Live updates: Iran war spreads as European nations drawn further in | CNN

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Iran war spreads as European nations drawn further in

Debris litters a street following an Israeli airstrike that targeted the Haret Hreik neighbourhood in Beirut's southern suburbs on March 4, 2026. Israel launched fresh strikes on Iran and Lebanon, where state media reported a residential building was hit on March 4, as Iran's Guards said they had sealed off one of the world's most vital shipping routes for energy. (Photo by AFP via Getty Images)
Watch ongoing coverage of the Middle East conflict
• Source: CNN

Here's the latest

• Europe drawn in: A host of European countries pledged military aid after Cyprus and Western allies in the Gulf were attacked. The UK is sending extra jets to Qatar while France is allowing the US to use a base for non-combat purposes. But leaders remain reluctant to get too closely involved in the war.

On the ground: There has been no letup in strikes with the war in its sixth day. Israel says it hit Iranian missile sites while Iran carried out fresh retaliatory strikes across the region, with several injured in Abu Dhabi. A CNN team has entered Iran, the first US network to cross into the country since the war began.

Widening conflict: There are further signs of the war spilling beyond the Middle East. Iran denied its drones struck an airport in Azerbaijan, and Tehran called the US torpedoing of a warship near Sri Lanka an “atrocity.”

• Evacuations ramp up: Stranded passengers are starting to leave the Middle East as airlines schedule new services and governments rally charter flights. But many remain stuck, with travel options limited.

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Loud blasts heard in Abu Dhabi as air defenses respond to missile threat

Air defenses in the United Arab Emirates are responding to “incoming missile and drone threats from Iran,” the country’s ministry of defence said.

A CNN team in Abu Dhabi heard several loud blasts a short while ago.

Iran launches more retaliatory strikes as fresh evacuation orders issued. Catch up here

As nations around the world ramp up evacuation efforts amid spiraling violence in the Middle East, there are further signs of the war spilling beyond the region.

Meanwhile, a CNN team has entered Iran — the first US network to cross into the country since the conflict began — as the country’s internet blackout passes 120 hours.

Here are the newest developments:

  • Iran’s latest strikes: Iran has continued retaliatory strikes, using drones and missiles to hit various locations throughout the Middle East, as well as allegedly hitting Azerbaijan for the first time — a claim Iran denies. Six Pakistani and Nepali nationals were also injured in an Iranian strike on Abu Dhabi, the United Arab Emirates’ media office said, while Qatari air defense systems intercepted missiles over the capital of Doha.
  • Fresh evacuation orders: The Israeli military issued what it described as urgent evacuation warnings for entire neighborhoods in the southern suburbs of Lebanese capital Beirut, a significant expansion from previous orders that were typically limited to specific buildings.
  • Iranian Kurdish forces: The Iraqi Kurdistan Regional Government said today that reports claiming it is part of a plan to arm and send Iranian Kurdish opposition parties into Iranian territory are “completely unfounded.” It follows reports the CIA was working to arm Kurdish forces, with the aim of fomenting a popular uprising in Iran.
  • “An act of terror:” Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev has called drone strikes in his country “ugly, cowardly, and shameless.” The strikes reportedly injured two people and damaged an airport terminal building in the first attacks on the country since the beginning of the conflict. Iran has denied launching the drones.
  • European response: France has permitted US non-combat aircraft to use an airbase on the French mainland with the “guarantee” that these aircraft “do not participate in any way in US operations in Iran,” only in defense of regional partners. European nations are working to shore up defenses in Cyprus after a British airbase on the Mediterranean island was hit by a drone attack on Monday. UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer also said today that four more Typhoon fighter jets would be deployed to Qatar.
  • On the ground: Crowds of women dressed in black abayas and men holding national flags cascaded down the streets of Iran late Wednesday, as they mourned the killing of the country’s supreme leader.

Read more about what we know on day 6 of the Middle East war here.

Iran says death toll has reached 1,230, as US-Israeli strikes hit “civilian" targets

Rescue workers carry a casualty of an airstrike in Tehran, Iran, on Wednesday.

US and Israeli attacks have killed at least 1,230 people in Iran since Saturday, according to the state-affiliated Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA), as regional hostilities flared overnight.

