Live updates: Iran war; Trump warns the US will seize key Iranian oil export hub Kharg Island | CNN

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Trump warns the US will seize key Iranian oil export hub Kharg Island

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CNN live in Tehran as US launches new strikes on Iran
2:31 • Source: CNN
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2:31

Here's the latest

Trump threatens to take key Iranian island: President Donald Trump warned Thursday morning the US will hit Iran “VERY HARD TONIGHT” and threatened to take Kharg Island, which handles roughly 90% of Iran’s crude exports.

• Escalation in hostilities: Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said they targeted US bases in the region overnight for a second consecutive day, following US strikes across Iran. In response to the latest US strikes, Iran said the Strait of Hormuz was closed — a claim the US military rejected. A senior Iranian official told CNN in Tehran that Iran would “respond more severely” to any future attacks.

• Talks under pressure: A Qatari delegation left Tehran after negotiations with Iranian officials, a diplomatic source said. The talks, conducted in coordination with the US, lasted into the early hours of Thursday morning local time, as the US was striking Iran.

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Trump says US will seize key Iranian oil export hub Kharg Island

A satellite image shows an oil terminal at Kharg Island, Iran, on February 25.

President Donald Trump said Thursday morning the US will take Kharg Island and other oil infrastructure in Iran.

The tiny island in the Persian Gulf is an economic lifeline for Iran and handles roughly 90% of the country’s crude exports.

The US president also warned the military will hit Iran “VERY HARD TONIGHT” as the two countries exchange fire while peace talks stall.

“The United States will be hitting Iran (Whose Navy, Air Force, Radar, Anti Aircraft, and all other forms of Defense, together with most its offensive capability, are GONE!), VERY HARD TONIGHT,” Trump wrote in a post on Truth Social.

“At some point in the not too distant future, we will be taking Kharg Island, and other oil infrastructure points, and assume total control of their Oil and Gas Markets, much like we have with Venezuela, which is working out brilliantly for both Venezuela and the United States of America,” he added.

The US and Iran traded strikes overnight with Trump warning earlier that the bombing would continue if a memorandum of understanding wasn’t reached.

European Central Bank hikes interest rates for the first time since 2023

Inside the headquarters of the European Central Bank in Frankfurt am Main, Germany, on Thursday, ahead of the bank's meeting on the Eurozone's monetary policy.

The European Central Bank raised interest rates for the first time in almost three years Thursday, as a jump in energy prices triggered by the Iran war drives inflation higher.

The ECB lifted the benchmark rate in the euro area by a quarter of a percentage point to 2.25%, becoming the first major central bank to increase borrowing costs since the war began on February 28.

“The war in the Middle East is generating inflation pressures,” the central bank said in a statement. “The outlook remains uncertain, with upside risks for inflation and downside risks for economic growth,” it added.

Inflation across the 21 countries that use the euro stood at 3.2% last month, up from 3% in April, as energy prices rose. The ECB, like other major central banks, targets an inflation rate of around 2%.

Europe depends heavily on imported fossil fuels to power its economy and is spending billions of dollars more on energy imports because of the war. Soaring energy costs threaten to derail a tentative economic recovery in the region, which only recently emerged from the energy crunch precipitated by Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine.

Headline inflation peaked at 10.6% in the euro area in October 2022. Interest rates, meanwhile, hit a record high of 4% in September 2023, following a protracted rate-hiking campaign to tame soaring prices.

The International Monetary Fund sees euro area growth at 1.1% this year, according to an April estimate, a 0.2 percentage point downgrade from its forecast in January.

Iranian official says renewed US strikes render ceasefire "meaningless"

Recent US attacks on Iran have rendered the temporary ceasefire between Tehran and Washington “meaningless” and “ineffective,” senior Iranian officials said today.

Iran’s military has also carried out retaliatory strikes targeting US bases in the region.

Meanwhile, Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi also cast doubt on the status of the fragile truce.

He told EU foreign affairs chief Kaja Kallas in a phone call today that Tehran views Washington’s recent strikes as a “clear violation” of international law, which have “rendered the ceasefire ineffective,” according to Iran’s Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA).

