Thursday, March 5, 2026

DW PoliticsIran - How long can Iran continue the war? - Shabnam von Hein - 5 hours ago (5 March 2026 )

 DW

PoliticsIran

How long can Iran continue the war?

Shabnam von Hein

5 hours ago


In the war with the US and Israel, Iran is largely on its own. The regime is relying primarily on its missile and drone systems and has no intention of surrendering.


https://p.dw.com/p/59s5E

Thousands attend a funeral in Qom, with the coffin covered in an Iranian flag and lifted by many hands

Iran's population mourns civilian casualties, as seen in this picture of a funeral in Qom supplied by Iran's ISNA news agencyImage: Mehdi Alavi/ISNA/AFP/Getty Images


Iran has prepared itself for a long war, unlike the United States, Ali Larijani, secretary-general of the Middle East nation's Supreme National Security Council, said on the third day of the US-Israel war against Iran.


Larijani reiterated what other officials of the Islamic Republic have been saying since the military conflict began: "We will defend ourselves, whatever the cost."


Since February 28, the US and Israel have been conducting a coordinated, massive military offensive against Iran, targeting in particular Iranian leaders as well as military and other government facilities.


Even though several high-ranking Iranian officials have been killed, the Islamic theocratic regime remains intact, so far.


And Tehran has responded by lobbing missiles and drones on targets in Israel and in neighboring Persian Gulf countries, including US bases across the region.


The United Arab Emirates says it alone has been targeted by hundreds of Iranian rockets and drones in recent days.


Iran war exposes global dependence on Middle East energy


07:38

Admiral Brad Cooper, head of the US Central Command, said that Iran had fired more than 500 ballistic missiles and more than 2,000 drones by Wednesday, March 4. He accused Tehran of indiscriminately attacking civilians in the process.


"We don't know exactly how many ballistic missiles and drones Iran actually has," a weapons expert, who asked not to be named, told DW.


Logistics and production of missiles and drones

At the start of the war on Saturday, the Israeli military estimated that Iran had around 2,500 ballistic missiles.


But the stockpile is likely to have reduced significantly since then, not only due to Iran firing missiles on targets across the region but also because of US-Israeli strikes destroying and burying many bomb storage sites.


Satellite images currently circulating online purport to show attacks on missile bases in Kermanshah, Karaj, Khorramabad and northern Tabriz, with collapsed tunnel entrances to underground storage facilities that are said to have been destroyed in recent attacks.


"We are also seeing that mobile missile launchers are being pursued with great vigor," said the weapons expert. "What was very difficult five years ago is now possible thanks to technological advances. Still, the question remains as to how many of these systems have actually been destroyed."


It is not clear how many missiles were removed from these sites and dispersed across the country ahead of the war, and how many functional missile launchers Iran still has.


On March 4, the Israeli military warned that Iran retains substantial capacity to launch missiles against Israel, despite ongoing strikes targeting missile launch sites in the Islamic Republic.


Iran is also believed to have the ability to quickly ramp up the production of drones. According to leaked Russian documents, Tehran can produce around 5,000 drones per month.


The drones are launched from a simple scaffold that can be built in just a few hours.


The production of one of these drones, called Shahed, is said to cost Iran several thousand dollars. A US-made Patriot interceptor missile, on the other hand, costs up to about $3 million (€2.59 million) each.


According to an analysis by the New York Times based on satellite images and verified videos, Iran used its short-range missiles and drones over the weekend and on Monday to damage structures that are part of communications and radar systems at or near at least seven US military bases in the Middle East.


The US military's communications infrastructure is kept strictly secret, making it difficult to determine exactly which systems may have been affected. But the attacks on these sites suggest that Iran wanted to disrupt the US' communication and coordination capabilities.


Who will lead Iran after death of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei?


01:57

Consequences for the population and the region

"Iran will try to prolong the war and is playing for time," Fawaz Gerges, professor of international relations at the London School of Economics, told DW.


"The Iranian leadership has had time to plan and coordinate its actions. I think they are preparing for a long war," he added, pointing out that the overarching goal of the Iranian regime is resilience — the ability to persevere, to absorb the blows, and then continue to fight.


