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  • Live: Iran attacks US bases in Bahrain after US strikes

    Live: Iran attacks US bases in Bahrain after US strikes

    The United States launched a third round of strikes against Iran and announced the reimposition of a naval blockade on Iranian ports, amid the collapse of the memorandum of understanding (MoU) signed by both sides after clashes resumed last week.

    Hours before announcing the strikes, Trump said the Strait of Hormuz is open and will remain so “with or without Iran.” He also said the United States would reimpose its blockade on Iranian ports and begin charging fees to ships transiting that waterway.

    The president set a levy of 20% “for each and every cost necessary” to ensure the security of vessels in the strait. The United States Central Command said preparations to resume the blockade of ships bound for or departing from Iranian ports would begin at 20:00 GMT on Tuesday.

    The International Maritime Organization (IMO) rejected both the fees and the military actions in the area. In a statement, the IMO Council reiterated its commitment to protecting vital sea routes and said passage through the Strait of Hormuz “must remain free of tolls and charges, in accordance with international law.”

    Below is minute-by-minute coverage:

    US diplomatic missions in the United Arab Emirates cancel appointments

    The US Embassy in Abu Dhabi and the US Consulate General in Dubai have canceled consular appointments through Wednesday due to the regional security situation, the embassy said in a security alert.

    The notice came after the United Arab Emirates reported that two tankers flying the UAE flag were struck by Iranian missiles in the Strait of Hormuz, causing the death of one seafarer.

    Jordan shot down four missiles from Iran

    Jordan says it intercepted and shot down four missiles that entered Jordanian airspace from Iranian territory, the state news agency reported.

    Iran said it attacked the US Fifth Fleet in Bahrain

    The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) said it launched missile and drone strikes against the US Fifth Fleet in Bahrain.

    According to the IRGC, the attacks caused a fire in fuel storage at the base and struck and destroyed a Patriot radar, the fleet’s air control radar, a C-RAM early-warning radar system, and the command and monitoring center for unmanned surface vessels (USVs).

    “The retaliatory operation continues,” the statement added.

    Asian markets show volatility after Trump’s comments about Strait of Hormuz fees

    Stock markets swung between gains and losses, and oil hit a one-month high during early Asian trading. In a volatile session, the broader MSCI index of Asia-Pacific shares excluding Japan rose 0.4%, helped by a 2.2% gain in Korean stocks.

    Japan’s Nikkei 225 rose 0.2%, while S&P 500 e-mini futures fell slightly by 0.1%.

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    Air-raid sirens sound again in Bahrain

    Air-raid sirens sounded for the third time on Tuesday morning in Bahrain, where the Interior Ministry urged residents to take shelter immediately.

    Oil prices surge to a four-week high

    Oil prices rose about 2%, reaching a four-week high amid ongoing reciprocal strikes between the United States and Iran.

    Brent futures climbed $1.68, or 2%, to $84.98 a barrel, while US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude rose $1.65, or 2.1%, to $79.79 a barrel at 00:51 GMT.

    The increase followed a dramatic Monday session in which Brent jumped 9.6%, its largest one-day rise since May 2020.

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    Bahrain intercepted Iranian air attacks

    Nabeel Alhamer, press adviser to the king of Bahrain, said the kingdom’s air defense systems intercepted and destroyed multiple Iranian air attacks in recent hours.

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    Air-raid sirens activated in Bahrain

    Warning sirens are sounding in Bahrain and authorities are urging residents to seek shelter immediately.

    The Interior Ministry ordered the public to “stay calm and proceed to the nearest safe location” after the latest alarms were activated.

    Two tankers attacked by Iran: one Indian seafarer killed

    The United Arab Emirates Ministry of Defense said on Monday that two domestic tankers were hit by two Iranian cruise missiles in the southern channel of the Strait of Hormuz, in Omani territorial waters. The attack killed one Indian crew member and wounded eight, four of them seriously.

    The ministry said fires broke out on both vessels but were brought under control. It condemned the attack as a serious violation of international law and said the UAE retains its full right to respond and take all necessary measures to protect its sovereignty and security.

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    Trump says Iran sought further negotiations after the deal

    The US president said the United States had reached an agreement with Iran two days earlier, but that Tehran wanted to continue negotiating.

    When asked by a reporter whether he had decided that a negotiated deal with Iran was no longer possible, Trump replied: “I never came to that conclusion.”

    He added that he believed the most effective way to pressure Iran was through a combination of blockade and strikes.

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    The International Maritime Organization (IMO) reiterated on Monday that passage through the Strait of Hormuz should be free of tariffs, after President Donald Trump said the same day that the United States would impose a 20% fee for what he called protection services.

    Under international law, passage must remain free of customs duties and charges, the UN specialized agency based in London said. The IMO emphasized that any arrangement among the region’s littoral states must guarantee non-discriminatory, unobstructed right of passage for all vessels.

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    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/el-petroleo-registro-su-mayor-alza-diaria-desde-el-inicio-del-conflicto-entre-estados-unidos-e-iran/

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    Donald Trump announced he will address the nation in prime time on Thursday, amid a major escalation of hostilities with Iran.

    “President Trump will speak to the nation Thursday night at 9 p.m. Eastern (01:00 GMT Friday). Thank you for your attention!” Trump posted on Monday on his social platform Truth.

    US missions in the United Arab Emirates suspend consular appointments

    The United States announced the suspension of consular appointments in the United Arab Emirates for three days starting Monday, citing the escalation of military tensions in the Gulf region.

    “The US Embassy in Abu Dhabi and the US Consulate General in Dubai have canceled consular appointments from July 13 to July 15 due to the regional security situation. If you have an appointment scheduled for those dates, please do not come to the embassy or consulate. We will contact you to reschedule it,” the notice said.

    Iran’s foreign minister mocks Trump over plan to charge ships for protection in Hormuz

    Iranian foreign minister Abbas Araqchi ridiculed President Donald Trump’s proposal to charge fees to protect ships transiting the Strait of Hormuz and said his country would charge a lower toll.

    “Whoever guarantees the safe passage of commercial ships through the Strait of Hormuz should receive compensation for that service. Iran has always been the GUARDIAN of the strait and will remain so FOREVER. Twenty percent is, of course, too much. We will be fair,” the minister wrote on social media, referring to the fee Trump proposed earlier.

    Oil prices jump more than 9%

    Oil prices surged Monday, driven by the US reinstatement of a naval blockade on Iranian ports and Washington’s plan to impose a toll on ships seeking to transit the Strait of Hormuz.

    By 18:20 GMT, the price of a Brent barrel rose 9.06% to $82.90. The US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) barrel advanced 9.05% to $77.87.

    The US naval blockade of Iran will start Tuesday

    The United States will start enforcing a naval blockade against all Iranian ports and oil terminals on Tuesday, the Joint Maritime Information Center (JMIC) of the US-led Combined Maritime Forces said in a statement on Monday.

    According to the JMIC, the blockade will apply to all ships regardless of their flag. The blockade will not prevent neutral traffic transiting the Strait of Hormuz to or from destinations outside Iran, the statement added.

    Humanitarian shipments will be allowed to pass, subject to inspections, the JMIC said.

    /estados-unidos/2026/07/13/nueva-ofensiva-contra-iran-estados-unidos-bombardeo-una-instalacion-naval-del-regimen-con-drones-maritimos-no-tripulados/

    Saudi Arabia says it responded to Houthi ballistic missile attack from Yemen

    The Saudi-led military coalition intervening in Yemen since 2015 said on Monday it had responded to a ballistic missile attack launched by Houthi rebels, after the group accused Riyadh of bombing Sanaa International Airport.

