The Times – Iran war latest: US says it will destroy regime but won’t use nuclear weapons
Child wounded in Qatar
Four people, including a child, have been injured in Qatar after debris from intercepted missiles fell on a house, says Qatar’s Interior Ministry.
In Saudi Arabia, local media reports said air defences were also active on Tuesday night, in a sign that Iran was continuing its retaliations against Gulf countries.
Tehran has launched air attacks against such nations since the beginning of the war in late February.
Turkey joins peace negotiations
Turkey has joined the negotiations between Pakistan, Iran and the US on a potential two-week ceasefire proposal put forward by the Pakistani prime minister tonight.
Hakan Fidan, the Turkish foreign minister, held a phone call with his Pakistani counterpart, Ishaq Dar, as part of diplomatic efforts aimed at ending the Iran war, Turkish foreign ministry sources said.
Shehbaz Sharif, the Pakistani prime minister, put forward certain conditions to Iran to secure the ceasefire deal.
He asked Tehran to commit to reopening the Strait of Hormuz, a focal point of talks during the ongoing conflict.
Blasts heard in Doha and Baghdad
Blasts have been heard in the Qatari capital Doha and the Iraqi capital Baghdad tonight, while the UAE says its air defences are responding to missile threats.
“The UAE’s air defences are currently dealing with missile and drone attacks coming from Iran,” the Emirati Ministry of Defence said in a statement on X.
Trump calls Iran’s human shields ‘totally illegal’
President Trump has criticised Iran’s call for citizens to form human shields around power plants in the country, during a brief telephone call with a US broadcaster.
“Totally illegal,” Trump said, according to NBC News. “They’re not allowed to do that.”
The president declined to provide any update on the status of ongoing negotiations with the Iranians during the call, the channel reported.
As for what motivated him to post this morning that “a whole civilisation will die tonight” — a comment that has provoked backlash from around the world — he would only say: “You’ll have to figure that out.”
Israel warns of inbound attacks ‘in the coming hours’
As President Trump’s deadline for Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz approaches, Israel has warned of an increased risk of inbound attacks.
“Following a situational assessment, and as part of preparations for the possible expiration of the ultimatum, there may be an increase in fire toward the territory of the State of Israel in the coming hours,” the Israeli military said on its official Telegram channel.
US and Iran reviewing Pakistan’s ceasefire request
Both the US and Iran are said to be reviewing Pakistan’s request for a two-week ceasefire and an extended deadline for negotiations to seek an end to the war.
The White House press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, told Axios: “The president has been made aware of the proposal, and a response will come.”
A senior Iranian official told Reuters that Tehran was “positively reviewing” the ceasefire request that Shehbaz Sharif, the Pakistani prime minister, announced on social media just five hours before President Trump’s stated final deadline was due to expire.
Tehran may be down but it’s not out
By the normal standards of warfare, Iran should be down and out. Its leader has been killed. His successor is thought to be incapacitated. The upper echelons of the military and security apparatus are either dead or hiding below ground. The naval fleet is mostly sunk. Missile-launch capability has been severely degraded (Tom Ball writes).
And yet for all that, Tehran is refusing to submit to America’s demands for capitulation. Such recalcitrance does not conform to President Trump’s understanding of how deals are made.
“My style of deal-making is quite simple and straightforward,” Trump wrote in The Art of the Deal, his 1987 manual for aspiring tycoons. “I aim very high, and then I just keep pushing and pushing and pushing to get what I’m after. Sometimes I settle for less than I sought, but in most cases I still end up with what I want.”
Pakistan PM calls for two-week ceasefire
The prime minister of Pakistan, which is a key mediator in the Middle East conflict, has asked President Trump for a ceasefire period of two weeks to reach a deal with Iran and “allow diplomacy to run its course”.
He also suggested Iran could open the Strait of Hormuz during this period “as a goodwill gesture”.
Writing on X — and tagging Trump and other US and Iranian leaders — Shehbaz Sharif said: “Diplomatic efforts for peaceful settlement of the ongoing war in the Middle East are progressing steadily, strongly and powerfully with the potential to lead to substantive results in near future.
