Russia told Trump it isn't sharing US military asset intel with Iran, says Witkoff
Russia has denied sharing intelligence with Iran on US military assets in the Middle East, Trump’s special envoy Steve Witkoff has said today.
Speaking to CNBC, Witkoff said the denial came during a phone call that Donald Trump had with Russian president Vladimir Putin yesterday, as well as in a separate call that he held earlier on Monday with Jared Kushner and Kremlin foreign policy aide Yuri Ushakov.
Trump didn’t divulge any details about his call with Putin yesterday, saying only that it was “very good” and that the Russian president “wants to be helpful on Iran”. On the Russian side, Ushakov said the conversation was “frank” and “business-like”.
It follows reports on Friday that Moscow was providing Tehran with targeting information that included locations and movements of US warships and aircraft in the region.
“Yesterday on the call with the president, the Russians said that they have not been sharing,” Witkoff said when asked if Washington thought Moscow had shared intelligence about the location of US military assets with Tehran.
He went on: “We can take them at their word. But they did say that. And yesterday morning, independently, Jared and I had a call with Ushakov who reiterated the same.”
He added: “That’s a better question for the intel people, but let’s hope that they’re not sharing.”
Key events Show key events only Please turn on JavaScript to use this feature
Leavitt insists that hike in gas prices is 'temporary' and assures rapid price drop
The press secretary used her opening remarks to assuage anxiety around the hike in prices at the pump that many Americans have seen in the past week.
The recent increase in oil and gas prices is temporary, and this operation will result in lower gas prices in the long term. Once the national security objectives of Operation epic fury are fully achieved, Americans will see oil and gas prices drop rapidly, potentially even lower than they were prior to the start of the operation.
Leavitt says US military is 'drawing up additional options' to keep strait of Hormuz open, amid disruptions to oil supply chain
Leavitt noted today that the president and his energy team are closely watching the markets, when it comes the price of oil which has surged and dropped in recent days.
The press secretary noted that the US military is “drawing up additional options” following Donald Trump’s directive to continue keeping the strait of Hormuz open. “I will not broadcast what those options look like, but just know the president is not afraid to use them,” Leavitt said.
Karoline Leavitt said today that US forces have hit 5,000 Iranian targets since the beginning of Operation Epic Fury.
She noted that the regime’s ballistic missile attacks are down “more than 90%” and their “drone attacks are down by approximately 85%”.
In a short while we’ll also hear from White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt, as she briefs reporters. I’ll bring you the latest lines here.
Johnson reiterated that the SAVE America act is a top priority for GOP lawmakers moving forward. The legislation, which has already passed the Republican-controlled House, has stalled in the Senate.
A reminder that the bill would require proof of citizenship when registering to vote, and showing voter ID to cast a ballot. However, Donald Trump wants to revise the legislation further and limit mail-in voting with a few exceptions, and include unrelated measures that would ban transgender people participating in women’s sports and gender-affirming surgeries for minors.
“Why is not passing in the Senate? Because no Democrat will go along with that,” Johnson told reporters in Miami on Tuesday. “Every Republican is in favor of those principles,” the House speaker added, while noting that the Senate’s majority leader, John Thune is “looking at all other avenues” to advance the bill.
The upper chamber’s top Republican appeared to dash his party’s hopes that they would be able to forge ahead without the 60-vote threshold requirement. “The votes aren’t there, one, to nuke the filibuster, and the votes aren’t there for a talking filibuster. It’s just a reality,” Thune told reporters.
Mike Johnson refuses to condemn GOP congressman's Islamophobic social media posts
At the House Republican policy conference in Doral, Florida, speaker Mike Johnson refused to condemn congressman Andy Ogles’ Islamophobic posts on social media.
A reminder that the GOP lawmaker, who represents Tennessee’s fifth congressional district, wrote on X that “Muslims don’t belong in America”. Ogles has repeatedly denigrated the Muslim faith, insisting that it is “incompatible” with American values. His Islamophobic espousals have manifested in a piece of proposed legislation that would ban immigration from several Muslim-majority countries, including Iran, Syria and Libya.
On Tuesday, reporters press Johnson for his response to Ogles’ comments. “There is a lot of energy in the country, and a lot of popular sentiment that the demand to impose Sharia law in America is a serious problem,” he said in a attempt to justify Ogles’ posts. “That what animates this. That’s the language that people use, it’s a different language than I would use.”
He went on to say, without providing any evidence, that the imposition of Sharia law – the legal system of Islam that is enforced to varying degrees of severity across Muslim-majority countries – is a “real issue”.
“When you seek to come to a country and not assimilate…that is the conflict,” Johnson added. “It is not about people as Muslims, it’s about those who seek to impose a belief system that is in direct conflict with the constitution.”