That figure, which has now surpassed the 1,190 deaths in US and Israeli strikes on Iran last June, came as a growing chorus of world leaders and analysts warn of the hollow legal basis for the US and Israeli military campaign. Elsewhere in the region, dozens of people, including children, have been killed by Tehran’s retaliatory strikes on neighboring countries, according to local authorities.

Now, Iranian authorities say US-Israeli attacks have hit “dozens of civilian centers” including residential neighborhoods, hospitals, schools and heritage sites spanning from the capital Tehran, in the country’s north, to the southern Minab province.

“In the past five days, following US and Israeli attacks on Iran, a large number of civilian areas have been targeted,” IRNA reported Thursday, quoting Ismaeil Baghai, an Iranian foreign ministry spokesperson.

In Tehran, a children’s park and the UNESCO-listed Golestan Palace were struck, according to IRNA. The capital’s Gandhi Hospital was also damaged in a strike on Monday, according to Iran’s state broadcaster.

Elsewhere, strikes killed at least 35 people in the southern Fars province, and 27 civilians in residential areas in Maragheh, in northwestern Iran, the agency said. On Wednesday, a densely populated residential complex in the western city of Sanandaj was also struck, IRNA added.

The single deadliest strike in Iran so far took place on Saturday, when at least 168 schoolgirls and 14 teachers were killed in a US-Israeli attack on a girls’ elementary school in Minab, according to Iranian state media. The White House did not rule out on Wednesday that US military personnel carried out the strike, but insisted that the US “does not target civilians.”

CNN has approached the Israeli military for comment.

Multiple US evacuation flights "underway," State Department deputy spokesperson says

Multiple charter flights are “underway” to evacuate Americans from the Middle East, a State Department spokesperson told CNN, as countries around the world ramp up evacuation efforts.

Yesterday, the State Department said that one charter flight of Americans left the Middle East — the first confirmed US-facilitated evacuation flight — and added that “additional flights will be surged throughout the region.”

The State Department has not given information on where those flights originated, where they are heading or how many Americans were on board.

Pigott also told CNN that 20,000 Americans have returned to the US since the war began. He claimed 10,000 were directly assisted by the State Department’s task force. A senior State Department official noted Wednesday that they have been offering assistance by offering “critical information, assisting them with transportation options, etc.”

He did not explain why other countries were able to get out charter flights in some cases days before the US, pointing only to the State Department standing up a task force on the same weekend that the strikes on Iran began.

CNN’s Jennifer Hansler and Kylie Atwood contributed to this report.

UK to send extra jets to Qatar as PM plays down rift with Trump

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer gives an update on the situation in the Middle East from the Downing Street Briefing Room on Thursday.

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer says the “special relationship” between Britain and the US remains intact despite criticism from President Donald Trump over the country’s contribution to the war against Iran.

“The special relationship is in operation right now,” Starmer said at a press conference Thursday.

“We are working together in the region, we’re sharing intelligence on a 24/7 basis in the usual way. That is the special relationship,” he said.

President Trump lashed out at Starmer on Monday for denying the US permission to use British military airbases in the Chagos Islands for offensive strikes against Iran.

“This is not Winston Churchill that we’re dealing with,” said Trump.

But Starmer played down any suggestion of a rift between the two leaders.

“Clearly it’s for the president to take decisions that he considers in the national interest the right decisions for the US,” he said.

“Equally, it’s for me as the British Prime Minister, to take decisions that I consider to be in the best interest of the United Kingdom. There’s nothing controversial about that,” added Starmer.

Assets deployed: The Prime Minister also defended Britain’s preparedness for the conflict with Iran, which has come under scrutiny after a British airbase on the Mediterranean island of Cyprus was hit by a drone attack on Monday.

Starmer said that defensive assets had been deployed to Cyprus in January and February, adding that officials “continue to bolster the capability that we have there to keep our people safe.”

The Prime Minister also mentioned that four more Typhoon fighter jets would be deployed to Qatar, and that the government has chartered an aircraft to help with repatriation efforts for those stranded in the Middle East.

What it's like on the ground in Doha as Iranian missiles are intercepted

Qatar has been subject to another barrage of missiles from Iran, its defense ministry confirmed.

CNN’s Bijan Hosseini reports from Doha’s West Bay:

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Doha attacked by Iranian missiles

Qatar has been subject to another barrage of missiles from Iran, the Ministry of Defense confirmed. CNN's Bijan Hosseini reports from the ground in Doha.

