• #301
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  • #302

"Jim Chalmers 'worried' about Iranian women's football team members who returned

We reported earlier that three members of the Iranian women's football team who were given humanitarian visas, have chosen to return home.

Federal Treasurer Jim Chalmers said the government had concerns about the women's safety.

"I am worried about them. I can only imagine the pressure that they felt and how difficult these sorts of decisions would be for them," he told Channel Seven.

"The job was always to provide the opportunity for them to stay if they wanted to. We can't and haven't sought to compel an outcome for obvious reasons, and I hope they're okay." "


 
  • #303
"We reported earlier that 12 doctors, paramedics and nurses were killed in strikes late last night, on the Bourj Qalaouiyeh Primary Healthcare Center.

The World Health Organisation has also confirmed the death of two paramedics after attacks on a health facility in Al Sowana.

WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus posted on X regarding the incident, saying, "Bombing a hospital or a school isn't a 'miscalculation'."

The Director-General continued, saying, "These are war crimes. Full stop." "

 
  • #304
"The US Department of Defense has identified the six US airmen who were killed in a plane crash over Iraq:
  • Major John A. ‌Klinner, 33, of Auburn, Alabama.
  • Captain Ariana G. Savino, 31, ⁠of Covington, Washington. ‌
  • Technical Sergeant Ashley B. ‌Pruitt, 34, of Bardstown, Kentucky.
  • Captain Seth R. Koval, 38, of Mooresville, Indiana.
  • Captain Curtis J. Angst, 30, of Wilmington, ⁠Ohio.
  • Technical Sergeant Tyler H. Simmons, 28, of ‌Columbus, Ohio.
The airmen were on a ‌KC-135 aerial refuelling tanker supporting US attacks on Iran.

The crash involved another aircraft but was not ‌the result of hostile ⁠or friendly fire and is under investigation, ‌the military has said."

 
  • #305
Skyrocketing energy prices and inflation woes mount as the ‘absurd’ reality in Iran sinks in

The immediate shock of the U.S. and Israeli war with Iran is felt most acutely in fuel prices. As the fighting drags into a third week, however, the ripples are spreading across a broader swath of the economy, threatening to affect everything from groceries and work schedules to stock markets and interest rates.

Even stagflation—the dreaded S-word that plagued American consumers during the 1970s Middle East oil crisis—is in the air again, as business leaders, analysts, and policymakers reassess the scope and duration of a conflict that the U.S. government seems to have underestimated.

At the center of the widening crisis is the false belief that the Strait of Hormuz—the narrow choke point separating 20% of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas from global markets—would be left untouched from the conflict, said Bob McNally, former White House energy adviser under George W. Bush and founder of the Rapidan Energy Group.

“Even the possibility that a hostile power could choke traffic in Hormuz—by far the world’s most vital energy and commodity artery—was considered to be absurd,” McNally told Fortune, largely because it hadn’t happened before. “When I would tell people our analysis shows that, in a military conflict with Iran, Hormuz would be shut for weeks, people looked at me like I was high on crack cocaine.”

 
  • #306
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  • #307
  • #308
"A massive flotilla of tankers is rushing to Saudi Arabia’s Red Sea coast to pick up crude oil that has been diverted as a result of Iran’s closure of the Strait of Hormuz.

Between 24 and 30 large crude carriers are en route to the Saudi Arabian port city of Yanbu, where the East-West pipeline terminates, according to ship tracking data reported by Bloomberg and The Financial Times on Thursday.

The Red Sea route does not remove geopolitical risk. About 75 percent of Saudi Arabia’s crude is exported to Asian countries like China, India, Japan, and South Korea. That means vessels have to pass twice through the Bab el-Mandeb Strait - once to pick up Saudi crude, and again to bring it to Asian markets.

Tankers still have to pass the Bab el-Mandeb Strait, where the Houthis have attacked ships in recent years."

 
  • #309
Posted 14 March 2026:
Formula 1 cancels the Bahrain and Saudi Arabian Grands Prix due to ongoing Middle East conflict; decision to not replace events will see F1 2026 schedule reduced to 22 rounds; ...
 
  • #310
"In a few days, 2,500 US troops from the 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit are expected to arrive in the Middle East.
...

The fact that the government is sending 2,500 elite troops to the Middle East contributes to speculation that the US army is considering 'boots on the ground' in Iran after all."
...

European countries would do well to stay out of the conflict between Iran, Israel, and the United States. Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said this to his French counterpart Jean-Noël Barrot.