“To allow diplomacy to run its course, I earnestly request President Trump to extend the deadline for two weeks. Pakistan, in all sincerity, requests the Iranian brothers to open the Strait of Hormuz for a corresponding period of two weeks as a goodwill gesture.
“We also urge all warring parties to observe a ceasefire everywhere for two weeks to allow diplomacy to achieve conclusive termination of war, in the interest of long-term peace and stability in the region.”
‘No threat is beyond Iran’s preparedness’
The Islamic republic is prepared for all possibilities in its war with the US and Israel, according to Mohammad Reza Aref, the first vice-president of Iran.
“National security and infrastructure sustainability are the subject of our precise calculations,” Aref wrote on X. “The government has finalised the necessary measures in detail for all scenarios. No threat is beyond our preparedness and intelligence.”
Tehran also said it will prevail over “brute force” in an apparent rebuke to Trump’s threats.
Esmail Baghaei, the spokesman for the Iranian foreign ministry, wrote on X: “The power of a “CIVILIZED” nation’s culture, logic, and faith in its righteous cause will undoubtedly prevail over the logic of brute force.
“A nation that has every faith in the righteousness of its path shall harness all its capacities and capabilities to safeguard its rights and legitimate interests.”
Pope: threat against all Iranian people is ‘truly unacceptable’
The Pope has said that threats to inflict widespread damage on civilian targets in Iran were “unacceptable” and could breach international law.
Speaking to journalists as he left his residence in Castel Gandolfo, outside Rome, he said: “Today … there was this threat against all the people of Iran, and this is truly unacceptable. There are certainly questions of international law, but much more than that, it is a moral question.”
If Trump carries out threats it could be a war crime
President Trump’s threats to extinguish Iran’s “civilisation” and destroy its power and desalination plants would constitute war crimes if acted upon, according to experts including the UN’s human rights chief (Samer Al-Atrush writes).
Trump’s aim is to force the Iranian regime to agree to a ceasefire on his terms. But targeting civilian infrastructure, even if it is also used by the Iranian military, could violate laws in the United States and internationally.
In a post on Truth Social hours before his deadline for Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, Trump wrote: “A whole civilisation will die tonight, never to be brought back again.”
Deaths reported after infrastructure attacks
Iranian officials reported damage to bridges, railway systems and highways today as part of a wave of deadly airstrikes on infrastructure.
A bridge near the holy city of Qom and another carrying a railway line in the central city of Kashan were struck, according to regional officials quoted by state media.
Akbar Salehi, a senior regional security official, told the Islamic Republic News Agency (Irna) that two people had been killed and three more had been injured in Kashan.
A key highway in northern Iran connecting the main northern city of Tabriz with Tehran via Zanjan was also temporarily closed after a hit around 90 kilometres (55 miles) outside of Tabriz, the Irna and Fars agencies reported.
Fars and the Mizan news agency also reported a strike on railway tracks in Karaj, outside Tehran, with images showing Red Crescent rescuers carrying an injured man on a stretcher.
JD Vance: EU meddling in Hungary election
JD Vance, the US vice-president, has aссused Brussels of meddling in elections that could end the career of Viktor Orban, the Hungarian prime minister, whose self-styled “illiberal democracy” has been touted by President Trump as a role model for Europe (Marc Bennetts writes).
An outspoken opponent of European Union policies on Ukraine, immigration and gender, Orban has been in power since 2010. However, his ruling Fidesz party is trailing in most independent polls to Tisza, a party led by Peter Magyar, a former government insider, before Sunday’s parliamentary elections.
Vance, who arrived in Budapest on Tuesday to try to boost Orban’s hopes of securing a fifth straight term, said his two-day visit was intended as a “signal” to the EU, which he alleged was carrying out a “disgraceful” campaign to bring down Orban at the ballot box.
Iran ‘believes it is winning’
Iran is said to have told Pakistan, an intermediary in peace talks, that it retained a large stockpile of weapons and that it “believed it was winning” the conflict.
Citing a person familiar with the matter, The Wall Street Journal said Tehran claimed to still have 15,000 missiles and 45,000 drones with which to retaliate against US-Israeli attacks.