    “Air defenses responded to a ballistic missile threat launched by the terrorist Houthi militia toward the southern region,” Turki al-Malki, spokesman for the Coalition to Support Legitimacy in Yemen, said on X.

    European stocks close slightly higher amid Middle East uncertainty

    European stocks closed slightly higher on Monday after a session marked by the resumption of hostilities and rising oil prices, alongside concerns about the tech sector and the outlook for interest rates.

    London ended marginally up 0.01%, Paris gained 0.31%, Frankfurt 0.19%, Milan 0.37% and Madrid 0.25%.

    Guterres warns of military escalation in the Gulf after US and Iranian strikes

    UN Secretary-General António Guterres warned on Monday about the US strikes on Iran and Tehran’s attacks on ships in the Strait of Hormuz and on neighboring countries.

    Guterres expressed his “deep concern about the serious escalation of renewed military confrontations in the Gulf region,” his spokesman Stéphane Dujarric said.

    Oil rises more than 4% as US-Iran tensions grow

    Oil prices climbed sharply on Monday, with West Texas Intermediate trading at $74.53 a barrel, up 4.37%, while Brent rose 4.30% to $79.28. The increase came amid rising military tensions between the United States and Iran, which revived doubts about the security of transit through the Strait of Hormuz.

    The energy price jump also affected stock and bond markets: the VIX volatility index jumped 7.77%, while US Treasury yields rose across the curve—the 10-year up 0.63% and the 5-year up 0.88%—reflecting investor caution about a potential prolonged disruption to global energy trade.

    CENTCOM confirms first combat use of marine drones: attacked Iranian naval base in Bandar Abbas

    The US Central Command (CENTCOM) said its forces successfully struck a submarine and ship maintenance facility in Iran using multiple single-use aerial attack drones. According to CENTCOM, three Corsair-model unmanned surface vessels struck the port at Bandar Abbas Naval Base.

    CENTCOM said the attack marked the first time US forces employed marine drones in combat operations. The command stated the night strikes “degraded Iran’s ability to continue attacking commercial shipping,” amid the military escalation that has put Strait of Hormuz transit at risk.

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    Trump says the US will charge a 20% fee to protect ships in the Strait of Hormuz

    President Donald Trump announced that the Strait of Hormuz is and will remain “OPEN,” with or without Iran, and that the United States is reinstating what he called the “IRANIAN BLOCKADE,” which, he explained, will only prevent entry or exit by Iranian ships or customers.

    “All other countries will have fair and open use of the strait,” the president wrote on Truth Social.

    Trump said that moving forward, the United States would be known as “THE GUARDIAN OF THE STRAIT OF HORMUZ,” and argued that, “as a matter of FAIRNESS,” the country should be reimbursed at a rate of 20% on all cargo transported to cover the costs needed to provide security for “this very volatile section of the world.” “The process and training will begin immediately,” the president concluded.

    The announcement intensified Trump’s rhetoric on the strait, after he had earlier told Fox in an interview that Washington would become the “guardian” of the waterway and be compensated for doing so, amid the military escalation with Iran and Tehran’s warning that it would consider any Gulf states’ cooperation with the United States in managing the strait “an act of war.”

    Full story at the link.

    Iran’s Revolutionary Guards accuse the US of endangering global oil supplies by “interfering” in Hormuz

    Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps accused the United States on Monday of endangering global oil and gas supplies by “interfering” in the Strait of Hormuz after hostilities between the two countries resumed. IRGC spokesman Hosein Mohebi said the United States “must be held accountable” for risking the security of global energy supplies.

    In a post on X, Mohebi added that Tehran “will continue exercising its sovereignty and management of the Strait of Hormuz,” signaling that Iran is not willing to cede operational control of the waterway despite US pressure.

    The accusation followed a warning from the Khatam Al-Anbiya military command, which called any cooperation by Gulf states with Washington in managing the strait “an act of war,” after President Trump said the United States would become its “guardian” and should be compensated for the role.

    Wall Street opens lower amid US-Iran escalation and a drop in semiconductors

    US stocks mostly fell Monday morning as markets weighed higher oil prices and a retreat in semiconductor shares, while investors awaited upcoming corporate earnings and economic data. Crude prices rose more than 3% amid mounting tensions between the United States and Iran, which revived concerns about oil infrastructure in the Strait of Hormuz.

    Semiconductor stocks fell early after a poor session on South Korea’s Kospi, where SK hynix plunged. About 10 minutes after the open, the Dow Jones was up 0.1% at 52,676.53 points, while the S&P 500 was down 0.4% at 7,547.53 and the Nasdaq Composite fell 0.9% to 26,039.50.

    “Tensions with Iran, which are intensifying, are pushing up oil prices, and that is raising Treasury yields, while the SK hynix selloff drags down memory-related stocks, which in turn pressures the Nasdaq and the S&P,” said Art Hogan of B. Riley Wealth Management. This week’s agenda includes large US bank earnings, testimony before Congress by Federal Reserve chair Kevin Warsh, and the latest consumer price index data.

    Iran warns Gulf states: cooperating with the US in the Strait of Hormuz will be considered “an act of war”

    Iran’s military warned on Monday that any cooperation by Gulf states with the United States in managing the Strait of Hormuz would be considered “an act of war,” after hostilities between Tehran and Washington resumed. A spokesperson for the Khatam Al-Anbiya military command delivered the warning in a video message addressed to regional nations.

    The same spokesman said Iran “under no circumstances will allow… the United States to interfere in the management” of the strategic waterway, aiming to deter Washington’s regional allies from joining any joint administration of the strait.

    The statement came hours after President Donald Trump said his country would become the “guardian” of the Strait of Hormuz and should be compensated for protecting it, amid the military escalation threatening transit through this key energy trade route.

    Trump says the US is “taking control” of the Strait of Hormuz

    President Donald Trump said on Monday that the United States was “taking control” of the Strait of Hormuz after several days of exchanges of strikes with Iran in the crucial waterway. “We are taking control of the strait. They have nothing. They have nothing,” Trump said in an interview with Fox News, referring to what he described as Iran’s military vulnerability.

    The president added that the US would become the “guardian” of the strait and that Washington should be paid for protecting it. “We will become the guardian of the strait (…) And we should be compensated for that,” he said.

    He also issued a sharp warning to Iran after the breakdown of the existing military agreement, saying US forces had struck Iranian military equipment overnight. “Most of their equipment is gone. Their anti-aircraft gun, we hit it very hard last night,” he said. “Every time they send a drone, we hit them very hard.” Trump said the US had reached an agreement with Tehran that was later broken: “We had a deal… and they broke it. They always break it. So we’re going to hit them very hard and we’re going to keep the strait, and we’ll probably manage it.”

    The remarks come amid the dispute over control of the strait, after Iran threatened to close it and fired “warning shots” at vessels attempting to cross, while Washington insists maritime traffic continues to flow normally despite the military escalation.

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    Video: US releases footage of the new wave of strikes against Iran

    US forces completed a new wave of strikes against Iran on Sunday, hitting dozens of targets in multiple locations with precision munitions, the US Central Command (CENTCOM) said. CENTCOM said it struck air defense systems, coastal radars, missile and drone capabilities, and small Iranian vessels using fighter jets, warships, and single-use aerial and maritime attack drones.

    Iranian media reported Sunday missile strikes and explosions around the port cities of Sirik and Bandar Abbas—where military installations near the strait are located—and the nearby island of Qeshm. Iran’s foreign ministry condemned the weekend US strikes as “aggressive.” Reuters could not independently verify the location or date of the video, and no earlier version was found online before July 12.

