Every facet of Iran's military and theocracy is under assault. These images show the damage

CAIRO (AP) — The U.S. and Israel arestriking a much wider array of targetsin Iran than they did during 12 days of war last summer, when their focus was on the country's nuclear enrichment sites. Now, the aim appears to be destroying Iran's military and weakeningthe grip of its theocratic rulers, experts say.

Associated Press This satellite image provided by Vantor shows a destroyed drone storage building and cratered airstrip at Konarak drone base in Iran on Wednesday, March 4, 2026. (Satellite image ©2026 Vantor via AP) This satellite image provided by Vantor shows after airstrikes destroyed buildings and equipment at a drone base at Choqa Balk-e facility, west of Kermanshah, Iran, Monday, March 2, 2026. (Satellite image ©2026 Vantor via AP) In this satellite image provided by Vantor, damaged buildings are seen in the Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's official residence in Tehran, Iran, Sunday, March 1, 2026. (Satellite image ©2026 Vantor via AP) This satellite image provided by Vantor shows damaged buildings at the Garmdarah missile base in Iran, on Wednesday, March 4, 2025. (Satellite image ©2026 Vantor via AP) This satellite image provided by Vantor shows damage to Gandhi Hospital after airstrikes, in Tehran, Iran, Tuesday, March 3, 2026. (Satellite image ©2026 Vantor via AP) In this combo from satellite images provided by Vantor shows is a view of Natanz nuclear facility on March 1, 2026, left, and with damage on March 2, 2026 in Iran. (Satellite image ©2026 Vantor via AP) This satellite image provided by Vantor shows damage after airstrikes of Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) headquarters, in Tehran, Iran, Tuesday, March 3, 2026. (Satellite image ©2026 Vantor via AP)

Iran

U.S. Central Command alone says it has hit more than 2,000 targets in less than a week, a far heavier barrage than any American bombing campaign in the Middle East in more than a decade, according to Airwars, an independent group that tracks global conflicts. Israel says it has hit hundreds of sites.

From the capital of Tehran to cities across the country, the U.S. and Israeli airstrikes have bombarded the Islamic Republic -- its leaders, military bases, weapons factories, soldiers and police, and state TV.

The totality of the damage is not clear. But it is "a more significant blow than anyone expected might happen in such a short time," Armed Conflict Location and Event Data, an independent monitoring group, said in a statement. Still, even afterthe killing of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the emergency leadership team still appears to have "the ability for domestic coercion," said the group, which goes by the acronym ACLED.

The mounting death toll is also difficult to independently assess because of poor communications. An Iranian government agency says at least 1,230 people have been killed. More than 165 people were killed when a school in southeastern Iran was hit, most of them of children, according to Iranian state media.

Here is a deeper look at what has been targeted so far:

Many top officials have been killed

U.S. and Israeli strikes hit Khamenei's residential compound in central Tehran, killing him in the opening barrages on Feb. 28. Airstrikes also killed the defense minister, the head of the Republican Guard, Khamenei's top security adviser and other senior figures.

A religious site connected to Khamenei's predecessor was partially destroyed, and an airstrike smashed a hole through the dome of a building belonging to the Assembly of Experts, a council of senior Shiite clerics tasked with appointing the next supreme leader.

The Revolutionary Guard and Basij come under heavy fire

Many airstrikes have been directed at the Revolutionary Guard, Iran's most powerful military force, and the Basij, a paramilitary force that brutally enforces Islamic law and crushes any public dissent.

In more than 280 strikes that ACLED documented as of Wednesday, over 20% targeted Revolutionary Guard or Basij positions, mostly in Tehran and in western and southern Iran. Garrisons, air bases, underground complexes, ammunition depots, weapons factories and command buildings have all been attacked.

At the Revolutionary Guard's headquarters in northern Tehran, several buildings have been demolished, according to satellite photos from Vantor, a U.S. imaging company. Small, local branches of the Basij have also been targeted, according to ACLED.

