Morning Brief
Key Developments – March 28, 2026
As of the morning of Saturday, March 28, 2026 (EDT)
At a glance
- Russia intensifies its spring offensive in Ukraine with large drone and missile barrages; Ukraine strikes deep into Russian territory with long-range drones.
- The 2026 Iran war broadens as Yemen’s Houthi movement launches a missile toward Israel amid ongoing Iran–Israel–U.S. clashes.
- The U.S. faces a partial DHS shutdown and planned nationwide “No Kings 3” protests over immigration and broader Trump administration policies.
- Russia shows signs of financial strain as the Kremlin presses major businesses for greater support to fund the war.
- Global markets stay volatile despite forecasts for modest U.S. growth and easing inflation.
Based solely on information from the user-provided summaries and linked public reports.
1. War in Ukraine – Escalating Spring Offensive & Drone Warfare
Russia has launched some of its largest drone and missile barrages of the war in recent days, including nearly 1,000 drones and dozens of missiles between March 23–24.
- Strikes heavily targeted Ukraine’s energy grid and cities and are described as the start of a broader spring offensive.
- Ukraine is responding with large-scale long-range drone attacks on Russian territory.
- Overnight March 27–28, Ukrainian drones reportedly hit the Yaroslavl oil refinery—one of Russia’s largest—and other infrastructure in multiple regions, causing fires and temporary disruptions.
- Both sides are leaning more on drones amid shortages of conventional munitions and manpower, while civilian casualties and infrastructure damage in Ukraine continue to rise.
2. Wider Middle East – 2026 Iran War Widens
The conflict involving Iran, Israel, the U.S., and regional proxies continues to expand.
- Israel has carried out strikes on Iranian nuclear‑related and oil facilities, as well as targets in Lebanon.
- Israel is also absorbing repeated Iranian ballistic‑missile salvos.
- On March 28, Yemen’s Houthi movement openly joined the war by launching a ballistic‑missile attack toward Israel, setting off air‑raid sirens in Beersheba in southern Israel.
- The Iran war is drawing diplomatic attention and resources away from Ukraine; U.S.-mediated talks between Kyiv and Moscow are described as largely stalled while Washington focuses on the Middle East crisis.
3. United States – DHS Funding Standoff & Nationwide Protests
The U.S. remains in a partial federal government shutdown focused on the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).
- The DHS-centered shutdown began February 14, 2026, over disputes on immigration enforcement and border policy funding.
- A tentative Senate deal announced March 26 would fund much of DHS but exclude immigration enforcement and deportation operations; as of this morning, some DHS functions remain unfunded and final passage is uncertain.
- For today, March 28, large “No Kings 3” protests are planned in multiple U.S. cities.
- Demonstrations target federal immigration enforcement practices, recent ICE shootings of migrants, and broader opposition to the Trump administration’s policies, including its handling of the Iran war.
4. Russian Domestic Front – Strains in War Financing
New reporting and conflict analyses point to growing financial pressure inside Russia linked to the war.
- President Vladimir Putin has reportedly asked leading Russian business figures for greater financial support to sustain the war effort.
- This has prompted speculation that the Kremlin may be preparing measures that approach de‑facto nationalization or forced contributions from major firms.
5. Global & U.S. Economic Outlook
Recent economic outlooks from major financial institutions describe a mixed picture.
- The U.S. economy is expected to slow but continue growing, with forecasts of modest real GDP growth in 2026–27.
- Inflation is projected to ease gradually, and expectations point to a lower Federal Funds rate path over the next two years.
- Markets remain volatile amid concerns about new tariffs, rapid AI‑driven disruptions, and geopolitical risks from both the Ukraine and Iran wars.
- Commentary links trade policy uncertainty and fast AI adoption to episodes of stock‑market turbulence.