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Thank you for tuning in to our live coverage of events in the Middle East.
We will continue to keep you posted about the latest development in a new blog.
Iran’s Armed Forces threatened to destroy US-linked oil infrastructure if Iran’s energy facilities were attacked. The warning came after president Donald Trump said the US had bombed Iran’s oil hub of Kharg Island, and “totally obliterated” every military target there.
Trump said he had chosen not to wipe out the oil infrastructure on Kharg Island, which serves as the export terminal for 90% of Iran’s oil shipments. But he added: “Should Iran, or anyone else, do anything to interfere with the Free and Safe Passage of Ships through the Strait of Hormuz, I will immediately reconsider this decision.”
Explosions rocked Iraq’s capital Baghdad on Saturday after two strikes targeted the powerful Iran-backed group Kataeb Hezbollah, killing two members including a “key figure”, security sources told AFP.
At least 12 medical personnel were killed in an Israeli strike on a healthcare center in the town of Borj Qalaouiya in southern Lebanon, the Lebanese state news agency reported, citing the health ministry.
Israeli strikes have killed more than 100 children in Lebanon, according to the latest data from the Lebanese health ministry. A total of 773 people have been killed since Israel’s first strikes on the country on 2 March, with a further 1,933 people wounded, the ministry said in its daily report. It said 103 children had now been killed in the strikes, and a further 326 children have been wounded.
Qatar’s interior ministry said it was evacuating a number of “key areas” as Iran presses its retaliatory air campaign against Gulf countries. In Doha’s central Musheireb district some residents received phone alerts telling them to “evacuate the area immediately... to the nearest safest place as a temporary precaution”.
The US energy department said it expects initial deliveries of oil from its strategic petroleum reserve will begin moving to the market by the end of next week. Members of the 32-nation International Energy Agency, announced earlier this week they would unlock 400m barrels of oil in an effort to bring down prices.
The Pentagon is moving additional Marines and warships to the Middle East, the Wall Street Journal and other outlets reported. US defence secretary Pete Hegseth reportedly approved a request from US Central Command for an element of an amphibious ready group and attached Marine expeditionary unit (MEU). There are differing reports about the size of the contingent to be deployed, but the group typically consists of several warships and 5,000 Marines and sailors.
The UN under-secretary-general for humanitarian affairs and emergency relief coordinator, called for humanitarian aid to be allowed to pass safely through the strait of Hormuz as the US-Israeli war on Iran continues to disrupt one of the world’s most vital shipping routes. In a statement, Tom Fletcher said this will make it harder and more expensive to deliver critical supplies, including food and medicine. Only 77 ships have so far crossed through the critical waterway this month.
Qatar’s defence ministry said its military had “intercepted” two missile attacks targeting the country, in statements posted on social media on Saturday.
Earlier, the interior ministry said in a statement it was “evacuating several key areas as a temporary precautionary measure, within the framework of ensuring public safety until the danger has passed”.
In Doha’s central Musheireb district some residents received phone alerts telling them to evacuate the area immediately.
A drone struck the US embassy in Baghdad on Saturday, according to a report from AFP.
“A drone hit the embassy,” an official told AFP, with a second security source confirming that an attack had targeted the diplomatic mission.
The attack took place shortly after two Iran-backed fighters were killed in strikes on Iraq’s capital, according to several sources.
AFP has some further details on the two strikes that targeted the powerful Iran-backed group Kataeb Hezbollah earlier, killing two members including a “key figure”.
“At 02:15 am (2315 GMT Friday), a missile struck a house that was being used by Kataeb Hezbollah,” a security source told AFP, adding that “a key figure was martyred,” and two members of the group were wounded.
AFP journalists heard blasts in the capital followed by ambulance sirens, with witnesses saying they saw smoke rising from the Arasat neighbourhood, where several Iran-backed groups are known to be present.
Two hours later, an airstrike hit a vehicle in eastern Baghdad that killed “a member of the Hashed al-Shaabi,” another security source said.
A Hashed al-Shaabi official told AFP the member killed belongs to Kataeb Hezbollah.
The Hashed al-Shaabi, or the Popular Mobilisation Forces (PMF), is a former paramilitary group now integrated into the regular armed forces. It also encompasses brigades from Iran-backed groups, including Kataeb Hezbollah.
None of the sources said who was believed to be behind the strikes, and the Kataeb Hezbollah group has not commented. However, since the start of the war, several attacks that targeted Iran-backed fighters across Iraq have been blamed on the US and Israel.
The United Arab Emirates’ attorney-general has ordered the arrest of 10 individuals accused of sharing video clips that show genuine footage of air defence systems intercepting attacks, as well as fabricated scenes.
The individuals have been referred to an expedited trial, according to state controlled media, which said videos were deemed liable to mislead and incite fear.
Earlier this week 20 people, including a British tourist, were charged in the UAE under cybercrime laws in connection with filming and posting material related to Iranian attacks on the country.
Updated
Thirty six years before Donald Trump ordered military strikes on Iran’s vital oil hub, Kharg island, he told the Guardian that he would attack the island if he ever became president and Iran fired even one bullet at an American.
In a 1988 interview with the Guardian, which Trump was reminded of during a Fox News interview on Friday morning, Polly Toynbee, now a Guardian columnist, asked the businessman what his platform would be if he ever did run for president.
“Respect,” Trump replied.
“We’re a second rate economic power, a debtor nation. We’re getting kicked around,” he added.
When Toynbee asked him what he would do about Iran, Trump replied:
I’d be harsh on Iran. They’ve been beating us psychologically, making us look a bunch of fools. One bullet shot at one of our men or ships and I’d do a number on Kharg Island. I’d go in and take it. Iran can’t even beat Iraq, yet they push the United States around. It’d be good for the world to take them on.
Seven years before that interview, the New York Times and other outlets reported that Pentagon invasion plans for Iran drawn up during the 1979 hostage crisis started with an attack on Kharg Island.
An explosion was heard in Iraq’s capital Baghdad on Saturday, hours after a missile struck a powerful Iran-backed group in the city, AFP reports.
Residents in the Zayouna district in eastern Baghdad told AFP that the force of the blast shook their houses.
Explosions were heard earlier in Baghdad, which appeared to be a missile strike on a house used by the powerful Iran-backed group Kataeb Hezbollah, killing “a key figure” and wounding two others, according to a security source.
Iran’s Armed Forces Unified Combatant has warned that any attack on Iran’s oil and energy infrastructure will lead to attacks on energy infrastructure owned by oil companies cooperating with the US in the region, Iranian media has reported.
The military’s Al-Anbiya Central Headquarters said in a statement cited by Iranian media that oil and energy infrastructure belonging to firms that cooperated with the United States would “immediately be destroyed and turned into a pile of ashes” if Iran’s energy facilities were attacked.
The warning came after Trump said that the US had destroyed military targets on Iran’s main oil hub of Kharg Island. The island serves as the export terminal for 90% of Iran’s oil shipments.
In an earlier post on Truth Social, Trump said the US had “totally obliterated” every military target on Kharg Island.
Trump added he had chosen not to wipe out the oil infrastructure on the island, but said: “However, should Iran, or anyone else, do anything to interfere with the Free and Safe Passage of Ships through the Strait of Hormuz, I will immediately reconsider this decision.”
Updated
An Israeli strike in southern Lebanon has killed a dozen medical staff at a clinic, Lebanese health authorities said on Saturday, according to a report from AFP.
Lebanese health authorities said an Israeli strike killed 12 doctors, paramedics and nurses working at a healthcare centre in the town of Burj Qalawiya, following another strike on the town of Sawaneh that left two paramedics affiliated with Hezbollah and its ally Amal dead.
The US has told non-emergency US government employees in Oman and their family members to leave the country, AFP reports.
The state department updated its advisory to warn Americans of “safety risks,” noting “there has been an ongoing threat of drone and missile attacks from Iran and significant disruptions to commercial flights.”
