Post reports that “Claude is deeply embedded in the military’s systems and while the Trump administration said it would transition away from the technology, it has been continuing to use it in support of its bombing campaign in Iran.”

The tool the Pentagon publicly declared dangerous is privately considered indispensable. The right hand punishes what the left hand depends on.


Part Two
The Verified Facts

Developments of greatest consequence not covered in Part One. Facts, not analysis.

Nuclear strikes: Two nuclear-related facilities struck on Day 28. The Khondab heavy water complex in northwest Iran (linked to plutonium production) and a yellowcake production facility in Ardakan, Yazd. No radioactive release reported.

Saudi base attack: Iranian attack on a Saudi base wounded at least 10 US troops and damaged several planes (Day 28).

Houthi entry: Houthis launched two attacks against Israel from Yemen—their first since the current conflict began. They warned of further attacks “until the criminal enemy ceases its attacks.”

G7 statement: G7 foreign ministers demanded an “immediate end to attacks on civilians” and called reopening Hormuz an “absolute necessity.” No force package, timeline, or rules of engagement specified.

Urmia residential strike: US-Israeli air strike targeted a residential building in Urmia, West Azerbaijan province. Four residential buildings completely destroyed. Citizens killed and injured.

Lebanon escalation: Israeli military issued fresh evacuation orders for Beirut’s densely populated southern outskirts. More than 1 million displaced. Israel preparing to expand ground occupation of southern Lebanon.

Ghost Supreme Leader: Mojtaba Khamenei has still not been seen in public or on state television since becoming Supreme Leader in early March. Written messages attributed to him. Trump claims he is “either dead or in very bad shape.”

Pakistan mediation: Pakistan’s foreign minister says both Iran and the US have “expressed confidence in Pakistan to facilitate” talks. Meetings held with Saudi, Turkish, Egyptian, and Chinese foreign ministers.

NATO insult: Trump called NATO allies “COWARDS” after they declined to help reopen Hormuz. Germany’s defence minister Pistorius responded that Germany could help secure the waterway once a ceasefire is agreed—but would not join the war.

Recession fears: Economists increasingly say the Iran war fallout raises the odds of a US recession. Goldman Sachs warns the oil shock will hit jobs.

Escalation vs. Off-Ramp Signal Grid

↑ Escalation Signals

↑ 10,000 additional ground troops under consideration

↑ Nuclear facilities struck (Khondab, Ardakan)

↑ Houthis enter war from Yemen

↑ Iran turns back Chinese ships (hardening)

↑ IDF chief warns of manpower “collapse”

↑ Residential buildings destroyed in Urmia

↑ US troops wounded on Saudi base

↑ WSJ: Trump weighing uranium extraction ground operation

↓ Off-Ramp Signals

↓ Deadline extended to April 6 (third extension)

↓ Pakistan facilitating talks with both sides

↓ G7 demands end to civilian attacks

↓ Rubio: “weeks, not months”

↓ Iran reviewing US proposal (not yet rejected formally)

↓ GOP members publicly demanding exit strategy

↓ 52.1% public opposition (climbing)

↓ Trump allies urging shift to domestic agenda

COUNT THE DEAD

LINCOLN HOLDS THE RECEIPTS  •  DAY 28

Iranian civilians killed:   1,492+   (HRANA)

Children killed:           217+    (HRANA — 15% of total)

Total Iranian dead:       3,300+   (health ministry)

Lebanese killed:          1,110   

Gulf countries killed:    50+    

Israelis killed:          16     

Americans killed:        13     

Americans wounded:       303     (CENTCOM — 10 serious)

Lebanese displaced:      1,000,000+

Seafarers killed:         7+      (IMO)

Real-time tracking: wardeathcount.live

Resalat, Tehran. March 9. An Israeli strike targeting a Basij militia building destroyed at least four buildings in a residential district. Mark 84 bombs—2,000 pounds each—used in a dense neighbourhood. Damage extending 65 metres from the target. A mother stood by the rubble for days, calling out for her daughter. “They don’t have the manpower to get her out. My daughter is under the rubble… she’s afraid of the dark.” Days later, her daughter and granddaughter were found dead.

Niloufar Square, Tehran. March 1. Israeli strike on the Abbasabad police station. Families had gathered after breaking their Ramadan fast. Eyewitnesses describe at least 20 killed. Multiple strikes in quick succession on the same target. “A man and a woman had just come out of a shop… they were hit immediately.”

No public shelters. No sirens. No evacuation guidance. Near-total internet blackout for 92 million people.

Names of Iranian civilian sources changed for protection.

THE RECEIPTS

ECONOMIC DASHBOARD  •  DAY 28

Brent crude: $101.89   (prewar: ~$70)

US crude: $94.48

US gas: $3.88/gal   (inauguration: $3.11)

S&P 500: 6,477   (down 7.2% from ATH, 5-week losing streak)

Nasdaq: CORRECTION   (10%+ below ATH)

UMich consumer sentiment: 53.3   (Feb: 56.6)

Fed rate cuts (2026): Priced out

Pentagon supplemental request: $200 billion

War support (Silver Bulletin): 39.5%

War opposition: 52.1%

Targets struck (CENTCOM): 9,000+

Iran missile/drone capacity: Degraded ~90%

Hormuz status: IRGC toll booth regime — 90% traffic reduction

WAR AIMS STATED: (1) Destroy missiles & production (2) Annihilate navy (3) Sever proxy support (4) Prevent nuclear weapon
WAR AIMS ACHIEVED: Missile/drone capacity degraded ~90%. Navy degraded. Proxy networks disrupted. Enriched uranium: still in Iran. Hormuz: under Iranian control.


Special Segment
The War Council
⚠ DISCLAIMER: The following War Council commentary is entirely fictional and speculative. These are hypothetical intellectual exercises using historical figures as analytical lenses. None of these figures said or would have said these words. They are thought experiments only, grounded in each figure’s documented philosophy and historical record, applied to current events for analytical illumination. They do not represent the views of any person, living or dead.
Sun Tzu — The Art of War

I will speak plainly, because the dead deserve plainness.

My first principle: The supreme art of war is to subdue the enemy without fighting. Twenty-eight days of the most intensive air campaign in modern warfare, 9,000 targets struck, Iran’s military degraded by 90%—and the Strait of Hormuz is administered by the enemy. Not closed. Administered. With escort codes, vetting procedures, and fees collected in a foreign currency. The enemy has built a customs authority inside your war. This is not failure of arms. It is failure of strategy.

My second principle: Know your enemy and know yourself. The president says Iran is “begging to make a deal.” On the same day, Iran publicly rejects his terms and issues maximalist counter-demands. The president says talks are “going very well.” Iran says no talks are happening. Someone in this equation does not know what the enemy is doing. When the sovereign’s words contradict the enemy’s actions, it is the sovereign who is deceived—not the enemy.

