Iranian attack on Saudi base injures US troops. More American forces arrive in the Middle East

WASHINGTON (AP) — The number of American service members wounded in theIran warhas grown beyond 300, with more than two dozen troops injured this week from attacks on a Saudi air base.

Associated Press

Iran fired six ballistic missiles and 29 drones at Saudi Arabia's Prince Sultan air base in an attack Friday that injured at least 15 troops, including five seriously, according to two people briefed on the matter. U.S. officialsinitially reportedthat at least 10 U.S. troops were injured, including two who were seriously wounded.

More American forces arereaching the Middle East, with a Navy ship carrying about 2,500 Marines having now arrived in the region, U.S. Central Command announced Saturday. The USS Tripoli, an amphibious assault ship, as well as the elements from the 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit that are aboard, are based in Japan. They were conducting exercises in the area around Taiwan when the order came to deploy to the Middle East almost two weeks ago.

Central Command said that in addition to the Marines, the Tripoli also brings transport and strike fighter aircraft, as well as amphibious assault assets to the region. The USS Boxer and two other ships, along with another Marine Expeditionary Unit, have also been ordered to the region from San Diego.

Before the arrival of the Marines, the U.S. military had already built up the largest American force in the region in more than 20 years, including two aircraft carriers, several other warships and some 50,000 troops. The USS Gerald R Ford, the nation's newest aircraft carrier, recently left the Middle East for repairs and supplies in Europe after a fire in a laundry room that affected some of the ship's sleeping quarters.

Secretary of StateMarco Rubiosaid Friday the United States can meet its objectives "without any ground troops." But he also said Trump "has to be prepared for multiple contingencies" and that American forces are available "to give the president maximum optionality and maximum, opportunity to adjust to contingencies should they emerge."

The Saudi base had come under come attack twice earlier in week, including an incident that injured 14 U.S. troops, according to the people, who were not authorized to discuss the matter publicly and spoke on the condition of anonymity. In the other attack, no one was injured but a U.S. aircraft was damaged.

The base, which is about 96 kilometers (60 miles) from the Saudi capital of Riyadh, is run by the Royal Saudi Air Force, but also used by U.S. troops. The installation has been targeted almost since the beginning of the war, which on Saturday reached the one-month mark.

Army Sgt. Benjamin N. Pennington, 26, was wounded during a March 1 attack on the base anddied days later. He is one of the 13 service members who have beenkilled in the war.Six of the fallen were killedwhen an Iranian drone struck anoperations center at a civilian portin Kuwait. Another six died when theirrefueling plane crashedin Iraq following an incident with another aircraft that the U.S. military said was "not due to hostile or friendly fire."

The Pentagon did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment Saturday regarding the American casualties at the Saudi base.

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Central Command said Friday that more than 300 service members have been wounded in the war. Most have returned to duty, while 30 remained out of action and 10 were considered seriously wounded.

Iran has responded to attacks by the United States and Israel with strikes against Israel and neighboring Gulf Arab states. The war has upended global air travel, disrupted oil exports and caused fuel prices to soar. Iran's stranglehold on theStrait of Hormuz, a strategic waterway, has exacerbated the economic fallout.

With the economic repercussions extending far beyond the Middle East, President Donald Trump is under growing pressure to end Iran's chokehold on the strait. The latest attacks on the Saudi air base happened after Trump claimed talks on ending the war were going "very well."

Trump said he had given Tehran until April 6 to reopen the strait. Iran says it has not engaged in any negotiations.

James Jeffrey, who served as a deputy national security adviser to President George W. Bush, said the relatively small number of American deaths and injuries "says great things about our operational and tactical-level use of the military."

"It's amazing how low the casualties have been, given the amount of stuff that the Iranians have fired," said Jeffrey, who is now a scholar at The Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

But Jeffrey said the Islamic Republic's overall goal is not killing American service members. It's inflicting economic pain on U.S. allies and the world.

"We have not stopped Iran from its campaign against the Gulf," said Jeffrey, who was U.S. ambassador to Iraq under Bush and a special envoy for Syria in the first Trump administration. "We have not eliminated all of their missiles. And of course, they still have the 400-plus kilograms of highly enriched uranium. It's buried, but still it's there."

Magdy reported from Cairo. Associated Press writer Konstantin Toropin in Washington contributed to this report.