Two people were killed by drone in northern Oman, state media reported Friday, as Iran continues its retaliatory attacks on neighbouring countries.
Updated
Two people were wounded after a projectile fell on a house in Iraq’s capital Baghdad on Saturday, reports AFP, citing two security sources.
AFP journalists heard loud bangs in the capital followed by ambulance sirens, with witnesses saying they saw smoke rising from an area in the city’s centre.
A security source said “a projectile fell on a house wounding two people,” in the neighbourhood of Arasat, where several Iran-backed groups are known to be present, without being able to determine the type of the projectile.
Another security source confirmed two people were injured.
The US energy department expects early deliveries of oil from its strategic petroleum reserve to begin moving to the market by the end of next week, it said in a statement.
This is part of a wider effort by the 32-nation International Energy Agency, announced earlier this week, to unlock 400m barrels of oil in an effort to bring down prices.
Updated
Qatari authorities evacuated parts of Doha’s Msheireb district, which includes government offices and a Google office, early on Saturday, witnesses said.
The witnesses also said authorities evacuated parts of Doha’s education city, which is home to branch campuses of six US universities.
The evacuation orders come after Qatar’s interior ministry said authorities were evacuating a “number of specified areas as a temporary precautionary measure,” without providing details on the areas.
It came about an hour before authorities reported missile interceptions in Qatar, Reuters reports.
Updated
Israeli strikes in Gaza killed four Palestinians, including two 17-year-olds, in two separate attacks, Palestinian medics said, with violence continuing in the West Bank and Gaza even as Israel expands its offensive across the region.
Israeli forces killed two in the West Bank city of Nablus on Thursday, according to Palestinian officials, while the death toll in Lebanon reached 773, its Health Ministry said on Friday.
The Israeli military told Reuters it was not aware of the earlier airstrike reported in Gaza, which paramedics said killed three people, including two 17-year-old males.
Separately, one Palestinian was killed and several other people were wounded in Israeli tank shelling near a police checkpoint in western Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, medics said.
Five US air force refueling planes were struck and damaged on the ground at Prince Sultan airbase in Saudi Arabia, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing two US officials.
The planes, which were hit during an Iranian missile strike on the Saudi base in recent days, were damaged but not fully destroyed and are being repaired, the Journal said, adding no one was killed in the strikes.
Updated
At least 12 medical personnel were killed in an Israeli strike on a healthcare center in the town of Borj Qalaouiya in southern Lebanon, the Lebanese state news agency reported, citing the health ministry.
The health ministry said the death toll was preliminary, with rescue operations underway to search for missing persons.
Updated
Donald Trump said the United States carried out strikes against “every military target” on Iran’s Kharg Island export hub.
“For reasons of decency, I have chosen NOT to wipe out the Oil Infrastructure on the Island,” the US president wrote on Truth Social.
“However, should Iran, or anyone else, do anything to interfere with the Free and Safe Passage of Ships through the strait of Hormuz, I will immediately reconsider this decision.”
Updated
We are pausing our live coverage for now, thank you all for reading along. Here’s a brief recap of some of the key developments from the last few hours.
Several hours ago, at approximately 10pm local time, the Israeli military said it had launched a new wave of strikes on Tehran. Residents in the Iranian capital reported heavy explosions.
Israeli strikes have killed more than 100 children in Lebanon, according to the latest data from the Lebanese health ministry. A total of 773 people have been killed since Israel’s first strikes on the country on 2 March, with a further 1,933 people wounded, the ministry said in its daily report. It said 103 children had now been killed in the strikes, and a further 326 children have been wounded.
The Pentagon is moving additional Marines and warships to the Middle East, the Wall Street Journal and other outlets reported. US defence secretary Pete Hegseth reportedly approved a request from US Central Command for an element of an amphibious ready group and attached Marine expeditionary unit (MEU). There are differing reports about the size of the contingent to be deployed, but the group typically consists of several warships and 5,000 Marines and sailors. It is not yet clear what the MEU will be used for or where exactly it will be deployed. But, their presence gives commanders additional options for a range of contingencies, a source told CNN. Trump and his administration have repeatedly refused to rule out US boots on the ground in Iran.
Donald Trump rejected an offer from Vladimir Putin to move Iran’s enriched uranium to Russia, Axios reported. The offer was reportedly made during the phone call the two leaders held earlier this week. Trump has repeatedly stated that one of his key objectives in launching the war is to prevent Tehran from ever having a nuclear weapon.
But in his interview on Fox News Radio on Friday morning, Trump suggested that securing Iran’s highly enriched uranium is not currently a top priority: “We are not focused on that, but at some point we might be.” Previous reports have suggested that the US president is considering sending US troops into Iran to seize its uranium.
Trump also said he didn’t think “it’s going to be long when [the war is] over”. Asked when he might end it, Trump told Fox News Radio it would be up to him: “When I feel it, OK … feel it in my bones.”
Trump also said he believes that Russia might be helping Iran “a little bit”, before pointing to US support for Ukraine as possible justification. It come after the UK defence secretary, John Healey, said on Thursday that Putin’s “hidden hand” lies behind Iran’s military methods. Last week, the Washington Post and others reported that Moscow was providing Tehran with intelligence on US military assets in the region. Putin denied Russian involvement in a phone call with Trump, US special envoy Steve Witkoff said on Tuesday.
The UN under-secretary-general for humanitarian affairs and emergency relief coordinator, called for humanitarian aid to be allowed to pass safely through the strait of Hormuz as the US-Israeli war on Iran continues to disrupt one of the world’s most vital shipping routes. In a statement, Tom Fletcher said this will make it harder and more expensive to deliver critical supplies, including food and medicine. Only 77 ships have so far crossed through the critical waterway this month.
US vice-president JD Vance said the US knows Iran’s new supreme leader is hurt but does not known the full extent of his injuries. “We know that he’s hurt. We don’t know exactly how bad, but we know that he’s hurt,” he told reporters in North Carolina. It appeared to contradict his cabinet colleague US defence secretary Pete Hegseth’s claim earlier on Friday that Khamenei is “wounded and likely disfigured” as he questioned his ability to govern. At present, there is no proof for Hegseth’s claim.
Hezbollah leader Naim Qassem said in a televised speech on Friday that his group is fighting an “existential” battle and is ready for a “long confrontation” with Israel as the war continues. Israel will be “surprised on the battlefield”, Qassem said, adding that “the enemy’s threats do not scare us”. Israeli threats to assassinate him are “worthless”, he added.
The US state department is offering rewards of up to $10m to anyone with information on Iran’s new supreme leader Mojtaba Khamenei as well as nine “key leaders” of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC). Among the six figures named are new secretary of the Supreme National Security Council Ali Larijani and Esmail Khatib, the minister of intelligence. The others are listed only by their positions.
A British counter-drone unit has shot down “multiple drones overnight” following recent strikes on coalition bases in Iraq, the UK’s Ministry of Defence said. Overnight, UK Typhoon jets flew air defence operations over Bahrain for the first time, the MoD said in an update shared on X. It added: “British Typhoon and F-35 jets are now flying in defence of British interests and allies across Qatar, Cyprus, UAE, Jordan, and Bahrain.”
Qatar’s Ministry of Interior said that “a number of specified areas” are being evacuated “as a temporary precautionary measure, in the interest of public safety until the threat has subsided”.
The armed suspect who crashed into a large Michigan synagogue had lost four family members in an Israeli airstrike in his native Lebanon last week, an unnamed official told the Associated Press on Friday. Here’s our story on that.
Formula One is poised to cancel races scheduled for next month in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia, as a result of the ongoing conflict in the region. The sport has not yet formally confirmed the grands prix will be scrapped but it is expected to announce their cancellation as soon as this weekend.
Updated
Tom Fletcher, the UN under-secretary-general for humanitarian affairs and emergency relief coordinator, called on Friday for humanitarian aid to be allowed to pass safely through the strait of Hormuz as the US-Israeli war on Iran continues to disrupt one of the world’s most vital shipping routes.
