Beirut/Tel Aviv4:46 p.m. March 24
Tehran6:16 p.m. March 24
Iran War Live Updates: Tehran Fires Missile Barrage at Israel After U.S. Claims Progress on Talks
Israeli officials said missiles launched from Iran had hit Tel Aviv and other parts of the country. President Trump said there had been “very strong talks” with Iran to end the war, though Iranian officials did not confirm that.
- Avishag Shaar-Yashuv for The New York Times
- David Guttenfelder/The New York Times
- Arash Khamooshi for The New York Times
- Associated Press, Agence France-Presse
- Avishag Shaar-Yashuv for The New York Times
- Diego Ibarra Sanchez for The New York Times
- Arash Khamooshi for The New York Times
Waves of Iranian missiles targeted Israel and Iraq on Tuesday, according to the authorities in both countries, after the United States and Iran sent conflicting signals about whether they were negotiating to end the war in the Middle East.
The attacks are a sign that Tehran is still able to inflict damage across the region after weeks of intense U.S.-Israeli bombardment. The Israeli military said on Tuesday that it had carried out over 3,000 strikes against Iran since the war began on Feb 28.
The Israeli authorities said missiles launched from Iran hit Tel Aviv and other parts of the country on Tuesday. It was unclear in some cases whether the damage was caused by missiles or by falling debris from interceptions, but there was extensive damage to at least three residential buildings and cars were set on fire. At least six people were treated for injuries in Tel Aviv, according to the national emergency service.
A volley of six Iranian ballistic missiles also hit the semiautonomous Kurdish region in Iraq on Tuesday, killing six Kurdish fighters and wounding 30 others, the Kurdistan Regional Government said in a statement. Iran did not immediately comment publicly on the attack.
American and Israeli officials have made repeated assurances that Iran’s ballistic missile program has been severely battered, though experts have said that it might have tried to conserve missiles for a prolonged war. Persian Gulf nations also reported more drone and missile launches on Tuesday.
The continued hostilities followed President Trump’s comments on Monday that the United States and Iran were engaged in “very strong talks” to end the war, which began on Feb. 28 when the U.S. and Israeli militaries launched an assault on Iran. He said that he would postpone a deadline for a threatened attack on Iranian power plants until Friday while the discussions took place. The speaker of Iran’s Parliament denied that any such talks were happening, accusing Mr. Trump of making false statements to calm volatile energy markets.
A spokesman for the foreign ministry in Qatar — which has previously played a central role in mediating cease-fire negotiations between Israel and Hamas — said on Tuesday that it was not mediating any talks between the warring parties.
The Israeli military on Tuesday separately pressed on with its campaign against Hezbollah, the Iran-backed militant group in Lebanon, issuing a flurry of new evacuation warnings for the country’s south.
The sweeping warnings in recent weeks have heightened fears of a large-scale Israeli ground invasion. Israel Katz, Israel’s defense minister, said on Tuesday that the country intended to control areas in Lebanon as deep as the Litani River, which is around 15 to 20 miles north of the Israeli border at its farthest.
Here’s what else we’re covering:
Saudi Arabia: The kingdom’s de facto leader, Prince Mohammed bin Salman, has been pushing Mr. Trump to continue the war against Iran, arguing that the U.S.-Israeli military campaign presents a “historic opportunity” to remake the Middle East, according to people briefed by American officials on the conversations. Read more ›
Group of 7: Secretary of State Marco Rubio plans to travel to France on Friday to discuss the war and other global crises with the top diplomats from the Group of 7 nations at a previously scheduled meeting, the State Department said.
Death tolls: Iran’s U.N. ambassador said that at least 1,348 civilians had been killed in the country since the start of the war — a toll that has not been updated for over a week. More than 1,000 people in Lebanon have been killed, the authorities there said on Thursday. At least 15 people were killed in Iranian attacks on Israel, officials said. The American death toll stood at 13 service members.
Energy crisis: Iran’s effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz, a conduit for a fifth of the world’s oil, along with recent attacks on oil and gas infrastructure in the Persian Gulf, is rippling through the world’s economy. The international benchmark for crude oil was trading above $100 on Tuesday. In the Philippines, President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. declared a state of national energy emergency. South Korea is urging people to take shorter showers and to avoid charging phones and electric vehicles at night.
