Live updates: Iran war news; US troop deaths raise fears of a wider war as Iran hit by new strikes | CNN

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Death of US troops raises fears of a wider war with Iran

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Here's the latest

Escalating war: The US military launched another round of strikes after vowing to “swiftly punish” Iran for an attack on Jordan that left two US service members dead and one missing in action, deepening fears that the conflict will spiral further.

Iranian strikes: Meanwhile, US allies in the region reported a new wave of Iranian fire, including in Kuwait, where officials said a power and desalination plant was attacked for a second consecutive day. Air defenses also intercepted strikes in Jordan and Bahrain.

In Tehran: Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said he has yet to meet the country’s new supreme leader, who has not appeared in public since assuming the role. In a new interview, Araghchi also said Tehran must negotiate if “absolute military victory” is impossible, though he said talks should take place when Iran has “the upper hand.”

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Iraqi leader to visit Tehran days after meeting with Trump in Washington

Iraqi Prime Minister Ali Al-Zaidi is expected to travel to Tehran next week, just days after meeting US President Donald Trump in Washington, in a visit likely to focus on bilateral relations and rising regional tensions.

Iraq’s Foreign Ministry said in a statement Sunday that the visit next week will witness “the signing of several memoranda of understanding in areas of common cooperation, to enhance bilateral relations and serve the mutual interests of both countries.”

The visit comes at a sensitive time as Baghdad seeks to balance its close ties with Tehran while maintaining its strategic relationship with Washington.

Last week, the prime minister said US military forces would leave Iraq by September 30 and that Iran-backed militias would have “no justification” to continue operating after the withdrawal. He made the remarks during a joint appearance with Trump at the White House.

Iraq has frequently sought to serve as a bridge between Iran and the United States, using its relationships with both countries to encourage dialogue and help prevent further regional escalation.

It's late evening in Tehran. Here's how the day has unfolded so far

People cross the Islamic Revolution Street under a mural depicting a portrait of the late Iranian revolutionary founder Ayatollah Khomeini in downtown Tehran, on Saturday.

Fears of a prolonged regional conflict have grown this weekend after the US and Iran launched waves of strikes and Washington announced the death of two American service members in Jordan.

If you’re just joining us, here’s what to know about the day so far:

  • The US military said it struck a range of Iranian military targets in its latest round of bombing overnight Saturday into Sunday. Explosions were heard in the Iranian city of Bandar Abbas and on Qeshm Island. The US had vowed to “swiftly punish” Tehran for the attack in Jordan that killed two US troops and left another missing in action.
  • Kuwait said a power and desalination plant was hit by Iranian attacks for the second time in two days. Such facilities are vital to the region’s water supply.
  • The desalination plant strike was one of several fresh attacks reported by US regional allies on Sunday. In Jordan, air defenses intercepted three Iranian missiles and a fourth landed in a remote area, the country’s military said. Bahrain also said it intercepted Iranian fire.
  • The United Nations’ nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, said it is looking into Iranian reports that an overnight US strike hit an unfinished nuclear power plant in the country. The construction site for the Darkhovin Power Plant is near the Iraqi border. The IAEA said the site was unlikely to pose any radiological risk.
  • In a wide-ranging interview, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said security shortcomings that allowed devastating US-Israeli strikes at the start of the war still exist. He also said Tehran must negotiate if “absolute military victory” is impossible, though he said talks should take place when Iran has “the upper hand.” And Araghchi said he’s yet to meet Iran’s new supreme leader.
  • The US carried out a new missile strike on the outskirts of Abadan, Iran, on Sunday evening local time, according to state media. The city is located in southwestern Iran, near the country’s border with Iraq.
  • Secretary of State Marco Rubio met with Lebanese President Joseph Aoun in Washington on Sunday to discuss a recent agreement between Israel, the US and Lebanon.

CNN’s Aileen Graef, Adam Pourahmadi, Catherine Nicholls, Tim Lister, Issy Ronald, Jomana Karadsheh, Eugenia Yosef, Ibrahim Dahman and Sophie Tanno contributed to this report.