My third principle: All warfare is based on deception. But deception must degrade the enemy’s decision-making, not your own. The South Pars revelation showed the deception is directed inward—at the American public, at allied governments, at the sovereign’s own information environment. The adversary knows the truth. Only the decision-maker is confused.

My fourth principle: There is no instance of a country having benefited from prolonged warfare. Oil above $100. Markets in correction. Consumer sentiment at its lowest. Gas approaching $4. A $200 billion supplemental requested. The war’s economic cost compounds daily—not for the enemy, whose oil still flows from Kharg Island, but for the sovereign and his people.

My fifth principle: Readiness to receive the enemy. Three thousand eight hundred State Department employees fired. The Iran desk merged with Iraq. Arabic and Farsi speakers terminated. The wargame models predicting Gulf retaliation existed. The people who would have surfaced them were gone. The chairman of Armed Services walks out of classified briefings in frustration because even he cannot get basic details.

A young man in Charlotte asks the question that should have been answered before the first bomb fell: “I don’t know why we are fighting if we have never been attacked.”

I wrote two and a half thousand years ago: He who is destined to defeat first fights and afterwards looks for victory. The fighting began without a defined victory condition. The victory conditions are being improvised after the fact—shifting to match whatever the military situation produces. The uranium extraction is considered because the uranium is still there after 29 days of bombing. The Hormuz reopening is elevated because Hormuz is the most visible crisis. The objectives drift because they were never fixed. And the sovereign who fights without knowing what victory is cannot achieve it—he can only declare it.

George Washington — On the Republic

I commanded an army of farmers against the greatest empire on earth. I know something of wars that are longer than expected and costlier than promised. But I also know that no war succeeds without the consent of the governed.

This president announced war on Truth Social at two in the morning. He did not address the nation from the Oval Office. He did not seek a declaration of war from Congress. He did not ask the people to sacrifice. Even the hawk at National Review sees it: the president betrays a lack of trust in the American people, and the polls suggest they are returning the favour.

When I fought, the people knew why. When I asked for sacrifice, I named it. When I won, the victory belonged to the Republic, not to me. I fear for a Republic where war is conducted through social media posts that move markets for anonymous traders, where the commander’s courtiers treat him like an actor between performances, and where the people’s representatives walk out of briefings because even they cannot learn the truth.

Abraham Lincoln — On the Dead

I count them. I always count them. Thirteen Americans. Three hundred and three wounded. Fifteen hundred Iranian civilians. Two hundred and seventeen children. A mother waiting days for rescuers to dig through rubble, calling out that her daughter is afraid of the dark. The daughter and granddaughter found dead.

I carried every death of the Civil War as a personal burden. I read the casualty reports at night and could not sleep. I knew their names when I could. I knew their states. I knew their families.

These dead have names too. But their names are changed for protection—protection from the regime that oppresses them, while the bombs that were supposed to liberate them fall on their homes. Count them. Let the counting change the deciding.


War makes honest fools of us all.
But the toll booth doesn’t care about honesty. It only asks for yuan.
The harvest keeps receipts.
⚠ AI DISCLOSURE & DISCLAIMER (REPEATED): This entire newsletter was generated by artificial intelligence (Claude by Anthropic). It is not an authoritative source. All War Council commentary is entirely fictional. Historical figures are hypothetical depictions only. All analysis is interpretive and speculative. All casualty figures are drawn from publicly available reporting and may be incomplete or inaccurate. Independent verification is strongly encouraged.
Sources include: AP, Reuters, BBC, WSJ, NYT, NPR, CNBC, The Hill, Bloomberg, FT, Al Jazeera, National Review, Mother Jones, NOTUS, Fox News, The Independent, Oilprice.com, Critical Threats (ISW-CTP), CSIS, The Diplomat, Nate Silver/Silver Bulletin, UMich Consumer Sentiment, Lloyd’s List Intelligence, HRANA, Washington Post

Standing Resources:
Real-time casualty tracking: wardeathcount.live
Nuclear facility intelligence: iranwarintel.com / IranTrack

© 2026 The Unreported Brief  •  Published every other day  •  Distributed via Blogspot

The Unreported Brief — Day 25

The Unreported Brief

THE UNREPORTED BRIEF

Independent Strategic Analysis  |  US–Iran Conflict  |  Days 23–25  |  March 23–25, 2026

Strategy • Diplomacy • History • What The Headlines Miss

⚠ AI DISCLOSURE & DISCLAIMER: This newsletter was generated by artificial intelligence (Claude by Anthropic) and draws exclusively on publicly available news reporting. It is not an authoritative source of truth. Historical figure commentary is entirely fictional, speculative, and hypothetical. All analysis is interpretive and generative — it requires independent verification. All data points are from publicly available information.

“If you know the enemy and know yourself, you need not fear the result of a hundred battles. If you know yourself but not the enemy, for every victory gained you will also suffer a defeat. If you know neither the enemy nor yourself, you will succumb in every battle.”

SUN TZU, THE ART OF WAR • ENTIRELY FICTIONAL APPLICATION — HYPOTHETICAL STRATEGIC COMMENTARY

On Day 25, the question is no longer which category the United States occupies. The evidence is in. Today’s edition documents, across every source from Breitbart to the BBC, the architecture of a nation that has systematically disabled every mechanism by which it could know itself — and is preparing to send its sons to a mined beach on an island a third the size of Manhattan.

PART ONE: BEYOND THE HEADLINES

The narrative between the data points. What the news reports but does not connect. Day 25 of Operation Epic Fury.

The Montage Presidency

The most important piece of reporting on Day 25 was not about bombs or diplomacy. It was about a two-minute video. NBC News, through reporters Doyle, Kube, and De Luce, documented the information architecture surrounding the commander-in-chief: each day since February 28, CENTCOM compiles a highlight reel of the biggest, most successful strikes on Iranian targets. The montage typically runs two minutes. One official described it as clips of “stuff blowing up.”

The president watches the montage. His briefings draw better feedback from aides when they emphasise victories. Comparatively little detail about Iranian actions reaches him. When five US Air Force refueling planes were hit at Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia, Trump was not briefed. He learned about it from media reports. When he inquired, he was told the damage was minor. The Wall Street Journal confirmed the planes were struck and are being repaired — bringing the total number of Air Force tankers damaged or destroyed to at least seven.

Trump’s allies are privately trying to provide him with additional context, including polling data showing his approval sinking. Joe Kent, the former National Counterterrorism Center director who resigned over the war, confirmed on Tucker Carlson that “a good deal of key decision-makers were not allowed to come express their opinion to the president.” The montage is not an accident. It is the information architecture of this war, and it determines what the decision-maker can see.

For context: President Lincoln walked to the War Department telegraph office at night to read raw dispatches because he didn’t trust filtered summaries. Johnson watched three television sets simultaneously. They understood the problem. The montage is the problem institutionalised into a daily two-minute product.