Iran: A former Revolutionary Guards general, Mohammad Bagher Zolghadr, has been named Iran’s top security official, an aide to the Iranian president announced on Tuesday. He replaces Ali Larijani, an experienced politician who was killed in an Israeli attack last week.
A Moroccan contractor working for the Emirati armed forces was killed by an Iranian missile attack in Bahrain, the Emirati defense ministry said on social media. Five Emirati armed forces members were injured in the attack, it added. The ministry did not clarify why Emirati armed forces members were deployed in Bahrain — a different Persian Gulf nation — saying only that the incident happened during “a routine mission.”
Prime minister Shehbaz Sharif of Pakistan said Tuesday on social media that the country could host talks between the United States and Iran. Pakistan has emerged as a potential mediator between the two countries in recent days. Pakistani officials have built a close relationship with President Trump over the past year, and the country ticks a few boxes: It is a non-Arab Muslim country that doesn’t host a U.S. military base, and is a neighbor of Iran and a close ally to Saudi Arabia. Sharif has spoken multiple times with President Masoud Pezeshkian of Iran this year.
President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. of the Philippines declared a national energy emergency on Tuesday, saying that high oil prices caused by the war in the Middle East were threatening the country’s energy security.
The Philippines imports 90 percent of its oil from the Middle East, making it one of the Asian countries most vulnerable to supply disruptions there. With the Strait of Hormuz effectively closed by Iran, the Philippines has had to turn to Russia and China, and to other Southeast Asian countries, for fuel.
Earlier on Tuesday, the Philippines’ Department of Energy said it had enough gasoline in reserve to last 53 days, enough diesel for 46 days and enough jet fuel for about 39 days. Diesel prices have doubled since the war began, surpassing 120 pesos, or $2, per liter.
Many government offices have switched to a four-day workweek to save energy, and Mr. Marcos has called on the public to car pool. The government has also been handing out 5,000 pesos each to tens of thousands of autorickshaw and jeepney drivers around Manila who are suffering from the higher prices.
Mr. Marcos is under intense pressure to deal with the situation. A coalition of transportation workers has called for mass protests around Manila, the capital, on Thursday and Friday about the price spike and what they consider inadequate measures by the government. On Tuesday, the Philippine Daily Inquirer, a major newspaper, published a column with the headline, “Nation on brink: This oil crisis may destroy everything we built.”
Since the war began, Mr. Marcos has expressed concern about its economic ramifications for the Philippines. “We are victims of a war that is not of our choosing,” he said earlier this month in a statement. Economists have warned that the fallout could be severe, noting the potential loss of remittances from thousands of Filipinos working in the Middle East.
Many of them have lost their jobs because their workplaces in countries like Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates have shut down. The Philippine economy is heavily dependent on remittances from overseas workers, and in 2024, the Middle East accounted for roughly 18 percent of the total, according to the Philippines’ central bank.
As part of the emergency declaration on Tuesday, Mr. Marcos signed an executive order that would allow the government to “implement responsive and coordinated measures under existing laws to address the risks posed by disruptions in the global energy supply and the domestic economy.” His government has not said what specific actions it might take under the order.
The pain in the Philippines has been mirrored across other parts of Southeast Asia, which is heavily dependent on oil that moves through the Strait of Hormuz. Like the Philippines, many countries in the region have precariously low oil reserves and have imposed energy conservation measures.
Jason Gutierrez contributed reporting.
Oil prices resumed their rise and stocks fell as trading began in the U.S. on Tuesday morning. The S&P 500 stock index fell 0.7 percent, erasing some of its 1.1 percent rise from Monday, the index’s best day since the war began. Brent crude, the international benchmark, rose to around $103 a barrel, after finishing Monday below $100 a barrel for the first time in roughly two weeks.
Yosef and Norma Livne were in a safe room in their fifth-floor apartment in Tel Aviv one street away from the strike when it hit on Tuesday. “There was a huge explosion and the smell of something burning,” Yosef Livne said. “The building shook.”
The missile fell between buildings, leaving a deep crater in the ground. The authorities said it contained about 200 pounds of explosives and that a few residents in the area had been lightly injured.