In another message of condemnation, a key military advisor to Iran’s supreme leader, Mohsen Rezaei, said Washington must either accept Iran’s terms or risk losing the “last shred of its credibility in the world.” He did not specify what “terms” he was referring to.

US disables Guinea-Bissau-flagged tanker it says was transporting Iranian oil

The US military on Wednesday disabled a vessel attempting to transport Iranian oil by firing two missiles into its engine room, US Central Command announced today.

CENTCOM said the Guinea-Bissau-flagged M/T Jalveer was attempting to “transport oil from Iran through the Gulf of Oman” in violation of the US blockade.

“A U.S. aircraft fired two Hellfire missiles into the ship’s engine room after the crew repeatedly failed to comply with directions from U.S. forces,” CENTCOM added in a post on X.

This incident marks the third time the US has disabled a vessel this week, according to the post. In total, the US has disabled nine ships and redirected 135 others.

Can Iran be bombed into submission? Experts say it can't

US President Donald Trump speaks in the Oval Office on Wednesday.

US President Donald Trump has renewed strikes on Iran, hoping to pressure the Islamic Republic into accepting a deal suitable for Washington. But experts warn this will have the opposite effect.

Trump said on Wednesday the US will resume attacks on Iran “very hard” after insufficient progress in negotiations to end the war. Fresh US attacks - and retaliatory strikes from Tehran - then followed.

Iran’s current leadership believes that “surviving” the US’ most intense attacks allows them to maintain some form of diplomatic leverage, he said, adding that the Islamic Republic leadership relies heavily on “a hardline, ideologically oriented constituency that views any sign of softness as capitulation.”

Ali Ahmadi, a fellow at the Geneva Centre for Security Policy and Middle East Institute Switzerland, said that having survived 39 days of war, the Iranian leadership now has more confidence in the country’s resilience.

The Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said they carried out retaliatory strikes targeting US bases in the region after the US military struck Iran overnight. A senior Iranian military official later warned that Iran could turn the Middle East region “into hell” if the Strait of Hormuz is made insecure – which it proceeded to say was now closed.

“Under these circumstances, US military moves only complicate any potential concessions that the Iranian leadership may already have been prepared to make,” Azizi said.

Key mediator Pakistan urges warring parties to "end hostilities"

Pakistan's Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi, left, meets with Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi in Tehran, Iran, on Sunday.

Pakistan, a key regional mediator, said it was “deeply concerned” by the recent escalation in the Middle East, following a second night of US strikes and Iranian retaliatory attacks.

The country’s foreign ministry spokesperson, Tahir Andrabi, called on all parties to “adhere to the understanding reached on the ceasefire and end hostilities to widen the space for dialogue and diplomacy.”

In an effort to solidify the temporary ceasefire that began in April, Pakistan’s Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi attended “important meetings with Iran’s leadership” in Tehran earlier this week, Andrabi confirmed.

On another front of the current Middle East conflict, Andrabi also detailed Pakistan’s involvement in diplomatic efforts regarding the conflict in Lebanon. He said that Israel and Lebanon agreed to renew their ceasefire agreement earlier this month following “strong advocacy from Pakistan.”

This week, Lebanese Army Chief Gen. Rodolphe Haykal visited Pakistan, he added.

India calls on US to stop attacks on vessels in the Persian Gulf region

India has called on the United States to stop its “attacks” on vessels near the Strait of Hormuz after three Indian seafarers were found dead following a US strike on an Iran-linked oil tanker.

An Indian government minister previously confirmed that three Indian seafarers were found dead after the US strike in the Gulf of Oman on Wednesday local time. US Central Command said a US aircraft “fired precision munitions into the ship’s engine room after the crew repeatedly failed to comply with directions from American forces.”

India’s foreign ministry secretary, Aseem Mahajan, said today there were 28 crew members on board MT Settebello, including 24 Indian nationals. “Out of the 24 Indian nationals, 21 have been safely rescued. Unfortunately, three Indian nationals have lost their lives,” he said.

Mahajan added that another commercial vessel, MT Jalveer, a Guinea Bissau-flagged ship with 20 Indian crew members on board, also came under attack off Oman’s coast earlier today. All Indian crew are reportedly safe, he said.