    The Houthis warn they will respond to the strike on Sanaa airport

    The Iran-backed Houthis in Yemen said on Monday they would respond to the attack on Sanaa airport, which they attributed to Saudi Arabia, though the operation was claimed by the Yemeni government backed by Riyadh. Houthi military spokesman Yahya Saree accused Saudi Arabia of “ending the de-escalation phase and assuming full responsibility for the consequences of its aggression.”

    Saree also warned that “this aggression will not go unanswered or unpunished,” signaling that the rebel group could intensify its actions amid growing regional tensions linked to the US-Iran confrontation.

    Yemeni government claims attack on Sanaa airport; Houthis blame Saudi Arabia

    The internationally recognized government of Yemen said on Monday it struck Sanaa airport after a dispute involving an Iranian plane carrying a Houthi delegation—an attack that the rebel group initially blamed on Saudi Arabia. “The Houthi terrorist militias—backed by the Iranian regime—prevented national Yemeni aircraft from landing at the capital’s airport while insisting that an Iranian plane violate Yemeni airspace; consequently, the airport runway was attacked,” Yemen’s defense ministry said. Earlier, the Houthi channel Al Masirah reported that “the Saudi aggression targeted the runways of Sanaa International Airport.”

    The Houthis, backed by Iran, said on Monday they will respond to the attack on Sanaa airport, which they blamed on Saudi Arabia, while the Riyadh-backed Yemeni government claimed responsibility. Houthi spokesman Yahya Saree accused Saudi Arabia of “ending the de-escalation phase and assuming full responsibility for the consequences of its aggression,” and warned: “We affirm that this aggression will not remain unanswered or unpunished.”

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    Bahrain intercepted Iranian drones and missiles amid reports of attacks in southern Iran

    Bahrain’s military said on Monday its air defense systems intercepted and destroyed several Iranian missiles and drones launched during the day, after the IRGC claimed to have struck US military facilities in the Gulf, including bases in Bahraini territory. Bahrain’s Defense Forces accused Iran of continuing to target the kingdom’s civilian population.

    Separately, semi-official Iranian agency ISNA reported that a US strike on a target in Isfahan province in central Iran left one person dead and seven wounded in the early hours of Monday, the province’s deputy governor for security said. Iran has not released an official casualty count since large-scale strikes resumed last week, but state media reports and statements about isolated incidents suggest roughly 20 people have died from renewed US bombardments. At the start of the war, thousands were killed, mostly in Iran and Lebanon.

    Bahrain’s military accuses Iran of attacking civilians

    On Monday, Bahrain’s armed forces accused Iran of targeting civilians in its recent attacks on the kingdom, after Tehran said it had struck US military facilities and infrastructure there.

    “Iran continues its systematic hostile posture through its atrocious missile and drone attacks directed at civilians in the Kingdom of Bahrain,” the Bahrain armed forces command said in a statement, adding that its air defenses “intercepted and destroyed several Iranian air attacks” Monday morning.

    Iranian media report explosions near the Strait of Hormuz

    Explosions of unknown origin were heard on Monday in southern Iran, near the Strait of Hormuz, an agency reported following an exchange of strikes between Tehran and Washington.

    “Media and residents reported hearing explosions on Monday around midday near Bandar Abbas and the island of Qeshm,” Mehr news agency said, adding that the blasts “appear to originate from the west coast of Bandar Abbas.”

    Iran says it continues talks with mediators to “avoid escalation” with the US

    On Monday Iran said it is continuing diplomatic efforts with mediators Qatar, Pakistan and Oman to “avoid an escalation” with the United States amid renewed hostilities between the two countries.

    “The role of the mediators is to continue their efforts to prevent an escalation of tensions,” foreign ministry spokesman Esmail Baqai said, adding that Tehran had been in contact “in recent days” with Qatar and Oman—two countries Iran has attacked militarily—as well as with Pakistan.

    Iran says it will stop complying with the agreement if the US does not honor its commitments

    Iran announced on Monday that it would no longer honor the memorandum of understanding with the United States if Washington did not fulfill its commitments to end the war.

    “Whenever the other side has not fulfilled its obligations, we have not fulfilled ours… We will continue to act in this way,” foreign ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei said at a press conference in Tehran after the latest wave of hostilities between the adversaries.

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  • Live: Iran attacks US bases in Bahrain after US strikes

    Live: Iran attacks US bases in Bahrain after US strikes

    The United States launched a third round of strikes against Iran and announced the reimposition of a naval blockade on Iranian ports, after the memorandum of understanding (MoU) between the two sides collapsed following the resumption of hostilities last week.

    Hours before his comments about the strikes, Trump said the Strait of Hormuz is open and will remain so “with or without Iran.” He also announced that the United States would reimpose its blockade on Iranian ports and begin charging fees to vessels transiting that waterway.

    The president set a levy of 20% “for every cost necessary” to ensure the safety of ships in the strait. The United States Central Command announced that preparations to resume the blockade of vessels bound for or departing Iranian ports would begin at 20:00 GMT on Tuesday.

    The International Maritime Organization (IMO) rejected both the fees and the military actions in the area. In a statement, the IMO Council reaffirmed its commitment to protecting vital shipping routes and said transit through the Strait of Hormuz “must remain free of tolls and charges, in accordance with international law.”

    The following is minute-by-minute coverage:

    US diplomatic missions in the United Arab Emirates cancel appointments

    The United States Embassy in Abu Dhabi and the US Consulate General in Dubai have canceled consular appointments through Wednesday due to the regional security situation, the embassy said in a security alert.

    The notice followed reports from the United Arab Emirates that two UAE-flagged oil tankers were struck by Iranian missiles in the Strait of Hormuz, killing one seafarer.

    Jordan shot down four missiles from Iran

    Jordan says it intercepted and shot down four missiles that entered Jordanian airspace from Iranian territory, according to the state news agency.

    Iran says it attacked the US Fifth Fleet in Bahrain

    The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) said it launched missile and drone attacks against the US Fifth Fleet in Bahrain.

    It reported that the strikes caused a fire in the base’s fuel storage and destroyed a Patriot radar, the fleet’s air control radar, a C-RAM early-warning radar system, and the control and monitoring center for unmanned surface vessels (USVs).

    “The retaliation operation continues,” the statement said.

    Asian markets volatile after Trump’s comments on Strait of Hormuz fees

    Stock markets moved between gains and losses and oil rose to a one-month high in early Asian trading. The broader MSCI index of Asia-Pacific equities excluding Japan rose 0.4%, helped by a 2.2% gain in Korean shares.

    Japan’s Nikkei 225 rose 0.2%, while S&P 500 e-mini futures were down slightly by 0.1%.

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    Air-raid sirens sound again in Bahrain

    Air-raid sirens sounded for the third time on Tuesday morning in Bahrain, where the Interior Ministry urged residents to seek shelter immediately.

    Oil prices surge to four-week high

    Oil prices rose about 2%, reaching a four-week high amid ongoing reciprocal strikes between the United States and Iran.

    Brent futures rose $1.68, or 2%, to $84.98 a barrel, while US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) climbed $1.65, or 2.1%, to $79.79 a barrel at 00:51 GMT.

    The gain followed a dramatic Monday when Brent jumped 9.6%, its largest one-day rise since May 2020.

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    Bahrain intercepted Iranian aerial attacks

    Nabeel Alhamer, the press adviser to Bahrain’s king, said the kingdom’s air defenses intercepted and destroyed multiple Iranian aerial attacks in recent hours.

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    Air-raid sirens activated in Bahrain

    Warning sirens are sounding in Bahrain and authorities have urged residents to seek shelter immediately.

    The Interior Ministry instructed the public to “remain calm and go to the nearest safe location” following the activation of the alarms.