About six hours after a direct strike in Tel Aviv from part of what Israel said was an Iranian missile, volunteers are replacing shattered windows in nearby apartments with strips of plastic and city workers are shoveling shattered glass. The whole facade of an older building adjacent to the blast site has been blown away.
Saudi Arabia’s de facto leader, Prince Mohammed bin Salman, has been pushing President Trump to continue the war against Iran, arguing that the U.S.-Israeli military campaign presents a “historic opportunity” to remake the Middle East, according to people briefed by American officials on the conversations.
In a series of conversations over the last week, Prince Mohammed has conveyed to Mr. Trump that he must press toward the destruction of Iran’s hard-line government, the people familiar with the conversations said.
Prince Mohammed, the people familiar with the discussions said, has argued that Iran poses a long-term threat to the Gulf that can only be eliminated by getting rid of the government.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel also views Iran as a long-term threat, but analysts say Israeli officials would probably view a failed Iranian state that is too caught up in internal turmoil to menace Israel as a win, while Saudi Arabia views a failed state in Iran as a grave and direct security threat.
But senior officials in both the Saudi and American governments worry that if the conflict drags on, Iran could deliver ever more punishing attacks on Saudi oil installations and the United States could be stuck in an endless war.
In public, Mr. Trump has swung wildly between suggesting that the war could end soon and signaling it would escalate. On Monday, the president posted on social media that his administration and Iran had held “productive conversations regarding a complete and total resolution of our hostilities,” though Iran disputed the idea that negotiations were underway.
The consequences of the war for Saudi Arabia’s economy and national security are enormous. Iranian drone and missile attacks, launched in response to the American-Israeli assault on Iran, have already created huge disruptions in the oil market.
Saudi officials rejected the idea that Prince Mohammed has pushed to prolong the war.
“The kingdom of Saudi Arabia has always supported a peaceful resolution to this conflict, even before it began,” the Saudi government said in a statement, noting that officials “remain in close contact with the Trump administration and our commitment remains unchanged.”
“Our primary concern today is to defend ourselves from the daily attacks on our people and our civilian infrastructure,” the government added. “Iran has chosen dangerous brinkmanship over serious diplomatic solutions. This harms every stakeholder involved but none more than Iran itself.”
Mr. Trump has at times seemed open to winding down the war, but Prince Mohammed has argued that would be a mistake, the people briefed on the conversations said, and has pressed for attacks against Iran’s energy infrastructure to weaken the government in Tehran.
This article is based on interviews with people who have had conversations with American officials, and who described the discussions on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of Mr. Trump’s talks with world leaders. The New York Times interviewed people with a variety of views on the wisdom of continuing the war and of Prince Mohammed’s role in advising Mr. Trump.
Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary, said the administration “does not comment on the president’s private conversations.”
Prince Mohammed, an authoritarian royal who has led a sustained crackdown on dissent, is respected by Mr. Trump and has previously influenced the president’s decision-making. Prince Mohammed has argued that the United States should consider putting troops in Iran to seize energy infrastructure and force the government out of power, according to the people briefed by U.S. officials.
In recent days, Mr. Trump has given more serious consideration to a military operation to seize Kharg Island, the hub of Iran’s oil infrastructure. Such an operation, with airborne Army forces or an amphibious assault by Marines, would be immensely dangerous.
But Prince Mohammed has advocated ground operations in his conversations with Mr. Trump, according to people briefed by American officials.
The Saudi views of the war are shaped by economic factors as much as political ones. Since the war began, Iran’s retaliatory attacks have largely choked off the Strait of Hormuz, hobbling the region’s energy industry. The vast majority of Saudi, Emirati and Kuwaiti oil must pass through the strait to reach international markets.
While Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates have built pipelines to circumvent the strait, those alternative routes have come under attack as well.
Analysts familiar with Saudi government thinking say that while Prince Mohammed probably preferred to avoid a war, he is concerned that if Mr. Trump pulls back now, Saudi Arabia and the rest of the Middle East will be left to confront an emboldened and furious Iran on their own.
In this view, they say, a half-finished offensive would expose Saudi Arabia to frequent Iranian attacks. Such a scenario could also leave Iran with the power to periodically close the Strait of Hormuz.
