US forces say Iran's IRGC command destroyed, Iran claims massive attack on US base in Bahrain

US forces say Iran's IRGC command destroyed, Iran claims massive attack on US base in Bahrain


Birds fly as smoke rises following an explosion, after Israel and the U.S. launched strikes on Iran, amid the U.S.-Israel conflict with Iran, in Tehran, Iran, March 2, 2026.
| Photo Credit:
MAJID ASGARIPOUR

The United States Central Command (CENTCOM) said on Tuesday that the US forces carried out sustained operations targeting key Iranian military infrastructure, including facilities linked to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).

In a post on X, CENTCOM said, “US forces have destroyed Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps command and control facilities, Iranian air defense capabilities, missile and drone launch sites, and military airfields during sustained operations. We will continue to take decisive action against imminent threats posed by the Iranian regime.”

CENTCOM also said that multiple squadrons of F/A-18s are supporting sustained operations against Iran. According to CENTCOM US forces are flying day and night to deliver overwhelming firepower. US B-1 bombers also struck deep inside Iran to degrade Iranian ballistic missile capabilities. This enhanced use of firepower comes amid escalating hostilities between Washington and Tehran.

Separately, Al Jazeera reported that Iran claimed to have launched a “massive missile and drone” attack on the US air base in Bahrain. Iran’s IRGC said it destroyed the main command building of a US air base in Bahrain during a drone and missile attack early Tuesday. It said that 20 drones and 3 missiles struck the Sheikh Isa base, also setting fuel tanks on fire.

Iran’s Ambassador to the United Nations, Amir Saeid Iravani, stated that Iran will continue to defend itself decisively for as long as the US-Israeli aggression persists.The conflict has also spread to Lebanon with Israel mounting an offensive against the Hezbollah.

Israel said that the head of Hezbollah’s intelligence arm was killed in an overnight strike. The IDF said Makled was responsible for “forming the intelligence picture using various intelligence collection tools to provide the Hezbollah terror organization with intelligence assessments regarding IDF troops and the State of Israel.”

The Israeli Air Force also intercepted two unmanned aerial vehicles that crossed from Lebanon. Earlier, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said that the US military operation against Iran was aimed at “eliminating” the threat posed by Iran’s short-range ballistic missiles and its naval capabilities, particularly regarding threats to global shipping. Echoing US President Donald Trump he said that the hardest hits were yet to come.

“The hardest hits are yet to come from the US military. The next phase will be even more punishing on Iran than it is right now… The world will be a safer place when we’re done with this operation,” Rubio said. “Our mission and our focus is the destruction of their ballistic missile capabilities and their ability to manufacture them, as well as the threat posed by their Navy to global shipping,” he aded. The scope of the conflict continues to widen with the Gulf States now drawn into it.

Published on March 3, 2026



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ईरान तनाव से कच्चे तेल में उछाल के बीच सरकार ने एनर्जी कंपनियों को दिए ये बड़े निर्देश

ईरान तनाव से कच्चे तेल में उछाल के बीच सरकार ने एनर्जी कंपनियों को दिए ये बड़े निर्देश


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Indian Refining Companies Export Cut Plan: पश्चिम एशिया में पैदा हुई अनिश्चितता का प्रभाव अब साफ दिखने लगा है. पिछले 3 दिनों से कच्चे तेल की कीमतों में उछाल देखने को मिल रहा है. जिससे तेल आयात करने वाले देशों पर आर्थिक दबाव का खतरा बढ़ता ही जा रहा हैं.

वहीं, विभिन्न रिपोर्ट भी युद्ध लंबा खींचने से तेल की कीमतों में जोरदार तेजी की ओर इशारा कर रहे हैं. आइए जानते हैं, भारत सरकार और रिफाइनरिंग कंपनियां इस हालात से निपटने के लिए कैसी तैयारी कर रही हैं?

रिफाइनरिंग कंपनियों से चर्चा

इन सब के बीच भारत सरकार ने अपनी तैयारियां शुरू कर दी है. कच्चे तेल की संभावित कमी को देखते हुए सरकार रिफाइनरिंग कंपनियों के साथ रणनीति बना रही है. जिसके तहत सरकार कंपनियों से निर्यात घटाने और घरेलू बाजार में इसे उपलब्ध करवाने की बात कह सकती है.

