Mar 11, 2026

Headlines at the World Socialist Web Site today:

1. US media and Democratic Party enable Trump’s war of extermination against Iran

The US-Israeli assault has killed at least 1,255 people and wounded more than 12,000. Two hundred children are among the dead, including more than 170 killed by a Tomahawk missile that struck a girls’ school in Minab. The Iranian Red Crescent reported 19,734 civilian structures damaged, nearly doubling in 24 hours. This includes 77 healthcare centers and 69 schools.

This criminal war of aggression is systematically enabled by the media and the Democratic Party, whose leaders have endorsed the murder of Iranian officials, provided political cover for the Trump regime and funded the war. Not a single Democratic leader, not a single major newspaper editorial, has called the war what it is: a war crime and a “crime against peace” under the Nuremberg precedent, the very crime for which Nazi leaders were hanged.

Reflecting the general attitude of the Democratic Party-aligened media, Thomas Friedman, the New York Times’ most influential foreign affairs columnist, wrote Tuesday that the war’s initial results are “good for the Iranian people, given how many have been killed by the regime controlling that power, and it is good for the region.”

Friedman’s declaration that the outcome of the war is “good” is the endorsement of an unprovoked war of aggression in violation of international law. The murder of Iran’s head of state under the guise of negotiations is the crime of perfidy under the Geneva Conventions. The extermination of more than 170 children in a school is a war crime under the Rome Statute. The torpedoing of an unarmed vessel whose crew was left to drown is a violation of the Second Geneva Convention.

Friedman ignores every one of these crimes. His sole concern is tactical. The “transformation of Iran”—that is, overthrow of its government and the installation of a regime beholden to American imperialism—“is so much more important than the war’s critics admit, but so much more difficult than the war’s designers understand,” Friedman writes. 

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On the broadcast networks and in the evening news, Trump’s genocidal statements are routinely passed over without comment—let alone condemnation—if they are reported at all. Threats to “end” Iran as a country and erase its very name are treated as just another soundbite, normalized as legitimate policy rather than exposed as incitement to mass murder.

The Democratic Party plays an even more direct role in enabling the war. The House Democratic leadership has endorsed the murder of Iran’s civilian leaders. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer declared on the Senate floor on March 2: “I will not shed a tear for Ali Khamenei, the Supreme Leader of Iran, who was killed in the initial rounds of airstrikes.” House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries declared on Meet the Press last weekend that Iran’s leader “was a bad actor, and I’m not going to shed any tears as a result of his departure.”

Jeffries also signaled his openness to providing Trump with more money to wage the war: “We’ll cross that bridge when we get to it.” The ritual is the same in every case: denounce Iran, praise the illegal murder of Iran’s civilian leadership, then complain about the process.

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Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez played her assigned role in the Trump administration’s war propaganda. On January 9—two days after ICE agent Jonathan Ross shot and killed Renee Good, a 37-year-old mother of three, in Minneapolis—she posted on X: “The Iranian government’s violent crackdown on demonstrators is horrific and must stop now.” At the Munich Security Conference in February, she repeated the administration’s claims that the Iranian government had killed “tens of thousands of people,” adding her voice to the propaganda barrage that preceded the attack on Iran.

On March 8, Ocasio-Cortez held a joint town hall in Glens Falls, New York, with Representative Pat Ryan, a former military intelligence officer and CIA Democrat whose career includes work for a Palantir subcontractor that proposed surveillance of left-wing activists. She did not mention the Iran war once.

The purpose of this massive propaganda onslaught is to combat and trample the mass popular opposition to the war. It underscores the fact that Trump is not acting as an isolated individual. He is the political representative of the capitalist oligarchy, which is resorting to the most criminal methods—war and extermination abroad, repression and dictatorship at home—to defend its wealth and global dominance. 

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This is a war waged not only against the people of Iran, but against the working class in the United States and internationally. The fight against imperialist war is inseparable from the struggle to defend and extend the social and democratic rights of workers everywhere and to build an independent movement of the working class against the capitalist system that produces war, austerity and dictatorship. 

2. Michigan, United States:  Henry Ford Genesys walkout enters 6th month, as Corewell Health nurses vote on strike action

The 750 Henry Ford Genesys Hospital nurses and case workers, who have been on strike in Grand Blanc, Michigan for six months, are under intense pressure by management, the Teamsters apparatus and government mediators to end their fight. This is happening as 10,000 Corewell Health nurses across Michigan vote on strike authorization over essentially the same issues of unsafe staffing and unbearable workloads.

The strike at Henry Ford Genesys Hospital began September 1, 2025, after the labor agreement expired in June and negotiations deadlocked over staffing ratios and pay. With federal and state mediators involved and no publicly announced tentative agreement, discussions are clearly focused on ending the walkout and orchestrating a return to work.

In recent days, Henry Ford has presented an “improved” contract package that includes pay raises—reported locally as up to 13 percent, with claims that some nurses will make over $100,000 a year—and provisions for strikers to return to work.

However, the offer does not guarantee that nurses will return to their original positions, units or shifts, since the hospital insists it can reassign them where “needed” because many positions have already been filled during the strike.

The central objective of the current talks revolves around how to shut down the strike, manage reentry of the workforce and stabilize operations after months of disruption. The talks between management and the Teamsters are not about meeting nurses’ core demands on staffing and working conditions. 

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Throughout the strike, Henry Ford Health has pursued an aggressive policy of strikebreaking and workforce restructuring. The hospital has brought in replacement nurses—using agency staff and other outside hires—to maintain operations, while simultaneously offering permanent full‑time positions to non‑striking nurses to backfill the roles of those on the picket line.

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From the beginning, the courageous Genesys Hospital nurses have centered their fight on chronic understaffing, unsafe nurse‑to‑patient ratios and the erosion of patient care, alongside demands for higher pay to keep experienced staff from leaving. Nurses have described conditions in which they are routinely assigned more patients than they can safely care for, forced into exhausting overtime, and left without adequate support staff to handle complex caseloads. 

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Recent offers from the hospital that have focused on wage increases without enforceable ratios or hiring commitments prove that the core issues in the strike have not been addressed. The ending of the strike would leave management’s control over staffing largely untouched.

While the determined fight of the Genesys Hospital strikers enters its sixth month, approximately 10,000 nurses across the Corewell Health system in Michigan have begun voting on whether to authorize a strike as they fight for their first ever contract.

These nurses, members of Teamsters Local 2024, have been in negotiations since June 2025. The strike authorization vote runs through mid‑March. Issues at Corewell include wages, just‑cause protections and a real grievance procedure, but the central concerns echo Genesys: safe staffing levels, protection from arbitrary discipline in a high‑pressure understaffed environment, and improvement that make it possible to provide safe, humane care at the bedside.

Corewell nurses are pushing back against workloads and scheduling practices that mirror those that drove Genesys nurses to strike, underscoring that these are system‑wide problems across Michigan healthcare, throughout the US and in fact the world. 

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For six months, Teamsters Local 332 and the Teamsters International apparatus have kept the Genesys strike confined to one hospital, despite widespread support among workers and the existence of other Teamster‑organized healthcare workforces in Michigan. There has been no effort to mobilize the full Genesys workforce—technical, support and ancillary staff—or to organize solidarity actions by workers in the broader Henry Ford system or other Teamster‑organized facilities.

Instead, union officials have focused on sporadic negotiations, media events and appeals to Democratic Party politicians and government mediators, channeling the struggle into safe institutional channels while management has entrenched its position with replacements. Rank‑and‑file frustration is rife due to the lack of any strategy to expand the fight.

If Genesys nurses are on strike and actively seeking solidarity as Corewell nurses moved toward a walkout, it would pose the immediate question of a uniting 11,000 nurses and hospital workers in a single struggle over the same issues of staffing, wages and patient safety. The Teamsters leadership’s opposition to calls for coordinated action and its emphasis on separate bargaining tracks and limited, localized protests demonstrates how the union apparatus is the chief obstacle to broadening a working class offensive against the entire for‑profit healthcare system.

The World Socialist Web Site has consistently called on Genesys nurses and other hospital workers to form independent rank‑and‑file committees to take control of the struggle out of the hands of the Teamsters apparatus. Such committees would link the Genesys fight with healthcare workers at Corewell and other healthcare systems, such as Michigan Medicine at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor where there are 6,000 nurses.

The recent experiences of hospital workers in New York City, California and Hawaii have also shown that healthcare workers are in a life-and-death battle not only against the hospital chains and their wealthy backers but the pro‑corporate union apparatus that functions as their partner. In both cases, strikes that had been prepared and launched with widespread rank‑and‑file support were rapidly wound down or shut off by the bureaucracy, which moved to impose concessionary agreements and prevent the struggle from developing into a broader political confrontation with the government and the healthcare corporations. 

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In the face of management’s strikebreaking and the Teamsters bureaucracy’s efforts to isolate and shut down the struggle, only an independent, rank‑and‑file‑led movement can unify Genesys and Corewell nurses, mobilize broader community and working class support, and fight for the social right to high‑quality, fully staffed healthcare for all.

3. Lessons of the 2026 New York City nurses strike

On January 12, 15,000 nurses in the New York State Nurses Association (NYSNA) went on strike against below-inflation wages, unsafe staffing levels, inadequate healthcare benefits and widespread workplace violence.

The strike won broad support among workers, students and more thoughtful middle-class layers, who are themselves confronting the rapid growth of inequality, which the deepening crisis in healthcare reflects. Taking place alongside a strike of 33,000 healthcare workers in California, it was part of a broader upsurge of the working class. It also coincided with mass demonstrations against the deployment of ICE to Minneapolis, where the question of a general strike against Trump became a topic of wide discussion.

But in spite of the powerful position nurses were in, the struggle was undermined by the NYSNA bureaucracy, which isolated the strike and shut it down after 41 days. Returning nurses now confront a management bent on retaliation and contracts that resolve none of the issues that drove them onto the picket lines.

The new agreements contain below-inflation wages, and health benefits so inadequate that many nurses cannot afford treatment in the units where they work. They include language on artificial intelligence that does nothing to prevent hospitals from replacing nurses with it. And the provisions on workplace violence are so weak that they merely call for committees to review violent incidents—after they have already occurred.