00:49 • Source: CNN
00:49

Here's how US universities with Middle East campuses are adjusting their operations

In this file photo, a Qatari student walks to a building in the Texas A&M University campus at Education City, on October 18, 2011, in Doha, Qatar.

As the US State Department urges Americans in the Gulf region to leave immediately, US universities with campuses in the region have adjusted their operations.

American universities with outposts in Doha, Qatar’s Education City — a research hub located roughly 40 kilometers (25 miles) from Al Udeid Air Base — as well as other US schools with campuses in the United Arab Emirates, have transitioned to remote instruction until further notice. Here’s a look at how some universities are handling the ongoing conflict:

  • Texas A&M University in Doha: More than two dozen Texas A&M University students were headed to Doha from Texas when the war began and were diverted to Istanbul, Turkey, a university spokesperson told CNN. The university’s building is currently locked down with no access for employees, students or visitors.
  • Georgetown University in Doha: Georgetown University’s campus in Qatar has shifted to online instruction until further notice, according to an update posted on its website. The university’s interim president also said a group of graduate business students were set to begin a program in Dubai on March 1, but Georgetown has suspended the course and is working to bring students back home as soon as possible.
  • Virginia Commonwealth University School of the Arts in Doha: VCU Arts Qatar’s dean said in a letter that faculty and staff can leave Qatar and teach remotely — a decision made “in the interest of flexibility and personal safety.” The letter said this option is available to all faculty and staff, not just US citizens, and will not affect their employment status. A university spokesperson told CNN there have been no reports of injuries among VCU Arts Qatar students, faculty or staff.
  • New York University in Abu Dhabi: NYU’s Abu Dhabi campus is “assisting with the departure of any students seeking to leave the area by identifying and securing travel arrangements, though air travel remains challenging,” a university spokesperson told CNN, adding: “The safety of our students, staff and visitors is our utmost priority.”

White House posts Iran strike video montage that includes "Call of Duty" footage

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White House posts video of operations in Iran mixed with 'Call of Duty' footage
01:17 • Source: CNN
01:17

The White House is facing criticism for a social media video that mixed “Call of Duty” game footage with clips of American missile strikes inside Iran.

The minute-long montage, captioned “Courtesy of the Red, White & Blue,” has garnered more than 30 million views on Elon Musk’s X, according to the social network.

Commenters replied with a mix of astonishment, amusement and disgust. Many said they were shocked to see a “Call of Duty” sequence repurposed by the Trump administration.

“They think war is a video game,” wrote Paul Rieckhoff, the founder of Independent Veterans of America and a staunch Trump critic. He called it “inappropriate, juvenile and unacceptable.”

“Left out of this ‘video game’ are the Iranian school girls blown to bits & American troops killed,” Harvard professor and former NAACP President Cornell William Brooks wrote.

The White House has not ruled out that the US military carried out a strike on a girls’ elementary school in Iran during the initial joint US-Israeli strikes, which killed at least 168 children, according to Iranian state media. Six US service members were killed by an Iranian strike in Kuwait.

White House communications director Steven Cheung seemed to welcome the attention last night. He responded to a reporter’s post about the video and wrote, “W’s in the chat, boys!”

The “W” is short for win; the phrase is popularly used by live streamers to celebrate a gaming victory.

Who are the Kurds in Iran?

Women dressed in traditional Kurdish clothing take photos during a public gathering in Mahabad, Iran, on November 28, 2025.

The Kurdish people are an ethnic minority group in the Middle East without an independent state.

Estimates of their population range between 25 million and 45 million worldwide, with most living in the mountainous region that stretches across parts of Iran, Iraq, Turkey, Syria, and Armenia. But there are no official statistics because many regional countries do not register ethnicity in censuses. About half of the region’s Kurds are estimated to live in Turkey, where they are the country’s largest ethnic minority.

After the collapse of the Ottoman Empire, the Allied powers proposed a Kurdish state in what is now eastern Turkey, but the plan was dropped after the new Turkish government rejected it.

Most Kurds are Sunni Muslims, but the Kurdish population has diverse religious, cultural, social and political traditions, as well as a variety of dialects.

In Iran today, Kurdish people make up an estimated 8% to 17% of the population, according to British government estimates. The Kurdish regions in western Iran have long pushed for greater autonomy or independence, as well as improved rights.

