Thursday, May 7, 2026

Trump: ‘Great damage’ done to Iranian attackers after US ships face fire; says truce ‘in effect’


Trump: ‘Great damage’ done to Iranian attackers after US ships face fire; says truce ‘in effect’
TOI

US President Donald Trump says three US Navy destroyers transited out of the Strait of Hormuz under fire, adding that the American destroyers were not damaged but “great damage was done to Iranian attackers.”

Earlier, Trump tells a reporter from ABC News that the recent US strikes were “just a love tap” and adds that “the ceasefire is going. It’s in effect.”

On Truth Social, Trump writes that the US attacked Iranian seacraft that fired at US Navy ships.

“Three World Class American Destroyers just transited, very successfully, out of the Strait of Hormuz, under fire. There was no damage done to the three Destroyers, but great damage done to the Iranian attackers,” Trump writes on Truth Social.

“They were completely destroyed along with numerous small boats,” he says.

He threatens Iran with further attacks unless it agrees to a deal in ongoing talks with the US.

“A normal country would have allowed these destroyers to pass, but Iran is not a normal country. They are led by LUNATICS, and if they had the chance to use a nuclear weapon, they would do it, without question,” he writes. “But they’ll never have that opportunity and, just like we knocked them out again today, we’ll knock them out a lot harder, and a lot more violently, in the future, if they don’t get their deal signed, FAST!”

US confirms striking Iran in ‘self defense,’ says it ‘does not seek escalation’

TOI

The American military confirms carrying out “self-defense” strikes in Iran in response to “unprovoked Iranian attacks” against US Navy missile destroyers that transited the Strait of Hormuz to the Gulf of Oman.

“Iranian forces launched multiple missiles, drones and small boats as USS Truxtun (DDG 103), USS Rafael Peralta (DDG 115), and USS Mason (DDG 87) transited the international sea passage,” US Central Command says in a statement.

CENTCOM says it intercepted the “inbound threats,” and “no US assets were struck.”

In response, CENTCOM says it targeted Iranian military facilities “responsible for attacking US forces.” The targets included “missile and drone launch sites, command and control locations, and intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance nodes,” according to CENTCOM.

“CENTCOM does not seek escalation but remains positioned and ready to protect American forces,” the statement adds.

Trump: Hormuz clash a ‘trifle,’ deal with Iran ‘might not happen, but could happen any day’

Trump says US is negotiating with Iran following strikes



US Conducts New Iran Strikes Along Hormuz Corridor, State Media Cites Return Fire On 3 US Destroyers


US Conducts New Iran Strikes Along Hormuz Corridor, State Media Cites Return Fire On 3 US Destroyers
TYLER DURDEN



Summary

  • US military attacks Iran locations on southern coast, and allegations of UAE involvement; Explosions rock Abu DhabiCENTCOM says intercepted Iranian counterattacks.

  • Iran says US violated ceasefire after Centcom targeted Iranian facilities responsible for attacks; US says ceasefire not violated despite striking Iranian oil tanker and targets in Bandar Abbas and Qeshm.

  • The Trump admin mulls restarting operation to guide ships through the Strait of Hormuz with naval and air support as early as this week after Saudi Arabia and Kuwait lifted restrictions on US access to their bases and airspaces

  • Iran national security commission 'red line': No uranium has left the country; The right to enrich uranium, the complete lifting of sanctions, and the release of the country's assets are non-negotiable red lines.

  • French nuclear-powered carrier steams through Suez Canal in support mission as Europe seeks diplomatic influence over Hormuz outcome.

  • First Chinese tanker reportedly attacked: shipping industry source told Caixin that this was the first time a Chinese tanker was hit in the three-month-long war, calling it "psychologically very hard to accept."


    Iran says US violated ceasefire as explosions are reported in the UAE (via Newsquawk)


    IRAN SAYS US VIOLATED CEASEFIRE

    Iran’s Top Joint Military Command says:

    • The US violated the ceasefire,
    • The US targeted an Iranian oil tanker and another ship entering the Strait of Hormuz,
    • Iran will respond “powerfully and without hesitation.”

    US SOURCE SAID CEASEFIRE NOT VIOLATED

    • US officials, according to Axios/Fox reporting, say:
    • US strikes were carried out in Qeshm port and Bandar Abbas,
    • The strikes do not mean the war has restarted,
    • The ceasefire is not over.

    ATTACKS

    • Iranian media and officials also claimed:
    • Three American destroyers were attacked near the Strait of Hormuz,
    • Iranian missile fire forced enemy units to retreat after suffering damage.

    These claims are unverified.

