What the international press is saying — translated for American readers.
Iran | Killed: 1,348+ civilians (UN Ambassador Iravani) | Injured: 17,000+ | Children killed or injured: 1,100+ (UNICEF)
Lebanon | Killed: 634+ | Displaced: 800,000+
Israel | Killed: 12 civilians | Injured: 1,929+
US | KIA: 8 | Wounded: 140 (Pentagon)
Ships attacked in/near Hormuz since Feb 28: 17+ and climbing — 3 more struck overnight into Thursday morning
Brent crude: Back over $100/barrel — IEA’s record 400M barrel release failed to move prices
Travel & tourism losses: $600M per day across the Middle East (World Travel & Tourism Council)
US war cost: $11.3B in first 6 days (Pentagon, closed-door Senate briefing — NYT first, confirmed NBC/The Hill) — does not include pre-war military buildup costs. Sen. Coons (D-Del.) said Wednesday he believes the actual total “is significantly above that.” At the Pentagon’s own $1B/day baseline, Day 13 puts the running estimate at $13B+ and climbing. A $50B supplemental funding request is being prepared for Congress.
Overnight into Day 13, three more vessels were struck in and around the Strait of Hormuz. The Safesea Vishnu — a Marshall Islands-flagged tanker owned by a US company — was hit by an Iranian underwater drone in Iraqi territorial waters near Basra’s Umm Qasr port. One crew member was killed. Thirty-eight others were rescued. A second vessel, the Maltese-flagged chemical tanker Zefyros, was also struck nearby. A third ship was hit off the UAE coast.
Iraq subsequently shut down all oil port operations in its southern terminals — a staggering development. Iraq’s southern ports are one of the few remaining major export routes not dependent on the Strait of Hormuz itself. That exit is now compromised.
The IRGC’s framing of all these strikes is consistent and deliberate. Every statement follows the same formula: the vessel “ignored warnings,” therefore Iran’s navy acted. The message to the shipping world is unmistakable — Iran has declared itself the authority over who moves through these waters, and it is collecting compliance through fire.
Thailand summoned Iran’s ambassador Thursday over the Mayuree Naree attack. Three crew members remain missing, believed to have been in the engine compartment when the ship was struck.
Iran’s parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf escalated the rhetoric further Thursday morning, warning that any attack on Iranian islands would cause Iran to “abandon all restraint” and make “the Persian Gulf run with the blood of invaders.”
The US and Europe are now actively discussing naval convoy escorts for commercial shipping — but Eurasia Group estimates it will take until end of March or early April to stand anything up. In the meantime, ships are making the call individually: most are routing around the Cape of Good Hope, adding weeks and significant cost to every voyage.
🌍 TRANSLATOR’S NOTE: Outside the US, the shutdown of Iraqi ports is being treated as a major escalation — not just of the military conflict but of the economic war. Iraq is not a party to this conflict. Its oil terminals are civilian infrastructure. The fact that Iran struck tankers in Iraqi territorial waters signals that Iran is no longer limiting its economic pressure campaign to the strait itself. The war’s economic blast radius just got wider.
🇺🇸 WHAT AMERICAN READERS NEED TO KNOW: The IEA released a record 400 million barrels from strategic reserves this week. Brent crude is still over $100 a barrel. That number tells you everything about the gap between what governments can do and what markets believe about how long this lasts. The strategic reserve exists for emergencies. It just fired its biggest shot in history. Prices didn’t move.
Thirteen days into this war, America’s closest allies are confronting an uncomfortable reality: they are stakeholders in a conflict they were never consulted on, with no idea how it ends — and no one in Washington is telling them.
The Council on Foreign Relations documented what European capitals have confirmed privately: the US launched the operation with little to no consultation with transatlantic allies. European governments learned about Operation Epic Fury the same way everyone else did.
Since then, the picture hasn’t clarified. It has gotten murkier. In recent days Trump has called for Iran’s “unconditional surrender,” suggested the war was “pretty much over,” vowed to continue until “ultimate victory,” and said there was “practically nothing left to target.” These statements were sometimes made hours apart.
The G7 call — convened by Macron — was meant to produce alignment. It produced the opposite. Two sources with knowledge of the call told Axios that Trump was “ambiguous and noncommittal.” Some participants left believing he wanted to end the war quickly. Others came away with the opposite impression. Macron went public afterward, saying it would be “up to the president of the United States to clarify both his final objectives and the pace he intends to give to the operations.” That is diplomatic language for: we don’t know what he wants and he didn’t tell us.