On Thursday, two sports facilities in Tehran were struck, including the sprawling Azadi Sports Complex, where Iran once hoped to host the Olympics. There is now a giant hole in the roof of a 12,000-person arena, according to video verified by AP. The Guard and Basij have been known to use sports facilities as mobilizing points.

Not every bomb delivers meaningful impact. "A lot of empty buildings" are also being struck, ACLED said.

Destroying missile factories and storage sites is a priority

Eliminating Iran's missile arsenal and launchers is a top priority, Israeli and U.S. officials say.

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A suspected missile site deep in the barren mountains overlooking the central city of Isfahan was struck, as was another outside the western city of Kermanshah. There, roads leading into tunnels beneath a mountain are now pockmarked with craters, according to satellite photos provided by Planet Labs PBC.

On the outskirts of Tehran, several buildings at the Garmdarah missile site were also heavily damaged.

Before the war, Iran was believed to have several thousand short- and medium-range missiles. It is still firing missiles and drones at Israel, American bases in the Persian Gulf, and at energy facilities across the region. A senior Western official, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss intelligence matters, said Iran has several days' worth of ballistic missiles if it continues firing at current rates, but it may hold some back to wage a longer campaign.

The military and national police are key targets

Many buildings and assets belonging to Iran's armed forces have been hit. Satellite photos from Vantor show a capsized ship in the waters of the Konarak Naval Base on Iran's southern coast after strikes there. A U.S. submarine sankan Iranian warship off the coast of Sri Lanka, which on Wednesday recovered 87 bodies and rescued 32 Iranian sailors.

Manufacturers with ties to the military have also been attacked. In the central city of Isfahan, ACLED documented a strike on Isfahan Optics Industries, which is under international sanctions for its suspected connections to Iran's nuclear program.

At the main police headquarters in Tehran, strikes flattened multiple buildings, according to satellite photos from Planet Labs. The national police, commanded by a Revolutionary Guard general, is key to Iran's internal security apparatus and has been involved in violently halting anti-government protests.

Local police stations have also been in the line of fire, including one across the street from Tehran's Grand Bazaar, where protests began in late December that swelled into massive nationwide demonstrations across the country, before being crushed in early January.

Iranian state TV still on air after multiple barrages

The state TV and radio broadcaster IRIB has faced multiple barrages, though it has continued to stay on air. Its main headquarters, located in a large park in northern Tehran, shows signs of damage.

A strike on Sunday hit an IRIB station elsewhere in the capital, bringing down an antenna. The strike caused heavy damage to the Gandhi Hospital across the street, shattering its façade and sending debris across its wards inside.

So far, nuclear facilities have not been a focus of the attacks

Nuclear facilities have not appeared to be a priority yet, though Israel has indicated it will attack them.Satellite images on Mondayshow newly damaged buildings at theNatanz nuclear facilityin central Iran, the country's main enrichment site. The International Atomic Energy Agency said there was "no radiological consequence expected."

The Israeli military said it also struck mountains north of Tehran where it said Iran had secretly moved some nuclear activities to underground bunkers after June's12-day war.

Iran maintains its program is peaceful, though its officials had threatened to pursue a bomb while enriching uranium to near-weapons-grade levels.

El Deeb reported from Beirut, Biesecker from Washington. Associated Press reporters Sam Metz and Julia Frankel in Jerusalem and Jill Lawless in London, contributed to this report.

Every facet of Iran's military and theocracy is under assault. These images show the damage

CAIRO (AP) — The U.S. and Israel arestriking a much wider array of targetsin Iran than they did during 12 days of war las...
FAA seeking steeper cuts in flights at Chicago O'Hare airport, sources say

WASHINGTON, March 5 (Reuters) - The Federal Aviation Administration ‌told airlines it wants ‌to potentially cut a few ​hundred additional flights at Chicago O'Hare airport this summer over what it initially ‌outlined last ⁠week, sources told Reuters on Thursday.