The 15-Point Plan and Iran’s Rejection

For the entire war, this newsletter has tracked a single analytical signal: will Trump name his terms? On Day 15 we wrote that his refusal to specify terms meant either they were still being determined or the gap was wider than negotiation could close. On Day 25, there is a 15-point plan on Tehran’s desk — sent via Pakistan, according to the New York Times.

Tehran’s verdict, through Al Jazeera: “extremely maximalist and unreasonable.” A high-ranking diplomatic source said the plan was “deceptive and misleading in its presentation” and that media portrayals do not accurately reflect its substance. Iran’s counter-framing was precise: the US constantly moves the goalposts while Iran has a clear understanding of what it will accept and reject. No indirect talks have occurred since February 28. Messages only via mediators. Twenty-five days of bombing and the two sides have not spoken directly.

Iran has issued five conditions of its own, including a conclusion to the conflict “across all fronts” and payment of reparations. Araghchi told state media Iran has “no intention of negotiating for now.” But he also said: “If a position needs to be taken, it will certainly be determined.” That is not a locked door. It is a conditional opening. The question is whether the architecture around the president — the montage, the gatekeepers, the MBS calls — allows the conditional to be heard.

Three Allies, Three Wars, Zero Convergence

MBS wants a broken Iran. The New York Times, through Barnes, Pager, and Schmitt (front page, Section A, Page 1), reported that Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has been pushing Trump in a series of calls over the past week to continue the war, calling it a “historic opportunity” to remake the Middle East. He has argued that the US should consider putting troops on Iranian soil to seize energy infrastructure. He has told Trump the oil price damage is “only temporary.” His own economists know it is not.

Netanyahu wants regime collapse. Axios reported that Netanyahu proposed a coordinated public call for Iranians to flood the streets last week. Trump refused. “Why the hell should we tell people to take to the streets when they’ll just get mowed down,” Trump told Netanyahu, according to a US official. That is the most honest sentence Trump has spoken about this war. It demolishes the regime-change rationale: the president privately knows the uprising isn’t coming, while his public statements continue to hint at liberation.

Netanyahu went ahead and made a public call from air force headquarters anyway. Very few Iranians came out. US and Israeli officials attributed this to fear of the regime. The Isfahan woman on Day 13 gave the fuller answer: fear of the regime is real, but so is hatred of the bombing. When you are being bombed by the country that promised to liberate you, staying home is not just fear. It is a verdict.

Trump wants out — but cannot find the door. The Wall Street Journal reported late Wednesday that Trump has privately told advisers he wants to avoid a protracted war and hopes to end it within four to six weeks. He is planning a mid-May summit with Xi in Beijing with the expectation the war will be concluded beforehand. He told an associate the war was “distracting from his other priorities.” At a $1,200-per-person fundraiser at Mar-a-Lago, he said: “I am supposed to be prosecuting the war, but the war’s going very well.”

The WSJ’s verdict: “The problem is Trump has no easy options for ending the war, and peace negotiations are at a nascent stage.” Three allied leaders with three incompatible objectives. One president who wants out. No mechanism to get there.

The IRGC Ascendancy: The War Created Its Own Enemy

The Economist published the analytical piece that reframes the entire conflict. Iran has transformed from a theocracy into something resembling a military junta. “We’ve gone from divine power to hard power,” says a person close to the regime. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps — 190,000 strong — now appears to run both the state and the war.

Mojtaba Khamenei has not been seen or heard since February 28. Larijani was replaced on the National Security Council by Muhammad Zulghadr, an IRGC apparatchik. Israel killed the philosopher and got the bureaucrat. Israel killed the man who could negotiate and got the man who runs the machine.

The IRGC was divided into 31 autonomous sub-districts after last summer’s assassinations. Each received its own missiles, drones, and target lists — with the authority to use them independently. The Basij has been broken into tens of thousands of small mobile cells operating from mosques, schools, and under bridges. The Economist warns that decentralised IRGC cells could form the nucleus of a guerrilla force capable of blocking the Strait of Hormuz indefinitely — regardless of what any central authority decides.

A teacher in Mashhad: “We used to talk about the end of the regime when the war stopped. Now we fear what to do with a regime that is stronger and more powerful than ever.”

Kharg Island: The Trap Is Set

CNN reported, sourced from multiple people familiar with US intelligence, that Iran has been laying traps and moving additional military personnel and air defenses to Kharg Island. MANPADs moved to the island. Anti-personnel and anti-armor mines on the shoreline where US troops could stage an amphibious landing. Layered air defenses. Iran knows the operation is being discussed because its parliament speaker publicly warned against it, naming the regional country supporting the plan without naming Saudi Arabia.

Retired Admiral James Stavridis, former NATO Supreme Allied Commander: “I would be very worried about this. Iranians are clever and ruthless. They will do everything they can to inflict maximum casualties on US forces.” He offered an alternative: an offshore blockade of Kharg, achieving the same leverage without putting troops on a mined beach. “This could be done without actually putting troops ashore.”

Gulf allies are privately urging against the operation, warning it would result in high casualties and prolonged conflict. But MBS is pushing for it. The 82nd Airborne is deploying. Two Marine Expeditionary Units are already en route. The force structure MBS requested is being assembled while Congress cannot get an explanation for why.

The Republican Fracture Goes Institutional

House Armed Services Committee chair Mike Rogers — a defense hawk who backed the decision to attack Iran — publicly denounced the Pentagon for failing to give lawmakers enough information. “We just wanted them to tell us what’s the plan, and we didn’t get any answers.” Senate Armed Services chair Roger Wicker confirmed the sentiment. Rep. Nancy Mace walked out of a classified briefing and posted immediately: “I will not support troops on the ground in Iran, even more so after this briefing.”

The Pentagon, for the first time in decades, has no plans to release a Global Posture Review — the formal document that tells allies and Congress where America plans to station its military. European allies call the US position “absurdly incoherent.” Germany’s president stated the war violates international law and the casus belli “does not hold water.” A NATO diplomat, speaking anonymously: “I’m proud of our no.”

Fox News’s own poll — conducted by Beacon Research and Shaw & Company with live interviews — found 58% oppose the military action, 64% disapprove of Trump’s handling, and his 59% disapproval is the highest of either term. Among non-MAGA Republicans, approval dropped 11 points in one year. The Republican pollster co-conducting the survey stated plainly: “Today, it seems many partisans rate the Iranian conflict based on their broader perceptions of Trump. Facts on the ground are interpreted to conform to partisan predispositions.”

The Voices From Inside the Blackout

The BBC’s Fergal Keane obtained testimony from inside Iran — names changed, locations obscured, sources risking arrest. Ten people were recently arrested for “co-operating with foreign media.” These voices speak to us at personal risk.