He said in a statement:
When routes close and costs surge, the help we can deliver shrinks - and the people who need it most are the ones who lose it first.
So my message to the parties to the conflict and all those with influence over them is simple: humanitarian cargo must be allowed to pass safely through the strait of Hormuz.
The ongoing conflict has already caused a near halt in traffic through the strait, Fletcher said. (Earlier, we reported that only 77 ships have so far crossed through the critical waterway this month.)
This, Fletcher added, will make it harder and more expensive to deliver critical supplies, including food and medicine.
I am speaking directly with key parties, pressing for humanitarian supplies to be allowed to keep moving unobstructed through the strait.
Updated
Qatar’s Ministry of Interior has said that “a number of specified areas” are being evacuated “as a temporary precautionary measure, in the interest of public safety until the threat has subsided”.
In a post on X, the ministry urged “everyone to rely on official sources for information and to adhere to the issued instructions.”
Donald Trump rejected an offer from Vladimir Putin to move Iran’s enriched uranium to Russia, Axios reports citing sources.
The offer was reportedly made during the phone call the two leaders held earlier this week. Trump has said of the call that he and the Russian president had a “very good” talk and that “[Putin] wants to be helpful on the Middle East”.
“This is not the first time it was offered. It hasn’t been accepted. The US position is we need to see the uranium secured,” a US official told Axios.
According to Axios, Iran has 450 kilograms of 60%-enriched uranium — enough for more than 10 nuclear bombs.
Trump has repeatedly stated that one of his key objectives in launching war on Iran with Israel is to prevent Tehran from ever having a nuclear weapon.
In his interview on Fox News Radio on Friday morning, Trump suggested that securing the highly enriched uranium is not currently a top priority:
We are not focused on that, but at some point we might be.
Previous reports have suggested that the US president is considering sending US troops into Iran to seize its uranium.
A couple of hours ago, at approximately 10pm local time, the Israeli military said it had launched a new wave of strikes on Tehran.
In a post on its Farsi language page on X, the IDF said:
The Israeli army has now launched a massive wave of attacks against the infrastructure of the Iranian terrorist regime across Tehran.
Residents in the Iranian capital reported heavy explosions.
Updated
US vice-president JD Vance has said the US knows Iran’s new supreme leader is hurt but does not known the full extent of his injuries.
Responding to question from CBS News in North Carolina about whether Mojtaba Khamenei had been hurt by a US airstrike, Vance said:
Well, it’s not totally clear, actually. It’s obviously a very chaotic environment over there. And you have the Israelis striking, you have, obviously, the United States striking a number of targets. So we know that he’s hurt. We don’t know exactly how bad, but we know that he’s hurt.
It appears to contradict his cabinet colleague US defence secretary Pete Hegseth’s claim earlier on Friday that Khamenei is “wounded and likely disfigured” as he questioned his ability to govern. At present, there is no proof for that claim.
As we’ve been reporting, no images have been released of Khamenei since an Israeli strike at the start of the war that killed much of his family, including his father and wife, on 28 February. He was hurt in that attack, Tehran’s ambassador to Cyprus confirmed on Wednesday, and there has been much speculation about the full extent of his injuries and speed of his recovery. The first comments in his name were read out on state TV, rather than delivered live or on video, on Thursday.
Updated
Hezbollah leader Naim Qassem said in a televised speech on Friday that his group is fighting an “existential” battle and is ready for a “long confrontation” with Israel as the war continues.
Israel will be “surprised on the battlefield”, Qassem said, adding that “the enemy’s threats do not scare us”.
This is an existential battle, not a limited or simple battle.
Qassem added that Israeli threats to assassinate him are “worthless”.
We have given many opportunities for political solutions, but the Israeli aggression has not stopped.
Our involvement in the conflict at this time is aimed at weakening Israel’s position in order to reach a better agreement.
There is no solution except through resistance; otherwise, Lebanon will face extinction.
Updated
The Formula 1 races in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia, both scheduled for next month, are set to be cancelled, Sky News reports.
A grand prix was due to be held in Bahrain on 12 April, followed by Saudi Arabia the following weekend on 19 April.
BBC News hears the same, reporting that, “With the deadline to start shipping the freight needed for the event looming, and no sign of imminent resolution to the US-Israeli conflict with Iran, it has been deemed as too great a risk to staff.”
Both countries have experienced Iranian retaliatory strikes on their territory.
Official confirmation of the decision is set to be announced in the next 48 hours.
Neither race will be replaced on the F1 calendar, cutting the season to 22 grand prix events.
Updated
The US state department is offering rewards of up to $10m to anyone with information on Iran’s new supreme leader Mojtaba Khamenei as well as nine “key leaders” of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).
Among the six figures named are new secretary of the Supreme National Security Council Ali Larijani and Esmail Khatib, the minister of intelligence. The others are listed only by their positions.
In a post on X, the US state department said: “Your information could make you eligible for relocation and a reward.”
Updated
The Pentagon is moving additional Marines and warships to the Middle East as Iran steps up its attacks on the strait of Hormuz, the Wall Street Journal reports, citing three US officials.
US defence secretary Pete Hegseth has approved a request from US Central Command for an element of an amphibious ready group and attached Marine expeditionary unit (MEU), typically consisting of several warships and 5,000 Marines and sailors, the officials told the WSJ.
According to the WSJ, the Japan-based USS Tripoli and its attached Marines are now headed for the Middle East. Marines are already in the Middle East supporting the Iran operation, the officials said.
CNN also hears about the MEU deployment to the region from three officials familiar with the matter.
It is not yet clear what the MEU will be used for or where exactly it will be deployed.
Per CNN’s report: “These units have traditionally been used for missions like large-scale evacuations and amphibious operations that require ship-to-shore movements, including raids and assaults. They also have a ground and aviation combat component and some units are trained for special operations.”
Their presence gives commanders additional options for a range of contingencies, one of the sources told CNN.
Donald Trump and his administration have repeatedly refused to rule out US boots on the ground in Iran.
Updated
Earlier, Donald Trump said he believes that Russia might be helping Iran “a little bit”, before pointing to US support for Ukraine as possible justification.
In an interview on Fox News Radio on Friday morning, the US president was pressed on whether he believes Vladimir Putin is supporting Iran following US-Israeli strikes on the country. He said:
I think he might be helping him a little bit, yeah, I guess. And he probably thinks we’re helping Ukraine, right? Yeah, we’re helping [Ukraine] also. And so, [Putin] says that, and China would say the same thing. You know, it’s like, hey, they do it and we do it. In all fairness, they do it and we do it.
On Thursday, the UK defence secretary, John Healey, said that Putin’s “hidden hand” lies behind Iran’s military methods.
He was speaking after British officers at the UK’s military headquarters in London told him that drone pilots from Iran and Iranian proxies were increasingly adopting tactics “from the Russians”.
Iran has already fired more than 2,000 Shahed drones – long-range weapons heavily used by Russia against Ukraine – across the Middle East in response to the US-Israeli attack launched on 28 February.
Last week, the Washington Post and others reported that Moscow was providing Tehran with intelligence on US military assets in the region.
Putin denied Russian involvement in a phone call with Trump, US special envoy Steve Witkoff said on Tuesday.
Updated
A British counter-drone unit has shot down “multiple drones overnight” following recent strikes on coalition bases in Iraq, the UK’s Ministry of Defence has said.
It comes after a French soldier was killed in a drone attack in Iraq’s Erbil region last night, and a base housing UK and US forces in the area came under attack from an Iranian drone on Wednesday.
Overnight, UK Typhoon jets flew air defence operations over Bahrain for the first time, the MoD said in an update shared on X. It added:
British Typhoon and F-35 jets are now flying in defence of British interests and allies across Qatar, Cyprus, UAE, Jordan, and Bahrain.