Araghchi's remark comes after Donald Trump's call (to France, among others) to send warships to the Middle East to escort oil tankers through the closed Strait of Hormuz. Trump also addressed the United Kingdom, Japan, and China in this regard."

 
  • #311
"We never asked for a ceasefire, and we have never asked even for negotiation," Araghchi said on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan."

<modsnip: Copyright violation of more than 10% of article>

"We were talking with them when they decided to attack us, and that was for the second time," he said. "There is no good experience talking with the Americans. We were talking, so why they decided to attack us? So what is good if we go back to talk once again?"
 
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  • #312
Zelensky asks for money and technology in exchange for help against Iranian drone attacks.

"To be honest, it is important for us today to receive sufficient investment and technology." That is what Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky is asking for in exchange for Ukrainian expertise to counter Iranian drones in the Middle East.

Zelensky says that about 12 countries have already requested assistance to counter drone attacks by Iranian Shaheds. Ukraine has years of experience from the war with Russia, which also uses Iranian drones. The Ukrainian government has already sent three teams of experts to Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates.
...

Iran, however, views the Ukrainian intervention as participation in the war. A high-ranking official within the Iranian Security Commission stated yesterday that "the entire Ukrainian territory is a legitimate target" for Iranian retaliatory attacks."

 
  • #313
"Iran sees no reason whatsoever to negotiate with the Americans, because we were talking to them at the moment they decided to attack us." Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said this on Sunday in an interview on CBS.

He further added that that was "already the 2nd time," referring to the American attacks in June 2025.

US President Donald Trump told NBC News on Saturday that Iran "wants to make a deal," but that he himself did not want to yet "because the terms are not yet good enough." When asked what conditions were being referred to, the president declined to answer."

 
  • #314
"Donald Trump ... asserted the U.S. had "destroyed 100 per cent of Iran's military capability."

Trump is urging other countries to help secure the Strait of Hormuz as Iran targets ships in the vital oil route, but so far there are few firm commitments.

In a social media post Saturday, Trump suggested that many countries were already prepared to send naval vessels to keep the waterway open. He named China, France, Japan, South Korea and the United Kingdom.

"Many Countries, especially those who are affected by Iran's attempted closure of the Hormuz Strait, will be sending War Ships, in conjunction with the United States of America, to keep the Strait open and safe,"
...

The appeal is notable because Trump has repeatedly said U.S. and Israeli strikes have largely defeated Iran's military capabilities — even as the disruption to shipping in the strait has persisted.

For allies weighing the request, deploying naval forces could risk drawing them deeper into a widening regional war.
...

Araghchi told CBS that Tehran has been "approached by a number of countries" seeking safe passage for their vessels ... Tehran's Ambassador to India Mohammad Fathali confirmed that Iran has allowed some Indian vessels to sail through the Strait of Hormuz."

 
  • #315
  • #316
  • A winter downpour hit Lebanon over the weekend, further exacerbating the humanitarian crisis that has developed there over the past fortnight. It is believed more than 800,000 people have been forced from their homes, and more than 800 killed, as Israel intensified its bombardment of the capital and southern Lebanon.

  • Israeli forces continue to mass along the country's northern border, amid reports that a ground invasion of southern Lebanon is imminent. Axios quoted one Israeli official over the weekend saying it was preparing to "do what we did in Gaza".
 
  • #317
Only two of the seven women who were granted humanitarian visas remain in Australia after a fifth left the country this morning.

"They had a genuine choice to make, we understand the context in which they were making it must have been just incredibly hard and very difficult, they must have been facing enormous pressure from what was happening overseas, and we're certainly proud that Australia has offered that choice to these women," she says.

 
  • #318
Foreign Minister S Jaishankar told the Financial Times that negotiations between New Delhi and Tehran allowed two Indian-flagged gas tankers to pass through the strait yesterday.

“I am at the moment engaged in talking to them and my talking has yielded some results,” he said.

Jaishankar added: “Certainly, from India’s perspective, it is better that we reason and we coordinate and we get a solution.”

 
  • #319
The French have been trying to offer mediation between Israel and Lebanon, but Israel’s foreign minister, Gideon Sa’ar, has said a flat no, there are no plans for that to happen.

Long term, there’s an enormous amount of damage in the southern suburbs of Beirut and in southern Lebanon, which will take a very long time to rebuild.

 
  • #320
A man accused of plotting to assassinate top U.S. political leaders on behalf of Iran's powerful paramilitary Revolutionary Guard was found guilty in his federal trial last week.
 

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