The war’s center of gravity keeps shifting across the Gulf. Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu insisted there is no schedule for ending the Iran war and denied Israel dragged Washington into it, even as he separately claimed Tehran lacks the capacity to enrich uranium or build ballistic missiles—assertions U.S. veterans of cyber and intel ops called hard to neutralize in practice [1] [2].
Riyadh’s patience is thinning. After barrages were intercepted over the Saudi capital and drones struck a Red Sea refinery, Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan warned the kingdom “will not shy away” from defending its territory and energy infrastructure, saying trust with Tehran has collapsed and military options remain on the table [4].

U.S. posture hardens: The United States is accelerating the deployment of thousands more Marines and sailors to the Middle East, a move that underscores the risk of wider spillover as attacks on energy sites continue [3]. Energy analysts warn repairs to damaged facilities could take months, a timeline that keeps pressure under oil and broader markets already wary amid elevated geopolitical risk and corporate caution [2]. Former NSA Cyber Command chief Tim Haugh added it would be “incredibly difficult” to fully negate Iran’s nuclear capability—another signal that strategic risk won’t fade quickly [2].
At home and in the corridors of power
- Contractors told White House officials they were asked to pay Corey Lewandowski, according to reporting discussed on NBC’s news program; civil rights icon Dolores Huerta also addressed allegations in a new interview [3].
- Trump’s DHS pick, Sen. Markwayne Mullin, advanced to a Senate vote; former FBI Director James Comey was subpoenaed in a probe branded a “grand conspiracy” by investigators [1].
- NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman discussed the upcoming Artemis II mission and the broader orbital economy, even as market participants say uncertainty is holding back big decisions [2].
Also today, in brief (NBC video roundup) [1]
- Iran targeted energy infrastructure after Israel struck a gas field; separate analysts say fixes could run months.
- Trump quipped about Pearl Harbor in a meeting with Japan and said people with learning disorders shouldn’t be president.
- UConn opened as a big favorite in women’s March Madness.
- Containers were at risk of toppling from a ship off Long Beach, a reminder of lingering supply-chain fragility.
- Kim Jong Un was filmed riding a tank while his teenage daughter drove.
- Police found a body amid the search for a missing U.S. student in Barcelona.
- And yes, some Boston lobster rolls are going for $50—a tidy sum for a taste of summer.
What I’m watching next
- Whether additional U.S. force movements deter cross-border strikes—or invite more tests from Iran-aligned groups [3] [4].
- Saudi messaging: does Riyadh coordinate a firmer response with Gulf partners, or keep pressure rhetorical?
- Oil repair timelines and shipping risks around Yanbu and the Red Sea chokepoints.
- Senate floor timing on Mullin’s nomination and any new subpoenas in the Comey matter [1].
- Artemis II schedule signals as NASA balances ambition with caution [2].
References


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