Air raid sirens in Bahrain as Iran targets Gulf with missiles, drones
The exchange of strikes comes as the Trump administration ramps up pressure on Iran to make a deal to end the conflict.
PTI
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Kuwait intercepted incoming missiles & drones as Bahrain sounded sirens & urged residents to seek shelter (Screengarb)
Cairo, 6 June
Bahrain's government said Saturday that Iran fired ballistic missiles and drones towards it and Kuwait. The foreign ministry said they had been intercepted and called on Iran to immediately cease attacks on its Gulf neighbours.
The
statement came hours after the US military said it shot down Iranian ballistic
missiles and drones launched toward the Strait of Hormuz and Gulf Arab allies
on Friday, while striking some of the Islamic Republic's coastal surveillance
radar sites in response, an exchange of fire that further frayed a shaky
ceasefire with Tehran.
The exchange of strikes comes as the Trump administration ramps up pressure on Iran
to make a deal to end the conflict.
US Central
Command said on social media Friday night that Iran fired seven ballistic
missiles toward Kuwait and Bahrain, with US forces intercepting six of the
missiles and a seventh failing to reach its target. The military said there
were no reports of harm to US personnel.
The
ballistic missiles were fired after the US earlier in the day shot down four
Iranian drones that were launched toward the Strait of Hormuz.
“The
attack drones posed an immediate threat to regional maritime traffic,” US
Central Command said on social media.
Kuwait's
military said forces were intercepting missiles and drones attacking the
country, while Bahrain activated air raid sirens and told residents to move to
the nearest safe location and follow official instructions.
Iran's
Revolutionary Guard said it targeted the Ali Al Salem airbase, which hosts US
forces in Kuwait, and the US Navy's 5th Fleet in the tiny Gulf island nation of
Bahrain, according to the state-run IRNA news agency.
The US
military is enforcing a blockade on Iranian ports in response to Tehran's
chokehold on the crucial corridor for global oil and natural gas shipments,
which has sent energy prices spiking and posed political problems for President
Donald Trump's Republican Party ahead of the midterm congressional elections.
US Central
Command said it hit the radar sites, including an island in the strait, “to
defend against further attacks.”
Trump promises a quick end to US-Iran conflict
It was the
latest in back-and-forth attacks that have strained the tenuous ceasefire in
the war and efforts to reach a deal to extend that truce. Earlier this week,
Iranian drones heavily damaged a passenger terminal at Kuwait's main airport,
killing one person, wounding dozens and briefly closing the airfield.
Despite
the attacks raising new concerns that the ceasefire could collapse, Trump told
reporters Friday that “the situation with Iran seems to be going quite well.”
“We're
going to come out of Iran very quickly, and it's going to be very strong one way
or the other, whether it's a piece of paper or the very tough way,” Trump said
at an event with farmers in Wisconsin. “The very tough way is maybe the easier
way, but we're going to come out, and your fertiliser prices are going to go
way down, just like they were four months ago.”
Trump
increasingly appears to be boxed in on a conflict that has settled into a
holding pattern. US and Iranian negotiators reached a tentative agreement a
week ago to extend the ceasefire by 60 days and start a new round of talks on
Iran's nuclear program. But Trump has called for unspecified changes, and
Iranian officials have shown no public signs of signing off on the deal.
Asked on
Friday why it was taking so long, Trump told NBC's “Meet the Press” it was
because “it's a very hard thing for them.”
“There are
things they never thought they'd be doing that they're going to have to do.
They've got no choice, and it takes a little while,” he said in the interview.
Trump said
the Iranians still have 21 per cent to 22 per cent of their missiles.
Israeli strikes on Lebanon continue
His
administration also has touted the latest ceasefire agreed to this week by the
Lebanese government and Israel after US-brokered talks in Washington. However,
the Iranian-backed Hezbollah militant group has rejected the agreement, and new
attacks have put it at further risk.
The
Israeli military on Friday struck multiple parts of southern Lebanon and issued
evacuation warnings for nine villages, including one that has sheltered
thousands of people displaced by the fighting. The strikes killed nine people
in six locations in southern Lebanon, the state news agency reported.
The
Israeli military said two soldiers were wounded, one severely, in an encounter
Friday with militants in southern Lebanon.
The
fighting in Lebanon, where Israeli forces have seized large swaths of the
south, also threatens efforts to end the Iran war and reopen the Strait of
Hormuz because Iran has demanded that any lasting truce extend to Lebanon.
Besides
the drone interception in the Strait of Hormuz, the US military said earlier
Friday that its forces boarded a sanctioned oil tanker linked to Iran in the
Indian Ocean as the United States seeks to prevent Iran from profiting off its
oil and other goods.
The US also targeted Iran's energy sector with new sanctions on a group of people, firms and tankers.
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