    Two tankers attacked by Iran: one Indian crew member killed

    The United Arab Emirates Ministry of Defense reported on Monday that two national oil tankers were struck by two Iranian cruise missiles in the southern channel of the Strait of Hormuz, in Omani territorial waters. The attack killed one Indian crew member and injured eight others, four seriously.

    The ministry said fires broke out on both vessels but were brought under control. It condemned the attack as a serious violation of international law and said the UAE reserves the right to respond and take all necessary measures to protect its sovereignty and security.

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    Trump says Iran wanted further negotiations after the deal

    The US president said that the United States had reached an agreement with Iran two days earlier, but that Tehran wanted to continue negotiating.

    Asked by a reporter whether he had decided that a negotiated deal with Iran was no longer possible, Trump replied: “I never reached that conclusion.”

    He added that he believed the most effective way to pressure Iran was through a combination of blockade and strikes.

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    The International Maritime Organization (IMO) reiterated on Monday that passage through the Strait of Hormuz must remain free of charges, responding to President Donald Trump’s statement that the United States would levy a 20% fee for what he called protection services.

    Under international law, passage should remain free of customs duties and charges, the London-based UN specialized agency said. The IMO emphasized that any agreement among littoral states must ensure nondiscriminatory, unobstructed transit for all vessels.

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    Donald Trump announced he will address the nation in prime time on Thursday amid a significant escalation of hostilities with Iran.

    “President Trump will address the nation on Thursday night at 9 p.m. Eastern (01:00 GMT Friday). Thank you for your attention!” Trump posted Monday on his social network Truth.

    US missions in the United Arab Emirates suspend consular appointments

    The United States announced the suspension of consular appointments in the United Arab Emirates for three days starting Monday, citing the heightened military tensions in the Gulf region.

    “The US Embassy in Abu Dhabi and the US Consulate General in Dubai have canceled consular appointments from July 13 to 15 due to the regional security situation. If you have an appointment scheduled for those dates, please do not go to the embassy or consulate. We will contact you to reschedule,” the statement said.

    Iran’s foreign minister mocks Trump over proposed fee to protect ships in Hormuz

    Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi ridiculed President Donald Trump’s proposal to charge fees for protecting vessels transiting the Strait of Hormuz, saying Iran would charge a lower toll.

    “Whoever ensures the safe passage of commercial ships through the Strait of Hormuz should be compensated for that service. Iran has always been the GUARDIAN of the strait and will remain so FOREVER. Twenty percent is, of course, too much. We will be fair,” the minister wrote on social media, referring to the rate Trump proposed earlier.

    Oil prices jump more than 9%

    Oil prices surged on Monday, driven by the US reinstatement of a naval blockade on Iranian ports and Washington’s intention to impose a toll on ships transiting the Strait of Hormuz.

    By 18:20 GMT, Brent crude was up 9.06% at $82.90 a barrel. US WTI rose 9.05% to $77.87 a barrel.

    US naval blockade of Iran to begin Tuesday

    The United States will begin enforcing a naval blockade against all Iranian ports and oil terminals on Tuesday, the Joint Maritime Information Center (JMIC) of the US-led Combined Maritime Forces said in a statement on Monday.

    According to the JMIC, the blockade will apply to all vessels regardless of flag. It will not prevent neutral traffic transiting the Strait of Hormuz to or from destinations outside Iran, the statement said.

    Humanitarian shipments will be allowed passage but will be subject to inspections, the JMIC added.

    /estados-unidos/2026/07/13/nueva-ofensiva-contra-iran-estados-unidos-bombardeo-una-instalacion-naval-del-regimen-con-drones-maritimos-no-tripulados/

    Saudi coalition says it responded to Houthi ballistic missile attack from Yemen

    The Saudi-led military coalition intervening in Yemen since 2015 said on Monday it had responded to a ballistic missile attack launched by Houthi rebels, after the group accused Riyadh of bombing Sanaa International Airport.

    “Air defenses have responded to a ballistic missile threat launched by the terrorist Houthi militia toward the southern region,” coalition spokesperson Turki al-Maliki wrote on X. The coalition supports Yemen’s internationally recognized government.

    European markets close slightly higher amid Middle East uncertainty

    European stock markets closed with modest gains on Monday after a session marked by renewed hostilities, higher oil prices, worries about the technology sector, and uncertainty over interest rates.

    London closed up 0.01%, Paris gained 0.31%, Frankfurt 0.19%, Milan 0.37%, and Madrid 0.25%.

    Guterres warns of escalation in the Gulf after US and Iranian strikes

    UN Secretary-General António Guterres warned on Monday about US strikes on Iran and Iranian attacks on ships in the Strait of Hormuz and on neighboring countries.

    Guterres expressed his “deep concern over the serious escalation resulting from the resumption of military clashes in the Gulf region,” his spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric said.

    Oil rises more than 4% as US-Iran tensions grow

    Oil prices climbed strongly on Monday, with WTI trading at $74.53 a barrel, up 4.37%, and Brent rising 4.30% to $79.28. The increase came amid rising military tension between the United States and Iran, reviving concerns about the security of transit through the Strait of Hormuz.

    The energy surge also affected stock and bond markets: the VIX volatility index jumped 7.77%, while US Treasury yields rose across the curve—the 10-year up 0.63% and the 5-year up 0.88%—reflecting investor caution about a potential prolonged disruption to global energy trade.

    CENTCOM confirms first combat use of maritime drones in attack on Iranian naval base at Bandar Abbas

    The United States Central Command (CENTCOM) said its forces successfully struck a submarine and ship maintenance facility in Iran using multiple single-use air attack drones. It reported that three Corsair unmanned surface vessels struck the port area of Bandar Abbas Naval Base.

    CENTCOM said the strike marked the first time US forces used maritime drones in combat. The command said the overnight strikes “degraded Iran’s ability to continue attacking commercial shipping,” amid the escalation that has put the Strait of Hormuz under intense scrutiny.

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    Trump says US will charge a 20% fee to protect ships in the Strait of Hormuz

    President Donald Trump said the Strait of Hormuz is and will remain “OPEN,” with or without Iran, and that the United States is reinstating what he called the “IRANIAN BLOCKADE,” which, he explained, would only prevent Iranian ships or customers from entering or leaving.

    “All other countries will have fair and open use of the strait,” the president wrote on Truth Social.

    Trump said the US would be known as “THE GUARDIAN OF THE STRAIT OF HORMUZ” and that, “as a matter of FAIRNESS,” the country would be reimbursed at a rate of 20% on all transported cargo for costs necessary to provide security in “this very volatile section of the world.” “The process and training will begin immediately,” he added.

    The announcement intensified Trump’s rhetoric about the strait after he had earlier told Fox News that Washington would become the “guardian” of the waterway and be compensated for doing so, amid a military escalation with Iran and Tehran’s warning that any Gulf cooperation with the United States in managing the passage would be considered “an act of war.”

    The full report is available at this link.

    The Revolutionary Guards accuse the US of endangering global oil supplies by “interfering” in Hormuz

    Iran’s Revolutionary Guards accused the United States on Monday of endangering global oil and gas supplies by “interfering” in the Strait of Hormuz after hostilities between the two countries resumed. IRGC spokesman Hosein Mohebi said the US “must be held accountable” for risking the security of energy supplies.

    In a post on X, Mohebi added that Tehran “will continue to exercise its sovereignty and management of the Strait of Hormuz,” signaling that Iran is unwilling to cede operational control of the waterway despite US pressure.

