Factpost - Reporter: The Irish president has said that your war against Iran is illegal. It's an attack on international law.
Trump: Who said that?.... Reporter: The Irish president.
Trump: Look, he's lucky I exist. That's all I can say.
Daily Mail, UK - Donald Trump's inner circle is growing alarmed that he may be losing control of the Iran war after allied countries flatly rejected his plan to reopen the Strait of Hormuz.
Trump has demanded US allies deploy warships to reopen the critical oil passageway, but France, Japan, Australia and the United Kingdom have all declined to help protect commercial shipping from Iranian attack.
Gas prices have surged to an average of $3.80 a gallon from $2.90 before the conflict began three weeks ago, while the narrow strait - through which a fifth of the world's oil flows - remains blocked by the threat of Iranian mines and missiles
NBC News - The director of the National Counterterrorism Center, a retired Green Beret and longtime supporter of President Donald Trump, said he has resigned over the war with Iran. "I cannot in good conscience support the ongoing war in Iran. Iran posed no imminent threat to our nation," Joe Kent said in a statement posted on X. "It is clear that we started this war due to pressure from Israel and its powerful American lobby."
Axios - Countries across Asia are imposing emergency measures — rationing energy, closing universities, shortening workweeks and even changing how crematoriums operate — to manage the fallout from the Iran war, Axios' Emily Peck writes.
- Bangladesh closed universities.
- South Korea capped gas prices for the first time in nearly three decades.
- Thailand is encouraging work from home.
- Some local governments in the Philippines ordered civil servants to work four days a week.
- Pakistan has shut schools, mandated a four-day workweek for some government offices and raised gas prices, the Financial Times reports.
NBC News - Military officials have included options in regular war planning for Trump to end the conflict in Iran should he decide to do so, six people familiar with the plans told NBC News. So far, he hasn’t.
The timeline for the war’s duration “could change every day,” one source said. As the conflict widens, America’s stated terms for ending the war have varied wildly, and aides and allies have sought to pull the president in different directions.
The off-ramps are built into daily war planning, along with options for escalation if the White House seeks to increase the pressure on Iran. Some in communication with Trump who favor an exit strategy are concerned about global economic instability, while others are focused on the opportunity to erode the regime’s influence in the region by staying.
Trump said one of his predecessors told him he wished he had been the one to bomb Iran, but denials from four former presidents’ staffs say otherwise. Read more about Trump’s war planning here.
Bloomberg - Israel said it killed Iran’s security chief Ali Larijani in an overnight strike, intensifying the region-wide war which shows no sign of abating. Donald Trump reiterated his appeals for other nations to help secure the Strait of Hormuz, as he threatened to expand strikes on Iran’s Kharg Island to target its oil infrastructure. And the UAE was forced to close its airspace for about two hours overnight as its defenses intercepted drones and missiles.
NPR - A second front in the U.S. and Israel's war with Iran is heating up in Lebanon, where Israel has intensified ground attacks on the Iranian-backed militant group Hezbollah. Israel’s defense minister says the military has killed two top Iranian commanders in a targeted strike. Iran did not immediately confirm the killings. Meanwhile, some of the U.S.’ European allies have refused to send warships to the Strait of Hormuz, a vital oil passage blocked by Iran amid the conflict. NATO countries are set to convene in Brussels today to discuss the escalating tensions in the Middle East....
President Trump has said that NATO allies should help the U.S. reopen the Strait of Hormuz. But European countries firmly believe this isn’t their war... The president didn’t consult them before taking action, and then demanded to use European military bases in the Middle East. European allies are currently focused on Russian President Vladimir Putin, who they see as their enemy, and on Ukraine as a territory to protect. Schultz says it remains to be seen if Trump will intensify pressure to shift European leaders’ priorities.
MS NOW - Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, during a televised press briefing at the Pentagon on the Iran war on March 13, vowed this about America’s response to Iran’s ruling regime: “We will keep pushing, keep advancing. No quarter, no mercy for our enemies.”
These words in themselves could be a violation of both U.S. and international law...
The law of war prohibits military leaders from the speech act of announcing “no quarter” alone.
Dating back to at least the Civil War, the denial of quarter has been forbidden. As articulated in the 1863 Lieber Code (Instructions for the Government of Armies of the United States in the Field, General Order No. 100), “It is against the usage of modern war to resolve, in hatred and revenge, to give no quarter. No body of troops has the right to declare that it will not give, and therefore will not expect, quarter.” (emphasis added) This rule would subsequently be incorporated into treaties to which the United States is a party, including in the regulations annexed to the 1907 Hague Convention IV, and as customary law binding on all states. Importantly, this law of war rule applies to air, land and sea warfare.
As reflected in the Lieber Code (and the Department of Defense’s own Law of War Manual), the ban on denial of quarter includes both: 1) a prohibition on conducting hostilities on the basis that legitimate offers of surrender by enemy personnel will not be accepted, but instead that there should be no survivors, and 2) a prohibition on simply declaring no quarter itself.
In other words, the law of war prohibits military leaders from the speech act of announcing “no quarter” alone.
Alternet - One of President Donald Trump’s staunchest supporters has a warning for him: Americans will not support his war against Iran “forever.”
“I think they will back him for a little while, but they will not back him forever,” Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.) told Fox Business’ “Kudlow” on Monday. He went on to identify “three huge challenges” facing the administration including keeping the Strait of Hormuz open, stabilizing the global economy and dismantling the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. If he succeeds in all three, he will be regarded as a “genius,” Gingrich argued, but if he fails it will be “a step into quicksand.”
Gingrich, despite supporting Trump in all three of his presidential campaigns and generally aligning with him ideologically, has occasionally parted ways with his fellow Republican.
Alternet - The Atlantic's Jonathan Lemire, during a Tuesday morning, March 17 appearance on MS NOW's "Morning Joe," argued that Iran, its "diminished" capacity, could be even more dangerous — from holding up the flow of oil in the Strait of Hormuz to the possibility of terrorist attacks in the United States. And some Washington insiders interviewed by Politico fear that Trump in way over his head with Iran.
Politico's Megan Messerly, in an article published on March 17, reports, "When the U.S. started firing Tomahawk missiles at Iran late last month, many of President Donald Trump's allies hoped it would be a quick, surgical operation, similar to last year's strike against Iran's nuclear facilities or the ouster of Venezuelan dictator NicolΓ‘s Maduro in January. Though uneasy, they were reassured by the belief that Trump's open-ended objectives gave him the flexibility to declare victory whenever he saw fit. Now, more than two weeks into the campaign, some of those allies believe the president no longer controls how, or when, the war ends."
Messerly adds, "They fear Iran's attacks on oil tankers in the Strait of Hormuz, which have rattled global crude markets and threaten broader economic distress, are boxing Trump into a situation where escalating the conflict — potentially even putting American boots on the ground — becomes the only way to credibly claim victory."