    • Air defences were activated multiple times around:
    • Tehran
    • Bandar Abbas
    • Qeshm

    REGIONAL TARGETS

    • Iran is accusing the US and “some regional nations” of striking targets in the Strait of Hormuz area.
    • Iranian media outlets reported explosions in Abu Dhabi and Dubai:
    • ISNA: explosions heard in Abu Dhabi and Dubai.
    • IRIB/Fars: explosions heard in Abu Dhabi.
    • There is no confirmation yet on cause, damage, or responsibility.


    CENTCOM confirms attack on Iran, and intercept of Iranian retaliation effort: "U.S. forces intercepted unprovoked Iranian attacks and responded with self-defense strikes as U.S. Navy guided-missile destroyers transited the Strait of Hormuz to the Gulf of Oman, May 7.


    Iranian forces launched multiple missiles, drones and small boats as USS Truxtun (DDG 103), USS Rafael Peralta (DDG 115), and USS Mason (DDG 87) transited the international sea passage. No U.S. assets were struck.


    U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) eliminated inbound threats and targeted Iranian military facilities responsible for attacking U.S. forces including missile and drone launch sites; command and control locations; and intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance nodes. CENTCOM does not seek escalation but remains positioned and ready to protect American forces."


    Fox News confirming a nighttime US miliary attack on Iran's Qeshm port and Bandar Abbas, however, with US officials seeking to downplay that this marks a restart of the war and bombing campaign. This comes via Fox chief national security correspondent Jennifer Griffin:

    A senior US official tells me that it was a US military strike on Iran’s Qeshm port and Bandar Abbas moments ago but added this is NOT a restarting of the war or end to the ceasefire.

    The strike on one of Iran’s oil ports comes two days after Iran fired 15 ballistic and cruise missiles at UAE Fujairah Port, eliciting anger from Gulf countries after top Pentagon leaders said Tuesday that the Iranian strikes did not rise to the level of breaking the ceasefire, calling it low level attacks that didn’t rise to that level.


    There have been allegations of UAE involvement. Since the initial explosions, more follow up blasts have been reported via state media, along with some emerging images:

    • US CONDUCTED STRIKES THURS IN THE STRAIT OF HORMUZ AREA: AXIOS
    • IRAN CLAIMS IT FIRED MISSILES AT THREE US DESTORYERS: TASNIM




Explosions heard in southern Iran, cause unclear, Iran lawmaker says Tehran will not reopen Hormuz


Explosions heard in southern Iran, cause unclear - state media


IRGC-affiliated Fars News reported that residents of Bandar Abbas heard several sounds resembling explosions near the southern Iranian port city, adding that the source and exact location remained unclear. 


Local outlet Eskan News reported six explosions in Sirik in Hormozgan province, at intervals of 40 seconds from one another. Vahid Online also reported explosions heard Thursday night in Qeshm, Minab, Bandar Abbas, Bandar Khamir, and Sirik.


Iran's state TV said an explosion was heard at Bahman passenger pier on Qeshm Island in southern Iran.

"Some sources say some of the sounds were related to operations by the IRGC Navy to warn certain vessels about unauthorized passage through the Strait of Hormuz. But efforts to determine the exact and full source of the sounds are still ongoing," IRGC-affiliated Tasnim reports.



Iran lawmaker says Tehran will not reopen Hormuz


Iran will not reopen the Strait of Hormuz and no oil can pass through the waterway without Tehran’s permission, spokesperson for the Iranian parliament’s National Security and Foreign Policy Committee Ebrahim Rezaei said on Thursday.


“They cannot pass even one liter of oil through the Strait of Hormuz without the permission of the Islamic Republic,” Rezaei said.


“If the Americans see the slightest concession or retreat from our side, they will definitely become more emboldened,” he added.



Iran's new demands hold up response to US proposal


Iran's new demands hold up response to US proposal


Diplomatic officials in the region tell Israel Hayom that the delay in Iran's response to the US proposal stems from Tehran's demand for changes to the document on the table before it submits an official response.

Among the demands raised and relayed by Pakistan to Washington is that the understandings be defined in stages, with the first stage including an agreement on a long-term ceasefire and the opening the Strait of Hormuz, and only afterward discussions on the nuclear issue.

According to the same officials, Iran is also walking back previous understandings regarding a ban on enrichment and the handover of enriched uranium. 

The officials further assessed that the US is not expected to accept the Iranian demands, and is therefore expected to continue its policy of blockade and severe sanctions against Tehran.

At the same time, according to data and information coming from Iran, public frustration with the regime is growing amid poverty and the increasingly widespread difficulty of obtaining basic goods among large parts of the population. However, assessments indicate that at this stage, the frustration is not expected to lead to renewed public protests.


What is everyone misunderstanding about US intelligence report on Iran nuclear threat?


What is everyone misunderstanding about US intelligence report on Iran nuclear threat? - analysis



On Monday, Reuters reported that US intelligence estimates regarding Iran being only one year away from a nuclear weapon had not changed much since last year’s 12 Day War with Iran, despite the recent Operation Epic Fury (Roaring Lion) this year.

