U.S. hits Iran as Gulf states targeted in flareup over Hormuz
Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said they had struck US military targets and bases in Jordan, Bahrain and Kuwait.
Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said they had struck US military targets and bases in Jordan, Bahrain and Kuwait.

PHOTOGRAPH courtesy of AFP
What's your take?
Google Preferred Sources
Get more Daily Tribune stories in your search results
Add Daily Tribune as a preferred source on Google Search.
TEHRAN (AFP) — The United States struck Iran Monday for a second day running, drawing Tehran’s reprisals against its allies in the Gulf as the foes battle over the status of the strategic Strait of Hormuz.
The fresh fighting and Iran’s announcement over the weekend of a new closure of Hormuz — a key conduit in the world’s oil trade — sent crude prices climbing on Monday and further battered an interim peace deal.
Iran responded to the latest US attacks by targeting Gulf nations, with the powerful Revolutionary Guards announcing new strikes on Bahrain, Jordan and Kuwait, according to state media reports.
The US Central Command (CENTCOMM) said its forces had completed their latest barrage, which began overnight Sunday, on dozens of Iranian targets.
US aircraft, naval vessels and drones had “completed a new wave of offensive strikes against Iran... hitting dozens of targets at multiple locations with precision munitions to degrade Iran’s ability to continue attacking international shipping flowing through the Strait of Hormuz.”
The past week’s hostilities have centered over competing claims over the critical energy trade route, which Iran’s Guards say is now “closed” while the US maintains the strait is open to maritime traffic and is not controlled by Iran.
Oil prices, which tumbled after the announcement of the June agreement, jumped 4.5 percent when futures trading opened Monday in Asia, with the US benchmark WTI jumping above $74 a barrel on fears of hampered supply on global markets.
Mediators have been trying to salvage a diplomatic solution to ending the war after President Donald Trump this week declared a ceasefire over.
Pakistan, a key intermediary in negotiations between the rival countries, expressed “deep concern at escalation in regional tensions,” according to its foreign office.
Iran’s foreign ministry said the US attacks on Sunday had “caused the return of insecurity in the Strait of Hormuz” and “have rendered futile all efforts” at establishing peace in the region.
Iranian state media reported two deaths in US strikes that it said targeted large areas across southern and western Iran, including Qeshm island and Bandar Abbas near the Strait of Hormuz, and in Khuzestan province bordering Iraq.
Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said they had struck US military targets and bases in Jordan, Bahrain and Kuwait, state media reported on Monday.
Air raid alerts sounded in Bahrain where the interior ministry while Kuwait’s army said the country’s forces were intercepting “hostile aerial targets” on Monday.
Jordan’s army said it had intercepted four Iranian missiles.
The renewed fighting followed an Iranian attack early Sunday on a commercial ship in the Strait of Hormuz, whose crew was forced to abandon it after it went up in flames.
Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said after the incident that “the Strait of Hormuz will be closed until further notice and until the end of American interventions in this region,” according to state news agency IRNA.
Control of the strategic waterway has become key leverage for Iran, with an adviser to the country’s supreme leader on Sunday saying it was more important than “dozens of atomic bombs.”
US CENTCOM countered on X that the strait was “open to all vessels seeking to lawfully transit.”
On Sunday evening, Iranian state media reported at least 10 “enemy projectiles” hitting Qeshm Island, which sits on the Strait of Hormuz.

NEW DELHI, India (AFP) — Nine workers were killed at a waste-to-energy plant in western India after a garbage heap…

A number of the victims were found near a fire exit that authorities believe may have been blocked.

Qatar's government on Sunday announced the death of former leader Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani, who led the…

WASHINGTON, United States (AFP) — US President Donald Trump faced questions about the security of his new Air Force One…

QUITO, Ecuador (AFP) — When Diana Tupiza and Andres Alquinga decided to get married, they selected a rather unusual…

List includes Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, French President Emmanuel…