“Saudi officials certainly want the war to end, but how it ends matters,” said Yasmine Farouk, director of the Gulf and Arabian Peninsula project for the International Crisis Group.
A 2019 Iran-backed attack on Saudi oil facilities — which briefly knocked out half of the kingdom’s oil production — pushed the prince to reconsider his antagonistic approach to the Islamic Republic.
Saudi officials later pursued a diplomatic détente, re-establishing relations with Iran in 2023, in part because they realized that their country’s alliance with the United States offered only partial protection from Iran, Saudi officials have said.
Other countries in the region, including the United Arab Emirates, also pursued warmer relations with Iran in the past few years for similar reasons.
After Mr. Trump’s decision to go to war, against the advice of several Gulf governments, Iran responded by shooting thousands of missiles and drones at countries in the region, derailing their efforts to bring Iran into their fold, Gulf officials have said.
“What little trust there was before has completely been shattered,” Saudi Arabia’s foreign minister, Prince Faisal bin Farhan, told reporters last week.
Saudi Arabia has a large stockpile of Patriot interceptors that it is using to protect itself from the barrage of Iranian attacks that have rained down on its oil fields, refineries and cities.
But interceptors are in short supply globally. Drone and missile attacks in Saudi Arabia have already struck a refinery and the U.S. embassy, while fragments from intercepted projectiles have killed two Bangladeshi migrant workers and injured more than a dozen other foreign residents.
Since the beginning of the war, Mr. Netanyahu has pushed for military operations that could force the collapse of Iran’s government. U.S. officials have focused on degrading the country’s missile and naval capabilities and have been more skeptical that the hard-line government in Iran can be driven from power.
Though Israeli strikes have killed a large number of leaders, the hard-line government remains in control.
Saudi officials have long expressed concerns that a failed state in Iran poses a grave threat to them, analysts say. They fear that even if Iran’s government fell, elements of the military — or militias that could emerge in the power vacuum — would continue to attack the kingdom and are likely to focus on oil targets.
Some government intelligence analysts have told other officials that they think Prince Mohammed sees the war as an opportunity for him to increase Saudi Arabia’s influence throughout the Middle East, and that he believes Saudi Arabia can protect itself even if the war continues.
In conversations with Prince Mohammed, Mr. Trump has raised worries about the price of oil and the damage it is doing to the economy. The Saudi leader has assured him that is only temporary, according to people briefed by American officials.
But American and regional officials are deeply skeptical that oil markets will quickly recover from the war. Saudi Arabia cannot make up the shortfalls caused by the war because its overland pipeline can only carry a fraction of the oil that normally transits through the Strait of Hormuz, economists say.
While Saudi Arabia is better positioned than the other Gulf countries to weather the closure of the strait, it could face dire ramifications if the waterway is not reopened soon.
Even before the war began, Prince Mohammed was facing serious financial challenges as he approached the 2030 deadline he had set for himself to transform Saudi Arabia into a global business hub. His government is forecasting budget deficits for several years to come as ambitious megaprojects and vast investments in artificial intelligence strain the country’s limited resources.
A prolonged war with Iran would put all of that at risk. The prince’s success hinges on creating a secure environment for investors and tourists.
Asked last week whether the Saudi government preferred an immediate end to the war or a longer conflict in which Iran’s capabilities were degraded, Prince Faisal, the Saudi foreign minister, told reporters that the only thing that officials cared about was halting Iranian attacks on Saudi Arabia and neighboring countries.
“We’re going to use every lever we have — political, economic, diplomatic and else-wise — to get these attacks to stop,” Prince Faisal said.
Vivian Nereim in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, and David E. Sanger in Washington contributed reporting.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio plans to travel to France on Friday to discuss the war and other global crises with the top diplomats from the Group of 7 nations, the State Department said. In addition to Iran, Rubio plans to talk with the diplomats at the previously scheduled meeting outside Versailles about Russia’s war in Ukraine and other “threats across the world,” the department said.
A former Revolutionary Guards general, Mohammad Bagher Zolghadr, has been named Iran’s top security official, an aide to the Iranian president announced on Tuesday. He replaces Ali Larijani, an experienced politician who was killed in an Israeli attack last week.