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Last week, ⁠the FAA proposed a 2,800 per day limit, ​down from ​the ​3,080 daily operations ‌announced for the summer, but above last summer's 2,680 daily flights, citing concerns about delays and airline ‌over scheduling. The ​FAA told ​airlines this ​week it wants ‌to limit flights ​to around ​2,500 per day, but that number remains under ​discussion, ‌the sources added.

(Reporting by ​David Shepardson; Editing by ​Chris Reese)

FAA seeking steeper cuts in flights at Chicago O'Hare airport, sources say

WASHINGTON, March 5 (Reuters) - The Federal Aviation Administration ‌told airlines it wants ‌to potentially cut a few ​hu...
US Postal Service expects to run out of cash in a year without help from Congress, postmaster says

TheU.S. Postal Servicewill run out of cash within a year unless Congress lifts a decades-old cap and allows the agency to borrow more money, the new postmaster general warned in an interview.

Associated Press

If it doesn't, the Postal Service might not be able to pay its employees or vendors by February 2027, with potentially dire consequences for mail delivery,Postmaster General David Steinertold The Associated Press.

"How long are employees going to work and vendors going to show up if we're not paying them?" Steiner said in an interview on Wednesday.

The postmaster general is scheduled to testify before Congress later this month about the Postal Service's financial struggles and the need to change longstanding rules and regulations that he considers burdensome. He singled out the $15 billion cap on borrowing that has been in place since 1990.

The Postal Service is an independent agency that is funded mostly through postage revenue and the services it provides. Steiner said it has all the burdens of a government agency, such as having to deliver mail six days a week to every address, but none of the benefits, such as an annual appropriation from the federal budget.

"We have to have a conversation with the American public," Steiner said. "If you want us to deliver everywhere, every day, we'll do it. That's not a problem. But who is going to pay for it?"

Steiner, a former CEO of the nation's largest waste management company and a former member of the FedEx board of directors, took over the struggling Postal Service last July. He said raising the borrowing limit is the easiest thing lawmakers can do immediately to help the agency.

"That will buy us the time to make the fixes we need to make, and we can sail on down the road," he said.

He has called forexpanding the service's revenue base, including extending itslast-mile delivery serviceto more entities. Last-mile delivery refers to the final step of getting a package from a local distribution center to a customer's door, the most labor-intensive part of the delivery process.

USPS's net losses for the 2025 fiscal year totaled $9 billion, even though total operating revenue increased by $916 million or 1.2%, due largely to its Ground Advantage shipping service. Net losses in fiscal year 2024 were $9.5 billion.

Ultimately, other changes are needed, as well, Steiner said, including giving the Postal Service authority to raise postage prices high enough to cover losses. He said increasing the price of a first-class stamp to 95 cents, from today's 78 cents, would be enough to "fix" the Postal Service's fiscal woes. A decade ago, a first-class stamp was 47 cents, although postal officials note it's still the lowest price in the industrialized world and covers a delivery range that's ten times farther than in other countries.

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But he said an independent agency created by Congress to oversee the Postal Service won't allow it, he said.

"If the Postal Regulatory Commission adopted our pricing model, problem solved," he said, adding how the package delivery side of the business could then subsidize the mail side.

Steiner and other Postal Service officials also have called for reforms to its pension and retiree health benefit obligations, including the ability to invest the money in something other than Treasury bills.

Multiple postmaster generals over the past two decades have repeatedly asked Congress or regulators to change the various rules governing the Postal Service. In 2022, Congress did pass the Postal Service Reform Act, which ended a requirement that the agency prefund its retiree health benefits, but it left other constraints intact.

Meanwhile, the Postal Service has seen annual volume plummet from about 220 billion pieces to about 110 billion today as more people pay bills and communicate online.

"Take those 110 billion and put a 78-cent stamp on them. That's $86 billion of revenue that evaporated in 15 years," he said. "If either FedEx or UPS lost $86 billion of revenue, they would have no revenue."

But instead of helping the Postal Service, Steiner said regulators and Congress have imposed costly mandates.

"I like to say we sort of got thrown overboard on a ship into the cold water, right? And instead of throwing us a life preserver, we get thrown an anchor," he said.

