Iran launched a series of attacks against United States allies in the Middle East as renewed US strikes on Iran entered their second week, with fighting intensifying across the Strait of Hormuz.
Kuwait has accused Iran of striking civilian sites and critical infrastructure, including a power and water desalination plant. As an arid nation, Kuwait depends on desalinated water for roughly 90% of its drinking supply.
The country temporarily closed its airspace after intercepting Iranian missiles and drones, and reported that several Kuwaiti firefighters and a worker sustained injuries while extinguishing blazes caused by the Iranian strikes.
Bahrain triggered its air‑siren alerts on Saturday, urging residents to seek shelter after detecting possible incoming drones or missiles, and Jordan’s state‑run Petra news agency reported that the kingdom’s air‑defence systems had intercepted Iranian missiles.
The Iranian assaults on U.S. allies in the region were retaliation for recent U.S. strikes on civilian infrastructure, such as bridges and power facilities.
The secretary‑general of the Gulf Cooperation Council condemned the attacks, describing strikes on civilian infrastructure as war crimes.
Al‑Budaiwi said Iran’s actions represent a highly dangerous escalation, a grave violation of international law and the UN Charter, and amount to war crimes that demand international accountability and prosecution for the deliberate targeting of infrastructure and civilian facilities.
Reports also indicate that Iranians struck an oil facility in Kuwait, causing several injuries and significant material losses, according to the Kuwait Petroleum Corporation.
The foreign ministry of Kuwait said the repeated targeting of vital facilities demonstrates a systematic hostile approach against civilian sites and critical infrastructure, endangering lives and safety.
Late on Friday, Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps claimed that two oil tankers, guided by what it termed deceptive American intelligence, exploded after striking mines in the Strait of Hormuz; the U.S. military said that claim was false.
The IRGC also said on state television that it had intercepted four vessels attempting to transit the critical waterway and that a missile and drone attack early Saturday on a U.S. base in Azraq, Jordan, destroyed at least two U.S. fighter aircraft and three additional aircraft.
A U.S. military support centre at Camp Arifjan in Kuwait was struck, and a U.S. radar facility at Ali Al Salem airbase was destroyed, the IRGC reported.
The IRGC also targeted a site in Bahrain where U.S. combat aircraft were stationed at Sheikh Isa airbase and an intelligence data centre, according to Iranian state media.
US Central Command said its strikes, which began at 7 p.m. the previous night for the seventh consecutive evening, were intended to continue degrading Iranian military capabilities.
The United States reported hitting Iranian surveillance sites, military logistics infrastructure, underground weapons storage facilities, and maritime capabilities overnight, according to a statement released Saturday morning.
Iranian media reported hearing explosions or experiencing strikes in the cities of Sirik, Ahvaz, and Yazd.
Iran’s health ministry reported that US strikes have killed 50 people and wounded more than 500 since hostilities resumed. On Friday, the Iranian energy ministry called on residents in southern provinces experiencing extreme heat to conserve electricity after confirming successful U.S. attacks on power infrastructure, though it did not specify which facilities were struck.
Maj. Gen. Mohsen Rezaee, a senior adviser to Iran’s supreme leader, warned that Tehran would resume full‑scale offensive operations if U.S. strikes continue for another two or three days.
Rezaei said Iran will no longer limit its response to reciprocal actions and that no political border will be safe, according to the Iranian news agency IRIB.
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