    The accusation followed a warning from the Khatam Al-Anbiya military command that any Gulf cooperation with Washington in managing the strait would be considered “an act of war” after President Trump said the US would become its “guardian” and should be compensated.

    Wall Street opens lower amid US-Iran escalation and semiconductor sell-off

    US stocks opened mostly lower on Monday morning as markets weighed higher oil prices and weakness in semiconductor shares, while investors looked ahead to corporate earnings and economic data. Crude oil rose more than 3% amid mounting US-Iran tensions that rekindled concerns about energy infrastructure in the Strait of Hormuz.

    US semiconductor stocks fell following a weak session in South Korea’s Kospi, led by a steep drop in SK hynix. About 10 minutes after the open, the Dow Jones was up 0.1% at 52,676.53, the S&P 500 was down 0.4% at 7,547.53, and the Nasdaq Composite fell 0.9% to 26,039.50.

    “Tensions with Iran, which are intensifying, are pushing oil prices higher, and that is lifting Treasury yields, while the SK hynix sell-off drags down memory-related stocks and pressures the Nasdaq and the S&P,” said Art Hogan of B. Riley Wealth Management. This week’s agenda includes major US bank earnings, testimony before Congress by Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh, and the latest consumer price index data.

    Iran warns Gulf states: cooperating with the US in the Strait of Hormuz will be considered “an act of war”

    Iran’s military warned on Monday that any cooperation by Gulf states with the United States in managing the Strait of Hormuz would be considered “an act of war,” as hostilities between Tehran and Washington resumed. A spokesperson for the Khatam Al-Anbiya military command delivered the warning in a video message to regional countries.

    The spokesperson said Iran would “under no circumstances allow… the United States to interfere in the management” of the strategic waterway, seeking to dissuade Washington’s regional allies from joining any joint administration scheme for the strait.

    The statement came hours after President Trump said the US would become the “guardian” of the Strait of Hormuz and should be paid to protect it amid the escalating military confrontation over control of the passage.

    Trump says the US is “taking control” of the Strait of Hormuz

    President Donald Trump said on Monday that the United States was “taking control” of the Strait of Hormuz after days of exchanges with Iran over the waterway. “We are taking control of the strait. They have nothing. They have nothing,” Trump said in an interview with Fox News, referring to Iran’s alleged military vulnerabilities.

    The president said his country would become the strait’s “guardian” and should be paid for protecting it. “We will become the guardian of the strait (…) And we should be compensated for that,” he said in the telephone interview.

    He also issued a strong warning to Iran after the collapse of the existing military agreement, saying US forces had struck Iranian military equipment overnight: “Most of their equipment no longer exists. We hit their anti-aircraft guns very hard last night,” he said. “Every time they send a drone, we hit them very hard.” Trump said the US had reached an agreement with Tehran that was later broken: “We had an agreement… and they broke it. They always break it. So we’re going to hit them very hard and we’re going to keep the strait, and we’ll probably administer it.”

    The remarks come amid the dispute over control of the strait, after Iran threatened to close it and fired “warning shots” at ships attempting to cross, while Washington maintains that maritime traffic continues to flow normally despite the military escalation.

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    Video: US releases footage of new wave of strikes on Iran

    US forces carried out a new wave of strikes on Iran on Sunday, hitting dozens of targets at multiple locations with precision munitions, the US Central Command (CENTCOM) said. CENTCOM said it struck air defenses, coastal radars, missile and drone capabilities, and small Iranian vessels using warplanes, surface ships, and single-use air and maritime attack drones.

    Iranian media reported missile strikes and explosions near the port cities of Sirik and Bandar Abbas—where military facilities near the strait are located—and the nearby island of Qeshm. Iran’s foreign ministry denounced the US strikes over the weekend as “aggressive.” Reuters could not independently verify the location or date of the video footage, and no earlier version was found online before July 12.

    The Houthis warn they will respond to the attack on Sanaa airport

    The Iran-backed Houthis in Yemen said on Monday they would respond to the attack on Sanaa Airport, which they attributed to Saudi Arabia, although the operation was claimed by the Yemeni government backed by Riyadh. Houthi military spokesman Yahya Saree accused Saudi Arabia of “ending the phase of détente and assuming full responsibility for the consequences of its aggression.”

    Saree also warned that “this aggression will not go unanswered or unpunished,” suggesting the rebel group may intensify its actions amid rising regional tensions linked to the US-Iran confrontation.

    Yemeni government claims attack on Sanaa airport; Houthis blame Saudi Arabia

    Yemen’s internationally recognized government said on Monday it attacked Sanaa Airport after a dispute involving an Iranian plane carrying a Houthi delegation, an attack the Houthi group had initially blamed on Saudi Arabia. “The Houthi terrorist militias—backed by the Iranian regime—prevented national Yemeni aircraft from landing at the capital’s airport while insisting on allowing an Iranian plane to violate Yemeni airspace; consequently, the airport runway was struck,” Yemen’s Defense Ministry said.

    Earlier, the Houthi channel Al Masirah reported that “the Saudi aggression targeted the takeoff and landing runways of Sanaa International Airport.”

    The Houthis said they would respond to the airport attack they blamed on Saudi Arabia, while the Riyadh-backed Yemeni government claimed responsibility for the operation. Houthi spokesman Yahya Saree accused Saudi Arabia of “ending the phase of détente and assuming full responsibility for the consequences of its aggression,” and warned: “We affirm that this aggression will not go unanswered or unpunished.”

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/como-esta-el-trafico-maritimo-en-el-estrecho-de-ormuz-que-iran-asegura-haber-cerrado-y-eeuu-quiere-mantener-abierto/

    Bahrain intercepted Iranian drones and missiles amid reports of strikes in southern Iran

    Bahrain’s military said on Monday that its air defenses intercepted and destroyed several Iranian missiles and drones launched during the day, after the IRGC claimed attacks on US military installations in the Gulf, including bases in Bahraini territory. Bahrain’s Defense Forces accused Iran of continuing to target the kingdom’s civilian population.

    Separately, semi-official Iranian agency ISNA reported that a US strike on a target in Isfahan province in central Iran killed one person and wounded seven early on Monday, according to the province’s deputy governor for security. Iran has not released an official casualty count since the recent round of strikes resumed, but state media reports and scattered incident statements suggest roughly 20 people may have died in renewed US bombardments. Early in the conflict, thousands had died, mostly in Iran and Lebanon.

    Bahrain’s military accuses Iran of attacking civilians

    On Monday, Bahrain’s armed forces accused Iran of attacking civilians in its recent strikes against the kingdom, after Tehran said it had struck US military facilities and infrastructure there.

    “Iran continues its systematic hostile behavior through its atrocious missile and drone attacks directed at civilians in the Kingdom of Bahrain,” the General Command of Bahrain’s armed forces said in a statement, adding that air defenses “intercepted and destroyed several Iranian aerial attacks” Monday morning.

    Iranian media report explosions near the Strait of Hormuz

    Explosions of unknown origin were heard on Monday in southern Iran near the Strait of Hormuz, an Iranian news agency reported, after an exchange of strikes between Tehran and Washington.

    “Media and residents reported hearing explosions near Bandar Abbas and Qeshm Island at midday on Monday,” Mehr news agency said, adding that the blasts “appear to have originated from the west coast of Bandar Abbas.”

    Iran says it continues talks with mediators to “avoid escalation” with the US

    Iran said on Monday that it is continuing diplomatic contacts with mediators Qatar, Pakistan, and Oman to “avoid an escalation” with the United States amid renewed hostilities.

    “The role of mediators is to continue their efforts to prevent an escalation of tensions,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmail Baqai said, adding that Tehran had been in contact “in recent days” with Qatar and Oman—both targeted by Iranian strikes—as well as with Pakistan.

