Major developments we’re following:
* A day after Tehran dismissed U.S.
President Donald Trump’s 15-point ceasefire plan, the American leader claimed that Iran was “begging to make a deal,” and that he wasn’t the one pushing for negotiations.
Earlier Thursday, Trump told Tehran to “get serious soon” on negotiating an end to the war.
* Israel said Thursday it killed Commodore Alireza Tangsiri, the head of Iranian Revolutionary Guard’s navy.
Israel’s Defense Minister Israel Katz said Tangsiri had been killed along with other senior naval commanders in a strike overnight.
* The secretary-general of a bloc of Gulf Arab countries said that Iran is charging fees for ships to safely transit the Strait of Hormuz.
Industry experts say some ships are paying in Chinese yuan to pass through the Strait of Hormuz, where 20% of all traded oil and natural gas is transported in peacetime.
* The death toll from the war has risen to more than 1,500 people in Iran, nearly 1,100 people in Lebanon, 22 Israelis and 13 U.S. military members, as well as a number of civilians on land and sea in the Gulf region.
Millions of people in Lebanon and Iran have been displaced.
Brig.
Gen.
Effie Defrin, an Israeli military spokesperson, said Thursday that the army needs about 15,000 soldiers, roughly half of them combat troops, to be at full strength for its multiple missions.
Israel can call up tens of thousands of reservists, but repeated deployments have prompted past pushback, with many citing exhaustion and the financial strain of leaving work and family behind.
With tens of thousands still deployed in Gaza and more sent to Lebanon, Defrin said Israel expected to broaden operations on several fronts.
Defrin also pointed to the occupied West Bank.
Lt.
Gen.
Eyal Zamir, the military’s chief of staff, warned last week that the army should not have to divert forces to the West Bank during a multi-front war to contend with attacks by Israeli settlers on Palestinians and unauthorized outposts in military-controlled zones.
Doubt has taken over again on Wall Street about a possible end to the conflict.
The S&P 500 fell 1.7% Thursday.
The index is headed for a fifth straight losing week, which would be the longest such losing streak in almost four years.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 1%, and the Nasdaq composite sank 2.4%.
They’re the latest flip-flops for financial markets this week after Iran rejected a U.S. offer for a ceasefire.
Oil prices rose more than 4%, and Treasury yields climbed in the bond market.
Maximo Torero said markets will absorb the Iran war’s impact if the conflict ends in the next two weeks or so.
But if it continues for three to six months it will not only impact food security and energy but other sectors as well because prices will rise.
And those rising prices, and the fall in remittances from overseas workers, will affect economic development and growth across the globe, the chief economist for the U.N.
Food and Agriculture Organization told a U.N. press conference Thursday.
He said an El Nino climate phenomenon, which tends to increase global temperatures, is also expected soon.
A strong El Nino could significantly exacerbate the economic situation, he said.
“My message is, we need to find a way to resolve this problem as soon as possible,” Torero said in the video press conference.
“Because, if not, the consequences … could be very dramatic, even worse that what happened in the Ukraine war.”
“The first line of borders is a no-man zone.
This is basically a large parking lot that is facing Israel,” said Mohanad Hage Ali, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Middle East think tank in Beirut.
“There is nothing there, no movement, nothing at all,” he said.
Lebanese movement is restricted farther north.
During last year’s olive harvest, farmers struggled to reach groves because of Israeli strikes and had to be accompanied by Lebanese troops and U.N. peacekeepers, who coordinated with Israel.
Sarit Zehavi, the founder and president of the Alma Institute and a retired Israeli military officer, said Israel will likely establish a more extensive area of control stretching farther north.
She acknowledged that Israel was unlikely to defeat Hezbollah and was at risk of having to maintain a long-term presence in southern Lebanon.
“But the other alternative is to take the risk that we will be slaughtered.
It’s as simple as that,” she said.
Israel invaded southern Lebanon in 1982 during the country’s civil war.
