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US and Iran trade attacks for a second day, undermining shaky ceasefire

Oil prices rose nearly $3 following Trump’s threat of escalation and extended gains in early Asian trade on Thursday

Iranian missiles are launched, as Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said they had carried out attacks against a U.S. base in Jordan and 21 other targets in the Gulf on Wednesday in retaliation for American strikes around the Strait of Hormuz, from a location given as Tehran, Iran, released June 10, 2026, in this still image taken from a video. PHOTO: REUTERS

The United States and Iran traded air attacks on Thursday for a second straight day, with President Donald Trump vowing further strikes if Tehran does not immediately agree to a peace deal.

The escalation in hostilities began earlier this week with the downing of a US Apache helicopter near the Strait of Hormuz, which sparked a series of tit-for-tat attacks across Iran and on US bases around the region.

It was the most serious threat to a fragile ceasefire agreed in April, dampening hopes for a swift end to the war that started in late February with massive US-Israeli joint air strikes on Iran.

The US military said its latest attacks targeted “military surveillance capabilities, communication systems, and air defence sites across Iran” in response to what it called Tehran’s “unwarranted and continued aggression.”

Trump told Fox News reporter Trey Yingst on Wednesday evening the US strikes would stop shortly, but that he would resume heavy bombing if Iran’s leaders did not sign an agreement with the United States immediately, Yingst wrote on X.

Read: Iran’s Revolutionary Guard says 21 US military targets hit across region

Oil prices rose nearly $3 following Trump’s threat of escalation, and extended gains in early Asian trade on Thursday.

The military’s Central Command announced the strikes were complete about four hours after they began, soon after midnight in Tehran.

Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) said it had launched counter-attacks on 18 US military targets at airbases in Kuwait and Bahrain, as well as the US Navy’s Fifth Fleet in Bahrain.

It later said it had also targeted the al-Azraq air base in Jordan for a second night running, firing 12 ballistic missiles at the US base.

Kuwait’s air defences were engaging hostile aerial targets, the US ally’s army said, while Bahraini air defences intercepted and destroyed Iranian aerial attacks, a media adviser to Bahrain’s king said on X.

US denies Iran claim that Strait is closed

Iran’s top joint military command also warned it would fire on any vessel trying to pass through the Strait of Hormuz, which has been largely closed for months. Iranian media said two US ships were fired on.

US Central Command denied that the strait was closed or any of its ships were struck, saying commercial ships were still transiting the strait despite Iran’s threats.

Iranian news agencies reported explosions in several cities across the country of 93 million, including Sirik, Kargan, Bandar Abbas, Minab, and Karaj near the strait, as well as Varamin far to the north, closer to the Caspian Sea.

US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth presented the move as an effort to force Iran into a deal to end the conflict.

The strikes would “advance our military interests and also enhance our diplomatic position,” he told reporters during a visit to Central Command in Florida.

“We will strike them hard tonight, and hopefully Iran makes a good decision,” he said. “If we need to negotiate with bombs, we’ll negotiate with bombs.”

The United States and Iran have traded fire several times since the tentative ceasefire took hold, even as negotiators have unsuccessfully sought to end the war, now in its fourth month.

Trump has repeatedly said a deal is close, though there has been no sign of a breakthrough, while also threatening to resume bombing.

Early on Wednesday, the US military targeted air defences and radar sites around the Strait of Hormuz after Monday’s downing of a US attack helicopter near the strategic waterway.

Iran responded with missile and drone attacks on US bases in Jordan, Kuwait and Bahrain. A US official said there was no significant damage.

Iran accused the US of striking reservoirs that supplied drinking water to 10 villages and violating international law.

“This is not collateral damage – it is a calculated war crime and a flagrant violation of human rights,” said foreign ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baghei.

The Pentagon did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The war has killed thousands and disrupted roughly a fifth of the global supply of crude oil and liquefied natural gas, sending prices sharply higher.

Iran has blocked traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, while the US has maintained its own blockade on Iranian ports.

The conflict has become a political headache for the White House, with polls showing Trump’s approval ratings sinking amid voter anger over high gasoline prices.

Some Republicans have openly worried that the war’s unpopularity could cost them control of Congress in November’s midterm elections.

US strikes near Hormuz hit Iranian drinking water facility: Media reports

US strikes near the Strait of Hormuz on Wednesday destroyed what appears to be a drinking water facility in southern Iran, the New York Times reported, citing satellite imagery and video analysis.

The Times‘ Visual Investigations team identified two small water storage structures in the village of Bemani in the Hormozgan province.

Earlier, Iranian media reported that strikes hit two water tanks in the Bemani district, with a local official reportedly saying that water was cut off to more than 20,000 people.

Tasnim, a semiofficial Iranian news agency, published images of weapons remnants retrieved from the site.

Specialists at the Open Source Munitions Portal, which catalogues weapons debris from conflict zones worldwide, determined that the fragments came from a GBU-39 — a US-made guided bomb weighing roughly 250 pounds, according to the Times.

That conclusion aligns with the damage captured on a video of a damaged building, it added.

Under the Geneva Convention, which the US is a party to, deliberately targeting civilian infrastructure is a war crime.

The military’s US Central Command (CENTCOM) said on Wednesday that US forces had “completed additional self-defence strikes against multiple targets,” including Iranian military surveillance capabilities, communication systems, and air defence sites, using “precision munitions” fired by US Marine Corps, Air Force, and Navy assets.

The command said the strikes were “in response to Iran’s unwarranted and continued aggression.”

Fighting in Lebanon continues

Fighting continued in Israel’s parallel war on Lebanon.

Israeli airstrikes in southern Lebanon killed at least 13 people on Wednesday, Lebanese security sources said, while Hezbollah attacked Israeli forces.

The Israeli military said two “launches” were identified falling adjacent to an area where Israeli troops are operating in southern Lebanon, after sirens sounded in several areas of northern Israel early on Thursday.

Tehran’s demands include an end to Israel’s attacks in Lebanon, the lifting of sanctions on Iran, the release of billions of dollars in frozen assets, and recognition of its control of the strait.

Trump says Iran must end its restrictions on shipping through Hormuz. He also says any peace deal must ensure Iran cannot develop a nuclear weapon. Iran denies any such ambition.

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