Amnesty International and other human rights groups have detailed widespread human rights abuses against Kurds in Iran. Teaching of the Kurdish language is often restricted, some Kurdish names cannot be officially registered, and Kurdish activists face arbitrary detention.

Armed Iranian Kurdish groups have fought the regime for decades, operating from outposts on the Iraq-Iran border, where they have thousands of forces.

What’s happening now? The CIA is working to arm Iranian Kurdish forces with the aim of fomenting a popular uprising in Iran, multiple people familiar with the plan told CNN. Several Iranian-Kurdish groups have released public statements since the beginning of the war hinting at imminent action and urging Iranian military forces to defect.

Sicily locals confuse earthquake with bombing

The war in Iran is reverberating 2,600 miles away in Sicily, which houses US and NATO bases.

So nervous are locals that on Wednesday when a minor earthquake struck the flanks of Mt. Etna, locals called emergency services asking if the island had been bombed, according to Italy’s Civil Protection authority.

On Thursday morning, Italy’s Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani and Defense Minister Guido Crosetto addressed parliament to reassure lawmakers that regarding US bases, “Treaties govern their use.”

The ministers did not rule out the use of the bases in the future and echoed Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s announcement that Italy would send air defense systems to the region.

“We intend to deploy a multi-domain device in the Middle East, with anti-drone and anti-missile air defense systems,” Crosetto said, adding that they would be ready to consider a request to use the bases.

Sicily is home to the Sigonella, the main base of NATO’s Alliance Ground Surveillance and home to more than 2,000 active-duty US service members.

Ministers were also pressed on concerns that the island could be a target, which has led to some Sicilians evacuating to the mainland.

“Sicily has always been a land of peace and dialogue between peoples and cannot be used as a base for aggression and conflict,” Five Star MEP Giuseppe Antoci said.

Tanker anchored off Kuwait takes on water following a "large explosion"

A tanker ship anchored off the coast of Kuwait has taken on water after an explosion, according to UK Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO), an organisation that monitors maritime security.

The ship was at anchor 30 nautical miles southeast of Kuwait’s Mubarak Al Kabeer governorate, said the UKMTO in a statement, adding that the ship’s captain reported “witnessing and hearing a large explosion on the port side, then seeing a small craft leave the vicinity.”

Although the vessel has taken on water, there are no fires and the crew are safe and well, it added.

The report comes after Iran’s Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) announced that it had hit what it said was an American oil tanker in the northern Persian Gulf, and Iranian media outlets have also posted video footage that purports to show the incident.

Azerbaijani president calls purported Iranian drone strikes on airport “shameless”

A drone explodes at the airport of Nakhchivan, Azerbaijan, in this screengrab obtained from a social media video released on March 5.

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev called drone strikes in his country “an act of terror” and “ugly, cowardly, and shameless.” The strikes reportedly injured two people and damaged an airport terminal building in the first attacks on the country since the beginning of the conflict.

Azerbaijani authorities blamed the attack on Iran, but Tehran’s armed forces denied launching the drones and suggested the incident may have been a false-flag operation by Israel.

Azerbaijan’s armed forces have since been instructed to “prepare and implement retaliatory measures,” according to the president. “We are ready to show our strength against any evil force, and Iran should not forget this.”

The president called the strike on civilian targets “an example of great ingratitude,” pointing out that at the request of the Iranian deputy foreign minister, Azerbaijan had sent a plane to help evacuate employees of the Iranian embassy in Lebanon, who had become stranded.

“In return for all this, to strike Nakhchivan in an ugly, cowardly, and shameless manner? This stain will never be erased from their ugly and unsightly face,” Aliyev assured.

Azerbaijan’s exclave of Nakhchivan is separated from mainland Azerbaijan by Armenia.

Israel’s foreign minister, Gideon Sa’ar, said he spoke with his Azerbaijani counterpart today and condemned Iran’s “overt and deliberate aggression” against Azerbaijan. Sa’ar said the attack “once again proves that the Iranian regime is insane and unrestrained.”

This post has been updated with the Israeli foreign minister’s remarks.

Europe vows to scale up evacuation efforts as travel chaos persists

Spanish nationals, who are trapped in the Middle East board a military repatriation flight at an unknown location in Oman, in this handout photo released on Wednesday.

