Live updates: Trump says no deal with Iran until ‘unconditional surrender’ | CNN

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Trump says no deal with Iran until ‘unconditional surrender’

President Donald Trump speaks at an event to honor the 2025 Major League Soccer champions Inter Miami CF in the East Room of the White House, Thursday, March 5, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
Dana Bash interviews President Trump about the war with Iran
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Here's the latest

Trump on Iran: US President Donald Trump said there will be no deal with Iran until “unconditional surrender.” The president also told CNN he’s not concerned whether Iran becomes a democratic state, and he is seeking leadership that will treat the US, Israel and Middle East allies well.

• Strikes in Tehran: Explosions lit up the sky in Tehran after Israel said it had begun a “broad-scale wave of strikes.” CNN saw thick black smoke in the capital, while state media reported a busy shopping street was hit. Tehran residents tell CNN they experienced the “worst night” of airstrikes since the war began.

• Panic in Beirut: Fresh strikes also hit Beirut, hours after Israel said it targeted Hezbollah sites overnight in the Lebanese capital’s southern suburbs.

• Strait of Hormuz chokepoint: As the war disrupts global energy supplies, Trump said he is not worried about soaring gas prices in the US. Meanwhile, two of the largest shipping companies are no longer accepting cargo bound for the Persian Gulf.

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Ghanaian Army says two UN peacekeepers critically injured by missile fire in Lebanon

The Ghanaian Armed Forces said two of their soldiers serving in UNIFIL, the United Nations peacekeeping mission in Lebanon, were “critically injured” after their position came under missile fire on Friday.

In a statement issued on X, the Ghanaian Army said their headquarters in southern Lebanon suffered “two missile attacks” within less than 10 minutes on Friday evening.

The statement did not specify whether the missiles were fired by Israel or Hezbollah, instead attributing them to the “fallout of the current on-going (Israel Defense Forces) and Hezbollah exchanges.”

The Ghanaian Armed Forces added that it had registered an official complaint with UN headquarters in New York. CNN has reached out to the IDF and UNIFIL for comment.

The peacekeeping mission has operated in southern Lebanon for more than 45 years, made up of personnel from more than 50 countries.

During Israel’s last invasion of Lebanon in 2024, Israeli officials accused Hezbollah of operating in areas near UNIFIL positions. IDF troops also occasionally fired on peacekeepers and forcibly entered UNIFIL facilities.

CNN’s Dana Karni and Kara Fox contributed reporting.

CNN visited a Kurdish site where an Iranian missile struck. Here's what we found

An Iranian missile struck a base of Iranian Kurdish militias in Iraq’s Kurdistan. That is significant because as CNN has reported, the CIA is working to arm Iranian Kurdish forces with the aim of fomenting a popular uprising in Iran, according to multiple sources.

CNN’s Clarissa Ward shows what that means:

Clarissa Ward shows the crater after an Iranian missile struck a Kurdish base in Iraqi Kurdistan.
Iranian missile strikes Kurdish base

CNN's Clarissa Ward shows the aftermath after an Iranian missile struck a base of Iranian Kurdish militias in Iraq's Kurdistan. The CIA is working to arm Iranian Kurdish forces with the aim of fomenting a popular uprising in Iran, multiple people familiar with the plan told CNN this week.

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UN chief warns that Iran war could "spiral beyond anyone’s control"

United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres delivers a speech at the opening of the 61st session of the UN Human Rights Council at the United Nations office in Geneva on February 23.

United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres on Friday called for “serious diplomatic negotiations” to stop the fighting in the Middle East, warning that “the stakes could not be higher.”

“All the unlawful attacks in the Middle East and beyond are causing tremendous suffering and harm to civilians throughout the region – and pose a grave (sic) risk to the global economy, particularly to the most vulnerable people,” Guterres said in a statement.

More on the economy: Inflation could rise and economic growth slow around the world if the conflict in the Middle East drags on, economists have warned.

You’ve read about escalating strikes in the Middle East conflict. Here’s what that looks like

We’ve been bringing you reports of intensifying attacks across the Middle East, including at the Israel-Lebanon border. Watch what that means as a CNN team observes the exchanging of strikes:

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Intensifying crossfire on Israel-Lebanon border

A CNN team on the Israel-Lebanon border witnessed two projectiles from Lebanon striking northern Israel, as the crossfire between Israel and Hezbollah intensifies. Israel has carried out a wave of strikes in Beirut and in southern Lebanon. Meanwhile, Israel says five Israeli soldiers were seriously wounded by Hezbollah fire on Friday. CNN’s Jeremy Diamond reports from the Israel-Lebanon border.

