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Israel plans at least three more weeks of strikes on Iran - CNN

Mar 15, 2026, 14:53 GMT+0

Israel’s military is planning at least three more weeks of its campaign against Iran and still has “thousands of targets” remaining, CNN reported on Sunday, citing an Israeli military spokesperson.

“We have thousands of targets ahead,” CNN quoted Israeli military spokesperson Brig. Gen. Effie Defrin as saying.

“We are ready, in coordination with our US allies, with plans through at least the Jewish holiday of Passover, about three weeks from now,” he said.

“And we have deeper plans for even three weeks beyond that,” Defrin added.

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  • Rapid deterioration of Iran-UAE ties threatens a critical trade lifeline
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Israel says Hezbollah commander killed was brother of US synagogue attacker

Mar 15, 2026, 14:43 GMT+0

The Israeli military said on Sunday that a Hezbollah commander killed in an Israeli airstrike last week was the brother of a man accused of carrying out an attack on a synagogue in the United States.

In a statement, the military said Ibrahim Muhammad Ghazali, a Hezbollah commander responsible for managing weapons operations within a specialized branch of the group’s Badr Unit, was killed in an Israeli Air Force strike on a Hezbollah military structure last week.

"His brother, Ayman Muhammad Ghazali, carried out the terror attack in Michigan this past Thursday," the statement added.

US energy secretary says Iran war could end within 'few weeks'

Mar 15, 2026, 14:05 GMT+0

US Energy Secretary Chris Wright said on Sunday he expects the war between the United States and Iran to end within weeks, with oil supplies rebounding and energy prices falling afterward.

“I think that this conflict will certainly come to the end in the next few weeks – could be sooner than that,” Wright said in an interview with ABC’s This Week.

“But the conflict will come to the end in the next few weeks, and we'll see a rebound in supplies and a pushing down in prices after that,” he added.

Prince Pahlavi sets out five economic goals for post-Islamic Republic transition

Mar 15, 2026, 12:39 GMT+0

Exiled prince Reza Pahlavi on Sunday outlined what he described as five economic goals for a future transition in Iran, saying the country’s wealth must be taken back from corruption, military control and the Islamic Republic’s mismanagement.

In a video message, Pahlavi said a transition authority would remove Iran’s economy from the control of military and paramilitary groups and from what he called economic criminals.

He said it would recover seized or stolen national wealth and return it to Iranian citizens, while redirecting state resources away from foreign militias and toward rebuilding infrastructure, particularly water, electricity and fuel networks.

He also said the transition system would dismantle rent-seeking, entrenched corruption and monopolies, and instead channel national wealth into healthcare, education and poverty reduction.

As a fifth goal, he said Iran’s greatest asset was its people rather than oil and gas, and pledged investment in human capital, reconnection to the global economy and the return of economic stability, growth and prosperity.

Pahlavi said these were not empty promises but commitments he would pursue alongside the Iranian people.

Iran commander says Tehran will keep using Hormuz as pressure point

Mar 15, 2026, 11:57 GMT+0

A senior Iranian military commander said the country’s armed forces are prepared to use all geopolitical leverage, including controlling traffic through the strategic Strait of Hormuz, to pressure the United States and Israel.

Ali Abdollahi, commander of Iran’s Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters, said the armed forces were determined to use the waterway to bring what he described as “aggressors” to their knees, adding that Iran had already delivered “heavy blows” to its enemies.

Abdollahi said Iran had not initiated the war but would determine how it ends, insisting that the United States and Israel ultimately “have no choice but to surrender” in the face of what he called Iran’s military strength.

UAE revokes licenses of five Iranian schools

Mar 15, 2026, 11:50 GMT+0

Iran’s education authorities say five Iranian educational complexes in the United Arab Emirates have had their operating licenses revoked, leaving around 2,500 students uncertain about how they will continue their schooling.

The head of Iran’s Center for Overseas Schools, Mohammad Salimi, said the closures have left thousands of Iranian students studying in the UAE without a clear path to continue their education.

Iran International reported last week that the United Arab Emirates had ordered the closure of institutions linked to the Islamic Republic, including the Iranian Hospital, Iranian schools and the Iranian Club in Dubai, and had instructed staff sent from Iran who work at those facilities to leave the country.