Iran War
Live Updates: Trump Disparages Allies for Rebuffing His Requests for Military
Assistance
“We don’t
need anybody,” the president declared, even as he said several countries had
agreed to help reopen the Strait of Hormuz. The Israeli military escalated
ground attacks against Iran-backed Hezbollah in Lebanon.
Anton
Troianovski Erica L. Green David E. Sanger and Aaron Boxerman
https://www.nytimes.com/live/2026/03/16/world/iran-war-trump-oil-lebanon
Here’s
the latest.
President
Trump on Monday disparaged U.S. allies that he said had relied too long — and
too expensively — on American defense, as several of those countries have
declined to meet his call to send warships to escort merchant vessels in and
out of the Persian Gulf.
“We don’t
need anybody; we’re the strongest nation in the world,” Mr. Trump said. He
suggested his request for assistance in reopening the Strait of Hormuz instead
amounted to a loyalty test of America’s allies. “I’m almost doing it in some
cases not because we need them but because I want to find out how they react,”
he said.
Referring
to countries that have rebuffed, or reacted coolly, to his appeal for ships,
Mr. Trump said he had long believed that “if we ever needed help, they won’t be
there for us,” and they were proving his point. He added, “You mean for 40
years we’re protecting you and you don’t want to get involved in something
that’s very minor?” noting that Europe, Japan and others depend on oil from the
Persian Gulf far more than the United States does.
Even so,
Mr. Trump said that “numerous countries have told me that they’re on the way.”
But asked to name them, he replied, “I’d rather not say yet, but we’ll be
announcing them.”
The
sharpest refusal to his belated effort to build an international coalition
against Iran came Monday from Germany, whose defense minister, Boris Pistorius,
said, “This is not our war; we did not start it.” Top officials of Japan, Italy
and Australia said Monday that their countries would not participate in efforts
to reopen the Strait of Hormuz.
The
European Union will not expand maritime operations in the region to protect
traffic through the strait, said its top diplomat, Kaja Kallas. “This is not
Europe’s war, but Europe’s interests are directly at stake,” she said.
Others
were noncommittal, including France, South Korea and Britain, whose prime
minister, Keir Starmer, said his country would not be “drawn into wider war.”
As Iran
blockades most traffic through the oil shipping choke point, Mr. Trump’s call
on social media on Saturday for other nations to join the United States in an
escort effort was the first time he had sounded eager to build a broad
coalition against Iran. But he was asking for backup from allies he had not
consulted ahead of the U.S.-Israeli decision to go to war, and whom he had
derided as freeloaders again on Monday.
The
American-Israeli air war against Iran, now in its third week, has killed more
than 2,000 people, mostly in Iran and Lebanon, and has drawn in much of the
Middle East. Iran has launched rockets and drones at neighboring countries and
at ships in the Gulf, and global energy prices have skyrocketed. The price of
Brent crude, the global benchmark for oil, briefly reached $106 on Monday.
The
United States appears to have been unprepared for the extent of Iran’s
retaliation and the need to protect merchant ships and giant oil tankers from
attack — something that administration officials have discussed publicly since
the first week of the war, but has not yet begun. Adm. Brad Cooper, the head of
U.S. Central Command, in a video update on Monday, did not offer details on how
the United States would reopen the strait
Here’s
what else we are covering:
Attacks
in Lebanon: There are few signs that the conflict is easing. Israel’s defense
minister, Israel Katz, said that its forces had launched a “ground maneuver” in
southern Lebanon, adding to fears that a broader invasion may be coming. More
than 800,000 people in Lebanon have fled their homes. The Israelis said on
Monday they had launched a “broad wave” of attacks across Iran.
China
summit: Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary, said President
Trump’s trip to China later this month may be delayed because of the war
against Iran, a new sign of how the conflict is casting a shadow over the
relationship between the world’s two biggest economies.
Death
toll: At least 1,348 civilians in Iran have been killed since the start of the
war, Iran’s U.N. representative told the Security Council last Wednesday, the
latest figure the country has provided. In Lebanon, officials said that 886
people had been killed. And in Israel at least 12 people have been killed,
according to the authorities. The Pentagon has said that 13 American service
members have died since the start of the war.

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