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Kurdish armed group struck by drones and missiles in northern Iraq

A security force headquarters belonging to the Kurdish armed group Kurdistan Freedom Party (PAK) was struck by a drone attack Friday afternoon, according to Iranian state media and confirmed by a spokesperson for the group.

The base, located in northern Iraq near the city of Erbil, was targeted by two drones and two missiles and resulted in four injuries among the PAK security forces, the spokesperson said.

Footage of the attack showed thick plumes of smoke rising from the struck base.

The spokesperson could not confirm where the attacks originated from, stating that missile attacks usually come from inside Iran, while drone attacks sometimes are launched by pro-Iranian factions inside Iraq.

Since CNN reported that the CIA was working to arm Iranian Kurdish groups to foment an insurgency inside Iran, Tehran has targeted these fighters more frequently and more intensely, even employing some of its missiles.

CNN’s Vasco Cotovio contributed to this reporting.

IDF says it struck Iranian “command center” in Lebanon as death toll surpasses 200

The Israel Defense Forces said it struck an Iranian “command center” in Beirut’s Dahieh neighborhood, among other targets, today as war continues to rage between Iran, Israel and the US.

The IDF said that it struck an Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) “Air Force command center,” and other command centers used by Hezbollah’s navy, finance unit and operating council.

“Prior to the strike, steps were taken to mitigate harm to civilians, including the use of precise munition, aerial surveillance, and additional intelligence,” the IDF said, adding that it had struck over 500 locations since the war began.

Israeli Chief of the General Staff Eyal Zamir said in a visit to northern Israel that the IDF would “not relinquish the disarming of Hezbollah” among its war aims.

At least 217 have died and 798 people have been injured in the ongoing air strikes, Lebanon’s National News Agency reported Friday, citing the Ministry of Health.

In addition to deaths and injuries, Israel’s far-reaching evacuation order, demanding residents south of Lebanon’s Litani River to move north, has resulted in more than 109,000 people in displacement shelters, according to the Lebanese government.

Trump alone will decide when Iran has "unconditionally surrendered," press secretary says

President Donald Trump in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building on March 4.

What will it look like for Iran to deliver an “UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER,” as President Donald Trump demanded Friday?

The president will decide, his spokeswoman said a few hours later.

“What the president means is that when he, as commander in chief of the US Armed Forces, determines that Iran no longer poses a threat to the United States of America and the goals of Operation Epic Fury has been fully realized, then Iran will essentially be in a place of unconditional surrender, whether they say it themselves or not,” she told reporters in the White House driveway.

“Frankly,” she went on, “they don’t have a lot of people to say that for them, because the United States and and the State of Israel have completely wiped out near more than 50 leaders of the former terrorist regime, including the Supreme Leader himself.”

Leavitt’s explanation, like Trump’s post from earlier in the day, stopped short of making any specific demands that Iranian leaders renounce their nuclear ambitions or terror groups.

Several US charter flights have brought back hundreds of Americans, officials say

This photo posted on X by Assistant Secretary of State for Global Public Affairs Dylan Johnson shows Americans boarding one of the State Department charter flights leaving the Middle East to the US on Friday.

Several US charter flights have brought back “hundreds” of Americans from the Middle East to the United States, “with additional flights scheduled to take place over the coming days, as security conditions allow,” Assistant Secretary of State for Global Public Affairs Dylan Johnson said Friday.

Johnson said the State Department’s task force had “directly assisted nearly 13,000 Americans abroad, offering security guidance and travel assistance.”

“The Department is facilitating charter flights from Israel, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates,” said a second State Department official, speaking on background to reporters Friday. They said they expected the number of flights to be in the double digits over the coming days but declined to provide a specific figure.

However, “30 to 40% of Americans are declining our charter operations at this time,” the official said, attributing it to an increasing availability of commercial flight options.

“As we’re getting people onto flights, the average is 30 to 40% of people say, ‘I have departed the region already. I want to take a different option. I’m actually not going to go today, etc,’” the official said. They said they have not heard of anyone declining a flight because they feel unsafe traveling to the airport.

The official noted that not all flights are coming back to the US. Rather, they are “going to a variety of locations where folks can arrange onward travel or directly to the United States.”

One of the charter planes that brought back Americans was the New England Patriots’ team plane, according to a post on X from Johnson. Both the Patriots and the State Department said the team was not involved in the use of the aircraft.