Iranian attack on Saudi base injures US troops. More American forces arrive in the Middle East

WASHINGTON (AP) — The number of American service members wounded in theIran warhas grown beyond 300, with more than two d...
Don't strike a deal with Iran's current leaders, opposition figure Pahlavi warns

By Nathan Layne

Reuters Reza Pahlavi, the exiled son of Iran's last shah and an Iranian opposition figure, speaks during the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) USA 2026 at the Gaylord Texan Resort and Convention Center, in Grapevine, Texas, U.S. March 28, 2026. REUTERS/Callaghan O'Hare Reza Pahlavi, the exiled son of Iran's last shah and an Iranian opposition figure blows a kiss during the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) USA 2026 at the Gaylord Texan Resort and Convention Center, in Grapevine, Texas, U.S., March 28, 2026. REUTERS/Daniel Cole

Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) USA 2026 in Grapevine

GRAPEVINE, Texas, March 28 (Reuters) - Iranian opposition figure Reza Pahlavi on Saturday warned that negotiating for peace with the current leaders of Iran would only push the threat ‌to Americans down the road, and said he would once again call for Iranians to protest ‌in the streets.

Pahlavi, the exiled son of Iran's ousted shah, was warmly received during his address to the Conservative Political Action Conference ​in Texas, an annual gathering of Republican activists and lawmakers. He drew a standing ovation as he took the stage, and his pledges to help liberate the Iranian people sparked enthusiastic rounds of applause from conservatives and Iranian Americans in the audience.

Citing President Donald Trump's comments earlier this month that he was pressing ahead with attacks ‌on Iran because he did not ⁠want to confront security threats from the country "every two years," Pahlavi warned that negotiating with Iran's current leadership would mean doing exactly that.

"The only thing that the remnants ⁠of this regime can be relied on to do is to buy time, to cheat and to steal. They will never be honest or true partners for peace," Pahlavi said.

"It will buy time, it will pretend to negotiate, ​and then ​it will return to its old jihadist ways of ​threatening America, its security and its interests."

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Pahlavi, 65, ‌has promoted himself as the most viable option to lead a transitional government and expressed readiness to return to Iran at the earliest opportunity, ending a 47‑year absence from the country.

But Iran's opposition is fragmented among rival groups and ideological factions, and Trump has repeatedly expressed skepticism about Pahlavi as a potential leader, suggesting that someone from inside Iran might be better.

With global energy prices rising and his approval ratings slipping, ‌Trump is confronting stark choices after a month of war with ​Iran: strike a potentially fragile deal and exit, or escalate ​militarily and risk a prolonged conflict.

Pahlavi sought to ​link his cause to American security and business interests. He drew raucous applause when ‌he asked the crowd to imagine Iran ​moving from chants of "Death to ​America" to "God bless America," and pledged that a free Iran would offer vast economic opportunities for the United States.

At several points during the speech, Iranian Americans in the audience chanted "long live the king."

Pahlavi, ​who called for sustained nationwide protests ‌in Iran in January, said that "when the right moment arrives" he would "call on them to ​rise up again" in an effort to "reclaim their homeland, their dignity and their future."

(Reporting by ​Nathan Layne in Grapevine, Texas; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama )

Don't strike a deal with Iran's current leaders, opposition figure Pahlavi warns

By Nathan Layne Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) USA 2026 in Grapevine GRAPEVINE, Texas, Marc...
Russia took satellite images of U.S. air base before Iranian attack, Zelenskyy says

DOHA, Qatar — Russia took satellite images of a U.S. air base in Saudi Arabia three times in the days before Iran attacked the site and wounded American troops, according to a summary of Ukrainian intelligence shared with NBC News byPresident Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

NBC Universal

In an interview in the Gulf nation of Qatar on Saturday, Zelenskyy said he was "100%" confident Russia was sharing such intelligence with Iran to help target U.S. forces across the Middle East.

"I think that it's in Russia's interest to help Iranians. And I don't believe — I know — that they share information," he said. "Do they help Iranians? Of course. How many percent? One-hundred percent."

During the interview, Zelenskyy shared a summary of the daily presidential briefing he receives from Ukraine's spy agencies. The report stated that Russian satellites had taken images of the Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia on March 20, March 23 and March 25.

Read more on this story atNBCNews.comand watch "NBC Nightly News with Tom Llamas" tonightat 6:30 p.m. ET/5:30 p.m. CT.

