Trump tells aides he is willing to end Iran war without reopening Hormuz, WSJ reports

March 30 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald ‌Trump told ‌aides he is ​willing to end the military campaign against Iran ‌even ⁠if the Strait of Hormuz ⁠remains largely closed and ​leave ​a ​complex operation ‌to reopen it for a later date, the Wall Street Journal ‌reported on ​Monday, ​citing ​administration officials.

Reuters

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Reuters ‌could not immediately ​verify ​the report.

(Reporting by Fabiola ​Arámburo ‌in Mexico City; ​Editing by ​Himani Sarkar)

Trump tells aides he is willing to end Iran war without reopening Hormuz, WSJ reports

March 30 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald ‌Trump told ‌aides he is ​willing to end the military campaign against Iran ‌e...
'You know the drill': Iran takes on Trump on social media

America's poster-in-chief has a new challenger.

NBC Universal

While most Iranians are barred from the internet, one of the country's rising hard-line figures is using social mediato take on President Donald Trump.

Parliament SpeakerMohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, 64, is adopting an increasingly Trumpian approach to wartime communication, posting English-language snark and memes in an apparent attempt to counter Trump's influence on news coverage and financial markets.

Ghalibaf, who is a decade and a half younger than Trump, favors a snappier, less all-caps style than Trump, who has posteda staggering 6,800 Truth Social messagesin the past year.

Iran and its supporters are making a wider push in a growing information war, flooding the internet with memes and AI-generated content faking attacks on American bases. State media has even got in on the act, taunting Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

"Heads-up," Ghalibaf told his almost half-million followers Sunday on X. The "pre-market so-called 'news' or 'Truth' is often just a setup for profit-taking," he said, his latest accusation thatTrump's posts on Truth Social are a concerted effort to move markets, eitherfor profitor to stem the war's impact on surging energy prices.

The U.S. government has strongly denied allegations ofinsider trading.

Ghalibaf urged followers to "do the opposite" of what Trump's messages indicate if they, too, want to turn a profit.

"If they pump it, short it. If they dump it, go long," he said. "You know the drill."

Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian (Anadolu via Getty Images file)

In a more succinct caption, Ghalibaf posted a picture earlier Sunday, was geolocated by NBC News, that shows an American airborne warning and control system (or AWACS) aircraft with its rear blown off at Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia.

Alongside the picture of the ruined plane, Ghalibaf wrote: "sustained only minor damage," with three emojis conveying the "just a little bit" pinching hand gesture. Initial reports had indicated the plane sustained minor damage in an Iranian attack.

Ghalibaf has risen to greater prominence afterthe assassinations of a phalanx of his fellow top officialsin Israeli-U.S. airstrikes. Among them was the late supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, creating a power vacuum largely filled by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, a powerful paramilitary, political and economic group.

Ghalibaf came through the ranks of the guard himself and is believed to be among the inner circle ofMojtaba Khamenei, the ayatollah's son and successor. The younger Khamenei has not appeared in person after Iran said he too was injured in strikes.

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According to Trump, it was Ghalibaf who allowed 20 oil tankers to pass through the blockaded Strait of Hormuz. "He's the one who authorized the ships to me," Trump told the Financial Times newspaper.

But in public, Ghalibaf has been far more hostile to Trump and his forces.

In a message Sunday marking 30 days since the start of the war, he said Iran was "waiting for American soldiers to enter on the ground so they can set them ablaze."

Meanwhile, he has accused Trump of trying to "jawbone" the oil market, using public statements and social media to reassure investors and prevent further price rises.

Other posts included his likening the "No Kings" marches across American cities this weekend to the Islamic Revolution of 1979.

"Welcome to the party we started 47 years ago," he wrote. "This is the people of Iran, and we approve this message."

Parliament Speaker Ghalibaf In Pro-Government Rally (Morteza Nikoubazl / NurPhoto via Getty Images)

And he has ridiculed Trump's apparently shifting war aims, suggesting that his goals have now narrowed to reopening the Strait of Hormuz — which was the case before the U.S. and Israel started bombing.

"They're playing 6D chess again!" Ghalibaf wrote alongside three clapping emojis.

Trump has been more active than ever on social media in his second term, including posting lengthy all-caps screeds offering vacillating updates on the war.