Meanwhile, the cost of the war is borne primarily by the general public in Iran, who are defenseless against the attacks.


Even though the US and Israel claim to be carrying out targeted strikes, high levels of collateral damage are almost inevitable in densely populated cities.


According to Iranian sources, a primary school in the southern city of Minab was hit on the first day of the conflict. On Tuesday, Iranian state media showed images of mass funerals for the 168 children, as well as their teachers, who reportedly died in the attack.


The United Nations described the incident as "absolutely shocking" and called for an investigation. Israel denied attacking the school in Minab, which is located about 40 kilometers from the Gulf of Oman. The US, which has two aircraft carrier strike groups deployed to the region, announced that it would investigate the incident.


The article was originally written in German.







GREEK REPORT - Greece Rejects Turkey’s Protests Over Patriot Deployment on Karpathos - By Tasos Kokkinidis - March 5, 2026

 GREEK REPORT

Greece Rejects Turkey’s Protests Over Patriot Deployment on Karpathos

By

Tasos Kokkinidis

March 5, 2026



Greece Turkey Patriot missiles

Greece says Turkey’s claims regarding the “demilitarized status” of the islands are “unfounded.” Public Domain

Greece’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs responded swiftly to Turkey’s protests regarding the deployment of Patriot missile systems to Karpathos. Rejecting Turkey’s claims, Athens framed the move as a necessary measure for national security amid the ongoing instability in the Middle East.


In a firm official statement, the Ministry characterized Turkey’s claims regarding the “demilitarized status” of the islands as “unfounded” and noted that they have been repeatedly and comprehensively rejected by Greece in the past. Earlier, the Turkish Foreign Ministry formally protested the deployment, issuing a sharp statement that reiterates Ankara’s long-standing claims regarding the “demilitarized status” of the Dodecanese islands.


The Ministry insisted that there is no ambiguity regarding the legal status of the Eastern Aegean and Dodecanese islands. Ankara asserts that these areas were placed under a demilitarized status in accordance with the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne and the 1947 Treaty of Paris.


The statement accused specific, unnamed “circles” of attempting to exploit current regional instability to create “new faits accomplis,” alleging that these actions aim to “poison bilateral relations” between Turkey and its NATO ally, Greece.


Greece responds to Turkey accusations over Patriot deployment

Athens’ counter-arguments centered on several legal and strategic pillars.


Legal foundations: Greece reaffirmed that the status of the Eastern Aegean islands is definitively settled by three major international agreements:


The 1923 Treaty of Lausanne

The 1936 Montreux Convention

The 1947 Treaty of Peace with Italy (Treaty of Paris)

The “Signatory” Argument: Athens explicitly highlighted that Turkey is not a signatory party to the 1947 Treaty of Paris, which ceded the Dodecanese to Greece, implying that Ankara has no legal standing to invoke that treaty to challenge Greek sovereignty or defensive posture.

Non-negotiable defense: The Ministry declared that Greece’s defensive arrangements are “non-negotiable.” It framed the current military preparedness not as an act of aggression but as a mandatory response to the “war-like conditions” in the wider region.


A call for temperance: Athens criticized Turkey’s statement as “weak rhetoric,” arguing that the prevailing regional uncertainty and the risk of further escalation necessitate “prudence and sobriety” rather than confrontational posturing.


Related: Greece Deploys Frigates, Fighter Jets in Cyprus Amid Iran Threat


 


 


 


 


DW - Conflicts Iran Possible scenarios for Iran once war with US, Israel ends - David Ehl 12 hours ago- 5 March 2026

 DW

Conflicts Iran

Possible scenarios for Iran once war with US, Israel ends

David Ehl

12 hours ago



Nobody can say how the US-Israeli war on Iran will play out, let alone what will happen to Iran once hostilities end. Experts shared their takes on where Iran's government could go from here.

https://p.dw.com/p/59orF

The Freedom Tower in Tehran shrouded in smoke clouds following air strikesImage: Davoud Ghahrdar/ISNA/dpa/picture alliance


When the US and Israel began pounding Iran on February 28, people in Tehran stood on their roofs and cheered. This reaction from Iranians was not one that one would expect, given the war'scontroversial nature under international law and how the Iranian government regards the US and Israel as bitter enemies.