इसके अलावा रसोई गैस के उत्पादन बढ़ाने की भी बात हो सकती है. जिससे देश में ऊर्जा जरूरतों की कमी न हो. 

लंबा युद्ध बढ़ा सकता है कीमतें

रिफाइनरिंग कंपनियो से बातचीत के अलावा सरकार दूसरे विकल्प की तलाश भी कर रही है. जिससे ईरान और होर्मुज स्ट्रेट पर निर्भरता कम की जा सके. हालांकि, खुदरा ईंधन की कीमतों में तुरंत कोई बड़ी बढ़ोतरी हो ऐसा जरूरी नहीं है. क्योंकि ऐसे माहौल में रिफाइनरिंग कंपनियां संतुलित नीति अपनाती है. 

वैश्विक स्तर पर कीमतों में आई तेजी से कुछ समय तक कंपनियां नुकसान उठाती है और कीमतें कम होने पर मुनाफा कमा कर हुए नुकसान की भरपाई करती है. हालांकि, युद्ध लंबा खींचने और सप्लाई के लंबे समय तक बाधित रहने के कारण कीमतों में तेजी देखने को मिलती है.

देश ऊर्जा जरूरतों के लिए है निर्भर

देश की ऊर्जा आवश्यकताओं का बड़ा हिस्सा आयात पर टिका हुआ है. कच्चे तेल की मांग का करीब 90 प्रतिशत आयात के जरिये पूरा किया जाता है. वहीं रसोई गैस की जरूरत का लगभग 60 से 65 प्रतिशत और एलएनजी की खपत का करीब 60 प्रतिशत हिस्सा भी बाहर से आयात किया जाता है.

इन आपूर्तियों का अधिकांश भाग पश्चिम एशिया से पहुंचता है और अधिकतर खेप होर्मुज स्ट्रेट के रास्ते से ही गुजरती है. युद्ध जैसी परिस्थितियों होने के कारण सप्लाई पूरी तरह से बाधित हो सकता है. जिसके कारण एक बड़ा ऊर्जा संकट आने की संभावना से इंकार नहीं किया जा सकता है.   

यह भी पढ़ें: होर्मुज स्ट्रेट पर संकट गहराया तो महंगा होगा कच्चा तेल, S&P Global की रिपोर्ट; 100 डॉलर के पार जाएंगे दाम?



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India's 100 million barrel crude stocks could cover 40-45 days if Hormuz flows disrupted

India's 100 million barrel crude stocks could cover 40-45 days if Hormuz flows disrupted


India holds about 100 million barrels of commercial crude oil stocks — in storage tanks, underground strategic reserves and on ships voyaging towards the country — which could cover roughly 40-45 days of its requirement if flows through the Strait of Hormuz are disrupted, according to Kpler.

India imports about 88 per cent of the crude oil it needs — the raw material for fuels such as petrol and diesel — with more than 50 per cent supplied by Middle Eastern countries and transiting the narrow Strait of Hormuz, flows from which have been disrupted amid the Iran crisis.

If Middle Eastern crude supply were to halt completely for a temporary period, the immediate impact would be logistical and price-driven, with supply risks intensifying if movement through the Strait of Hormuz is disrupted for longer, said Sumit Ritolia, Lead Research Analyst, Refining & Modeling at Kpler.

A closure of Strait of Hormuz would at first impact prompt cargo liftings. “However, refiners typically maintain commercial inventories, and cargoes already on water would continue to arrive, providing some short-term cushioning to the system,” he said adding in the event of a prolonged disruption, medium-term pressures would build through higher import costs, freight exposure and the need to reroute supplies over longer distances.

“The country maintains strategic petroleum reserves alongside commercial inventories held by refiners and oil marketing companies. These buffers are intended to manage temporary supply shocks rather than sustained outages,” he said.

“Based on Kpler inventory data, commercial crude stocks are around 100 million barrels, including volumes in the strategic petroleum reserve (SPR) facilities at Mangalore, Padur and Visakhapatnam.”

With imports via the Strait of Hormuz averaging roughly 2.5 million barrels per day — about half of India’s just over 5 million bpd total crude imports — these combined reserves could theoretically cover around 40-45 days of imports in a crude disruption scenario, he said.

Additional refined product inventories would extend effective coverage further.

However, the immediate impact will be on prices. Brent, global benchmark, crossed $80 per barrel, roughly 10 per cent more since the Iran crisis. For India, higher prices means higher import bill.