Mediators said the numbers were likely to be exaggerated but reflected Iran’s unchanged negotiating position. Despite claims by the Pentagon and Israel that most of the regime’s launchers had been destroyed or damaged, the regime has proved capable of launching daily attacks against Gulf countries, as well as Israeli and US military bases and other targets in the region.
Israel regrets damaging Tehran synagogue
The Israeli military has expressed regret over “collateral damage” to a synagogue in Tehran in an overnight strike that targeted the “emergency headquarters” of a senior Iranian commander.
It said the results of the strike were “under review”, adding that “steps were taken to mitigate harm to civilians, including the use of precise munitions and aerial surveillance”.
Iran’s Shargh newspaper and Mehr news agency have reported that the Rafi-Nia Synagogue in central Tehran was “completely destroyed”.
Judaism is one of Iran’s legally recognised minority religions and there are thought to be a few thousand Jewish people in the country.
Iranians form human chains on infrastructure
Iranians appear to have been forming human chains on bridges and power stations after President Trump threatened to bomb civilian infrastructure.
Crowds waving national flags and banners were filmed gathering at key sites after a call from Iranian regime officials to symbolically protect the locations.
On Easter Sunday, Trump announced the US military would destroy Iranian power plants and bridges if Iran did not meet his terms for a deal, but it was not clear if the gatherings would continue into the night.
Analysis: Trump’s very stable deadlines
For President Trump, the finality of his deadlines are as stable as his genius (David Charter writes). His latest threat to Iran follows a series of elastic ultimatums that can be summed up as:
- March 21 “Open the Strait in 48 hours”;
- March 23 “Open it in five days”;
- March 26 “Open it in ten days”;
- March 30 “Open it immediately”;
- April 4 “Open it in 48 hours”;
- April 5 “Open it in [another] 48 hours”.
This brinkmanship was Trump’s hallmark in business and in his 2016 presidential campaign he said that America “must, as a nation, be more unpredictable”.
He said yesterday that a deal with Iran had fallen through, so he ordered the bombing of its largest bridge. The regime does not know for sure if he would seriously bomb every bridge and power station if it fails to comply with his demands tonight.
The most likely outcome is that he will find a way to extend the deadline again or carry out limited but high-profile strikes on infrastructure. Yet, as he also said yesterday, “a lot of this is instinct” — keeping everyone guessing.
Democrats call for Trump to be removed
Democratic members of Congress have suggested the 25th amendment should be invoked to remove President Trump from office (Josie Ensor writes).
“Donald Trump has lost his mind and his threats to wipe out the Iranian people should be taken seriously,” Robert Garcia, a ranking Democratic member of the House oversight committee, posted on X. He called for the invocation of the amendment, which allows the vice-president and a majority of the cabinet to remove power from a president deemed unable to discharge their duties.
Melanie Stansbury, a congresswoman for New Mexico, posted: “This man is threatening mass killings and war crimes on social media posts. When will enough be enough? We need our Republican colleagues to do the right thing, for this country and for the world.”
Vatican aid convoy to Lebanon fired upon
An aid convoy organised by the Vatican’s envoy to Lebanon had to turn back today after it came under fire.
Archbishop Paolo Borgia was travelling in a convoy headed for Christian villages in the country’s south, a source told AFP news agency. Despite being escorted by French peacekeepers from the United Nations, the convoy was fired upon as it approached border villages. Vehicles were damaged but no casualties were reported.
The source did not specify who had fired the shots but there has been fighting in border villages between the IDF and Hezbollah fighters for the past month.
US journalist kidnapped in Baghdad ‘has been freed’
An American journalist kidnapped in Iraq has been freed (Josie Ensor writes).
Shelly Kittleson, a freelance correspondent from Minnesota, was taken from a Baghdad street last week by Kataib Hezbollah, an Iran-backed militia. It announced its intention to release her today.
HMS Dragon withdrawn for maintenance
The sole Royal Navy warship sent to protect British bases from Iranian drones and missiles has returned to port for maintenance (Charlie Parker writes).
HMS Dragon, a Type-45 destroyer, arrived in the eastern Mediterranean weeks after the fighting began but is having to temporarily withdraw. The Ministry of Defence admitted that the vessel, which is tasked with defending RAF Akrotiri in Cyprus as well as Gulf allies, has sailed to a safe berth for repairs.
