Saudi Arabia’s East-West oil pipeline was hit in an Iranian attack despite a declared ceasefire, and damage was being assessed, while other facilities were also targeted, an industry source tells Reuters.
The pipeline is the only outlet for Saudi crude exports after Iran’s effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz.
The large wave of Israeli airstrikes against Hezbollah across Lebanon involved 50 fighter jets dropping some 160 bombs on 100 targets within 10 minutes, according to the military.
The wave of strikes was given the internal codename “Eternal Darkness.”
The IDF said it bombed around 100 Hezbollah command centers and other military infrastructure in Beirut, the Beqaa Valley and southern Lebanon during the strikes.
Hegseth says Hormuz is open; senior Iranian official says Tehran will open strait in ‘limited’ manner tomorrow or Friday
US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth says that the Strait of Hormuz is open and the US military would be “hanging around” in the Middle East to ensure Iran complies with the ceasefire.
However, a senior Iranian official involved in talks with the US tells Reuters Iran could open the Strait of Hormuz in a limited and controlled way tomorrow or Friday ahead of a meeting between US and Iranian officials in Pakistan, implying it was not open yet.
“If an understanding on a framework for talks is reached, the strait could be opened “limited, under Iran’s control,” the official says.
“Coordinating with Iranian military will be mandatory for all ships. Still the ceasefire is fragile, however, we prefer lasting peace but Iran has no fear to return to war if the US wants go the same way.”
US forces ‘ready’ if Iran ceasefire ends, top US general says; ‘a ceasefire is a pause’
The US military is prepared to resume attacks on Iran if ordered by President Donald Trump, the top US general says.
“Let us be clear, a ceasefire is a pause, and the joint force remains ready, if ordered or called upon,” General Dan Caine tells a press conference.
US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth also warns that “we stand ready in the background to ensure that Iran upholds” the terms of the truce agreed to on Tuesday.
Iran’s defense-industrial base ‘completely’ destroyed, Pentagon chief Hegseth says
The US war against Iran has “completely” destroyed the country’s ability to build missiles or other sophisticated weaponry, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth says.
“We finished completely destroying Iran’s defense-industrial base, a core pillar of our mission,” Hegseth tells reporters. “They still shoot… here and there… but they can no longer build missiles.”
Iran “accepted the ceasefire under overwhelming pressure,” knowing that US was “locked and loaded” on energy and other targets it had no means to defend, Hegseth says.
“They know this agreement means they will never, ever possess a nuclear weapon.”
There is now a chance for “real peace and real deal,” he says, and warns that the “War Department… stand ready in the background to ensure Iran upholds every reasonable term.”
He thanks Israel “for being a brave, capable, and willing ally on this battlefield. The rest of the world and the rest of our so-called allies saw what real capabilities look like. They should take some notes.”
IDF denies involvement in alleged strikes today on Iranian oil refinery
The IDF denies any involvement in the reported strikes targeting an oil refinery on Iran’s Lavan Island this morning.
Iran has claimed that in response to a “cowardly attack” on the Lavan Oil Refinery, it launched missile and drone attacks on Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates.
IDF says will continue to strike Hezbollah, ‘no compromise’ on north’s security
The wide-scale Israeli attacks against Hezbollah across Lebanon a short while ago are not “closing strikes,” and the fighting against the terror group continues, according to the IDF.
Earlier, the IDF said it bombed around 100 Hezbollah sites in Beirut, the Beqaa Valley and southern Lebanon within 10 minutes. The wave of strikes was given the internal codename “Eternal Darkness.”
“We will continue to strike the Hezbollah terror organization and seize every opportunity. We will not compromise on the security of northern residents. We will continue to attack without pause,” IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir is quoted as saying by the military during the strikes.
The military says the massive wave of strikes was planned regardless of the ceasefire in Iran, and the timing is coincidental. The strikes were carried out after various “operational conditions” were considered optimal, according to military officials.
The IDF says it will continue its campaign against Hezbollah until told otherwise by Israel’s political leadership.
Trump: Iran won’t enrich uranium, will dig up uranium stockpile; US lifting sanctions
US President Donald Trump asserts that Iran will not be allowed to enrich uranium and claims that the US will work with Iran to dig up its stockpiles of highly-enriched uranium.
There is no indication that Iran has agreed to comply with either of these points, and they are likely to be subject to negotiations that are slated to begin on Friday.
“The United States will work closely with Iran, which we have determined has gone through what will be a very productive Regime Change!” Trump writes in a Truth Social post, even though the Islamic Republic has not fallen.
“There will be no enrichment of Uranium, and the United States will, working with Iran, dig up and remove all of the deeply buried (B-2 Bombers) nuclear ‘dust,'” he adds, referring to the results of the June 2025 strikes on Iran’s nuclear enrichment sites.
“It is now, and has been, under very exacting satellite surveillance (space force!). Nothing has been touched from the date of attack.”
“We are, and will be, talking rariff and sanctions relief with Iran,” he reveals.
In a subsequent post, Trump adds, “A country supplying military weapons to Iran will be immediately tariffed, on any and all goods sold to the United States of America, 50%, effective immediately. There will be no exclusions or exemptions!”
Back in the first post, Trump says, “Many of the 15 points have already been been agreed to.”
He notably appears to make Washington’s 15-point plan for ending the war the basis of negotiations with Iran, even though his post announcing the ceasefire said Iran’s 10-point response would be the basis for talks.