On March 26, Iran attacked the base, which hosts U.S. forces as well as Saudi troops. The strike wounded a number of American service members,two U.S. officials said Friday, though none of the injuries were considered life-threatening.

Zelenskyy said that based on Ukraine's experience, Russia's repeated photographing of installations over several days is an indication of attack planning.

"We know that if they make images once, they are preparing. If they make images a second time, it's like a simulation. The third time it means that in one or two days, they will attack," he said. The briefing did not include evidence of the Russian satellite imagery or specify how Ukraine became aware of it, and NBC News was unable to verify its accuracy.

NBC Newsreported earlier this monththat Russia was providing intelligence to Iran on the location of U.S. forces in the Middle East, citing four sources with knowledge of the matter. Russia's Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov denied providing Tehran with intelligence in an interview with French media on Thursday, though he said Moscow has sent military equipment to Iran under their long-standing military alliance.

Zelenskyy toured the Gulf states this week seeking to seal deals providingUkraine's battle-tested air defense technologiesto nations under fire from Iranian missiles and drones.

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He said defense agreements had been signed with Saudi Arabia and Qatar in which Ukraine would provide technical know-how in exchange for "billions" of dollars of investment in Ukrainian defense industries. "They recognize our expertise," he added.Iran's low-cost Shahed drones, among the key weapons used to attack Tehran's neighbors, have been deployed by Russia across its four-year war with Ukraine.

The U.S.-Israeli war with Iran has created enormous demand for American-mademissile interceptorsamong U.S. allies in the Middle East, with stockpiles draining after a month of daily attacks from Iran. Zelenskyy said he was concerned that the conflict could lead to U.S. weapons being diverted from Ukraine to the Middle East, but that so far there had been no disruption in scheduled deliveries to Kyiv.

"I'm very worried. I hope that the United States will not make such mistakes," he said, adding that weapon flows from Western allies were critical to his country's defense against Russia.

Zelenskyy said he believed Russian President Vladimir Putin was hoping for a "long war in the Middle East."

"[Putin] has benefits, a lot of benefits, of this war," he said, pointing to higher oil prices and the temporary lifting of some U.S. sanctions on Russian oil, which mean more revenue for the Kremlin. "If sanctions are lifted, [Putin] will get more money, much more money, and he will put this money to weapons."

While U.S. efforts to broker a peace agreement between Ukraine and Russia appeared largely stalled before the war in Iran, Zelenskyy said the new conflict in the Middle East had slowed diplomacy even further.

He said he had been told the U.S. mediation team — led by Steve Witkoff, President Donald Trump's special envoy, and Jared Kushner, the president's son-in-law — were not able to conduct negotiations in a neutral venue outside the United States during the Iran war.

The U.S. team had offered to hosttrilateral negotiationson American soil but the Russian side was unwilling to do so, Zelenskyy said, though Kremlin envoy Kirill Dmitriev has traveled to Florida for past talks with his U.S. counterparts. He added that Ukraine was prepared to meet at any time in any venue except Russia and suggested Turkey or Switzerland as possibilities.

"We will never be the side who is blocking or delaying or postponing, etc. And that's why we are ready to meet everywhere except Russia and Belarus — they are allies and they are enemies," he said.

Asked whether he believed Trump cared about the future of Ukraine, Zelenskyy paused for a moment.

"I hope so," he said. "You know the policy of the United States today. They care about the United States more. It's understandable, by the way. We understand it and I think that the American team is very open about it."

Russia took satellite images of U.S. air base before Iranian attack, Zelenskyy says

DOHA, Qatar — Russia took satellite images of a U.S. air base in Saudi Arabia three times in the days before Iran attacke...
Rangers scratch 2-time Cy Young Award winner Jacob deGrom from start against Phillies with sore neck

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — TheTexas Rangersscratched two-time Cy Young Award winner Jacob deGrom from his scheduled start Saturday against the Phillies because of neck stiffness.

Associated Press

Rangers manager Skip Schumaker said he expected deGrom to start Tuesday or Wednesday at Baltimore.

The Rangers gave left-hander Jacob Latz the start.

Latz failed to win a spot in the rotation out of spring training. He's pitched mostly out of the bullpen in parts of four seasons with the Rangers.

