Daily Digest

Friday, April 3, 2026

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A Month into the Iran War: Incoherence, Devastation, and $2.1 Billion a Day

This is a developing story.

One month into Operation Epic Fury, the US war on Iran has produced a humanitarian catastrophe, a global energy crisis, and a president who cannot articulate why any of it is happening. In a primetime address on Wednesday — billed as "an important update on the war" — Donald Trump delivered what even his own advisors privately called the worst performance of his presidency. "It reminded me of listening to Joe Biden speak," one administration official told Zeteo, deploying what passes for the ultimate insult in Trumplandia. Political analyst Vlad Vexler, who watched the speech live, described it as "a porridge of impulsive Truth Social posts somehow concentrated into a pre-planned 19-minute presentation" — not strategically post-truth, but an unfiltered "excretion of random happenings in Trump's brain" that the administration formalized into a speech without meaningful filtering.

The 19 minutes were a cascade of contradictions. Trump declared Iran "essentially decimated" while simultaneously threatening to bomb it "back to the stone ages, where they belong." He told nations dependent on oil through the Strait of Hormuz to "build up some delayed courage" and seize the waterway, then immediately claimed it would "open up naturally" when fighting ends. He offered no coherent timeline, no exit strategy, and no acknowledgment of the war's staggering costs — except at an Easter lunch earlier that day, when he said the quiet part loud: "We can't take care of daycare. We're fighting wars. It's not possible for us to take care of daycare, Medicaid, Medicare, all these things."

Those costs are extraordinary. According to a meticulous analysis by Jacobin, the US spent an estimated $28.7 billion in the first two weeks alone — roughly $2.1 billion per day. The Pentagon's leaked figure of $11.3 billion vastly understates reality, primarily by using outdated moving-average accounting for munitions rather than the replacement costs taxpayers will actually bear. When an SM-2 interceptor is fired, the Pentagon logs its 2011 unit cost of $1.1 million, but replacing it with the SM-6 successor costs $5.3 million. The analysis identifies 725 Tomahawk missiles fired, over 1,000 JASSMs, and some 1,567 interceptors launched at Iranian missiles — along with $4.25 billion in operations costs and $2.71 billion in losses to damaged US infrastructure in the Gulf. If Defense Secretary Hegseth's claim that the war's intensity is "seven times" the June 2025 conflict holds, even these numbers may be badly understated.

The campaign has devastated Iranian civilian infrastructure. CENTCOM reports striking over 12,300 targets. The Pasteur Institute of Iran, a century-old medical research center in Tehran, has sustained extensive damage. A pharmaceutical factory producing antibiotics, cardiovascular drugs, and intravenous fluids was destroyed. In total, 24 pharmaceutical and medical facilities have been partially or totally damaged. Iran's healthcare system is collapsing: cancer patients are told no post-chemotherapy medication is available, non-emergency surgeries are postponed due to anesthesia shortages, and in some Tehran neighborhoods a single doctor is seeing 200 to 300 patients per day. Austrian physicians have pointed out that strikes on pharmaceutical facilities fall "outside all legal frameworks of war." The Iranian Red Crescent reports over 115,000 civilian units damaged. Former foreign minister Kamal Kharazi, 81, was severely injured and his wife killed in a strike on their Tehran residence.

Iran has responded with its largest missile barrages in weeks. At least 10 ballistic missiles were fired toward central Israel on Passover eve, with cluster munitions dispersing bomblets over residential areas. Israel and Kuwait both reported renewed bombardment on Thursday. Retaliatory attacks struck targets across the UAE, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain, Jordan, and Iraq. The Houthis have threatened to close the Bab el Mandab strait — the 32-kilometer chokepoint at the tip of the Arabian Peninsula — if Gulf states join the US-Israel coalition, which would choke off the last remaining route for Saudi oil exports to Asia.

The diplomatic picture is dire. Thirty-five nations convened virtually at Britain's invitation to discuss reopening the Strait of Hormuz; the US did not attend. French President Macron, speaking in South Korea, called a military reopening "unrealistic" — it "can only be done in coordination with Iran" through negotiations. Trump responded by threatening to withdraw the US from NATO. In the background, the US military has briefed Trump on plans for a ground operation to seize 970 pounds of enriched uranium from deep underground Iranian facilities — what a former CIA officer called potentially "the largest, most complicated special operations in history." Iran, for its part, has launched a nationwide volunteer recruitment campaign, with the IRGC calling for recruits as young as 12, which Human Rights Watch has warned constitutes a war crime.

