World views from the author of First with the News, a memoir of life on the front line
Sunday, 29 March 2026
Delta Force's greatest challenge
Clad in radiation-protection suits and full-facial respirators, America’s elite special forces units have been training for this moment for years. Despite all the talk of behind-the-scenes peace negotiations, the seizure by force of Iran’s hidden 440.9 kilos of 60-per-cent-enriched uranium is still one of the primary options awaiting a decision by President Trump. The US Army’s Delta Force, modelled on Britain’s SAS, has carried out exercises every year to rehearse the removal of nuclear, chemical or biological materials in hostile conditions. The search for and safe extraction of Iran’s highest-enriched uranium, contained in the form of uranium hexafluoride gas inside portable pressurised steel canisters, would be Delta Force’s greatest challenge since it was formed in 1977.
The mission, if approved by Trump, could also involve either of the two other special combat units trained and experienced in handling nuclear products: the Green Berets and 75th Ranger Regiment. The decision by Trump to deploy to the Middle East about 1,000 paratroopers from the 82nd Airborne Division’s immediate response force suggests their role could be to join two 4,400-strong US marine expeditionary units, also en route, in providing a security perimeter around the nuclear sites where the canisters of enriched uranium are believed to be buried. The dispatching of elements of 82nd Airborne Division which was among the last military units to leave Afghanistan in the chaotic withdrawal of August, 2021, has already caused alarm among former members of the 82nd. “Paratroopers always get the job done. I know because I also served in this division,” ex-Captain Jason Crow disclosed. “I also know what it’s like to be deployed with no clear strategy and end game. Americans deserve better,” he wrote on his Facebook page this week. Jason Crow, 47, is now the Democratic Representative for the 6th district of Colorado and serves on the House intelligence and armed services committees. He saw combat in Afghanistan and Iraq with 82nd Airborne and 75th Ranger Regiment. About 200 kilos of enriched uranium are believed to be buried in an underground steel-walled bunker at the nuclear Isfahan site, 270 miles south of Tehran. Isfahan was one of three nuclear sites targeted by the US and Israel in the 12-day war last June. The remainder of the 440.9 kilos could be underground at Fordow, about 100 miles south of the capital. The special forces units would operate with a US Army Nuclear Disablement Team (NDT) which is part of 20th Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear Explosives Command. There are three NDTs, all based in Maryland. Equipped with Geiger counters, they are trained to disable enemy nuclear capabilities. However, despite all this expertise, is it feasible to consider a special operations mission to remove the canisters; and what if some of the uranium – only 30 per cent of enrichment away from being fissile material for a bomb - has been withdrawn to another underground facility? Such as the one designated “Pickaxe Mountain”, a mile from the Natanz uranium-enrichment plant, southwest of the capital. Moreover, would 1,000 paratroopers from the 82nd and 4,400 marines be enough to support the special forces’ mission? The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) which has responsibility for protecting Iran’s nuclear sites, has been targeted by US and Israeli bombing. But before the war began it was more than 150,000-strong. A former senior US commander who served with the 82nd said: “I don’t even know where they [the airborne troops] can safely stage, much less what they might do. “I can see where paratroopers and marines might deploy on the ground in or off the coast of Iran but I think the risks in securing them once there would be enormous.” If the operation by Delta Force in January to capture Nicolas Maduro, the former president of Venezuela, is anything to go by, there will be an awesome display of fixed-wing aircraft, helicopters and drones overseeing the mission. More than 150 aircraft were used for the seizing of Maduro. Air assets currently part of the operation against Iran include U-2 spy planes, RC-135 Rivet Joint reconnaissance aircraft, E-11A communications aircraft, often called high-altitude WiFi platforms, MQ-9 surveillance and attack Reaper drones; and two key low-flying ground attack aircraft, A-10 gunships and Apache helicopters, both armed with rapid-fire cannons to target IRGC troops. “Everything would depend on the intelligence, not just of the location of the enriched uranium but where helicopters can land with troops in a secure area, and the positions of the IRGC units,” said a former British special forces soldier who has trained with Delta Force. “The Israelis will play a key role. They have agents everywhere in Iran who are pro-US and pro-Israel who will guide them.,” he said. “Provided the area where the uranium is buried is secured, the US special forces teams can take as long as they need to extract it. In exercises in the US, Delta Force