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Iran Escalates Retaliation as US War Spirals With No End in Sight—Live Updates

Iran Escalates Retaliation as US War Spirals With No End in Sight—Live Updates

Iran and the US: A Simple Guide to the Latest Fighting

What Happened on Friday?

Imagine two kids in a playground who had a shaky promise not to hit each other. That promise broke about a week ago. On Friday, Iran said it threw the biggest "counter-punches" since the promise broke. It says it aimed at US buildings and US friends in the Middle East.

Why Is the US Hitting Iran?

For the past six days, US forces have been hitting Iran—sometimes more than once a day. Think of it like repeated time-outs.
Washington (the US government) says:

  • Iran attacked commercial ships (big boats carrying goods) in the Strait of Hormuz (a narrow water path).
  • Iran broke a "memorandum of understanding" (a written promise that was supposed to be the plan for lasting peace).
    So the US says the strikes are payback.

The Peace Deal Is Broken

That peace agreement is now in pieces. Even though the Trump administration said many times that Iran’s military was "decimated" (badly damaged), Iran’s military still has strength—it can still throw punches.

Iran Still Has Lots of Weapons

According to earlier CNN reporting:

  • Tehran (Iran’s capital) might still have thousands of flying robots (drones) and rockets (missiles).
  • That is enough to keep attacking at this speed for a long time.

Important Point: Iran may still have thousands of drones and missiles—enough to keep up attacks for a long time.

What the Numbers Tell Us

Here is the simple timeline of weapon counts:

  1. By early April, the Pentagon (US military HQ) said Iran’s missile and drone attacks dropped by 90% since the war started in late February.
  2. But no one knows exactly how many missiles/drones Iran had at the start, or how many were used or destroyed.
  3. Just before the April ceasefire (a stop-fighting agreement), CNN reported Iran still had thousands of drones and about half its missile launchers (the machines that fire missiles) working.
  4. By late May, Iran started making drones again and rebuilt destroyed missile sites and launchers.
  5. By Thursday evening in the Gulf, Iran’s actions over six days seemed to work as intended.

Why This Matters for the World

Experts say Iran does not need a giant pile of drones and missiles to mess up the region. It can:

  • Destabilize (shake up) the area.
  • Keep the Strait of Hormuz effectively closed.
  • Cut off about 20% of the world’s pre-war oil supplies (the oil the world used before the war).

Important Point: Closing the Strait of Hormuz can block ~20% of the world’s pre-war oil.

The Strait of Hormuz: Before and Now

Open-source data from MarineTraffic (a website that tracks ships) shows:

  • In the 24 hours before Thursday, only 3 ships went through the Strait.
  • Before the war, about 110 ships went through every day.

Summary

Iran says it hit US and partner targets in the Middle East on Friday—its biggest response since a weak ceasefire broke. The US has been striking Iran for six days, saying it is revenge for Iran attacking ships and breaking a peace promise. The deal is torn up, but Iran still has many drones and missiles, and has been rebuilding. Even a small arsenal can choke the Strait of Hormuz, slashing ship traffic from 110 per day to just 3, and risking 20% of world oil flow.

FAQ

Q1: What is the Strait of Hormuz?
A: It is a narrow strip of water where many ships pass. A lot of the world’s oil moves through it.

Q2: What is a drone?
A: A drone is a flying robot that can be sent to watch or attack without a pilot inside.

Q3: What does "ceasefire" mean?
A: It is a pause or stop in fighting, like a timeout in a game.

Q4: Why does the US say it is attacking Iran?
A: The US says Iran attacked ships and broke a peace agreement, so the US is giving payback.

Q5: How few ships are using the Strait now?
A: Only 3 ships went through in 24 hours, compared to about 110 daily before the war.

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