UK defences in the eastern Mediterranean now include Typhoon and F-35 jets, air defence and counter-drone units, Wildcat and Merlin helicopters, and a further 400 air defence personnel are currently deployed to protect British lives and interests.
Israeli strikes have killed more than 100 children in Lebanon, according to the latest data from the Lebanese health ministry.
A total of 773 people have been killed since Israel’s first strikes on the country on 2 March, with a further 1,933 people wounded, the ministry said in its daily report.
It said 103 children had now been killed in the strikes, and a further 326 children have been wounded.
The armed suspect who crashed into a large Michigan synagogue had lost four family members in an Israeli airstrike in his native Lebanon last week, an unnamed official told the Associated Press on Friday.
Ayman Mohamad Ghazali, 41, a naturalized US citizen born in Lebanon, was killed by security after ramming into Temple Israel in West Bloomfield Township outside Detroit on Thursday. There were no casualties or injuries to the synagogue’s staff, teachers and 140 children at the early childhood center on site.
The FBI, which is leading the investigation, described the attack as an act of violence targeting the Jewish community.
A local official in Mashgharah, in central Lebanon, told the Associated Press on Friday that Ghazali’s two brothers and a niece and nephew were killed at their home in the 5 March airstrike just after sunset as they were having their fast-breaking meal during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.
More on this story here:
Updated
Only 77 ships have so far crossed the strait of Hormuz in March as the Mideast war disrupts one of the world’s most vital shipping routes, a maritime data firm reported on Friday.
Lloyd’s List Intelligence said most of these vessels belonged to the so-called ‘shadow fleet’ – ships used to skirt Western sanctions and regulations, typically linked to Russia and Iran.
They are often ageing ships in poor condition, without proper insurance and with opaque ownership.
The 77 transits recorded so far this month compare with 1,229 passages between 1-11 March last year, according to Lloyd’s List Intelligence.
Sri Lanka on Friday repatriated the remains of 84 Iranian sailors who perished when their frigate was sunk nine days ago by a US submarine, local officials said.
The seamen were killed when the IRIS Dena was torpedoed on March 4 just off the coast of Sri Lanka, in an incident that extended the Middle East war to the Indian Ocean, AFP reported.
An Airbus A340 chartered by Iran “left a short while ago carrying the remains of the sailors,” an airport official at Mattala International Airport in the island’s south told AFP by telephone.
“The departure was delayed because 84 sealed boxes had to be loaded,” added the official who requested anonymity.
The destination of the flight was not disclosed.
A drone strike killed two members of an Iranian Kurdish armed opposition group in northern Iraq on Friday, a senior official from the exiled party said, blaming the attack on Iran.
Since the start of the Middle East war, Iran has repeatedly struck positions belonging to Iranian Kurdish exiled groups in Iraq.
“A drone struck one of our positions at 4.40pm, killing two party members and wounding four others,” Mardin Zahidi, from the Khabat Organisation of Iranian Kurdistan, told AFP.
The attack occurred in the mountains of Bashiqa, in an area under Kurdish control, between the city of Mosul and the autonomous Kurdistan region.
Zahidi blamed the attack “on Iran and its militias”.
Turkey’s defence ministry on Friday said a ballistic missile from Iran had been shot down in Turkish airspace by Nato forces, the third such incident of the Middle East war.
“A ballistic munition launched from Iran and entering Turkish airspace was neutralised by Nato air and missile defence assets deployed in the eastern Mediterranean,” a ministry statement said.
Hours earlier, sirens sounded at Turkey’s southern Incirlik airbase, a key Nato facility where US troops are stationed located just outside the southern city of Adana, state news agency Anadolu reported.
Nato air defences shot down a first ballistic missile fired from Iran on 4 March, with a second intercepted on Monday.
On the main street of Metula on Thursday morning there was one thing everybody agreed on: the night had been “difficult”.
The sirens had fallen silent only a few hours earlier when military authorities were sure there would be no further waves of attacks with rockets and drones on targets across northern Israel launched by Hezbollah, the Lebanon-based militant Islamist movement, and its sponsor, Iran.
Yet any calm was fragile and partial.
Warplanes flew low over the small town, the northernmost community in Israel, and the loud percussive bang of interceptions of missiles came frequently. In the background was the thud and crack of what residents drinking coffee in the Bela cafe said was Israeli artillery firing not far away.
Pro-Israel Palestinian militia have launched repeated raids, clandestine assassination and abduction operations deep inside parts of Gaza controlled by Hamas in recent months, with new operations launched recently despite the outbreak of conflict with Iran.
The militia, which are all based in eastern parts of Gaza that are under Israeli control after a ceasefire came into effect in October, have received significant logistic support from Israel since last year but appear to have increased their firepower, allowing new and more aggressive attacks in recent weeks.
Israeli strikes in Gaza, which had averaged around 10 a day across the devastated territory over the last five months, have continued even as Israeli jets carry out bombing campaigns in Iran and Lebanon.
On Sunday, an Israeli airstrike and tank shelling killed six Palestinians, including two women and a girl, in separate attacks in Gaza City, the deadliest incidents in Gaza since the US-Israeli offensive on Iran began, health officials said. At least 16 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza by airstrikes since the outbreak of war with Iran on 28 February, health officials say.
All six crew members on board a US KC-135 military aerial refuelling plane that crashed in western Iraq yesterday have been confirmed dead, US Central Command said in an update Friday. USCentcom, who had earlier today said that only four of the six had died, again made clear that the crash was not caused by hostile fire or friendly fire.
Iran’s new supreme leader Mojtaba Khamenei is wounded and likely disfigured, US defense secretary Pete Hegseth claimed on Friday, questioning Khamenei’s ability to govern after nearly two weeks of US and Israeli attacks on Iran. There is at present no proof for Hegseth’s claim. No images have been released of Khamenei, who was injured in an Israeli strike at the start of the war that killed much of his family, including his father and wife, on 28 February, and the first public comments in his name were delivered on state tv by a presenter on Thursday.
Donald Trump spoke with Fox News this morning, where he said that the US planned on hitting Iran “very hard” over the next week, according to Reuters who heard Trump’s comments. The comment echoed an earlier post he had on Truth Social on Friday, in which he said: “Watch what happens to these deranged scumbags today” in reference to the Iranian regime. “They’ve been killing innocent people all over the world for 47 years, and now I, as the 47th President of the United States of America, am killing them,” he wrote. “What a great honor it is to do so!”
The Israeli military has launched a new campaign across Iran, the IDF said, with Iranian state TV reporting explosions heard across Tehran. The IDF said it has completed its most recent wave of strikes in Tehran, Shiraz and Ahvaz in Iran. The IDF had earlier issued evacuation warnings for parts of Tehran and Qazvin, which is located about 144 kilometres (89 miles) northwest of the capital.
Air defences in the United Arab Emirates have intercepted 27 drones and seven ballistic missiles today, the UAE defence ministry said. Since the start of the conflict, UAE air defences have tallied 285 ballistic missiles, 15 cruise missiles and 1567 drones heading into their territory.
Israel’s military said it struck the Zrarieh Bridge spanning the Litani River early on Friday, in what appears to be the first time Israel has acknowledged attacking civilian infrastructure in Lebanon since the conflict began. Reuters reports that Israeli defence minister Israel Katz said on Friday that the Lebanese government “will pay increasing costs through damage to infrastructure and loss of territory” until Hezbollah is disarmed.
Iran’s Revolutionary Guards have warned that any new protests against the authorities would be met with a stronger response than in January, when several thousand people were killed.
NATO air and missile defence assets have shot down an Iranian missile fired into Turkish airspace, Turkey’s ministry of defence said on Friday. “All necessary are being taken decisively and without hesitation against any threat directed at our country’s territory and airspace,” the ministry said in its statement.
Two people were killed in Oman on Friday after air defences intercepted a drone over the Al Awahi industrial area, according to state media. The drone was one of two that were shot by air defences on Friday, but the second one did not cause any injuries.