However, defence sources denied it would affect the ship’s operational capability. Officials said the stop would include addressing “a minor technical issue with onboard water systems”.
IDF issues warning for southern Lebanon coast
The Israeli military issued a warning today for all vessels anchoring or sailing in the maritime area from the Israel-Lebanon border to the Lebanese city of Tyre, possibly signalling an imminent attack.
All vessels must immediately sail north of the Tyre area, the military said.
IDF: offensive is approaching ‘strategic crossroads’
The joint US-Israeli offensive against Iran is “approaching a strategic crossroads”, the head of Israel’s military has said, while promising to “intensify the damage inflicted on the regime”.
Eyal Zamir, the IDF chief of staff, said: “We have achieved significant gains, including relative to the objectives we set at the outset of the operation. We will continue to act with determination and intensify the damage inflicted on the regime.”
The remarks came after the Israeli military announced it had struck eight bridges that it said were used by Iran’s armed forces “for transporting weapons and military equipment”.
IDF posts video of ‘terrorists’ being eliminated
The Israeli military has published video of what it said were strikes against “terrorists” in Lebanon as it continues its military campaign against Hezbollah.
The footage, posted online, shows aerial surveillance and explosive attacks against individuals on foot, in vehicles and against buildings.
The Israel Defence Forces said in a caption “that approximately 130 terrorists were eliminated … In various operations, the forces identified terrorists who posed a real threat to them, closing the circle quickly as the terrorists were eliminated by the air force in co-ordination with observation forces after attempting to flee.”
UN rights chief: Attacking civilians is a war crime
The UN commissioner for human rights decried the “incendiary rhetoric” in the Middle East war and said that deliberate attacks on civilians and civilian infrastructure would constitute “a war crime”.
Volker Türk said in a statement: “Under international law, deliberately attacking civilians and civilian infrastructure is a war crime. Anyone responsible for international crimes must be held to account by a competent court.”
Türk did not name the United States, Israel or Iran.
‘Only Trump knows what he will do’
President Trump is the only person who knows his plans for Iran, the White House said today after his repeated warnings hours before a “final deadline” was due to expire.
“The Iranian regime has until 8pm eastern time [1am BST] to meet the moment and make a deal with the United States,” Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary, said in a statement to AFP. “Only the president knows where things stand and what he will do.”
China and Russia veto UN resolution on opening Strait
China and Russia have vetoed a resolution at the UN security council on reopening the Strait of Hormuz.
There were 11 votes in favour. Pakistan, a mediator in the dispute, was one of two countries that abstained. The initial proposal, from Bahrain, would have authorised countries to use “all necessary means” — UN wording that would include military action — to ensure transit through the Strait of Hormuz and deter attempts to close it.
‘No American president has ever behaved in this fashion’
President Trump’s social media comments on Iran are an “embarrassment”, a former US state department negotiator has said.
Aaron David Miller, who served six secretaries of state as an adviser on the Middle East, told Times Radio: “No American president has ever behaved in this fashion, no American presidency seemed to relish the possibility of destruction of civilian infrastructure, no American president ever deployed profanity — a certain cruelty and unkindness of this language.
“It is an embarrassment, it is a shame, and having worked for Republicans and Democrats — and voted for Democrats and Republicans — this seems to me to be a result of an American president who is angry, full of rage and cannot see beyond his own frustration.”
Iran denies cutting off ceasefire talks
Iran has denied reports that negotiation channels with the US had been cut off.
“Diplomatic and indirect channels of talks with the US are not CLOSED,” the Tehran Times, an English-language newspaper tied to the regime, said after sources told American newspapers that Iran had informed Pakistan, the intermediary in ceasefire talks, that it would no longer take part.
Trump ‘sticking to his deadline’
President Trump said “there is going to be an attack like they have not seen” as he reinforced his deadline for negotiations with Iran to move forward.
The Fox News presenter Bret Baier told viewers: “I just got off the phone with the president … I said, ‘Listen, if you were to put odds on it, what were the odds that this is going to end up being a negotiated deal?’ He said he wasn’t going to put odds on it. But he said 8pm [1am BST] is happening.
