‘7 Million Iranians Wait For US Troops’

Iranian leaders warn of mass mobilization, issue direct threats, and signal readiness for escalation amid ongoing US-Israeli attacks.

Key Developments

  • Ghalibaf says nearly 7 million Iranians have volunteered to take up arms in defense of the country.
  • Hatami warns that no enemy troops should survive any ground attack on Iranian territory.
  • IRGC commander Majid Mousavi issues direct threat to US leadership as tensions continue to escalate.

‘Bring It On’

Iranian officials on Thursday issued some of their strongest warnings yet since the start of the US-Israeli war, pairing threats of wider retaliation with declarations of mass popular readiness for battle.

The sharpest political message came from Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, who said a nationwide campaign had already drawn millions of volunteers prepared to defend the country.

“Right now, in less than a week, a powerful national campaign sweeping the country has brought forward around 7 million Iranians who have already stepped up and declared they’re ready to pick up arms and stand in defense of our nation,” Ghalibaf wrote on X.

He followed that with an even more direct warning: “You come for our home… you’re gonna meet the whole family. Locked, loaded, and standing tall. Bring it on.”

‘No Survivors’

Those remarks did not emerge in isolation. Just last week, Tasnim reported that more than one million Iranian combatants had already been organized for possible ground confrontation with US forces, while describing a wider influx of young volunteers to Basij, IRGC, and army centers.

That earlier report gives Ghalibaf’s new figure a clearer military and political backdrop: the Iranian leadership is presenting the current confrontation not simply as an exchange of strikes, but as a moment of national mobilization.

The military tone was reinforced by Army commander Amir Hatami, who ordered operational headquarters to monitor “enemy movements with utmost pessimism and accuracy” and remain ready to counter any method of attack.

Reuters, citing Iranian state media, reported Hatami’s warning in blunt terms: “No enemy troops should survive if adversaries attempt a ground operation.”

https://www.palestinechronicle.com/us-israel-bomb-irans-pasteur-institute-sudans-al-shifa-shadows-reawaken/embed/#?secret=yjszBpR7Fy#?secret=KvQhWOePC3

‘Hollywood Illusions’

That message was echoed in even harsher language by IRGC Aerospace Force commander Majid Mousavi.

In a post carried by Defa Press, Mousavi responded to recent US threats by writing: “You are the one who is taking your soldiers to the grave, not Iran, who wants to take it back to the Stone Age.”

He added: “Hollywood illusions have so contaminated your thinking that you are threatening a civilization that is more than 6,000 years old with a meager 250-year history.” Palestine Chronicle

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Iranian, Houthi Missiles Land in Israel

Incoming missile sirens sounded Thursday evening in central and southern Israel following barrages from Iran and Yemen in less than two hours, Israeli media reported.

Army Radio said missile fragments fell near Tel Aviv after a new wave of Iranian missiles targeted the area.

The daily Yedioth Ahronoth said one of the missiles made a direct impact in the city of Petah Tikva near Tel Aviv.

Channel 12 said sirens sounded in the Dead Sea in southern Israel after a missile attack from Yemen.

The outlet said a missile fired by the Houthi group was intercepted by air defenses.

No details were given about damage or injuries.

Regional tensions have escalated since the US and Israel launched a joint offensive on Iran on Feb. 28, killing more than 1,340 people to date, including then-Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.

Tehran has retaliated with drone and missile strikes targeting Israel, as well as Jordan, Iraq, and Gulf countries hosting US military assets. Anadolu

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Trump Threatens to Leave NATO But Can He?

US President Donald Trump on Thursday urged the members of NATO to gather the courage to send naval vessels to the Strait of Hormuz, again disparaging the longtime military alliance.

Asked why he had not mentioned NATO in his Wednesday night address to the nation, Trump said it was not a NATO speech but that he had referenced the strait and those who were absent. “They gotta get guts and go in and just send your ships up there and enjoy it,” he told Politico.