New polling shows 66% of Americans disapprove of the war, with 77% opposing the requested $200 billion in additional military funding. The war forced General George, the Army's top officer, from his post after Hegseth pressured him to resign mid-conflict. And its geopolitical fallout may outlast any military outcome. As Cornell sanctions expert Nicholas Moulder argued, the era of US economic warfare dominance may be ending. Iran's emerging toll system at Hormuz — free passage for friendly nations, tolls for neutrals, blockade for hostile ones — is fracturing any potential US-led coalition. The shadow fleet built to evade Russian sanctions has created alternative trade infrastructure that Iran can now access, settling transactions in yuan or cryptocurrency entirely outside the US banking system. Sanctions, Moulder warns, originally conceived as an alternative to war, have become "an on-ramp to war."

Israel Wages Ethnic Cleansing Campaign in Southern Lebanon

While the world's attention is fixed on Iran, Israel is conducting what multiple sources describe as a systematic campaign to ethnically cleanse southern Lebanon of its Shia population. In an investigation published by the New York Times and detailed by Drop Site News, Israeli military officials have been privately calling leaders of at least eight Christian and Druze villages in southern Lebanon, directing them to expel displaced Shiite Muslims who had sought refuge in their communities — while publicly ordering a blanket evacuation of all civilians within 25 miles of the Israeli border. Local leaders complied out of fear their towns would be bombed. "I visited the families one by one and told them to prepare themselves, that if we got an alert they would have to move," one deputy mayor told the Times.

The death toll from Israel's assault on Lebanon has reached at least 1,318, with 3,935 wounded, since the campaign began on March 2. On Thursday alone, seven people were killed in Israeli airstrikes, including four in the Tyre district and a family of four — two young sisters and their parents — whose home was bombed in Houmeen al-Tahta in southern Lebanon. Israel assassinated Haj Youssef Ismail Hashem, the commander of Hezbollah's southern front, in a Beirut strike on Wednesday, killing at least seven people in total — the strike was conducted near a school sheltering displaced civilians. Israel's finance and defense ministers have openly called for the annexation of southern Lebanon. France condemned "absolutely unacceptable intimidation" of French UNIFIL peacekeepers by Israeli forces, while Indonesia called for a UN investigation into the deaths of three Indonesian peacekeepers killed in Israeli strikes last weekend.

In Gaza, the genocide grinds on beneath the noise of the Iran war. The recorded death toll since October 7, 2023 has reached 72,289, with 172,043 injured. Since October 11, the first full day of the so-called ceasefire, Israel has killed at least 713 Palestinians and wounded 1,943, while 756 bodies have been recovered from rubble. This week, a Palestinian woman was killed by Israeli gunfire near al-Maghazi refugee camp, and a child was critically wounded in Khan Younis. In a rare moment of reunion, eight Palestinian toddlers — evacuated as premature babies from al-Shifa Hospital in November 2023 when Israel laid siege to the facility — were finally returned to their families in Gaza after two and a half years of separation. One father, Ahmed Al-Harsh, whose wife died from injuries sustained in the airstrike that precipitated their son's evacuation, said: "These two years felt like forty, even more — a lifetime."

Meanwhile, Israel's Knesset passed a law making execution by hanging the default punishment for Palestinians convicted of attacks "committed with the intent of rejecting the existence of the state of Israel" — language that ensures only Palestinians can be prosecuted under it. National Security Minister Ben Gvir celebrated by popping champagne while wearing a golden noose lapel pin. The political ground is shifting, however slowly. In the US, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez announced she would oppose all military aid to Israel. NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani and Rep. Ro Khanna joined her, with Khanna declaring: "Israel is a first-world country, and it can pay for the defensive systems it needs." As veteran Israeli journalist Gideon Levy warned in an interview with Owen Jones, the campus protesters at Berkeley, NYU, and Harvard "are the next president, secretary of state, and secretary of defense of the United States." Trump, he predicted, will be "the last American president who still feels some commitment toward Israel."

World News

Trump Fires Attorney General Bondi for Not Being Corrupt Enough

Donald Trump fired Attorney General Pam Bondi on Thursday for, among other things, failing to prosecute his political enemies with sufficient zeal. It is the second cabinet firing in months, following Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem. Sources with direct knowledge told Zeteo that Trump had been privately trashing Bondi for weeks, complaining she had done a "very subpar" job leading the Justice Department's baseless investigations into his political opponents and that she was letting them "get away with it." He also fumed that the DOJ had not investigated the 2020 election results aggressively enough — the election he lost to Joe Biden.