War to continue unless US respects Iran's interests, senior Iranian official tells CNN

<p>After the US and Iran trade fresh strikes for a second night in a row, CNN’s Frederik Pleitgen and Claudia Otto speak to Mohammad Mokhber an Iranian advisor to the Supreme Leader who says that the war will continue unless the US respects Iran’s interests. CNN operates in Iran only with the permission of the government but maintains full editorial control of its reports.</p>
War will continue unless US respects Iran's interests, senior Iranian official tells CNN
0:44 • Source: CNN
<p>After the US and Iran trade fresh strikes for a second night in a row, CNN’s Frederik Pleitgen and Claudia Otto speak to Mohammad Mokhber an Iranian advisor to the Supreme Leader who says that the war will continue unless the US respects Iran’s interests. CNN operates in Iran only with the permission of the government but maintains full editorial control of its reports.</p>
0:44

An advisor to Iran’s supreme leader has warned that the war with the United States will continue unless Washington respects Tehran’s interests.

Mohammad Mokhber told CNN in Tehran that Iran would “respond more severely and more heavily” to any future US attacks, adding that the fate of the war depends on Washington’s actions.

“Whenever they (US) attack, we respond more severely and more heavily,” he said. “(US President Donald Trump) must understand that the Islamic Republic will not back down or step back from the entirety of its independence and national interests. And we will make the aggressors regret it.”

Asked whether he believed war between Iran and the US could resume, Mokhber said the decision rests with Washington.

Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said they carried out retaliatory strikes targeting US bases in the region after the US military struck Iran overnight.

Editor’s Note: CNN operates in Iran only with the permission of the government but maintains full editorial control of its reports.

Hormuz "closed until further notice," Iran's strait authority says

Vessels are anchored in the Strait of Hormuz, as seen from Musandam, Oman, on Thursday.

Due to the exchange of fire with the United States, the Strait of Hormuz “will be closed until further notice,” Iran’s new strait authority said on Thursday.

The authority added that “applicants who have received a transit permit are asked to be patient and await further guidance from the PGSA.”

After the US launched fresh strikes on Iran Wednesday, Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) said the strait will now be “closed to all vessels.”

US Central Command pushed back on the Iranian claim, saying that commercial ships continue to transit in and out of the strait – which the IRGC denied.

Tehran had previously insisted that the waterway was open, but only for ships that coordinated passage with Iranian authorities. The US has warned ship operators not to cooperate with the PGSA.

The critical waterway has been choked off for months because of the war, with visible traffic through the strait estimated to be just 15% of pre-war levels, according to JPMorgan.

Is the Strait of Hormuz open or shut? Shipping companies will decide

Vessels in the Strait of Hormuz near the beach of Bandar Abbas, Iran, on Monday.

Iran has declared the Strait of Hormuz closed after the United States targeted air defense sites and other military assets across the country in a second night of strikes Wednesday.

Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) threatened to shoot at tankers and commercial ships that attempt transit through the waterway.

The US military, however, has disputed the closure claim, saying on X that commercial ships continue to transit in and out of the strait.

So is the Strait of Hormuz open or shut? Ultimately, that call won’t be made by rulers in Tehran or Washington.

“It is not the US or even Iran who decides if the Strait of Hormuz is open or not. It is shipping companies,” Gregory Brew, a senior analyst at political risk consultancy Eurasia Group, told CNN last month during an interview discussing the long-term security of the strait.

By that measure, the strait could probably be described as effectively shut, if a little leaky.

Visible transits have collapsed to, at best, low double-digit figures from around 140 vessels a day before the war. There have been additional ‘dark’ transits through the strait, where vessels turn off transponders to avoid detection, but the point remains this: The shipping industry will ultimately determine whether the Strait of Hormuz is, in practice, open or closed to the movement of oil and other goods.

Iran condemns “blatant violation” of truce, warns regional countries

The USS Michael Murphy launches Tomahawk cruise missiles from an unknown location in this still image obtained from a handout video released on Wednesday.

Iran has strongly condemned recent US strikes on the country, calling them a “blatant violation” of the April truce while pinning the blame for any further escalation on Washington.