Hezbollah, established that year, waged a guerrilla campaign that eventually ended the Israeli occupation in 2000.
As Israel’s leaders hint at a long-term occupation of southern Lebanon modeled on the devastating conquest of much of Gaza, many Lebanese who fled their homes are in limbo.
Some fear they may never return.
Elias Konsol and his neighbors fled the Christian border village of Alma al-Shaab with U.N. peacekeepers’ help.
He was reunited with his mother, who cried in his arms, at a church near Beirut where funeral services were being held for a resident killed in an Israeli strike.
Konsol said there were no weapons or Hezbollah fighters in his village, but it was forced to evacuate anyway.
“We no longer know our fate,” he said.
“We don’t know if we will see our homes and village again.”
The Iran war’s disruption of oil exports from the Middle East will substantially boost consumer prices while also slowing growth in the United States and many other developed countries, the Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development said Thursday.
The OECD expects U.S. inflation to jump to an annual average of 4.2% this year, from about 2.6% in 2025.
The increase will manly be driven by spiking gas costs, but fertilizer exports have also been interrupted and could raise food prices in coming months, the OECD said.
“In the United States, the impact of higher energy prices on inflation will more than offset the effect from the decline in effective tariff rates on imports,” the OECD’s interim outlook report said.
Growth is expected to slip to 2% this year from 2.1% in 2025, then decline further next year to 1.7%.
In 20 of the largest countries, referred to as the Group of 20, which includes Japan, Europe, and large emerging economies such as Brazil, inflation is forecast to rise to 4% from 3.4%.
Even though Spain generated over half its electricity last year from renewable sources, its government is still concerned that a global scarcity of oil and natural gas coming from the Middle East will impact consumers with higher prices at the pump.
So parliament has approved a package of emergency economic measures, including slashing the sales tax on gas and electricity bills from 21% to 10%.
The government estimates that car owners will save 30 cents on the euro for every liter of gas, or around 20 euros per tank.
Truck drivers, farmers, herders and fishermen will be able to claim refunds of 20 cents per each liter for diesel from the government.
The same refund will apply to fertilizers.
Spain is also freezing the price of butane and propane.
The government says the measures total 5 billion euros ($5.7 billion) and will help 20 million of Spain’s 49 million residents.
The 162nd Division’s deployment is the latest expansion of Israel’s ground offensive against Hezbollah, as senior officials say the army aims to control territory up to the Litani River.
Israel does not disclose division sizes but previously described three divisions in Gaza as “tens of thousands” of troops.
The move comes a day after Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz said the country would expand its control and establish a “security zone” up to the Litani River.
He drew parallels to Gaza, where many areas have been depopulated.
The Israeli military has destroyed bridges and homes in southern Lebanon and set up new positions in recent weeks.
Lebanon says over 1 million people have been displaced and more than 1,000 people killed.
Thursday’s videoconference of defense staff chiefs focused on how to reopen shipping “once the intensity of hostilities has sufficiently decreased,” France’s Defense Ministry said.
That could entail a “strictly defensive” mission to escort commercial vessels and restore freedom of navigation, the ministry said.
Witnesses told The Associated Press that power is out in some areas of the Iranian capital, although no official reports have been released yet.
Less than an hour ago, witnesses reported the sounds of heavy strikes and fighter jets overhead.
They also said they heard the sounds of what appeared to be fighter jets flying overhead.
Trump’s first Cabinet meeting since the start of the Iran war ran an hour and 40 minutes.
But unlike past meetings of this kind, the president kept it largely focused on the war.
Trump usually gives every Cabinet member time to speak, but on Thursday he limited speakers to himself, Vance, Rubio, Hegseth, Bessent, Energy Secretary Chris Wright and Interior Secretary Doug Burgum.
Still, Trump weighed in on a few unrelated topics, such as his choice of writing implements, a construction project at the Federal Reserve that he thinks costs too much, and lawsuits pending to stop him from closing the Kennedy Center performing arts venue for a two-year renovation project.