Many Iranians are, however, willing to accept civilian deaths and destruction if it means toppling their despised theocratic regime. While the US made various contradictory statements over its war objective, regime change remains a possibility.


US President Donald Trump appealed directly to Iranians who had staged mass anti-government protests in January, telling them to stand up. " When we are finished, take over your government. It will be yours to take. This will be probably your only chance for generations."


Mere hours later, news emerged that Iran's supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, had been killed in a strike. Yet even with Khamenei gone, Iran's regime is still fully functional with veteran politician Ali Larijani at the helm. Whether the US and Israel will achieve their war aims and what Iran's future will hold remains unclear.


The Venezuelan scenario

Trump may be satisfied to see a Khamenei successor appointed who is more in line with US interests. The US president told The New York Times he has "three very good options" in mind, though he did not provide any names.


Changing a country's top leadership while keeping its political system intact is exactly how Trump's operation in Venezuela played out. US special forces removed Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro in early January and then struck a political deal with his deputy, Delcy Rodriguez.


0, 2026.Venezuela's Interim President Delcy Rodriguez stands at a podium next to the Venezuelan flag during the opening of the new term of the Supreme Court magistrates in Caracas, Venezuela, on January 30, 2026.


Delcy Rodriguez was installed as Venezuela's interim president shortly after the US capture of leader Nicolas MaduroImage: Miraflores Palace/REUTERS


Indeed, Trump told The New York Times, "What we did in Venezuela, I think, is the perfect, the perfect scenario [for Iran]."


Cornelius Adebahr of the German Council on Foreign Relations told German broadcaster ARD that Iran may install a new leadership built on the strength of Iran's Revolutionary Guards and seek to establish a new relationship with the US.


"It's the same scenario as in Venezuela," Adebahr said. "You swap out the top leadership and far fewer changes than people had hoped for."


It is not clear, however, if the US actually favors such a scenario. Trump, after all, also told The New York Times that Iranians could rise up to bring about a comprehensive political change.


Unpacking Iran's 'existential crisis' in war with US, Israel


19:38

What will become of Iran's leadership?

Peyman Asadzade of Harvard's Kennedy School believes the war could bring down Iran's regime.


Yet he thinks a different scenario is feasible, too. It would be defined by "continuity with recalibration" in that Iran's Assembly of Experts selects a pragmatic successor to Khamenei and then directs its attention to domestic priorities like "economic reconstruction, stabilization, and governance reforms, while foreign policy shifts toward de-escalation." This trajectory is not unlike the Venezuela scenario outlined above.


"A pragmatic course for whoever emerges in Tehran after this war would be to pursue de-escalation with the United States, in the hope that it could unlock economic relief and begin to ease the day-to-day cost pressures facing millions of Iranians," said Burcu Ozcelik, a Middle East expert with RUSI, a British security think tank.


"That, in turn, could open a path toward a more stable and much-needed period of recovery."


Who will lead Iran after death of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei?


01:57

Asadzade can also envision a third scenario, whereby the Iranian regime rallies around an even more hard-line leader and entrenches its conservative ideology.


This is a trajectory Julian Borger, a correspondent for The Guardian, fears. "After repeated attacks, the surviving leaders conclude that a bomb is the only guarantee of survival. The opposition is quashed with ever-growing brutality as the survivor regime becomes increasingly similar to North Korea: isolated, paranoid and nuclear-armed," he wrote in a recent analysis.


Could Iran's opposition come into power?

Two weeks before the start of the war, some 250,000 Iranians and other demonstrators took to the streets of Munich to cheer on Reza Pahlavi, whose late father, the Iranian Shah, was ousted following the 1979 Islamic Revolution. Pahlavi insisted he would not want to reinstate the monarchy but rather turn Iran into a democracy.


The Shah's son garnered a lot of attention during January's protests, even though he is not without controversy. This is likely because the Iranian regime has imprisoned and silenced many opposition figures.