In addition, the US’ continued use of military facilities in regional countries to “prepare and carry out aggressive operations against Iran has effectively placed those countries alongside the aggressors,” IRIB cited the ministry as saying.

Tehran will take “all necessary measures to neutralize threats and prevent further aggression while exercising its inherent right of self-defense against US military aggression,” the ministry added.

Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps said earlier it carried out retaliatory attacks targeting US bases in the region amid a second night of US strikes. President Donald Trump has warned that US attacks could resume if a peace agreement isn’t reached between the two warring nations.

Jordan says it intercepted 20 missiles launched from Iran

Jordan said it had intercepted and destroyed 20 missiles launched from Iran, after Tehran said it had targeted American bases in the region in response to US strikes.

Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said they launched retaliatory attacks targeting US military bases in Kuwait, Bahrain and Jordan early Thursday, after the US said it struck multiple targets in Iran.

Vessel carrying "essential goods" from Oman to Iran was struck by US, Iranian media says

A cargo dhow carrying “essential goods” was struck by an American projectile on its way from the city of Khasab, across the Strait of Hormuz in Oman, toward the Iranian city of Sirik, Iranian state broadcaster IRIB reported, citing the governor of Sirik.

It “was struck by an enemy projectile 5 nautical miles off Khasab,” Sirik governor Reza Shahidian said, according IRIB, adding that the 150-ton vessel carried five crew members who were all rescued with the help of passing vessels and transferred to Oman.

Images of the vessel shared by IRIB and other media outlets show the ship partially submerged.

In what was the second night of US strikes on Iran, the US military said it targeted surveillance, communication and air defense sites in Iran. Explosions were heard across Iran, including in a string of key locations near the Strait of Hormuz. US President Donald Trump warned US attacks could resume if a deal isn’t reached.

Three Indian seafarers found dead after US strike on tanker off Oman, Indian minister says

Three Indian seafarers have been found dead after a US strike on an Iran-linked oil tanker in the Gulf of Oman on Wednesday local time, an Indian government minister has confirmed.

The US strike on the vessel risks adding friction to relations between New Delhi and Washington, which have experienced some strain over the last year.

India has already condemned the attack on the Palau-flagged M/T Settebello, which was struck with a precision munition while transiting the Strait of Oman. New Delhi has also summoned Washington’s Chargé d’Affaires to lodge a protest, according to sources at India’s Ministry of External Affairs.

There were 24 crew members on board at the time and 21 were rescued from the vessel.

Sonowal said he has directed officials to “ensure immediate repatriation of the rescued crew members and swift return of the mortal remains of the deceased for their final rites.”

Some background: US Central Command said a US aircraft “fired precision munitions into the ship’s engine room after the crew repeatedly failed to comply with directions from American forces.”

It said the Settebello was stopped as part of the ongoing blockade aimed at vessels attempting to transport Iranian oil.

US forces have disabled eight “non-compliant vessels,” redirected 134 ships and allowed 42 humanitarian aid vessels to pass since the blockade began on April 13, the military said.

Fire in the engine room of a tanker off Oman coast, UKMTO says

The United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) on Thursday said it received reports a tanker off Oman has “experienced a fire in the engine room.”

The maritime authority that monitors shipping in the region said “it received a report of an incident” 21 nautical miles northeast of Sohar, Oman.

“No environmental impact has been reported. Authorities continue to investigate,” the monitoring group said in a statement.

UKMTO did not name the vessel.

For context: The UKMTO is a Royal Navy-affiliated body that monitors shipping in the Red Sea, Persian Gulf and northern Indian Ocean.

Since Iran effectively closed the Strait of Hormuz in response to US-Israeli strikes on the country, the number of emergency calls the UKMTO receives has skyrocketed and it has often been the first agency to report attacks on vessels.

US-Iran talks are still on track, diplomatic source says

Talks to reach a deal between the United States and Iran are still on track after overnight negotiations, a diplomatic source with knowledge of the situation told CNN.

The discussions continued despite an overnight exchange of strikes between the US and Iran that threatened to complicate the diplomatic effort.