Asked whether he’s sticking to a five-day delay he announced on Monday, Trump said “I don’t know.”
Speaking at a Cabinet meeting, the president said it depends on whether his team tells him talks with Iran are “going along” or not.
“We have a lot of time,” Trump said.
“It’s a day.
In Trump time, a day- you know what it is?
That’s an eternity.”
Trump threatened to strike Iranian power plants starting Monday unless the strait was fully reopened.
He said the deadline was pushed back to negotiate a deal.
The total number of people killed by Israeli strikes in Lebanon since the outbreak of the latest Israel-Hezbollah war has risen to 1,116, with 3,229 wounded, Lebanon’s health ministry said Thursday.
The death toll includes 121 children and 83 women.
More than 1 million people have been displaced in Lebanon by the conflict.
The Iran-backed Lebanese militant group Hezbollah fired missiles across the border into Israel on March 2, two days after the U.S. and Israel attacked Iran.
Israel has since launched widespread airstrikes and a ground invasion of Lebanon.
Israel’s Magen David Adom emergency service says a man in his 30s was killed by shrapnel from a missile strike in Nahariya following a barrage from Lebanon.
It said medics treated a man in his 50s who was in moderate to serious condition, and three people who were lightly wounded.
President Volodymyr Zelenskyy is in Saudi Arabia on an unannounced visit, days after revealing that Ukraine is helping five countries in the Middle East counter attacks on their territory by drones amid the Iran war.
Ukraine has grown into one of the world’s leading producers of cutting-edge, battle-tested drone interceptors that are cheap and effective.
“Arrived in Saudi Arabia.
Important meetings are scheduled,” the Ukrainian leader said on X Thursday along with video of his arrival.
“We appreciate the support and support those who are ready to work with us to ensure security.”
Zelenskyy said last week that Ukrainian officials are helping Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Kuwait and Jordan with drone expertise and helping build a defense system.
Asked by a reporter how close he was to marshaling a coalition of partners to help protect tankers moving through the strait, Trump said the U.S. has “so much oil — our country is not affected by this.”
The narrow waterway typically sees a fifth of the world’s oil exit the Persian Gulf through it to reach customers worldwide, particularly in Asia, and blockages there have sent oil prices near $120 per barrel at times.
And although it’s true that the United States doesn’t get a massive percentage of its oil from resources moving through the strait, the price of oil is set on the global market.
Iran’s stranglehold on the waterway has raised prices at the pump for drivers the world over.
The nationwide average price of gas is up more than a dollar from just a month earlier.
Asked by a reporter about that option during the Cabinet meeting, Trump said, “we’ve thought about it, I guess” and suggested that states suspend their taxes on fuel.
He segued into talking about the stock market and was asked again about the possibility of suspending the federal gas tax, which is 18.4 cents per gallon on gasoline and 24.4 cents per gallon on diesel fuel.
That does not include state taxes, which often are higher.
Trump cannot suspend the federal tax on his own; Congress would have to approve.
But he indicated he wasn’t ready to go that route at the federal level at this time.
“It’s something we have in our pocket if we think it’s necessary,” Trump said.
In a speech on Tuesday, German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier said Trump’s aggression against Iran was a “dangerous mistake” in violation of international law.
Taking questions from reporters during Thursday’s Cabinet meeting, Trump likened Steinmeier’s statement to the U.S. assistance to Ukraine in its war with Russia, which he said was “not our war, we helped, but Ukraine’s done well.”
Trump, who as he campaigned for a second term said repeatedly he could swiftly end the Russia-Ukraine war, added, “if I can solve that, it will be a great honor to do it.
I wish it could have gone faster.”
Trump earlier this week cryptically said that Iran “gave us a present.”
He revealed the gift during Thursday’s Cabinet meeting.
Trump said that Iranian officials, with whom the U.S. is engaging in backchannel talks, are allowing “eight boats of oil” to pass through the Strait of Hormuz, suggesting it was an apparent act of good faith for negotiations.