Not long before markets were due to open Monday, Trump hailed what he said was "great progress" in talks, though he also threatened to obliterate Iran's civilian water and energy infrastructure if a deal isn't reached soon. Ghalibaf and other Iranian officials have frequently denied such progress.

Though Ghalibaf is seen as a relative hard-liner, he has never been afraid to adapt his message to his audience.

"Ghalibaf exhibits a dual posture — pragmatic when engaging pragmatic counterparts and hard-line when confronting hard-line adversaries," Ali Alfoneh, a senior fellow at the Arab Gulf States Institute, a Washington-based think tank, told NBC News last week.

He is among 1% of Iranians currently able to use the internet, according to the monitoring group NetBlocks.

Only "regime apparatchiks are allowed online," NetBlocks said.

'You know the drill': Iran takes on Trump on social media

America's poster-in-chief has a new challenger. While most Iranians are barred from the internet, one of th...
Attack on Michigan synagogue was Hezbollah-inspired 'act of terrorism,' FBI says

By Jasper Ward

Reuters

WASHINGTON, March 30 (Reuters) - The FBI said on Monday that an attack on the largest Jewish temple in Michigan earlier this month ‌was an "act of terrorism" inspired by Hezbollah.

Ayman Ghazali, a 41-year-old man ‌who was born in Lebanon and became a U.S. citizen in 2016, killed himself during the March ​12 attack, when he crashed his truck into the Temple of Israel synagogue before opening fire on security guards and causing an explosion using fireworks, said Jennifer Runyan, the special agent in charge of the Federal Bureau of Investigation's Detroit field office.

No one else ‌died during the attack on ⁠the synagogue where children were attending preschool.

Ghazali consumed pro-Hezbollah ideology prior to the attack, said Runyan, but the FBI has not been ⁠able to verify if he was a member of Hezbollah. There is no evidence that he had co-conspirators, Runyan said.

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Lebanese armed group Hezbollah was founded by Iran's elite Islamic ​Revolutionary Guard ​Corps in 1982. Both Hezbollah and the ​IRGC are designated as foreign ‌terrorist organizations by the U.S. The U.S. and Israel launched a war against Iran on February 28.

"Had this man lived, I am convinced that my office would prove beyond a reasonable doubt that he committed the federal crime of providing material support to Hezbollah," said Jerome Borgen, the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of ‌Michigan.

Runyan said the day before the synagogue attack ​Ghazali started sharing photos on social media of Iranian ​Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, ​who was killed in U.S.-Israeli strikes last month. Then, on the day ‌of the attack, while sitting in ​the parking lot of ​the Temple of Israel, Ghazali told his sister in a message that he planned "to commit a mass terrorist attack."

Antisemitic incidents have spiked in recent years ​in the U.S., with anti-Jewish ‌incidents accounting for nearly two-thirds of 5,300-plus religiously motivated hate crimes ​since February 2024, according to FBI data.

(Reporting by Jasper Ward in Washington; ​Editing by Michelle Nichols and Bill Berkrot)

Attack on Michigan synagogue was Hezbollah-inspired 'act of terrorism,' FBI says

By Jasper Ward WASHINGTON, March 30 (Reuters) - The FBI said on Monday that an attack on the largest Jewish te...
Super Bowl heading back to Las Vegas in 2029

LAS VEGAS (AP) — The Super Bowl will return to Las Vegas in 2029 for the second time after NFL owners voted Monday to award the nation's gambling and entertainment capital the big game.

Associated Press

Las Vegas getting the Super Bowl back afterKansas City defeated San Francisco 25-22in overtime in February 2024 seemed like only a matter of time.

Commissioner Roger Goodell all but gave that possibility his blessing after the first Super Bowl in a city the league long shunned because of concerns about legalized sports betting.

"We're excited to bring the Super Bowl back to Las Vegas and provide our fans another incredible experience in one of America's greatest sport and entertainment destinations," Goodell said in a statement.

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"Super Bowl LVIII demonstrated the scale, energy and hospitality the city brings to global events, and we look forward to working alongside the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority, the Raiders and the community to deliver an even greater experience this time around."

Next year's Super Bowl will be played in California for the second straight time when Inglewood hosts. Santa Clara was the site of this year's game in whichSeattle beat New England 29-13.

Atlanta will host the 2028 game.

