Live updates: Iran attacks US military sites in Bahrain and Kuwait as strikes strain fragile truce | CNN

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Iran attacks US military sites in Bahrain and Kuwait as strikes strain fragile truce

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U.S., Iran trade more strikes
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Here's the latest

• Regional flare-up: Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) said it targeted US military sites in neighboring countries including Kuwait and Bahrain, after the US struck Iranian sites. The exchanges of attacks are testing the fragile US-Iran agreement.

New threats: Neither side is looking ready to de-escalate. US President Donald Trump threatened more military action if Iranian strikes continue, while the IRGC warned ceasefire violations would “result in the complete halt of all diplomatic processes.”

Strait of Hormuz: The escalation was triggered by an Iranian attack on a cargo ship on Thursday in the vital Strait of Hormuz. Despite this, ships continue to pass through and are increasingly steering clear of the Iran controlled route.

• Lebanon: Fighting between Israel and Hezbollah remains another flashpoint. An Israeli soldier was killed while the Israeli military reportedly carried out fresh strikes in southern Lebanon.

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Fresh Israeli strikes reported in Lebanon, two days after US-brokered agreement signed

Two days after a US-brokered agreement was signed between Israel, Lebanon and the US aimed at moving toward a broader peace deal, fighting continues in southern Lebanon, with fresh Israeli attacks reported today.

In response to CNN, the Israeli military said they were not aware of any strikes in the Shebaa area.

Elsewhere, an Israeli soldier, Capt. David Hazutt, was killed in southern Lebanon in a firefight with a Hezbollah gunman, the Israeli military announced Sunday.

The clashes risk complicating efforts to secure a lasting peace agreement between the US and Iran, and have continued despite the memorandum of understanding recently reached between Washington and Tehran including a ceasefire in Lebanon.

Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said today it is “regrettable” that Israel continues its attacks on Lebanon, pinning responsibility on the US to stop such strikes.

The Israeli military also carried out a drone attack in southern Lebanon on Saturday, which an IDF official told CNN was aimed at eliminating a threat to its troops.

The fighting persists in the country’s south despite Israel and Lebanon broadly welcoming Friday’s signing as a positive step. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu celebrated the agreement, describing it as a major win for Israel. However, his far-right coalition partner, Itamar Ben Gvir, called it a “big mistake.”

As part of the agreement, Israel will withdraw from two areas in southern Lebanon, transferring the sites to the Lebanese military.

Hezbollah criticized the deal: The group’s Secretary-General Sheikh Naim Qassem said the agreement was “a squandering of Lebanon’s sovereignty.”

Read more about the newly signed agreement here.

Iran-US accord under strain after clashes near Strait of Hormuz. Catch up on the latest

Bahrain civil defense and rescue personnel work in a residential building, which according to the Bahraini Interior Ministry, was hit by an Iranian drone, in Muharraq, Bahrain on Sunday.

Regional states, including Bahrain and Kuwait, have condemned recent Iranian attacks on their countries after the US and Iran exchanged fresh strikes, straining the ceasefire agreement signed earlier this month.

Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps said it targeted American military sites in neighboring countries following US strikes near the Strait of Hormuz. Later, the US military said it had launched more strikes on Iranian sites around the crucial waterway, saying they came in response to “continued Iranian aggression.”

Catch up on the latest developments here:

  • Trump warning: US President Donald Trump threatened Iran on Saturday, saying the US may be forced to use more military action if Tehran continues to launch strikes. The US president accused Iran of violating the ceasefire agreement between the two nations.
  • Regional criticism: Bahrain said today Iran had targeted it with “a number of ballistic missiles and drones,” an attack the country’s Foreign Ministry called a “dangerous escalation.” Meanwhile, Kuwait’s Foreign Affairs Ministry condemned what it said were “repeated, heinous” Iranian attacks as a “flagrant violation” of Kuwait’s sovereignty.
  • Iran’s response: Tehran said today that US strikes on the country a day earlier were a “clear violation” of the June 18 ceasefire memorandum of understanding. Also responding to the recent US strikes, Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) said any violation of the ceasefire will result in the “suspension of all related processes,” according to Iran’s semi-official Tasnim news agency.
  • Strait of Hormuz: Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said interference in Iran’s management of the critical waterway will escalate tensions. “Once obstacles are removed, the Strait of Hormuz will return to its pre-war capacity within 30 days under Iran’s exclusive management,” he said. The Iranian official also reiterated that the war must end completely on all fronts, including in Lebanon.
  • Fighting in Lebanon: An Israeli soldier was killed in southern Lebanon in a firefight with a Hezbollah gunman, the Israeli military said today, two days after a new agreement was signed in Washington between the two countries. Also on Sunday, Lebanon’s state National News Agency (NNA) reported that Israel carried out strikes near Deir Seryan and Taybeh in the country’s south.
  • World Cup elimination: Elsewhere, Iran’s soccer team has been eliminated from the 2026 FIFA World Cup, missing the 32-team knockout stages by one spot in heartbreaking fashion. It’s been a difficult World Cup for the Iranians amid the flaring regional violence.