ZAHRA — Grandmother, Tehran

“This regime has inflicted so much pain on us over the past 47 years leaving countless mothers without their children, more than even the war itself did. So, I prefer that there be no ceasefire until this entire regime is gone.”

BBC News • Name changed to protect source

SAMAR — Student, Tehran

“Wherever I look, it’s a mess. Even if Pahlavi comes and tries to form a new government, I think these people will start suicide attacks. They won’t back down.”

BBC News • Name changed to protect source

ALI — Young Man Facing Conscription

“I definitely won’t go because my life would be in danger. Whatever I can do, I will do so that I don’t go into military service.”

BBC News • Name changed to protect source

Zahra wants the regime gone. Samar sees nothing but mess. Ali won’t serve. Iranian-American author Tara Kangarlou told NewsNation that ordinary Iranians are trapped between a “brutal dictatorship” and a “lack of policy” from the US, wondering whether “their story will end like Afghanistan.”

These are the voices the montage will never show. Ninety-two million people living through this war without internet, without agency, and without any indication that anyone bombing them has thought about what happens to them afterward. Outside Zahra’s window, “black rain” — the residue of US and Israeli strikes on oil depots — covers the ground. She cleans it off her courtyard to welcome Nowruz, the 3,000-year-old festival of the Iranian New Year. “Perhaps this dark night will finally give way to dawn.”

PART TWO: THE VERIFIED FACTS

Confirmed events of most consequence from Day 25. What to watch and why it matters.

Military & Operational

CENTCOM continuing strikes — posted satellite imagery of targets. Language shifted from “destroy” to “degrade” capabilities that have “threatened American troops for decades.”

82nd Airborne deploying ~1,000 soldiers to Middle East. Joins two Marine Expeditionary Units with several thousand Marines, amphibious warships, aviation assets.

Iran fortifying Kharg Island — MANPADs, anti-personnel mines, anti-armor mines on shoreline. Scorched-earth contingency possible.

Iran drone/missile attacks on Saudi Eastern Province — ~30 drones and one ballistic missile overnight. Also targeting Yanbu on Red Sea coast. 70% of Saudi energy reserves concentrated in Eastern Province.

Lebanese Health Ministry: 1,094 killed, 3,119 wounded since March 2. Twenty-two killed on Day 25 alone.

Nearly 300 US service members wounded (WSJ). 13 killed. $800M in Iranian strike damage to US bases (BBC).

USS Gerald R. Ford in Crete for repairs after 30-hour fire. Flagship carrier out of theater.

Diplomatic & Political

Iran rejected US 15-point plan as “extremely maximalist and unreasonable” (Al Jazeera). Issued five counter-conditions including reparations.

Trump told advisers he wants war over in 4–6 weeks (WSJ). Planning mid-May Xi summit. Said war “distracting from other priorities.”

Trump floated securing US access to Iranian oil as part of deal (WSJ). War aims migrated from nuclear security to resource access.

Pentagon canceled Global Posture Review — first time in decades (Politico). Allies and Congress lose formal planning document.

European allies call US position “absurdly incoherent” (Politico EU). No formal requests made to any ally. Germany’s president: war “violates international law.”

Democrat flipped South Florida state seat that includes Mar-a-Lago.

Fox News poll: 58% oppose action, 64% disapprove handling. Trump disapproval at all-time high. AP-NORC: majority says “gone too far.”

Economic Indicators

Oil volatile near $90–$100/barrel. Down from $119 spike but still 25%+ above pre-war levels.

US business activity at 11-month low — GDP tracking 1.0% annualised. “Stagflation” word used by S&P Global economist. Employment fell for first time in a year (Breitbart/S&P Global).

Gold at $4,549.80, up 3.36%. Flight-to-safety accelerating.

India bought first Iranian LPG cargo in years using US sanctions relief. The sanctions architecture the war was supposed to enforce is being dismantled by the war’s own consequences.

$928 million paid to TotalEnergies to cancel offshore wind leases (1.3M homes) and redirect into LNG exports that the EIA says raise domestic prices.

Escalation vs. Off-Ramp Signals

↑ Escalation Signals

↑ 82nd Airborne deploying to Middle East

↑ MBS pushing for ground troops on Kharg Island

↑ Iran mining Kharg beaches, moving MANPADs

↑ Saudi Eastern Province under nightly attack

↑ IRGC consolidating — junta replacing theocracy

↑ 31 autonomous IRGC sub-districts with independent weapons

↑ Hegseth: “We negotiate with bombs”

↑ Lebanon: 1,094 dead. 22 killed today

↑ Congress cannot get answers on troop plans

↑ Pentagon canceled Global Posture Review

↓ Off-Ramp Signals

↓ Trump privately wants war over in 4–6 weeks

↓ Trump told Netanyahu uprising would fail

↓ 15-point plan delivered — rejected but received

↓ Iran issued five counter-conditions

↓ Araghchi: “if a position needs to be taken, it will be determined”

↓ Trump walked back threat to strike power plants

↓ Gulf allies privately urging against ground ops

↓ Fox poll: 58% oppose. Political window closing

↓ Stavridis proposes blockade over amphibious assault

↓ UK hosting Hormuz security summit

☠ Abraham Lincoln Counts The Dead

“I have been counting since Day 1. Each name does not reduce the weight of the names already there. It multiplies it.”

Iranian Deaths (military & civilian)~3,000+
Lebanese Killed1,094+
US Service Members Killed13
US Service Members Wounded~300
Lebanese Wounded3,119+
Israelis Killed14+
Seafarers Killed / Stranded8+ / 20,000+
Iranians Displaced3.2 million+
Lebanese Displaced800,000+

For real-time casualty tracking: wardeathcount.live | Figures sourced from UN Security Council, Red Crescent, Lebanese Health Ministry, Pentagon, BBC, Israeli emergency services. Figures are floors, not ceilings. Iran maintains near-total internet blackout for 25 days.

💾 The Harvest Keeps Receipts

US war spending (25 days)$46 billion+
Pentagon supplemental request$200 billion
US damage from Iranian base strikes$800 million+
US gas average (inauguration: $3.11)$3.88/gal
US diesel (inauguration: $3.72)$5.09/gal
Brent crude (pre-war: ~$72)~$90–100 volatile
Gold (flight-to-safety)$4,549.80
GDP growth tracking1.0% annualised
Air Force tankers damaged/destroyed7
Taxpayer payment to cancel wind farms$928 million
Americans who oppose action (Fox News)58%
Trump disapproval (all-time high)59%
Stated war aims since Feb 287
War aims fully achieved0
🔍 Additional nuclear facility analysis & intelligence tracking: iranwarintel.com

SPECIAL SEGMENT: SUN TZU READS DAY 25

Entirely fictional and speculative. This is an imagined voice, grounded in Sun Tzu’s documented philosophy as recorded in The Art of War, applied to current events for the purposes of illumination. This is not a quotation. It is a thought experiment and hypothetical depiction only.