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DeGrom's final two years with the New York Mets were plagued by injury before he left in free agency after the 2022 season. He then had Tommy John surgery after only six starts in his Rangers debut in 2023, the season of their only World Series title. They won each of his starts that all came before the end of April that year.

The $185 million, five-year deal deGrom signed with Texas included a conditional sixth-year club optionworth at least $20 millionand up to $37 million for 2028 that has been triggered because of the time missed injured.

AP MLB:https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

Rangers scratch 2-time Cy Young Award winner Jacob deGrom from start against Phillies with sore neck

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — TheTexas Rangersscratched two-time Cy Young Award winner Jacob deGrom from his scheduled start Saturd...
Frustration expected in chase of Tyler Reddick at Martinsville

When the NASCAR Cup Series rolls across the Virginia state line this week and checks into venerable Martinsville Speedway, competitors will not find anything different in Sunday's Cook Out 400 that they haven't encountered before.

Field Level Media

Because it's Spring in southern Virginia, and that means the start of the short-track season, though it is rather shortened -- too brief, to be honest -- in its current state.

Back in the day, there truly was a stretch -- three-quarters of a month -- when NASCAR visited its moonshining roots in North Carolina and neighboring Tennessee and Virginia, usually in the year's fourth month but sometimes in the previous one.

This time it's March, and it's not three visits. It's two.

The 400-lapper at the half-mile Martinsville Speedway, NASCAR's oldest venue that opened in 1947, is the first of just two back-to-back races on bullrings less than a mile in length.

Let's just call this stop in Martinsville and the day race in Bristol a "Fortnight of Fun and Frustration" because short-track racing is usually straight-up fun, though the races will be two weeks apart and not on consecutive weekends due to Easter.

It would be hard to ignore the growing frustration as one driver dominates the show.

Let's start with Chevrolet's struggles.

Through six races, the manufacturer has recorded 11 top-five finishes, which may sound like a lot, nearly two per race, but it has been hard to get all the way up front.

Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Shane van Gisbergen and Chase Elliott have each posted runner-up finishes at Daytona, COTA and Vegas, respectively, but the bow-tied hotshoes have not been able to take their cars to Victory Lane.

One-sixth of the way through the schedule, Chevy is experiencing its worst drought to start a season since the one before 2020, the COVID-stricken one that serves as a line of demarcation.

In 2019 in an 0-for-9 skid, the manufacturer watched Toyota win six times and Ford notch three more before Elliott finally parked his No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports ride in Victory Lane at Talladega on April 28.

Almost all the way to May without winning.

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Chevy went winless over the next six to create a 1-for-16 stretch in nearly half the season, but at least Elliott bailed out General Motors.

Hope springs for the racing group though.

Since 2020, no manufacturer has hauled its way out of tiny Martinsville Speedway with more grandfather clocks, the bullring's quirky trophy, than Chevy.

In 12 races, one of its drivers has left with the odd timepiece six times: William Byron with three, while Elliott, Kyle Larson and Alex Bowman have one apiece.

But the frustration runs through the garage, primarily due to the success of Toyota's Tyler Reddick, who is making this look way too easy at 23XI Racing with four wins in six starts.

After Reddick smoked the Darlington field and ran away from Brad Keselowski by 5.847 seconds -- the largest winning margin since Bill Elliott claimed the 1994 Southern 500 by 6.39 seconds -- the Ford driver said it's basically the field versus Reddick right now.

"A lot," said Keselowski when asked what he needed to beat the sport's new star. "We were not that close to him. He's in another category, for sure.

"He was really in a class of his own."

That's the source of much of the current frustration, and it won't be alleviated until the rest of NASCAR figures out how to outrun the current best driver.

Denny Hamlin, who grew up in Chesterfield, Va., scored the Busch Light Pole on Saturday, his fifth career top qualifying spot at the short track and his first overall of 2026.

A six-time Martinsville winner, Hamlin breezed around the half-mile track in his No. 11 Toyota at 98.241 mph to win his 49th career pole and earn the best spot to defend his victory at the Virginia track a year ago.

William Byron's No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet will start second. The Wood Racing Ford's Josh Berry slotted third followed by Ty Gibbs and Shane van Gisbergen.

Four-time season winner and points leader Reddick grids eighth.

--Field Level Media

Frustration expected in chase of Tyler Reddick at Martinsville

When the NASCAR Cup Series rolls across the Virginia state line this week and checks into venerable Martinsville Speed...

 

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