On the 28th day of the US-Israel war against Iran, US President Donald Trump’s decision to extend the “pause” on strikes against Iranian energy infrastructure until April 6 created the appearance of a diplomatic opening; but in effect, it reflected an attempt to buy time amid rising military, economic and political pressures, while keeping escalation options firmly on the table.

The extension, framed by Washington as a response to “ongoing talks,” has been rejected by Tehran as psychological signalling, with Iranian officials maintaining that no such request was made and reiterating their rejection of the US proposal. This difference in itself underscores the underlying reality that the pause is less about de-escalation and more about managing the pace of escalation, allowing the US and Israel to sustain pressure through other means while avoiding an immediate dive into full-scale energy warfare.

On the battlefield, the conflict continues to operate at a high intensity. Iranian ballistic missile barrages and Hezbollah strikes over the past 24 hours have kept pressure on Israeli territory, triggering repeated air raid alerts and reinforcing the pattern of sustained, distributed retaliation. Iranian missile launches from sites, including the repeatedly targeted Yazd missile complex, prove that despite ongoing strikes and the claims about obliteration of Iranian capacity, Tehran retains operational depth.

Read more here.

A view of a residential building damaged by a strike, amid the US-Israeli war on Iran, in Tehran, Iran, March 27. — Reuters
A view of a residential building damaged by a strike, amid the US-Israeli war on Iran, in Tehran, Iran, March 27. — Reuters

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