CNN’s Brad Lendon, Yasha Saebi, Jacob Lev, Casey Gannon, Aida Karimi and Tim Lister contributed reporting.

More tankers entering Gulf Sunday, ship tracking shows

Several large merchant ships passed through the southern part of the Strait of Hormuz heading for ports in the Gulf – in a further sign that more vessels are prepared to use a route that hugs the Omani coast.

Among the ships that entered the Gulf on Sunday were two oil tankers and two liquid gas carriers, according to ship tracking service Marine Traffic. A container ship also passed through the Strait by the same route.

The vessels had their transponders turned on, and their routes into the Gulf passed within a few miles of the Omani coast.

But some merchant ships are still using a different route close to the Iranian coast.

French shipping giant CMA GGM said its container ship Galapagos had exited the Strait Sunday, saying the transit “marks an important ​milestone in a ​regional context that ⁠remains complex and requires constant ⁠vigilance.”

Ship-tracking data showed the Galapagos sailing between the Iranian islands of Qeshm and Hormuz as it left the Gulf late Saturday.

Traffic is still highly sensitive to drone attacks and the presence of mines in the Strait. The Joint Maritime Information Center, which is overseen by the US Navy, raised the threat level in the strait to “substantial” on Saturday after attacks on merchant vessels.

But it also said that the southern route through the Strait near Oman had been expanded to allow for greater passage of marine traffic in both directions.

Israeli soldier killed in southern Lebanon two days after new framework agreement

An Israeli soldier was killed in southern Lebanon in a firefight with a Hezbollah gunman, the Israeli military said on Sunday, two days after a new agreement was signed in Washington between the two countries.

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) identified the soldier as Capt. David Hazutt. An Israeli military official said Hazutt encountered a Hezbollah fighter after entering a “suspicious structure” near Deir Seryan in southern Lebanon. Hazutt was killed in the encounter, while another soldier was lightly injured.

A total of 38 Israeli soldiers have been killed in southern Lebanon or northern Israel since the war began four months ago.

As of early Sunday afternoon, the IDF said the search for the gunman was ongoing as the military carried out strikes in the area.

According to Lebanon’s state National News Agency (NNA), Israel carried out strikes near Deir Seryan and Taybeh in southern Lebanon. NNA also reported that Israel had fired a cluster munition near the town of Shebaa close to the Israel-Lebanon border.

CNN has reached out to the IDF for comment.

A new agreement: Friday’s signing has been described as a first step towards a comprehensive peace deal. Israel has agreed to withdraw from some areas in southern Lebanon where it is battling Hezbollah militants.

Struggle for Hormuz threatens to undermine Iran-US accord

Oil tankers and cargo vessels remain anchored off Port Sultan Qaboos in Muscat, Oman, on June 21.

The contest for control of the Strait of Hormuz — the maritime chokepoint at the mouth of the Persian Gulf — threatens to derail negotiations between Iran and the United States on a broader agreement to end the conflict.

Over the past three days, US and Iranian forces have targeted each other after Iran attacked two ships transiting the Strait.

Tehran insists that ships must have its permission to sail through the Strait on designated routes. But a growing number of vessels are using a route that hugs the Omani coast, threatening Iran’s leverage over the waterway.

On Thursday, 18 vessels transited inbound and 45 outbound through the Strait of Hormuz, according to maritime analysts Windward. It said more than half the vessels leaving the Gulf had used the southern route close to Oman.

Several large crude carriers have been loading oil at Saudi and Emirati ports in preparation for passage through the Strait, according to shipping analysts.

Then the International Maritime Organization suspended use of the route after a cargo ship was attacked in the Gulf of Oman on Thursday.