SUN TZU • General, Strategist, Author • 544–496 BC

On the Montage, the Mined Beach, and the Supreme Art Inverted

I will speak of three things. The information. The enemy. The art.

The supreme art of war is to subdue the enemy without fighting. On Day 25, Iran demonstrated this principle with greater precision than on any previous day. India purchased Iranian oil using the sanctions relief that the United States itself provided. The sanctions architecture that took decades to construct is being dismantled by the war that was supposed to enforce it. Iran did not fire a single shot to achieve this. It closed a strait, created economic panic, waited for its adversary to lift its own constraints, and sold its oil to one of the world’s largest economies. This is the supreme art, executed at the macroeconomic level, against the party that launched the war.

Know your enemy and know yourself. The United States on Day 25 has systematically disabled every mechanism by which it could know itself. The president receives a two-minute montage. He was not told about damage to his own aircraft. His legislature cannot obtain answers about troop deployments. His allies have not received the formal document of strategic intention for the first time in decades. This is not a failure of intelligence. It is a failure of self-knowledge — the most dangerous failure I described.

Meanwhile, the enemy — under bombardment, under blackout, under assassination — has transformed itself. The IRGC now runs the state. Thirty-one autonomous sub-districts operate with independent weapons and the authority to continue fighting regardless of what any central authority decides. The philosopher on the National Security Council was killed and replaced by an apparatchik. The party being bombed knows itself better than the party doing the bombing.

There is no instance of a country having benefited from prolonged warfare. Day 25. Stagflation at the door. Three hundred Americans wounded. A grandmother cleaning black rain off her courtyard. A teacher fearing a regime stronger than ever. A president watching clips while his allies smuggle polling data past gatekeepers. The principle does not require my commentary. It requires only honest observation.

The mines are on the beach at Kharg. The IRGC has prepared for exactly the operation being contemplated. An admiral who commanded NATO says he would be very worried. The chairman of the committee that funds the war cannot get answers about why the troops are deploying. And the president who could stop all of it is watching a montage.

The deal that was on the table 36 hours before February 28 was the supreme art available to the United States. It was declined. A diminished version remains available. Every day it is declined, the price rises. This is not strategic advice. It is arithmetic.

War makes honest fools of us all.

The harvest is no longer waiting. It arrived weeks ago. And it is still arriving.

“Perhaps this dark night will finally give way to dawn.”
— Zahra, grandmother, Tehran, cleaning black rain off her courtyard for Nowruz

“Wherever I look, it’s a mess.”
— Samar, student, Tehran, Day 25

⚠ AI DISCLOSURE & DISCLAIMER (REPEATED): This edition of The Unreported Brief was generated entirely by artificial intelligence (Claude by Anthropic, Opus 4.6) and draws exclusively on publicly available news reporting. It is not an authoritative source of truth. It does not represent any government, military, intelligence agency, or news organisation. All analysis is interpretive and speculative. Historical figure commentary is entirely fictional — these are hypothetical intellectual depictions only and do not constitute real quotations. Financial analysis does not constitute financial advice. All data points require independent verification. The Unreported Brief is an independent analytical newsletter for educational purposes only.

THE UNREPORTED BRIEF  |  Day 25  |  March 25, 2026

AI-generated analysis by Claude (Anthropic)

Sources: NBC News, New York Times, Wall Street Journal, BBC, Al Jazeera, The Economist, Axios, Politico, Politico Europe, CNN, Fox News, Breitbart, The Hill, Straight Arrow News, Reuters, AP, S&P Global, NewsNation

Additional tracking: iranwarintel.com  |  Casualty data: wardeathcount.live

Not an authoritative source. Historical commentary is entirely fictional, speculative, and hypothetical only. Verify all claims independently.

THE UNREPORTED BRIEF — Days 23-25

The Unreported Brief

THE UNREPORTED BRIEF

Independent Strategic Analysis  |  US–Iran Conflict  |  Days 23–25  |  March 23–25, 2026

Strategy • Diplomacy • History • What The Headlines Miss

⚠ AI DISCLOSURE & DISCLAIMER: This newsletter was generated by artificial intelligence (Claude by Anthropic) and draws exclusively on publicly available news reporting. It is not an authoritative source of truth. Historical figure commentary is entirely fictional, speculative, and hypothetical. All analysis is interpretive and generative — it requires independent verification. All data points are from publicly available information.

“I don’t know why we are fighting if we have never been attacked.”

Joshua Byers, 26, document clerk, Charlotte NC — Washington Post focus group, March 2026

The first president of the republic would like to address Mr. Byers directly. His letter appears below.

PART ONE: BEYOND THE HEADLINES

The narrative between the data points. What the news reports but does not connect.

I. The Phone Call That Started a War

On Day 23, Reuters correspondents Erin Banco and Gram Slattery published the most important piece of investigative journalism since the war began. Their reporting, sourced from three people briefed on a previously unreported phone call, revealed the decision architecture behind Operation Epic Fury — and it is not the story the administration has told.

Less than 48 hours before the first bombs fell on February 28, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called President Trump with intelligence showing that Supreme Leader Khamenei and his key lieutenants would meet at his Tehran compound earlier than expected. Netanyahu’s argument: there might never be a better chance to kill Khamenei, to avenge Iranian efforts to assassinate Trump personally, and to “make history” by helping eliminate a leadership reviled by the West. Iranians might take to the streets, he argued, overthrowing the theocracy.

The CIA had assessed the opposite — that Khamenei would likely be replaced by an internal hardliner. This prediction proved correct. Mojtaba Khamenei, described as even more harshly anti-American than his father, was named the new Supreme Leader within days. The regime change thesis was Netanyahu’s argument, not the intelligence community’s assessment.

Four days before the strikes, Secretary of State Rubio told congressional leaders that Israel would attack Iran whether or not the US participated, and Iran would retaliate against US targets. American intelligence confirmed this assessment. The prediction — Iranian counterattacks on US military assets, attacks on Gulf allies, Hormuz closure, oil price spikes — proved accurate in every particular.

The Banco reporting also revealed a critical antecedent: a first joint US-Israeli operation occurred in June 2025, striking nuclear facilities, missile sites, and Iranian leaders. Trump declared Iran’s nuclear program “obliterated.” But months later, Netanyahu told Trump at Mar-a-Lago that he was “not fully satisfied.” The January 3 capture of Venezuela’s President Maduro — zero American casualties, a dictator removed — gave Trump the template that ambitious operations could succeed without cost. The January massacres in Iran gave moral cover. The 7-page diplomatic proposal that was on the table before the bombs fell went unsigned.

Defense Secretary Hegseth confirmed the personal dimension on the record: “Iran tried to kill President Trump, and President Trump got the last laugh.” Twenty-five days later, the laughter echoes across 82,000 damaged structures, 2,300+ Iranian civilian dead, and a war that the president’s own defense secretary describes in three words: “We negotiate with bombs.”