Jordan summons Iranian diplomat to protest attacks and “provocative” statements

Jordan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs summoned the chargé d’affaires of the Iranian Embassy in Amman on Sunday to lodge its protest over Iranian attacks targeting Jordanian territory.

The ministry said in a statement that it “delivered a strongly worded protest message against the ongoing aggressive and unjustified Iranian attacks targeting the Kingdom’s territories, and the provocative incitement statements issued by official Iranian entities regarding the Kingdom,” the statement said.

Foreign ministry spokesperson Fuad Al-Majali said the ministry instructed the Iranian diplomat to relay “a clear message” to Tehran to immediately halt the attacks on the kingdom, the statement added.

“Jordan’s security and the safety of its citizens represent a red line that cannot be crossed,” Al-Majali said, according to the statement.

Jordanian air defenses earlier on Sunday intercepted three Iranian missiles on Sunday afternoon local time while a fourth landed in a remote area, the country’s military said.

Israel warns it will respond to any Iranian strike

US Air Force tanker aircrafts are lined up at Ben Gurion International airport in Lod, near Tel Aviv in Israel, February 24, 2026.

Senior Israeli officials again warned Sunday that the country will respond to any Iranian attacks as this latest phase of the war continues to escalate.

“If Iran attacks Israel, Israel will respond and strike back without any dependence or conditions,” said the country’s defense minister, Israel Katz.

Similarly, the Israel Defense Forces chief of staff, Lt. Gen Eyal Kamir, said the country’s military is “prepared to immediately resume combat and will act with great determination against anyone who harms us.”

The statements come after Iran launched missiles toward the Jordanian city of Aqaba earlier today, an attack that came close to Israel’s territory. Jordan said its air defenses intercepted three of the missiles and a fourth one landed in a remote area. The IDF later confirmed that Israeli air defenses had taken part in intercepting some of the missiles.

Although a joint US-Israeli operation kickstarted the conflict in February, Israel has reportedly been sidelined by Washington during this latest escalation. Two Israeli sources told CNN last week that the Trump administration doesn’t want Israel involved in the fighting over concerns of losing control of the conflict. A US official rejected that characterization saying the US “remains in close coordination with our Israeli partners.”

Iran has also refrained from targeting Israel since the ceasefire crumbled, even as it has fired barrages at its Gulf neighbors.

On Saturday, the US bolstered its fleet of refueling aircraft in Israel as part of its adjustments to its force posture in the region, according to an Israeli military official.

US secretary of state meets with Lebanese president in Washington

Secretary of State Marco Rubio shakes hands with Lebanese President Joseph Aoun at the State Department, on July 19.

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio met with Lebanese President Joseph Aoun in Washington, DC, on Sunday to discuss a recent agreement between the US, Israel and Lebanon.

During the meeting, Rubio reaffirmed the US commitment to helping implement the trilateral framework reached in Washington last month, in which Israel agreed to withdraw its forces from two areas in southern Lebanon, paving the way for further negotiations.

“The Secretary commended the courage of the Government of Lebanon, under President Aoun’s leadership, for their determined effort to reclaim Lebanon’s sovereignty, disarm Hizballah and dismantle its terrorist infrastructure, and move towards peace,” State Department spokesperson Tommy Pigott said in a statement.

A Lebanese statement about the meeting said Aoun also stressed the need to implement the framework, “beginning with securing the first Israeli withdrawal from the first model area.” The agreement designated “pilot zones” where Israeli forces can begin transitioning control of territory to the Lebanese military.

Aoun’s office said in a previous statement that a Lebanese-US summit will be held at the White House this week.

Some background: Before renewed fighting broke out between the US and Iran, a memorandum of understanding signed by Washington and Tehran had aimed to end the fighting in Lebanon as part of a wider ceasefire plan.

Despite that initial agreement — and US-brokered ceasefires between the Israeli and Lebanese governments — fighting between Israel and the Iranian-backed militant group Hezbollah has continued.