“Well, I guess we’re dealing with the right people,” said Trump, who indicated the tankers are operating under Pakistani flags.
The announcement comes a day after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel is expanding an area it controls along southern Lebanon’s border with Israel, as Israeli troops push through more villages in the area and fight with Iran-allied Hezbollah militants.
Israel has moved several thousand troops into southern Lebanon in recent weeks in what it says is a defensive move to protect its northern border communities from Hezbollah rocket and drone fire.
Israel occupied southern Lebanon from 1982 until 2000.
Hezbollah was formed in the 1980s as a guerrilla force fighting that occupation.
Mahmoud Qamati made the remarks at a protest beside Iran’s Embassy in the southern suburbs of Beirut, where dozens of people gathered waving Hezbollah and Iranian flags.
“Ambassador (Mohammad Reza) Sheibani, the ambassador to the Islamic Republic of Iran, will stay in Lebanon and will not leave Lebanon no matter how much you try,” Qamati said in a speech, condemning Lebanese Foreign Minister Youssef Rajji, a staunch opponent of Hezbollah, who made the decision to order the diplomat to leave.
“Don’t play with fire, because this fire will burn you, your people, and those behind you,” Qamati said.
Hezbollah is Iran’s key ally in Lebanon, and since the group’s inception in 1982 it has relied heavily on Tehran for weapons and financial support.
U.S.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said that Iran, by restricting oil and natural gas shipped through the Strait of Hormuz, is “trying to take control of the global economy through a choke point that we believe does not exist.”
Bessent’s phrasing was misleading, as the Strait of Hormuz is critical for global shipments of oil and natural gas, especially for Asia, and energy prices have increased since the war with Iran began.
Still, Bessent said that more tankers are making it through the Strait of Hormuz.
“I am confident that shipping traffic will continue to increase on a daily basis, even before we secure” the strait, Bessent said.
Witnesses heard repeated explosions across most parts of Iran’s capital, along with the activation of air defense systems.
Very large blasts are also being reported.
Speaking at a Saudi investment summit in Florida, Jared Kushner on Thursday echoed sentiments made by his negotiating partner Steve Witkoff in dismissing Iranians’ public statements, saying it’s often different than what is being communicated behind closed doors.
“The one thing with the Iranians, and we’re seeing this even now, is you have to ... just ignore a lot of what they say publicly, because I think that their statements are usually more for their domestic audiences,” Kushner, who has been volunteering as a U.S. peace envoy, told the audience at a Future Investment Initiative summit in Miami.
His comments came shortly before Witkoff spoke at Trump’s Cabinet meeting, where he said that despite Iranians assertions that there is no communication with Washington during the ongoing war, the U.S. has presented a 15-point “action list” where there is a “possibility” for a deal between the longtime adversaries.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio is a noted fan of 1990s rap.
During Thursday’s Cabinet meeting, his remarks appeared to borrow a bit from Public Enemy’s “Welcome to the Terrordome.”
Chuck D raps in the track off of the eponymous album “Fear of a Black Planet,” “I got so much trouble on my mind/ I refuse to lose/Here’s your ticket/Hear the drummer get wicked/The crew to you to push the back to Black.”
Rubio, Trump’s chief diplomat, offered, “But every day the Department of War lets the drummer get wicked over every portion of Iran that has these military capabilities, and the results are going to bear fruit for the world,” Rubio said.
The top Iranian envoy to U.N. institutions in Geneva has warned in an interview that any attempt by Israel and the United States to mount a ground invasion of Iran would be a “big” mistake.
Ali Bahreini says Iran is winning the war, and has forced the U.S. and Israel to back off their initial goals.
He says those have now been reduced to trying to keep the Strait of Hormuz open for shipments to countries dependent on oil from the Persian Gulf.
Bahreini also says Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei, is “safe” and running the country.
Khamenei has not been seen or directly heard from since he was named to replace his slain father, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
Asked why Khamenei hasn’t been seen, the ambassador cited “security arrangements which are very necessary for this particular time.”
