The United States and Israel pounded Iran on Tuesday with what the Pentagon and Iranians on the ground called the most intense air strikes of the war, despite global markets betting that U.S. President Donald Trump will seek to end the conflict soon.
Raising the stakes for the global economy, Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said they would block oil shipments from the Gulf unless U.S. and Israeli attacks cease.
Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps also said it launched missiles on Tuesday evening at Qatar’s U.S.-operated Al Udeid base and the Al Harir base in Iraq’s Kurdistan.
Those launches were followed by drone attacks targeting a gathering of U.S. troops at Al Dhafra air base in the United Arab Emirates and Juffair naval base in Bahrain.
Early on Wednesday, Iranian state media reported another round of attacks was unleashed on U.S. military installations in Bahrain.
Waves of Iranian missiles also were fired at central Israel early on Wednesday. The sound of explosions from air defences intercepting the rockets punctuated the pre-dawn darkness as air raid sirens blared and Israelis scrambled to safe rooms and shelters. There was no immediate word of whether any of the missiles reached the ground.
The latest attacks from Iran roughly coincided with a new Israeli barrage on Beirut aimed at rooting out the Iran-backed group Hezbollah, which has fired into Israel from Lebanon in solidarity with the Tehran government.
The White House on Tuesday reiterated Trump’s threat to hit Iran hard over moves to stop the flow of energy supplies through the Strait of Hormuz, where the war has effectively halted one-fifth of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas shipments, and repeated his offer for the U.S. Navy to safely escort tankers.
“Today will be yet again, our most intense day of strikes inside Iran: the most fighters, the most bombers, the most strikes, intelligence more refined and better than ever,” U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth told a Pentagon briefing.
In a message posted to his Truth Social platform later in the day, Trump said, “Within the last few hours, we have hit, and completely destroyed” 10 of Iran’s “inactive” mine-laying vessels. He did not clarify where the strikes occurred.
Trump says Iran war could be over soon, but oil disruption would unleash harsher U.S. strikes
Tehran residents reached by Reuters described the war’s most intense night of bombardment.
“It was like hell. They were bombing everywhere, every part of Tehran,” a resident said by phone, speaking on condition of anonymity for security reasons. “My children are afraid to sleep now.”
In Tehran’s east, two five-storey residential buildings were hit on Monday, blasting out floors and walls and leaving a rickety concrete frame. Footage from Iran’s Red Crescent showed rescuers there carrying a victim in a body bag. Workers were still recovering bodies at the site on Tuesday when a missile struck a road intersection nearby.
Yet with Mr. Trump having described the war on Monday as “very complete, pretty much,” investors appeared convinced he would end it soon – before the disruption to global energy supplies caused a worldwide economic meltdown.
A U.S. Army carry team moves a flag-draped transfer case with the remains of a U.S. Army Reserve soldier past U.S. President Donald Trump during a casualty return at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware on Saturday.Mark Schiefelbein/The Associated Press
A historic surge in crude oil prices on Monday to nearly US$120 a barrel was reversed as Brent crude settled back down below US$90 on Tuesday. Asian and European share prices staged a partial recovery from earlier precipitous falls, and Wall Street bounced around its late February levels, before the war.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters on Tuesday that the American public will see oil and gas prices drop rapidly once the objectives of the joint Israeli-U.S. air war are fully achieved.
Some Iranians hoped the war would bring regime change. Now they doubt it
A source familiar with Israel’s war plans told Reuters the Israeli military wanted to inflict as much damage as possible before the window for further strikes closes, under the assumption Mr. Trump could end the war at any time.
Israel’s Foreign Minister, Gideon Saar, said the war would proceed until his country and the U.S. determine the time has come to cease hostilities, but that Israel was not seeking an “endless war.”
“We will continue until the minute that we, and our partners, think that it is appropriate to stop,” he said.
The United States and Israel pounded Iran on Tuesday with what the Pentagon and Iranians on the ground said were the most intense airstrikes of the war, despite global markets betting that U.S. President Donald Trump will seek to end the conflict soon.
Reuters
Iran has refused to bow to Mr. Trump’s demand that it let the United States choose its new leadership, naming hard-liner Mojtaba Khamenei as supreme leader to replace his father, who was killed on the war’s first day.
But occasionally contradictory remarks from Mr. Trump at a Monday news conference seemed to reassure markets he would stop the war before provoking an economic crisis like those that followed the Middle East oil shocks of the 1970s. He said the U.S. had already inflicted serious damage and predicted the conflict would end before the four weeks he initially set out.
Mr. Trump has not defined what victory would look like, but on Monday did not repeat declarations that Iran must let him choose its leader.
Several congressional aides have said they expect the White House to soon request as much as US$50-billion in additional funding for the war.
The U.S. used US$5.6-billion in munitions in the first two days of strikes against Iran, a source familiar with the information said on Tuesday.
The conflict, in which nearly every country in the Middle East has sustained damage from missiles or drone strikes, has left ships carrying oil unable to safely pass through the Strait of Hormuz.
The Associated Press
Several senior Iranian officials voiced defiance on Tuesday.
“Certainly, we are not seeking a ceasefire; we believe the aggressor must be struck in the mouth so that they learn a lesson,” Iran’s parliament Speaker, Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf, posted on X.
Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi told PBS that Tehran was unlikely to resume negotiations with the U.S.
And a spokesperson for the Revolutionary Guards said Tehran would not allow “one litre” of Middle Eastern oil to reach the U.S. or its allies while U.S. and Israeli attacks continue.
“We are the ones who will determine the end of the war,” the spokesperson said.
Mojtaba Khamenei named Iran's Supreme Leader, hardliners take to streets to proclaim loyalty
Ending the war quickly would appear to preclude toppling Iran’s leadership, which held large-scale rallies on Monday in support of the new supreme leader.
Many Iranians want change and some openly celebrated the death of the elder Khamenei, weeks after his security forces killed thousands of people to put down anti-government protests. But there has been little sign of protest during the war.
Fearing a revival of anti-government demonstrations, Iran’s police chief Ahmadreza Radan warned that “anyone taking into streets at the enemy’s request will be confronted as an enemy not protester.”
“All our security forces have their fingers on the trigger,” Radan told state television.

A banner displayed at Valiasr Square in central Tehran on Tuesday, depicting Iran's late supreme leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, left, watching as his successor the late Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, centre, hands over a national flag to his son and new supreme leader Mojtaba Khamenei.-/AFP/Getty Images
More than 1,300 Iranian civilians have been killed since the U.S. and Israeli air strikes began on Feb. 28, according to Iran’s UN ambassador, Amir Saeid Iravani. He said nearly 8,000 homes have been destroyed, along with 1,600 “commercial and service centres” and dozens of medical, educational and energy-supply facilities.
The intention of U.S. and Israeli strikes is “to terrorize civilians, massacre innocent people, and cause maximum destruction and suffering,” the ambassador said.
Scores have also been killed in Israeli attacks on Lebanon, while Iranian strikes on Israel have killed 12 people.
Iran has struck U.S. military bases and diplomatic missions in Arab Gulf states but also hit hotels, closed airports and damaged oil infrastructure.
In addition to the six U.S. soldiers killed at the outset of the conflict, the Pentagon on Tuesday estimated that about 140 American troops have been wounded. The Defense Department previously said eight U.S. military personnel had been seriously injured.

An explosion erupts following an Israeli air strike on the village of Abbasiyeh in southern Lebanon on Tuesday.KAWNAT HAJU/AFP/Getty Images