ISRAEL STRIKES WORLD'S LARGEST GAS FIELD WITHOUT TELLING TRUMP — IRAN DESTROYS QATAR'S LNG HUB IN RESPONSE, OIL HITS $116
The accountability questions emerging from Israel's unauthorized gas field strike, Iran's destruction of Qatar's LNG hub, and a senior Trump official's resignation warning the war was built on a lie.
Israel struck Iran’s South Pars gas field — the largest natural gas field on earth — on Wednesday without advance notice to the United States, triggering an Iranian retaliatory missile campaign that caused extensive damage to Qatar’s Ras Laffan Industrial City, the world’s largest LNG export complex, and sent global energy prices into crisis territory.
Brent crude hit $116.38 a barrel Thursday morning, up more than 50% since the war began on February 28. European natural gas benchmark prices surged 24% in a single day. Qatar has suspended all LNG production. Trump, who said the U.S. knew nothing about Israel’s strike, posted on Truth Social Wednesday night threatening to “massively blow up the entirety of the South Pars Gas Field” if Iran continued attacking Qatar — while simultaneously urging Israel to stop hitting the field. An Israeli official told CNN the strike was in fact carried out in coordination with and approved by the U.S., directly contradicting Trump’s account. Saudi Arabia warned it reserves the right to take military action against Iran after two Riyadh refineries were struck.
Kuwait’s Mina al-Ahmadi refinery was hit by an Iranian drone Thursday morning. Qatar expelled Iran’s military attaches in response to the attacks. Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan said what little trust remained between Gulf states and Iran “has been shattered, on multiple levels.” Qatar supplies roughly 20% of the world’s LNG. Analysts warn the damage at Ras Laffan could take months or years to repair, triggering a lasting global gas shortage.
Quick Hits
- Rafah Crossing Reopens for First Time Since the War Began — The Rafah Crossing between Gaza and Egypt opened Thursday for the first time since Operation Epic Fury launched on February 28, allowing limited Palestinian movement. The war in Iran effectively closed the crossing for nearly three weeks amid the broader regional escalation. [Source]
- Trump Threatens NATO Membership Over Hormuz Inaction — Trump said this week that the U.S. should rethink its NATO membership after allies refused his demands to send warships to help secure the Strait of Hormuz and escort tankers through the waterway. Germany's foreign minister said there are "many steps" before Europe could deploy assets and that an international mandate would be required. [Source]
- Russia Benefitting Financially from the War — War Analysts told CBS News that Russia is benefitting financially from the Iran war, as Hormuz disruptions send global energy prices skyward. The U.S. Treasury issued a 30-day waiver last week on Russian energy sanctions — allowing Russia to sell pre-loaded oil tankers — to stabilize global markets. Treasury Secretary Bessent called it "narrowly tailored." Russia and some analysts disagree. [Source]
- UNICEF: 1,100+ Children Killed or Wounded — UNICEF has declared the humanitarian situation "catastrophic," with more than 1,100 children killed or wounded across Iran, Lebanon, and Gulf states in 20 days. The figure includes those killed in the Minab school strike, which the Pentagon confirmed was caused by outdated U.S. targeting data from the Defense Intelligence Agency. No official timeline for the investigation's final findings has been set. [Source]
What to Watch For
Hegseth/Caine press conference: Scheduled for 8 AM ET Thursday — watch for any public statement on ground troop deployment numbers, the South Pars coordination question, and whether the administration addresses the Trump-Israel coordination contradiction directly.
Gabbard testimony: The DNI is scheduled to testify before the House Intelligence Committee Thursday after the hearing was postponed earlier this week. Minab targeting failure and the Joe Kent resignation will dominate questioning.
Qatar LNG damage assessment: QatarEnergy is conducting damage surveys at Ras Laffan after two rounds of Iranian strikes Wednesday and Thursday morning. The scope of damage to the facility — which handles 20% of global LNG — will determine how far and how fast the global gas crisis deepens.
Saudi military posture: Riyadh said it reserves the right to take military action against Iran following refinery strikes. Watch whether Saudi Arabia moves from warning to action — its entry into active operations would fundamentally reshape the war.
By The Numbers
Brent crude per barrel Thursday morning, up from under $73 on February 27, the day before the war began. A 59% increase in 20 days.
Single-day spike in European natural gas benchmark prices Thursday after Iran struck Qatar's Ras Laffan LNG complex. Qatar supplies roughly 20% of global LNG.
Average U.S. gallon of gasoline Thursday, up 90 cents since the war began. Highest price since October 2022.
People confirmed killed in Iran by U.S.-Israeli strikes as of Day 19, per Iran's Ministry of Health, with 18,551 injured. Does not include Lebanon or Gulf state casualties.
Senior Iranian officials confirmed killed in 20 days: Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, Defense Minister Nasirzadeh, Security Chief Larijani, Intelligence Minister Khatib, and Basij Commander Soleimani. Iran's government has not collapsed.
Quote of the Day
"Iran posed no imminent threat to our nation, and it is clear that we started this war due to pressure from Israel and its powerful American lobby." — Joe Kent, Director of the National Counterterrorism Center, resignation letter, March 17, 2026. https://www.axios.com/2026/03/17/joe-kent-resigns-trump-iran-israel-threat
Bottom Line
Twenty days in, the war has now crossed two thresholds that could not be walked back. Israel struck the world's largest gas field without telling its primary ally — or did it, with the U.S. denying knowledge its own officials contradicted hours later. And Iran responded by damaging a facility that supplies a fifth of the planet's LNG, an act of economic warfare with consequences that will outlast the bombs by years. The U.S. has no counterterrorism director. The Federal Reserve is frozen. Gulf allies are threatening military action of their own. Trump is threatening to blow up infrastructure he just said he didn't authorize striking. The accountability questions are no longer abstract — they are measured in cents per gallon, LNG contracts, and the silence from a supreme leader nobody has actually seen lead.