    Iran says it will stop complying with the agreement if the US does not meet its commitments

    Iran announced on Monday that it would no longer observe the memorandum of understanding with the United States if Washington failed to meet its commitments to end the war.

    “Whenever the other party has not fulfilled its obligations, we have not fulfilled ours… We will continue to act in this manner,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei said at a press conference in Tehran following the latest wave of hostilities.

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/el-petroleo-sube-mas-de-4-tras-la-reanudacion-de-los-ataques-entre-eeuu-e-iran-y-la-amenaza-de-cierre-del-estrecho-de-ormuz/

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/el-regimen-de-iran-lanzo-ataques-contra-bases-militares-de-estados-unidos-en-jordania-bahrein-y-kuwait/

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  • Live: Iran attacks US bases in Bahrain after US strikes

    Live: Iran attacks US bases in Bahrain after US strikes

    The United States launched a third round of strikes against Iran and announced the reinstatement of a naval blockade on Iranian ports, amid the collapse of the memorandum of understanding (MoU) signed between the two parties after the resumption of hostilities last week.

    Hours before his statements about the strikes, Trump said the Strait of Hormuz is open and will remain so “with or without Iran.” He also announced that the United States would reimpose its blockade on Iranian ports and begin charging fees to ships transiting that waterway.

    The president set a levy of 20% “for any and all costs necessary” to guarantee the safety of vessels in the strait. The United States Central Command said preparations to reestablish the blockade of ships bound for or departing from Iranian ports would begin at 20:00 GMT on Tuesday.

    The International Maritime Organization (IMO) rejected both the fees and the military actions in the area. In a statement, the IMO Council reaffirmed its commitment to protecting vital sea lanes and said passage through the Strait of Hormuz “must remain free from tolls and charges, in accordance with international law.”

    Below is live, minute-by-minute coverage:

    Jordan shot down four missiles from Iran

    Jordan says it intercepted and shot down four missiles that entered Jordanian airspace from Iranian territory, the state news agency reported.

    Iran says it attacked the US Fifth Fleet in Bahrain

    The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) said it launched missile and drone strikes against the US Fifth Fleet in Bahrain.

    It reported that the attacks caused a fire at fuel storage facilities on the base and hit and destroyed a Patriot radar, the fleet’s air control radar, a C-RAM early-warning radar system, and the command and monitoring center for unmanned surface vessels (USVs).

    “The retaliatory operation continues,” the statement added.

    Asian markets show volatility after Trump’s comments on Strait of Hormuz fees

    Stock markets swung between gains and losses, and oil reached its highest level in a month during early Asian trading. In a volatile session, the broader MSCI index of Asia-Pacific equities ex-Japan rose 0.4%, supported by a 2.2% gain in South Korean shares.

    Japan’s Nikkei 225 rose 0.2%, while S&P 500 e-mini futures were down slightly by 0.1%.

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    Air-raid sirens sound again in Bahrain

    Air-raid sirens sounded for the third time on Tuesday morning in Bahrain, where the Interior Ministry asked residents to seek shelter immediately.

    Oil prices surge to four-week high

    Oil prices rose about 2%, reaching a four-week high amid ongoing reciprocal strikes between the United States and Iran.

    Brent futures rose $1.68, or 2%, to $84.98 a barrel, while US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude rose $1.65, or 2.1%, to $79.79 a barrel at 00:51 GMT.

    The increase follows a dramatic Monday session when Brent jumped 9.6%, its largest one-day gain since May 2020.

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    Bahrain intercepted Iranian aerial attacks

    Nabeel Alhamer, press adviser to the king of Bahrain, said the kingdom’s air defense systems intercepted and destroyed multiple Iranian aerial attacks in recent hours.

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    Air-raid sirens activated in Bahrain

    Alert sirens sounded in Bahrain, and authorities urged residents to seek shelter immediately.

    The Interior Ministry ordered people to “remain calm and proceed to the nearest safe location” after the latest alarms were activated.

    Two tankers attacked by Iran: one Indian crew member killed

    The United Arab Emirates Ministry of Defense said on Monday that two national-flagged tankers were struck by two Iranian cruise missiles in the southern channel of the Strait of Hormuz, in Omani territorial waters. The attack killed one Indian crew member and left eight injured, four of them seriously.

    The ministry said fires broke out on both vessels but were brought under control. It condemned the attack as a serious violation of international law and said the UAE reserves the right to respond and take all necessary measures to protect its sovereignty and security.

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    Trump says Iran wanted further negotiations after the deal

    The US president said the United States reached an agreement with Iran two days earlier, but that Tehran wanted to continue negotiating.

    When asked by a reporter whether he had decided that a negotiated agreement with Iran was no longer possible, Trump replied: “I never came to that conclusion.”

    He added that he believed the most effective way to pressure Iran was through a combination of a blockade and strikes.

    /estados-unidos/2026/07/13/estados-unidos-lanzo-una-nueva-ronda-de-ataques-contra-iran-para-degradar-su-capacidad-militar-en-estrecho-de-ormuz/

    The International Maritime Organization (IMO) reiterated on Monday that passage through the Strait of Hormuz must remain free of tolls, after US President Donald Trump said the same day that the United States would charge a 20% fee for what he called security protection.

    Under international law, passage must remain free from customs duties and charges, the UN shipping agency based in London said. The IMO emphasized that any agreement among coastal states in the region must guarantee nondiscriminatory, unobstructed right of passage for all vessels.

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    Donald Trump announced he will address the nation in prime time on Thursday, a move that comes amid a significant escalation of hostilities with Iran.

    “President Trump will address the nation Thursday night at 9 p.m. Eastern (01:00 GMT Friday). Thank you for your attention!” Trump posted Monday on his social network Truth.

    US missions in the UAE suspend consular appointments

    The United States announced the suspension of consular appointments in the United Arab Emirates for three days beginning Monday, due to rising military tensions in the Gulf region.

    The US Embassy in Abu Dhabi and the US Consulate General in Dubai have canceled consular appointments from July 13 to 15 because of the regional security situation. If you have an appointment scheduled for those dates, please do not go to the embassy or consulate. We will contact you to reschedule, the advisory said.

    Iran’s foreign minister mocks Trump’s fee to protect ships in Hormuz

    Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi ridiculed President Donald Trump’s proposal to charge fees to protect ships transiting the Strait of Hormuz and said his country would charge a cheaper toll.

    “Whoever guarantees the safe passage of commercial vessels through the Strait of Hormuz should receive compensation for that service. Iran has always been the GUARDIAN of the strait and will remain so FOREVER. Twenty percent is, of course, too much. We will be fair,” the minister wrote on social media, referring to the fee proposed earlier by Trump.

    Oil prices jump more than 9%

    Oil prices surged on Monday, driven by the United States’ reinstatement of a naval blockade on Iranian ports and Washington’s intention to impose a toll on ships transiting the Strait of Hormuz.

    By 18:20 GMT, the North Sea Brent benchmark rose 9.06% to $82.90 a barrel. Its US counterpart, West Texas Intermediate (WTI), climbed 9.05% to $77.87 a barrel.

    US naval blockade of Iran to begin Tuesday

    The United States will begin enforcing a naval blockade against all Iranian ports and oil terminals on Tuesday, the Joint Maritime Information Center (JMIC) of the US-led Combined Maritime Forces said in a statement on Monday.

    The JMIC said the blockade would apply to all vessels regardless of flag. It added that the blockade would not prevent neutral traffic transiting the Strait of Hormuz to or from destinations outside Iran.

    Humanitarian shipments will be allowed subject to inspections, the JMIC added.