used to use a giant balloon to lift up a dummy nuclear device, and a C-130 Hercules aircraft with a special fork-shaped contraption sticking out at the front would fly over and hook it up. In Iran, they would use helicopters to fly the canisters off to a ship. “The American special forces use Pegasus [Israeli-made spyware capable of infiltrating all mobile devices] to intercept everything on the ground. It’s a phenominal system and will allow the units to be kept informed of Iranian leadership command decisions” US Central Command which is in charge of Operation Epic Fury – codename for the strikes on Iran – is also now equipped with the Maven smart system, a battlefield management, artificial intelligence “military brain”. The AI software platform has revolutionised ground warfare, making it possible to collect huge amounts of data, analyse it and identify targets in less than a minute. It will help simplify what will otherwise be a highly complex ground operation. “Despite all the advances in technology and the training for this sort of operation, I find it difficult to believe they will risk a ground operation of this sort,” the former special forces soldier said. “There is also one crucial curve ball and that is that China and Russia will be helping the Iranians, especially the Chinese with their satellites, supplying intelligence to Iran,” he said.
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Friday, 27 March 2026
Another 10,000 US troops for Iran?
This is beginning to look like serious mission-creep. We already have two Marine Expeditionary Units arriving in the Middle East, plus 2,000-3,000 paratroopers from the 82nd Airborne Division. Now it is reported in Washington that the Pentagon has sent the White House a plan to deploy 10,000 more troops. Is this part of Donald Trump's campaign to put more and more pressure on the Tehran regime, or is it a sign that the president is deciding whether to go for a full-blown invasion of Iran? But if that is the case, the US would need to send more than 200,000 troops. Iran's main fighting force, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, is at least 150,000-strong and could have up to 180,000 troops. Ok, most of Iran's military infrastructure has been destroyed or damaged. But there is still a huge fighting force available to take on the US. This bit-by-bit increase in ground-troop presence in the Middle East doesn't really make much sense, unless it's purely for one specific role, either the taking of Kharg Island, the oil terminal location, or trying to grab the enriched uranium from its bunkered storage sites. Whatever is the thinking, this war looks like a much longer-term operation that the Trump administration had in mind when it all started on February 28.
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Thursday, 26 March 2026
Are we getting used to perpetual war?
When did we have peace everywhere in the world? Never. And now there are so many wars going on that we have been forced to change our view of the future of this planet. It all looks so grim. The Russian war against Ukraine is into its fifth year and the wars in the Middle East show no sign of ending soon. For those who have to suffer the results of bombing and missile dropping, it is infinitely worse, but for the rest of us who are lookers-on rather than victims, there is now an overwhelming sense of depression and negativity. Meanwhile, for the countries which have suffered wars that are supposedly at an end, such as Gaza, there is relief from the bombings but no sense of hope for the future. Other countries where there are for-ever wars, such as Sudan, the violence and terror has become a permanent backcloth, and even worse, nobody with political power in the West is doing much about it. This year, 2026, will go down in history as a year of death and destruction across so many parts of the globe. Will 2027 be any better?
Wednesday, 25 March 2026
Trump's plan to end the war with Iran is rejected by Tehran
The 15-point plan to end the war in Iran looked very similar to the proposals made before the bombs started falling and it was rejected then, as it has been today. Perhaps Trump thought it best to start with a wish list and then agree to some sort of compromise. The classic negotiating stance. Tehran, under its new regime leadership, appeared to show little interest, although supposedly is ready to talk. To the rest of the world, it doesn't look as if this new regime will be ready to do anything but take the punishment it's getting daily and answer back with ballistic missiles, some of which (too many) are getting through defences, This is perhaps the most worrying development. Even Israel's famous Iron Dome and Arrow anti-missile systems are not proving capable of knocking out everything thrown at them from Iran. Although the number of missiles has reduced significantly because of targeted bombing by the Americans and Israelis, enough are getting through to cause deaths, injury and destruction of buildings. This will give the new leaders in Tehran an incentive to carry on launching missiles. This is bad news and not helpful for Trump who now wants to wind it all up.
