US Iran strikes enter seventh consecutive night According to US Central Command (CENTCOM), American forces completed another round of strikes at 9:30 p.m. ET. The targets reportedly included: Surveillance sites Military logistics infrastructure Underground weapons storage facilities Maritime capabilities The operation reportedly involved fighter aircraft, drones and naval warships. CENTCOM did not specify how many targets were hit. Naval blockade remains in forceCENTCOM says it is continuing to enforce a naval blockade of Iranian ports, indicating that Washington is maintaining pressure not only through air power but also by restricting Iran's maritime activity. If accurate, this suggests the campaign is broadening beyond isolated strikes toward degrading Iran's ability to move military equipment and supplies. Gulf states on alertSeveral US-aligned Gulf nations reported possible drone threats overnight. Kuwait activated its air defenses against what it described as hostile drones. Bahrain sounded nationwide warning sirens and advised residents to seek shelter. Saudi Arabia briefly issued alerts in Yanbu and Al-Kharj before announcing the danger had passed. This illustrates one of Iran's apparent strategies: applying pressure on US regional partners rather than confronting American forces directly whenever possible. Tanker mine claims disputedIran claimed that two oil tankers struck mines in the Strait of Hormuz and caught fire, declaring the waterway "highly unsafe and completely closed." CENTCOM immediately rejected that account, stating simply: CNN notes it has not independently verified either side's version. At this stage there is no independent confirmation that either tanker was mined. Strait of Hormuz traffic remains extremely lowMarineTraffic data shows only six commercial vessels passed through the Strait in the previous 24 hours. Normally, traffic through one of the world's busiest shipping lanes is far heavier. The reduced numbers suggest shipping companies remain extremely cautious because of: military action insurance costs possible mining drone attacks uncertainty over future US or Iranian actions Pattern of US operations becoming clearerCNN notes an increasingly obvious operational pattern. Rather than simply destroying military headquarters, US forces have repeatedly targeted: bridges railway junctions surveillance systems logistics hubs coastal infrastructure maritime assets Taken together, these targets would make it progressively harder for Iran to reinforce or operate around the Strait of Hormuz. That lends weight to the assessment that the campaign is evolving into an effort to deny Iran effective control of the strategic waterway rather than simply retaliating for previous attacks. Iran's responseSenior IRGC adviser Mohsen Rezaei warned of a "full-scale offensive" if US attacks continue. So far, however, Iran has largely focused its military responses on US allies in the Gulf rather than direct large-scale attacks on American forces themselves. That approach may reflect an attempt to raise the regional cost for Washington while avoiding an immediate escalation into a broader US-Iran war. Humanitarian impactCNN also highlights that many of the areas under attack are among Iran's poorest provinces. These regions contain: major ports energy infrastructure ethnic minority communities historically underdeveloped areas This means the conflict's economic and humanitarian effects are likely to fall disproportionately on populations already facing significant hardship. Overall assessmentThe latest updates reinforce several trends that have become increasingly apparent over the past week: The US campaign is becoming systematic rather than symbolic, with repeated attacks on infrastructure that supports Iranian military operations. Gulf states remain on high alert, suggesting fears that Iran could widen the conflict through drones or missile attacks. Shipping through the Strait of Hormuz continues at a sharply reduced pace, underscoring the conflict's impact on global trade. Information warfare remains intense, with Tehran and Washington issuing directly contradictory claims that cannot yet be independently verified. Overall, this points to a conflict that is becoming more sustained and strategically focused, even if both sides continue to calibrate their actions to avoid an immediate, all-out regional war. SOURCE
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