    /estados-unidos/2026/07/13/nueva-ofensiva-contra-iran-estados-unidos-bombardeo-una-instalacion-naval-del-regimen-con-drones-maritimos-no-tripulados/

    Saudi-led coalition says it responded to Houthi ballistic missile attack from Yemen

    The Saudi-led military coalition intervening in Yemen since 2015 said on Monday it had responded to a ballistic missile attack launched by Houthi rebels, after the group accused Riyadh of bombing Sanaa International Airport.

    “Air defenses have responded to a ballistic missile threat launched by the terrorist Houthi militia towards the southern region,” Turki al-Malki, spokesperson for the Coalition to Support the Legitimacy in Yemen, said on X.

    European bourses close marginally higher amid Middle East uncertainty

    European stock markets closed slightly higher on Monday after a session marked by the resumption of hostilities and rising oil prices, along with concerns about the tech sector and the outlook for interest rates.

    London closed up 0.01%, Paris gained 0.31%, Frankfurt 0.19%, Milan 0.37% and Madrid 0.25%.

    Guterres warns about military escalation in the Gulf after US and Iranian attacks

    UN Secretary-General António Guterres expressed concern on Monday about US strikes on Iran and Tehran’s attacks on vessels in the Strait of Hormuz and on neighboring countries.

    Guterres voiced his “deep concern over the serious escalation following the resumption of military confrontations in the Gulf region,” his spokesman Stéphane Dujarric said.

    Oil rises more than 4% as US-Iran tensions grow

    Oil prices climbed strongly on Monday, with West Texas Intermediate trading at $74.53 a barrel, up 4.37%, while Brent rose 4.30% to $79.28. The gains came amid mounting military tension between the United States and Iran, which revived doubts about the security of shipping through the Strait of Hormuz.

    The energy rally also affected equity and bond markets: the VIX volatility index jumped 7.77%, while US Treasury yields rose across the curve — the 10-year up 0.63% and the 5-year up 0.88% — reflecting investor caution about an escalation that could disrupt global energy trade for an extended period.

    CENTCOM confirms first combat use of maritime drones: struck an Iranian naval base in Bandar Abbas

    US Central Command (CENTCOM) reported that its forces successfully struck a maintenance facility for submarines and vessels in Iran using multiple expendable attacking aerial drones. The command said three Corsair model unmanned surface vessels struck the port at Bandar Abbas Naval Base.

    According to CENTCOM, the strike marked the first time US forces used maritime drones in combat. The command said the overnight strikes “degraded Iran’s ability to continue attacking commercial shipping,” amid the military escalation that has put transit through the Strait of Hormuz on edge.

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    Trump says the US will charge a 20% fee to protect ships in the Strait of Hormuz

    President Donald Trump said the Strait of Hormuz is and will remain “OPEN,” with or without Iran, and that the United States is reinstating what he called the “IRAN BLOCKADE,” so named, he explained, because it would only prevent Iranian ships or customers from entering or leaving.

    “All other countries will have fair and open use of the strait,” the president wrote on Truth Social.

    Trump said that from now on, the United States would be known as “THE GUARDIAN OF THE STRAIT OF HORMUZ,” and stated that, “as a matter of FAIRNESS,” the country would be reimbursed at a 20% rate on all cargo transported, to cover the costs necessary to provide security to “this very volatile section of the world.” “The process and training will begin immediately,” the president concluded.

    The announcement deepens Trump’s rhetoric around the strait, after earlier stating in an interview with Fox that Washington would become the “guardian” of the waterway and would be compensated for its custody, amid the military escalation with Iran and Tehran’s warning that it would consider “an act of war” any Gulf cooperation with the United States in managing the passage.

    See the full report at this link.

    Revolutionary Guards accuse the US of endangering global oil supplies by “interfering” in Hormuz

    Iran’s Revolutionary Guards accused the United States on Monday of endangering global oil and gas supplies by “interfering” in the Strait of Hormuz, following the resumption of hostilities between the two countries. IRGC spokesman Hosein Mohebi said the United States “must be held accountable” for jeopardizing the security of global energy supplies.

    In a post on X, Mohebi added that Tehran “will continue to exercise its sovereignty and management of the Strait of Hormuz,” signaling that Iran is unwilling to cede operational control of the waterway despite US pressure.

    The accusation follows an earlier warning from the Khatam Al-Anbiya military command, which called any Gulf cooperation with Washington over the strait “an act of war,” after President Donald Trump said the United States would become its “guardian” and should be compensated for safeguarding it.

    Wall Street opens lower as US-Iran escalation and semiconductor declines hit markets

    US stocks opened mostly lower on Monday morning as markets weighed higher oil prices and weakness in semiconductor shares, while investors looked ahead to upcoming corporate earnings and economic data. Crude prices rose more than 3% amid rising US-Iran tension, renewing concerns about oil infrastructure in the Strait of Hormuz.

    US semiconductor stocks fell early following a poor session on South Korea’s Kospi, led by a sharp decline in SK hynix. About 10 minutes after the open, the Dow Jones was up 0.1% at 52,676.53 points, while the S&P 500 was down 0.4% at 7,547.53 and the Nasdaq Composite fell 0.9% to 26,039.50.

    “Tensions with Iran, which are intensifying, are pushing oil prices higher, and that is lifting Treasury yields, while the sell-off in SK hynix is weighing on memory-related stocks, which in turn pressures the Nasdaq and S&P,” said Art Hogan of B. Riley Wealth Management. This week’s agenda includes earnings from major US banks, a congressional appearance by Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh, and the latest consumer price index data.

    Iran warns Gulf countries: cooperating with the US in the Strait of Hormuz will be considered “an act of war”

    Iran’s military warned Gulf states on Monday that any cooperation with the United States in managing the Strait of Hormuz would be considered “an act of war,” as hostilities between Tehran and Washington resumed. A spokesperson for the Khatam Al-Anbiya military command delivered the warning in a video message to regional nations.

    The same spokesperson said Iran “under no circumstances will allow… the United States to interfere in the management” of the strategic waterway, a statement intended to deter Washington’s regional allies from joining any joint management scheme for the strait.

    The statement came hours after President Donald Trump said his country would become the “guardian” of the Strait of Hormuz and should be paid to protect it, amid the military escalation that has put the key energy trade route on edge.

    Trump says the US is “taking control” of the Strait of Hormuz

    President Donald Trump said on Monday that the United States was “taking control” of the Strait of Hormuz after several days of exchanges of strikes with Iran in this crucial maritime corridor. “We are taking control of the strait. They have nothing. They have nothing,” Trump said in an interview with Fox News, referring to what he described as Iran’s military vulnerability.

    The president added that the United States would become the “guardian” of the strait and should be paid for protecting it. “We will become the guardian of the strait (…) And we should be compensated for that,” he said in the phone interview.

    He also issued a strong warning to Iran after the breakdown of the existing military arrangement, saying US strikes had damaged much of Iran’s equipment overnight. “Most of their equipment no longer exists. Their anti-aircraft guns — we hit them very hard last night,” he said. “Every time they send a drone, we hit them very hard.” Trump said Washington had reached an agreement with Tehran that was then breached: “We had an agreement… and they broke it. They always break it. So we are going to hit them very hard and we are going to keep the strait, and we will probably manage it.”

    The statement comes amid a dispute over control of the strait, after Iran threatened to close it and fired “warning shots” at ships attempting to cross, while Washington insists maritime traffic continues to flow normally despite the military escalation.