Calls on Thursday to some members of Congress who oversee the Postal Service were not immediately returned. A message was also left with Keep Us Posted, an advocacy group launched in 2021 in response to price increases and service delays. Last month, the organization warned the USPS was "headed for a taxpayer bailout" given its cash flow issues. The group urged Congress to pass legislation it says would limit rate increases to once a year, tying them to service performance, among other measures.

Steiner acknowledged he didn't realize the depth of the Postal Service's cash crunch until he took the postmaster general job last year.

"Interestingly, I'm not sure some of the people at the Postal Service realized how dramatic it was," he said.

US Postal Service expects to run out of cash in a year without help from Congress, postmaster says

TheU.S. Postal Servicewill run out of cash within a year unless Congress lifts a decades-old cap and allows the agency to...
Winter Paralympics 2026: Start date, events and how to watch Milan Cortina Games

The 2026 Winter Olympics may be over, but fans of the games still have a few more chances to see their favorite Olympic sports in action before a multi-year layoff. The 2026 Paralympics start are upon us and feature many of the same events already shown off by athletes at the Milan Cortina Games.

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With the Paralympics just around the corner, here's everything fans need to know about the 2026 Paralympics, including the start date, events and how to watch coverage of the games.

When are the 2026 Paralympics?

The Opening Ceremony for the 2026 Paralympics will take place Friday, March 6. While that marks the "beginning" of the games, some sports — like wheelchair curling and para alpine skiing — are already underway. Both of those events began Wednesday, March 4, and continued into Thursday. The final events take place Sunday, March 15.

Where are the 2026 Paralympics?

Just like the 2026 Winter Olympics, the 2026 Paralympics will take place in Milan-Cortina in Italy. Milan and Cortina are technically two separate cities, but the event was called the Milan Cortina Games due to their proximity, and the fact that events will be held in both cities during the games.

2026 Paralympics events

The following sports will take place at the 2026 Milan Cortina Games:

  • Para alpine skiing

  • Wheelchair curling

  • Para biathlon

  • Para ice hockey

  • Para snowboard

  • Para cross-country skiing

Many of those sports will feature multiple events. Alpine skiing, for example, will include downhill sitting, downhill standing, super-G, slalom and various other events. The same can be said of biathlon, snowboarding and cross-country skiing, which will also feature multiple events in those sports. Wheelchair curling will hold a mixed doubles event and a mixed team event at the 2026 Paralympics. And Para ice hockey will feature one tournament. The gold-medal hockey game will close out the Paralympics, and is scheduled to be the final event of the Games before the Closing Ceremony.

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2026 Paralympics athletes to watch

Team USA will send a total of 72 athletes the Paralympics in 2026. That isfive more athletesthan the country sent to Beijing in 2022, per Axios.

Here are a few of the biggest names to watch at the games:

  • Para skier Oksana Masters: Masters is a multisport Paralympic athlete. During the Winter Paralympics, she competes in skiing, where she's won three gold medals in various para skiing events over the years. She's also a Paralympic rower during the Summer Paralympics, and has two golds in that event.

  • Para snowboarder Brenna Huckaby: At age 14, Huckaby had her leg amputated due to cancer. She learned to snowboard following that procedure and has three Paralympic gold medals under her belt.

  • Para skier Joshua Sweeney: A former member of the United States Marine Corp., Sweeney received a Purple Heart after being deployed to Afghanistan. He stepped on an IED while overseas, losing both legs. Sweeney initially competed in Para ice hockey, winning a gold medal in the sport at the 2014 Paralympics. He switched to para skiing in 2022 and will compete in that sport in Italy in 2026.

  • Para ice hockey player Declan Farmer: A long-time veteran of Team USA, Farmer has won three Paralympic gold medals in ice hockey. He's been a big name in the sport since age 14, when he first made the American national team.

