Pentagon 'prepares for major escalation in Iran War'
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The Pentagon is reportedly preparing for potential ground operations in Iran that could span several weeks, as thousands of U.S. Marines are deployed to the Middle East, officials have disclosed.

According to sources cited by The Washington Post, defense leaders are anticipating what insiders are calling a “major escalation.” However, the military action is not expected to escalate to a full-scale invasion.

Instead, the plan reportedly involves utilizing Special Operations forces, supported by infantry troops, to execute targeted missions.

It remains uncertain whether President Donald Trump has approved or will approve the Pentagon’s proposed strategies.

This development follows the arrival of the U.S. 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit in the region on Saturday, adding approximately 3,500 troops. As reported by the Wall Street Journal, the unit is typically tasked with intercepting vessels and capturing strategic locations.

The timing of this deployment aligns with the recent involvement of Iranian-backed Houthis, who entered the conflict after an unsuccessful missile strike against Israel.

The president reportedly continues to mull whether to send an additional 10,000 troops to the Middle East to give Washington more military options.

The Trump administration has insisted that the war is drawing closer to an end and that it is seeking peace talks with Tehran, while leaving the possibility of further force on the table. 

Officials said that the Pentagon is preparing for weeks of ground operations in Iran just shy of a full-scale invasion, including raids using Special Operations forces and infantry troops

Officials said that the Pentagon is preparing for weeks of ground operations in Iran just shy of a full-scale invasion, including raids using Special Operations forces and infantry troops

An explosion erupts following strikes near Azadi Tower close to Mehrabad International Airport in Tehran on March 7, 2026

An explosion erupts following strikes near Azadi Tower close to Mehrabad International Airport in Tehran on March 7, 2026

President Donald Trump has hinted that the war was drawing to a close, while others in the Trump Administration have said the President was prepared to 'unleash hell'

President Donald Trump has hinted that the war was drawing to a close, while others in the Trump Administration have said the President was prepared to ‘unleash hell’

On Friday, Trump declared: ‘It’s sort of finished, but it’s not finished. It’s got to be finished.’ 

Meanwhile, Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt warned on Tuesday that if the regime in Tehran did not bring its threats and nuclear ambitions to an end, the President is ‘prepared to unleash hell.’

Leavitt added in a statement to the Post: ‘It’s the job of the Pentagon to make preparations in order to give the Commander in Chief maximum optionality. It does not mean the President has made a decision.’

The timeline of the operation between the Post’s sources ranged from ‘weeks, not months’ to ‘a couple of months.’

The Pentagon told the Daily Mail that they had nothing to offer on the matter. The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

A former senior defense official familiar with the US military’s plans for a ground operation in Iran told the Post that ‘this is not last minute planning.’

‘We’ve looked at this. It’s been war-gamed,’ they said.  

Secretary of State Marco Rubio, at a meeting in France where US allies met to discuss the economic toll that the war is having, said on Friday that the war is not projected ‘to be a prolonged conflict.’

He added that the operation is ahead of schedule based on the administration’s assessment and said that the US ‘can achieve all of our objectives without ground troops,’ the outlet reported. 

Meanwhile, some 10,000 troops were being prepared for deployment from the 82nd Airborne Division to the Middle East, adding to the thousands of marines aboard Navy ships already on their way to the region, sources close to the Pentagon told AP on Tuesday. 

The conflict has already seen the deaths of at least 13 US soldiers, including six involved in a plane crash in Iraq and six in a drone attack on Port Shuaiba. 

As the current conflict in Iran intensifies, the US is reportedly preparing to deploy around 10,000 soldiers from the 82nd Airborne Division. Some soldiers from that division are pictured

As the current conflict in Iran intensifies, the US is reportedly preparing to deploy around 10,000 soldiers from the 82nd Airborne Division. Some soldiers from that division are pictured

'Several' American servicemembers were injured in a Friday attack on Prince Sultan Air Base (file photo)

‘Several’ American servicemembers were injured in a Friday attack on Prince Sultan Air Base (file photo)

Deploying ground troops in Iran would be necessary to accomplish certain strategic objectives. Soldiers with the 82nd Airborne Division are pictured parachuting

Deploying ground troops in Iran would be necessary to accomplish certain strategic objectives. Soldiers with the 82nd Airborne Division are pictured parachuting

Around a dozen US soldiers were wounded and multiple planes damaged following an Iranian missile strike at the Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia on Friday. 

US and Arab officials confirmed that one missile and several unmanned aerial vehicles struck on Friday, resulting in twelve US soldiers being wounded. 

Two were ‘very seriously injured’ and at least two KC-135 refueling planes suffered ‘significant damage.’

The strike represents one of the most serious breaches of US air defenses since the monthlong war with Iran began, as well as at least the second hit on Prince Sultan Air Base. 

An earlier March 1 strike on the base damaged five US refueling aircraft and claimed the life of 26-year-old Army Sgt Benjamin N Pennington just days after he was wounded. 

Over 300 US troops have been wounded in the ongoing conflict, including about 225 with traumatic brain injuries from missile blasts, the US Central Command announced on Friday.

Saudi Arabia and other Gulf powers are now signaling a tougher stance against Iran’s attacks, hinting that continued strikes may draw them deeper into the war.

Meanwhile, the US and its allied forces are continuing to see their supply of air defense interceptors shrink after just four weeks. 