The Epstein files debacle compounded Trump's frustration. A congressional hearing in February devolved into a shouting match when Bondi, unable to defend the administration's handling of the files, pivoted to boasting about stock market performance while Epstein survivors looked on. Her firing comes precisely 12 days before her scheduled deposition before the House Oversight Committee on the matter. Trump announced the firing on Truth Social while calling her a "Great American Patriot" and naming her deputy Todd Blanche as acting AG. He is reportedly considering EPA administrator Lee Zeldin as a permanent replacement — a loyalist who voted against certifying the 2020 election results.

The firing underscores a recurring pattern: Trump demands not just loyalty but active corruption from his appointees, and discards anyone who falls short. As Zeteo put it, one of the key reasons for Bondi's ouster is that a woman who "went all-in on Trump's cult of personality" and oversaw a Department of Justice that "corruptly went after Trump's vindictively selected targets" was simply not corrupt or authoritarian enough.

3,800 Workers Unite in the Largest US Meatpacking Strike in 40 Years

At the sprawling JBS beef processing plant in Greeley, Colorado, workers speaking 57 languages have entered the third week of the largest US meatpacking strike in four decades. The 3,800 members of UFCW Local 7 walked off the job on March 16 in an unfair labor practice strike against JBS, the world's largest meatpacker. On the picket line, chatter overlaps with the sound of dancehall, bachata, Thai pop, Haitian kompa, and Micronesian hip-hop. At sunset, dozens gather for iftar, breaking their Ramadan fast.

The grievances are concrete. JBS has been increasing line speeds while cutting work hours from 40 to 35 per week — squeezing more work for less money. Workers must pay out of pocket for safety equipment like mesh vests and arm guards, with costs of up to $1,100 garnished directly from paychecks. "We're demanding our rights," said one 18-year veteran who spoke in Spanish. "They want the same output, but fewer hours and fewer people." A thousand Haitian workers have filed a class action lawsuit alleging discriminatory practices that push them to work at dangerously fast speeds. Meatpacking workers showed cuts, deep callouses, and chemical burns; in 2021, a worker at the same plant died after falling into a vat of chemicals.

JBS's track record is notorious even in an industry known for exploitation. The company paid a $4 million fine after using child labor at the Greeley plant, and $55 million in a meatpacking industry settlement over wage collusion. Its subsidiary Pilgrim's Pride made the single largest donation to Trump's inauguration — $5 million — after which the SEC approved JBS's long-stalled New York Stock Exchange listing. Union density in meatpacking has cratered from 90% in the postwar era to 15% by 2019, as the "Big Four" companies consolidated and shuttered unionized plants only to restart production in nonunion facilities. This strike, the first ever at the Greeley plant, is a direct challenge to that trajectory.

Sources: Jacobin

The "No Kings" Movement Grows as Trump Plans International Anti-Antifa Summit

The protest movement against the Trump administration has evolved. The "No Kings" demonstrations, which began as scattered rallies, have grown into a nationwide movement in which millions participate, uniting opposition to the Iran war with resistance to oligarchic rule at home. As JACOBIN Magazin reports, the protests are distinguished by their breadth — spanning class, geography, and political affiliation — and by their explicit anti-war stance, a dimension largely absent from earlier anti-Trump mobilizations.

The administration's response has been to internationalize its crackdown on dissent. According to nd, the US government is planning an international "Anti-Antifa" summit, reportedly aimed at getting anti-fascist movements added to the EU's terror list. Hungary and the AfD are already warming up to the project. The initiative represents a new frontier in what nd terms "transatlantic repression" — the coordination of authoritarian tactics across borders to suppress left-wing organizing.

Meanwhile, the Democratic Party continues to eat its own left flank. When Michigan Senate candidate Abdul El-Sayed announced that left-wing streamer Hasan Piker — one of the few media figures with a large, young, mostly male audience that Democrats claim to covet — would join him on the campaign trail, the party establishment attacked with coordinated fury. Third Way, the centrist think tank, published a Wall Street Journal op-ed demanding no Democrat engage with Piker, whose supposed "antisemitism" boils down to criticism of Israel. As Jacobin observed, Democrats spent 18 months asking "where is the Joe Rogan of the Left?" but what they actually want is "a housebroken imitation" — a branded content asset, not an independent voice.