“However, given the vessel attack [on Thursday] and the IRGC reportedly instructing multiple tankers transiting the southern corridor to turn around on June 25, transits have slowed,” it added.

A statement from the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps Sunday insisted that “according to the Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding, control over transit and passage through the Strait of Hormuz lies with the Islamic Republic of Iran.”

“From now on, violating vessels will be dealt with more forcefully than before,” it said.

Iran's FM reiterates the war must end on all fronts including Lebanon

Iran’s Foreign Minister, Abbas Araghchi, also reiterated that the war must end completely on all fronts, including in Lebanon, at his news conference in Baghdad.

“It is regrettable that Israel continues its attacks. Under the commitments set out in the agreement, the US bears direct responsibility for stopping the attacks, implementing the ceasefire, and ensuring a withdrawal from occupied areas,” he added during a news conference in Iraq.

The memorandum of understanding reached between the US and Iran includes a ceasefire in Lebanon. But this - as well as a new agreement signed between the governments of Israel and Lebanon signed on Friday - have done little to reduce clashes in southern Lebanon.

Israel has said its forces will remain in southern Lebanon as they seek to degrade the Iranian-backed Hezbollah group.

Interference in Tehran's control over Strait of Hormuz will delay reopening, Iranian FM warns

Interference in Iran’s management of the Strait of Hormuz will escalate tensions, according to Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, amid signs of ships evading Tehran-controlled routes.

Speaking at a news conference during a visit to Iraq, Araghchi said that under the agreement with the United States reached earlier this month “and once obstacles are removed, the Strait of Hormuz will return to its pre-war capacity within 30 days under Iran’s exclusive management.”

“The incidents and clashes in the Strait of Hormuz over the past two nights are evidence of this,” Araghchi said, referring to strikes by the US on Iranian coastal installations after drone attacks on two merchant ships close to Hormuz since Thursday.

Araghchi did not specify the “parallel arrangements” but a growing number of ships have sought to evade Iranian control of the passage by taking a southern route close to the Omani coast.

What’s in the agreement? The ceasefire agreement stipulates that Iran will make “arrangements using its best efforts” to ensure the safe passage of commercial vessels in the Strait of Hormuz. Ensuring unobstructed transit was Iran’s main concession to the US.

However, a vaguely worded article in the agreement said Iran and Oman would work together to “define the future administration” of the waterway, effectively giving Tehran a formal role in managing it.

Kuwait says Iranian attacks a "flagrant violation" of its sovereignty

Kuwait’s Foreign Affairs Ministry has condemned what it said were “repeated, heinous” Iranian attacks on Sunday as a “flagrant violation” of Kuwait’s sovereignty, describing them as a “clear breach of international law” which threaten to derail international efforts to reduce tensions in the region.

The Kuwaiti army said it intercepted two ballistic missiles with no damage or casualties.

Iranian attack a "dangerous escalation," Bahrain says

Bahrain on Sunday said Iran had targeted it with “a number of ballistic missiles and drones,” an attack the Foreign Ministry called a “dangerous escalation.”

The attack shows Iran has “a deliberate policy and a systematic pattern of repeated aggression against Bahrain’s sovereignty and the security of its citizens and residents,” the ministry said in a statement on Sunday.

Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps said earlier it targeted US facilities in Bahrain and Kuwait in retaliation for US airstrikes on Iranian sites Saturday. Bahrain had activated sirens multiple times early Sunday local time and told residents to head to a safe place.

Bahrain said Iran’s attacks constitute a threat to all states in the Gulf Cooperation Council, which also includes Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates, pointing to a joint defense agreement among them.

Meanwhile, the General Command of the Bahrain Defense Force said its air defenses had “successfully intercepted and destroyed a number of the treacherous Iranian aerial attacks.”

It urged residents not to approach debris or suspicious objects that may be found in the wake of the Iranian attack.

All branches of Bahrain’s armed forces are at the highest level of alert, it said.

Residential building badly damaged in Iranian attack, Bahrain government says

A damaged residential building in Muharraq Governorate, Bahrain, on Sunday.

A residential building in the Gulf kingdom of Bahrain suffered heavy damage in an Iranian attack overnight, its Interior Ministry said Sunday.

No one was killed, the ministry said.

It posted pictures of what appears to be the penthouse of a multistory residential block in ruins, with missing walls and collapsed ceilings, in the tiny country’s Muharraq governorate.