“This is stuff for the history books; This is stuff for legacy,” the U.S. defense secretary said during a Cabinet meeting Thursday.
As part of his praise for the decision to engage in the conflict, Hegseth claimed that Iran had “a modern military” but that “never in recorded history has a nation’s military been so quickly and so effectively neutralized.”
The U.S. defense secretary said Thursday that the war in Iran is “unlike Iraq.
This isn’t a tie.
This is not parity.
This is not chaos.
This is success.
Pure American success.”
Hegseth spoke as he sat next to Trump at a Cabinet meeting.
Hegseth noted that the war’s objectives “remain clear: No nukes, no navy, and complete dismantling of their missile program and defense industrial base.”
Trump noted that the Strait of Hormuz, through which 20% of the world’s oil normally flows, remained effectively closed because of the war, although the president predicted the waterway will open up.
It was delivered through Pakistan as a framework for a possible peace deal.
Witkoff indicated there’s a possibility an agreement can be reached.
It’s the first time the Trump administration has confirmed the 15-point plan.
Witkoff made the comment Thursday at a Cabinet meeting.
He added that Trump directed Witkoff to “maintain confidentiality” as the administration reached out, citing sensitive diplomatic discussions.
“If a deal happens, it will be great for the country of Iran, the entire region and the world at large,” he said.
Addressing the Cabinet, Vance asserted that the “conventional military” in Iran has been “effectively destroyed” during the war.
Echoing Trump, Vance said Iran no longer has a navy and “they don’t have the ability to hit us like they could of even a few weeks ago.”
“And what that does is that gives us options,” Vance said.
He did not go into detail about those options.
Corrects: A previous version of this APNewsAlert erroneously reported that a Trump envoy says there is a ‘strong possibility’ a deal can happen.
The top U.S. commander in the Middle East on Thursday hailed an Israeli strike that Israel earlier said killed Iranian naval commander Alireza Tangsiri.
Adm.
Brad Cooper, head of U.S.
Central Command, said Tangsiri’s killing put Iran’s navy on a path toward “irreversible decline” after weeks of U.S. and Israeli strikes that he said destroyed most of its larger ships and stripped it of much of its ability to project power.
He warned that the United States would keep striking naval targets in Iran.
Though the U.S. claims to have destroyed most of Iran’s naval capabilities, it has smaller boats capable of laying mines and anti-ship cruise missiles that can be launched from ashore.
Iran did not immediately acknowledge Tangsiri’s killing.
Palestinians on Thursday mourned a man killed a day earlier during an attack by Israeli soldiers and settlers.
The Palestinian Red Crescent Society said it responded Wednesday to reports of beatings and tear gas.
Witnesses told The Associated Press they’d been trying to return to the village of Umm al-Kheir but were blocked by a closed military gate and came under fire.
Israel’s military said a group of vehicles had fled a checkpoint and then lost control, veering off road.
It said in a statement that forces fired warning shots in the air as part of an effort to apprehend those in the vehicles.
It did not say whether anyone was apprehended.
Israel has erected hundreds of new military gates and checkpoints over the past two and a half years, as part of a broader effort that Palestinians say is to stifle their movement in the occupied West Bank.
Violence — often fatal — has surged in the territory as attention and scrutiny has shifted elsewhere.
The president told his cabinet he plans to roll out a “variety” of policies “to support American farmers,” as the war with Iran has increased the cost of fertilizer during planting season.
Trump emphasized that he previously supported farmers by giving them $12 billion in aid when the agricultural sector faced blowback last year after his tariffs started a trade war.
The president, speaking at the start of a Thursday cabinet meeting, said he wanted to “set the record straight” that he isn’t the one pushing for a deal.
“They’re begging to make a deal, not me,” Trump said.
Iranian officials have denied that they’re negotiating with the U.S. as the war continues in its fourth week.
Trump insisted they are.
“Anybody would know they’re talking,” he said.