“One of the companies the State Department contracted for charter flights also manages the New England Patriots’ team plane. This flight was entirely paid for by the State Department,” a State Department spokesperson said.

The State Department continues to urge Americans in need of assistance in Oman, Kuwait, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and Israel to complete the Crisis Intake Form. Their call line is still running 24/7 +1-202-501-4444, the official said.

UK counter-drone helicopters arrive in Cyprus

British helicopters with counter-drone capabilities have started arriving in Cyprus, the UK’s Ministry of Defence said on Friday.

After an attack on a military base in Cyprus, Prime Minister Keir Starmer said that he would send the Royal Navy’s HMS Dragon warship and Wildcat helicopters to the region

Four additional Typhoon aircraft are scheduled to arrive in Qatar overnight, the defense ministry said.

The UK also had aircraft making defensive air patrols over Qatar, Jordan and the Eastern Mediterranean last night, the ministry said.

Starmer has repeatedly asserted that the UK will not join the US and Israel in taking offensive action against Iran.

Trump and Hegseth meeting with defense contractors at the White House

President Donald Trump and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth are expected to meet with defense contractors at the White House today, according to press secretary Karoline Leavitt.

“The president will be meeting with defense contractors here at the White House in a few minutes, with Secretary Hegseth,” Leavitt told reporters.

“This is a pre-scheduled meeting, and the purpose of it is to talk about the president’s aggressive and fierce support for rapidly increasing the ability of US manufacturers to produce American-made weapons,” she added.

A White House official previewed this meeting earlier in the week, saying in part that the president would discuss ramping up weapons production with the defense contractors.

CNN’s Alejandra Jaramillo contributed to this report.

"Edge of panic." US oil prices skyrocket, topping $91 for first time since October 2023

A gas station attendant pumps gas for a customer in New York's Queens borough on Wednesday as crude oil prices have increased across the United States.

Energy supply fears are intensifying, catapulting the price of oil beyond $91 a barrel for the first time since the fall of 2023.

US oil prices spiked by another 12% in recent trading to $90.85 a barrel. That leaves crude on track for its biggest one-day gain since May 2020.

Earlier today, oil traded as high as $91.09 a barrel — the highest intraday level since October 2023.

Brent crude, the world benchmark, surged 8% to $92.50 a barrel in recent trading.

While traders initially took the de facto shutdown of the Strait of Hormuz in stride, fear is starting to set in about when this critical waterway will reopen. About 20% of global crude is transported through the strait, but the US-Israel war with Iran has effectively shut down that avenue.

“Unless the market believes and sees those tankers are going through the Strait of Hormuz, we’re going to blow through $100 and keep going until we hit a recession,” said McNally, a former energy adviser to President George W. Bush.

US oil prices have now surged by 36% this week, on track for their biggest weekly gain on FactSet, whose records go back to 1983.

Plan for oil tankers' naval escorts has no specific timeline, administration official says

A senior administration official said that there is currently “no specific timeline” on launching the Naval escort operation in the Strait of Hormuz, but there is a concerted effort to set the conditions for the operation as soon as possible.

US officials view the strait as part of an active conflict zone where Iran has taken action to target several tankers since the start of the conflict. That’s why the US military is actively working to take out Iran’s firepower, reducing its ability to attack vessels in the region.

Trump administration officials are viewing the current moment as a short-term disruption that can quickly be eased once the security environment allows for tankers to restart transit with US military protection.

“The world is at absolutely zero risk of running out of oil or energy through this conflict, but we are suffering a short-term price dislocation. That’ll be over soon,” the official said.

Still, the administration’s actions in recent days provide a window into a level of concern that isn’t reflected in the more sanguine public statements from Trump and his top energy and economic officials.

Trump’s public announcement this week of a US backstop to commercial maritime insurance through a risk-based reinsurance proposal was paired with the promise of US naval escorts through the strait at a future date was intended to talk down the rapidly accelerating market unease triggered by the de facto closure of the strait.

The announcement had a near-term effect, but as Gulf states have more publicly warned of the rapidly looming production shutdowns tied to dwindling storage capacity and the timeline for naval escorts has remained unclear, prices resumed their steady upward trajectory.

“Insurance isn’t the issue. It’s a problem, but it’s not the issue. Security is the issue,” a senior shipping executive told CNN.

The Trump administration is currently weighing a number of additional short-term actions designed to unlock global supply in a short-term manner, the official added.

Judge cites Iran war as he looks skeptically at restrictive Pentagon press policy

US Secretary of War Pete Hegseth listens to question during a news conference at the Pentagon on March 2 in Arlington, Virginia.