This post has been updated with a statement from Lebanon.

CNN’s Mohammed Tawfeeq, Oren Liebermann, Sean Lyngaas and Charbel Mallo contributed to this report.

Iranian media reports US missile strike in city near Iraqi border

The US carried out a missile strike on the outskirts of the city of Abadan on Sunday evening local time, according to Iranian media.

Abadan, located in Khuzestan province, is in southwestern Iran, near the country’s border with Iraq.

There were no casualties as a result of the attack, Valiollah Hayati, a deputy governor for the province, told Iran’s national broadcaster IRIB. Iran’s semi-official Fars news agency also reported the strike, citing the Khuzestan government.

CNN has reached out to US Central Command for comment.

Big picture: The reports come after days of escalation between Washington and Tehran. Overnight Saturday into Sunday, US forces carried out their eighth consecutive round of strikes on the country.

The overnight strikes targeted facilities related to Iran’s air and coastal defenses as well as its missile and drone storage sites, according to the US military.

Iranian foreign minister says he has yet to meet supreme leader

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi arrives to meet his Iraqi counterpart Fouad Hussein in Baghdad, Iraq, on June 28.

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi says he’s yet to meet Iran’s new Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamanei since he was appointed back in March.

In a wide-ranging interview, Araghchi also said the security shortcomings that allowed Israel to strike Iran’s leadership at the outset of the war still exist.

Here are some of the key points of his conversation with podcaster Javad Mogouyee:

• Before the war: Speaking about negotiations with US envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner in February, Araghchi said: “I told Witkoff, ‘Have you ever attended a meeting where there was a possibility of being bombed at any moment?’”

• US-Israeli strikes: Araghchi said the bombing of the leadership compound in Tehran that killed Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and much of his family in February “was carried out through a security vulnerability, and this security vulnerability still exists.”

• When he learned of Khamenei’s death: The foreign minister said that “from the very first day,” plans were in place to close the Strait of Hormuz if the leader was targeted. “I immediately contacted the foreign ministries of the region and said: We will strike US military bases; understand that this action is against America,” he added.

• On meeting the new supreme leader: “I still have not met Agha (leader) Mojtaba in person during this period of the leader’s tenure. Only a very small number of people have met with him.”

• Military readiness: “During the eight months between the two wars (June 2025 and February 2026), Iran’s launcher system was changed in such a way that no matter how much we fired, our missiles would not run out,” Araghchi claimed.

• During the conflict: “I and the deputy foreign ministers did not leave the foreign ministry building. For several hours a day, we would drive around the city in a vehicle; I could not put my mobile phone aside.”

• Next steps: “If we do not have the ability to achieve an absolute military victory, we must negotiate. Negotiations should take place when you have the upper hand on the military front.”

Why desalination plants are so vital to Gulf nations like Kuwait

A view of the Ras al-Khair water desalination plant, owned by the Saudi government's Saline Water Conversion Corporation, in Ras al-Khair along the Gulf coast in eastern Saudi Arabia, on March 30, 2023.

A Kuwaiti power and desalination plant has been attacked by Iran for the second time in two days, Kuwait’s Ministry of Electricity, Water and Renewable Energy said earlier today.

Yesterday, an Iranian provincial official said a US missile attack also damaged a desalination plant in the country. CNN has reached out to the US military for a response.

The plants, which convert seawater into drinking water, are vital in the Middle East, providing a key lifeline and sustaining certain remote regions through droughts. Some countries in the region are almost entirely dependent on desalination for drinking water.

In Kuwait and Oman, desalination accounts for around 90% of freshwater needs. In Bahrain, it’s 85%, and in Saudi Arabia around 70%. Major Gulf cities, including Abu Dhabi, Dubai, Doha, Kuwait City and Jeddah, are almost wholly dependent on desalinated water.

Iran is less dependent on desalination than its Gulf neighbors for drinking water. Still, the process is key for providing water to coastal and island communities and to help to offset droughts.

