Major Global & U.S. News
Top points at a glance
- War involving Iran, the U.S., and Israel is intensifying, with heavy strikes, Iranian attacks on energy and shipping, and tension over the Strait of Hormuz.
- Humanitarian conditions are worsening in Lebanon and across the region, with over a million displaced in Lebanon and strikes on Gulf energy sites.
- Oil has surged above $100 a barrel and global markets are volatile amid fears of a prolonged energy shock.
- The Federal Reserve is cautious on rate cuts despite wartime price pressures, while facing political criticism for not easing faster.
- Air travel and shipping are disrupted from U.S. airports to key Middle East sea lanes, even as airlines roll out new products.
- A major U.S. court fight over an Anthropic AI ban highlights growing tension around AI policy, speech, and surveillance tools.
War involving Iran, the U.S., and Israel
The U.S.–Israel war in Iran continues with heavy airstrikes across Iran and the wider region. Iran has responded with attacks on regional energy infrastructure and shipping and is asserting control over the Strait of Hormuz, a key route for roughly one-fifth of the world’s oil.
Iran has rejected a U.S. ceasefire proposal and issued counter-demands. Reported death tolls are in the thousands across Iran, Lebanon, Israel, among U.S. forces, and among Gulf-region civilians.
Former U.S. President Donald Trump has again warned of potential “widespread destruction” of Iranian oil, power, and desalination infrastructure if no deal is reached soon to end the war and reopen Hormuz, adding to fears of deeper regional and humanitarian crises.
Humanitarian fallout in Lebanon and the wider region
Israel’s expanded ground and air operations in Lebanon have displaced more than one million Lebanese residents, according to public radio reporting. Thousands of additional U.S. troops are being deployed to the region, with more deployments expected.
Iran’s missile and drone attacks have also struck locations in Gulf states, including Kuwait, and key energy facilities such as Kharg Island and the South Pars gas and oil complex, further disrupting civilian life and regional economies.
Energy shock and global market volatility
Crude prices have surged above $100 a barrel as traffic through the Strait of Hormuz has reportedly dropped by about 90% since the war began. This is fueling concern about a prolonged global energy crisis and potential shortages, particularly in Asia.
U.S. stocks traded nervously on Monday, with major indexes swinging as oil prices climbed; benchmark U.S. crude settled up around 3.3% near $103. European markets were mixed, while some Asian exchanges saw sharp declines.
Germany’s DAX index fell about 1.4%, underperforming other European benchmarks amid worries that higher energy costs could reignite stagflation pressures in Europe.
U.S. economy, Fed policy, and political tensions
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said the Fed is closely monitoring wartime energy price spikes but stressed that monetary policy has limited power over supply-driven oil shocks. He has signaled caution on cutting interest rates quickly despite market turbulence.
Donald Trump has publicly criticized Powell and has urged the Fed to cut rates more aggressively to support the economy, adding political pressure on the central bank at a time of elevated inflation risk from higher fuel and transport costs.
Air travel and global transport disruptions
U.S. travelers are seeing continued airport delays, tied in part to unresolved federal funding issues affecting aviation security and operations. Long queues and rolling disruptions are being reported at multiple major hubs.
In the broader Middle East region, the Iran war and related Houthi attacks from Yemen have severely disrupted shipping and cruise traffic through the Bab al-Mandeb and Red Sea corridors, complicating global logistics and tourism.
Separately, United Airlines has introduced a new “Relax Row” long-haul economy seating product on transatlantic routes, signaling that airlines are still trying to differentiate on comfort even as geopolitical risks reshape international travel patterns.
Technology and AI policy developments
In a significant U.S. tech-policy case, Anthropic has reportedly won a preliminary injunction blocking the Trump administration Defense Department’s ban on its Claude AI model. The company has argued that the ban amounts to unconstitutional retaliation over protected speech.
Broader technology coverage points to rapid advances in AI platforms, rising concern over surveillance and AI-based lie-detection tools, and shifting business models for online information platforms under pressure from AI-generated content.
Recent extreme weather in North America
Earlier in March, a major blizzard informally called Winter Storm Iona brought up to 3–4 feet of snow to parts of the Upper Midwest and High Plains. The storm contributed to hundreds of crashes and formed part of a wider outbreak of ice storms and severe weather across the central and eastern United States.