The struggle demonstrates, once again, that workers’ struggles against the corporate oligarchy requires at the same time a fight against the trade union apparatus, which is joined at the hip with management and the pro-capitalist Democratic and Republican parties.

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The conflict that emerged between the rank-and-file nurses and the NYSNA leadership was not simply the product of the personal decisions of individual officials, but the expression of opposed social interests of the union apparatus and the workers they claim to represent. The trade union bureaucracy has been transformed into an instrument for suppressing the class struggle and enforcing the dictates of the corporations and the state. 

Behind the union bureaucracy stood the Democratic Party, which was hostile to the strike. Governor Kathy Hochul declared a state of emergency, allowing hospitals to bring in out-of-state scab nurses while denouncing the strike as a threat to patient care. When militant nurses marched on the governor’s mansion in Albany, the union leadership rushed to distance itself from the demonstration, making it clear they had not authorized it.

Throughout the strike, union officials arranged almost daily visits to the picket lines by low-level Democratic politicians who offered empty words of support through a bullhorn before fleeing the cold. Mayor and self-described “democratic socialist” Zohran Mamdani also appeared twice on the picket lines. But later at a demonstration, a dozen nurses protesting the contract were arrested by police.

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Throughout the strike, reporters for the World Socialist Web Site spoke with nurses on the picket lines, distributed articles and discussed the strategy needed to advance their struggle. Videos of these discussions circulated widely online, drawing hundreds of thousands of views. They allowed supporters of the strike to hear nurses’ demands and grievances, and relayed greetings of solidarity among workers in California, Minnesota and New York.

Two well-attended online meetings of rank-and-file nurses and healthcare workers were organized to discuss how the strike could be expanded and united with the struggles of healthcare workers and other sections of the working class confronting similar attacks. A statement issued at the first of these meetings declared:

“Healthcare workers defend life. When wealthy executives starve hospitals of staff and resources, they endanger patients; when the state kills a nurse in the streets, it signals that no one in the working class is safe from repression. Our struggle for staffing ratios, living wages and full benefits is inseparable from the defense of democratic rights.”

The central lesson of the strike is the need for a new strategy based on the independent organization of rank-and-file nurses. Control of the struggle must be taken out of the hands of the union bureaucracy and placed in organizations democratically run by workers themselves. Such organizations must seek to expand the fight beyond individual hospitals, uniting nurses with healthcare workers and other sections of the working class confronting layoffs, austerity and repression.

The International Workers Alliance of Rank-and-File Committees is fighting to build this movement on a world scale. In the United Auto Workers, Mack Trucks worker Will Lehman is running for president on an insurgent platform to transfer power from the pro-corporate union apparatus to rank-and-file workers themselves.

 Above all, the struggle must reject the claim that the needs of patients and healthcare workers must be subordinated to the profits of hospital systems and their billionaire trustees. Healthcare is a social right, and its defense requires the political independence of the working class from both corporate parties.

4. The Dutch ruling elite, its royals, and the war against Iran

Queen Máxima, 54, plays "soldier"

The eruption of war against Iran, and the rapid and fascistic character in its unraveling course, has demolished any pretense of “neutrality” or “restraint” in Dutch bourgeois politics, revealing how swiftly the new minority cabinet of Prime Minister Rob Jetten, Democrats 66 (D66), aligns itself with the interests of international capital, imperialist powers and their predatory wars.

Public political sentiment in the Netherlands, by contrast, reflects mounting anti-war opposition. A recent RTL Nieuws poll revealed that a majority fears the escalation of the war into a third world war involving the Netherlands itself. Yet the Jetten cabinet, taking office just five days before the bombing of Iran, not only signaled support for a war of annihilation against Iran, but has also accelerated its plans to expand the Dutch military.

This dual dynamic—growing mass opposition from below confronted by an almost unanimous warmongering consensus above—reveals the ever-widening and irreconcilable gulf between the working class and the entire bourgeois political establishment as seen internationally.

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Through collaborations with France, the Dutch military seeks to gain “operational experience” in the planning and execution of nuclear war, despite possessing no arsenal of its own. “This is the role that the Netherlands must play,” Jetten boasted. “We must look for clever coalitions which serve Dutch interests and strengthen Europe,” he further emphasized.

The drive for a specifically European nuclear deterrent grows more insistent as trade and strategic frictions between Europe and the United States intensify. Each turn of the global crisis pushes Europe’s ruling classes—including the Dutch bourgeoisie—toward asserting their own imperial interests under the misleading slogan of “strategic autonomy.”

At his weekly press briefing, as the Dutch frigate HNLMS Evertsen departed to “protect” a French aircraft carrier to the Gulf without full cabinet approval, Jetten warned of potential casualties: “The Dutch frigate is well capable of intercepting projectiles from the air.” In plain terms, the Netherlands is prepared to engage Iran militarily—placing itself on the front line of this widening war. 

Facing widespread public opposition—and in many quarters open hostility—toward its plans to expand the armed forces from 80,000 to 122,000 personnel, with possible expansion to 200,000, the Jetten government has turned recruitment for war into a spectacle. In coordination with the Ministry of Defense, the corporate media have launched a nationwide recruitment campaign to glorify the military, with the monarchy playing a starring role.

Only weeks before the bombardment of Iran began, Queen Máxima announced she had enlisted as a reservist in the Royal Netherlands Army. At 54, she appeared in camouflage, trading silk and ceremony for khaki and combat drills. The Ministry of Defense claimed this was a personal response to new “security concerns”: “Because the security of the Netherlands can no longer be taken for granted, Máxima has decided to become a reservist.”

Her choreographed appearances—grinning from armored vehicles and drilling with soldiers—are not just pompous publicity stunts but acts of calculated political theater. A Defense Ministry spokesman boasted, “We are very proud that she is doing this and hope other people will think, ‘Hey, this is something I could do.’”

In a society where confidence in parliament, its affiliated institutions, the established political parties, affiliated trade unions, and its pseudo-left appendages—part and parcel with the corporate media—has all but collapsed, the monarchy functions as one of the ruling class’s last refuges of manufactured legitimacy. The ruling elite, in turn, safeguards the monarchy as a vital ideological instrument. It alone can drape nationalist chauvinism and militarism in the language of “unity, tradition and home-grown virtue.”

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The policies of the Dutch government are one link in the global chain of capitalist crisis. The transformation of the Jetten cabinet into a de facto war government, as seen at other European centres, expresses the logic of European capitalism as a whole. Confronted with stagnation, intensifying inter-imperialist rivalry and growing social unrest, the bourgeoisie turns outward—to militarism—and inward—to repression.

These measures are already arousing anger among workers and youth. Strikes and protests originally centred on wages, housing and climate issues are acquiring a consciously political, anti-war character. Yet this mass opposition collides with the absence of revolutionary leadership. The so-called “Dutch left”—PvdA, GroenLinks, Socialist Party and the trade-union bureaucracy—long ago integrated themselves into the state and NATO’s command structure. Their hollow appeals for “dialogue” and “diplomacy” merely disguise their acceptance of imperialist policy.

The leaders of the main trade union confederations—such as FNV, CNV, as well as VCP—have met with cabinet ministers, warning that strikes will be unavoidable unless plans to delay retirement and cuts to unemployment benefits are withdrawn. Their own statements, however, underscore the volatility of the situation: mass demonstrations are again expected in The Hague and in Amsterdam, the same cities where hundreds of thousands rallied against the genocide in Gaza.

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The US-led war against Iran is the latest chapter in a 35-year trajectory of imperialist interventions across the Middle East, carried out to control energy routes, strategic chokepoints and resources as part of a broader strategy to contain Russia and China. It forms part of a global plan for US hegemony, using the Middle East’s resources as tools of coercion against both rivals and its “allies” in Europe.

The workers and youth of the Netherlands must draw the necessary political conclusions from this political reality and from their historical experiences. Genuine opposition to war is inseparable from opposition to the capitalist system that breeds it. The struggle against the bombardment of Iran, NATO’s drive toward nuclear confrontation with Russia, and the social attacks at home must be waged as a unified fight—through the independent mobilization of the Dutch working class as part of the European and international working class under a socialist program. 

5. Blind in the right eye – Prosecution – and a documentary about German dramatist Einar Schleef

In an interview, the film’s young director correctly noted: “We can’t really understand the German judicial system without taking its Nazi past into account." 

In an interview, Faraz Shariat, the film’s young director, quite correctly noted: “We can’t really understand the German judicial system without taking its Nazi past into account. Many problems stem from the fact that total de-nazification of society has never taken place.”

The phrase “the German state is blind in the right eye” first emerged following the persecution of political opponents of the Weimar Republic. Laws introduced following a wave of ultra-right violence and murders were used mainly to prosecute left-wing political activists.

According to statistics gathered between 1919–22, out of a total of 354 right-wing assassins, only 24 convictions were made. None of the convicted were executed and the average sentence served was four months.

On the other hand, only 22 leftists were identified as involved in murders. Yet 38 were convicted! Ten were executed and the average prison term served was 15 years.

Furthermore, in 1972, the Radikalenerlass (“Radicals Decree”) to combat political extremism introduced by the Social Democratic government of Willy Brandt was largely used to prosecute and punish leftists.

In the form of a thriller, Prosecution makes the case that this bias on the part of the German state continues to this day. In the last federal election, the extreme right Alternative for Germany (AfD) won over 20 percent of the vote and emerged as the main opposition party in parliament. Tackling the growth of the far right is impossible without tackling its supporters inside the German state—and German capitalism as a whole.

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The painter, playwright and director Einar Schleef is often mentioned in the same breath as filmmaker Rainer Werner Fassbinder as one of the outstanding artistic figures in postwar Germany. A new documentary with the clumsy English title No Germany Did I Find [the German is Einar Schleef–Ich habe kein Deutschland gefunden], directed by Sandra Prechtel, featured at the recent Berlinale. It contains fascinating material relating to the life and work of Schleef who was born in East Germany (GDR) at the end of World War II. 

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In the notes for her documentary, director Prechtel writes: “Theaters should burn after every performance, says Schleef. This is not a call for violence, it is Schleef’s seriousness with which he does everything he can to shake people out of their lethargy. Out of their insensitivity. [For him] Art must not be an escape from reality, it must be an escape into reality, in all its harshness.”