“He said if we get to that point, there is going to be an attack like they have not seen. Now he’s sticking to that. He said if negotiations move forward today and there is something concrete, that could change. But at this hour, he didn’t want to put odds on it, but he said it is moving forward with the plans that we have.”
White House denies nuclear weapons claim
The White House has denied that remarks by JD Vance, the vice-president, contained any suggestion of a US nuclear strike against Iran.
After Vance said US forces had tools they “so far haven’t decided to use”, an X account said he had implied Trump “might use nuclear weapons”. The White House responded on its Rapid Response 47 account: “Literally nothing @VP said here ‘implies’ this, you absolute buffoons.”
Vance, who is in Hungary to support Viktor Orban before the prime minister seeks re-election this weekend, also said the US had “fundamentally” completed its military objectives in Iran and there were two ways the war could end — either “Iranians decide … they’re not going to fund terrorism any more, they’re going to be part of the world system of commerce and exchange”, or “the economic situation in Iran will continue to be very, very bad”.
IDF attacks Iranian bridges and railways
Binyamin Netanyahu said Israel had struck railways and bridges in Iran “used by the Revolutionary Guards”.
“We are crushing the terror regime in Iran … with even greater vigour and with increasing force,” the Israeli prime minister said. “Yesterday, our pilots destroyed transport aircraft and dozens of helicopters at an Iranian air force base. Today they struck the railways and bridges used by the Revolutionary Guards.”
The Israeli military said it struck “eight bridge segments that were utilised by the Iranian terror regime’s armed forces for transporting weapons and military equipment in several areas across Iran, including Tehran, Karaj, Tabriz, Kashan and Qom”.
Hang more ‘enemy agents’, urges Iranian chief justice
Iran’s hardline judiciary chief has urged the courts to speed up verdicts against “enemy agents” linked to the US-Israeli war.
Since the war began on February 28, Iran has hanged seven people in connection with January protests: six convicted of membership of the banned opposition group the People’s Mujahidin of Iran (MEK) and a dual Iranian-Swedish citizen on charges of spying for Israel.
Rights groups have said dozens more people are at risk of execution over the January protests or after being arrested on suspicion of helping the enemy during the war.
“You need to speed up the issuing of sentences for executions and the confiscation of property,” Gholam-Hossein Mohseni-Ejei, the chief justice, told a televised meeting of senior judiciary officials. “It is necessary to continue issuing judicial verdicts for elements and agents of the aggressor enemy with greater speed.”
Iran attacks Saudi petrochemical complex
Iran has attacked Saudi Arabia’s Jubail petrochemical complex, the heart of the kingdom’s oil refinement, processing and distribution sector.
The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps said it was responding to assaults overnight on its Asaluyeh petrochemical plants, which are connected to the massive South Pars gasfield.
Jubail, a sprawling industrial city, houses multibillion-dollar joint ventures between the state-backed oil giant Saudi Aramco and its petrochemical subsidiary Sabic, and western energy majors.
French pair going home after release from Iran jail
Two French citizens detained in Iran are on their way home, President Macron has announced. They were released in November after more than three years in prison on espionage charges.
“Cecile Kohler and Jacques Paris are free and on their way to France,” Macron wrote on X.
A source at the French foreign ministry said they left Iran for Azerbaijan on Tuesday at dawn in a diplomatic convoy with the French ambassador.
Kohler, who is her forties, and Paris, in his seventies, had been jailed on charges of spying for France and Israel, after being arrested in 2022. Freed in November, they had not been allowed to leave the country until now. “This is a relief for all of us and obviously for their families,” Macron said on X.
‘He is calling for a nuclear strike’
Anthony Scaramucci, a former White House communications director, has called for President Trump to be removed from office.
“Wake up: he is calling for a nuclear strike. Seek his removal immediately,” Scaramucci, who served in Trump’s first administration for ten days in July 2017, wrote on X.
US attack would make it an ‘agent of chaos’
President Trump’s former counterterrorism chief said America “stands in danger” after his latest threat to Iran.
Joe Kent, who resigned in March over the war, wrote on X: “If he attempts to eradicate Iranian civilisation, the United States will no longer be viewed as a stabilising force in the world, but as an agent of chaos — effectively ending our status as the world’s greatest superpower.
