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TRUE SIGNAL MEDIA | THE DAILY BRIEF
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Iran Rejects Peace Plan, $580M Trades Raise Insider Questions | Daily Brief

Tehran formally rejected Washington's 15-point war proposal as Pentagon invasion options for Kharg Island advanced, oil hit $106, and suspicious futures trades minutes before a Trump announcement drew calls for a federal corruption probe.

True Signal Media | The Daily Brief tracks the institutions, decisions, and accountability stories shaping the day ahead.
Military officers gathered around illuminated map of Persian Gulf and Kharg Island in nighttime operations center with satellite imagery and oil price charts during Iran war escalation
Thursday, March 26, 2026 Maya Sutton | Daily Brief Editor Standard International

Oil surges, Marines deploy, and Pentagon planners advance invasion scenarios as diplomacy stalls.

The morning briefing on a war approaching a decision point — Tehran rejecting Washington’s peace proposal, Pentagon invasion options for Kharg Island advancing, and a growing insider trading scandal tied to Trump’s market-moving announcements.

President Trump warned Iran Thursday that time is running out for a deal, as U.S. stock futures fell more than 400 points and oil surged above $106 a barrel after Tehran publicly rejected Washington’s 15-point peace plan and signaled it will keep charging ships to pass through the Strait of Hormuz.

Israel announced Thursday morning that it had killed IRGC Navy Commander Alireza Tangsiri — the officer directly responsible for orchestrating the near-total blockade of the Strait of Hormuz that has pushed U.S. gas prices to their highest point since 2022. Iran did not confirm or deny his death. Tangsiri’s killing is the most significant command-level elimination of the war so far and removes one of the key architects of the maritime stranglehold that has sent Brent crude to nearly $120 per barrel at its peak, disrupted roughly 20% of global oil supplies, and stranded an estimated 20,000 seafarers across the region.

On the ground, approximately 2,000 Marines from the 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit are expected to arrive in the region Friday aboard the USS Tripoli, joining an 82nd Airborne Division deployment of roughly 3,000 soldiers already en route. Pentagon planners have briefed Gulf countries that a large portion of Iran’s ballistic and cruise missile capability has been degraded, and administration officials tell Axios that “final blow” options are being developed — including potential ground seizure of Kharg Island, which handles 90% of Iran’s crude exports. Iran has responded by laying traps and moving air defense systems to the island, warning that any ground operation would result in “irreparable” losses for U.S. forces. Iran’s parliament speaker separately threatened that any Gulf state assisting a Kharg invasion would face relentless attacks on its vital energy infrastructure — a warning widely interpreted as aimed at the UAE.

The diplomatic track remains murky. Pakistan confirmed “indirect talks are taking place,” but Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said his government reviewed the U.S. proposal and found it “maximalist,” noting that Iran’s five conditions for peace include compensation for war damages, sovereignty over Hormuz, and guarantees the conflict will not resume. The White House says it is working to arrange a meeting in Islamabad this weekend. Tehran, for its part, mocked Washington by saying the U.S. is “negotiating with yourselves.”

Top Stories

$580 Million in Oil Futures Traded Minutes Before Trump's Iran Announcement

Roughly $580 million in oil futures contracts changed hands in a single minute — 15 minutes before President Trump posted on Truth Social Monday that U.S.-Iran talks were "productive." A simultaneous $1.5 billion position in S&P 500 futures was taken five minutes before the announcement. No major economic data or Fed events were scheduled that morning. Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman called it "treason." Sen. Chris Murphy (D-CT) demanded answers: "Who was it? Trump? A family member? A White House staffer?" The White House denied wrongdoing. The Justice Department's Public Integrity Section has been reduced from 36 lawyers to two under the current administration, and the SEC's top enforcement official reportedly resigned last week after agency leaders blocked aggressive pursuit of cases touching Trump's circle.

Sources: CBS News • Fortune • AXIOS

Iran Rejects U.S. 15-Point Peace Plan as "Maximalist"

Iran's state television announced Thursday that Tehran formally rejected Washington's 15-point proposal for ending the war, delivered through Pakistan as an intermediary. Iranian officials described the conditions — which include limits on Tehran's defense capabilities, severing proxy support, and recognizing Israel's right to exist — as nonstarter demands. Iran countered with five conditions of its own: a halt to hostilities, compensation for war damages, guaranteed sovereignty over Hormuz, and assurances the conflict will not resume. The White House insisted talks are continuing and that a meeting in Islamabad may occur this weekend.

Sources: Al Jazeera • CNN

9% of Americans Say Iran War Was a Mistake

Three new polls released Wednesday show deepening American opposition to the war as it enters its fourth week. A Pew Research survey of 3,524 adults found 59% said military force against Iran was the wrong decision, with only 25% saying the war is going "extremely or very well." A Quinnipiac poll found registered voters oppose military action 54% to 39%, with 92% of Democrats and 64% of independents opposed. Republican support holds at 86%. The numbers are stable from earlier in March, suggesting opposition has hardened rather than grown.

Sources: CNN

Iran Strikes Gulf States; UAE, Kuwait, Bahrain Intercept Drones and Missiles

Iran launched a new wave of missiles and drones at Gulf Arab countries early Thursday, with the UAE, Kuwait, and Bahrain all activating air defense systems and issuing public warnings that explosions residents heard were interceptions, not impacts. Saudi Arabia reported multiple interceptions targeting Eastern Province facilities including Ras Tanura, Ghawar, and Abqaiq — the kingdom's most critical oil infrastructure. The Gulf Cooperation Council Secretary-General said Iran's actions have "overcome all red lines."

