US strikes hit over 80 targets in Iran after Strait of Hormuz ship attacks
The US launched strikes on more than 80 targets in Iran early Wednesday, hours after three merchant ships were hit in the Strait of Hormuz. The interim ceasefire is hanging by a thread.
The escalation everyone feared has arrived. The United States launched strikes on more than 80 targets inside Iran in the early hours of Wednesday, hours after three merchant ships were hit in the Strait of Hormuz. US Central Command (CENTCOM) said the operation was meant to “impose heavy costs” on those attacking commercial shipping “crewed by innocent civilians” in an international waterway.
What did the US strike in Iran?
According to CENTCOM, the precision strikes targeted air defences, radar sites and anti-ship missile batteries, as well as dozens of fast boats used by Iran’s Revolutionary Guard. A day earlier, the US Treasury had already revoked the waiver allowing Iran to sell oil and petrochemicals — cutting off a revenue stream negotiated during the recent talks.
Tehran answered quickly, at least in words: the Revolutionary Guard claims it targeted dozens of US military sites in Bahrain and Kuwait “in response to US ceasefire violations”, shortly after Kuwait’s military reported air-raid sirens over missile and drone attacks. Those claims have not been independently verified.
Is the US-Iran ceasefire over?
Formally not yet — in practice it is hanging by a thread. The interim agreement that paused the fighting has been eroding for days; oil prices had already spiked when Trump declared the ceasefire “over”, and this direct exchange of fire is the most serious test so far. For Portugal and for Europe, the channel that carries roughly a fifth of the world’s oil is once again the most dangerous spot on the map. Official statements on the operation are on the CENTCOM website.
Image: U.S. Navy Photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Clas… / Wikimedia Commons (public domain)