Cultural life was suffocating in the Stalinist GDR where creative work was subject to the veto of bone-headed bureaucrats—and Schleef was not prepared to make compromises. Declaring his disenchantment with the stifling bureaucracy in the East, Schleef moved to Frankfurt in West Germany in the 1980s and began work on plays based on Greek classics.

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Having turned his back on the Stalinist East, Schleef also felt uneasy in the capitalist West. In 1989-90, he was one of the few artists to recognize the significance of the transformation of the universalist slogan used by East German workers in their demonstrations against the Stalinist system–“We are the People”–into “We are One People,” i.e., the nationalist slogan introduced by leading Stalinist politicians to ease the integration of East Germany into West German capitalism.

For Schleef, the return of a united capitalist Germany represented a dangerous Pandora’s box which, when opened, could once again unleash the horrors of the country’s not-too-distant Nazi past.

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Schleef died relatively young, at the age of 57. At the centre of this new documentary, his own commentaries are interspersed with observations from many of those who worked alongside him and who praise his sensitivity and insight.

Despite the immense difficulties he confronted in his life, there is not the slightest hint of self-pity on his part and, to her credit, Prechtel has avoided any attempt to reduce her film merely to a psychological portrait. Her documentary is a fitting tribute to a leading figure in postwar German theater.

6. The COVID-19 pandemic at 6 years: Mass death, debilitation and media silence

Six years ago this week, on March 11, 2020, the World Health Organization (WHO) officially declared the global outbreak of COVID-19 a pandemic. In the six years since, the pandemic has killed over 30 million people worldwide, left more than 400 million suffering from Long COVID and inflicted incalculable damage on the social fabric of every country on Earth. It is one of the most catastrophic events in modern history—and it is not over.

Yet not a single major bourgeois publication has so much as acknowledged this anniversary. The pandemic has been deliberately erased from public consciousness by the political establishment, even as the virus continues to spread, disable and kill on a mass scale. In May 2023, under pressure from the Biden administration, the WHO prematurely ended the Public Health Emergency of International Concern, offering political cover for capitalist governments globally to scrap remaining public health measures. Today, the COVID-19 pandemic remains a serious and deadly ongoing threat whose cumulative toll grows with each passing week. 

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The normalization of mass death from COVID-19 is of a piece with the broader social barbarism overseen by the same ruling elites. The capitalist governments that have condemned millions to death through “forever COVID” are the same that have enabled and armed the genocide in Gaza and now the criminal US-Israeli war against Iran. The Trump administration’s fascistic assault on public health—accelerated by Kennedy’s demolition of the remaining public health infrastructure—is part of a broader program of social reaction that includes the destruction of all climate change mitigation policies, which in turn fosters the conditions for future pandemics through habitat destruction, zoonotic spillover and the weakening of global health systems. The world is now less prepared for the next pandemic than it was in 2020.

The World Socialist Web Site stands alone in providing continuous, scientifically grounded coverage of the COVID-19 pandemic from the standpoint of the international working class. Since January 2020, the WSWS has published over 5,000 articles on the pandemic—the only publication outside of scientific journals to have covered the science and politics of COVID with this depth and consistency.

One year ago, the WSWS marked the five-year anniversary of the pandemic with a comprehensive series analyzing the origins of the social catastrophe and the unique record of the WSWS in opposing it. The Global Workers’ Inquest into the COVID-19 Pandemic, launched in November 2021, continues to document the testimonies of workers, scientists and public health experts from around the world.

As we have stressed from the very beginning, the defense of science, the restoration of public health infrastructure and the end of the pandemic require the independent political mobilization of the international working class to fight for a socialist reorganization of society. 

7. US and Ecuadorian militaries burn homes and torture workers in “Operation Total Extermination”

The US-Ecuadorian joint military operation launched March 3, ostensibly against drug cartels, has turned Ecuador into a proving ground for unleashing military violence upon every country in the hemisphere in furtherance of US hegemony.

Neither the Pentagon nor the Ecuadorian Ministry of Defense, which has dubbed the onslaught “Operation Total Extermination,” have reported casualty figures.

Subsequent reports, however, have made clear that the Pentagon and Ecuadorian forces are following a scorched-earth policy aimed not at cartels but civilians, akin to that employed by the military dictatorships in Central and South America over the last century.

Last Friday, the Ecuadorian Armed Forces boasted on social media that “Ecuador and the US destroyed” the training grounds and a vacation home of the Border Commands—a drug trafficking group formed by former Colombian FARC-EP guerrilla fighters along the Colombian-Ecuadorian border.

The announcement included aerial videos showing military helicopters bombing rural properties and rustic homes in the northeast town of Santa Rosa, Sucumbíos Province. “During the subsequent search, weapons and other evidence linked to illegal activities were found,” the publication claims.

The US Southern Command, the branch of the US armed forces that oversees forces in Latin America, issued an accompanying statement indicating the US and Ecuador had launched “lethal kinetic operations against Designated Terrorist Organizations.”

Sean Parnell, chief Pentagon spokesman, added: “At the request of Ecuador, the Department of War executed targeted action to advance our shared objective of dismantling narco-terrorist networks.”

The following day, Saturday, President Daniel Noboa shook hands with Donald Trump at the “Shield of the Americas Summit” in Miami, where the fascist American president announced a “brand new military coalition” against drug cartels. “The only way to defeat these enemies is by unleashing the power of our militaries,” he declared.

To capture drug traffickers, Trump might have simply called for the arrest of Noboa himself, whose billionaire family’s Noboa Trading Co. has been caught shipping cocaine to the Balkans in crates with bananas sold under the Bonita label.

Instead, in real time, the true character of this coalition was shown in Sucumbíos, where local news reporters were informing Saturday that the US and Ecuadorian militaries had bombed the homes of peasants and small farmers and tortured agricultural workers who deny any illegal activities. 

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Under the pretext of fighting “narco-terrorists,” US imperialism and its stooges are deliberately sowing terror.

Radio Sucumbíos published a video of the total destruction of an impoverished home in San Martín, reporting that the town was left “war-torn.”

None of the international news media have mentioned what happened in San Martin in their reporting of the joint operation, and it is still unclear from media reports how many people have been killed.

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As noted by the World Socialist Web Site, the “Shield of the Americas” summit in Miami has as its closest historical precedent the November 1975 summit in Pinochet’s Chile, where intelligence officials of South America’s dictatorships launched “Operation Condor,” named after Chile’s national bird. This network coordinated the detention, torture and killings of suspected leftists with the assistance of the CIA.

The Ecuadorian military, which would later join Operation Condor, and their US handlers are now relaunching their network of terror.

The Trump administration undoubtedly expects that the turmoil generated by the unraveling economic and military wars launched by US imperialism, now leading to skyrocketing oil prices, will lead to explosive social protests across Latin America akin to those that erupted during the 1970s oil shocks. In response, they seek to terrorize the population and set up dictatorships before a popular upheaval.

The methods of landing helicopters in rural communities, burning and bombing homes, capturing and torturing their inhabitants recall the types of attacks and massacres carried out by these dictatorships to kill hundreds of thousands across South and Central America, but this time replacing the charge of “Communists” with that of “Narco-terrorists.” In many cases, these dictatorships and the CIA worked closely with the drug cartels. 

As recently as March 2022, the Colombian military massacred 11 people, including the indigenous governor and another local leader, at a peasant bazaar in Putumayo, claiming that they belonged to the same Border Command targeted in Ecuador. While this took place under the far-right Iván Duque administration, the current pseudo-leftist President Gustavo Petro has joined the fray, announcing a joint operation with Ecuador and the US, with 20,000 Colombian troops deploying to the border in collaboration with “Operation Total Extermination.”

Ecuador serves only as the test case. This terror is no aberration but the logical outgrowth of US imperialism’s global war drive, from Iran’s annihilation to the starvation of Cuba, the bombing of Caracas and kidnapping of the Venezuelan president. 

8. United Kingdom:  Labour’s SEND “reform”: an austerity-driven attack on vulnerable children

Britain’s Labour government released its Schools White Paper on February 23, titled, “Every Child Achieving and Thriving”. Central to the policies outlined is the section detailing Special Educational Needs and Disability (SEND) Reform.

As with the government’s other “reforms,” the term has been turned on its head to describe a pro-market agenda—whether justifying further privatization in the National Health Service (NHS) or the downgrading of the mail service—and this applies equally to the deepened erosion of public education.

The White Paper proposes an overhaul of the rights of children with SEND to access education over the next decade. Stripped of the jargon of “inclusion” and “equality for all,” the measures will remove the statutory right of hundreds of thousands of children to receive necessary support, slash funding, and offload SEND provision onto cash-strapped schools and exhausted teachers.

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The White Paper trailed months of media reports claiming councils face bankruptcy due to SEND overspending. What these omit is that central government grants to local authorities have been cut by half since 2010, forcing a constant slash-and-burn of public provision and the sell-off of public assets to the private sector, which has leeched billions through the contracting out of local services.

A survey published days before the White Paper found that of 87 councils responding, 69 warned they faced insolvency if required to repay SEND debts built up over years of overspending. 

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Many core elements of the reforms have been postponed until the next parliament, as ministers attempt to defuse anger among parent campaigners who recognize the measures as austerity imposed on the most vulnerable. This follows Labour’s broader agenda of welfare cuts and measures aimed at forcing disabled people into jobs that do not exist.

Phillipson cited the achievement gap between SEND and non-SEND pupils. But this is the product of systematic cuts to education budgets totaling around £60 billion in real terms over the past decade.

One in three children have special needs at some point in their schooling. More than half (51.6 percent) of pupils who fail to meet Key Stage 2 expectations in reading, writing and maths have been identified with special needs by the end of that stage.

In January 2025, 638,700 children and young people had an active EHCP—an increase of 10.8 percent from January 2024. Since the 2014 reforms introducing EHCPs, the number has doubled, including a 30 percent increase among children under five since 2023.

The rise is driven primarily by Autism Spectrum Disorders, Social, Emotional and Mental Health needs, and Speech, Language and Communication Needs. Meanwhile, the number of pupils with Profound and Multiple Learning Difficulties or Severe Learning Difficulties—those most likely to require specialist schools—has remained largely unchanged.

The increased demand for EHCPs has not developed in a vacuum. The criminal policy of placing profit over public health during the COVID-19 pandemic, including the thousands of children who lost a parent—around 2 million who suffer from Long COVID—worsening mental health and rising child poverty have had a devastating impact on children.