Desalination plants were also targeted when the current conflict began in March. At the time, the World Water Council — a UN-affiliated organization which advocates for global water security — condemned the attacks and called on all parties “to fully respect their obligations under international law.”

In a statement, it pointed to an article of the Geneva Convention which prohibits combatants from attacking essential resources for civilians’ survival “such as drinking water installations and supplies.”

CNN’s Catherine Nicholls contributed to this reporting.

UN's nuclear watchdog "looking into" reported strike on Iranian power plant site

Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency, or IAEA, Rafael Mariano Grossi looks on during a press conference in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, June 2.

The UN’s International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) says it is looking into reports of an overnight attack on the construction site of an Iranian nuclear power plant.

The Darkhovin Power Plant, in southern Iran, is in the “very early stages” of construction and the reported attack is unlikely to pose any radiological risk, the watchdog said today. It also called for “military restraint” in the vicinity of all nuclear sites.

As we reported earlier, Iran’s Atomic Energy Organization said the US struck the power plant in the early hours of this morning. CNN has reached out to US Central Command for comment.

Jordan intercepts Iranian missiles, military says

Jordanian air defenses intercepted three Iranian missiles on Sunday afternoon local time while a fourth landed in a remote area, the country’s military said in a statement.

No casualties or material damage were reported in the attack, the statement added.

Sirens had earlier sounded over Jordan, as the Israeli military reported Iran had launched missiles toward the Jordanian port city of Aqaba.

Eyewitness in Aqaba reported hearing several blasts, which were likely the sound of missile interceptions.

Given Aqaba’s close proximity to the Israeli border, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) warned that sirens could sound in southern Israel too. They later confirmed that Israeli air defenses had taken part in intercepting the missiles.

Earlier on Sunday, the Jordanian government denied that Aqaba’s international airport and seaport had been evacuated, despite a statement from the US Embassy in Jordan saying they had been due to “a specific and credible threat.”

Iran says US struck nuclear power plant under construction

Iran’s Atomic Energy Organization said the US struck an Iranian nuclear power plant currently under construction in the early hours of this morning.

The strikes hit the construction site at the Darkhovin Power Plant, which is located in southern Iran, near the Iraqi border, the organization said.

The organization said in December 2022 that groundworks had begun at the site. Construction still had not officially started as of March, according to the World Nuclear Association, which represents the global nuclear industry.

CNN has reached out to US Central Command for comment.

Some context: Plans for a nuclear power plant in Darkhovin date back to before the 1979 Iranian Revolution, and construction there began in the 1970s following French investment in the project.

But after the revolution, France withdrew its investments, halting construction, according to the World Nuclear Association. Chinese investments, agreed in the 1990s, was also withdrawn before construction could restart, the association added.

Kuwait says power and desalination plant attacked by Iran for second time in two days

A satellite image shows smoke billowing near an oil facility in Ahmadi Governorate, Kuwait, July 18.

A Kuwaiti power and desalination plant has been attacked by Iran for the second time in two days, Kuwait’s Ministry of Electricity, Water and Renewable Energy said in a statement a short while ago, as Iranian strikes on US regional allies persist.

The Iranian strike was “heinous,” the ministry said, calling it “second hostile attack in two days.”

A resulting fire impacted a “large number of electricity generation units,” the ministry said, leading to the activation of emergency plans to maintain the stability of the plant’s electrical system.

Yesterday’s attack also saw a fire break out at the plant, but only in “one of the plant’s components,” according to the ministry.

A similar attack also took place on Friday, the ministry said after which the electrical generation units of a Kuwaiti power generation and water desalination plant were damaged in a fire that resulted from the Iranian strike.

Kuwait’s Foreign Ministry said it holds Iran “fully responsible” for the strike and its consequences and called on Tehran to stop the attacks immediately.

The ministry said in a statement Sunday that Kuwait reserves “the full right to take all necessary actions to preserve its security and defend its territories and vital installations against any aggression or threat.”

Kuwait has been one of the countries most frequently targeted by Iran since hostilities resumed between Tehran and Washington. In Kuwait, desalination accounts for around 90% of freshwater needs.