Repatriation flights from the Middle East are underway as countries around the world grapple with how to bring their citizens to safety amid the widening war with Iran.

At least six flights supported by the European Commission have left the region since Wednesday, bringing European citizens back home to Bulgaria, Italy, Austria and Slovakia, the European Commission said in a statement. Additional repatriation flights are planned in the coming days, the statement said.

The US State Department has pledged to increase flights “across the region” after saying late Wednesday that more than 17,500 American citizens had returned to the US from the Middle East since February 28.

Elsewhere, evacuations flights have departed from regional hubs like Dubai and Jeddah, while France, Germany and the Czech Republic have also begun arranging flights out of the Middle East.

The UK said today that technical issues delayed the country’s first charter flight out of the Omani capital of Muscat since the conflict began, but added the plane was due to take off shortly. More flights are planned in the coming days, it said.

NATO chief backs Trump on Iran, but rejects involvement of alliance

NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte speaks during a press conference in Brussels, Belgium, on February 11.

NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte on Thursday praised US President Donald Trump’s decision to launch strikes on Iran but rejected any suggestion the NATO alliance would participate in the conflict.

“We support the president in taking out that capability,” Rutte said, referring to the US military objective to eradicate the Iranian regime’s ballistic missile program. “We have to be sure going forward that Iran, this republic, is not able again to pose a death threat to its neighbors; to Israel, the Middle East, to Europe,” he added in a video interview.

Speaking the day after Turkey said NATO air defense systems shot down an Iranian missile that was traveling towards its airspace, Rutte condemned the “serious” incident, in which Iran denied any involvement. He described the successful interception as evidence of a “360-degree approach” to defending NATO territory.

Rutte rebuffed however any notion that NATO was actively involved in the conflict but emphasized that the alliance is essential to the effectiveness of the US in its campaign.

“NATO is not itself involved here,” he asserted, “NATO allies are providing key enabling support … NATO, in that sense, is also this power projection platform for the United States because without European allies, the US would have found it very difficult.”

The secretary-general defended his backing for Trump when challenged by Reuters journalist Andrew Gray, explaining: “This decisive action to take out this capability of Iran … as an exporter of terrorism and chaos … I think if the president of a country is providing that type of leadership, some praise is warranted.”

Mourners hold flags and prayers in mass pro-regime processions across Iran

Crowds of women dressed in black abayas and men holding national flags cascaded down the streets of Iran late Wednesday, as they mourned the killing of the country’s Supreme Leader.

Others raised framed photos of the late Ayatollah Khamenei, who was killed by US and Israeli bombing in Tehran on February 28, sparking a wave of regional violence and killing hundreds of civilians over the course of five days – including at least 183 children in Iran alone, according to the US-based Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA).

Worshippers took part in prayers at mosques and main squares in Tehran, including in the Narmak neighborhood and at Nabuwwat Square on the capital’s northeastern fringes, as well as in the central city of Arak. People also gathered in cities including Mashhad, Qom, Ahvaz, Karaj, Rasht, Zabol, Isfahan and Abadan, state-affiliated news agency IRNA reported.

The Iranian government announced 40 days of national mourning on Sunday, according to semi-official news agency Mehr News. Then on Wednesday, the official mourning ceremony for the country’s Supreme Leader was postponed, according to the state-affiliated Fars news agency.

Authorities have not given a new timeframe for Khamenei’s mourning ceremony. But as Iranian ruling clerics deliberate over a new incumbent, the Israeli defense minister threatened Wednesday that any leader would be an “unequivocal target for elimination.”

Israel orders entire neighborhoods in southern Beirut to evacuate for the first time

Debris litters a street following an Israeli airstrike that targeted the Haret Hreik neighbourhood in Beirut's southern suburbs on Wednesday.

The Israeli military issued what it described as an urgent evacuation warning for entire neighbourhoods in Beirut’s southern suburbs, a significant expansion from previous orders that were typically limited to specific buildings.

In a post on X on Thursday, the Israel Defense Forces’ (IDF) Arabic-language spokesperson Avichay Adraee urged residents of Burj al-Barajneh and Haret Hreik/Al-Hadath to evacuate via 2 main highways.

The statement warned residents not to head south, saying any movement in that direction could put their lives at risk, and said the military would announce when it is safe for residents to return.