Germany

Fuel Crisis Deepens: Speed Limits, Windfall Taxes, and Who Actually Benefits from the Pendlerpauschale

Germany's fuel prices have surged to historic highs as the Iran war disrupts global energy markets. Diesel has reached an all-time high, with super rising from 1.82 to 2.13 euros per liter and diesel from 1.73 to 2.30 euros since late February. No other European country has seen steeper increases. In Southeast Asia, the war has triggered an outright energy catastrophe, with closed gas stations and mandatory home office arrangements. In the UK, the final vessel carrying jet fuel was expected to arrive within 48 hours with "no more after that," according to Bloomberg's global head of commodities research.

The policy response has been a muddle. The Wirtschaftsweise (economic sage) Veronika Grimm called a speed limit on German roads "a smart signal," pointing to other countries imposing far harsher measures. The DGB is demanding flexibility on home office rules and advocating for a "Mobilitätsgeld" to replace the existing Pendlerpauschale. SPD's Sebastian Roloff has proposed raising the Pendlerpauschale to 45 cents per kilometer — a move that sounds generous but, as Geld für die Welt's analysis makes devastatingly clear, would primarily benefit the wealthy. The Pendlerpauschale reduces taxable income, not the tax itself, meaning a top earner saves 14 to 17 cents per kilometer while a cashier saves 7 to 10 cents. Those earning too little to owe income tax get nothing at all. A Mobilitätsgeld — a flat credit deducted directly from the tax bill, with cash payments for those below the tax threshold — would provide equal relief for equal distances.

Behind the price spikes lies profiteering. A Greenpeace study found that prices at the pump have risen faster than crude oil prices on international markets. Oil companies are pocketing an extra 3.2 million euros per day on petrol and 17.9 million on diesel. The state transport ministers unanimously called for a windfall profit tax, and SPD co-chair Bärbel Bas backed the idea. Surplus Magazin outlined three models: a UK-style Energy Profits Levy, a turnover-based approach favored by some EU member states, and a margin-based tax targeting the spread between crude costs and pump prices. Finance Minister Klingbeil says he will "examine" the proposal — political language that often means waiting until the moment passes.

AI Facial Recognition and the Erosion of Transparency Laws

The German government is advancing two surveillance initiatives that civil society groups say are fundamentally incompatible with constitutional rights. Under plans jointly developed by Justice Minister Hubig (SPD) and Interior Minister Dobrindt (CSU), police would be empowered to biometrically scan the entire public internet for facial matches against suspects — meaning anyone whose face appears in any publicly accessible image, even as a bystander, could be processed. A second proposal would enable Palantir-style algorithmic analysis of massive police databases, merging data from victims, witnesses, and uninvolved persons into a single "super-database" to generate deep personality profiles.

A coalition including Amnesty International and the Chaos Computer Club issued a joint statement declaring that "no constitutionally compliant design of these powers is possible" and demanding the complete withdrawal of both bills. The proposals would effectively create infrastructure for mass surveillance, with chilling effects on assembly and expression: anyone who fears being biometrically identified at a protest may simply stop protesting. The organizations also warned of discriminatory impact, noting that People of Color are disproportionately affected by facial recognition errors. The independent data protection authorities (DSK) concurred: the proposals "endanger the constitutionally protected rights of uninvolved persons considerably." The EU's AI Act nominally prohibits mass biometric databases, but the German proposals appear designed to circumvent that ban.

In parallel, the right to government transparency is being gutted across multiple states. Berlin's Senate has stripped its Freedom of Information law of meaningful substance, introducing sweeping exemptions for "critical infrastructure" that cover hospitals, public transport, energy, water, and even media and culture. Investigations like the CDU funding scandal — uncovered through FOI requests — would no longer be possible. FragDenStaat reports that 38 organizations and 20,000 petition signatories opposed the changes; all were ignored. Similar restrictions are planned in Schleswig-Holstein, Thüringen, and Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, following a pattern in which security pretexts are used to dismantle democratic oversight.

Far-Right Networks: Bundeswehr Scandals and AfD-Identitäre Connections

The Bundeswehr has identified 59 suspects in a scandal engulfing a paratrooper unit, with allegations spanning sexual assault, right-wing extremism, and drug abuse. The numbers, released in response to a taz investigation, point to a deeply entrenched culture of impunity within the unit. Separately, the Fretterode trial — a retrial of neo-Nazis who brutally attacked journalists in the Thuringian village — has gained new urgency after a fresh attack at the same location. The nd characterizes the case as an example of "neonazistische Clankriminalität" — a far-right clan structure that operates with a degree of organization typically associated with organized crime.