A federal judge today stressed the importance of press access to the Pentagon during the war in Iran as he looked skeptically at a restrictive policy rolled out by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth last year.

“Isn’t it even more important than ever that the public have information and a variety of views on what their country is doing?” senior US District Judge Paul Friedman asked a Justice Department attorney defending the policy.

He cited major moments when press coverage that included reporting of confidential information helped the public better understand what was unfolding. Those moments, he said, included the Vietnam War, the US invasion of Iraq and the use of Guantanamo Bay during the war on terror.

“A lot of things need to be held tightly and securely. But openness and transparency allows the public to know what their government is doing,” Friedman said. “That’s what the First Amendment is all about.”

Friedman is weighing a major challenge brought by The New York Times to the Pentagon policy, which requires beat reporters to sign a pledge not to obtain or use unauthorized material. Scores of news organizations, including the Times and CNN, have declined to agree, resulting in reporters being denied press badges that give them access to the Pentagon.

During one testy exchange with DOJ attorney Michael Bruns, the judge scoffed at the government’s argument that the First Amendment doesn’t protect journalists who solicit or receive confidential information.

“Why not? Why not?” he shouted. “There is no prohibition on them asking the question” that may result in the disclosure of such information.

"It's not our war": Gulf nations try to avoid chaos as conflict spreads

Smoke rises above the city of Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on Thursday, amid the US-Israeli conflict with Iran.

“It’s not our war,” a regional source told me earlier in the week, requesting anonymity to discuss sensitive policy issues. The same sentiment reverberated through many conversations in Riyadh. Yet, explosions and fires caused by drones, missiles and debris of interceptions are serving the Gulf nations the ashy taste of war zones.

In the months leading up to the joint US-Israel attack, Arab nations argued strenuously against a prolonged war.

They understood that the chaos resulting from regime collapse in Iran would ensnare their economies and security for years. These repercussions are likely to far outlast the Iranian drones and missiles that are currently shattering the Arabian Gulf’s carefully tended brand of stability and prosperity.

That route has been upended. In the United Arab Emirates, billionaire Khalaf Ahmad Al Habtoor slammed Trump for dragging the region into war after promising peace and prosperity.

Official statements from Gulf nations condemning Iranian attacks have stressed that they have not allowed the US to use their airspace or territory to launch attacks.

And while the same statements note that Arab Gulf countries reserve the right to respond to Iranian aggression, hitting back comes with strategic and political risks.

Taking this option means weighing the reliability of the US as a political partner and weapons supplier. Israel’s attack on Qatar, home to the biggest US air base in the region, in September is still fresh in people’s minds.

Satellite image shows another key US missile interceptor radar site hit

A satellite image taken on March 1 shows smoke rising from a radar site near the Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia, where dozens of American planes are stationed. At the site, a tent previously used to shelter a radar system for a nearby THAAD battery was badly charred and debris was scattered around it.

A satellite image taken on March 1, 2026, shows smoke rising from a compound near Prince Sultan Air Base, where the radar for a THAAD battery was previously stationed.

It’s one of five radar sites CNN has identified as being struck by Iran or its allies. These are the heart of US air defenses, detecting an incoming missile and triggering the interceptors to shoot them down.

Four of the sites hosted radars for THAAD batteries, a US-made high-end missile interceptor system, used to engage and destroy ballistic missiles as they fly toward their targets. These systems, the US-made AN/TPY-2 transportable radar, cost just shy of half-a-billion dollars each, according to a 2025 Missile Defense Agency budget.

A satellite image from January of the tent near Prince Sultan Air Base showed the radar system’s antenna was positioned inside, pointed northeast toward Iran. It wasn’t immediately clear if the radar was present at the time of the attack or if the system previously stationed there belonged to the United States or Saudi Arabia.

Saudi officials did not respond to questions about the ownership of the system, and a US defense official declined to discuss the system citing operational security.

Read the full investigation.

Russia is providing intelligence aiding Iran’s war effort, sources say

Motorists drive along a street as smoke rises from a reported Iranian strike in the area where the US Embassy is located in Kuwait City on March 2.

Russia is providing Iran with intelligence about the locations and movements of American troops, ships and aircraft, according to multiple people familiar with US intelligence reporting on the issue, the first indication that Moscow has sought to get involved in the war.

One of the sources briefed on the intelligence said, “This shows Russia still likes Iran very much.”