The Senate minority leader, Chuck Schumer, said that Trump administration “can’t make it 12 hours without contradicting themselves about this war”. This comes after defense secretary Pete Hegseth said earlier that Iran would see the “most intense day of strikes” on Tuesday while Donald Trump told CBS News on Monday that Operation Epic Fury is “very complete”.

Russia told Trump it isn't sharing US military asset intel with Iran, says Witkoff
Russia has denied sharing intelligence with Iran on US military assets in the Middle East, Trump’s special envoy Steve Witkoff has said today.
Speaking to CNBC, Witkoff said the denial came during a phone call that Donald Trump had with Russian president Vladimir Putin yesterday, as well as in a separate call that he held earlier on Monday with Jared Kushner and Kremlin foreign policy aide Yuri Ushakov.
Trump didn’t divulge any details about his call with Putin yesterday, saying only that it was “very good” and that the Russian president “wants to be helpful on Iran”. On the Russian side, Ushakov said the conversation was “frank” and “business-like”.
It follows reports on Friday that Moscow was providing Tehran with targeting information that included locations and movements of US warships and aircraft in the region.
“Yesterday on the call with the president, the Russians said that they have not been sharing,” Witkoff said when asked if Washington thought Moscow had shared intelligence about the location of US military assets with Tehran.
He went on: “We can take them at their word. But they did say that. And yesterday morning, independently, Jared and I had a call with Ushakov who reiterated the same.”
He added: “That’s a better question for the intel people, but let’s hope that they’re not sharing.”
Pentagon estimates US used more than $5bn worth of munitions in first two days of Iran war - reports
Multiple outlets are reporting that the US military used $5.6bn in munitions during the first two days of strikes against Iran, according to an assessment the Pentagon provided to congressional committees on Monday.
Members of Congress, who may soon have to approve additional funding for the war, have expressed concern about how quickly the conflict is burning through US military stocks - including long-range precision guided munitions that were used heavily in the first few days of the war - at a time when the defense industry was already struggling to keep up with demand.
There are also concerns that the US and its allies are expending a significant number of air defense munitions to shoot down incoming Iranian ballistic missiles and drones, of which Tehran has a large arsenal.
Indeed Donald Trump met with leading US weapons manufacturers at the White House on Friday – and said they had agreed to “quadruple Production of ‘Exquisite Class’ Weaponry” - as the Pentagon worked to replenish supplies.

His administration has not provided a public assessment of the cost of the conflict it launched on 28 February alongside Israel.
Lawmakers have clamored for more information, including public testimony from officials about issues including how the conflict might affect the US military’s readiness to defend the country.
Arizona Democratic senator Mark Kelly told CNN that senators would continue to ask briefers behind closed doors today about the per-day cost of the conflict to the US.
Several congressional aides have told Reuters and CNN that they expect the White House to soon submit a request to Congress for additional funding to produce more munitions for the war. Per Reuters, some officials have said the request could be for $50bn, but others have said that estimate seems low.

Damien Gayle
Iran has appealed to the United Nations to condemn the United States and Israel for a “manifest environmental crime” over the bombing of fuel storage facilities in Tehran and other cities over the weekend.
The attacks led to the falling of acid rain across Tehran, as well as the spreading of clouds of smoke so thick they blocked out the sun and caused respiratory problems and skin irritation to residents.

In a letter passed to senior officials at the UN on Monday, including secretary general António Guterres, Saeed Iravani, Iran’s UN ambassador, said the explosions had “released large quantities of hazardous compounds including hydrocarbons, sulphur, and nitrogen oxides” creating “severe air pollution and serious health risks”. Subsequent rainfall led to the “dispersion and deposition of these pollutants through highly acidic precipitation”.
“Such developments may result in severe respiratory harm to the population and extensive environmental degradation, including the contamination of water resources and damage to ecosystems and living organisms.”
In response, all medical facilities in Tehran had been placed on high alert, while Iran’s environment department had advised residents to remain indoors, Iravani said.
These attacks constitute a clear violation of international obligations arising under multilateral environmental agreements, including the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and the Convention on Biological Diversity, which underscore States’ responsibility to protect the global environment and to refrain from actions that may cause widespread environmental harm.
The Government of the Islamic Republic of Iran calls upon the United Nations and its relevant bodies to urgently address these developments and to undertake appropriate measures, including condemning environmentally destructive acts and pursuing accountability for those responsible for this manifest environmental crime.
You can follow developments on US-Israeli war on Iran over on our dedicated live blog here:

