How Trump’s War With Iran Changed the World in a Week
The conflict is reshaping travel patterns, energy dependencies, living costs, trade routes and diplomatic alliances.
The conflict is reshaping travel patterns, energy dependencies, living costs, trade routes and diplomatic alliances.
Trump’s Iran war will affect more than just gas prices.
Revered cultural icons that have withstood the upheavals of history are being hit hard in the war being waged by Israel and the United States.
Environmentalists say the war’s effects on oil and gas prices are an argument for countries to get off fossil fuels. But the reality is likely to be messier.
The low-grade oil has been used to fuel power plants amid Iran’s international isolation. Tanks of mazut may now be burning near the city.
A New York Times analysis of satellite imagery and verified videos shows damage to more than a dozen American military sites and installations from Iran’s retaliatory strikes.
The United States and Israel have considered using Iranian Kurds as a ground force.
Officials say Mojtaba Khamanei’s legs were hurt, but the circumstances as well as the extent of his injuries were unclear. He has remained out of view since being named leader three days ago.
Su padre, el ayatolá Alí Jameneí, convirtió lo que tradicionalmente era una oficina de asuntos religiosos en un gigante tenebroso de la seguridad nacional.
In the lead-up to the U. S. -Israeli attack, President Trump downplayed the risks to the energy markets as a short-term concern that should not overshadow the mission to decapitate the Iranian regime.
The effects of the war are being felt through the Persian Gulf.
Trump administration officials cast the president as the sole arbiter on the U. S. war effort.
A video posted by the U. S. Central Command showed munitions striking nine vessels, most of which were moored at the time.
Algunos residentes dijeron que los ataques de la noche del lunes al martes fueron de los peores que habían experimentado desde que comenzó la guerra.
Senate Democratic leaders called on President Trump to dispatch the senior cabinet officials to make the case to Congress and the American public for the war in Iran.
Iran appears to be targeting what it views as American vulnerabilities, including air defenses meant to guard troops and assets in the region.
The president and the Pentagon have cast blame on Iran for the mounting toll. More than 1,800 people have died in the war, including many civilians.
Some residents of Lebanon, Gaza and Iran are reporting shortages of food, rising food prices and other disruptions to food supplies as the conflict in the Middle East continues.
The best hope? Weaken the regime’s ability to lash out and resist an uprising.
Iranian detention centers, some holding people swept up in a government crackdown on protests along with other prisoners, have been damaged in the U. S. -Israeli airstrikes.