Iran's opposition: United, divided, ready to take over?


08:08

Pahlavi has done "serious work on transition planning," acknowledged Mark Dubowitz and Ben Cohen of the US Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD). "But planning is not power. There is no certainty about who will govern Tehran the day the clerical regime collapses. Iran is also not a monolith; it is a mosaic, including Azeris, Kurds, Arabs, Baluch and others."



Will violence in Iran increase after the war?

The Iranian army hastened the Shah's downfall when it announced in February 1979 that it would not open fire on his opponents. After the Islamic Revolution later that year, Iran's new rulers established the Revolutionary Guards to safeguard their power. To this day, the army and the Revolutionary Guards coexist in Iran, although most analysts today attribute greater power to the latter.


The Revolutionary Guards not only maintain an army, air force, navy and secret service, but also run influential businesses. The EU, meanwhile, classified the Revolutionary Guards as a terrorist organization after they contributed to violently suppressing January's anti-government protests in Iran.


In the early stages of the war, Trump called on the Iranian army, Revolutionary Guard and police to lay down their weapons. Experts, however, say there are no signs that any of these organizations has been thrown into disarray.


Four missile launchers belonging to the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps are parked in front of a navy vessel in Bandar Abbas, Iran, on January 6, 2024.Four missile launchers belonging to the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps are parked in front of a navy vessel in Bandar Abbas, Iran, on January 6, 2024.


Iran's Revolutionary Guard has powerful military equipment at its disposal and also controls significant parts of the Iranian economyImage: Sephanews/ZUMA Press/picture alliance


However, Ozcelik, the RUSI expert, believes the Revolutionary Guards could face growing domestic resistance due to their elite patronage system.


"This could manifest in sharper institutional fault lines," she told DW. "One possibility is a widening divergence between the Revolutionary Guards and the conventional army, with the army increasingly elevated as the 'reformed' face of a renewed Iranian patriotism and functional state. Another is fragmentation within the Revolutionary Guards itself, as factions may compete over status and resources in a post-war settlement."


In this scenario, Iran's army and Revolutionary Guards could end up in different and perhaps even opposing political camps, which could spark civil war.


Iran's ethnic diversity could also endanger its domestic stability if separatist groups try to seize power amid a political vacuum. After all, five Kurdish organizations joined forces to collectively confront Iran's regime just one week before the war began. They reject Reza Pahlavi taking over on an interim basis.


This shows just how many challenges lie ahead should Iran's current regime collapse.


US, Israel and Iran: What are their next moves?


31:02

This article was originally published in German.




 


 


 


IRAN CRİSİS UPDATE Iran Update Morning Special Report: March 5, 2026, 08:00 AM ET

 

     IRAN CRİSİS UPDATE

The United States and Israel are conducting a 


campaign to topple the Islamic Republic of Iran. 


AEI's Critical Threats Project (CTP) and the 


Institute for the Study of War (ISW) are covering 


the developing situation and will publish 


additional updates and maps throughout the 


conflict. Read the latest from CTP and ISW below. 

US and Israeli Strikes in Iran, Morning of March 5, 2026
  • The combined force has continued to degrade Iran’s ballistic missile and drone capabilities in order to disrupt Iran’s ability to launch retaliatory attacks against Israel and US forces. The decrease in retaliatory Iranian drone and missile attacks strongly suggests that the US-Israeli effort to destroy Iran’s ballistic missile and drone capabilities has had considerable success.



  • The combined force has continued to target Iran’s internal security and government institutions. The strikes were concentrated in Tehran and northwestern Iran. The regime has historically been concerned about anti-regime activity in northwestern Iran.



  • Iran launched attacks targeting Turkey and Azerbaijan on March 4 and 5. These attacks mark the 10th and 11th country to come under Iranian fire.



  • Hezbollah claimed that the group conducted 7 attacks targeting IDF position and forces in northern Israel and southern Lebanon since CTP-ISW's last data cutoff at 4:00 PM ET on March 4. Hezbollah claimed on March 4 that its fighters engaged Israeli ground forces in Dhayra, Tyre District, and Khiam, Marjaayoun. These mark the first direct engagements between Hezbollah and the IDF since the Fall 2024 Israel-Hezbollah conflict.