II. The Fork: Fifteen Points or Three Thousand Paratroopers

Day 24 produced the war’s most consequential single day. Within the same twelve-hour window, two developments occurred that represent two mutually exclusive futures — and both were set in motion simultaneously.

The Golden Bridge: The New York Times, Reuters, and Israel’s Channel 12 confirmed the US has transmitted a 15-point plan to Iran via Pakistan. The Wall Street Journal reported its broad terms: dismantlement of three main nuclear sites, cessation of all enrichment on Iranian soil, suspension of the ballistic missile program, curbing of proxy support, and full reopening of the Strait of Hormuz. In return, Iran would receive nuclear sanctions relief and US assistance for civilian nuclear power. Channel 12 reported the US seeks a month-long ceasefire to discuss the plan. The US and Israel have granted temporary diplomatic immunity to Iran’s Foreign Minister Araghchi and Parliament Speaker Qalibaf for five days — the most concrete evidence that substantive negotiations are underway. Mediators from Turkey, Egypt, and Pakistan are pushing for a direct US-Iran meeting by Thursday.

The Sword: The Pentagon is deploying a brigade combat team from the 82nd Airborne Division — approximately 3,000 soldiers — to the Middle East, with written deployment orders expected in hours. The WSJ listed three possible missions: reopen the Strait of Hormuz by force, seize Iran’s strategic islands including Kharg Island (Iran’s primary oil export terminal), or launch a ground mission to capture enriched uranium. Retired Lt. Gen. Keith Kellogg, Trump’s former Ukraine envoy, went on Fox & Friends to advocate ground seizure of Kharg Island, comparing the strategy to Roman legions.

Trump, speaking from the Oval Office, declared “This war has been won” and claimed Iran had given the US a “very significant prize” related to Hormuz oil and gas. He named Vance, Rubio, Kushner, and Witkoff as involved in negotiations “right now.” He made no mention of the 82nd Airborne deployment. He made no mention of Israel. The White House responded to press queries about troop deployment with: “All announcements regarding troop deployments will come from the Department of War.” Not Defense. War.

The five-day pause on power plant strikes and the 82nd Airborne deployment are the two hands of the same strategy: one extends the olive branch, the other holds the sword. The question the Friday deadline will answer is which hand was real.

III. “Ridiculous and Unrealistic”: The Gap Between Two Worlds

The Wall Street Journal’s Summer Said and Robbie Gramer reported the IRGC’s counter-demands — and they exist in a different universe from the 15-point plan. The IRGC has consolidated power within the shattered regime and is pushing demands that include: closure of all American bases in the Gulf, reparations for attacks on Iran, a new Hormuz order allowing Iran to collect transit fees from ships (modeled on Egypt’s Suez Canal), guarantees the war won’t restart, an end to Israeli strikes on Hezbollah, lifting of all sanctions, and permission to keep its missile program with no negotiations to limit it.

A US official called the demands “ridiculous and unrealistic.” But the counter-demands reveal the IRGC’s strategic logic: the war has not destroyed the regime, and the regime knows it. If the US wants to stop bombing, the IRGC reasons, then the US should pay the price of admission — not the other way around. Iran’s position is that it is surviving, not surrendering.

Meanwhile, Iran told the UN’s International Maritime Organization that “non-hostile” vessels may pass through Hormuz “in coordination with Iranian authorities” — a selective opening that preserves Iran’s claim to sovereignty over the strait while allowing some oil to flow. And Al Jazeera’s fact-check noted what should have been headline news: Iran has long said it does not seek nuclear weapons. Khamenei repeatedly stated this. The IAEA found no evidence of a weapons program. Trump’s claim that Iran “agreed they will never have a nuclear weapon” is presenting Iran’s pre-existing position as a concession won through bombing.

IV. $160 a Barrel: The Price Behind the Price

The Philippines became the first country in the world to declare a national energy emergency in response to the conflict. It imports 98% of its oil from the Persian Gulf. Diesel and petrol prices have more than doubled. President Marcos Jr. cited “imminent danger” and formed a committee to oversee distribution of fuel, food, and medicine. The energy minister says the country has 45 days of supply. The order remains in force for one year. A country 7,000 miles from the Strait of Hormuz is rationing fuel because of a phone call between Trump and Netanyahu.

Shell CEO Wael Sawan, speaking at CERAWeek in Houston, delivered the most technically precise warning yet: fuel supplies will tighten before oil supplies do. The cascade: jet fuel is already impacted, diesel is next, then gasoline — arriving just as summer driving season begins. Refineries in the Gulf have been struck. Shell’s own Pearl gas-to-liquids facility in Qatar was hit by an Iranian missile. Europe will see shortfalls in April. Meanwhile, US jet fuel prices have doubled from $2.17 to $4.56 per gallon. United Airlines is cutting 5% of flights. Delta added $400 million in fuel costs in March alone. Airlines warn inventories could run dry within weeks.

But the number that matters most is hidden in the WSJ’s commodities reporting: traders are paying $160 per barrel for Emirati oil that can bypass the Strait of Hormuz. The Brent benchmark at ~$100 is the average. The marginal barrel — the one that has to navigate the war zone — costs 60% more. The physical market has diverged from the paper market. The physical market is pricing a war that doesn’t end.

And on the same day, Fortune published what should have been the lead story in every newspaper: the US Treasury’s own consolidated financial statements for FY2025 show $6.06 trillion in assets against $47.78 trillion in liabilities — a negative net position of $41.72 trillion. When unfunded social insurance obligations are included, total federal obligations reach $136.2 trillion — roughly five times annual GDP. The GAO has issued a disclaimer of opinion on the government’s financial statements for the 29th consecutive year. The $200 billion war supplemental request is being made by a government that is, by its own Treasury’s accounting, insolvent. A household earning $52,446, spending $73,378, already $1.3 million in debt — and now funding a war.

V. The Regime Change That Keeps Giving

In Baghdad, US warplanes flew low over the city — “people here say they haven’t heard US aeroplanes above Baghdad flying so low since the American invasion,” BBC’s Nicolas Haque reported. The US consulate in Erbil was attacked by drones. And then the development that crystallizes twenty years of American foreign policy into a single sentence: the Iraqi government held an emergency meeting and formally authorized Iran-backed militias to respond to US air strikes.

The United States invaded Iraq in 2003 to overthrow Saddam Hussein. The cost: 4,431 American service members killed, an estimated 200,000+ Iraqi civilians dead, $2-3 trillion in direct and indirect spending over two decades. The US built the government that exists today. Trained its military. Wrote its constitution. Funded its institutions. That government just authorized Iranian proxies to fire on American forces.

