US Central Command (CENTCOM) executed its sixth consecutive night of airstrikes against Iran, late Thursday to early Friday morning expanding targets to include civilian infrastructure such as six bridges, a railway station, an airport, and a maritime control tower at Chabahar Port.
The strikes, aimed at severing logistical links to the port city of Bandar Abbas and degrading Iran's control over the Strait of Hormuz, killed at least seven to eight people and wounded dozens more in southern provinces including Hormozgan.
The American campaign focused on disrupting Iran's ability to threaten shipping in the Strait of Hormuz by targeting highway and railway bridges in Bandar Khamir and collapsing a surveillance tower at the Chah Bahar Shahid Kalantari Port on the Gulf of Oman.
President Donald Trump authorized these strikes on energy sites and transport networks supposedly to pressure Tehran into easing its chokehold on the waterway, which has caused global oil prices to surge above $86 a barrel.
While CENTCOM described the targets as "military logistics infrastructure," Iranian officials condemned the attacks on power facilities and bridges as strikes on civilian infrastructure, with the Energy Ministry reporting power outages during extreme heat.
In retaliation, Iran's Revolutionary Guard (IRGC) launched missile and drone attacks against US-allied nations hosting American forces, striking targets in Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain, Jordan, former US base in Syria and sites in Iraq's Kurdish region.
Iran responded by firing missiles at desalination plants in Kuwait, causing fires and damage to vital water infrastructure, and targeting air defenses in Qatar where falling shrapnel injured a child. IRGC claimed it struck the al-Tanf garrison in Syria and US assets in Bahrain and Oman. However the US military and Syrian sources denied that any American troops were present or harmed at the Syrian site, noting US forces had withdrawn months prior.
The escalation has effectively halted commercial traffic in the Strait of Hormuz, with only eight vessels** transiting the waterway on July 16, via the Iranian corridor, as the interim ceasefire between the US and Iran remains collapsed.