CNN’s Jessie Yeung and Mostafa Salem contributed to this reporting.

Two protesters executed for role in anti-government demonstrations, Iranian media says

Demonstrators attend an anti-government protest in Tehran, Iran, Jan. 9.

Two Iranian protesters have been executed, according to the country’s semi-official Tasnim news agency, in a sign that the Iranian regime could be cracking down under the cover of ongoing conflict.

Erfan Esfandiari and Gol Mohammad Mohammadi were executed this morning, Tasnim said, for their role in the January anti-government demonstrations, which drew a brutal response from the regime.

It’s still unclear how many people were killed during those protests, but the US-based Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA) says at least 6,000 protesters died and another 17,000 deaths are under investigation.

US President Donald Trump warned Tehran at the time that if they used violence against the protesters, the US would “come to their rescue.” And when the US and Israel started striking Iran weeks later, Trump called on Iranians to “seize the moment” and “take back” their country.”

Such rhetoric has waned during the course of the war. In fact, according to the Oslo-based Iran Human Rights (IHR), the regime has executed at least 47 political prisoners, many more than the 16 who had been executed at around the same time last year.

CNN’s Isobel Yeung and Vasco Cotovio contributed reporting.

Jordanian government denies airport, seaport evacuation after US Embassy report

The Jordanian government denied the international airport and seaport in the port city of Aqaba were evacuated Sunday, despite a statement from the US Embassy in Jordan.

“No potential threats have been recorded by the relevant Jordanian authorities in the past few hours,” spokesperson Dr. Mohammad Al-Momani said. “The authorities have not issued any evacuation orders at Aqaba Airport or the port.”

Both the airport and the seaport are operating normally, he added.

Earlier, the US Embassy said the airport and seaport in Aqaba had been evacuated due to a “specific and credible threat” as it advised Americans in the country against traveling to either terminal.

How ceasefire broke down before renewed fighting raised fears of a wider war

People walk the street with an anti-US mural on a building in the background, in Tehran, Iran, July 18.

The ceasefire between the US and Iran is in tatters, with the conflict between the two sides intensifying this past week.

Tehran and Washington agreed to a memorandum of understanding (MoU) last month.

Here’s what has happened since the beginning of July:

CNN’s Mohammed Tawfeeq, Zachary Cohen, Jessie Yeung, Kevin Liptak, Sophie Tanno, Casey Gannon, Julia Benbrook, Hira Humayun, Pamela Brown, Lex Harvey, Davis Winkie, Isaac Yee, Clay Voytek, Betsy Klein, Alejandra Jaramillo, Aida Karimi, Lauren Kent, Jennifer Hansler, Rhea Mogul, Dalia Abdelwahab, Aleena Fayaz, Aileen Graef, Kathleen Magramo, Billy Stockwell, Helen Regan, Kareem El Damanhoury, Hanna Park, Ibrahim Dahman, Sana Noor Haq, Xiaoqian Lin, Mostafa Salem, Eyad Kourdi, Adam Pourahmadi, Tim Lister and Chris Lau contributed to this reporting.

Bahrain and Kuwait intercept Iranian attacks, as US strikes Iran for eighth straight night

Smoke rises from an explosion at an unknown location, during what US Central Command says are strikes on Iran, on July 18.

Both Bahrain and Kuwait have reported intercepting Iranian aerial attacks today, after the US launched yet another round of strikes at Iran overnight.

As the conflict continues to escalate, here’s the latest:

CNN’s Ibrahim Dahman, Sophie Tanno, Chris Lau, Aleena Fayaz, Logan Schiciano and Jomana Karadsheh contributed to this reporting.

Airport and seaport evacuated in Jordan over "credible threat," US embassy says

The international airport and seaport in the Jordanian port city of Aqaba have been evacuated due to a “specific and credible threat,”, the US Embassy in Jordan said Sunday.

“We strongly advise all Americans to refrain traveling to either the airport or seaport,” it added.