This is the definitive counter-evidence to the Iran regime change thesis. The Banco exclusive revealed that Netanyahu’s closing argument to Trump was that Iranians would overthrow the theocracy. Brigadier General Amir Avivi told Fox News that Iran is “weeks” from uprising. Iraq is the answer to both of them. The US achieved total, complete military regime change in Iraq — and twenty years later, the government it built provides legal cover for the enemy’s proxies to shoot at its soldiers. Regime change doesn’t produce the country you want. It produces a country. And countries do what countries do: they survive, and they align with whoever is closest when the liberator goes home. Geography doesn’t change. Qatar’s spokesman said it on Day 24: “We can’t change geography.” Iraq is the 20-year proof of that sentence.

VI. 36% and Falling: The Domestic Reckoning

Reuters/Ipsos released the poll number that frames everything: Trump’s approval has hit 36% approve / 62% disapprove — the lowest of his second term, driven specifically by economic stewardship as gas prices surge. A Democrat just flipped Trump’s own Mar-a-Lago district in a Florida special election.

The POLITICO/Public First poll reveals the fracture within the Trump coalition: 81% of self-identified MAGA voters backed the strikes, but only 61% of non-MAGA Trump voters did. On accepting more American casualties, MAGA is at 58%, but non-MAGA Trump supporters drop to 44%. Only 43% of all Americans support the strikes. And 7% — seven percent — support large-scale ground operations. The 82nd Airborne is deploying into a political environment where the mission it would execute has 7% public support.

Scott McConnell, founding editor of The American Conservative, publicly called on Vice President Vance to support a 25th Amendment transition. This is not a liberal voice — it is the conservative antiwar movement reaching constitutional expression. Media outlets note Vance has “side-stepped giving a public vote of confidence in the war.” His only public statement, from March 13: “I hate to disappoint you, but I’m not going to show up here and, in front of God and everybody else, tell you exactly what I said in that classified room.” That is not a vote of confidence. It is a man preserving his options. Trump publicly named Vance as involved in negotiations — binding the vice president to the war’s outcome. The Senate voted 53-47 to reject a third war powers resolution. Rand Paul (R) voted for it. John Fetterman (D) voted against.

PART TWO: THE VERIFIED FACTS

What happened. What it means. What to watch.

Key Developments: Days 23–25

  • UK Air War Escalation: RAF shot down 14 Iranian drones overnight at Erbil — largest engagement in weeks. British pilots have flown 900 hours in four weeks. UK deployed additional air defense to Cyprus. RAF Typhoons and F-35s confirmed defensive missions over Cyprus, Japan, and Qatar.
  • UK-France Hormuz Coalition: UK and France building multinational coalition to secure Hormuz — “once conditions allow.” UK offering security conference in Portsmouth or London. Officials confirm mines laid in strait. Solution requires crewed and autonomous mine-clearance vessels.
  • Iran Succession: Mohammad Bagher Zolghar appointed SNSC secretary, replacing killed Ali Larijani. IRGC deputy commander, deputy interior minister, Expediency Council secretary. Fourth major succession event of the war. The machine replaces its parts.
  • Qatar Positioning: Denies mediating but acknowledges “current negotiations” exist. No Iranian attacks on Qatar since Thursday. 200+ drone attacks total, 90%+ intercepted. Al-Udeid base closure denied. “We can’t change geography.”
  • Netanyahu: 36-second video: “We will protect our vital interests under any circumstances.” 100kg warhead crater in residential Tel Aviv. Israel pushes deeper into southern Lebanon. Fresh Beirut evacuation warnings. Made no appearance in Trump’s Oval Office remarks.
  • Bushehr: Nuclear power plant struck again (2nd time). Iran’s AEOI claims no damage. Russia-built facility. AEOI warns of “dangerous and irreparable consequences” for Gulf countries.
  • Russia/Caspian: Kremlin warns “extremely negatively” about war spillover into Caspian Sea after Israeli strikes on Iranian Navy infrastructure there. Russia and Iran share Caspian coastline.
  • Germany: President Steinmeier calls war “contrary to international law” and a “disastrous mistake.” Compares transatlantic rupture to post-Ukraine Russia relations. Calls for European tech/defense independence.
  • Trump-Modi: Call on war and Hormuz. Modi: India supports de-escalation. Hormuz must be “open, secure and accessible.”
  • Macron: Spoke to Pezeshkian urging “good faith” negotiations. Israeli President Herzog told Macron Israel must continue operations. Two allies, incompatible messages.
  • CERAWeek: TotalEnergies, ADNOC, Chevron, Vitol warn of global economic damage beyond energy prices. ConocoPhillips CEO pleads for military protection of Qatari corporate assets.
  • Kuwait: Army “responding to hostile missile and drone threats.” Airport fuel tank hit. Seven power transmission lines damaged.
  • Iranian Voices (BBC Persian): Karaj: “I don’t think they will negotiate.” Tehran: “Trump is buying time.” “His games are complex.” The regime is “very much in place.”
  • AWS Bahrain: Amazon Web Services confirms conflict has disrupted data center cluster in Bahrain.

Escalation vs. Off-Ramp Signals

▲ Escalation Signals

  • ↑ 3,000 82nd Airborne BCT deploying — orders imminent
  • ↑ Iraq authorizes Iran-backed militias to attack US forces
  • ↑ US warplanes fly low over Baghdad — not seen since 2003
  • ↑ 14 drones at Erbil — largest engagement in weeks
  • ↑ Israel pushes deeper into Lebanon; Beirut evacuations
  • ↑ Bushehr nuclear plant struck for second time
  • ↑ Israel strikes Iranian Navy in Caspian — Russia warns
  • ↑ Kuwait under active attack; airport fuel tank hit
  • ↑ Kellogg advocates Kharg Island ground seizure
  • ↑ Hegseth: “We negotiate with bombs”
  • ↑ $160/bbl for Hormuz-bypass crude
  • ↑ IRGC demands: US base closures, reparations

▼ Off-Ramp Signals

  • ↓ 15-point plan transmitted to Iran via Pakistan
  • ↓ Immunity granted to Araghchi & Qalibaf (5 days)
  • ↓ Mediators aim for US-Iran meeting by Thursday
  • ↓ Five-day pause on power plant strikes
  • ↓ Iran: non-hostile vessels may pass Hormuz
  • ↓ No Iranian attacks on Qatar since Thursday
  • ↓ Trump names Vance/Rubio/Kushner/Witkoff in talks
  • ↓ Pakistan PM offers Islamabad — Trump amplifies
  • ↓ Macron urges Pezeshkian: “good faith”
  • ↓ UK-France Hormuz coalition framework forming
  • ↓ Channel 12: US seeks month-long ceasefire
ASSESSMENT: Phase 5 has begun with both doors open. The 15-point plan and the 82nd Airborne are the two hands of the same strategy. The gap between US demands (total nuclear capitulation) and IRGC counter-demands (US withdrawal and reparations) is not a negotiating distance — it is two universes. The Friday deadline (March 28) is the inflection point. If Islamabad talks produce framework terms, Phase 5 becomes the Golden Bridge. If they produce nothing, Phase 5 becomes the Prolonged War — and 3,000 paratroopers enter a theater where 7% of Americans support what they would do. Meanwhile, the war the president says he has won continues to produce 14-drone engagements, residential missile craters in Tel Aviv, a new Iraqi front, and $160 oil in the physical market. The oil chart will answer before any government does.