The Iran Update aims to inform national security policy by providing timely, relevant, and independent open-source analysis of developments pertaining to Iran and its Axis of Resistance. This update covers political, military, and economic events and trends that affect the stability and decision-making of the Iranian regime. It also provides insights into Iranian and Iranian-sponsored activities abroad that undermine regional stability and threaten US forces and interests. The American Enterprise Institute's Critical Threats Project and the Institute for the Study of War will provide regular updates, including daily updates, as the crisis warrants.

 

Not subscribed to Iran Updates? Click here to receive regular email updates.

The Telegraph - 5 March 2026 - Starmer: Trump must negotiate with Iran

 

Welcome to From the Editor PM.

Sir Keir Starmer has addressed the nation to defend his decision not to take part in US and Israeli strikes on Iran. He said the best way forward is a negotiated settlement in which Iran surrenders its nuclear ambitions”. Donald Trump has responded by saying Sir Keir has been “very disappointing” during the conflict. Daniel Martin, our Deputy Political Editor, has the latest.

As the war in Iran nears the end of its first week, we’d like to give you the opportunity to ask our correspondents in the region any questions you have on the conflict. You can send your questions here.

Elsewhere, England have just lost a nail-biting T20 World Cup semi-final against India. Follow our live blog for the snap reaction here.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Try one year’s access for £1.99 per month, including all the articles in this newsletter. If you are already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


Latest Headlines

Protesters burned pictures of Benjamin Netanyahu at a candlelight vigil in memory of Ali Khamenei

Starmer: Trump must negotiate with Iran

Daniel Martin

Deputy Political Editor

 

Sir Keir Starmer summoned journalists to Downing Street this afternoon to explain his inaction on Iran.

However, those like me who attended left none the wiser about the Prime Minister’s failure to send a warship to defend Cyprus from retaliatory attacks.

He addressed the nation following mounting criticism of his handling of the crisis and his decision not to join the US-Israeli airstrikes.

He urged Donald Trump to negotiate with Iran, saying the White House must reach a settlement with Tehran in which the regime agrees to give up its ambitions to develop a nuclear weapon.

“The long standing British position is that the best way forward for the regime and the world is a negotiated settlement with Iran where they give up their nuclear ambitions,” he said.

The Prime Minister sidestepped questions about his decision to refuse permission for US planes to use the RAF base at Diego Garcia following opposition from Ed Miliband.

He argued that the UK had “pre-deployed” more military assets to Cyprus and the Middle East at the start of the year.

Trump has since responded by saying the Prime Minister should have given America access to British bases for strikes “without question or hesitation”. He added: “I was very surprised at Keir. Very disappointed.”

With no major announcements about Britain’s involvement in the crisis, journalists have been left scratching their heads as to why Sir Keir has decided to make this belated intervention, five days after the strikes began.
Follow the latest updates here ➤

Navy destroyer delayed from Cyprus mission by repair work ➤

 

Opinion

Suzanne Moore Headshot

Suzanne Moore

The war in Iran is not Britain’s to fight

The Islamic Republic must fall, but Trump and Netanyahu are not the champions of peace we should follow

Continue reading ➤

 

Your Essential Reads

Eastbourne is increasingly becoming inundated with homeless people from Brighton

Brighton ships its homeless people 20 miles away

For the families who live in Brighton, it is an “oasis of niceness” in an otherwise angry Britain. However, Daniel Hylands, who grew up in the city, has another tale to tell. He was one of dozens of homeless people over the past three years to have been shipped to a town 20 miles away. Noah Eastwood reports from Eastbourne, which frustrated families claim is being used as a dumping ground by a hypocritical neighbour that wants to keep its rough sleepers “out of sight, out of mind”.

Continue reading ➤

 

Could Trump topple London’s £50bn insurance giant?

In a post on Truth Social, Donald Trump outlined plans to kickstart global trade by offering cheap insurance policies to ships travelling through the Strait of Hormuz. It helped soothe markets amid widespread turmoil and a sharp spike in energy prices. However, the Lloyd’s of London insurance market in the City now risks emerging as one of the biggest losers from Trump’s plans, which threaten to undercut one of its most lucrative lines of business.