Some media outlets are putting this information out in ways that attempt to question whether the wars were worth it.

While that question might be more debatable from an American point of view, from an Israeli point of view, both wars were clearly worthwhile.

Prior to June 2025, Israel had faced two potential, relatively imminent existential threats from Iran: its nuclear weapons and the growth of its ballistic missile arsenal beyond a volume that Israel could handle on defense.

In June, Israeli and US attacks on dozens of Iranian nuclear facilities pushed back the Islamic regime’s nuclear program from a matter of months away from a nuclear weapon to between one and two years away.

The recent US-Israeli operations have now pushed Iran back from its arsenal of 2,500 ballistic missiles – and an uninterrupted path to achieving an additional 3,700 to 4,300 missiles within six months, and up to 4,900 to 6,100 within a year – to between a mere several hundred to a maximum of 1,000 missiles and a delay of multiple years for producing a new large volume of missiles.

So why does the US intelligence report say what it says? And why are so many analysts up in arms about the implications?

Part of the answer is due to US President Donald Trump conveying inaccurate messages about the recent war’s most achievable goals. Messages, incidentally, which were quite different from what IDF officials were emphasizing in their war messaging.

Trump emphasized how the war would end Iran’s nuclear weapons threat. The IDF emphasized the ballistic missile threat and de-emphasized the nuclear issue.

This was not just about messaging.

American forces hardly bombed a single Iranian nuclear site during the around 40 days of war this year.

Israeli forces bombed several thousand important targets before finally attacking one nuclear site on the fourth day of the war this year.

In other words, despite the messaging, the targeting makes it clear that Iran's nuclear program was not the focus of the 2026 war like it was in June 2025.

This was for a very simple reason: Iran did not progress with its nuclear program after June 2025.

Many of the critics who say nothing was achieved against Iran’s nuclear program in June 2025 had predicted that the Islamic regime would produce a nuclear weapon within three months of that war.

Nearly 11 months later, Iran has made zero concrete progress toward restoring its hammered nuclear program, and the few unimportant nuclear sites that it was trying to get going more recently were struck during this recent war.

If almost a year after the 12 Day War, Iran is still around one year from a nuclear weapon according to US intelligence, that pretty much fits Israel’s earlier predictions, that the Islamic regime would not be able to field a nuclear weapon before summer 2027 at the earliest, and even that would only happen if it pushed hard to do so and was not stopped.

Another point that has confused observers is that Iran still has two major remaining nuclear assets: over 400 kilograms of 60 percent enriched uranium and the new Pickaxe Mountain nuclear facility. But when critics discuss these nuclear assets as if this leaves Iran close to producing a nuclear weapon, they are either being disingenuous or are confused.

A mix of defense sources and open sources has made it clear to The Jerusalem Post that most or all of that 60% enriched uranium is deep under the rubble of the Isfahan nuclear facility and likely also under rubble at the Fordow or Natanz nuclear facilities.

Iran has made efforts to approach that uranium, but after 11 months has not succeeded.

The Islamic Republic, therefore, does not “possess” the uranium, and it is not clear whether it could obtain access to and control over it within a short period of time, even if there were no Israeli and American pressure on the issue.

Even if the Islamic regime could succeed in eventually getting to that uranium, Israeli and US intelligence know exactly where the spots are and have the capability of striking the Iranians exactly as the uranium was being removed from the area.

If Iran was able to remove it, assumptions that from that point (not from now, when the Islamic regime does not actually have the uranium in hand) it could potentially produce a nuclear weapon within a year – assuming that the Islamic regime succeeded in rebuilding centrifuges, specialized nuclear hemispheres, warheads, shock wave generators, and other detonation platforms, as well as delivery vehicles (after all of its dual-use satellite related programs have been bombed in 2026) without being stopped and minus most of their top nuclear scientists who were killed in two rounds over the last year.

None of this means, however, that Israel and the US can go to sleep at the wheel.

A high watch must be kept on the nuclear rubble sites.

Iran cannot be allowed to remove the uranium from those spots.

If Iran’s Pickaxe Mountain facility, which has been under construction since 2021, finally becomes operational, it will need to be carefully watched and may need to be attacked.

Nevertheless, no one should have any doubt that two existential threats have been pushed off by some years by these two wars.

Broader hopes that Iran’s Islamic regime might fall – or that at least it would be compelled to give up its enriched uranium and freeze enrichment for an extended period – have not yet panned out and may not pan out.

And whether the 2026 war was “worth it” from an American perspective is a trickier issue because of the hammering that the American economy is taking over the Strait of Hormuz standoff.

Yet from the Israeli perspective, pushing off two distinct existential threats for a period of years, even without fully resolving them, has been a critical security achievement, even if the broader goals emphasized by the political class have not come to pass.