Iran and US launch New Missile Attacks, Battle Over Control of Strait of Hormuz
Iran fired missiles at Jordan and Bahrain on Tuesday after the United States launched a five-hour attack on Iranian targets, stepping up a battle for control of the Strait of Hormuz that has pushed up oil prices to four-week highs.
Iran hit back by attacking a U.S. Army base in Jordan with ballistic missiles while Bahrain, which hosts a U.S. naval base, said it had fended off an Iranian aerial attack. Jordan said it had shot down four ballistic missiles and explosions were heard in Manama, Bahrain’s capital.
Read more: Trump Says US Reinstates Blockade of Strait of Hormuz After New Clashes With Iran
The worsening attacks have increased doubts that a memorandum of understanding (MoU) signed last month will lead to a permanent halt in the war, which has disrupted global energy supplies and raised fears of a rise in inflation globally.
Regional analysts said the hostilities remained within controlled boundaries for now, with both sides seeking leverage for an eventual peace deal, but that there was still a risk of fighting spinning out of control.
“I doubt the two sides will resume a full war, especially as Trump will suffer — though there is also a distinct possibility that the Iranians will overplay their hand. That is true of Trump too, of course,” said Yezid Sayigh, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Middle East Center.
The war has proved unpopular in the U.S., where gasoline prices have risen since the start of the war and congressional elections are looming in November. Half of those surveyed in a Reuters poll said they believed the war had not been worth its costs.
Oil prices rose again on Tuesday, with Brent crude futures LCOc1 gaining 5% to hit $87.49 per barrel — the highest since June 12 but still well below the peak since the war began — before dipping slightly.
Renewed Hostilities
The U.S. and Israel struck Iran on February 28, and Iran attacked Israel and Gulf states that host U.S. bases in a war that also reignited conflict between Israel and Hezbollah militants in Lebanon, killed thousands and displaced millions.
Lebanon and Israel resumed talks on Tuesday in Rome, with Beirut seeking progress towards securing an Israeli withdrawal from south Lebanon under a U.S.-brokered deal.
The U.S. has said its renewed attacks on Iran are intended to “degrade Iran’s ability to attack commercial shipping.”
Iranian media reported U.S. strikes on a number of cities and said four people had been wounded. Several explosions were heard in Bushehr and Choghadak, according to Fars News Agency, and IRNA quoted a provincial official as saying four areas of Bushehr city were hit.
No casualties were reported in Iran’s attack on the U.S. Army base in Jordan, and the strike on the kingdom was on a smaller scale than at the height of the war, when it at times faced much heavier barrages.
“We have returned to the boundaries of escalation prior to signing the MoU, a low-intensity conflict that will not produce any clear victory for anyone,” said Andreas Krieg, a senior lecturer at the School of Security Studies at King’s College London, commenting on the broader regional conflict.
Hostilities have intensified since Iran said late on Saturday it had closed the Strait of Hormuz after firing a warning shot that struck a vessel traveling on what it said was an unauthorized route.
Trump Reinstates Blockade
Trump said on Monday the U.S. was reinstating its blockade of Iranian shipping, which had been lifted as part of the MoU signed last month, and announced the 20% fee on all cargo shipped through it.
The U.S. Navy-led Joint Maritime Information Center said the blockade would take effect at 2000 GMT on Tuesday.
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi wrote on X that Tehran was the guardian of the strait and would remain so “forever,” adding in response to Trump: “20% is of course too much. We will be fair.”
Before the war, about a fifth of global oil and gas traffic passed through Hormuz daily. If the U.S. were to impose a 20% fee, it could generate around $240 million a day.
The U.N. shipping agency said it opposed any fees for straits used in international navigation and that there was no legal basis for introducing mandatory tolls on strait transits.
The United Arab Emirates Ministry of Defence said on Monday Iranian missiles struck two Emirati oil tankers while transiting the strait. One Indian crew member was killed and eight others were wounded, the ministry said on Tuesday.
Recorded transits of tankers through the strait had fallen in recent days to their lowest levels for weeks, though the level of traffic is hard to determine due to ships switching off their tracking systems.
(Additional reporting by Tom Perry in Beirut; writing by Michael Perry and Timothy Heritage; editing by Thomas Derpinghaus and Aidan Lewis)