Explosions shook buildings in Dubai, reports said, and a large cloud of smoke hung over a central area of the financial hub after what authorities described as a fire in an industrial area.
UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres landed in Beirut today for “a visit of solidarity with the people of Lebanon”. During a short news conference, he calledon Hezbollah and Israel to negotiate a ceasefire “to stop the war and pave the way to find a solution to allow Lebanon to become a country independent, with sovereignty and territorial integrity respected”, adding that this “is no longer the time of armed groups. This is a time of strong states.”
Updated
Images show a fireball erupting after an Israeli airstrike that targeted a building in the southern Lebanese village of Abbasiyyeh today.
It coems as UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres called on Israel and Hezbollah to “stop the war” at the start of a visit to Beirut, saying it was “no longer the time of armed groups”.
The UN will launch an urgent humanitarian fundraiser today to assist the more than 800,000 people registered as displaced in Lebanon.
More than 1,000 cargo ships, mainly oil and gas tankers, have been blocked from transiting the strait of Hormuz by the Israeli-US war against Iran after Tehran closed the key maritime passage.
Officials in the Trump administration have suggested ways to get ships moving again, but amid continued Iranian strikes on tankers, and reports that Iran has started mining the narrow waterway, the proposed naval escorts have failed to materialise – even as energy prices have soared.
Israel has issued evacuation orders for much of southern Lebanon, instructing residents within 25 miles of the border between the two countries to head north. The order covers major Lebanese cities and dozens of villages.
The Guardian’s William Christou reports from Nabatieh, a city in south Lebanon hit by Israeli strikes.
Iranian president Masoud Pezeshkian also attended the al-Quds Day march in Tehran on Friday, waving and smiling at the other demonstrators at the annual rally in support of Palestinian rights.
Iranian state media released photos of Iran’s senior leadership at the rally in an apparent show of strength. Earlier Friday, US defence secretary Pete Hegseth said Iran’s leadership was “desperate and hiding”. “They’ve gone underground. Cowering. That’s what rats do,” Hegseth said.
All six crew members on board a US KC-135 military aerial refuelling plane that crashed in western Iraq yesterday have been confirmed dead, US Central Command said in an update Friday.
USCentcom, who had earlier today said that only four of the six had died, again made clear that the crash was not caused by hostile fire or friendly fire.
The identities of the members who died are being withheld their families can be notified, USCentcom said.
This plane was Ithe fourth US aircraft lost since the US and Israel began launching strikes against Iran on 28 February. Three US air force fighter jets were mistakenly shot down in a friendly fire incident by Kuwait air defences earlier this month. All crew members in those jets ejected safely.
Seven US troops have been killed in the conflict, while as many as 150 US troops have been wounded. The death toll in Iran is more than 1,300, according to the country’s UN ambassador.
Both Donald Trump and the US defence secretary, Pete Hegseth, have warned that the Iran war would probably claim more American lives before the conflict ends.
Updated
Iranian foreign minister Abbas Araghchi posted video on X of Iranians reacting to an airstrike in Tehran during the annual al-Quds Day march for Palestinian rights.
He said their reaction – the video shows them yelling and gesturing defiantly toward the smoke rising in the distance rather than running away – is “nightmare for aggressors”.
“Iranians will ALWAYS stand firm and NEVER cower before cowardly attacks,” Araghchi said.
Proud and honored to have accompanied the Strong and Resilient People of Iran to mark International Quds Day.
— Seyed Abbas Araghchi (@araghchi) March 13, 2026
Iranians will ALWAYS stand firm and NEVER cower before cowardly attacks.
Video: Reaction of demonstrators when Tehran was bombed today is nightmare for aggressors. pic.twitter.com/0dtcHXMlTE
Oil tankers carrying Russian oil immediately rerouted to India when the US lifted sanctions, according to a senior risk analyst at Lloyd’s List Intelligence, the London-based shipping intelligence publisher.
“We instantaneously saw ships, shadow fleet tankers, sanctioned ones, nonsanctioned ones, making U turns, diverting course,” said senior risk analyst Bridget Diakun. “They were initially going towards Malaysia or to China, and they completely turned around and started heading for India. So India is at this point, able to outbid the buyers in China.”
Diakun said the lifting of sanctions is “a godsend for Russia’s shadow fleet”.
“They’re in a position where now Russia can make a lot of money because it’s given a pass,” Diakun said.
Ukraine president Volodymyr Zelenskyy said on Friday that the decision to lift sanctions against Russia was not going to help end the war in Ukraine, now in its fourth year, Reuters reports.
“This single easing by the US could provide Russia with around $10 billion for the war. It certainly does not help (to achieve) peace,” Zelenskyy, who is visiting Paris, said during a joint press conference with French president Emmanuel Macron.
Air defences in the United Arab Emirates have intercepted 27 drones and seven ballistic missiles today, the UAE defence ministry said.
Since the start of the conflict, UAE air defences have tallied 285 ballistic missiles, 15 cruise missiles and 1567 drones heading into their territory.
Updated
Israel’s military said it struck the Zrarieh Bridge spanning the Litani River early on Friday, in what appears to be the first time Israel has acknowledged attacking civilian infrastructure in Lebanon since the conflict began.
Reuters reports that Israeli defence minister Israel Katz said on Friday that the Lebanese government “will pay increasing costs through damage to infrastructure and loss of territory” until Hezbollah is disarmed.
“This is only the beginning,” Katz said.
During the press conference, Hegseth said there is no clear evidence that Iran has placed new mines in the strait of Hormuz.
The assessment by Hegseth contrasts with news reports earlier this week suggesting Iran had deployed about a dozen mines in the strait, the conduit for a fifth of the world’s oil.
Asked about the possibility of mines in the strait, Hegseth said:
We’ve heard them talk about it just like you’ve reported recklessly and wildly about it. But ... we have no clear evidence of that.
Updated
Hegseth says success in the conflict is defined by “reaching the military objectives that we’ve laid out”.
He says the US has internal metrics that look at those objectives that are presented to president Trump, who decides how long he wants the campaign to continue.
The Pentagon chief is now drawing parallels with Bush and Obama, who he says were constantly expanding their mission objectives.
Asked about Tucker Carlson’s comments about the war being “disgusting”, he says the US will “execute on the mission, whatever people say about this”.
That’s all from the press conference.
Updated
Asked about the air strike on a girls’ school that left 175 people, mostly children, dead, Hegseth says he will not let “reporting lead us … the truth matters”.
He says Centcom has designated an officer to investigate what happened “from outside Centcom”.
Hegseth adds that the fact of the probe taking place “doesn’t mean anything more than that” and reemphasises that the US does not target civilians, which he says is in contrast to Iran.
We don’t target, Iran does.
We will investigate, we will get to the truth and we will share it when we have it.
Hegseth says news reports that Iran could launch a drone attack on California was “bad reporting”.
He says:
There’s a lot of thing Iran has said it could for a long time, including engaging their proxies and getting them involved in the fight which they haven’t been able to do.
So, we’re watching that very closely.
Updated
In response, the US defence secretary says “the only thing prohibiting traffic in the strait at the moment is Iran shooting at shipping”.
He says the US “has a plan for every option” and that it will not allow the strait to remain “contested”.
On denying Iran’s ability to pursue a nuclear weapon, he says that remains a “core mission”.
Updated
Caine says US artillery forces made history by firing the first precision-strike missiles ever used in combat “reaching deep into enemy territory”.
He says he spoke to the crew he fired the first precision-strike missile, including one 20-year-old man who had only been in the army for six months and the unit for two.
“I asked him to walk me through a fire mission, not just what they do but what they feel,” he says.
“One of them just looked at me and said ‘it’s awesome’.”
General Dan Caine, chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, starts by appealing for people to keep the airmen who crashed in Iraq “in your thoughts”.
He says more updates will be available throughout the day as the rescue mission continues.
Caine says Iranian combat power has continued to decline as a result of strikes. He says the US has hit 6,000 targets so far.