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Tuesday, 24 March 2026
It's all about the price of oil
Most things come down to the price of oil. The war between US/Israel and Iran may on the surface be about nuclear weapons and terrorism and suppression of protesters in Tehran and an evil regime. But after three weeks of war it's now principally about the price of a barrel of oil. It can't go on for long being $100-$120 a barrel, because it hits the cost of living around the world and gives Vladimir Putin the last laugh because he is making big profits on the oil he manages to sell to willing importers. So Donald Trump out of the blue announced that talks between the US and Iran had gone so well that the war was about to end. The result was instant. The price of oil dropped. How true Trump's statement was we still don't know because Iran has dismissed it as fake news. As a result the price of oil swung upwards again. Trump probably needed to bide his time for a few days to make sure the Marine reinforcements had arrived and were ready to spring into action, seizing the Kharg Island oil terminal or smashing up the coastline sites where the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps have their speed boats for attacks on shipping in the Gulf. So, by the end of this week, there will be a resurgence of American firepower hammering Iran, and then the price of oil per barrel will go shooting up. Unless Tehran, hoping to prevent an invasion by US Marines, decides to hold serious talks after all, and then everyone can sleep better at night, and the price of oil will fall dramatically.
Monday, 23 March 2026
Trump raises hopes of a deal with Iran
To be fair, Donald Trump has been pretty optimistic since his war with Iran began that it would all work out well and he would meet all his objectives. There has been a ton of ups and downs since, but basically he remained sure that the war would end in due course and everything would be fine. While this was simplistic, because patently it has not been all right for the Iranians, or for Israelis injured in missile strikes or the Gulf states who have been targeted with Iranian drones and missiles, it now seems there is new hope for a settlement. Trump has said his two main Everything Envoys, Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, have held key talks with Iranian top officials and Tehran wants a deal. It's impossible to say with any degree of confidence that the talks will actually bring this war to an end. But Trump is holding off for five days from attacking Iran's power infrastructure to give the talks a chance. There was an almighty "PHEW" across the world and oil prices suddenly dropped. Of course, if the deal goes ahead but it doesn't include an agreement by Iran to hand over the 440 kilograms of 60 per cent enriched uranium, then there will be a lot of questions raised about why this war wes started in the first place. But, as someone famously said, let's give peace a chance. But what will Israel do? Only yesterday Israeli military spokesmen were talking about the war going on for weeks. Can Trump restrain Benjamin Netanyahu? I think he wqill have to, otherwsie any peace settlement with Washington will look pretty pointless.
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Sunday, 22 March 2026
Tit-for-tat energy war between the US and Iran is a disaster in the making
Four weeks into the war started by Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu, and the Tehran regime, propped up by the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Cporps, is showing no sign of backing down or lessening the tension, let alone seeking a peace deal. In fact the war is now reaching a truly dangerous stage, with Trump warning he will obliterate Iran's energy infrastructure, and Tehran saying it will respond in kind by showering the Gulf states' energy plants with ballistic missiles. And what, I might ask, is the hell the point of doing that? It will lead to an enormous breach in the world economy, poverty for the Iranian people and a wider war thoughout the Middle East. For God's sake, someone step forward and get some sense into the White House and Tehran and stop this warmongering. If Iran tries again to hit Israel's nuclear research site at Dimona, then Israel is going to respond with an almighty blast at Iran. Israel has around 80 nuclear warheads. If Netanyahu feels Israel's very existence is at stake, he could reach for the weapon of last resort. I only mention this because the rhetoric is now getting hyper-bellicose. Everyone needs to calm down. Who is actually working to get this war to stop?
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