CNN obtained a quote from a European diplomat that is more direct: “We have no idea what they actually want to accomplish when this war is over. It doesn’t seem like Trump even knows.”
The most telling signal came from Germany. Friedrich Merz has been the most supportive major European leader of the US-Israeli campaign — and even he is now breaking from the script. “Above all, we’re concerned that there is apparently no joint plan for how this war can be brought quickly to a convincing end,” Merz said Tuesday. He stressed that Germany and Europe have “no interest in an endless war.”
The mines question crystallized the problem. Trump warned Iran publicly and repeatedly to remove mines from the strait, threatening consequences “at a level never seen before.” Then Macron — on the same day, after the G7 call — said he had “no confirmation” that Iran was laying mines at all. Two leaders, same alliance, contradicting each other publicly on a core military fact on the same afternoon.
Spain is being punished for asking basic questions. After Madrid said it would not allow the US to use jointly operated bases in southern Spain for strikes not covered by the UN charter, Trump threatened to “cut off trade with Spain.” Keir Starmer and Pedro Sánchez have both faced Trump’s public anger for positions that, in any previous administration, would have been considered routine allied diplomacy.
The CFR’s conclusion: Europe went into this war as a bystander. Thirteen days later it is discovering it is a stakeholder — one with enormous economic exposure, no seat at the decision-making table, and no visibility into the exit.
🌍 TRANSLATOR’S NOTE: In European capitals, the mines moment was noticed. Macron publicly contradicting Trump on a factual military claim is not a routine diplomatic disagreement — it is a European leader signaling that he will not echo Washington’s narrative when he believes it is wrong. That is a significant break in the post-war Atlantic order. European press read it that way immediately.
🇺🇸 WHAT AMERICAN READERS NEED TO KNOW: Germany just approved its largest military rearmament since World War II, partly in direct response to this war and Trump’s approach to it. Europe is not just confused about American goals — it is actively making contingency plans for a world in which it cannot rely on Washington to be consistent, predictable, or honest with its allies. That process accelerated this week.
For the first time since the war began, Tehran has put conditions on the table. Iranian President Pezeshkian outlined three requirements to end the conflict: recognition of Iran’s “legitimate rights,” payment of reparations, and firm international guarantees against future aggression.
These terms are almost certainly not a serious opening negotiating position in the near term — reparations alone would be a non-starter in Washington. But their existence matters. Iran is signaling, for the first time publicly, that it has an off-ramp in mind. It is also signaling what it wants that off-ramp to look like: not surrender, but a negotiated acknowledgment that it was wronged.
Paired with this, Iran-linked hacker group Handala claimed it crippled the networks of US medical device giant Stryker, stealing 50TB of data — stating explicitly this was retaliation for the Minab school strike. Whether or not the claim is fully accurate, the cyber dimension of this war is now open and active.
UNICEF weighed in Thursday with its first comprehensive assessment: the conflict has created a “catastrophic” situation for children, with more than 1,100 already killed or injured.
🌍 TRANSLATOR’S NOTE: Outside the US, Pezeshkian’s three conditions were read not as a peace offer but as a face-saving framework — the minimum Iran would need to be able to tell its own people that the war ended on terms other than total defeat. The international press noted the language carefully: “legitimate rights” is the same phrase Iran has used in nuclear negotiations for years. It is a signal that Iran still sees a negotiated path, even if Washington doesn’t.
🇺🇸 WHAT AMERICAN READERS NEED TO KNOW: The White House has not responded to Pezeshkian’s conditions. Trump said Wednesday there is “practically nothing left” to target in Iran, and that the war could end “any time I want.” Iran’s parliament speaker said the same day that Iran is “certainly not seeking a ceasefire.” Two leaders saying the war is nearly over while their militaries escalate daily. Watch what they do, not what they say.
While the United States and its allies spent this week debating naval escort frameworks that won’t be operational until April at the earliest, India made a phone call.
External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar contacted Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi directly. The result: Iran agreed to allow Indian oil tankers to transit the Strait of Hormuz. As of Thursday morning, Indian vessels are moving through a waterway that is effectively closed to the rest of the world’s commercial shipping.