  • Wheelchair curling athletes Steve Emt and Laura Dwyer: Mixed doubles curling will make its debut at the 2026 Paralympics, and Emt and Dwyer have a shot at a medal. The pair went 4-2 at the world championships in 2025, though missed out on making the playoffs. Emt, 56, will be the oldest person on Team USA's Paralympics roster.

How to watch the 2026 Paralympics?

The 2026 Paralympics will air on various networks and streaming platforms, including NBC, Peacock, USA Network, CNBC and NBCSports, perparalympic.org.

Until the Opening Ceremony, coverage of the games can only be viewed via streaming. That will change Friday night, as USA Network will carry the Opening Ceremony.

CNBC will then carry live coverage of events, with NBC picking up either live coverage during the day or prime-time viewing later at night. Between Monday, March 9, and Friday, March 13, USA Network will carry daily coverage of the 2026 Paralympics.

Coverage will shift back to CNBC Saturday, March 14, with NBC once again providing prime-time coverage later that evening. On the final day of the Paralympics, CNBC will provide early coverage, though NBC will air the gold-medal hockey game.

The 2026 Paralympics Closing Ceremony will air on CNBC.

Winter Paralympics 2026: Start date, events and how to watch Milan Cortina Games

The 2026 Winter Olympics may be over, but fans of the games still have a few more chances to see their favorite Olympic s...
Olympic figure skater Alysa Liu pleads for privacy after being chased at airport

OlympianAlysa Liushared a scary encounter she had with a fan at the airport.

Entertainment Weekly Gold medalist Alysa Liu of Team United StatesCredit: Matthew Stockman/Getty

Liu became a sensation following hergold medal-winning free skateto Donna Summer's "MacArthur Park" at the 2026Winter Olympics. While the figure skater has become known for her carefree and joyful persona, she has suddenly been thrust into the spotlight, which has brought some unwelcome attention.

Alysa Liu of Team United States competes in Women's Single Skating at the 2026 Winter OlympicsCredit: Qian Jun/MB Media/Getty

Liu revealed that she was "chased" after getting off her flight on Wednesday. She asked the public for privacy after the stressful experience.

"So I land at the airport & there's a crowd waiting at the exit with cameras & things for me to sign," Liu shared in an Instagram Story on March 4. "All up in my personal space. Someone chased me to my car bruh. Please do not do that to me."

Liu, who is from Oakland, Calif., has been jetsetting across the country to discuss her skating career and Olympic wins. Her return from the Milan Cortina games has been quite a whirlwind. While disembarking her homecoming flight on Feb. 24 at the San Francisco International Airport, viral TikTok videos showedDelta employees givingher a shout-out andspectators waitingin the airport terminals for her arrival.

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The 20-year-old Olympian became the first United States woman to claim the gold since Sarah Hughes won at the 2002 Olympics in Salt Lake City. She also won gold in the team figure skating event alongside teammates Ilia Malinin, Amber Glenn, Madison Chock, Evan Bates, Ellie Kam, and Danny O'Shea.

U.S. Olympic Figure Skating gold medalist Alysa Liu and host Jimmy Fallon pose together on 'The Tonight Show'Credit: Todd Owyoung/NBC/Getty

Before that awkward post-flight encounter, Liu made anappearanceonThe Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallonon Tuesday night, gifting host Jimmy Fallon a wig emulating her iconic halo hair.

Get your daily dose of entertainment news, celebrity updates, and what to watch with ourEW Dispatch newsletter.

Luckily, Liu appears to be taking time for herself in spite of the madness. She toldTeen Voguethat she rested in the Bay Area immediately after the games.

"I went home and I literally did whatever I wanted for five days," she said. "I didn't have any media, and I had no commitments, so it was really great. I got to see a lot of my friends again, and just relax and catch up on sleep. I skated twice just because I wanted to."

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

Olympic figure skater Alysa Liu pleads for privacy after being chased at airport

OlympianAlysa Liushared a scary encounter she had with a fan at the airport. Liu became a sensation following ...
Cooper Flagg will reportedly return to Mavericks' lineup Thursday against Magic

Cooper Flagg is expected to return to the Dallas Mavericks' lineup for Thursday night's game against the Orlando Magic,according to Marc Stein.