Aqaba on the Red Sea is usually very busy during summer months. It is home to Jordan’s only seaport.

The US Embassy added that it continues to advise all Americans to avoid travel to military bases in Jordan, which have seen frequent Iranian attacks including one that killed two US service members.

There has been no immediate comment from the Jordanian authorities.

How the US-Iran conflict continues to escalate

Officials inspect a heavily-damaged bridge which was hit by a US strike along the road connecting Roudan and Bandar Abbas in southern Iran on Saturday.

The US has now bombarded Iran for an eighth consecutive night in a row, targeting facilities related to the country’s air and coastal defenses as well as its missile and drone storage sites, according to US Central Command (CENTCOM).

The strikes were launched to “swiftly punish” Iran for killing two American soldiers in Jordan on Friday, CENTCOM said.

Here’s a look at how the conflict has escalated over the past week:

CNN’s Dalia Abdelwahab, Aleena Fayaz, Laura Sharman, Eyad Kourdi, Xiaoqian Lin, Mohammed Tawfeeq, Kareem El Damanhoury, Ross Adkin, Lex Harvey, Yasha Saebi, Max Saltman, Clay Voytek, Aida Karimi, Hira Humayun, Kathleen Magramo, Davis Winkie, Zachary Cohen, Kit Maher, Billy Stockwell, Mitchell McCluskey, Hanna Park, Ibrahim Dahman, Sana Noor Haq, Sophie Tanno, Mostafa Salem, Isaac Yee, Jessie Yeung, Adam Pourahmadi, Tim Lister and Chris Lau contributed to this reporting.

Bahrain's air defenses intercept "a number" of Iranian attacks

Bahrain intercepted and destroyed multiple Iranian aerial attacks today, the country’s defense forces said, adding that all its “weapons and units are at the highest levels of readiness.”

The General Command urged “everyone to exercise caution and avoid approaching any unidentified or suspicious objects resulting from the remnants of the brutal Iranian aggression, and to report them immediately.”

Sirens sounded in Bahrain on Sunday morning, the country’s interior ministry noted on X, for the seventh time in less than 48 hours.

The ministry instructed citizens to remain calm and head to the nearest safe space.

Bahrain hosts US military facilities and has been a frequent target of Iranian reprisal attacks.

Spiraling US-Iran conflict risks turning into a broader regional war

Yemeni supporters of the Iran-backed Houthi movement hold portraits of Houthi leader Abdul-Malik al-Houthi during a protest against what the group says are restrictions imposed by the Saudi-led coalition on Houthi-controlled areas of Yemen, in Sanaa on Sunday.

Gulf states are looking on with growing apprehension as the conflict between Iran and the US escalates again.

A pattern of strikes and counterstrikes is firmly bedded in, with the additional complication of growing tension between Saudi Arabia and the Iran-allied Houthis in Yemen, who are determined to break a blockade against them.

The diplomatic track seems moribund for now. The flurry of Pakistani and Qatari delegations visiting Iran in an effort to sustain the ceasefire has given way to pessimism among regional diplomats. Qatar itself has been hit twice in the recent flare-up.

Iranian drones have also targeted Oman, days after negotiations between the two states on a management scheme for the Strait. And Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) has struck ships sailing close to the Omani coastline. Traffic in the Strait of Hormuz is down to a trickle.

Iran has repeatedly warned it is ready to step up strikes on neighbors that host US military facilities and a semi-official outlet – Fars – published a list of five ports in Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates that it said could become targets if Iranian infrastructure were attacked.

US targeting in recent days has included tunnels, roads, bridges and railways, according to Iranian state media – heightening anxiety that the conflict could spiral.

“Every US escalation is met by an Iranian escalation, as each side seeks to establish new deterrence thresholds with every exchange,” according to Israeli analyst Danny Citrinowicz.

Rather than force Iran back to the negotiating table, “an equally plausible outcome is a conflict that spirals beyond either side’s intentions, expanding into a much broader regional war with diminishing opportunities to restore diplomacy,” Citrinowicz posted on X yesterday.

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