The neighbourhoods are home to tens of thousands of people and are predominantly Shiite areas long regarded as Hezbollah strongholds. The scale of the warning is unprecedented in recent years, including during the 2024 confrontation.

In photos: Projectile from Iran lands near Tel Aviv

Emergency workers respond after a projectile fired from Iran landed in Bareket, east of Tel Aviv, Israel, today.

Emergency workers and civilians stand near a crater after a projectile landed in Bareket, east of Tel Aviv, Israel, on Thursday.
A man holds a piece of shrapnel after the projectile landed.
Emergency workers respond after the attack.

US gas prices are now at their highest level in 11 months

Fuel prices are displayed at a pump at a gas station in Baltimore on Wednesday.

Gas prices shot higher by another 5 cents a gallon in the latest reading from AAA, taking the average price in the US to $3.25 a gallon, the highest average price in 11 months.

This 26-cent-a-gallon increase since Friday is a reaction to the war in Iran and the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz, a crucial channel through which 20% of the world’s oil passes. Gas prices have also risen after Iran launched retaliatory attacks on the oil facilities of its oil-rich neighbors, such as the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, the world’s largest oil exporter.

Most of the increase has come in the last three days, although today’s 5-cent jump in prices is less than the 9-cent increase in Wednesday’s reading and the 11-cent spike in prices on Tuesday, which had been the biggest one-day increase since the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

Still, the 25-cent gain in gas prices in the last few days is the largest three-day rise since March 2022, shortly after sanctions were imposed on Russia for its invasion of Ukraine.

Diesel prices are rising even faster. The average price of diesel rose 12.8 cents to $4.17 a gallon in Thursday’s reading, taking it up 40 cents in just that last three days. While few American drivers have cars powered by diesel, the spike may be felt by the average consumer in coming weeks. Most heavy trucks use diesel, and most trucking companies have a fuel surcharge they add onto their rates. Fuel surcharges are also being put in place on ocean shipments. So, moving goods is becoming more expensive and could be passed onto consumers in higher prices.

High diesel prices could also hurt farmers, who use diesel in their farm equipment, just as they prepare for the spring planting season. And homeowners in the Northeast who use heating oil will be hurt since that is the same product as diesel.

And more prices hikes could be on the way. Wholesale gas prices, along with West Texas Intermediate oil and Brent Crude, the two benchmark readings for oil prices, were all slightly higher in early trading today.

European powers move to defend Cyprus after drone attack on island

The Greek frigate Keimon is seen in Limassol, Cyprus, on Wednesday as European nations pledge to work together to protect the island.

European nations are working together to shore up defenses in Cyprus after a British airbase on the Mediterranean island was hit by a drone attack on Monday.

France cut short the deployment of its aircraft carrier strike group to the Baltic to respond to the Iranian bombing campaign, and on Thursday a source close to French President Emmanuel Macron told CNN that the country will coordinate with Italy and Greece in shoring up defenses in Cyprus.

Italy’s defense minister Guido Crosetto confirmed his country’s involvement, saying “we must reassess our assets in the region and respond to the requests of friendly countries in difficulty.”

Spain is sending its Cristóbal Colón frigate to Cyprus as part of a joint deployment with the French aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle and vessels from the Greek Navy, the country’s defense ministry said in a statement Thursday.

The Cristóbal Colón is Spain’s “most technologically advanced frigate,” said the ministry, which added that the deployment shows the country’s “commitment to defending the European Union and its eastern border.”

Monday’s drone attack targeted RAF Akrotiri, a key hub for UK air operations in the Middle East, and is believed to be the first attack on the British base since 1986.

US-Israeli attack hits Tehran's iconic Azadi sports complex, Iranian state media reports

Smoke rises over the damaged Azadi sports complex following an attack in Tehran, Iran, on Wednesday.

Tehran’s iconic Azadi sports complex has been hit by a US-Israeli attack, according to state media.

The attack hit the complex’s indoor, multi-purpose stadium, the Azadi 12,000 Capacity Hall. It is mainly used for volleyball, wrestling and futsal.

Tehran’s Persepolis Football Club issued a statement condemning the attack, saying that sports venues symbolized peace and fair competition.

The complex was built by Iranian architecture firm AFFA for the 1974 Asian Games, which were the first Asian Games held in the Middle East.

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