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Civilian death toll in Iran war rises to 1,443 - HRANA

Mar 24, 2026, 03:14 GMT+0

At least 36 civilians were killed and 138 injured across Iran on March 23, according to figures compiled by the rights group HRANA.

The group said the casualties were recorded from the first minutes of the day until the end of March 23, Tehran time.

Aggregated data collected by HRANA since the start of the conflict on February 28 indicates that at least 1,443 civilians have been killed, including 217 children.

The figures are based on incidents recorded by the group and use minimum values for cases where casualties were reported as “more than” a specific number.

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Tehran keeps up war rhetoric after Trump signals possible talks

Mar 24, 2026, 02:57 GMT+0
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Behrouz Turani

Iranian state media continued issuing warnings against the United States even after President Donald Trump said Monday that the two countries had held “constructive” talks—and that he was therefore postponing planned strikes on Iran’s power grid.

Exchanging threats—sometimes several times a day—has become the dominant mode of communication between Tehran and Washington.

The IRGC-linked Fars News Agency denied that any contact had taken place between the two sides, while a senior commander escalated the rhetoric live on Iran’s state broadcaster.

“We will hit you so hard that your dentures will be knocked out of your mouth.”

Major General Abdollahi of the IRGC’s Khatam al-Anbia Headquarters also vowed to deploy “a new secret weapon that will bring an end to the enemy’s operations.”

Over the past two days, following Trump’s threat to strike Iran’s power-generation infrastructure unless Tehran unconditionally opens the Strait of Hormuz, several Iranian commanders and officials have issued counter-threats.

The core message was captured in an IRGC statement quoted by Entekhab on March 23: “We will respond to any attack immediately and at the same level.”

Entekhab also cited an IRGC spokesperson elaborating on Tehran’s position: “They hit schools and hospitals, but we did not reciprocate. If they attack power plants, we will strike power plants in countries that host US bases.” That would include much of the Middle East.

In a March 22 post on X, Esmail Saghab Esfahani, Iran’s vice president for energy optimization and strategic management, responded to Trump’s ultimatum.

“The Strait of Hormuz game has put so much pressure on Trump that he has issued a 48-hour ultimatum—unaware that the next move, which is the destruction of the most important electricity and water infrastructure of the Zionist regime and the United States in the region, will put even more pressure on him,” he wrote.

Saghab Esfahani also suggested that residents of Israel and people in countries hosting Iran’s adversaries would be wise to store water and charge their phones during those 48 hours.

Nour News, an outlet close to Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, responded with a mix of defiance and warning.

“Trump’s threat to destroy Iran’s electrical infrastructure is an explicit admission of a war crime and a sign of desperation,” it said.

In the hours before Trump’s deadline, a different narrative was circulating among many Iranian social-media users—particularly within opposition circles.

Rather than targeting infrastructure that ultimately serves the Iranian public, they urged the United States and Israel to focus on dismantling the security apparatus that underpins the state’s repressive machinery.

The tension was heightened further by an IRGC statement announcing what it described as a shift in Iran’s military doctrine—from a defensive posture to an offensive one.

As for ordinary Iranians, many appear increasingly anxious about how attacks on infrastructure might affect their already strained daily lives.

In Tehran—unlike in US markets—there has been no calm after Trump’s announcements. The drums of war are growing louder.

Oil rebounds after earlier drop on Trump Iran remarks

Mar 24, 2026, 02:47 GMT+0

The global benchmark oil price, Brent crude, rose to just over $104 per barrel late Monday, recovering some of the losses recorded earlier in the day.

Prices had dropped sharply from nearly $113 to around $97 after President Donald Trump said the United States and Iran were holding “productive conversations.”

The rebound later in the day suggests markets remain uncertain about the trajectory of the war and the potential for disruptions to energy supplies.

US claims of Iran talks aim to sow divisions - Tasnim

Mar 24, 2026, 02:32 GMT+0

An editorial published Tuesday by Iran’s IRGC-linked Tasnim News Agency said claims about behind-the-scenes negotiations between Tehran and Washington are part of a strategy to create divisions within Iran.

The commentary argued that proposals for secret talks involving only part of Iran’s political establishment reflected a “complex design by the enemy” aimed at undermining unity during the war.

It also dismissed reports circulating Monday that Iran’s parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf could be involved in negotiations, saying the suggestion was intended to trigger political infighting inside the country.

The editorial insisted that Iran already has a unified framework, approved by all centers of power, for how the country should approach an eventual exit from the war.

EU chief urges negotiations to end Iran war

Mar 24, 2026, 02:04 GMT+0

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said Tuesday it was time for negotiations to end the hostilities involving Iran, warning the conflict is having global economic consequences.

“The situation is critical for the energy supply worldwide. We all feel the knock-on effects on gas and oil prices, our businesses and our societies,” von der Leyen said at a news conference with Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese.

“It is of utmost importance that we come to a solution that is negotiated and this puts an end to the hostilities that we see in the Middle East,” she said.

Von der Leyen also condemned Iran’s attacks on civilian infrastructure across the region.

North Korea’s Kim vows to strengthen nuclear forces amid Iran war

Mar 24, 2026, 01:26 GMT+0

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un said his country would strengthen its nuclear forces amid US-Israeli military campaign against Iran, rejecting the idea of disarmament in exchange for economic benefits or security guarantees.

“The current world reality, where the dignity and rights of sovereign states are mercilessly violated by unilateral force and violence, clearly teaches what the true guarantee of a state’s existence and peace is,” Kim said Monday in an address to the Supreme People’s Assembly.

In remarks widely seen as referring to the ongoing Iran war, Kim said that Pyongyang would continue strengthening its nuclear capabilities, presenting the arsenal as essential for safeguarding the country’s sovereignty and long-term security.