No other major economy has achieved this. Not the EU. Not Japan. Not South Korea — all of whom are facing severe energy supply disruptions and rerouting tankers around the Cape of Good Hope at enormous cost. India negotiated a bilateral exemption while everyone else was still in meetings.
This is not a coincidence of geography or goodwill. India has maintained working relationships with both Washington and Tehran throughout this conflict, refusing to join Western condemnations of the strikes while also stopping short of backing Iran’s retaliation. That studied neutrality just paid a concrete dividend — in oil.
The move also has a Ukraine echo that will not be lost on European readers. India spent two years buying Russian oil at discount prices while Europe paid premium rates and called it a moral failure. Now India is buying Iranian-adjacent access while Europe’s tankers sail around Africa. The pattern is consistent: New Delhi will not sacrifice energy security on the altar of alliance politics.
🌍 TRANSLATOR’S NOTE: In the Asian and Global South press, this story is being read as a quiet demonstration of what genuine strategic autonomy looks like in practice. India did not lecture. It did not sanction. It picked up the phone. The result is that 1.4 billion people have more affordable energy today than they did yesterday. That calculus is not lost on governments in Ankara, Jakarta, or BrasĂlia who are watching how this war reshapes the rules of the road.
🇺🇸 WHAT AMERICAN READERS NEED TO KNOW: India is the world’s third-largest oil importer. It cannot afford to have the Strait closed. But instead of waiting for Washington to fix the problem, it solved it independently — through the same Iranian government the US is currently bombing. That is not a betrayal of the alliance. It is a preview of a multipolar world in which countries increasingly handle their own energy security, with or without American leadership.
Iraq oil terminals — shut down Thursday morning; watch for duration and Iranian follow-up
Naval convoy escorts — Eurasia Group says end of March/early April at earliest; G7 working group established
Pezeshkian’s three conditions — watch for any US or back-channel response
Mojtaba Khamenei — fractured foot confirmed (CNN); still no public appearance or written statement; Day 13
Minab school investigation — formal Pentagon probe underway; expected to take months
Stryker cyberattack — 50TB claimed stolen; watch for verification and US response
Spanish bases — Trump threatened trade war with Madrid; watch for NATO reaction
Iran islands warning — parliament speaker’s “abandon all restraint” statement; watch for US/Israeli response
Day 13 Evening Edition tonight. Stay with us.
— The Rest of the World Report
Sources: Al Jazeera, Axios, CNN, NPR, Reuters, ABC News, Iran International, Council on Foreign Relations, Eurasia Group, UNICEF, World Travel & Tourism Council, Jerusalem Post, NBC News, AP, Fortune, Military Times, Washington Times
ROTWR DAY 13 MORNING — CHEATSHEET WITH LINKS
Thursday, March 12, 2026
============================================
NUMBERS
——-
– Iran killed: 1,348+ civilians (UN Ambassador Iravani / Al Jazeera)
– Iran injured: 17,000+
– Children killed or injured: 1,100+ (UNICEF — Al Jazeera Day 13 recap)
– Lebanon killed: 634+ | Displaced: 800,000+
– Israel killed: 12 civilians | Injured: 1,929+
– US KIA: 8 | Wounded: 140 (Pentagon)
– Ships attacked since Feb 28: 17+ (3 more overnight Thursday)
– Brent crude: back over $100/barrel (NBC News live blog)
– Travel & tourism losses: $600M/day (WTTC via CNN)
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/3/12/iran-war-what-is-happening-on-day-13-of-us-israel-attacks
—
STORY 1: STRAIT / SHIPS / IRAQ PORTS
————————————–
– Safesea Vishnu (Marshall Islands, US-owned): hit by Iranian underwater drone, Umm Qasr/Basra, 1 killed, 38 rescued
– Zefyros (Malta-flagged chemical tanker): hit nearby, Iraqi territorial waters
– Third vessel hit off UAE coast (UKMTO)
– Iraq shuts ALL southern oil port operations
– Thailand summoned Iran’s ambassador over Mayuree Naree; 3 crew still missing
– Iran parliament speaker Ghalibaf: any attack on Iranian islands = “abandon all restraint” / “Persian Gulf run with blood of invaders”
– Naval escorts: Eurasia Group says end of March/early April at earliest
– IEA 400M barrel release FAILED to push prices below $100
ABC News live (ships, Basra):
https://abcnews.com/International/live-updates/iran-live-updates/?id=130893022
Iran International live (Ghalibaf, Safesea):
https://www.iranintl.com/en/liveblog/202603119917
Eurasia Group / naval escorts:
https://www.axios.com/2026/03/12/iran-war-oil-hormuz-strait-ships-trump-energy
Al Jazeera live (Iraq ports, Day 13):
—
STORY 2: EUROPE / ENDGAME / G7 CONFUSION
——————————————
– CFR: US launched war with “little to no consultation” with transatlantic allies
– G7 call: Trump “ambiguous and noncommittal” — participants left with opposite impressions (Axios, 2 sources)
– Macron after G7: “It will be up to the president of the United States to clarify both his final objectives and the pace he intends to give to the operations”
– European diplomat to CNN: “We have no idea what they actually want to accomplish when this war is over. It doesn’t seem like Trump even knows.”