“They’re not fools, they’re very smart actually in a certain way.
And they’re great negotiators.
I say they’re lousy fighters but they’re great negotiators.”
Houthi leader Abdul Malik al-Houthi reiterated the group’s condemnation against the U.S.-Israel war against Iran, describing it as “unjustifiable,” and called for solidarity protests on Friday in Sanaa, Yemen’s capital.
During a lengthy televised speech posted on Telegram on Thursday, the Iran-backed Houthi leader said the Iran war destabilized the region and impacted the global economy, accusing the U.S. and Israel of ignoring such consequences.
Al-Houthi didn’t mention whether the armed rebel group would fight alongside Iran but said “any developments in the fight that necessitate a military response will be met with complete trust in God and reliance upon Him.”
“Our position is clear and unequivocal against America and Israel, and hold no hostile intentions towards any Muslim country,” he added.
Since the war began nearly a month ago, Houthis maintained their support for Iran through statements and protests, despite playing an active role in the Israel-Hamas war when they upended shipping in the Red Sea, through which about $1 trillion worth of goods passed each year before the war.
The stock market wavered Thursday as hopes for an end to the Iran war faded and oil prices surged, with the S&P 500 falling 0.4%, the Nasdaq dropping 0.6% and the Dow little changed.
The moves were the latest in a week of volatile swings driven by shifting signals around ceasefire talks between the U.S. and Iran.
A barrel of Brent crude oil climbed 3.8% to $100.93 as hopes dimmed for a potential return to normal for the strait.
That’s up from roughly $70 before the war began.
Benchmark U.S. crude climbed 3% to $93.05 per barrel.
Rising energy prices have lifted oil and natural gas companies while worsening worries about inflation and weighing on sectors in which higher energy costs threaten to curb demand, including for steel and other industrial goods.
Uganda’s top general threatened to join the widening war in the Middle East, warning “any talk of destroying or defeating Israel will bring us into the war.
On the side of Israel!”
In a series of posts Thursday, Gen.
Muhoozi Kainerugaba, chief of Uganda’s Defense Forces, said Uganda would be willing to come to Israel’s assistance if asked, citing the Bible as a basis for the deeply Christian East African nation’s support.
The country has a robust military known for campaigns against militias in Congo and for supplying troops to international forces, including in Somalia.
Kainerugaba is known as Uganda’s “tweeting general” and was fired by his father, Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni, in 2022 over provocative posts about faraway wars.
Israel has in recent years attempted to expand its economic inroads in East Africa, including in Somaliland, a breakaway territory in the Horn of Africa, across the Gulf of Aden from Houthi-controlled Yemen.
Israel developed an alliance with Uganda decades ago when its early leaders sought allies outside the Middle East.
The Iran war has deflected global attention from Russia’s all-out invasion of its neighbor Ukraine as Europe’s biggest conflict since World War II enters its fifth year and an emboldened Kremlin undertakes a spring offensive.
The past week showed neither side is easing up.
Russia on Tuesday fired almost 1,000 drones and 34 missiles at Ukraine in one of the war’s biggest bombardments.
The following day Ukraine launched almost 400 drones in the largest reported overnight attack on Russian regions and Crimea.
Ukraine’s fate is still Europe’s top foreign policy issue, fueled by fears that Moscow has wider ambitions.
Meanwhile, the Trump administration has wound down talks with Russian and Ukrainian delegations as the Iran war grips its attention.
The administration has warned it could turn its back on the conflict if peace efforts come to nothing.
Iran’s internet shutdown is badly hurting many businesses, as well as limiting access to news of the war inside the country.
A designer in her mid-twenties says her fashion products company is “on the verge of closing” as online sales have ground to a halt.
She added a nearby strike had damaged her apartment in central Tehran.
Speaking on condition of anonymity, she shared with The Associated Press a photo of her street showing it filled with debris and broken glass from the blast wave.
She said she had gone to stay at her parents’ house where she felt safer.
