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US completes the 8th consecutive night of attacks on Iran

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WASHINGTON/CAIRO: The U.S. said it had completed an eighth ​straight night of attacks against Iran after earlier announcing that two U.S. military personnel were killed in Jordan and another was missing following an Iranian attack.


The U.S. and Iran have intensified attacks since an interim ceasefire deal signed a month ago fell apart last week, raising the possibility of a return to all-out war.


U.S. Central Command said in a statement that the airstrikes began at 6 p.m. ET (2200 GMT) on Saturday, at President Donald Trump's direction.


"The strikes are designed to further degrade Iran's ability to threaten commercial shipping in the Strait of Hormuz and swiftly punish Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps forces who launched attacks against American service members in Jordan last night," it said.


Central Command later said it had completed its wave of attacks, hitting Iranian military coastal surveillance and air defence facilities.


Iran's Mehr news agency said ⁠the U.S. carried out an attack near Sirik in southern Iran, adding that no casualties or damage to infrastructure have been reported. The Tasnim news agency said the U.S. military also targeted a location ⁠near Shadegan, close to the border with Iraq.


The Iranian army then carried out a drone attack that targeted U.S. military assets and equipment at Kuwait's Al-Adiri camp and Ali Al Salem Air Base, Iran's state TV reported early Sunday, citing a statement from the army. Both bases were targeted as part of Iran's attacks against U.S. assets and allies in the Gulf since last week.


Central Command said the two deaths occurred on Friday and that a third U.S. service member was missing in action. The announcement brought the number of ‌U.S. service members killed since the war began to 16, while more than 420 have been wounded.


U.S. Defense Secretary Pete ​Hegseth posted on X: "Their sacrifice only stiffens our resolve."


Iran appeared ⁠to target Saudi Arabia as well as other U.S. Gulf allies and Jordan on Saturday after U.S. attacks on Iranian bridges, power facilities and other infrastructure.


In a written ​statement carried by the official social media accounts of Iran's supreme leader and ‌Iranian state media, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei said U.S. actions have shown that Trump's signature was "utterly worthless and devoid of credibility."


The statement warned of "even heavier costs and further humiliation" for the United States. The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Khamenei's whereabouts remain a mystery. The conflict, which began when the U.S. and ​Israel launched strikes on Iran at the end of February, hoping to disable its nuclear and missile programmes and degrade its regional proxies, has led to major disruption to energy supplies, fears over global inflation and a battle for control of the Strait of Hormuz.


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


On Saturday, Kuwait came under sustained attack, with the armed forces saying they had intercepted Iranian ballistic missiles and drones, and that some firefighters and oil sector workers had been injured while responding to the attacks.


Iran's IRGC said it had struck a U.S. military support centre at Kuwait's Camp Arifjan and destroyed a radar facility at Ali Al Salem Air Base. Kuwait Petroleum Corporation later said one of its oil facilities had been ‌hit in "repeated Iranian attacks", causing significant damage and some injuries, according to the state news agency.


The IRGC also targeted a site in Bahrain where U.S. combat aircraft were gathered at Sheikh Isa Air Base and an intelligence ​data centre, Iranian media said.


The Guards also destroyed at least two U.S. fighter aircraft and three other aircraft during a missile and drone attack early on Saturday on the U.S. base in Al Azraq, Jordan, according ​to Iranian state TV.


Reuters could ‌not independently ⁠verify the reports.


Saudi Arabia's early warning system issued alerts early on Saturday urging residents of Al-Kharj and Yanbu to seek shelter. Al-Kharj, east of Riyadh, is home to a military base that hosts U.S. troops, while Yanbu, on the Red Sea, has a key oil export terminal.


Two people briefed on the matter said an Iranian missile attack, the first on Saudi Arabia in more than three months, had triggered the alerts. The government media office ​did not respond to a request for comment.


The IRGC made no mention of any attack on Saudi Arabia.


The U.S. State Department issued a worldwide ⁠travel alert for Americans abroad on ​Saturday, citing heightened tensions in the Middle East "with the potential for unforeseen escalation." The advisory said flight cancellations and periodic airspace closures could disrupt travel.


BATTLE FOR CONTROL OF THE STRAIT Earlier, U.S. Central Command said it had hit Iranian surveillance sites, military logistics infrastructure, underground weapons storage, and maritime capabilities. U.S. airstrikes early on Saturday killed three people and wounded eight others in the southern Hormozgan province, which borders the Strait of Hormuz, while two bridges and a road tunnel were damaged, Iranian state TV reported.


Iran's Health Ministry said on Saturday that 50 people had been killed and more than 500 wounded in U.S. strikes on the country over the past three weeks.


Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei accused ​the United States of seeking control over the Strait of Hormuz, which usually handles around one-fifth of the world's oil supply.


Both sides have aimed at shipping traffic, with the U.S. saying it ​is enforcing a naval blockade and Iran saying it targets vessels violating its rules on navigating the strait.


The European Union and Gulf states called on Iran to immediately and unconditionally halt all attacks and interference with maritime navigation and to keep the strait open without conditions or fees, according to a joint statement reported by Saudi state TV on Saturday. 



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