Secretary of State Marco Rubio (pictured on March 27, 2026) claimed on Friday the operation against Iran was 'ahead of schedule'

Secretary of State Marco Rubio (pictured on March 27, 2026) claimed on Friday the operation against Iran was ‘ahead of schedule’

The image above shows UK, US and French bases across the Middle East

The image above shows UK, US and French bases across the Middle East

A damaged residential building in southern Tehran on Friday after continued strikes by the US and Israel on March 27, 2026

A damaged residential building in southern Tehran on Friday after continued strikes by the US and Israel on March 27, 2026

The president declared that Saudi Arabia and Israel should move to normalize relations after the Iran conflict wraps up. 

‘It’s now time,’ Trump said. ‘We’ve now taken them out, and they are out bigly. ‘We got to get into the Abraham Accords.’

Trump has been urging Israel and Saudi Arabia, the two biggest powers in the Middle East, to normalize ties for years as part of his Abraham Accords initiative. 

However challenges remain, including Saudi Arabia’s insistence on a credible path to a Palestinian state before establishing commercial and diplomatic ties with Israel. 

Meanwhile, the Iranian ambassador to the United Nations in Geneva Ali Bahreini said Tehran has agreed to ‘facilitate and expedite’ humanitarian aid through the Strait of Hormuz, even as its nuclear sites are being struck. 

He said Tehran has agreed to a UN request to allow both humanitarian aid and agricultural shipments through the critical waterway that carries a fifth of the world’s oil and nearly a third of global fertilizer trade. 

The aid plan would be the first breakthrough at the shipping chokepoint after a month of war. 

However, Iran’s proxy group in Yemen issued its warning after launching a missile attack on ‘sensitive’ Israeli military sites, marking a significant escalation to the month-long war. 

At least 13 US military personnel have died in the Iran conflict so far and that number would be poised to rise dramatically if soldiers are deployed on the ground. Marines are pictured during a training exercise aboard the USS New Orleans

At least 13 US military personnel have died in the Iran conflict so far and that number would be poised to rise dramatically if soldiers are deployed on the ground. Marines are pictured during a training exercise aboard the USS New Orleans

Risking a further surge in oil and gas prices, the group’s military leaders said they are considering closing a Red Sea oil route used as an alternative to the Strait of Hormuz that Iran has effectively shut down.

Known as the ‘Gate of Tears’ in Arabic, the Bab al-Mandeb Strait is an 18-mile-wide waterway connecting the Red Sea with the Gulf of Aden. Crucially, it controls sea traffic toward the Suez Canal.

If both routes are compromised, the impact would extend far beyond the region, hitting supply chains, energy markets and shipping costs worldwide. 

Ten per cent of global seaborne trade passes through the Red Sea, including a fifth of the world’s container traffic and car shipments and 10 per cent of crude oil.

Mohamad Elmasry, a professor at the Doha Institute for Graduate Studies, described the Houthis entering the US-Israeli war on Iran as ‘very significant’.

An armed political and religious group, they declare themselves to be part of the Iranian-led ‘axis of resistance’ against Israel, the US and the wider West – along with armed groups such as Hamas and Lebanon’s Hezbollah movement.

Elmasry said: ‘We have seen over the past two and a half years that the Houthis have significant power. If they decided to move to shut down the Bab al-Mandeb Strait, the Red Sea and, ultimately, the Suez Canal, we would have two major choke points [closed] along with the Strait of Hormuz.’ 

If Hormuz is hit, oil struggles to leave the Gulf. If Bab al-Mandeb is blocked, it struggles to reach Europe and if both are hit the route breaks end to end.

Known as the 'Gate of Tears' in Arabic, the Bab al-Mandeb Strait is an 18-mile-wide waterway connecting the Red Sea with the Gulf of Aden. Crucially, it controls sea traffic toward the Suez Canal and is currently under an effective blockade by Iran

Known as the ‘Gate of Tears’ in Arabic, the Bab al-Mandeb Strait is an 18-mile-wide waterway connecting the Red Sea with the Gulf of Aden. Crucially, it controls sea traffic toward the Suez Canal and is currently under an effective blockade by Iran

The Houthis have held Yemen’s capital Sanaa since 2014 and, so far, have stayed out of the US-Israeli war on Iran.

The group’s attacks on ships during the Israel-Hamas war caused chaos in the Red Sea, through which billions of pounds of goods pass each year.

Between 2023 and 2025, Houthi rebels attacked more than 100 merchant vessels with missiles and drones, sinking two ships and killing four sailors.

During this time, ships transiting through the Suez Canal fell from 26,000 to 12,700.

Mohammed Mansour, the Houthis’ deputy information minister, said on Saturday: ‘We are conducting this battle in stages, and closing the Bab al-Mandeb Strait is among our options.’

Ibrahim Jalal, a senior researcher on Yemen and the Gulf, said the threat to shipping around Yemen is ‘very alarming, especially when it’s compounded by a coordinated multi-strait blockade’.

He told Al Jazeera: ‘This is exactly the theatre that Iran has been preparing for from what we have seen in the past few years with the Houthis.’

With stock markets tumbling and the economic fallout spreading far beyond the Middle East, Trump continues to face mounting pressure to break Iran’s chokehold on the Strait of Hormuz. 

Steve Witkoff, Trump’s envoy, said Washington passed a 15‑point ceasefire plan to Iran through Pakistan, aiming to restrict Tehran’s nuclear program and reopen the critical waterway.

Tehran shot down the president’s ceasefire package and fired back with its own five‑point deal that included reparations and official control of the vital strait.

Trump warned that if Iran doesn’t fully reopen the Strait of Hormuz by April 6, he will order strikes on the country’s energy plants. 

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