U.S. and Iran each target infrastructure in latest strikes of war

by South Asian Star | Jul 18, 2026 | World | 0 comments


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The United States ‌on Friday launched a seventh straight night of attacks on Iran, which in turn struck U.S. allies in the Gulf, as both sides targeted infrastructure while shipping in the Strait of Hormuz came under further assault.

At sea, where the renewed conflict has again cut off energy supplies from ‌the Gulf, U.S. Marines boarded a tanker near the Strait of Hormuz. Iranian media reported, citing Iran’s Revolutionary Guards, that two oil tankers exploded and caught fire after passing through a mined route south of the strait, but the U.S. military labelled ​the report as false.

Armed men seized another vessel off Yemen, raising concern over security in the Middle East’s other big choke point for oil shipments at the mouth of the Red Sea.

Iran’s state television quoted the Revolutionary Guards as saying that until U.S. “aggression” comes to an end, it will not be possible to export chemical fertilizers or even a “single drop of oil and gas” from the region.

The Revolutionary Guards later ​said four “violating” vessels that attempted to pass through the strait in recent hours were stopped through a combined missile and drone operation.

Washington and Tehran have been testing the limits of escalation since their ceasefire agreement collapsed last week, raising the prospect of a return to ​all-out war.

After reports of the escalation emerged on Friday, benchmark Brent crude oil prices climbed three per cent and were on ​track for a third consecutive weekly gain, putting political pressure on U.S. President Donald Trump ahead of ​November congressional elections.

U.S. air-strike threats loom

Trump has threatened to launch broad-based air strikes on Iran’s infrastructure and has also declined to rule out a ground assault on Iran’s coast or islands. U.S. officials have said attacks on southern Iran are designed ​in part to give Trump options.

A cropped image of U.S. President Donald Trump, as he stands on the tarmac at Joint Base Andrews, Maryland.
U.S. President Donald Trump, seen at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland on Friday, has threatened to launch broad-based air strikes on Iran’s infrastructure and has also declined to rule out a ground assault on Iran’s coast or islands. (Evan Vucci/Reuters)

Such moves risk provoking Iran to escalate in turn by hitting the vital infrastructure of vulnerable neighbouring Arab states, or having its allies in ⁠Yemen further disrupt global energy supplies by attacking shipping ⁠from the Red Sea.

Iranian media reported enemy strikes early on Saturday in coastal Hormozgan Province on the Iranian side of the Strait of Hormuz. State TV said three people were killed and eight wounded while two bridges and a road tunnel were damaged.

Mohsen Rezaei, an adviser to Iran’s supreme leader, ‌warned on Friday against U.S. escalation or any attempt to seize Iranian territory.

“If U.S. strikes continue for several more days, we will move into a phase of full-scale offensive operations,” Rezaei, a former Revolutionary Guards top commander, told state television.

5 bridges struck in south: Iran state media

Iranian state media previously said at least five bridges were struck in the south in U.S. attacks early on Friday. Seven people were reported killed in attacks on bridges in the southern port of Bandar Khamir, where the train station was also hit. An airport was reportedly hit further east and away from the coast in Iranshahr, ⁠in a province bordering Pakistan.

A vessel seen in the Strait of Hormuz, as seen from Oman.
A vessel is seen in the Strait of Hormuz, as viewed from Oman, on Friday. (Reuters)

Iran announced attacks on Gulf countries that host U.S. airbases, including Bahrain, Qatar and Kuwait, in addition to a U.S. vessel in the northern Indian Ocean.

Authorities in Kuwait said one of the country’s power generation and water desalination stations had been hit in an Iranian attack, causing damage, a fire and the disruption of a large number of electricity generation units.

The Kuwaiti army later said it was responding to Iranian drone attacks.

The Revolutionary Guards said it attacked a depot of U.S. drones in ⁠Bahrain and destroyed ⁠Bahrain’s main artificial intelligence centre with ballistic missiles and drones.

WATCH | Margaret Evans crosses into Iran:

Reporting from inside Iran

In June, CBC senior international correspondent Margaret Evans and videographer Lyza Sale were granted rare access to report from inside Iran. Where they could travel and what they could report on was tightly controlled, but Iranian authorities had no editorial influence on the content and were not given access to CBC News material before it was published.

UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres was concerned about the escalation, particularly ‌over “attacks on civilian infrastructure in Iran and across the region,” his spokesperson said.

The U.S. military’s Central Command earlier said its targets included “military logistics infrastructure,” the first time it mentioned infrastructure in more than a week.

In the latest strikes, Central Command said it reinitiated attacks on Iran for the seventh consecutive night with strikes at 3 p.m. ET or 10:30 p.m. in Tehran.

“The strikes are designed to continue degrading Iranian military capabilities at the Commander in Chief’s direction,” the statement on X said.

Shortly thereafter, Iranian media reported explosions heard or strikes carried out in Sirik, Ahvaz and Yazd.

The Iranian navy fired a ⁠shore-to-sea cruise missile toward what it called a hostile U.S. vessel in the northern Indian Ocean, state news agency IRNA reported on Friday. Iran’s army said the missile launch caused “fear and panic” ⁠and forced ⁠the vessel to move out of range of Iran’s navy.

Saudi Arabia’s civil defence issued early warnings, the first in several months, in at least two places but had yet to report any damage. Earlier in the war, ⁠Iran hit some of the oil-rich kingdom’s energy facilities.

A man walking along a street in Tehran, near a huge anti-U.S. billboard featuring an image of a burning White House.
A man walks near a huge anti-U.S. billboard in Tehran on Wednesday. (AFP/Getty Images)



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