The education unions have been complicit in the systematic decline in education funding, the expansion of privatization and the erosion of working conditions. They have repeatedly blocked strike mandates by teachers seeking to defend their conditions and oppose below-inflation pay settlements.

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The education unions have all “cautiously welcomed” the reforms announced by Phillipson, with the condition that they “don’t go far enough” and more funding is needed. They will not mobilize their membership for a properly funded education system, having promoted Labour as an alternative to more than a decade of austerity under the Conservatives.

The defense of education for all and decent wages and conditions for teachers can only happen through an independent rank-and-file opposition of teachers united with broader sections of workers against austerity, the attack on democratic rights and the subordination of all needs to the profit system. 

9. China’s five-year plan doubles down on hi-tech to counter US threat

The latest Chinese five-year plan released earlier this month, and the work report presented to the National People’s Congress last week underscore that the economic policy of the Xi Jinping regime is being driven by the threats posed by the US. 

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Critics of the regime’s economic policy, both externally and within China have repeatedly declared that the road to higher growth lies in boosting the domestic economy, particularly by lifting consumption spending. This should be done by expanding social service spending and by cleaning up the collapse of the property market which acts as a dead weight on consumers.

But that path has been by and large rejected, apart from some marginal changes, because the focus is on the further development of high tech and artificial intelligence.

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Apart from the threat to oil supplies, the chaos being unleashed in the Middle East threatens to disrupt what has been a central objective of Beijing, that is, to strengthen its economic and political ties with this region, through increased exports, loans and investments. 

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The priorities are clear in the five-year plan. Boosting the domestic economy ranks fourth behind building modern industries, achieving technological self-reliance, and digitizing the economy—one place lower than in the previous five-year plan. Developing AI is mentioned 50 times in the 141-page document. 

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Fred Neumann chief Asia economist at HSBC said: “China’s government remains laser-focused on spurring technological breakthroughs and high-tech investment. In part, this is motivated by competition with the United States for control over the technologies of the future.”

10. US memo exposes Sri Lankan “humanitarian” posturing over Iranian sailors’ rescue

On March 4, a US submarine torpedoed and sank the Iranian frigate IRIS Dena near Sri Lankan waters, killing 108 sailors on board. The attack without warning occurred in international waters as the vessel was returning from multinational naval exercises hosted by India.

This act of mass murder, thousands of kilometres from the Middle East, was part of Washington’s escalating war against Iran. It sent an unmistakable message: the conflict will be prosecuted wherever the US chooses, unconstrained by international law or convention.

The Sri Lankan Navy responded to two distress calls early in the morning—at 4 a.m. and 5 a.m.—from the sinking Iranian vessel and rescued 32 survivors, who were admitted to Karapitiya Hospital in Galle for treatment. The navy later retrieved the bodies of dozens of sailors from the sunken ship.

On March 4, a second Iranian naval ship, IRIS Bushehr, carrying 208 crew members, sent a message to the Sri Lankan Foreign Ministry requesting permission to enter Colombo Port. After initially rejecting the request, the nervous Sri Lankan government, after a flurry of diplomatic discussions, finally allowed the ship into Colombo Port on March 5. Its crew were disembarked and the vessel taken to Trincomalee Port on the other side of the country.

That night, in a special media briefing, President Anura Kumara Dissanayake claimed that his government had acted in a manner that “safeguards the dignity of the country.” It did not take a “hasty decision,” he said, because “this concerns a naval vessel belonging to one party in a war,” and “we are a neutral state.”

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Dissanayake acknowledged that discussions had been held with “relevant embassies” but did not identify them. He declared that Sri Lanka had agreed to take custody of the crew and vessel, “subject to agreements and understandings reached between the parties,” but likewise did not identify the parties, or the terms of the agreements.

In other words, Dissanayake presented the episode as a routine humanitarian operation carried out by a neutral state and was praised by the media and opposition parties for showing restraint.

That narrative has now been shattered by a Reuters report, posted on March 7, shedding light on what led the Sri Lankan government to allow the second ship into the country.

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Dissanayake’s posturing about Sri Lanka’s “neutrality” and “humanitarian mission” is false to the core. At an International Women’s Day event in Colombo, he boasted that Sri Lanka “carries the banner of humanity forward,” while other countries wage war.

In reality, the Dissanayake government functioned as a compliant intermediary for the diplomatic and strategic objectives of the US and Israel as dictated by their diplomatic envoys. The events surrounding the sinking of the Dena expose the complicity of Colombo—and New Delhi—in the imperialist war being waged against Iran.

Three Iranian ships—IRIS Lavan, IRIS Dena, and IRIS Bushehr—had recently participated in multinational naval exercises hosted by India in the Bay of Bengal. After the drills, on February 27, these vessels sought permission to make a courtesy port call in Colombo. That request was refused.

Neither New Delhi nor Colombo has condemned the US attack on the Dena or the killing of its crew, or the illegal war itself. Their silence is not accidental. Both governments are politically aligned with Washington and are increasingly integrated into its military and strategic framework in the Indo-Pacific as it prepares for war with China.

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Colombo’s role in the Iran war also sheds light on the political character of the government and the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) that leads it. The JVP, a petty bourgeois organization based on Maoism, Castroism and the armed struggle that routinely engaged in anti-imperialist and socialistic demagogy, has evolved into a flunky of US imperialism and international finance capital. 

At home, the Dissanayake administration, which claims to defend “humanity” abroad, is ruthlessly imposing International Monetary Fund austerity policies driving millions deeper into poverty. To enforce these measures, Dissanayake is expanding the powers of the police and military and using the draconian Prevention of Terrorism Act, Emergency Regulations and the Essential Services law to suppress the opposition of workers and the rural poor.

The sinking of IRIS Dena as part of the devastating war on Iran is another warning that US imperialism is plunging the world towards catastrophe as it engages in a reckless attempt to reassert global domination. The ruling classes in India and Sri Lanka, have aligned themselves with this neo-colonial agenda. The only social force capable of stopping this descent into barbarism is the international working class. 

11. Australian and New Zealand university students oppose US-Israeli war on Iran and Labor government complicity

Australian military personnel were aboard the US submarine that torpedoed and sank the unarmed IRIS Dena in international waters, killing 140 sailors in a war crime. Yesterday, Australia’s participation became open, with Labor announcing the deployment of missiles, a warplane and personnel to join in a war aimed at regime-change and the annihilation of Iranian society.

The International Youth and Students for Social Equality (IYSSE) has been campaigning on university campuses against the war, exposing Labor’s role, warning of the preparations for even greater crimes in the US-led confrontations with Russia and China and putting forward a socialist and revolutionary perspective to halt capitalism’s descent into barbarism. The IYSSE is holding a series of meetings at university campuses opposing the war. 

12. Germany:  SPD vote collapses in the Baden-Württemberg state elections

The collapse of the SPD is all the more remarkable given that the election took place against the backdrop of a catastrophic industrial decline and the criminal US war against Iran. While social crises and wars usually strengthen nominally left-wing parties, the opposite was the case this time. The former workers’ party, the SPD, has moved so far to the right that it is no longer perceived as the solution to the problems, but the cause.

The same applies to the Left Party. With 4.4 percent, it once again failed to enter the state parliament. Although its vote slightly improved compared to the last state election, it remained significantly below its Baden-Württemberg federal election result of 6.8 percent. Together, the SPD and the Left Party did not even account for 10 percent of the votes cast.

The issues of war and job losses are impelling millions of voters. Yet the election offered them no opportunity to provide an answer to this. The establishment parties all support the massive rearmament of the Bundeswehr (armed forces), the war against Russia in Ukraine, the genocide in Gaza and the war against Iran. The differences between them on these issues are minimal.

They all give the same answer to the jobs massacre in the car and metal industries: elimination of health and safety at work, more speed-ups and lower taxes to save corporate profits at the expense of jobs. The trade unions, which are closely linked to the SPD and the Left Party, sabotage and suppress any resistance to dismissals in the factories—as at Bosch in Schwäbisch Gmünd, where they are preventing an influential opposition list from participating in the works council election.

At the federal level, the SPD, together with the Christian Democrats (CDU/CSU), initiated “special funds” and loans totaling over €1 trillion to upgrade the Bundeswehr into Europe’s strongest armed force, and passed them with the help of the Greens. The Left Party also voted in favour of the war credits in the Bundesrat (second chamber of parliament) to demonstrate that its occasional pacifist phrases are not to be taken seriously.

The aims of the criminal war against Iran are supported by all the establishment parties. Left Party leader Jan van Aken welcomed the treacherous assassination of Iranian head of state Khamenei with the words: “May he rot in hell.” A different attitude prevails among the population. According to the latest ARD-DeutschlandTrend poll, 58 percent of respondents oppose the war against Iran, with only 25 percent considering it justified. Seventy-seven percent view the political situation in the world with concern.

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The only party that was able to profit from the growing frustration and suppressed indignation is the right-wing extremist Alternative for Germany (AfD). It received over 1 million votes in Baden-Württemberg for the first time and, with 18.8 percent, was able to almost double its result from the last state election. According to pollsters infratest dimap, the AfD achieved its highest share of the vote among workers, at 37 percent. The comparable figure for the SPD was only 5 percent, and for the Left Party 4 percent.

The AfD and its lead candidate Markus Frohnmaier undoubtedly bear fascist traits, but they do not lead a mass fascist movement as Hitler and Mussolini did. The votes for the AfD are an expression of widespread frustration, which manifests itself in reactionary forms because it cannot find a progressive avenue. The dissatisfaction is much broader than the AfD’s voter base. Many despise the right-wing extremists and hold their noses to vote for an establishment party because they see no other way to keep the AfD out of government.

This explains the election result in Baden-Württemberg, which ostensibly leaves everything as it was. As in the past 10 years, the Greens and the CDU will govern the state together. They even have a two-thirds majority in the state parliament, since numerous parties—including, for the first time, the Liberal Democratic Party (FDP)—failed to clear the 5 percent hurdle. Almost 16 percent of the votes cast are therefore unrepresented in the state parliament.