“This would upend our economy and shatter the global order. The process is already under way, yet we still have time to avert catastrophe if Trump finds the courage to pursue serious negotiations rather than reckless rage and destruction.”
Oil price increases after Trump’s social media post
The oil price has risen back above $111 a barrel after President Trump dashed hopes of a last-minute diplomatic breakthrough in talks with Iran with a post on his Truth Social website.
He wrote “a whole civilisation will die tonight, never to be brought back again. I don’t want that to happen, but it probably will”, adding “47 years of extortion, corruption, and death”.
There was an attack on Kharg Island, Iran’s main oil-export hub, while Iran has kept up attacks across the Gulf.
Brent crude rose 0.75 per cent to $111.31 a barrel in early afternoon trading. It had dropped to $108.44 a barrel in late morning after rising as high as $111.70 a barrel earlier in Asia.
Vance: We have options we haven’t used
JD Vance, the US vice-president, said “there’s going to be a lot of negotiation” until the deadline expires for Iran to open up the Strait of Hormuz or face the destruction of bridges and power plants.
Vance said during an official visit to Hungary that he was confident the US would get a response by the deadline, but added that America had “tools in our toolkit that we so far haven’t decided to use”.
No 10: This isn’t our war and we won’t be dragged into it
Downing Street suggested that Sir Keir Starmer was still urging restraint before President Trump’s deadline for a deal with Iran.
Asked if the US president’s comments were a help or a hindrance, No 10 said: “We believe the best path for the region is a negotiated settlement, and that continues. The prime minister has been very clear that this isn’t our war. We’re not being dragged into it, but our position is very much focused on de-escalation.”
The US was understood not to be joining an online meeting of military planners from more than 40 countries this afternoon. No 10 said there was no disruption to supplies of petrol or jet fuel, and encouraged motorists to fill up their tanks as usual.
US launched strikes on Kharg Island
The US has carried out strikes on military targets on Iran’s Kharg island, a US official said on Tuesday, according to Reuters. The strikes did not hit oil infrastructure, they said.
‘A whole civilisation will die tonight’, Trump says
Trump has warned that “a whole civilisation will die tonight, never to be brought back again”.
“I don’t want that to happen, but it probably will,” the president wrote in a Truth Social post. “However, now that we have Complete and Total Regime Change, where different, smarter, and less radicalized minds prevail, maybe something revolutionarily wonderful can happen, WHO KNOWS? We will find out tonight, one of the most important moments in the long and complex history of the World.”
As the world watches Kharg Island, Iran gets oil out another way
Iran is increasing activity at a “forgotten” oil port after threats that the US could invade its main export facility on Kharg Island.
Jask port, which has been largely inactive for years, has shipped millions of barrels of oil since the start of the war, according to an analysis of satellite imagery. The volume of oil stored at its terminal has also increased.
Jask, which is 95 miles east of the Strait of Hormuz, offers a plan B, experts say — especially if President Trump acts on his threats to seize Kharg Island, through which Iran exports 90 per cent of its oil.
Strike hits highway to main northern city
A US-Israeli strike shut down a key highway in northern Iran connecting the city of Tabriz with Tehran via Zanjan, regional authorities said.
The highway was hit about 55 miles outside of Tabriz, Iran’s main northern city, the official IRNA news agency said, quoting the crisis management office of the northern East Azerbaijan province.
Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Telegram channel said the strike hit an overpass bridge.
Conflict could get out of control, Qatar says
Qatar has said the war in the Middle East has neared the threshold at which it would not be able to be controlled, after President Trump set a deadline for Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz.
“We have been warning since 2023 that escalation left unchecked will get us into a situation where it cannot be controlled, and we are very close to that point, and this is why we have been urging all parties to find a resolution to find a way of ending this war before it’s too late,” Majed al-Ansari, Qatar’s foreign ministry spokesman, said.
Death toll in consulate shooting revised
The death toll in the Turkey shooting has been revised down to one. One of the gunmen was killed and two others wounded in close to the Israeli consulate in Istanbul, Davut Gul, the governor, said.