The Iranian navy has been rendered “ineffective”, he says. However, Iran still has the capability to harm “friendly forces” and commercial shipping, he says.
The US is prioritising targeting Iran’s mine-laying enterprise, he adds.
Hegseth turns to Iran’s new supreme leader Mojtaba Khamenei’s first public statement yesterday and questions its legitimacy.
The defence secretary says:
We know the new so-called not-so-supreme leader is wounded and likely disfigured.
He put out a statement yesterday – a weak one actually – but there was no voice and there was no video. It was a written statement.
He called for unity… apparently killing tens of thousands of protesters is his kind o unity.
Hegseth questions why the supreme leader issued a written statement, adding:
I think you know why.
He is now taking shots at media headlines, which he says do not paint a true picture of America’s success in its war on Iran. “We’re going up, they’re going down,” he says. “President Trump holds the cards.”
Friday will see the highest number of US strikes so far against Iranian targets, Hegseth tells the briefing.
Updated
Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth is now speaking to the media, updating on the latest on Trump’s war on Iran.
He says the Iranian regime will only see the stars and stripes of the USA and Israel’s star of David, which he describes as “their worst nightmare”.
Hegseth says Iran’s missile volume is down 90%, while its one-way attack drones were down 95% yesterday. Iran does not have the ability to build any more weapons, he adds.
The US is “dealing with” Iran’s attacks in the strait of Hormuz and it is something that does not need to be worried about, Hegseth says, adding:
Their production lines, their military plants, their defence innovation centres; defeated. Iran’s leadership is in no better shape.
Desperate and hiding, they’ve gone underground, cowering – that’s what rats do.
Updated
Four of six crew members on board a US KC-135 military aerial refuelling plane that crashed in western Iraq yesterday have been confirmed dead, US Central Command said Friday. While the circumstances of the crash are still under investigation, USCentcom made clear on Friday that it was not caused by hostile fire or friendly fire.
Donald Trump spoke with Fox News this morning, where he said that the US planned on hitting Iran “very hard” over the next week, according to Reuters who heard Trump’s comments. The comment echoed an earlier post he had on Truth Social on Friday, in which he said: “Watch what happens to these deranged scumbags today” in reference to the Iranian regime. “They’ve been killing innocent people all over the world for 47 years, and now I, as the 47th President of the United States of America, am killing them,” he wrote. “What a great honor it is to do so!”
The Israeli military has launched a new campaign across Iran, the IDF said, with Iranian state TV reporting explosions heard across Tehran. The IDF said it has completed its most recent wave of strikes in Tehran, Shiraz and Ahvaz in Iran. The IDF had earlier issued evacuation warnings for parts of Tehran and Qazvin, which is located about 144 kilometres (89 miles) northwest of the capital.
Iran’s Revolutionary Guards have warned that any new protests against the authorities would be met with a stronger response than in January, when several thousand people were killed.
NATO air and missile defence assets have shot down an Iranian missile fired into Turkish airspace, Turkey’s ministry of defence said on Friday. “All necessary are being taken decisively and without hesitation against any threat directed at our country’s territory and airspace,” the ministry said in its statement.
Two people were killed in Oman on Friday after air defences intercepted a drone over the Al Awahi industrial area, according to state media. The drone was one of two that were shot by air defences on Friday, but the second one did not cause any injuries.
Explosions shook buildings in Dubai, reports said, and a large cloud of smoke hung over a central area of the financial hub after what authorities described as a fire in an industrial area.
UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres has landed in Beirut today for “a visit of solidarity with the people of Lebanon”. During a short news conference, he calledon Hezbollah and Israel to negotiate a ceasefire “to stop the war and pave the way to find a solution to allow Lebanon to become a country independent, with sovereignty and territorial integrity respected”, adding that this “is no longer the time of armed groups. This is a time of strong states.”
French president Emmanuel Macron said a French soldier had been killed in an attack in Erbil in Iraq’s autonomous Kurdistan region – marking the first French military death of the war. Several other soldiers were wounded, he said. The French army said earlier that French soldiers had been engaged in training with Iraqi partners during the drone attack in the region.
UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres has landed in Beirut today for “a visit of solidarity with the people of Lebanon”.
During a short news conference, he calledon Hezbollah and Israel to negotiate a ceasefire “to stop the war and pave the way to find a solution to allow Lebanon to become a country independent, with sovereignty and territorial integrity respected”, adding that this “is no longer the time of armed groups. This is a time of strong states.”
“Lebanon was dragged into a war that is not a war that its people would be willing to have,” he said. “I sincerely hope that in my next visit to Lebanon, I’ll be able to visit a Lebanon in peace.”
Donald Trump spoke with Fox News this morning, where he said that the US planned on hitting Iran ‘“very hard” over the next week, according to Reuters who heard Trump’s comments.
The comment echoed an earlier post he had on Truth Social on Friday, in which he said: “Watch what happens to these deranged scumbags today” in reference to the Iranian regime.
“They’ve been killing innocent people all over the world for 47 years, and now I, as the 47th President of the United States of America, am killing them,” he wrote. “What a great honor it is to do so!”
Updated
NATO air and missile defence assets have shot down an Iranian missile fired into Turkish airspace, Turkey’s ministry of defence said on Friday.
“All necessary are being taken decisively and without hesitation against any threat directed at our country’s territory and airspace,” the ministry said in its statement.
Here are some images coming out of Beirut, which the IDF said it has hit with a wave of airstrikes. Hundreds of thousands of displaced residents have fled to the nation’s capital to seek shelter. Eight were killed on Thursday when two bombs from an Israeli drone had fallen in quick succession on the beachfront corniche where displaced people had been sleeping for the past week.
Four of six crew members on board a US KC-135 military aerial refuelling plane that crashed in western Iraq yesterday have been confirmed dead, US Central Command said Friday.
While the circumstances of the crash are still under investigation, USCentcom made clear on Friday that it was not caused by hostile fire or friendly fire.
The identities of the members who died are being withheld their families can be notified, USCentcom said.
This plane was Ithe fourth US aircraft lost since the US and Israel began launching strikes against Iran on 28 February. Three US air force fighter jets were mistakenly shot down in a friendly fire incident by Kuwait air defences earlier this month. All crew members in those jets ejected safely.
Seven US troops have been killed in the conflict, while as many as 150 US troops have been wounded. The death toll in Iran is more than 1,300, according to the country’s UN ambassador.
Both Donald Trump and the US defence secretary, Pete Hegseth, have warned that the Iran war would probably claim more American lives before the conflict ends.
Updated
China said on Friday that it will donate $200,000 to the parents of the students killed in the airstrike on the Shajareh Tayyebeh primary school in Iran, AFP reports.
Donald Trump has blamed Iran for the attack in Minab that killed up to 168 people, most of them seven- to 12-year-old girls – but geolocation, videos, satellite imagery and fragments apparently recovered from the site indicate otherwise.
Beijing’s foreign ministry said the Chinese Red Cross Society will donate the $200,000 in emergency humanitarian assistance to the Iranian Red Crescent Society but also specifically for “condolences and compensations” to the parents of dead students. Ministry spokesman Guo Jiakun called the strike a “severe violation” of international humanitarian law.
“Attacks on schools and children constitute a more severe violation of international humanitarian law and breach the bottom line of human conscience and morality,” Guo told reporters at a regular news briefing.
“China stands ready to continue providing necessary assistance to Iran in a humanitarian spirit to support the Iranian people through this difficult time,” he said.
Since the start of the conflict, 2,975 people have been transported to hospitals with injuries in Israel, the Israeli ministry of health said on Friday.
Of those individuals, 85 remain hospitalised – nine with serious injuries, 10 with moderate injuries and 64 with mild injuries.
Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps broadcasted a statement on state TV on Friday that they will respond to any new anti-regime protests with “a stronger blow” than they did during the January protests, AFP reports.