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The Özdemir government in Stuttgart is inevitably heading for a confrontation with the working class. But the latter needs a progressive perspective. The Sozialistische Gleichheitspartei (Socialist Equality Party, SGP) has consistently warned against the illusion that the Left Party, the trade unions or even the SPD could be moved to adopt policies in the interests of the working class. This illusion, propagated by pseudo-left organizations, leads to a dead end. The result of the state election in Baden-Württemberg has demonstrated this once again.

13. His ordeal continues:  Please defend and help free Ukrainian socialist and anti-war activist, Bogdan Syrotiuk! Please add your name to our petition! 

The fight for the Ukrainian socialist and anti-war activist's freedom is an essential component of the struggle against imperialist war, genocide, dictatorship and fascism.

Mar 10, 2026

Headlines at the World Socialist Web Site today: 

1. United States:  San Diego school layoffs expose union betrayal and the deepening assault on public education

San Diego, California is yet another flashpoint in the escalating crisis of public education in the United States. The San Diego Unified School District (SDUSD) announced a $47 million budget deficit for the upcoming school year, triggering threats of sweeping layoffs and program cuts. Last week, despite widespread public outcry, the district voted to move forward with the elimination of 221 classified positions, including bus drivers, custodians, cafeteria workers and special education aides—workers essential to the daily functioning of schools.

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The anger and backlash against the cuts were on full display at a recent San Diego Unified school board meeting, attended by educators and community members, many workers spoke out against the harm the cuts and layoffs will have. One school worker said, “I read braille at my school, who’s going to cover my job when it gets cut?” Another pleaded, “You are creating an unsafe environment with these cuts,” while one worker told the board, “If anything, you should be hiring more classified staff.” 

One speaker pointed out how the cuts were not announced until the previous Friday with panic setting in as workers did not have a full list of names until the following week. Another worker told the board, “We are not items on a spreadsheet, but faces at your school. These 221 positions are being eliminated but the work is still there.” 

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District officials have sought to frame the deficit as an unfortunate but unavoidable financial problem. Superintendent Fabi Bagula cited the underfunding of special education, stating that the district spends more than $400 million annually on services while receiving only $125 million in state, federal and local funding, leaving the remainder to be drawn from general funds.

But the timing of these layoffs is highly suspect, as just last month educators in San Diego were preparing for what would have been the district’s first strike in nearly 30 years. The planned action centered on chronic understaffing in special education and deteriorating working conditions. 

Teachers were prepared to walk out, but then, at the eleventh hour, the strike was called off by the San Diego Education Association (SDEA). The cancellation was announced by SDEA without a finalized, ratified contract and without resolving the structural funding crisis. Union officials declared that they had secured commitments to “address” special education staffing and educators were told to stand down. 

A little over two weeks later, the district announced layoffs of more than 200 classified staff—cuts projected to save roughly $19 million toward the $47 million shortfall. Preliminary layoff notices are being sent to roughly 200 workers, with dozens expected to lose their jobs outright.

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San Diego’s education crisis reflects a nationwide pattern. Across the country, school districts are invoking expired federal relief funds, declining enrollment and “structural deficits” to justify cuts. Yet at the same time, trillions continue to flow toward military expansion, corporate subsidies and tax breaks for the wealthy.

The attack on public education has intensified under the second administration of Donald Trump. Federal education funding has been frozen or slashed, grants eliminated and teacher preparation programs undermined. Policies favoring charter expansion and privatization continue to funnel public funds into private hands.

The political establishment insists there is “no money” for bus drivers, aides, counselors and teachers. Yet there is unlimited money to start a war with Iran and massacre school children there, while funding for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to kill Americans and deport immigrant families continues to flow uninterrupted here at home.  

In fact, the cost of a single F-35 fighter jet at $80 million could cover SDUSD’s $47 million deficit and still have over $30 million left over. According to the Center for American Progress the opening days of the recent US war on Iran has cost at least $5 billion, and if it lasts for several more months as President Trump has publicly predicted, the economic costs will escalate into the hundreds of billions and trillions. As for DHS and ICE, the deportation machine has received about $75 billion since 2025 to build concentration camps, up from roughly $10 billion every year.

California itself is home to immense wealth, with more billionaires and multimillionaires residing in the state than anywhere else in the US. Yet districts are told to tighten their belts while housing costs soar and working class families are pushed out of cities like San Diego. Budget shortfalls are politically produced. Decades of tax cuts for the wealthy, charter profiteering and military expansion have hollowed out public coffers.

The decisive issue, however, is not merely the district’s fiscal maneuvering. It is the role played by the trade union apparatus in disarming educators.

Rather than broadening the struggle—linking teachers, classified workers, parents and other districts facing similar cuts—the union leadership narrowed the fight to limited demands and then shut it down. Now, classified workers—many of whom earn far less than credentialed teachers—face job loss, increased workloads and destabilization. The union leadership has confined opposition to board meetings, appeals and lobbying efforts. 

This pattern is not unique to San Diego. In district after district, the union bureaucracies—tied to the Democratic Party—isolate struggles, prevent coordinated statewide action and negotiate concessions under the banner of “fiscal responsibility,” and fundamentally accepting austerity. 

The lesson of the past weeks is clear: the defense of public education cannot be entrusted to the trade union bureaucracy or to appeals to Democratic politicians. Educators and classified workers must take matters into their own hands and form independent rank-and-file committees in every school and district. 

2. Paramount–Warner merger signals new alliance of Silicon Valley, the Pentagon and Hollywood

On February 27, Paramount Skydance finalized a $111 billion merger to acquire 100 percent of Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD) for $31 per share in cash. The deal unites two of Hollywood’s historic studios and their global news and streaming divisions under a single corporate structure dominated by finance capital.

This marks a new stage in the restructuring of the US and international media landscape, concentrating enormous cultural (or anti-cultural) and informational power in the hands of a narrow layer of billionaires tied to Silicon Valley and the American state.

The transaction concludes a bitter, multi-year bidding war. In late 2025, Netflix appeared poised to take over WBD with an offer estimated to be worth between $72 and $83 billion. But Netflix sought only the most profitable components (Warner Bros. studios, the Burbank lot and HBO/Max), while excluding cable networks and CNN, which it regarded as declining assets burdened by debt.

Paramount Skydance, by contrast, insisted on a full buyout. Its leadership argued that only massive scale could compete with tech behemoths such as Amazon and Apple. Treating the acquisition as existential, Paramount raised its bid to $31 per share, above Netflix’s $27.75 offer. Netflix ultimately withdrew, citing the needs of financial self-discipline and Warner’s $33.5 billion debt burden. Paramount then secured shareholder approval with aggressive incentives, including reimbursement of Netflix’s $2.8 billion breakup fee and a record $7 billion regulatory termination fee should antitrust approval fail.

The merger relies heavily on debt and the financial backing of billionaire Larry Ellison and his family. Paramount secured between $54 and $57.5 billion in bridge loans from major banks, while Ellison reportedly guaranteed up to $45.7 billion in equity, leveraging his holdings in Oracle. The combined entity will carry approximately $90 billion in debt.

Such staggering leverage has immediate consequences. Chief executive David Ellison (son of Larry Ellison) has pledged to extract $6 billion annually in “cost synergies.” In plain language, this means mass layoffs, intensified workloads and the slashing of production budgets. Thousands—and potentially tens of thousands—of jobs across film, television, news and streaming are at risk.

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Central to the new corporation’s strategy is the transformation of the studio into what executives call an “AI-native” enterprise. Backed by Oracle’s data and cloud infrastructure, David Ellison is advancing so-called “Agentic AI” systems designed to automate complex decision-making across development, preproduction and post-production. New executives are being hired to oversee end-to-end AI workflows aimed at accelerating output and cutting costs.

For writers and other creative workers, this signals structural displacement. Repeatable tasks like script coverage, story drafting, editing and visual effects processing are prime targets for automation. While the recent contracts negotiated by the Writers Guild and SAG-AFTRA were promoted as establishing “guardrails” on the use of artificial intelligence, in reality they failed to provide any meaningful protection.

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The merger also underscores the growing fusion of media, technology and state power, in what might be described as a modern Military-Industrial-Media Complex. Ellison’s Oracle, founded on an early CIA contract, now provides cloud computing and artificial intelligence infrastructure to major corporations and national security agencies.

This infrastructure now forms the backbone of global defense through massive initiatives like the $9 billion Joint Warfighting Cloud Capability (JWCC) contract, which integrates Oracle’s “air-gapped” National Security Regions across the Department of Defense and all 17 US government intelligence agencies. “Air-gapped” refers to computers or networks physically isolated from unsecured, public networks to ensure maximum secrecy.

By deploying ruggedized [equipment engineered to withstand harsh conditions], portable cloud nodes to the “tactical edge” [remote, austere or disconnected environments] and partnering with firms like Palantir, Oracle enables real-time, AI-driven battlefield analytics and autonomous decision-making. This role extends to the “Five Eyes” alliance and NATO, where the company’s sovereign cloud environments and “agentic AI” workflows have transitioned Oracle from a mere software provider to an essential, high-stakes architect of 21st-century warfare and global surveillance.

The political implications are profound. Larry Ellison is a longtime ally and donor to Donald Trump, who has repeatedly attacked CNN as hostile to his administration. It is a common contention that the White House favored Paramount’s bid precisely because Ellison would be amenable to reshaping CNN’s editorial direction. The deal also involves investment from sovereign wealth funds in Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates, all accomplices in the conflicts taking place in the Middle East, from the Gaza genocide to the criminal assault on Iran. 

With Oracle already managing sensitive data infrastructure, including TikTok’s US operations, Ellison’s expanding media footprint consolidates control over both information distribution and AI development. Content is increasingly treated not as journalism or art but as data: raw material within broader geopolitical and economic competition.

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The broader implications for cultural life are immense. The consolidation of two of the largest studios, now essentially part of a military-CIA complex, significantly reduces diversity of production and narrows the range of perspectives available to audiences. Independent filmmakers, smaller production companies and dissenting artists will face even greater barriers to distribution. The concentration of news divisions under a single technology-driven hierarchy threatens further homogenization of political coverage.

As geopolitical tensions escalate and the war in Iran expands into a regional conflagration, the American public will confront a largely unified narrative shaped by corporate and state interests. Oppositional or even critical voices will be marginalized, investigative journalism constrained and programming aligned more closely with official policy.