Anna Betts
Cardinal Robert W McElroy, the archbishop of Washington, has said that the US-Israeli war with Iran is “not morally legitimate”, going further than the pope has done in his more moderate appeals for an end to the war.
In an interview with the Catholic Standard this week, McElroy said “the criterion of just cause is not met because our country was not responding to an existing or imminent and objectively verifiable attack by Iran.”
“As Pope Benedict declared categorically, Catholic teaching does not support preventative war, ie a war justified by speculation about events in the future,” he said. “If preventative war were to be accepted morally, then all limits to the cause for going to war would be put in extreme jeopardy.”
McElroy also argued that the conflict fails the “criterion of right intention” arguing that in his opinion, “one of the most worrying elements of these first days of the war in Iran is that our goals and intentions are absolutely unclear, ranging from the destruction of Iran’s conventional and nuclear weapons potential to the overthrow of its regime to the establishment of a democratic government to unconditional surrender,” he said. “You cannot satisfy the just war tradition’s criterion of right intention if you do not have a clear intention.”
Read the full story:
Top Republican on homeland security committee eyes next week for Mullin confirmation hearing
Rand Paul, the top Republican on the Senate homeland security and governmental affairs committee, told reporters that he’s hoping to schedule Markwayne Mullin’s confirmation hearing to take over as Department of Homeland Security (DHS) secretary for Wednesday 18 March.
A reminder that Mullin, a Republican senator from Oklahoma, was tapped by Donald Trump to lead the DHS after the president ousted Kristi Noem from the role. Her 13-month tenure had been roiled with controversy, most recently as immigration crackdowns across the country saw the fatal shootings of two US citizens.
Just before Noem was removed as DHS secretary she spent two days on Capitol Hill facing questions and criticism from lawmakers on both sides of the aisle. This included having to defend a $220m advertising contract that prominently featured her own image. Noem, for her part, claimed the president approved the campaign, despite the White House publicly denying any sign-off.
In the wake of Donald Trump telling CBS News that the US-Israel war on Iran could end “very soon”, oil prices rebounded on Tuesday. My colleagues on our dedicated live business blog note that Brent crude has now slipped just below $90 a barrel, down 9.9% to $89.22 a barrel.
This comes after they surged past $100 a barrel on Monday morning, the highest price in four years.
The national average gas price in the US, however, is still 13% higher than it was this time last week. The price-per-gallon sits around $3.53, according to AAA.
The White House has scheduled a briefing for reporters at 2pm ET. Karoline Leavitt will address the media, and take questions. We’ll bring you the latest lines as it gets underway.
Richard Luscombe
Three prosecutors installed by Donald Trump’s administration to lead the New Jersey attorney general’s office after the president’s former personal lawyer was disqualified from the role in December were also illegally appointed, a federal judge has ruled.
Pam Bondi, the US attorney general, handpicked the three to replace Alina Habba, who resigned after a succession of district and appeals court rulings that she was serving illegally because she never received Senate confirmation.

On Monday, federal judge Matthew Brann said Bondi’s actions repeated the same error of bypassing congressional approval for the appointments. He stopped short of ordering their removal pending a government appeal – but, in a blistering 130-page ruling, said overreach by the executive branch could jeopardise all of its cases before him.
“On the [government’s] reading, the president would have had no need ever to seek the Senate’s advice and consent for his [US attorney] appointments,” Brann, chief judge of the district court for the middle district of Pennsylvania, wrote.
Brann, a former Republican party official appointed to the federal court bench in 2012 during Barack Obama’s presidency, made the original ruling in August that disqualified Habba and accused the Trump administration of keeping her in place using “a novel series of legal and personnel moves”.
Donald Trump is back in Washington today. The president has no public appearances, per his official schedule, but we’ll be watching for any new lines that come out of the White House. Particularly after Trump said he would sign no new legislation until the SAVE America act is passed.

1 hour ago