Continue reading ➤

 

Patrick Greed, a tenant farmer in Devon, was paid by the landowner to leave his farm, forcing him to cut the size of his herd

The rewilding cash grab driving farmers off the land

Patrick Greed, an East Devon farmer, was forced out so his landlord could let the land sit idle. Thanks to carbon credits, landowners can earn 10 times more from “rewilding” than from rent, writes Patrick Galbraith, our Environment Correspondent. With 15 million acres targeted, is the British tenant farmer facing extinction?

Continue reading ➤

 

What to watch tonight

Channel 4, 3pm & 7.30pm; More4, 6.30pm

Crufts 2026

The dog show returns and Channel 4’s coverage has a new presenter in Claudia Winkleman. She joins veteran Crufts host Clare Balding at the NEC in Birmingham for the first of four days of competition.

Netflix

Vladimir

In a steamy new comedy, Rachel Weisz excels as an underappreciated, fourth-wall-smashing, middle-aged university professor who goes spectacularly off the rails when she develops a fixation on a flirtatious younger colleague (Leo Woodall).

Read our review 

Channel 5, 8pm

Alexander Armstrong in India

Always a congenial guide, the Pointless presenter’s latest travelogue explores the wonders and contrasts of a country where “1.4 billion people jostle alongside each other in a full-on riot of colourful chaos.”

Channel 4, 9pm

Molly vs the Machines

A powerful documentary exploring the circumstances in which 14-year-old Molly Russell took her own life in 2017, and the struggle to uncover the truth behind her death.

ITV1, 10.45pm

Film of the Day: Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)

Steven Spielberg’s rollicking adventure film won four Oscars and created a new action hero in Dr Henry “Indiana” Jones (Harrison Ford). Jones is an American archaeologist hired to seek out the Ark of the Covenant before the Nazis find it.


The full guide to what to watch on TV 

 

Your say

Teething problems

Every weekday, Orlando Bird, our loyal reader correspondent, shares an off-piste topic that has brought out the best of your opinions and stories.

Orlando writes...
Thanks for your responses to this morning’s From the Editor newsletter. Does parenthood need a new PR? According to Lorraine Kelly, having children now gets such a bad press that Britain’s birthrate is suffering as a result. I would argue that there are many other factors at play, but perhaps the narrative has become a little doom-laden. Either way, it wasn’t enough to put me off – and just today I was rewarded by being woken up at 3am.


 

Ginny Duffield writes: “As a mother of four children, I find the situation very sad. When I had mine back in the 1980s and early 1990s, lots of my friends had a similar number. Now it seems amazing if families manage to have two. I am 70 and have one grandson, who is only one.

“I know life is much more expensive, but many young people do not want to cut back on their lifestyle. They want it all: holidays, dinners out, smart clothes and gadgets. We did without all those things. Yet what happiness my children gave me, and still do. My life would be a sad and dull place without them. Yes, babies are hard work but it is not that bad. They also bring everlasting joy, interspersed with the bad times. All part of life’s rich tapestry.”


 

John Dawkins adds: “I was 22 when I became a first-time dad. My wife was 18. When you are young, you take it in your stride. It was financially hard at the time, but we did OK and I don’t regret any of it.”


 

Another reader places the blame more squarely on “the Government. We have the highest taxes since the war. Who can afford parenthood? In my opinion, politicians could have encouraged couples to have more children, but they had other ideas.”

That’s all from me for today, folks. I’ll be back bright and early tomorrow (with any luck after a few more hours’ sleep) to bring you the best Telegraph talking points. In the meantime, you can contact me here.

 

Today’s Quiz


Our Travel team has compiled a list of 10 great libraries you must visit in your lifetime. Where is the one pictured above?

 

Thank you for reading. Have a fulfilling day and I hope to see you tomorrow.

Chris Evans, Editor

Other newsletters for you

 

Telegraph Money

Want to be richer? Make your money work harder with our experts
Sign up here ➤