The unions representing entertainment workers express anxiety about job losses and AI displacement. But they are centrally responsible for facilitating the current situation. Their strategy remains confined to appeals to regulators and corporate management. None calls into question the dominance of finance capital or the subordination of culture to shareholder value. Certainly, none calls for the independent mobilization of workers against capitalism. 

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The defense of democratic rights, artistic freedom and truthful reporting cannot be entrusted to billionaires, regulators or union bureaucracies tied to corporate management. It requires the independent mobilization of workers across industries against capitalism and the subordination of society to profit.

3. In speech to Congress, Milei vows to send Argentina back 100 years, exposing role played by pseudo-left

In his speech opening the current session of Argentina’s legislature on March 1, President Javier Milei gloated over the passage of his reactionary labor counter-reform and declared his desire to take the country back 100 hundred years; paraphrasing US President Donald Trump’s phrase, to Make Argentina Great Again.

Milei glorifies a period characterized by extreme social inequality, and major strike struggles by the working class, led by anarchists and socialists, combined with extreme repression, and attacks on immigrants and indigenous people, culminating in the Patagonian Massacre of 1921, when over 1,500 striking workers in the Patagonian region were killed by the Argentine Army. It was a period in which Argentina was great only for the oligarchy, in cahoots with British imperialism.

Now, Milei proposes to return to those times, this time, in alliance with U.S. President Trump and US imperialism, and the collaboration of the trade union bureaucracy.

The reactionary anti-labor bill came out of the May Council (Consejo de Mayo), formed in June 2025. This committee included federal government officials, provincial delegates, a representative of the trade union bureaucracy (CGT-General Workers Confederation), and one from the Argentine Industrial Union (UIA).

The resulting “labor modernization” legislation, which was recently approved by both houses of the federal legislature, rolls back labor rights won over decades of workers’ struggles. The new legislation allows employers to impose a 12-hour workday (in a 48-hour week) without overtime pay. It also wipes out contractual rights for rural workers (the 1074 law had, for the first time, granted rural workers the same rights as all other workers). At a time of massive layoffs across the country, the legislation reduces the cost for employers to fire even more workers; it reduces sick pay; eliminates industry-wide contracts; allows employers to manipulate vacation time; ends retroactive payments in case of layoffs, eliminates the 13th month paycheck (aguinaldo); it does not allow for the extension of expired contracts, while new ones are negotiated opening the door to massive abuses.

The Milei administration argues that as industrial jobs are cut, new jobs will eventually be created in mining and fossil fuel extraction.

The labor legislation is only one of eight reactionary legislative proposals that takes Argentina back in time. They also include the law of “penal responsibility” that lowers the age for children to be tried and sent to jail as adults, from 16 to 14. Milei had voiced his support for lowering it to 10.

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The struggles of the Argentine working class beginning in the late-1800s were linked with and inspired by the struggles of the European and US proletariat. At that time, a significant percentage of worker immigrants, from Spain, Italy and other European countries, introduced anarchist and socialist ideas into Argentina. Following the May 4, 1886 Haymarket massacre, of Chicago workers fighting for the 8-hour day, Argentine workers were among the first to heed the call for the establishment of May 1 as International Workers Day. The first May Day demonstration took place in Buenos Aires in 1890.

In 1904, following railroad and port strikes, Buenos Aires workers helped elect the first socialist legislator, Alfredo Palacios, for the port district, who led the campaign for pro-labor legislation, beginning with the establishment of Sundays as a day of rest for workers in 1905.

4. Trump’s “Shield of the Americas” summit prepares escalation of imperialist violence in Latin America

On Saturday, a dozen of the most reactionary and corrupt political leaders of Latin America gathered with US President Donald Trump for an infamous regional summit dubbed the “Shield of the Americas.” Held against the backdrop of Washington’s criminal war of annihilation against Iran, the event reaffirmed US imperialism’s aim of establishing its direct neocolonial domination of Latin America through the use of unrestrained violence and promotion of dictatorial regimes aligned to its geopolitical strategy.

The meeting, convened at Trump’s south Florida golf club, was attended by the presidents of Bolivia, Chile, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guyana, Honduras, Panama, Paraguay, and Trinidad and Tobago. The leaders of Mexico, Brazil and Colombia, which together account for more than 60 percent of both the region’s GDP and its population, were deliberately excluded by Washington, along with other regional governments considered as “left-wing.”

The summit was called by Trump, in his own words, to establish a “brand new military coalition to eradicate the criminal cartels plaguing our region.” He branded it as the “Americas Counter Cartel Coalition.”

The fraudulent rhetoric of fighting “drug cartels” has been utilized by the Trump administration as a cynical pretext for an escalating wave of aggression and political intervention across the region. “Narcoterrorism” was the enemy fabricated to justify the launching of the ongoing campaign of missile murders of fishermen in the Caribbean and Eastern Pacific, as well as the invasion of Venezuela and kidnapping of its president on January 3. In recent weeks, the US military has promoted a new series of “boots on the ground” operations in Mexico, Colombia and Ecuador on the pretext of extending a war on “narcoterrorism” throughout the region.

The whole framework and statements at the “Shield of the Americas” summit laid bare how these multiple fronts of imperialist violence in Latin America, as well as the war on Iran, are interconnected parts of the same ruthless strategy for global domination and, more specifically, of the US build-up for war against China.

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The same goals of societal annihilation that Washington is pursuing in Iran through carpet bombing are being prosecuted against the island of Cuba, located barely 100 miles from where Trump was speaking, through the imposition of a blockade against all energy shipments. The deliberate provocation of mass hunger, disease, and social collapse was openly celebrated by the fascist US president. “Cuba’s at the end of the line,” Trump stated. “They’re very much at the end of the line. They have no money. They have no oil. They have a bad philosophy. They have a bad regime that’s been bad for a long time.”

Like a mafia gangster, Trump cynically stated, pointing to the Latin American political stooges in his audience: “I was surprised, but four of you said: ‘Could you do us a favor and take care of Cuba?’ I will take care of that, alright.” While his administration’s “focus right now is on Iran,” he said that US Secretary of State Marco Rubio could “take an hour off” to “wrap up a deal on Cuba. That’ll be an easy one.”

Significantly, while he boasted of starving Cuba of its oil imports from Venezuela, Trump highly praised the Venezuelan “interim” President Delcy Rodriguez. “She’s doing an excellent job partnering with us,” the US president said. The Chavista leader, speaking as a colonial adjunct, returned the compliment hours after the summit. “We reaffirm our commitment to developing enduring relations grounded in mutual respect, equality, and adherence to international law,” Rodriguez wrote, as the kidnapped Maduro sits in a US prison cell. 

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Saturday’s meeting culminated in the signature of a Joint Security Declaration ideologically based on the “Trump corollary” to the Monroe Doctrine, which claims the right to assert US domination over the Western Hemisphere and all its resources and to counter China’s regional influence. The signatories declared their intent to cooperate with Washington to “enhance security in the Western Hemisphere,” and on “efforts regarding border security, countering narcoterrorism,” as well as “securing critical infrastructure”–a euphemism for countering the influence of China. The Orwellian phrase, “Advance ‘Peace through Strength,’” was adopted as the “Shield’s” motto.

The militarization of Latin America proclaimed at the “Shield of the Americas” meeting has the deepest historical and political implications.

Trump’s call for the systematic employment of the military in regional internal repression is a blueprint for restoring the US-backed military dictatorships that unleashed a reign of political terror and mass torture and murder of Latin American workers and youth.

The criminal gang that posed alongside the US mafia boss for a family photo in Miami was composed of direct political heirs of these historical crimes. Prominent among them were Argentina’s fascist President Javier Milei and Chile’s president-elect José Antonio Kast, who came to be briefed in Washington four days before his inauguration. Kast, the son of a Nazi officer who escaped to Chile, is himself a vocal admirer of the murderous dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet that ruled his country from 1973-1990. 

The event hosted by Trump Saturday is directly reminiscent of another regional summit that took place 50 years ago, on November 25, 1975, in the Chilean capital, under Pinochet’s rule. Dubbed the “First Inter American Meeting on National Intelligence,” the meeting gathered fascistic military officials from Argentina, Brazil, Bolivia, Chile, Paraguay and Uruguay to establish the infamous “Operation Condor,” an integrated network of murderous political repression and coup plotting across the region.

A significant difference in relation to Trump’s summit is that Pinochet’s meeting in 1975 was held in secret, and the formal establishment of “Operation Condor” only came to public attention with the opening of the “Terror Archives” of Paraguay in 1992. Even more concealed was the participation of the United States in these crimes through the CIA’s provision of logistical backing to political coups and training and infrastructure for the murderous agencies of repression throughout Latin America.

The days in which US imperialism could maintain the image of leader of the “free world” are long gone. Washington’s unconcealed promotion of state murder and dictatorship has, however, explosive implications which are far beyond its control.

As the World Socialist Web Site has insisted, the violent outburst of US imperialism is not a sign of strength but of deep historical crisis. Its criminal interventions and disruption of bourgeois rule throughout the world are coupled with extreme political crisis within the United States itself. The contradictions of the imperialist system are leading to the greatest eruption of class struggle in history, in which the social struggles of workers in South, Central and North America will assume the form of an inseparable revolutionary process of a socialist character.

5. Questions raised by the Workers’ Party of Türkiye’s electoral alliance with the pro-war German Left Party

The Workers’ Party of Türkiye (TİP) claims to oppose the imperialist war against Iran, but is forming an electoral alliance with the Germany's Left Party, which celebrated the illegal killings of Iran’s leadership.

6. Second missile incident: War against Iran threatens to engulf Türkiye and NATO

NATO member Türkiye is being drawn ever deeper into the imperialist war waged by the US and Israel against Iran. On Monday, the Ministry of National Defence announced: “A ballistic munition launched from Iran and entering Turkish airspace was neutralized by NATO air and missile defense assets deployed in the Eastern Mediterranean.”

Fragments of the missile were reported to have fallen on an empty field in Gaziantep, a city neighboring Adana—home to NATO’s Incirlik Air Base, which is used by the United States—with no casualties or injuries reported.

The defense ministry’s statement further declared: “We once again emphasize that all necessary measures will be taken decisively and without hesitation against any threat directed at our country’s territory and airspace. We also reiterate that it is in everyone’s interest to heed Türkiye’s warnings in this regard.”