The Human Rights Activists News Agency estimated that more than 7,000 people were killed in the January protests, which Iranian authorities blamed on “terrorists” working on behalf of Israel and the United States.
Several rights organisations accused Iranian security forces of deliberately firing on demonstrators.
Donald Trump has also called for Iranians to rise up and overthrow their government.
The Australian government has directed all “non-essential” officials to leave Lebanon because of the conflict, the foreign minister, Penny Wong, said on Friday.
A small number of officials will remain to support Australians who need it, she added.
Wong on Thursday directed all non-essential officials to leave Israel and the United Arab Emirates. She again urged Australians to leave the Middle East when they can.
“Don’t wait until it’s too late. It may be the last chance for some time,” she said.
Explosions were heard across Tehran, according to Iranian state TV, as the Israeli military said it has completed its most recent wave of strikes in Tehran, Shiraz and Ahvaz in Iran.
The IDF had earlier issued evacuation warnings for parts of Tehran and Qazvin, which is located about 144 kilometres (89 miles) northwest of the capital.
Updated
Two people were killed in Oman on Friday after air defences intercepted a drone over the Al Awahi industrial area, according to state media.
The drone was one of two that were shot by air defences on Friday, but the second one did not cause any injuries.
If you’re just joining our live coverage of the US-Israel war on Iran, here’s a recap of the latest key news lines. It’s now 10.30am in Tehran, 9am in Tel Aviv and Beirut and 3am in Washington DC.
Iran’s Revolutionary Guards have warned that any new protests against the authorities would be met with a stronger response than in January, when several thousand people were killed.
US Central Command said it was carrying out ongoing rescue efforts after it lost a military refuelling aircraft in “friendly airspace” in Iraq, also saying neither hostile or friendly fire were to blame. It said the incident involved two planes, the second of which landed safely. The KC-135 aircraft that crashed had at least five crew members onboard, according to a US official quoted on condition of anonymity.
Israel launched intense strikes against Tehran and areas surrounding the Iranian capital, while fresh strikes on Beirut included one that hit a car in the coastal neighbourhood of Jnah, killing one person, according to the Lebanese health ministry. A strike in the eastern Lebanese village of Bar Elias wounded a local official with al-Jamaa al-Islamiya, or the Islamic Group, and two others, the state-run National News Agency said.
Donald Trump declared the US was “totally destroying” Iran’s ruling regime – “militarily, economically and otherwise” – and that it was his “great honour” to be killing them.
Sirens were heard early Friday at Turkey’s Incirlik air base, a key Nato facility in the south, state-run media reported. There was no immediate official comment.
Explosions shook buildings in Dubai, reports said, and a large cloud of smoke hung over a central area of the financial hub after what authorities described as a fire in an industrial area.
French president Emmanuel Macron said a French soldier had been killed in an attack in Erbil in Iraq’s autonomous Kurdistan region – marking the first French military death of the war. Several other soldiers were wounded, he said. The French army said earlier that French soldiers had been engaged in training with Iraqi partners during the drone attack in the region.
The pro-Iranian Ashab Alkahf group in Iraq later warned that French interests “in Iraq and the region” would be “under targeting fire” after the arrival of a French aircraft carrier.
Benjamin Netanyahu issued a veiled threat to kill Iran’s new supreme leader, saying he “wouldn’t take out life insurance policies” on Iran’s new ayatollah or the leader of Hezbollah. The Israeli prime minister used his first press conference since the start of the war to defend his joint military assault with the US against Iran.
The US has temporarily waived sanctions on Russian oil stranded at sea as Trump administration officials attempt to reverse a surge in prices that is causing mounting apprehension about global supplies.
The US Navy – perhaps with an international coalition – will escort vessels through the strait of Hormuz when it is militarily possible, US treasury secretary Scott Bessent said. The plan to escort ships would go ahead as soon as the US had “complete control of the skies and ... [Iran’s] rebuilding capabilities for the missiles completely degraded”, he told Sky News.
Updated
Iran’s Revolutionary Guards have warned that any new protests against the authorities would be met with a stronger response than in January, when several thousand people were killed.
“The evil enemy, failing to achieve its field battle goals, is once again pursuing the instillation of fear and street riots,” the Guards said in a statement broadcast on television and quoted by AFP on Friday.
The statement promised “a stronger blow than on January 8” in the event of new unrest.
Here are some of the latest images coming out of the Middle East today amid the US-Israel war on Iran.
The United States has temporarily waived sanctions on Russian oil stranded at sea as Trump administration officials attempt to reverse a surge in prices that is causing mounting apprehension about global supplies.
Scott Bessent, the US Treasury secretary, announced a “temporary authorisation” late on Thursday, allowing countries to buy the stranded Russian oil for 30 days. Trump was “working to keep prices low”, he said, after average US fuel prices rose by 65 cents per gallon in a month.
Bessent claimed:
This narrowly tailored, short-term measure applies only to oil already in transit and will not provide significant financial benefit to the Russian government, which derives the majority of its energy revenue from taxes assessed at the point of extraction.
Brent crude, the international benchmark, remained above $100 per barrel during early trading on Friday despite this latest in a string of measures designed to soothe concerns around the economic impact of the US-Israel warn on Iran.
The full report is here:
Saudi Arabian forces downed a “hostile drone” heading towards the embassies district in Riyadh, the defence ministry has said.
It said in another post on X also quoting a spokesperson that three drones had been intercepted in the Al-Kharj governate and the Empty Quarter desert.
Updated
Donald Trump has declared the US is “totally destroying” Iran’s ruling regime, adding it is his “great honour” to be killing them.
In a post on his Truth Social platform, the US president also lashed the New York Times, saying:
We are totally destroying the terrorist regime of Iran, militarily, economically, and otherwise, yet, if you read the Failing New York Times, you would incorrectly think that we are not winning.
Trump went on to say:
Iran’s Navy is gone, their Air Force is no longer, missiles, drones and everything else are being decimated, and their leaders have been wiped from the face of the earth. We have unparalleled firepower, unlimited ammunition, and plenty of time - Watch what happens to these deranged scumbags today.
They’ve been killing innocent people all over the world for 47 years, and now I, as the 47th President of the United States of America, am killing them. What a great honor it is to do so!
There has been no immediate official comment after sirens were heard early on Friday at Turkey’s Incirlik airbase, a key Nato facility where US troops are stationed near the south-eastern city of Adana.
AFP is also reporting that residents of Adana, which lies 10km (six miles) away from the base, were woken around 3.25am (0025 GMT) by sirens, which sounded for around five minutes, according to the Ekonomim business news website.
It said a red alert sounded at the base.
Several people posted mobile phone footage on social media of a glowing image flying through the sky, suggesting it could be a missile heading for the airbase, it said.
Across the city, sirens from fire engines and the security forces could be heard for a long time, it added.
The incident took place four days after Nato air defences shot down a ballistic missile in Turkish airspace that was fired from Iran – the second in five days.
Nato said it shot down the second ballistic missile fired from Iran on Monday, prompting a warning from Turkey to Tehran not to take “provocative steps”.
The announcement came shortly after Washington said it was closing down its consulate in Adana, urging all American citizens to leave south-eastern Turkey.
Updated
Turkey’s state-run news agency has given some background after reporting that sirens were heard on Friday at the country’s Incirlik air base, a key Nato facility in the south.
The Anadolu Agency said:
Earlier, two ballistic missiles heading toward Türkiye were intercepted by Nato air defenses.
The Turkish national defense ministry said Monday that a ballistic missile fired from Iran into Turkish airspace was neutralized by Nato air and missile defense assets deployed in the Eastern Mediterranean.
The ministry added that debris from the missile fell on vacant land in the southeastern Gaziantep province, noting that there were no casualties or injuries.
On Thursday of last week the Guardian reported:
Turkey said that Nato air defences had intercepted an Iranian missile headed toward its airspace, presumably to strike Nato forces at the Incirlik airbase. Turkish officials condemned the attack, while calling on all sides for de-escalation.