Much of the intelligence Russia has shared with Iran has been imagery from Moscow’s sophisticated constellation of overhead satellites, one of the people said. It is not clear what Russia is getting in return for the assistance.

CNN has asked the Kremlin and the Russian embassy in Washington for comment about the intelligence sharing, which was first reported by the Washington Post.

Continue reading about Russia targeting intelligence.

What are the possible outcomes of the Iran conflict? CNN's Christiane Amanpour analyzes

More than 1,000 people have been killed so far in one week of US-Israeli bombings in Iran, according to human rights groups, including school girls in an elementary school that was hit in the opening salvo last week.

With no exit strategy in sight, CNN’s chief international anchor Christiane Amanpour analyzes how the war with Iran could play out:

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What are the possible outcomes of the Iran conflict?

With more than a thousand killed and no exit strategy in sight, CNN's chief international anchor Christiane Amanpour analyzes how the war in the Middle East could play out.

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Almost half a million people likely displaced in Lebanon, refugee council says

Residents of Beirut's southern suburbs flee from the area after the Israeli military threatened all of Dahiyeh with an evacuation order on Thursday.

The number of people displaced in Lebanon after Israel renewed strikes and issued sweeping evacuation orders is close to half a million, the Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC) estimates.

“There is a lot of anxiety and suffering and despair,” NRC’s Lebanon program director Maureen Philippon told CNN’s Becky Anderson, saying government figures suggest around 100,000 have found safety in government shelters.

But Philippon warned this is likely a fraction of the real figure.

“From past experience in Lebanon, it’s about 20 to 25% (of the displaced population) who go to the government designated official shelters,” she said, meaning the number of displaced people is probably closer to half a million people.

Philippon said evacuation notices often spark chaos, as communication can be sporadic and information can fail to reach everyone.

“People would go on the street, trying to make noise, and potentially shooting in the air just to wake up people, make sure they wake up, pack and leave,” Philippon said, describing responses of civilians desperate to support the safe evacuation of their neighbors.

Lebanon’s death toll amid the renewed conflict has risen to 217, while a further 798 have been wounded, as per the latest announcement from the country’s health ministry.

Israel says it has destroyed bunker of Iran's deceased supreme leader

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Israel says it has destroyed bunker of Iran's deceased Supreme Leader
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Aerial video released by the Israeli Air Force today purports to show the destruction of the secret bunker of Iran’s former Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei beneath the regime’s headquarters in central Tehran.

The Israel Defense Forces say the bunker was intended to be used by Khamenei as an emergency command center, although the supreme leader was killed by US-Israeli strikes before retreating to it. The bunker remained “one of the Iranian leadership’s most important military command centers,” the air force said in a statement.

Grainy footage, appearing to be from the early hours of the morning, shows huge explosions ripping through several buildings as Israeli fighter jets struck multiple locations around the compound, sending smoke and debris high into the air.

CNN cannot independently verify the time and date of the videos.

Trump provided fresh insight on his view of the war with Iran. Catch up here

US President Donald Trump today gave more insights into his view of the war with Iran while US allies are cementing their positions.

If you’re just reading in, here’s what to know:

Everything Trump has said this morning:

What’s happening in Iran:

  • CNN’s Fred Pleitgen and Claudia Otto have arrived in Tehran, where Iran’s leadership gathered thousands following Friday prayers to voice their anger at the US-Israeli bombing campaign across the country and mourn the late Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. While usually religious hardliners come to Friday prayers, the turnout shows the government is still able to mobilize the masses.
  • Many young Iranians, who typically don’t have TVs or satellites and rely on the internet for information, are getting creative during communications blackouts across the country, one Tehran resident tells CNN.
  • Iranian authorities estimate more than 100,000 people may have left Tehran in the first two days of the war, which may be an underestimate, an official from refugee agency UNHCR told CNN, saying fears of a devastating humanitarian crisis are emerging.

Elsewhere:

  • Leaders of the UK, France, Germany and Italy spoke Friday and stressed diplomacy amid the war. Iran’s collapse or proxy conflicts in the country could impact Europe on “security, energy supply, and migration,” German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said in a statement.
  • The Iranian armed forces say they launched a fresh wave of drones against US bases in Kuwait. There are no reports from Kuwait of damage or casualties.
  • Spain’s Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez, who has emerged as Europe’s harshest critic against the war in Iran, defended his decision to send a warship to help defend Cyprus, saying Spain is determined to “lend a hand to an EU state that is a victim of that conflict.”
  • Saudi Arabia intercepted a cruise missile east of Al-Kharj, its defense ministry said.

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