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The US is launching a new wave of strikes in the escalating war over the Strait of Hormuz

18m ago

The video shows an explosion in a port in southern Iran as the US announces a new attack

Video verified by CBS News shows thick smoke rising from the Iranian port city of Chabahar on Wednesday.

Iranian state media reported on US strikes in the city on Wednesday, as the US Central Command announced a new wave of strikes.

Chabahar is home to a commercial port 200 kilometers east of the Strait of Hormuz, in southern Iran.

Images from a video posted online on July 15, 2026, and confirmed by CBS News Confirmed, show a plume of smoke rising from the Iranian port city of Chabahar after the US military announced new strikes in Iran.

38m ago

European aviation authorities are warning airlines not to fly in the Persian Gulf region as the war intensifies

The European Union Aviation Safety Agency warned airlines on Tuesday not to fly over certain Persian Gulf regions amid the US attack on Iran, and Iran’s retaliatory fire on American allies and commercial vessels.

EASA has issued an advisory that will remain in place until at least July 29 warning carriers to avoid the airspace of Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates and parts of the Gulf of Oman.

It notes that the implementation of the US-Iran ceasefire agreed in mid-June – which President Trump announced “more than” last week, “is subject to repeated and significant violations, which creates, again, a high level of danger in the Gulf region.”

“The preparedness and use of national and American air defense systems increases the risk of misidentification, unintended engagement and collateral effects affecting civil aviation,” said the EASA notice, adding that “unexpected military developments, combined with the possible use of missiles, drones, fighter jets and air defense systems, create a high risk of going to high altitude.”

57m ago

Oil prices remain above $85 a barrel as the war escalates

International benchmark Brent crude was still trading above $85 a barrel on Wednesday as the escalating strikes in the Strait of Hormuz continued to disrupt oil and gas flows through key shipping lanes.

Brent crude shot up to $86 a barrel on Tuesday, a one-month high, after President Trump announced the US would restore its embargo on Iranian ports and related vessels.

Brent was trading early Wednesday at $85.50, while US benchmark Texas Intermediate was trading at just under $80, both still well above pre-war levels, but below the peak of nearly $120 a barrel that Brent hit at the outbreak of the war.

7:26 AM

The US military announced new strikes on Iran

The US military’s Central Command announced a new wave of strikes in Iran on Wednesday morning, following a seven-hour overnight standoff.

“These strikes are designed to destroy the military capabilities that the Iranian military has used to attack commercial vessels in the Strait of Hormuz,” said a CENTCOM statement posted on social media.

The new strikes were announced just hours after the fourth attack in a row overnight, and the pace of attacks has increased since President Trump announced an end to the strike on July 8.

7:26 AM

Iranian officials have reported at least 30 dead and 260 injured in the latest strikes

The latest round of US airstrikes overnight in Iran has injured more than 260 people, an official in Iran’s health ministry said on Wednesday.

The comments of Hossein Kermanpour, a spokesman for the ministry, did not include the death toll figures.

In another statement, an Iranian government spokesman said at least 30 people had been killed “in recent days,” without specifying specific dates.

7:26 AM

Jordan, Bahrain and Kuwait report attacks from Iran

The Kuwaiti military said on Wednesday morning local time that it was facing a “drone attack” from Iran, hours after it announced that it had shot down dozens of drones and missiles and reported an Iranian strike on a Kuwaiti warship.

Bahrain also said its warning sirens sounded.

Meanwhile, Jordan’s military said on Wednesday it had shot down three missiles from Iran, as Tehran pressured US allies to respond to US strikes.

7:26 AM

The US is again embargoing Iran, carrying out more strikes

The US military also lifted its naval blockade of Iran and stepped up its airstrikes earlier on Wednesday.

The US Central Command (CENTCOM) said on Wednesday morning that it had completed a seven-hour wave of attacks on Iran “to enhance Iran’s ability to threaten commercial vessels and personnel.”

Days of retaliatory strikes in the Middle East by Iran and the US, as well as efforts by both nations to control the Strait of Hormuz, threaten to return the region to endless war.

7:26 AM

US closes 4th strike in a row, CENTCOM says

US Central Command said it struck dozens of Iranian targets within seven hours on Tuesday evening, including missile and drone sites and “coastal defense systems.”

The objective was to continue to degrade Iran’s ability to threaten commercial shipping and civilian personnel,” CENTCOM said in a post to X after the strikes were completed.

CENTCOM has hit Iran four nights in a row.

7:26 AM

Trump says US will strike Iranian power plants, bridges next week unless Iranians “come to the table and negotiate”

President Trump told Fox News that US strikes against Iran could be “really bad” next week, with attacks on Iranian bridges and power plants.

“We’re going to hit them hard tonight. We’re going to hit them hard tomorrow night. We’re going to hit them hard the night after,” he said. “And next week, it will be worse for them, because next week the power plants will come, next week the bridges will come.”

The president continued: “We will destroy all their power plants, we will destroy all their bridges. Unless they come to the table and negotiate.”

Mr. Trump has threatened to strike Iranian bridges and power plants in the past. Experts say attacks on civilian infrastructure could amount to war crimes, although the Trump administration has said it will reach legal targets used by the military.

The president also told Fox News’ Trey Yingst that his representatives sent a message to Iran earlier Tuesday, urging them to “make a deal.”

“We are very careful with the residents, as you know. But I said, ‘You better make a deal, you won’t be left with anything,'” he said.

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