AP NFL:https://apnews.com/hub/nfl

Super Bowl heading back to Las Vegas in 2029

LAS VEGAS (AP) — The Super Bowl will return to Las Vegas in 2029 for the second time after NFL owners voted Monday to awa...
Options vary for veteran QBs Aaron Rodgers, Kirk Cousins, Jimmy Garoppolo and Russell Wilson

PHOENIX (AP) — Aaron Rodgers, Kirk Cousins, Jimmy Garoppolo and Russell Wilson are still unsigned for the 2026 season.

Associated Press

Options vary for the four accomplished veteran quarterbacks.

The 42-year-old Rodgers can return to Pittsburgh and play for new coach Mike McCarthy if he doesn't choose to retire. Steelers owner Art Rooney II told reporters Sunday he expects a decision from the four-time NFL MVP before the NFL draft next month.

Cousins finished last season strong, leading Atlanta to four straight wins down the stretch but the Falcons still missed the playoffs and coach Raheem Morris lost his job. The 37-year-old Cousins threw for 876 yards in those four games with seven touchdowns, two interceptions and had a 93.6 passer rating. Overall, he was 5-3 as a starter after opening the season backing up Michael Penix Jr.

The Falcons hired coach Kevin Stefanski, signed Tua Tagovailoa and released Cousins, who will likely have to settle for a backup role somewhere unless another starter is injured in the offseason. He could end up in Pittsburgh if Rodgers retires and the Steelers want to turn to another veteran QB after going from Wilson in 2024 to Rodgers in 2025.

Stefanski said Tagovailoa and Penix will compete for the starting job in Atlanta. Penix, a first-round pick in 2024, is coming off surgery last November to repair a torn ACL and it's uncertain when he'll be ready to go.

"He has had great success in this league when doing a lot of things that we believe in," Stefanski said of Tagovailoa. "He's looking for an opportunity and we can provide that."

Garoppolo has an opportunity to go back to Los Angeles for a third season to play behind NFL MVP Matthew Stafford. If not, Cousins would be an option for the Rams and coach Sean McVay. They were together in Washington when McVay was the offensive coordinator.

Wilson began last season starting for the Giants and finished behind rookie Jaxson Dart and Jameis Winston. The 10-time Pro Bowl pick also is out of starting options and doesn't appear to be drawing much interest as a backup even though he was supportive of Dart in that role last season.

A.J. Brown's future

Eagles coach Nick Sirianni said "nothing's changed" regarding Brown, the three-time Pro Bowl receiver who has been involved in trade speculation.

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"A.J. is an Eagle," Sirianni said.

The Eagles have listened to offers for the veteran and also signed veteran wideouts Marquise "Hollywood" Brown and Elijah Moore, who was Brown's roommate at Mississippi. Miami's trade of Jaylen Waddle to Denver for a first-round pick along with a third and fourth raised the bar for A.J. Brown's market value.

Switch for Lions' Penei Sewell

Lions coach Dan Campbell said three-time All-Pro right tackle Penei Sewell is ready to switch over to the left side to protect Jared Goff's blind side.

The Lions need to replace Taylor Decker, who was released. Sewell played left tackle at Oregon before Detroit selected him with the seventh overall pick in the 2021 draft.

Proposal withdrawn

The Browns withdrew their proposal that would allow teams to trade draft picks five years into the future instead of three, a person with knowledge of the decision told the AP. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because Cleveland's decision wasn't announced.

Owners will be voting on other proposals by the NFL competition committee and a proposal from the Steelers about contacting players during the free agent negotiating period.

Any changes need to be approved by at least 24 of the 32 teams.

Josh Allen's recovery

Bills quarterback Josh Allen is no longer wearing a protective boot on his right foot after breaking a bone in it during a game in Week 16. The 2024 NFL MVP had surgery after Buffalo lost to Denver in overtime in the AFC divisional playoffs.

"His foot, I don't want to say it's 100 percent, but he's good," Bills general manager Brandon Beane told reporters on Monday. "When he gets back in April, we expect him to be full-go."

AP NFL:https://apnews.com/hub/nfl

Options vary for veteran QBs Aaron Rodgers, Kirk Cousins, Jimmy Garoppolo and Russell Wilson

PHOENIX (AP) — Aaron Rodgers, Kirk Cousins, Jimmy Garoppolo and Russell Wilson are still unsigned for the 2026 season. ...

 

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