– Merz (Germany, most supportive EU leader): “There is apparently no joint plan for how this war can be brought quickly to a convincing end” — “no interest in an endless war”
– Macron on mines: “no confirmation” Iran was laying mines — directly contradicting Trump’s public warnings (Al Jazeera)
– Spain: Trump threatens trade war after Madrid refuses US use of joint bases for strikes outside UN charter
– Starmer + Sánchez: both faced Trump’s anger for standard allied diplomacy positions
Axios (G7 confusion, endgame):
https://www.axios.com/2026/03/12/trump-iran-war-endgame
CNN (European diplomat quote, endgame):
https://www.cnn.com/2026/03/07/politics/donald-trump-iran-war-endgame-demands
CFR (Europe’s disjointed response):
https://www.cfr.org/articles/europes-disjointed-response-to-the-u-s-israeli-war-with-iran
AP/Fortune (Merz quote, Spain trade threat):
https://fortune.com/2026/03/11/trump-iran-war-no-plan-how-to-end/
Military Times (Merz, European allies):
—
STORY 3: IRAN NAMES ITS PRICE / UNICEF / CYBER
————————————————
– Pezeshkian’s 3 conditions: (1) recognition of Iran’s legitimate rights (2) reparations (3) firm international guarantees against future aggression
– Handala (Iran-linked): claimed crippling Stryker medical device networks, 50TB stolen — explicitly framed as Minab school retaliation
– UNICEF: “catastrophic” situation — 1,100+ children killed or injured
Al Jazeera Day 13 (Pezeshkian conditions, UNICEF, Handala):
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/3/12/iran-war-what-is-happening-on-day-13-of-us-israel-attacks
—
STORY 4: INDIA CALLS TEHRAN — AND THE STRAIT OPENS
—————————————————-
– Jaishankar (India EAM) called Araghchi (Iran FM) directly
– Iran agreed to allow Indian oil tankers to transit the Strait of Hormuz
– India is the ONLY major economy to secure a bilateral Hormuz exemption
– All other major importers (EU, Japan, South Korea) still rerouting via Cape of Good Hope
– Context: India has maintained studied neutrality throughout — no condemnation of strikes, no backing of retaliation
– Echoes India’s Russia oil pattern during Ukraine war: energy security over alliance politics
India TV News / PTI (Jaishankar-Araghchi talks, Indian tankers through strait):
Moscow Times (Zelensky/Erdogan context, India neutrality):
https://www.themoscowtimes.com/2026/03/10/us-proposed-ukraine-russia-talks-next-week-zelensky-a92188
—
WATCH LIST SOURCES
——————
– Mojtaba Khamenei fractured foot: CNN Day 12
https://www.cnn.com/2026/03/11/middleeast/us-israel-iran-middle-east-war-what-we-know-intl-hnk
– Naval escorts timeline (Eurasia Group):
https://www.axios.com/2026/03/12/iran-war-oil-hormuz-strait-ships-trump-energy
– Minab school Pentagon investigation:
https://www.npr.org/2026/03/11/nx-s1-5744981/pentagon-iran-missile-school-hegseth
============================================
HOLDS FOR DAY 13 EVENING
– Duration of Iraq port shutdown
– Any US/allied response to Pezeshkian’s 3 conditions
– Mojtaba Khamenei — still no public appearance (Day 13)
– Stryker cyberattack verification
– NATO reaction to Spain/Trump trade threat
– Naval escort framework progress
– Iran islands warning follow-through
– India exemption follow-through — watch for other nations (Turkey, Indonesia, Brazil?) seeking similar bilateral deals