Qatari delegation departs Tehran after overnight talks with Iranian officials

A Qatari delegation departed Tehran Thursday morning after negotiations with Iranian officials, a diplomatic source with knowledge of the situation told CNN.

The negotiations, which were conducted in coordination with the United States, lasted into the early hours of this morning, the source said.

The delegation was in Tehran as the US was striking Iran overnight.

11-year-old girl wounded in Bahrain by Iranian attack

A firefighter works in the aftermath of Iranian drone attacks at a location given as Bahrain, on Thursday.

An 11-year-old girl in Bahrain sustained minor wounds in an Iranian attack on Thursday, officials said.

Vehicles caught fire and houses were damage by falling debris from intercepted drones in Hamad Town and in the capital Manama, Bahrain’s Ministry of Interior said in a post on X.

The wounded girl was treated at the scene, the ministry said.

Photos of the aftermath, shared by the ministry, showed burned and damaged cars, and firefighters working to put out a blaze inside a building. Another image showed a street littered with debris.

Earlier on Thursday, Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said they had launched attacks targeting US airbases in Bahrain, Kuwait, Jordan.

It's morning in the Middle East. Here's what happened overnight

Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said they launched retaliatory attacks targeting US military bases in Kuwait, Bahrain and Jordan early Thursday, after the US said it struck multiple targets in Iran.

It’s the second night in a row Iran has targeted American bases in the region in response to US strikes, an escalation in hostilities that prompted the United Nations chief António Guterres to says the ceasefire looks “more like a lesser-fire.”

President Donald Trump said the first night of strikes was in retaliation for the downing of an Army helicopter, but cited slow progress in war talks when announcing the second round.

He said Iran would “pay the price” after taking “too long to negotiate a deal” and that all Tehran has to do is “start signing a paper.” Trump warned strikes could resume tomorrow if a deal isn’t reached, and that the US may resume targeting critical infrastructure.

Iran, meantime, threatened to turn the region “into hell” if the Strait of Hormuz was made “insecure.”

Here’s the latest:

  • Warning to US citizens in Jordan: The US Embassy in Jordan warned Americans in the country to take cover as Iran launched strikes targeting a US military base there. Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) claimed it “destroyed facilities and a large number of fighter aircraft” at the Al-Azraq air base, state media reported, but provided no evidence of damage. Iran also targeted US bases in Kuwait and Bahrain, which both activated air defenses.
  • US targets: The US military said it “launched strikes on Iranian military surveillance capabilities, communication systems, and air defense sites across Iran.” Explosions were heard in cities near the capital Tehran, including Abyek, Qarchak, Minab, Nazarabad and Karaj, state media said. Other locations targeted by the US lay close to the Strait of Hormuz, including Sirik, Bandar Abbas, Qeshm, and Kharg Island –– a critical oil hub in the Persian Gulf.
  • Iran threatens Strait of Hormuz: The oil trade chokepoint, which has been almost entirely shut since the war began, will be “closed to all vessels,” the IRGC said. US Central Command pushed back on the Iranian claim, saying that commercial ships continue to transit in and out of the strait – which the revolutionary guards denied. IRGC Aerospace Commander Seyed Majid Mousavi warned that Iran could turn the Middle East “into hell” if the Strait of Hormuz is made insecure.
  • “Secret mission”: US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said “Project Freedom,” the US military’s operation to guide commercial tankers through the Strait of Hormuz that the Pentagon said was over, went “underground” and did not stop. Trump previously said the US military had executed a “secret mission” directed by him last month to support oil tankers through the strait.

CNN’s Rhea Mogul, Jessie Yeung, Nadeen Ebrahim, Charbel Mallo, Frederik Pleitgen, Claudia Otto and Kit Maher contributed reporting to this post.

Trump brushes off inflation driven by war

“I love the inflation,” President Donald Trump said Wednesday.

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Trump: 'I love the inflation'

President Donald Trump said “I love the inflation,” in remarks from the Oval Office, brushing off a spike in inflation driven by his war in Iran, saying that “the numbers were great,” adding, “I love it,” of the new data that showed annual inflation hitting a three-year high.

0:52 • Source: CNN
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0:52

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