Zolghadr was named secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, the aide, Seyyed Mehdi Tabatabaei, said in a post on X. The decision was made “with the approval and consent” of Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei, Iran’s supreme leader, and by decree of President Masoud Pezeshkian, Tabatabaei said.
Zolghadr has held senior positions across Iran’s government, including in the Guards, the judiciary, the interior ministry, and the Expediency Discernment Council, an advisory body, according to a resume published by Tasnim, a semi-official Iranian news agency.
Majed al-Ansari, a spokesman for Qatar’s foreign ministry, said in a news conference that there are currently no Qatari mediation efforts between the warring parties, adding that Doha is focused on defending the country and addressing the impact of recent attacks. He said the Gulf’s regional security system has been overtaken by recent developments and called for reassessment while noting existing defense agreements have proven effective.
Gulf states host major U.S. military bases that underpin regional security arrangements. Qatar has previously played a central role in mediating ceasefire negotiations between Israel and Hamas, making the absence of current efforts notable.
Germany’s president, Frank-Walter Steinmeier, said Tuesday that the war in Iran violated international criminal law. He appeared to criticize his own government for not being prepared to be more clear in its condemnation. He went on to say that there seems little doubt that “the justification based on an imminent attack on the U.S. does not hold water.” Steinmeier, who made the comments at an event in Berlin, went on to call the war a politically disastrous mistake.
The Israeli military released a flurry of new evacuation warnings for southern Lebanon on Tuesday, ordering residents of nine towns and villages to leave their homes and flee several miles north. The sweeping evacuation orders in the country’s south in recent weeks have heightened fears of a large-scale Israeli ground invasion. Hours before the new warnings, Israel’s defense minister said that the country intends to control areas as deep in Lebanon as the Litani River, which lies around 15 to 20 miles north of the Israeli border.
President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. of the Philippines on Tuesday declared a state of national energy emergency amid global oil supply disruptions caused by the war in the Middle East.
Reporting from Beirut, Lebanon
The Lebanese government has withdrawn its approval of Iran’s ambassador, Mohammad Reza Sheibani, and given him until March 29 to leave the country, Lebanon’s foreign ministry said Tuesday. The Lebanese government cited “Iran’s violation of diplomatic norms and established protocols between the two countries,” but did not elaborate. The government typically uses such language to refer to interference in Lebanese internal affairs, especially in regard to Iran’s support for the Hezbollah militia.
Israel Katz, Israel’s defense minister, said Monday that Israel intends to control areas in Lebanon as deep as the Litani River as it continues its operations against Hezbollah, the Iranian-backed militia. He also confirmed that the Israeli military is following a model used last year in the war in Gaza, where swaths of buildings were razed in urban areas, as part of operations against what Israeli officials said was a renewed Hamas insurgency. The demolitions exacerbated what was already a humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza.
Katz said Tuesday that the Israeli military is flattening homes in border villages as part of the operations, claiming that they are being “used as terrorist positions.” Katz said Tuesday that Israeli forces had destroyed all five bridges over the Litani River, saying that Hezbollah used them to transport militants and weapons. The bridges are vital for the Lebanese population living south of the river, the majority of whom have been displaced by the fighting.
Iranian missile attacks hit the semiautonomous Kurdish region in Iraq on Tuesday, killing six Kurdish fighters and wounding 30 others, the Kurdistan Regional Government said in a statement. The volley of six Iranian ballistic missiles came in two separate attacks at dawn on Tuesday, according to the statement.
“While we condemn in the strongest terms this attack and all other terrorist attacks on the Kurdistan Region, we affirm that we have every right to respond to any aggression against our people and our land,” said the statement, from the KRG’s Ministry of Peshmerga Affairs. Iran did not immediately comment publicly on the attack.
One of the waves of Iranian missiles launched toward Israel on Tuesday resulted in four impact sites, the Israeli authorities said. It was not clear if all were missile hits or debris from interceptions. They caused extensive damage to at least three residential buildings and set cars on fire. In Tel Aviv, six people were treated for injuries, said Eli Bin from the national emergency service. One of the strikes in Tel Aviv was an Iranian missile with a warhead of around 100 kilograms, or 220 pounds, said Col. Miki David of the Israeli military. This missile was “something we have not yet encountered in the war,” David said.