Police officers pulled out guns and took cover as shots rang out for at least ten minutes near a permanent security checkpoint. One person was seen covered in blood near the glass towers in the heart of the city’s main financial district.
The three attackers had links to an organisation that exploits religion, Mustafa Ciftci, the interior minister, said.
The incident happened next to a major motorway just after midday, immediately outside the tower where the Israeli consulate is located. The Turkish authorities said the three attackers had been “neutralised”.
Trump ‘pushing European countries into new security arrangements’
American complaints about Nato allies and threats to quit the alliance are pushing European countries to seek alternative security arrangements, José Manuel Albares, the Spanish foreign minister, has said.
After European countries declined to send their navies to open up the Strait of Hormuz, President Trump declared he was considering withdrawing from the alliance, thrusting it into a crisis.
Albares said the decision was entirely up to Trump, but underscored that Nato allies stood in solidarity with Washington after the September 11, 2001 attacks.
He told LA Sexta TV: “Nato is a mutually beneficial alliance for both Europeans and Americans … But the US administration’s remarks and new positions on Euro-Atlantic security are inviting us Europeans to take a leap in terms of our sovereignty and defence matters. We must take our citizens’ security and dissuasion into our own hands.”
He said the EU should advance toward a pan-European army and integrate its defence industries.
Spain has been a leading critic of the war.
Kremlin claims requests for Russian energy increasing
The Kremlin said there was a huge number of requests for Russian energy from a range of different countries due to the global energy crisis.
European consumers had been trying to end their reliance on Russian energy to punish Moscow for the invasion of Ukraine, and Russia had looked set to cut its output in the wake of Ukrainian attacks on its oil infrastructure.
President Putin had suggested switching supplies more swiftly away from European customers if they do not want Russian energy.
“Now that the world has confidently embarked on the path of a rather serious economic and energy crisis, which is growing day by day, the market and market conditions in the field of energy and energy resources have completely changed,” Dmitry Peskov, the Kremlin spokesman, said.
“We are negotiating, we are negotiating in such a way that this situation best suits our interests.”
Fuel ‘cut off for years’ if Trump attacks infrastructure
Iran has warned that fuel would be cut off “for years” if President Trump carried out threat to attack power plants and bridges if the Strait of Hormuz did not reopen.
Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps has said in a statement that it would “deprive the US and its allies of the region’s oil and gas for years” in such a scenario.
Multiple Iranian media outlets carried the statement, as the group also issued a new threat to the Gulf Arab states.
“We have exercised great restraint and had considerations in choosing retaliatory targets, but from now on all these considerations have been removed,” the warning read.
Explosions on Kharg Island, Iran says
Explosions have been heard on Iran’s Kharg Island, the country’s main oil export hub, according to Iran’s semi-official Mehr News Agency.
The agency also claimed the US and Israel launched an attack on the island in the last hour, although there was no immediate confirmation from the Israeli or US military.
The US struck military targets on the island in mid-March amid threats to strike its oil infrastructure should Iran continue to blockade the Strait of Hormuz. At the time, President Trump said the US had “obliterated” every military target on the island, but left its oil infrastructure in tact.
Kharg Island is the export terminal for 90 per cent of Iran’s oil shipments.
People involved in consulate shooting ‘known to authorities’
The Turkish minister of the interior, Mustafa Ciftci, said that the identities of the attackers in Istanbul were known, and they travelled to Istanbul from Izmit (about 60 miles east) in a rented vehicle.
One of them had ties to a religious extremist organisation, one had a drug record and two were brothers, he said.
Oil price falls as talk breakthrough hopes rise
The oil price has fallen back from above $111 a barrel as some traders bet that President Trump’s deadline for Iran to reach a deal might lead to a last-minute diplomatic breakthrough.
Brent crude was trading down 1.1 per cent at $108.44 a barrel in the late morning in London after rising as high as $111.70 a barrel earlier. Shipping data showing that Iran had begun allowing a limited number of vessels to transit the Strait of Hormuz added to hopes of a deal.
Brent crude also hit a technical resistance level at $110.65, when the price failed to hold significantly above that, automated sell orders were triggered, helping push the price back down.
Millions of Iranians ‘registered to sacrifice their lives’ for country
Iran’s president has said that millions of Iranians would “sacrifice their lives” to defend their country as President Trump’s deadline loomed.