The AfD's newly founded youth organization, Generation Deutschland, was supposed to present a moderate face. But a case from Hesse reveals that party members are participating in reading circles organized by the Identitäre Bewegung, the far-right identitarian movement that the AfD's own "incompatibility resolutions" are supposed to keep at arm's length. The resolutions, as taz reports, are evidently toothless — a PR exercise rather than a genuine firewall. Meanwhile, Rheinmetall stands before its third current billion-euro order from the Bundeswehr, this time for kamikaze drones, following earlier contracts with Helsing and Stark. The armaments cycle continues to accelerate.

Sources: taz, nd, taz, nd

Tech

AI Industry in Turbulence: Claude Source Code Leaks as Half of Data Centers Stall

Anthropic, the AI company that has positioned itself as the "responsible" alternative to OpenAI, accidentally leaked approximately 500,000 lines of source code for Claude Code, its flagship coding assistant, due to a basic configuration error. The code is now being eagerly analyzed across the internet, while Anthropic floods platforms with DMCA takedown notices to suppress its spread. As Cory Doctorow argues in Pluralistic, this is "extremely good" — not because embarrassing a company is inherently virtuous, but because DMCA takedowns are the go-to tool for corporate censorship, allowing removal of material without judicial oversight or evidence. The irony compounds: Anthropic's own DMCA campaign separately hit legitimate GitHub forks that had nothing to do with the leak, as Ars Technica reports.

The leak arrives amid broader signs of instability in the AI industry. Bloomberg reports that half of US data centers planned for 2026 are expected to be delayed or canceled, primarily due to shortages of transformers, switchgear, and batteries that the US lacks the capacity to manufacture domestically — most are imported from China. The AI buildout, which has been the single pillar keeping US GDP growth positive while other sectors decline, now faces converging pressures: rising energy costs as the Iran war drives up natural gas prices, retreating venture capital from Gulf sovereign wealth funds, and stress in private credit markets. OpenAI has quietly shut down Sora, its video generation product, just months after launching it. The parallels to the dot-com bubble are hard to ignore: immature business models colliding with geopolitical disruption and tightening capital.

In the background, OpenAI has been building a national security hiring pipeline, recruiting over a dozen former officials from the Defense Department and National Security Council. The strategy paid off with a $200 million Pentagon contract — reportedly brokered after the Trump administration froze out Anthropic over its reluctance to have its models used for surveillance and automated weapons without sufficient safeguards. The "responsible AI" company gets its code leaked; the eager military contractor gets the contract.

Rowhammer Attacks Give Complete Control of Machines via Nvidia GPUs

Two new attacks demonstrate that a malicious user sharing a cloud-hosted Nvidia GPU can exploit memory hardware vulnerabilities to gain full root control of the host machine. The attacks extend a decade-old class of exploits called Rowhammer, which causes electrical disturbances in DRAM memory by rapidly and repeatedly accessing specific rows, flipping individual bits from 0 to 1 or vice versa. Previously demonstrated on CPUs, the technique has now been shown to work through high-performance GPU cards — a development with serious implications for cloud computing, where GPUs costing $8,000 or more are routinely shared among dozens of users.

The research matters because GPU cloud infrastructure has become the backbone of AI training and inference. A successful Rowhammer attack through a shared GPU could allow an attacker to escalate privileges, escape security sandboxes, and compromise other users' data or workloads on the same machine. As AI companies increasingly rely on shared GPU clusters, and as GPU scarcity forces ever-denser sharing arrangements, the attack surface grows.

Sources: Ars Technica

Perplexity's Privacy Deception Exposed as EU Caves to Trump on Digital Regulation

A lawsuit alleges that Perplexity AI's "Incognito Mode" is a sham. According to the complaint, Perplexity shares users' entire chat sessions — including follow-up questions — with Google and Meta regardless of whether users have accounts. For non-subscribers, the situation is worse: initial prompts are shared along with a URL through which the entire conversation can be accessed by third parties. The lawsuit, discovered through developer tools analysis, found that this data sharing occurred for "every user" and involved "enormous volumes of sensitive information."

The timing is telling. As European regulators face a privacy and AI governance landscape that demands stronger enforcement, the EU Commission is moving in the opposite direction. According to netzpolitik.org, the Commission plans to establish a new body giving the US government structured input on the enforcement of EU digital laws — including the Digital Services Act, Digital Markets Act, and antitrust proceedings against US tech companies. US State Department official Jacob Helberg told the Handelsblatt this would resolve "90 percent of all problems" between the US and EU, with reduced tariffs on European exports offered in exchange. While the Commission insists its laws are "not negotiable," the creation of such a body would grant Washington a formal voice in proceedings that were designed to protect European citizens from the very companies Trump's administration champions. European sovereignty in digital regulation, already fragile, is being traded for tariff relief.