Updated
Sirens have been heard at Incirlik air base, a key Nato facility in south Turkey, the state news agency is being quoted as saying.
We’ll bring you more on this shortly.
Saudi Arabia’s defence ministry is saying that two drones have been intercepted and destroyed in the eastern region.
Updated
More now after reports of explosions in Dubai on Friday morning: thick black smoke rose over the financial hub’s skyline after what authorities described as a fire in an industrial area of the city-state.
A fire was seen in Dubai’s Al Quoz neighbourhood and bystanders gathered to watch the smoke from the blaze, the Associated Press is reporting.
Police stopped an AP journalist from going closer to the site of the fire, which was in a cul-de-sac.
The Dubai media office, which issues statements for its government, posted on X that “debris from a successful interception caused a minor incident on the façade of a building in central Dubai”.
It said there had been no injuries, though the black smoke curled over the skyline as far as the sail-shaped Burj al-Arab luxury hotel.
Updated
Russia’s economic envoy Kirill Dmitriev has the global energy market “cannot remain stable” without his country’s oil.
His comments came after the US said it would temporarily allow the sale of Russian oil that is at sea, as energy prices soared after US-Israeli strikes on Iran.
Dmitriev posted on Telegram:
The United States is effectively acknowledging the obvious: without Russian oil, the global energy market cannot remain stable.
Explosions rattled buildings in Dubai and a large cloud of smoke hung over a central area of the city on Friday, AFP correspondents are saying.
One heard a huge blast and feeling a building shake in the financial hub, the news agency reports.
Sirens could be heard coming from the direction of Sheikh Zayed Road, the United Arab Emirates city’s main artery.
A drone fell on Thursday near Dubai’s financial district after Iran threatened to hit economic institutions, prompting some companies to evacuate staff.
The UAE has repeatedly come under Iranian attack during the Middle East war, with Dubai’s airport – among the world’s biggest – targeted as well as its port and luxury real estate including the Palm Jumeirah.
Updated
A pro-Iranian group in Iraq has warned that French interests “in Iraq and the region” will be “under targeting fire” after the arrival of a French aircraft carrier.
The statement on Friday by the Ashab Alkahf group on Telegram, cited by the Agence France-Presse news agency, came after French president Emmanuel Macron announced that a French soldier had been killed and several injured in an attack in Erbil in Iraq’s autonomous Kurdistan region.
Asian shares were mostly lower on Friday, tracking Wall Street losses, while oil prices hovered around $100 per barrel as anxiety remained over the Iran war and its impact on supplies of crude oil and gas.
Tokyo’s Nikkei 225 index slipped 1.1%, while South Korea’s Kospi fell 1.3%. Australia’s ASX 200 was up 0.1% and Taiwan’s Taiex was trading 0.7% lower.
Oil prices held steady. Brent crude, the international standard, gained 0.6% to $97.22 per barrel. It topped $100 on Thursday, days after jumping to near $120 earlier this week.
On Thursday, Iran’s new supreme leader, Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei, in his first public statements, vowed Iran would keep fighting. And that it would continue to use the strait of Hormuz – a crucial waterway for oil and gas transport which has been effectively closed amid significant traffic disruptions – as leverage against the US and Israel.
Updated
Emmanuel Macron has confirmed on social media that a French soldier has been killed in an attack in Erbil in Iraq’s autonomous Kurdistan region – marking the first French military death of the Middle East war.
The French president named him in a post on X as Chief Warrant Officer Arnaud Frion of the 7th Battalion of Chasseurs Alpins from Varces, saying he “died for France”.
To his family, to his brothers in arms, I want to express all the affection and solidarity of the Nation.
Macron also said in the post that several French soldiers had been wounded. He added:
This attack against our forces engaged in the fight against Daesh [Islamic State] since 2015 is unacceptable. Their presence in Iraq is part of the strict framework of the fight against terrorism. The war in Iran cannot justify such attacks.
As mentioned, France’s army said earlier that six French soldiers in training with Iraqi partners had been wounded and taken to medical centre after a drone attack in the region.
Updated
US and Israeli strikes hit parts of Tehran on Friday, Iranian media reported, adding that homes shook from the blasts.
“The intensity of the explosions was such that residents of these areas reported their houses shaking. No further details have been provided about the extent of damage or possible casualties,” Iran’s Fars news agency reported.
Updated
Iran started to lay mines on Thursday in the strait of Hormuz, a crucial Gulf passage for 20% of the world’s oil supply, US officials told the New York Times.
While Donald Trump has boasted that the US military has destroyed Iran’s navy, officials said Iran had started using smaller boats to place mines and enforce the closure of the strait it had imposed on its Gulf neighbours, sending oil prices sky high.
Iran’s move to close the narrow passage has long been an expected move by war planners in previous administrations but apparently took the Trump administration by surprise.
CNN reported on Thursday that senior Trump administration officials told lawmakers in recent classified briefings that they did not plan for the possibility of Iran closing the strait in response to strikes by the US and Israel.
“Planning around preventing this exact scenario … has been a bedrock principle of US national security policy for decades,” a former US official who served in Republican and Democratic administrations told CNN. “I’m dumbfounded.”
Updated
Hello and welcome to our ongoing live coverage of the US-Israeli war on Iran and the impact it is having on the region and the global economy.
Here are the latest developments:
US Central Command said it was carrying out rescue efforts after it lost a military refuelling aircraft in “friendly airspace” in Iraq, while saying neither hostile or friendly fire were to blame. A statement said “rescue efforts are ongoing” after an incident involving two planes, the second of which landed safely.
The KC-135 aircraft that crashed had at least five crew members onboard, according to US official, who spoke to the Associated Press on condition of anonymity. US central command said the crash was not due to hostile fire or friendly fire.
Israel launched fresh strikes on Tehran and Beirut.
Donald Trump said his war on Iran was “moving along very rapidly” and “doing very well”. He called Iran “a nation of terror and hate” and said it was “paying a big price right now”.
Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu issued a veiled threat to kill Iran’s new supreme leader, saying he “wouldn’t take out life insurance policies” on Iran’s new ayatollah or the leader of Hezbollah. Using his first press conference since the start of the war to defend his joint military assault with the US against Iran, he said Israel aimed to stop Iran from moving its nuclear and ballistic projects underground, and that some Israeli strikes had killed top Iranian nuclear scientists.
The US Navy, perhaps with an international coalition, will escort vessels through the strait of Hormuz when it is militarily possible, US treasury secretary Scott Bessent told Sky News. The plan to escort ships would go ahead as soon as the US has “complete control of the skies and ... [Iran’s] rebuilding capabilities for the missiles completely degraded,” he said.
French president Emmanuel Macron said a French soldier had been killed in an attack in Erbil in Iraq’s autonomous Kurdistan region – marking the first French military death of the war. Several other soldiers were wounded, he said. The French army said earlier that French soldiers had been engaged in training with Iraqi partners during the drone attack in the region.
Trump said the Iranian national football team was “welcome” to participate at this summer’s World Cup but added: “I really don’t believe it is appropriate that they be there, for their own life and safety.” The US president didn’t elaborate on the nature of the risk at the Cup, which is taking place in the US, Canada and Mexico.
A base housing UK and US forces and also in Erbil, northern Iraq, came under attack from an Iranian drone last night but there were no significant injuries and all American soldiers stationed there remained on duty, a US defence official told BBC News. No British soldiers were injured in the attack either, the broadcaster understood.
A ballistic missile fired from Iran hit an open area in central Israel, causing no injuries, the Israeli military’s home front command said, as quoted by Haaretz.
Saudi Arabia’s defence forces said it intercepted a drone heading towards the Shaybah oil field – an area drones have been targeting regularly this week – as well as a ballistic missile and three drones launched towards the country’s eastern region.
Qatar’s defence ministry said it had intercepted two ballistic missiles, one cruise missile and multiple drones launched from Iran.
Updated