India spent $137 billion on crude oil imports in fiscal year ended March 31, 2025. During April 2025 to January 2026 — first ten months of current fiscal — it spent $100.4 billion on import of 206.3 million tonnes of crude oil.

The United States and Israel launched military strikes on targets in Iran over the weekend. Tehran retaliated with missiles and drones aimed at Israel and countries hosting US forces, including the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain, Iraq, Jordan and Saudi Arabia.

Media reports suggest the conflict has effectively closed the Strait of Hormuz, a key conduit for global energy flows. Roughly one-third of the world’s seaborne crude oil exports and about 20 per cent of liquefied natural gas shipments transit the narrow waterway.

India, the world’s third largest oil importer, imports roughly half of its crude needs through the narrow Strait. Its mainstay liquefied natural gas (LNG) supplier in Qatar also uses the strait to ship the fuel to India.

In case of closure, India can tap suppliers in West Africa, Latin Amercia and the US to make up for the shortfall from the Middle-East. India could also tap Russian oil to make up for the deficit.

India had agreed to wind down purchases of Russian oil as part of a trade deal with the US – a deal which now sits in limbo after the US Supreme Court struck down US President Donald Trump’s country-based tariffs.

“Russian cargoes currently floating in the Arabian Sea and wider Asian region without firm buyers could also be absorbed relatively quickly if required,” Ritolia said.

If the Strait of Hormuz — the narrow 33-kilometre passage connecting the Persian Gulf to the Arabian Sea — were disrupted or shipping were forced onto longer routes, India’s crude import bill would rise.

Even without a full blockade, higher freight, war-risk insurance and geopolitical premiums would lift landed costs.

“In a more severe scenario, policy intervention would likely become a key stabilising tool. The government could prioritise domestic energy security by asking refiners to moderate or temporarily curb refined product exports to ensure adequate domestic supply,” he said.

Given that India is among the world’s largest exporters of refined products, particularly diesel and jet, redirecting export volumes to the domestic market would provide an additional buffer.

India exported 23.7 million tonnes (474,000 bpd) of petroleum products or 10 per cent of the country’s fuel consumption, in 2024-25. During April-January, exports stood at 53.3 million tones.

“If the Hormuz situation were to deteriorate meaningfully, safeguarding domestic fuel availability and price stability would likely take precedence over export optimisation, reinforcing internal supply resilience even at the cost of lower export revenues,” he said.

The worst-case scenario would involve a prolonged and severe disruption to Hormuz flows combined with sustained geopolitical escalation. In that case, crude prices would spike sharply, freight markets would tighten, and refiners could eventually be forced to trim runs if replacement barrels are delayed.

“However, such a scenario would have major global economic consequences, making it a low-probability but high-impact risk,” he said adding the near-term risk is primarily price volatility and higher import costs rather than immediate physical shortage, for now.

India has diversification options and inventory buffers, but sustained disruption would materially increase the import bill and create macroeconomic pressures.

Published on March 3, 2026



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Natco Pharma launches Pomalidomide capsules in US

Natco Pharma launches Pomalidomide capsules in US


This product, developed in partnership with Breckenridge Pharmaceutical, Inc., is indicated for the treatment of adult patients with multiple myeloma and AIDS-related Kaposi sarcoma.
| Photo Credit:
istock.com

Natco Pharma has announced the launch of Pomalidomide Capsules, a generic version of Pomalyst, in the US market.

This product, developed in partnership with Breckenridge Pharmaceutical, Inc., is indicated for the treatment of adult patients with multiple myeloma and AIDS-related Kaposi sarcoma.

Pomalidomide Capsules are available in strengths of 1mg, 2mg, 3mg, and 4mg and are distributed through specialty pharmacies and clinics. The estimated sales for Pomalidomide in the US for the year ending September 2025 was approximately $3.2 billion. Natco has indicated that it holds 180 days of shared exclusivity for this product as per FDA guidelines.

Rajeev Nannapaneni, Vice Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of NATCO Pharma, said, “The launch highlights our commitment to our mission of making specialty medicines accessible to all the patients worldwide. We look forward to bringing more such complex and specialty products to the market in the coming years.”

Natco Pharma shares ended 3 per cent lower on the NSE on Monday at ₹956.25.

