Latest News

US strikes Iran again after Iranian attack kills two military personnel

Central Command announced that the United States has launched new attacks against Iran after earlier announcing that two U.S. soldiers were killed in Jordan, and one was missing, following an Iranian attack.

Iran's supreme ruler said that Washington would be held accountable for "intensifying the conflict" before the Saturday strikes.

In a press release, Central Command said that President Donald Trump had ordered the airstrikes to begin at 6 pm ET (2200 GMT).

The statement said that the strikes were intended to "further degrade Iran's capability to?threaten? commercial shipping in Strait of Hormuz, and to swiftly punish Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) forces who attacked American servicemen in Jordan yesterday night." It did not provide any further details.

Iran's Mehr News Agency reported that the U.S. launched an attack near Sirik, in southern Iran. It added that no injuries or infrastructure damage had been reported.

Since an interim ceasefire agreement signed a month earlier fell apart last weekend, the U.S. has intensified its attacks on Iran. This raises the possibility of all-out warfare.

Central Command confirmed that the two deaths took place on Friday, and that another U.S. soldier was still missing. This announcement brings the total number of U.S. military deaths since the beginning of the war to 16. More than 420 U.S. soldiers have also been injured.

Pete Hegseth, the U.S. Secretary of Defense, posted on X that "Godspeed to heroes." "Their sacrifice only strengthens our resolve."

Iran seemed to be targeting Saudi Arabia, as well as other U.S. Gulf Allies and Jordan after U.S. strikes on Iranian bridges. power facilities? and other infrastructure.

Ayatollah Khamenei, the supreme leader of Iran and the Iranian state media, issued a statement in which he said that the repeated breaches by the United States of the interim agreement had demonstrated Trump's signature as "utterly useless and devoid credibility."

The statement read: "Now that the American enemy has decided to escalate the conflict, incurring further costs and humiliation and thereby incurring more heavy costs, it should be aware of the unforgettable lessons the noble nation Iran and the Resistance Front will teach it." The White House didn't immediately respond to an inquiry for comment. Khamenei’s whereabouts are still a mystery. The conflict began at the end of Feburary when Israel and the U.S. launched attacks on Iran to disable their missile programme and regional proxies. It has caused a'major disruption of energy supplies', global inflation fears and a fight for control of the Strait of Hormuz.

IRANIAN STRIKES REPORTED IN KUWAIT, BAHRAIN, JORDAN, SAUDI ARABIA

Kuwait was attacked on Saturday. The armed forces claimed to have intercepted Iranian drones and ballistic missiles. They also said that firefighters and workers in the oil sector had been injured as a result of the attacks.

Iran's IRGC claimed it had destroyed a radar at Ali Al Salem Air Base and struck a U.S. Military Support Centre at Kuwait's Camp Arifjan. Kuwait Petroleum Corporation said that one of its oil installations had been damaged by "repeated Iranian strikes", which caused significant damage, and also some injuries.

Iranian media reported that the IRGC also targeted a site near Bahrain, where U.S. fighter aircraft gathered at Sheikh Isa Air Base, and a data centre for intelligence.

At least two?U.S. According to Iranian state television, a missile attack and drone attack on the U.S. Al Azraq base, Jordan early Saturday morning destroyed three fighter aircraft as well as other aircraft.

The reports could not be independently verified.

Saudi Arabia's Early Warning System issued alerts on Saturday morning urging residents in Al-Kharj to seek shelter. Al-Kharj is east of Riyadh and hosts a U.S. military base, while Yanbu on the Red Sea has an important oil export terminal.

Two people who were briefed in the matter stated that an Iranian missile strike, the first to hit Saudi Arabia in more than three month, was the cause of the alerts. Saudi state media didn't say what prompted the alerts, and the government media office didn't respond to a comment request.

The IRGC did not mention any attacks on Saudi Arabia.

BATTLE FOR CONTROL THE STRAIT U.S. Central Command had earlier said that it had struck Iranian surveillance sites, "military logistic infrastructure, underground weapon storage, and maritime capabilities." U.S. Airstrikes on Saturday morning killed three people, injured eight more, and damaged two bridges and road tunnels in southern Hormozgan Province, which borders the Strait of Hormuz.

According to the semi-official Fars News Agency, which cited provincial authorities, the U.S. conducted further airstrikes on the same province Saturday afternoon.

Iran's Health Ministry announced on Saturday that more than 500 people were injured and 50 killed in U.S. airstrikes on the country during the last three weeks.

Esmaeil?Baghaei, a spokesperson for the Iranian Foreign?Ministry, accused the United States of trying to control the Strait of Hormuz. This strait?usually controls around one-fifth of world oil supply.

Both sides have targeted shipping traffic. The U.S. says it enforces a naval blocade, while Iran claims it targets vessels that violate its rules for navigating the Strait.

According to a statement released by Saudi state TV, the European Union and Gulf States called on Iran on Saturday to stop all attacks on maritime navigation immediately and without condition and to keep it open to traffic. Reporting by Bureaus; Writing by Gareth Jones Aidan Lewis Michael Martina; Editing Alison Williams Ros Russell Rod Nickel

(source: Reuters)