Sources: Times Of Israel • Al Jazeera

Sgt. Nicole Amor's Husband Speaks Out: "She Was the Rock"

She Was the Rock" Joey Amor gave his first public interview this week about his wife, Army Sgt. 1st Class Nicole Amor, one of the six soldiers from the 103rd Sustainment Command killed in an Iranian drone strike at Port Shuaiba, Kuwait, on March 1. "In a moment of chaos or darkness or concern or fear or uncertainty, she anchored them," Amor told CBS News, describing tributes from fellow soldiers who called Nicole the unit's emotional center. The six members of the Des Moines-based Army Reserve command were among the first American casualties of the war. Their dignified transfer at Dover was March 7.

Sources: CBS News

Quick Hits

  • Trump Warns Iran: "No Turning Back" — In a Truth Social post Thursday morning, President Trump warned Tehran that if talks don't move forward soon, "there is NO TURNING BACK, and it won't be pretty." White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt separately warned Trump would "unleash hell" if no deal is reached. The strike-pause on Iranian energy infrastructure expires in approximately 48 hours. [Source]
  • IEA Coordinates Record 400 Million Barrel Emergency Release — The International Energy Agency coordinated a record 400-million-barrel release from member countries' emergency oil stockpiles to offset war-driven supply disruptions. Japan alone is releasing nearly 80 million barrels of crude. The IEA estimates more than 3 million barrels per day of Gulf refining capacity has already shut down due to attacks and lack of viable export routes. [Source]
  • Trump Postpones China Trip to Mid-May — The White House announced Trump's Beijing visit — originally scheduled for March 31 — has been rescheduled to May 14-15, with the original three-day trip shortened to two days. China declined to confirm the dates. The postponement is widely read as a signal the administration does not expect the war to wind down for another six weeks. [Source]
  • BETS OFF — Act Introduced in Congress Sen. Chris Murphy and Rep. Greg Casar introduced legislation that would ban prediction markets from accepting bets on "government actions, terrorism, war, assassination, and events where an individual knows or controls the outcome." The bill follows reports that eight newly created Polymarket accounts bet $70,000 on a U.S.-Iran ceasefire days before Trump's announcement — positions that would yield $820,000 if a deal is reached before March 31. [Source]

What to Watch For

48-Hour Countdown on Iran Energy Infrastructure: Trump’s five-day pause on strikes against Iranian power plants expires in approximately two days. Watch whether the White House extends it, lets it lapse, or uses it as leverage heading into the Pakistan talks.

Islamabad Back-Channel Talks: U.S. and Iranian officials are reportedly close to a meeting in Pakistan this weekend. The U.S. wants to discuss its 15-point plan. Iran says it has already rejected it. Watch whether Araghchi or a deputy actually shows up.

Marine Arrival and Kharg Decision Window: Two Marine Expeditionary Units arrive in the Gulf Friday. Watch CENTCOM releases and Pentagon briefings for any language shift from “options” to “orders” on Kharg Island.

Congressional Insider Trading Pressure: With the BETS OFF Act introduced and Democrats calling for an SEC investigation, watch whether any Republican senators signal willingness to join — or whether the administration moves to get ahead of it.

Joey Amor Interview Fallout: Watch whether lawmakers or advocacy groups use Sgt. Nicole Amor’s story to push for formal accountability hearings on the six soldiers killed at Port Shuaiba.

– Note: I’m currently trying to bring a stranded U.S. Army veteran home and running out of time. If you want to support the work behind this reporting, you can here.

By The Numbers

$106.07

Price per barrel of Brent crude Thursday morning, up 3.8% overnight after Iran rejected the U.S. peace proposal. Brent touched nearly $120 at its war-time peak this month.

View Source
$580 million

Value of oil futures contracts traded in a single minute, 15 minutes before Trump's Truth Social post announcing Iran peace talks on Monday. No major economic events were scheduled that morning.

View Source
20,000

Seafarers stranded in the Strait of Hormuz, with approximately 2,000 vessels effectively blocked by Iran's near-total closure of the waterway since February 28.

View Source
59%

Share of U.S. adults who say the Iran war was a mistake, per the latest Pew Research survey. Just 25% say the war is going "extremely or very well."

View Source
400 million

Barrels of emergency oil released by IEA member countries to stabilize markets — the largest coordinated strategic reserve release in history.

View Source
59%

Share of U.S. adults who say the Iran war was a mistake, per the latest Pew Research survey. Just 25% say the war is going "extremely or very well."

View Source

Quote of the Day

"Are decisions about war and peace in part serving the cause of market manipulation rather than the national interest? If you dismiss this as unthinkable, you just haven't been paying attention."
— Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman, on the $580 million in oil futures traded minutes before Trump's Iran announcement.
https://paulkrugman.substack.com/p/treason-in-the-futures-markets

Bottom Line

Day 26 of the Iran war is a convergence of four unresolved crises: a ground invasion decision that could result in mass U.S. casualties; a diplomatic track where both sides are publicly claiming the other is lying about whether talks are even happening; oil markets that have made someone very rich on advance knowledge of Trump's announcements; and a public that has turned decisively against the war with no visible off-ramp in sight. The 48-hour countdown on Iran's energy infrastructure adds a hard deadline to all of it.

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