(This article was generated using AI and vetted by a journalist)

Published on March 3, 2026



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गिरते बाजार में भी विदेशी निवेशकों का भरोसा इन स्टॉक्स पर कायम, बढ़ाई शेयरहोल्डिंग; चेक करें कह

गिरते बाजार में भी विदेशी निवेशकों का भरोसा इन स्टॉक्स पर कायम, बढ़ाई शेयरहोल्डिंग; चेक करें कह


FII Increased Stake in Indian Stocks: गिरते घरेलू बाजार के बीच विदेशी संस्थागत निवेशक कुछ कंपनियों में अपनी हिस्सेदारी बढ़ा रहे हैं. आमतौर पर एफआईआई अच्छी तरह से रिसर्च करने के बाद ही किसी कंपनी पर अपना दांव लगाते हैं.

आंकड़ों से पता चलता है कि, विदेशी निवेशकों ने सिर्फ एक तिमाही में 14 कंपनियों में अपनी शेयरहोल्डिंग को करीब 50 प्रतिशत से अधिक बढ़ा दिया है. आइए जानते हैं, ऐसे ही कुछ चुनिंदा स्टॉक्स के बारे में जिनपर विदेशी निवेशक भरोसा दिखा रहे हैं….

आर्टेमिस मेडिकेयर सर्विसेज शेयर

हेल्थकेयर कंपनी आर्टेमिस मेडिकेयर सर्विसेज में विदेशी संस्थागत निवेशकों की दिलचस्पी अचानक तेज हुई है. सितंबर 2025 में जहां उनकी हिस्सेदारी सिर्फ 0.37 फीसदी थी, वहीं दिसंबर तिमाही तक यह बढ़कर 12.47 प्रतिशत पर पहुंच गई है. 

शेयर बाजार में कंपनी शेयरो के प्रदर्शन की बात करें तो इनमें दबाव देखने को मिल रहा है. दिसंबर तिमाही के बाद शेयर करीब 12 फीसदी टूट गए है. सोमवार, 2 मार्च के कारोबारी दिन बीएसई पर कंपनी शेयर 2.92 फीसदी या 6.95 रुपये की गिरावट के साथ 231.15 रुपये पर ट्रेड करते हुए बंद हुए थे. 

नॉलेज मरीन एंड इंजीनियरिंग वर्क्स शेयर

विदेशी निवेशकों ने नॉलेज मरीन एंड इंजीनियरिंग वर्क्स कंपनी में अपनी हिस्सेदारी बढ़ाई हैं. आंकड़ों के अनुसार, सितंबर 2025 में हिस्सेदारी 0.74 फीसदी थी. वहीं, दिसंबर तिमाही में यह आंकड़ा बढ़कर 11.01 प्रतिशत हो गया है.

आखिरी कारोबारी दिन कंपनी शेयरों में तेजी देखने को मिली थी. कंपनी शेयर 2.40 फीसदी या 38.55 रुपये की उछाल के साथ 1646.40 रुपये पर बंद हुए थे.  

बैंक ऑफ महाराष्ट्र शेयर

बैंक ऑफ महाराष्ट्र में विदेशी निवेशकों की भागीदारी बढ़ी है. सितंबर 2025 में विदेशी संस्थागत निवेशकों की हिस्सेदारी 2.35 प्रतिशत थी. जो दिसंबर तिमाही तक बढ़कर 4.92 फीसदी हो गई. तिमाही समाप्त होने के बाद शेयर ने मजबूती दिखाई और इसमें करीब 21 प्रतिशत की तेजी दर्ज की गई है. एनएसई पर सोमवार को बैंक शेयर 3.72 प्रतिशत फिसल गए थे.  

डिस्क्लेमर: (यहां मुहैया जानकारी सिर्फ़ सूचना हेतु दी जा रही है. यहां बताना जरूरी है कि मार्केट में निवेश बाजार जोखिमों के अधीन है. निवेशक के तौर पर पैसा लगाने से पहले हमेशा एक्सपर्ट से सलाह लें. ABPLive.com की तरफ से किसी को भी पैसा लगाने की यहां कभी भी सलाह नहीं दी जाती है.)

यह भी पढ़ें: Gold Silver Price Today: पश्चिम एशिया में पैदा हुई अनिश्चितता से सोना-चांदी को मिल रहा है सपोर्ट, जानिए आज आपके शहर में कीमतें घटीं या बढ़ीं?