President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, in remarks delivered that evening directed at Iran, stated: “However, I would hereby like to underscore that despite our warnings, extremely wrong and provocative steps, which will undermine Türkiye’s friendship, are continued to be taken. All should avoid calculations, which will inflict deep wounds in the hearts and minds of our nation, and which will cast a shadow on our 1,000-year-old neighborhood and brotherhood. Türkiye’s stance and attitude are clear.”

During a phone conversation with Erdoğan on Monday night, Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian denied claims regarding Iran launching a missile strike on Türkiye, according to the Iranian press.

About one hour before the announcement of the missile incident—which Iran has not confirmed—the US State Department ordered non-emergency diplomatic personnel and their families stationed at the US Consulate in Adana to depart Türkiye. Washington also advised American citizens to leave southeastern Türkiye.

Iran, the target of an unlawful aggression by the US and Israel, is retaliating against Israel and US bases across the region in exercise of its right to self-defense. However, a strike on Incirlik—a base used by, but not belonging to, the United States—could, by virtue of its legal status, trigger Article 5 of the NATO treaty and draw the entire alliance into war against Iran. This is far from a desirable outcome for Iran, which is already under massive imperialist assault with limited capacity to sustain it.

Monday’s missile incident follows the interception of another missile approaching Turkish airspace last Wednesday. In that case, Iran rejected claims that Türkiye had been targeted; Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi stated: “We have no reason to attack Türkiye. Türkiye is a good neighbor of ours.”

*****

Whatever the origin of the missiles, Ankara is being drawn step by step into the war, despite its warnings and calls for negotiation. The Turkish government’s objective and historical position in the war against Iran aligns with the US-Israeli axis.

7. Trump demands passage of voter suppression, anti-transgender bill

As part of the escalating assault on democratic rights, President Donald Trump told a meeting of Republican House members Monday that he would not sign any legislation of any kind into law until Congress passes the “Save America Act.”

The bill, initially dubbed the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility Act (or SAVE Act), rebaptized by Trump as the Save America Act, combines a series of anti-democratic ultra-right measures, mainly aimed at suppressing voter turnout in the elections, with provisions attacking transgendered youth added to appeal to anti-gay religious bigots and fascists.

The main provisions of the bill, which passed the House of Representatives last month, would mandate states to implement voter ID requirements and other restrictions on voting. There would be twofold sets of ID requirements. 

Anyone who registers to vote would have to provide proof of citizenship, either in the form of a passport or a birth certificate. Millions of Americans, disproportionately poor and minority, do not have birth certificates, and half the population has never applied for a passport or lacks a current one. Tens of millions of married women who took their husbands’ last names would need additional ID since their birth certificates are in their maiden names.

Once registered, a voter would still have to present a photo ID at the polls on Election Day. 

Additional restrictions would include a virtual ban on mail-in voting, except for the military, business travelers and those too ill or frail to go to the polls. This would most drastically affect the states that have gone to universal mail balloting, including California, Oregon and Washington, but it would also disrupt voting practices in nearly every other state.

Last-minute additions to the bill, before it passed the House, were to ban transgender athletes competing as females and to restrict gender-affirming care for youth under 18. These have nothing to do with voting but were added to fuel attack ads against Democrats, who vote against the legislation.

*****

While Trump depicts a Democratic victory in the midterms in apocalyptic terms, his real fear is not the alternate corporate-controlled party of American imperialism but the working class. This is a fear that the Democratic Party leaders themselves share: that a widespread repudiation of Trump and the Republicans at the polls in November could encourage mass opposition to the agenda of austerity, social reaction and imperialist war which is shared by both big business parties. 

*****

Neither [Senate Minority Leader Chuck] Schumer nor House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries has publicly drawn the connection between the Save America Act and Trump’s mobilization of tens of thousands of federal agents into immigrant neighborhoods in major cities, or to his suggestion that the mid-term election should be conducted under the control of the US military. This would overturn the U.S. Constitution, which assigns responsibility to the states and the Congress, giving the executive branch no role.

The Trump administration and the Republican Party have already encouraged local voter suppression initiatives in closely contested states, including Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. And the federal Department of Justice is suing many states to obtain their voter rolls, which would provide ammunition for challenging voters’ eligibility when they go to the polls.

8. US military killed 160 school girls in Monab with Tomahawk missile

The girls’ school in Minab is in Iran’s southern Hormozgan province close to the Persian Gulf. The school was effectively pulverized by multiple blasts, and many of those killed were obliterated and could only be identified through DNA analysis. Footage showed bodies and body parts partially trapped under collapsed floors, alongside scattered schoolbags, notebooks and dust‑covered textbooks.

When the US-Israeli bombardment began on the morning of Saturday, February 28, the first working day of the week in Iran, the school was full for morning classes. Iranian authorities and local officials report that three missiles struck the area—“triple‑tapped,” according to some accounts—with multiple impacts.

According to Iranian government figures cited by international media, roughly 168–180 people were killed, including at least 160–170 children and more than a dozen teachers and staff, making it the single deadliest attack on civilians in the war. Dozens more, possibly more than 100, were injured, many with catastrophic blast and shrapnel wounds, burns and crush injuries from the collapse of the two‑story structure’s roof and walls.

*****

Video and photographs from the aftermath show piles of rubble, desks and schoolbags buried in concrete dust, and rows of small coffins at mass funerals in Minab. The victims include entire classes of girls whose names appear on hastily printed lists taped to the walls of local mosques.

A short video, filmed from a nearby construction site and released by Iran’s semi‑official Mehr News Agency, has been widely circulated and independently authenticated by multiple investigative teams. The video opens with a view across an industrial area toward the IRGC naval facility near Minab; a low, fast‑moving projectile crosses the frame and then detonates in a massive fireball inside the base, sending a shockwave and debris into the air.

Munitions experts from Bellingcat, CNN, BBC Verify and other outlets have concluded that the projectile’s size, flight profile, and terminal behavior are consistent with a U.S. BGM/UGM‑109 Tomahawk Land Attack Missile. As the camera pans to the right in the final seconds, a huge plume of dark smoke can be seen rising from the direction of the Shajareh Tayyebeh school, already burning, indicating that at least one earlier strike had directly hit or detonated at or above the school complex.

Later satellite imagery shows multiple impact craters and burn marks in and around both the school and the adjacent military base, confirming that the area was struck more than once in the opening wave of US attacks on southern Iran. 

*****

On Saturday, President Trump claimed, when asked by reporters about the strike on the school, that Iran was responsible for the massacre and said, “in my opinion, from what I’ve seen, that was done by Iran.” He did not present any evidence to substantiate the claim. 

*****

US officials have admitted that southern Iran, including IRGC facilities near Minab, were among the first targets in a pre‑planned strike package and that Tomahawks were used in those attacks. By any objective standard, the destruction of a functioning, clearly marked girls’ primary school during school hours in an attack on a nearby military target was carried out with full knowledge of the school’s existence is a war crime under international humanitarian law, regardless of whether it is labeled “intentional” or “accidental” by the perpetrators. 

*****

The massacre in Minab is not a “tragic incident” but part of the campaign of terror directed against the civilian population of Iran. Iranian authorities and independent monitors report that other schools, hospitals, residential apartment blocks and urban neighborhoods have been repeatedly struck in the US‑Israeli bombing.

Human rights groups estimate that at least 1,600 Iranians have been killed in the first days of the war, overwhelmingly civilians, with large numbers of women and children among the dead.

Strikes on clearly civilian objects—from a pediatric wing of a hospital in Bandar Abbas to apartment towers in working class districts—follow the same military logic: high‑yield munitions deployed against targets embedded in or adjacent to densely populated areas, with full knowledge that mass casualties will result.

The Minab atrocity has taken place amid the nearly 30‑month‑long Israeli genocide in Gaza, waged with direct US military, financial and diplomatic support. Since late 2023, Israel has systematically destroyed homes, schools, universities, hospitals, refugee camps and basic infrastructure in Gaza, killing tens of thousands of Palestinians and rendering the enclave uninhabitable.

This campaign—openly justified in genocidal language by leading Israeli politicians—has been a deliberate policy of mass murder aimed at breaking the resistance of the Palestinian people and clearing the territory for strategic and demographic objectives. The same methods are being deployed in Iran to terrorize the population and kill the country’s leadership with the aim of imposing neocolonial subjugation of the country under the dictates of Washington and Wall Street.

9. South Australian workers and youth speak ahead of state election [videos included]

The Socialist Equality Party is campaigning in Adelaide, South Australia, ahead of the state election on March 21, which is proceeding under the shadow of the escalating US-led war against Iran. There is widespread opposition across Australia to the federal Labor government’s support and active participation in the war.

South Australia’s Labor government, led by Premier Peter Malinauskas, is transforming the state into a central hub for the AUKUS military alliance with the United States, as part of US-led preparations for war against China. While billions are being allocated to submarines, bases and missiles, public housing, hospitals, schools and social services remain chronically underfunded—as the ruling class seeks to make workers pay for the militarization of society.

While Labor is expected to be re-elected, this is not because of any popular enthusiasm for Malinauskas’ right-wing and militarist program. Rather, it reflects the crisis of the opposition Liberal Party, which has fallen behind the far-right, anti-immigrant One Nation in recent polls. None of the bourgeois parties is offering anything to address the social crisis facing working people, including collapsing public services and unaffordable housing.

SEP members spoke about the war and the social crisis with young people and workers at Adelaide University and in the working class suburbs of Elizabeth and Salisbury in Adelaide’s north.

The northern suburbs were decimated by the closure of the car industry in 2017, presided over by the state Labor government and the trade union bureaucracy, which enforced mass redundancies in the interests of the corporations. In Elizabeth, the former Holden stronghold, the unemployment rate was 17.8 percent in September 2025, according to an analysis of official data by AreaSearch. The 2021 Census found that nearly half of households in the suburb were living on less than $800 a week, with median incomes in the bottom 10 percent nationally.

The cost of living has surged dramatically in recent years. Rents in Adelaide have climbed sharply, with median weekly rents reaching over $600, while median dwelling prices are approaching $1 million. Secure housing is increasingly out of reach for large sections of the working class, particularly young people. 