Pressed on whether he was frustrated with the alliance, Trump said: “I couldn’t care less. I didn’t need them.”

He added: “But if I ever did need them, they wouldn’t be there.”

NATO has invoked Article 5 – its collective defense clause – just once in its history, after the 2001 terrorist attacks on the United States. NATO allies have criticized Trump for starting the war on Iran without consulting them.

The remarks are the latest in a string of pointed criticisms Trump has directed at NATO over its response to the Strait of Hormuz crisis. He has previously called alliance members “cowards” and, in a separate interview with British daily The Telegraph, described NATO as a “paper tiger” and said leaving the alliance was “beyond reconsideration.”

Leaving NATO unilaterally – a move Trump has hinted at since his first term – would face significant legal hurdles. A 2023 law bars any US president from withdrawing from the alliance without the backing of a two-thirds majority in the US Senate.

The strait, through which roughly 20 million barrels of oil pass daily, has been effectively disrupted since early March following Iranian measures taken in retaliation for the US-Israeli offensive on Iran that began on Feb. 28.

Trump has repeatedly urged European allies and Gulf states to take a more active role in securing the strait, arguing that countries dependent on its oil should bear responsibility for reopening it.

Trump will meet with NATO chief Mark Rutte in Washington next week, according to The Wall Street Journal. Anadolu

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ESCWA: War Affects 5 Million in Arab States

ESCWA: Conflict Could Push 5 Million more People into Food Insecurity across Arab Countries

A 20% increase in global food prices could push an additional 5 million people into food insecurity across Arab middle- and low-income countries, the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia (ESCWA) warns in a new policy brief released Wednesday 2 April, 2026. The report underscores that this risk is immediate and growing, particularly for fragile and conflict-affected countries with limited fiscal space and high dependence on food imports.
 
The brief, titled “Conflict and its shockwaves: escalating impacts and risks for energy, water and food systems in the Arab region”, cautions that the escalating conflict in the region is triggering severe and interconnected shocks to energy, water and food systems, with potentially devastating consequences for human security and economic stability.
 
It highlights how disruptions to energy trade have been the most immediate macroeconomic shock. Oil markets are under acute stress, with Gulf hydrocarbon exports falling by 75 to 90% since the start of the war and oil prices surging above $112 per barrel due to the near-closure of the Strait of Hormuz. These disruptions are driving inflation, widening fiscal deficits, and sharply increasing transport and insurance costs across the region.
 
Water security risks are equally alarming. The brief notes that nearly 40 million people in Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries depend on desalinated water drawn from the Gulf, making them highly vulnerable to any damage to energy or desalination infrastructure, as well as to marine pollution caused by the conflict. Any prolonged disruption could rapidly escalate into a humanitarian crisis, given  limited household-level  emergency water storage.
 
“These overwhelming figures entail urgent and coordinated regional action to safeguard critical supply chains,” urged ESCWA Acting Executive Secretary Mourad Wahba. “Such actions include deploying early warning systems, ensuring regional storage of strategic reserves, diversifying trade corridors, and accelerating investment in resilient energy, water and food systems.”
 
Food systems are already feeling the strain. The Arab region imports most of its cereals, and reserves remain limited, covering just over three months of consumption in recent years. Rising fuel prices, disrupted shipping routes and higher fertilizer costs are expected to further increase food prices and production costs, disproportionately affecting low-income households and vulnerable groups.
 
“Without swift intervention, the compounding effects of conflict could deepen poverty, fuel social unrest in fragile countries and reverse progress towards sustainable development across the Arab region,” Wahba added.
 
The brief is the second in a series of studies issued by ESCWA on the shockwaves of the conflict, the first having estimated that Arab economic output would be cut by $150 billion in one month.

One of five United Nations regional commissions, ESCWA supports inclusive and sustainable economic and social development in Arab States and works on enhancing regional integration.

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