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From handwashed underwear to fake Adidas, stranded travellers wait out travel chaos

From handwashed underwear to fake Adidas, stranded travellers wait out travel chaos


Stranded passengers wait near Emirates Airways customer service office at I Gusti Ngurah Rai International Airport after flights to Doha, Dubai, and Abu Dhabi were cancelled following strikes on Iran launched by the United States and Israel
| Photo Credit:
REUTERS/JOHANNES P. CHRISTO

In the lobby of a tired hotel near Doha airport, stranded travellers wear ​identical fake Adidas T-shirts bought from a nearby store and swap tips on where to buy underwear.

“It’s our uniform,” said Erika Macikova. The 49-year-old ‌Slovak winemaker was returning from an ayurvedic retreat in Sri Lanka when she became stranded in ​the Qatari capital. Her luggage remains at the airport, but she was evacuated to a hotel alongside hundreds ⁠of other passengers.

With no spare clothes, Macikova tracked down open shops and began sharing their names with fellow globetrotters. Tens of thousands of travellers across the Middle East were entering a third day of limbo after escalating conflict between the U.S., Israel and Iran disrupted flights worldwide ‌and forced the closure of major airports including Dubai, the world’s busiest international hub.

BIGGEST UPHEAVAL TO AIR TRAVEL SINCE COVID-19

Many of those stuck in the region, like Macikova, were simply changing planes. Dubai, which handles more ‌than 1,000 flights a day, and nearby Doha and Abu Dhabi sit at the crossroads of east-west air travel, ‌funnelling ⁠long-haul traffic between Europe and Asia through tightly scheduled connecting flights.

The upheaval is rippling far beyond the ⁠Middle East, with tens of thousands of passengers stranded in places including Bali, Kathmandu and Frankfurt. The UAE’s civil aviation authority said it assisted about 20,200 travellers on Saturday. Data shows at least 4,000 flights were cancelled in the space of three days.

In Dubai, James Gaskin spent Monday morning washing his underwear and ​a collection of novelty socks in his bathroom sink.

After a ‌week in India for work, the 53-year-old procurement manager from northern England was already short of clean clothes when his connecting flight back to Britain was cancelled. He was taken to a local hotel with hundreds of other passengers.

Like many of them, Gaskin said he had little idea what was unfolding when he landed at Dubai airport.

“A lady ‌came to the gate and just stood on a chair and made an announcement that everyone’s got to ​leave the airport. All very calm and orderly,” he said. “In a British way, I did six hours of queuing without any real drama.”

But the baggage hall descended into chaos, he said, as passengers pulled ⁠bags off carousels, seeking their own.

“Even though it was pandemonium, I was pretty relaxed,” he said.

But then “there were quite a few bangs, the airport got hit”, he said. “That brought it home.”

“The general feeling is, the longer it goes on, the more edgy people ‌are getting.”

PASSENGERS WHATSAPP TO SHARE COPING TIPS

Across hotels in the region, strangers trade information on where to find washing machines, how to navigate airline helplines or retrieve luggage, and whether it makes sense to pool resources and try to leave by car.

They gather in hotel lobbies to play games or watch sports, or head to shopping malls to buy snacks. WhatsApp groups have sprung up.

Many are trying not to dwell on their situation, even as loud bangs overhead remind them why they are stuck. Macikova was spending as much time as possible inside the hotel because she felt most secure there.

She was immersed in a ‌romantic novel, but Gaskin was bored. His wife had sent him logins to various streaming services but he had not felt like watching them.

British friends ​Julie Hardy and Francis McKay, who had been on a two-week tour of southern India, were staying at the same low-rise hotel near the airport.

On Sunday, they took a taxi to a nearby ⁠mall to buy medication, cheese and crackers, and to have lunch.

It was fun, they said. The nights are harder. On Saturday night, two ⁠alarms went off on Hardy’s phone and she rushed to the hotel lobby in her nightie, which no one seemed to find surprising.

“I’m very reluctant to go to bed up here,” she said. “I would rather be downstairs ‌for as long as possible … I can’t relax, because I think something’s going to happen in the night and I’m going to have to get up quickly and evacuate.”

McKay was anxious too and, while it sounded dramatic, worried whether ​she would see her family again:

“It’s the unknown, and I’ve never been in a war zone.”

Published on March 3, 2026



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