10. World Socialist Web Site emergency webinar articulates socialist strategy to stop US-Israeli war against Iran

Sunday’s webinar stands alone as the only serious political analysis of the war against Iran that identifies the international working class as the social force that can and must stop it. We urge all our readers to watch the webinar, share it as widely as possible and discuss its lessons and the way forward with coworkers, family and friends. Above all, make the decision today to join the Socialist Equality Party if there is a section in your country, or to take the initiative to build one where there is not.

11. Trump says “likely be more” US troop deaths to achieve “ultimate victory” against Iran

As the criminal US-Israeli war on Iran entered its second week, the Trump administration vowed to continue the bombardment and refused to rule out sending ground troops or implementing a military draft—even as it has failed to overthrow the Iranian government or compel surrender.

“We have won in many ways, but not enough. We go forward more determined than ever to achieve ultimate victory that will end this long-running danger once and for all,” US President Donald Trump declared at the House Republican policy retreat at his Doral resort in Florida on Monday.

Asked if the war would end this week, he said flatly: “No.” Hours earlier, in a desperate effort to calm oil and stock markets, Trump had told CBS News that the war “is very complete, pretty much” and that US forces are “very far ahead of schedule.”

*****

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, in a “60 Minutes” interview aired Sunday, stated the administration’s war aims with unvarnished brutality. “This is only just the beginning,” Hegseth declared. “The only ones that need to be worried right now are Iranians that think they’re gonna live.” Asked about limits on the operation, he said: “You don’t tell the enemy, you don’t tell the press, you don’t tell anybody what your limits would be on an operation.” On Monday, the Pentagon’s official social media account posted an image of a launched missile with the words “No Mercy” and the caption: “We have Only Just Begun to Fight.” 

The administration is taking increasingly desperate and escalatory actions amid its failure to achieve its stated aims. In January, the administration sought to exploit mass protests as the vehicle for regime change; when that failed, it turned to the targeted assassination of Iran’s leadership, killing Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on the first day of the war. Iran’s Assembly of Experts appointed Mojtaba Khamenei, the son of the slain supreme leader, on Monday in defiance of Israeli threats to kill any successor.

The administration has adopted the Gaza model: the genocidal destruction of Iranian society itself, reducing the country to rubble until it physically cannot resist. Trump made this clear when he said that his demand for “unconditional surrender” is “where they cry uncle or when they can’t fight any longer and there’s nobody around to cry uncle.”

*****

The war has triggered a financial crisis. The S&P 500 fell 2 percent last week, its worst week of 2026, and turned negative for the year. Oil prices posted their largest weekly gain on record, with Brent crude surging from roughly $70 before the war to above $92 by Friday, a nearly 30 percent increase in a single week. Traders warned that $100 oil was imminent.

Commercial shipping through the Strait of Hormuz—through which 20 percent of global oil flows—has nearly ceased. The US economy shed 92,000 jobs in February. Gold surged past $5,100 an ounce as central banks worldwide accelerated their flight from dollar-denominated assets. Trump’s claim to CBS that the war is “very complete” was a desperate effort to calm these markets—oil prices briefly fell to under $90 after his remarks before surging again.

*****

The war against Iran is part of a broader strategy aimed ultimately at China. Republican Senator Lindsey Graham, appearing on Fox News Sunday, stated the calculus openly: “Venezuela and Iran have 31 percent of the world’s oil reserves. We’re going to have a partnership with 31 percent of the known reserves. This is China’s nightmare.” Graham boasted: “When this regime goes down, we are going to have a new Middle East, and we are going to make a ton of money.”

Graham declared: “Cuba’s next, they’re gonna fall, this communist dictatorship in Cuba, their days are numbered.” Trump himself brandished a “Free Cuba” hat and declared, “Stay tuned. The liberation of Cuba is upon us. Iran is going down and Cuba is next.”

*****

Asked whether Democrats would block war funding, Jeffries refused: “We’ll cross that bridge when we get to it in terms of if the administration makes a request to Congress to consider additional funding.”

12. “The working class has to stop the war”: US workers denounce war with Iran

A Quinnipiac poll released Monday found that 53 percent of registered voters oppose the war, and 74 percent opposed sending ground troops into Iran, which Trump is reportedly seriously considering.

*****

Ten days into the illegal US-Israeli war against Iran, opposition continues to be widespread among workers in the United States. A Quinnipiac poll released Monday found that 53 percent of registered voters oppose the war, and 74 percent opposed sending ground troops into Iran, which Trump is reportedly seriously considering. The same poll put Trump’s approval rating at only 37 percent.

Ty, a teacher from Alabama, told the World Socialist Web Site she considers it “an unnecessary war, an unprovoked war and unjust war. They bomb people and boats, and there is no Congressional approval.

13. New Zealand Labour Party, Greens falsely posture as opponents of Iran war

Faced with widespread popular opposition to war, New Zealand’s government has been thrown into a crisis over its support for the criminal US-Israeli offensive against Iran.

Following the 12-day war in June 2025, which NZ endorsed, the full-scale assault now underway is an unprovoked act of aggression and regime change operation. In addition to murdering Ayatollah Ali Khameini and other leaders of the Iranian government, the US and Israel have killed over 1,000 Iranian civilians, including more than 150 children at a girls’ primary school in Minab.

On March 1, NZ Prime Minister Chrstopher Luxon and Foreign Minister Winston Peters echoed Washington’s lies justifying the war. They condemned “Iran’s nuclear program, its destabilizing activities in the region and elsewhere, and its repression of its own people.”

In a widely derided “train wreck” press conference the next day, Luxon refused to say whether the attacks on Iran and assassination of its leadership during ongoing negotiations were legal or not. He declared it would be “up to the US and Israel to explain the legal basis for their attacks.” Asked whether he supported the bombing of the school, Luxon said “I’m not in a position to judge that from sitting in New Zealand.”

*****

The nationalist rhetoric of Labour, the Greens and sections of academia and the media, calling for a more “independent” foreign policy, is a smokescreen and a fraud.

New Zealand, a minor imperialist power, is a key US ally in the Pacific region and part of the US-led Five Eyes global surveillance network. Like Australia, Canada and Britain, the NZ ruling class has relied since World War II on its alliance with the US in order to secure its “seat at the table” in the violent carve-up of the world’s resources and markets.

The only way to halt the escalating world war is through a mass movement of the working class, independent of all of the pro-capitalist parties. Such a movement must be international in scope, it must mobilize the vast social and political power of the working class, and be aimed at abolishing the profit system that is the source of war and reorganising society on socialist lines.

14. Wild swings in global markets

Global markets experienced major turmoil yesterday leading to an intervention by US president Trump aimed at halting a further sharp rise in oil prices and a slide on Wall Street.

When the trading day began in the US the price of oil had surged from around $90 a barrel to as high as $119 and was set to go even higher as stocks were falling following significant further selloffs in Asia.

*****

Trump then told CBS that the Iran war was “very complete, pretty much” and there was “nothing left to complete in a military sense.” He later described the hike in oil prices as a small price to pay for what he described as an “excursion.” 

*****

Trump’s intervention, driven by fears of what could happen on Wall Street, combined with a statement by the G7 powers that the group “stands ready” to release oil reserves should that become necessary halted the oil price escalation and induced a fall—at least for a day. 

But as the Wall Street Journal reported, an oil trading advisory firm predicted that oil could reach $130 per barrel later this week with a 70 percent to 80 percent chance of this happening. It said the longer the Strait of Hormuz remained closed the longer it would take to get back to normal production with the prospect that “some permanent oil field damage could develop.” 

15.  Australian Labor government sending missiles, warplane, troops to join illegal war on Iran

The Australian Labor government this morning announced that it is dispatching air-to-air missiles, an advanced warplane and a troop contingent to the United Arab Emirates (UAE) to engage in hostilities against Iran.

With its announcement, Labor is openly joining a massive US-led war against a historically oppressed country. It is doing so under conditions where the entire war is illegal, constituting an unprovoked assault on Iran and on peace, high crimes under international law. And it is joining the conflict after multiple documented war crimes, from the US and Israeli bombing of schools, to medical facilities and a desalination plant.

Labor’s announcement formalizes and deepens a participation in the war that began almost as soon as US President Donald Trump launched his sneak attack on February 28. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese was among the first world leaders to endorse the war, rushing out a statement repeating all of Trump’s lies within hours.

Then it was admitted by Albanese late last week that Australian personnel were aboard a US attack submarine that obliterated an unarmed and defenseless Iranian vessel off the coast of Sri Lanka, in an act of imperialist banditry and mass murder that recalled the military operations of the Nazis.

Albanese and other Labor leaders had absurdly claimed that the Australian personnel were not involved in that attack or any other offensive operations, despite being on the vessel that carried out the assault. Even commentators with close ties to the US military-intelligence apparatus derided that assertion and demanded that Labor acknowledge that it is participating in the war. 

*****

The war in Iran is not only aimed at regime-change in Tehran, but at striking a blow at China which has close ties with the Iranian government and relies upon it for substantial energy imports.

The same methods of total destruction and annihilation inflicted on a defenseless population in Gaza is being carried out against Iran, a country of more than 90 million people.

In addition to its full-throated support for US-led wars, Labor has spearheaded an assault on democratic rights. For more than three years it has supported the US-Israeli genocide of Palestinians in Gaza, while slandering and attacking the mass opposition to that historic crime as “antisemitic.” On that basis Labor governments have passed a battery of laws aimed at criminalizing protests and even political parties.

It is clear that this was not only an attempt to shutdown the anti-genocide movement. It was also a preparation to repress mass anti-war sentiment that will inevitably erupt in opposition to the war on Iran and the preparations for an assault on China.

16. Workers Struggles: The Americas

Argentina:

Buenos Aires police attack laid off tire factory workers
 
National teachers’ strike

Peru:

Indigenous communities stage protest strike over illegal gold mining

Canada:

Nova Scotia arts college workers strike

United States:

DHL logistics workers vote overwhelmingly to strike if no contract by March 31
Primary care providers at Minnesota and Wisconsin clinics authorize open-ended strike
 
Alaska bus drivers strike over wages and vehicle maintenance safety
 

17. Free Ukrainian socialist and anti-war activist, Bogdan Syrotiuk! 

The fight for the Ukrainian socialist and anti-war activist's freedom is an essential component of the struggle against imperialist war, genocide, dictatorship and fascism.