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The 2025 No. 1 overall draft pick has missed eight games with a left mid-foot sprain.

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[Join or create a Yahoo Fantasy Baseball league for the 2026 MLB season]

Flagg was upgraded to doubtful for Dallas' loss Tuesday to the Charlotte Hornets and is currently listedas questionable for the Magic game. Mavericks head coach Jason Kidd told reporters that Flagg willplay 20 to 25 minutesversus the Magic before seeing an uptick in minutes Friday at the Boston Celtics, his favorite childhood team.

The Mavericks won only two of the eight games they played without Flagg during this most recent injury. He also missed time this seasonwith a sprained ankleand an illness.

Through 49 games this season, Flagg is averaging 20.4 points, 6.6 rebounds, 4.1 assists and 1.2 steals per game. With 21 games remaining in the regular season, Dallas is 21-40.

Cooper Flagg will reportedly return to Mavericks' lineup Thursday against Magic

Cooper Flagg is expected to return to the Dallas Mavericks' lineup for Thursday night's game against the Orlan...
Queen Latifah Denies She's Dead in New Instagram Video: 'I'm 100% A-OK'

Queen Latifah shut down viral death hoax rumors with an Instagram video

People Queen Latifah in December 2025 in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia; Queen Latifah in March 2026Credit: Daniele Venturelli/Getty;Queen Latifah/Instagram

NEED TO KNOW

  • "I'm good," the actress and singer said in the clip shared on Thursday, March 5

  • Queen Latifah hasn't publicly shared she's battling any health issues

Queen Latifahis very much alive and well.

On Thursday, March 5, the actress and rapper shared anInstagram Reelshutting down a viral death hoax rumor about her.

"Good morning! It's me, Latifah," Queen Latifah, 55, said in the clip. "I'm 100% a-ok."

She added, "Can't believe what you read on the internet or see. Can't believe nothin' now, right? I'm good. Peace."

Sporting an olive green hoodie, Queen Latifah (born Dana Owens) smiled, blew kisses at the camera and threw up a peace sign before signing off.

Fans in the comments section were confused by the rumors.

"Idk what was said but keep her name out yalls mouth!!! Leave this Queen BE! ,"one person wrote.

Another added, "They better quit playing with the queen. Glad that you're well ."

Love you babygirl! Ain't nobody believing that nonsense ,"one individual commented.

A different user wrote, "Wait a minute! Who we need to fight?! Did they try to off the QUEEN?!?! ."

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Queen Latifah hasn't spoken about publicly battling any serious health issues.

But in September 2025, sheopened up to PEOPLEabout navigating menopause.

"I feel like I'm in control when it comes to this," Queen Latifah said at the time.

She revealed her journey with it began two years ago when she visited her gynecologist after experiencing "challenges with my reproductive system."

"I felt pretty normal," said Queen Latifah, recalling her surprise when her doctor pointed out changes in her hormone levels. "I wouldn't have even known that I was in premenopause, and I was actually kinda shocked."

Once Queen Latifah was told what her numbers looked like, she "could sort of tune into a couple of symptoms I may have been having."

Queen Latifah in December 2025 in Jeddah, Saudi ArabiaCredit: Arnold Jerocki/Getty

"I never had a hot flash or sweat down my forehead instantly like some of my friends, but I might argue about the temperature in the car with my driver so hey, maybe that was what was going on. Or this last 10 pounds that doesn't wanna go — you know, different things like that," theGirls Tripstar said.

Queen Latifah noted that "at the end of the day, it's a physical change that's happening."

"We all want to understand how to deal with it and how to handle it better," she added.

In May 2025, Queen Latifahtook her final bowas Robyn McCall inThe Equalizerafter five seasons.

Read the original article onPeople

Queen Latifah Denies She’s Dead in New Instagram Video: 'I'm 100% A-OK'

Queen Latifah shut down viral death hoax rumors with an Instagram video NEED TO KNOW "I'm good,"...

 

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