Count the Dead

Iranian civilians killed2,300+
US service members killed13+
Lebanese killed (past 24 hrs)33+
Iranian structures damaged82,000+
  — Homes62,000
  — Schools498
  — Medical facilities281
Iranians displaced3.2M+
CENTCOM: Targets struck9,000+
CENTCOM: Combat flights9,000+
CENTCOM: Vessels destroyed140+

Real-time tracking: wardeathcount.live  |  Figures from Reuters, Iranian Red Crescent, CENTCOM, Al Jazeera, AP. True figures likely higher.

The Receipts

Brent crude (Day 24)~$100/bbl
Brent crude (pre-war)~$72/bbl
Physical crude (bypass)$160/bbl
Day 23 Brent swing$113→$97→$103
US gasoline (avg)$3.88/gal
US gasoline (inauguration)$3.11/gal
US jet fuel$2.17→$4.56/gal
War spending (25 days)$46B+
Supplemental request$200B pending
Treasury net position−$41.72T
Total obligations (unfunded)$136.2T
Trump approval36% / 62%
Ground ops support7%
Overall strike support43%
FTSE 100 (5-day)−4.8%
Philippines fuel supply45 days
Delta fuel added (March)+$400M
War powers votes (3x)53-47 rejected

SPECIAL SEGMENT: THE WAR COUNCIL

Fictional commentary grounded in documented philosophy. Not endorsement. Not prediction. A lens.

George Washington — Commander-in-Chief, Continental Army; First President of the United States

A Letter to Joshua Byers of Charlotte, North Carolina

Mr. Byers —

You asked a question your representatives will not answer. You said: “I don’t know why we are fighting if we have never been attacked.” You are twenty-six years old. You are a document clerk. And you have, in seventeen words, identified the constitutional crisis that three branches of government have thus far declined to name.

I will try to answer you honestly, because you deserve honesty, and because the republic I helped to build was designed on the premise that its citizens would receive it.

You were not attacked. The intelligence services of the United States assessed that Iran’s Supreme Leader would be meeting with his lieutenants on a particular Saturday morning. The Prime Minister of Israel called the President and argued that this was an unrepeatable opportunity. The Central Intelligence Agency assessed that killing the Supreme Leader would produce a hardliner replacement, not a democratic uprising. That assessment proved correct. The Secretary of State told Congressional leaders, four days before the strikes, that Israel would attack regardless and that Iran would retaliate against American targets. That assessment also proved correct. The seven-page diplomatic proposal that was on the table went unsigned. The bombs fell.

Your question — why are we fighting if we were never attacked — has a factual answer: the President ordered Operation Epic Fury on February 27, 2026, after a phone call in which the Israeli Prime Minister argued for a joint killing of Iran’s Supreme Leader, citing an unrepeatable intelligence window and the opportunity to avenge assassination plots against the President himself. The Defense Secretary later confirmed the revenge motive on the record. The President has said the decision was his alone. Reuters reporting suggests the Israeli Prime Minister’s argument was “persuasive.”

Your question also has a constitutional answer, and it is worse than the factual one. The Congress of the United States has voted three times on resolutions to assert its war-making authority. Three times, the Senate rejected them — most recently, 53 to 47. The Constitution I helped to write vests the power to declare war in the Congress, not in the President, precisely because I understood what happens when a single individual commands both the army and the justification for using it. I did not design a system in which the legislature watches the executive prosecute an undeclared war and votes, three times, to continue watching.

But it is Iraq that would break my heart, Mr. Byers, and I wish to speak to you about it plainly.

I spent the treasury of the republic once before on a war of choice in that country. I sent 4,431 Americans to die for it. I was told it was for democracy, for freedom, for a new Iraq. We built the government that stands today. We trained its military. We wrote its constitution. And on Day 24 of this new war, that government — the one we built with American blood and American treasure — held an emergency meeting and authorized the militias funded by Iran to fire upon American soldiers.

The regime I changed became the instrument of the enemy I changed it to defeat.

And now they tell me we should change the regime in Iran. They tell me the streets will rise. They tell me the theocracy will fall. They told me the same about Iraq. The streets did not rise as we intended. The democracy we planted grew toward the sun that was closest — and the closest sun was Iran. Geography does not change. Iran will always be Iraq’s neighbor. It will always be Qatar’s neighbor. It will always be there, across the water, after the last American transport has gone.

You asked why we are fighting. I will tell you what I told the republic in my farewell: “The great rule of conduct for us in regard to foreign nations is in extending our commercial relations, to have with them as little political connection as possible.” And: “It is our true policy to steer clear of permanent alliances with any portion of the foreign world.” I said these words because I knew what a young republic would become if it acquired the habit of fighting wars at the urging of other nations’ leaders, for other nations’ objectives, with its own citizens’ blood.

The habit has been acquired. The blood has been spent. The objectives belong to others. And the document clerk from Charlotte, North Carolina, is the only person in the republic asking the question the Constitution was designed to force the Congress to answer.

I cannot tell you why you are fighting, Mr. Byers. I can only tell you that in the republic I designed, you were never supposed to need to ask.

Your servant,
G. Washington

This commentary is entirely fictional and speculative. George Washington is a historical figure used as an analytical lens. His documented philosophy and farewell address language are applied to current events as a thought experiment only.

Additional intelligence and nuclear facility tracking: iranwarintel.com

War makes honest fools of us all.

The harvest is no longer waiting. It is arriving in Manila. It is arriving in Baghdad. It is being loaded onto C-17s at Fort Liberty.

The harvest keeps receipts. And the receipts now have fifteen points — from both sides, and they don’t match.

THE UNREPORTED BRIEF  |  Days 23–25  |  March 23–25, 2026

AI-generated analysis by Claude (Anthropic)

Sources: Reuters, BBC, WSJ, NYT, Washington Post, Fox News, Al Jazeera, Financial Times, Bloomberg, Fortune, Newsweek, Jerusalem Post, Channel 12, Channel 14, POLITICO, CERAWeek/S&P Global, AP, CENTCOM, Iranian Red Crescent, Reuters/Ipsos

⚠ FINAL DISCLAIMER: This newsletter was generated by artificial intelligence. All analysis is generative and requires independent verification. All data points are from publicly available information. Historical persons depicted are entirely fictional and hypothetical. Not an authoritative source. Verify all claims independently.