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Iran internet blackout enters 18th day, NetBlocks says

Mar 17, 2026, 07:59 GMT+0Updated: 10:45 GMT+0

Iran’s nationwide internet blackout entered its 18th day on Tuesday, with public access to the global internet still largely cut off, according to NetBlocks.

The monitoring group said the disruption had passed 408 hours, leaving most users without international connectivity while a small number of approved users retained limited access.

"Chosen users are granted privileged access, while the remainder are left with a limited domestic intranet under increasingly tight control," NetBlocks said.

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UAE’s Fujairah port suspends oil loadings after attacks - Bloomberg

Mar 17, 2026, 07:50 GMT+0

Oil loadings at the UAE’s key Fujairah port have been suspended following a series of war-related strikes, Bloomberg News reported on Tuesday, citing a shipping agent and a person familiar with the matter.

Loading berths at the Fujairah Oil Tanker Terminals were halted as of Tuesday morning, while an offshore mooring point operated with Dutch firm Koninklijke Vopak also stopped operations, according to the report.

Crude loadings by Abu Dhabi National Oil Co. at the port remained suspended, Bloomberg said.

Fujairah, a major hub for crude and fuel exports located outside the Strait of Hormuz, has become increasingly important as the waterway has been largely disrupted by the conflict.

Separately, a Kuwait-flagged LPG tanker suffered minor damage after being hit by drone debris off Fujairah, a person familiar with the matter told Bloomberg.

Iraq in talks with Iran to allow tankers through Hormuz, minister says

Mar 17, 2026, 07:35 GMT+0

Iraq’s oil minister said on Tuesday that Baghdad was in contact with Iran to allow some oil tankers to pass through the Strait of Hormuz, the state news agency reported.

Iraq is also working to resume exports through the Kirkuk-Ceyhan pipeline to Turkey as it seeks to offset shipping disruptions caused by the Hormuz crisis.

The effort followed attacks on some vessels off Iraq’s coast during transfer operations.

Pay delays hit Iran security units as morale declines

Mar 17, 2026, 07:27 GMT+0
Pay delays hit Iran security units as morale declines
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Signs of discontent, low morale, financial strain and desertion are spreading among parts of Iran’s security and military forces, Iran International has learned.

Members of the Special Units Command received a notice on Friday saying salary payments for some units had run into problems, according to people familiar with the matter. The delay marked the third time this year that wages for those forces are being paid late.

Following the delays, some personnel refused to attend pro-government gatherings, the sources said, causing disruptions in deployment in some major cities.

Retirees and some army personnel have also not been paid for a second straight month.

Some senior commanders accuse the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps of using the financial crisis at Bank Sepah to weaken the police force and strengthen other institutions, especially bodies tied to the clerical establishment.

Israel says it struck missile and command sites in Iran

Mar 17, 2026, 07:13 GMT+0

Israel’s military said on Tuesday that it struck missile production sites, command centers and air defense systems in Tehran, Shiraz and Tabriz a day earlier.

In Tehran, the strikes hit command centers linked to Iran’s security bodies, including the Intelligence Ministry and the Basij, it said. Israel’s military added that it also struck sites used to store and launch drones, ballistic missiles and air defense systems.

In Shiraz, the military said it struck an internal security forces command center and a ballistic missile site.

In Tabriz, additional air defense systems were destroyed, which the IDF said would expand Israel’s aerial superiority and help protect the country.

The Israeli military said the strikes were part of an ongoing campaign to deepen damage to Iran’s core systems and reduce its ability to threaten Israel.

US forces must leave region, Iran’s parliament speaker says

Mar 17, 2026, 06:49 GMT+0

The US military presence in the Middle East does not bring security and regional countries would shape a new order without Washington, Iran’s parliament speaker said on Tuesday.

Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf said in a recorded video that security in the region should be established by regional countries and added that US forces needed to leave.

“The face and order of the Middle East will change, but not according to US plans,” he said. “We, the Islamic countries of the region, will establish regional order and security in the economic and security dimensions.”

He also said Iran had changed the design and system of its missile launchers after the 12-day war and that “the enemy cannot hit them.”

Ghalibaf also said the only goal the adversaries had achieved was the killing of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, adding that a “young Khamenei” has replaced him.