Iran says US strikes "clear violation" of ceasefire

Iran on Sunday local time said US airstrikes on the country a day earlier were a “clear violation” of the June 18 ceasefire memorandum of understanding between Washington and Tehran.

Earlier, US Central Command said US Navy and Air Force jets struck 10 Iranian military targets in and near the Strait of Hormuz after what it said was an Iranian attack on a commercial ship in the strait.

After those US strikes, Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps said it targeted US facilities in Bahrain and Kuwait with missiles and drones.

“The Islamic Republic of Iran reaffirms its determination to defend its national sovereignty and territorial integrity against U.S. military aggression,” the Foreign Ministry statement said Sunday.

Iran miss World Cup knockout stages by one spot

Iran's Shoja Khalilzadeh looks dejected after his goal gets disallowed after a VAR review during the World Cup 2026 match between Iran and Egypt in Seattle, Washington, on Saturday.

Elsewhere, Iran’s soccer team has been eliminated from the 2026 FIFA World Cup, missing the 32-team knockout stages by one spot in heartbreaking fashion.

It appeared Iran would advance as one of the top eight third-place teams among the 12 four-team groups in the competition after Algeria took a 3-2 lead over Austria in stoppage time on Saturday night in Group J play. But Austria equalized seconds later on the match’s final play, securing second place in the group and dropping Algeria to third.

The point Algeria picked up for the draw gave them four for the tournament, one more than Iran gained in their three matches in Group G, and dropped Iran to the ninth spot among the third place teams, one shy of making the round of 32.

It’s been a difficult World Cup for the Iranians, with the ongoing war forcing multiple difficulties on Team Melli. Some members of the team’s traveling delegation did not receiving visas to enter the United States, and the team was forced to enter the US from Mexico a day before each of their first two games and then had to leave almost immediately afterward.

The US government eventually softened its stance, allowing the Iranians to enter the US two days before their third group stage match, in which they tied Egypt, their third tie in three games.

How 3 days of escalation in the Middle East unfolded

Iran targeted American military facilities in the Middle East after the US launched more strikes on Iranian sites near the Strait of Hormuz. And in Lebanon, Israeli forces attacked a southern town, after Israel agreed to withdraw some troops from the area.

A timeline of the recent escalation:

Thursday

Iran attacks a Singapore-flagged container ship near the Strait of Hormuz. US President Donald Trump describes the move as a “foolish violation” of the initial agreement to end the war.

Friday

The US military conducts strikes around the Strait of Hormuz, targeting Iranian missile and drone storage locations and coastal radar sites.

Saturday

The US detects “a couple of drones” as Iran says it launched strikes on American military targets in the Middle East, but those drones didn’t reach their target, a US official says.

Hours later, the US military conducts more strikes against Iranian targets “in direct response to continued Iranian aggression,” according to the US Central Command.

Iran then launches missiles and drones at US facilities in neighboring countries including Kuwait and Bahrain, Reuters reports the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps as saying. There have been no US casualties or major damage to the facilities, Reuters reports, citing a US official.

Meanwhile in Lebanon, airstrikes hit the southern town of Nabatieh al-Fawqa, a day after Israel signed an agreement to withdraw troops from some areas. The Israeli military said on Saturday it killed Hezbollah militants in the Nabatieh area of southern Lebanon and dismantled a rocket launcher, according to a Telegram statement.

Why it matters: The attacks are straining a US-Iran agreement signed just earlier this month. The agreement was meant to expand on the ceasefire and resume normal maritime traffic in the Strait of Hormuz. Trump has threatened more military action if Tehran continues to launch strikes. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps argued that the US strikes violate the ceasefire and “will result in the complete halt of all diplomatic processes,” reported Reuters.

Trump threatens more military action against Iran if strikes continue

A US sailor stands aft lookout watch aboard Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS George H.W. Bush while sailing in the Arabian Sea, on June 21.

President Donald Trump threatened Iran on Saturday, saying the US may be forced to use more military action if Tehran continues to launch strikes.

Trump said that Iran violated the ceasefire agreement and that US aircraft struck Iranian missile and drone storage locations, as well as coastal radar sites.

“It is very possible that they will never learn! There may come a point when we are no longer able to be reasonable, and will be forced to militarily complete the job that we very successfully started,” Trump wrote on Truth Social.

The president warned that Iran “will no longer exist” should the US use more military action.

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