The Israeli military reported more Iranian missiles launches toward Israel on Tuesday. It said search and rescue teams were going to several places in southern and central Israel where impacts were reported. Yoel Moshe, an official with the national emergency rescue service, said that they were searching an impact site in Tel Aviv for casualties. Earlier on Tuesday, an impact was reported in northern Israel after reports of Iranian missile launches.
Anthony Albanese, Australia’s prime minister, at the briefing in Canberra with the E.U. chief on Tuesday condemned Iranian actions in the Strait of Hormuz.
“This is having an impact on the global economy,” he said. But he did not directly respond to a reporter’s question about whether Australia might get drawn into securing the strait, saying his country has provided support for the United Arab Emirates at its request, including moving an aircraft to the region and supplying “AMRAAMs” or Advanced Medium Range Air-to-Air Missiles for defense.
Asked whether the E.U. would contribute to a maritime operation to secure the Strait of Hormuz, Ursula von der Leyen, the E.U. chief, said, “Leaders in the European Union have been very clear that when the hostilities end, they could envisage an operation.”
“We think that it is time to go to the negotiation table and to end the hostilities,” she added Tuesday in Australia. “The situation is critical for the energy supplies worldwide. We all feel the knock-on effects on gas and oil prices, our businesses and our societies.”
The president of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, said she is “deeply concerned” about the conflict in the Middle East. Speaking at a briefing on Tuesday in Canberra, Australia’s capital, she called on Iran to “immediately” cease retaliatory attacks and allow free navigation in the Strait of Hormuz, a vital waterway that has been rendered perilous in recent weeks. “The recent attacks by Iran on unarmed commercial vessels in the Gulf, attacks on civilian infrastructure including oil and gas installations and the de facto closure of the Strait of Hormuz by Iranian forces is unacceptable and must be condemned,” she said.
Kuwait’s electricity ministry said that seven power lines in several areas of the country were taken out of service after they sustained damage from falling debris caused by air defense interceptions, Kuwait’s state news agency reported early Tuesday morning. The Kuwaiti army said on social media that it was confronting drone and missile attacks for the second time since about midnight.
The Popular Mobilization Forces in Iraq said that a commander and some of his fighters were killed in a strike targeting their headquarters in Anbar Province, Iraq’s state news agency said Tuesday morning. The group blamed the United States for the attack. The P.M.F. is an umbrella organization of militias under Iraqi state supervision, some of whom support Iran and have targeted American assets including the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad amid the conflict in the Middle East.
War planes were flying over Beirut as a series of airstrikes by the Israeli military that began late on Monday night continued into Tuesday morning. At least seven explosions were heard around the Lebanese capital. The Israeli military said earlier it was targeting Hezbollah infrastructure in Beirut.
Facts Only
Actors: United States, Iran, Iraq, Hezbollah, European Commission
Events: Military actions, retaliatory strikes, airstrikes, attacks on infrastructure and commercial vessels, casualties
Locations: Middle East, Strait of Hormuz, Beirut
Dates: Not specified in the article
Executive Summary
Full Take
Patterns detected: ARC-0013 Emotional exploitation (fear appeals), ARC-0024 Ambiguity (unclear motivations and intentions), ARC-0037 Distortion (out-of-context framing)
Steelman: The article presents a realistic account of the ongoing conflict in the Middle East, emphasizing the actions of various actors and the resulting impacts on key locations. The report offers a balanced perspective, acknowledging the complexities of the situation and the need for de-escalation.
Root Cause: The root cause of the conflict can be traced back to longstanding geopolitical tensions and competing interests in the Middle East. Historical patterns of proxy wars, sanctions, and military interventions contribute to the ongoing instability.
Implications: The escalating conflict has significant implications for regional and global security, energy markets, and civilian safety. The human costs of the violence are underscored by the reported casualties in Iraq and Lebanon.
Bridge Questions: Who stands to gain from the prolongation of the conflict? What long-term strategies could lead to a peaceful resolution? What role should international diplomacy play in addressing the root causes of the conflict?
Counterstrike Scan: The article's content does not align with a coordinated influence campaign as it presents a balanced account of the ongoing conflict and does not attempt to manipulate readers through emotional exploitation, distortion, or ambiguity.
