THE UNREPORTED BRIEF
Independent Strategic Analysis | US–Iran Conflict | Days 23–25 | March 23–25, 2026
Strategy • Diplomacy • History • What The Headlines Miss
“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
Count the Dead
Real-time tracking: wardeathcount.live | Figures from Reuters, Iranian Red Crescent, CENTCOM, Al Jazeera, AP. True figures likely higher.
The Receipts
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.
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