“More than 14 million proud Iranians have so far registered to sacrifice their lives to defend Iran. I too have been, am and will remain devoted to giving my life for Iran,” President Pezeshkian wrote on X.
Iran has a population of about 90 million. At the end of March, Iran began a campaign titled “Sacrificing Life” where people could express “their readiness to defend the country” by sending the digit 1 to a phone number.
Israel ‘aware’ of gunfire near consulate
The Istanbul governor said that there had been no diplomatic personnel at the Israeli consulate in Istanbul for more than two years.
Israel’s foreign ministry said it was “aware” of reports of shooting near its consulate in Turkey.
Investigation into gunfire near Israeli consulate
Akın Gurlek, the Turkish justice minister, said the Istanbul Chief Public Prosecutor’s Office had begun an investigation into reports of gunfire near the Israeli consulate in the Besiktas district of Istanbul.
A deputy chief public prosecutor and two public prosecutors have been assigned to the investigation, they have arrived at the scene and begun their examination.
Fatal shooting near Israeli consulate in Istanbul
Three people were killed and two police officers injured in a shooting near the Israeli consulate in Istanbul on Tuesday, police said.
Reuters video showed a police officer pulling out a gun and taking cover as gunshots were heard. One person was seen covered in blood.
An armed police presence is always maintained in the area near the Israeli consulate. Television footage showed armed police patrolling in the area after the shooting.
Hardest hit by energy costs get relief in Sri Lanka
Sri Lanka has announced a record $320 million relief package for farmers, fishermen and low-income households hit hardest by soaring energy costs due to the Middle East war.
President Dissanayake said the package, the biggest ever state handout, would help the most vulnerable in the island nation of 22 million.
Cash grants would be paid directly into the accounts of thousands of fishermen and rice and tea farmers, he said.
Those living below the poverty line, about 25 per cent of the population, would have their electricity bills subsidised, and get an additional $25 this month to celebrate the Sinhala and Tamil new year festivals.
Children among 18 killed in US-Israeli strike
Iranian media has reported that 18 people, including two children, were killed in strikes in Alborz province neighbouring the capital, citing a provincial official.
A deputy governor of Alborz province said that US-Israeli strikes hit residential areas, with “the deaths of 18 of our fellow citizens have been confirmed, including two young children”, the judiciary’s Mizan Online website and the Fars news agency reported.
Twenty-four people were wounded in the early morning attack, Kodratollah Seif added. Iran’s government has not released an updated overall casualty toll for the war in recent days.
Trump threatens journalist with jail over ‘leak’
President Trump threatened to jail a journalist who first reported that a US airman was missing if they did not hand over information on their source to the US government.
In his first press briefing on the mission to rescue the crew of a US F-15 fighter jet downed on Friday over southern Iran, Trump voiced anger at a “leaker” for disclosing that the aircraft’s pilot was successfully rescued before the second crew member was safe.
“We’ll be able to find it out because we’re going to go to the media company that released it, and we’re going to say, ‘National security, give it up or go to jail,’ ” Trump told reporters at the White House.
Looming deadline could bring ‘tragedy’ to Middle East
Iran’s ambassador to Kuwait urged Gulf states to find a way to avert a “tragedy”, as President Trump’s deadline loomed for Iran to agree a deal or face strikes on civilian infrastructure.
“We hope that the countries in the region will use all their diplomatic and political capabilities to prevent such a tragedy from befalling the region,” Mohammad Toutounji told the AFP news agency.
3,600 killed in conflict so far, says NGO
US and Israeli strikes on Iran have killed nearly 3,600 people, including at least 1,665 civilians, according to the Human Rights Activists News Agency (Hrana).
Since the start of the war, the US-Israeli forces have killed at least 248 children, the US-based NGO said.
At the beginning of the week, Hrana recorded at least 573 attacks across 215 incidents in 20 provinces in 24 hours, resulting in a total of at least 109 killed or injured.
“In Tehran, we have had around 548 impact points: the number of damaged residential units has reached 33,500. More than 13,000 units have been completed, and residents have returned to their homes,” Alireza Zakani, the mayor of Tehran, said.
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