“I don’t leave the house much except to buy necessities.
The checkpoints are still in place and every night, a few supporters of the government hold rallies throughout the city.
To be honest, I don’t dare go near the damaged or dangerous areas,” she added, referring to security checkpoints set up across the capital.
Iran has repeatedly restricted internet access since security forces shot thousands of anti-government protesters in early January.
Rampant inflation has also throttled the economy.
The designer said she has been forced to live on her small savings.
“I think we’ve experienced everything bad possible.
We’ve seen it all, from the terrible atmosphere of January and the killings and arrests to the war.”
The vast majority of Republicans in the AP-NORC poll, 81%, say it’s “extremely” or “very” important for the U.S. to prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon, lending support to one of the goals Trump has articulated since the war began.
But only about half of Republicans see replacing Iran’s government with leaders who are more friendly to the U.S. as a high priority.
Stephen Hauss, 40, is a state Agriculture Department employee in Camden, Delaware, where he manages environmental programs.
Hauss described his political views as libertarian-leaning, and he voted for Trump in 2024.
But the start of the Iran war has changed his views about the president.
“Before the war I was just kind of like, ‘OK, like, I voted for him.
I got to give him, like, some benefit of the doubt,’” he said.
Now, Hauss said he can’t support the U.S. trying to change the leadership of another country.
He added, “I don’t think I am on board with this anymore.”
About three-quarters of Republicans approve of Trump’s handling of the presidency, and a similar 70% approve of how he’s handling Iran.
Many Republicans continue to have “a great deal” or “quite a bit” of trust in the president to make the right decisions on foreign issues.
About half place a high level of trust in him when it comes to the use of military force outside the U.S.
Roughly the same percentage of Republicans have a high level of trust on his dealings with adversaries and allies.
Sharon Fuller, 68, is a firm backer of the president and approves of his handling of the job, as well as the war in Iran.
A retired hospital analyst from Ocklawaha, Florida, Fuller expressed some reservations about the war but called Trump a “huge patriot” and said she’s been impressed with how the stock market has done since he became president again.
“I don’t really agree with the war, but on the other hand, I think it’s a necessity at this point,” she said.
Oil depots spewing black smoke.
Debris sinking in the Persian Gulf.
Missiles pounding military sites.
The Iran war has unleashed a toxic mix of chemicals, heavy metals and other pollutants that threaten everything from agriculture to drinking water to people’s health — and will leave behind environmental damage and health risks that could persist for decades, experts said.
“All the burning of oil and gas fields in the coastal areas, all the ships that are there, the oil tankers that are being burned or (sunk) — all of these mean pollution,” said Kaveh Madani, an Iranian scientist and director of the United Nations University Institute for Water, Environment and Health.
“For someone like me who has fought for sustainability and protection of the environment in that region, this is like going many years backward.”
Documenting the damage has proved daunting, with a full accounting impossible for now, said Doug Weir, director of the Conflict and Environment Observatory, a U.K.-based nonprofit that monitors environmental harms from armed conflicts.
It’s costing more and more to gas up the hot rods Donnie Beson has spent a lifetime tinkering with.
He’s not questioning his support for Trump, but he feels as though the war in Iran has distracted the Republican president from the issues that got him elected.
“Come on, Trump.
Worry about us,” said Beson, 68, of Woodland Park, Colorado.
“We’re in a billion-dollar-a-day war.
It’s like, ‘Man, you forgot about the other stuff, and you got to take care of that first.’”
Trump still has deep support among Republicans, but a new poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research indicates the president risks frustrating his voters during a midterm election year if the United States gets involved in the kind of prolonged war in the Middle East that he promised to avoid.
Although 63% of Republicans back airstrikes against Iranian military targets, the survey found, only 20% back deploying American ground troops.
Rising gas prices could also pose a problem for Trump.
The cost of oil and gas has soared since the Iran war began nearly four weeks ago, adding more financial pressure when many Americans are already worried about affording essentials.