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/el-reino-unido-acuso-a-iran-de-respaldar-ataques-a-objetivos-judios-en-londres-y-declaro-ilegal-a-la-guardia-revolucionaria/

    Video: US releases footage of new wave of strikes against Iran

    US forces completed a new wave of strikes against Iran on Sunday, hitting dozens of targets in multiple locations with precision munitions, US Central Command (CENTCOM) said. According to the command, air defenses, coastal radars, missile and drone capabilities, and small Iranian vessels were struck using combat aircraft, warships, and single-use attacking aerial and maritime drones.

    Iranian media reported Sunday on missile strikes and explosions around the port cities of Sirik and Bandar Abbas — where military installations near the strait are located — and the nearby island of Qeshm. Iran’s foreign ministry condemned the US attacks over the weekend as “aggressive.” Reuters could not independently verify the location or date of the footage, and no prior version of the video was found online before July 12.

    The Houthis say they will retaliate for the attack on Sanaa airport

    The Iran-backed Houthis in Yemen said on Monday they would respond to the attack on Sanaa airport, which they blamed on Saudi Arabia, though the Yemeni government allied with Riyadh claimed responsibility. Houthi military spokesman Yahya Saree accused Saudi Arabia of “ending the phase of calm and assuming full responsibility for the consequences of its aggression.”

    Saree also warned that “this aggression will not go unanswered or unpunished,” suggesting the rebels may escalate their actions amid regional tensions linked to the US-Iran confrontation.

    Yemeni government claims responsibility for Sanaa airport strike; Houthis blame Saudi Arabia

    The internationally recognized Yemeni government said on Monday it attacked Sanaa airport after a dispute over an Iranian plane that was carrying a Houthi delegation; the government accused the Houthis of preventing Yemeni aircraft from landing while allowing an Iranian plane to violate Yemeni airspace, and therefore said it struck the airport runway, the defense ministry said. Earlier, the Houthi channel Al Masirah reported that “the Saudi aggression hit the takeoff and landing strips of Sanaa International Airport.”

    The Houthis, backed by Iran, said on Monday they would respond to the attack on Sanaa airport, which they had initially blamed on Saudi Arabia, while the government allied with Riyadh claimed responsibility. Houthi military spokesman Yahya Saree accused Saudi Arabia of “ending the phase of calm and assuming full responsibility for the consequences of its aggression,” and warned: “We affirm that this aggression will not go unanswered or unpunished.”

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/como-esta-el-trafico-maritimo-en-el-estrecho-de-ormuz-que-iran-asegura-haber-cerrado-y-eeuu-quiere-mantener-abierto/

    Bahrain intercepted Iranian drones and missiles amid reports of strikes in southern Iran

    Bahrain’s military said on Monday that its air defenses intercepted and destroyed several Iranian missiles and drones launched during the day, after the Revolutionary Guard claimed to have attacked US military facilities in the Gulf, including bases on Bahraini territory. Bahrain’s Defense Forces accused Iran of continuing to target the kingdom’s civilian population.

    Meanwhile, semi-official Iranian agency ISNA reported that a US strike on a target in Isfahan province in central Iran killed one person and wounded seven in the early hours of Monday, according to the province’s deputy governor for security. Iran has not released an official casualty tally since the resumption of large-scale exchanges of strikes last week, but state media reports and statements about individual incidents suggest about 20 people have died in renewed US bombardments. At the start of the conflict, thousands had died, mostly in Iran and Lebanon.

    Bahrain’s military accuses Iran of targeting civilians

    On Monday, Bahrain’s armed forces accused Iran of targeting civilians in its recent strikes against the kingdom, after Tehran said it had struck US military installations and infrastructure there.

    “Iran continues its systematic hostile behavior through its atrocious missile and drone attacks directed at civilians in the Kingdom of Bahrain,” the command said in a statement, adding that air defenses “intercepted and destroyed several Iranian aerial attacks” Monday morning.

    Iranian media report explosions near the Strait of Hormuz

    Explosions of unknown origin were heard on Monday in southern Iran near the Strait of Hormuz, a news agency reported, following an exchange of strikes between Tehran and Washington.

    “Media outlets and residents reported hearing explosions near Bandar Abbas and the island of Qeshm at midday on Monday,” Mehr news agency said, adding that the explosions “appear to have come from the west coast of Bandar Abbas.”

    Iran says it is still talking to mediators to “avoid escalation” with the US

    Iran said on Monday it continues diplomatic contacts with mediators Qatar, Pakistan and Oman to “avoid escalation” with the United States amid renewed hostilities.

    “The role of the mediators is to continue their efforts to prevent an escalation of tensions,” the Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmail Baqai said, adding that Tehran had been in contact “in recent days” with Qatar and Oman — both targets of Iranian military actions — as well as Pakistan.

    Iran says it will cease compliance with the agreement if the US does not meet its commitments

    Iran announced on Monday that it would stop observing the memorandum of understanding with the United States if Washington did not fulfill its commitments to end the war.

    “Whenever the other party has not fulfilled its obligations, we have not fulfilled ours… We will continue to act in this manner,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei said at a press conference in Tehran after the latest wave of hostilities between the two adversaries.

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/el-petroleo-sube-mas-de-4-tras-la-reanudacion-de-los-ataques-entre-eeuu-e-iran-y-la-amenaza-de-cierre-del-estrecho-de-ormuz/

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/el-regimen-de-iran-lanzo-ataques-contra-bases-militares-de-estados-unidos-en-jordania-bahrein-y-kuwait/

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  • Live: Iran strikes US bases in Bahrain after US bombings

    Live: Iran strikes US bases in Bahrain after US bombings

    The United States launched a third round of strikes against Iran and announced the reimposition of a naval blockade on Iranian ports, amid the collapse of the memorandum of understanding (MoU) signed between the two sides after fighting resumed last week.

    Hours before his statements about the strikes, Trump said the Strait of Hormuz is open and will remain so “with or without Iran.” He also announced that the United States would reimpose its blockade on Iranian ports and begin charging fees to vessels transiting that waterway.

    The president set a levy of 20% “for every and all costs necessary” to ensure the safety of vessels in the strait. The United States Central Command said preparations to resume the blockade of ships bound for or departing from Iranian ports would begin at 20:00 GMT on Tuesday.

    The International Maritime Organization (IMO) rejected both the fees and the military actions in the area. In a statement, the IMO Council reaffirmed its commitment to protecting vital sea lanes and said passage through the Strait of Hormuz “must remain free of tolls and charges, in accordance with international law.”

    Below is minute-by-minute coverage:

    Iran says it launched attacks against the US Fifth Fleet in Bahrain

    The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) said it launched missile and drone strikes against the US Fifth Fleet in Bahrain.

    According to the IRGC, the attacks caused a fire in the base fuel depots and struck and destroyed a Patriot radar, as well as the fleet’s air control radar, a C-RAM early-warning radar system, and the control and monitoring center for unmanned surface vessels (USV).

    “The retaliatory operation continues,” the statement added.

    Asian markets show volatility after Trump’s comments on Strait of Hormuz fees

    Stock markets swung between gains and losses, and oil reached its highest level in a month during early Asian trading. In a volatile session, the broader MSCI index of Asia-Pacific stocks ex-Japan rose 0.4%, led by a 2.2% gain in Korean shares.

    Japan’s Nikkei 225 rose 0.2%, while S&P 500 e-mini futures fell slightly by 0.1%.

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    Air-raid sirens sound again in Bahrain

    Air-raid sirens sounded for the third time on Tuesday morning in Bahrain, where the Interior Ministry urged residents to take shelter immediately.

    Oil prices soar to a four-week high

    Oil prices rose 2%, reaching a four-week high amid ongoing reciprocal attacks between the United States and Iran.

    Brent futures rose $1.68, or 2%, to $84.98 a barrel, while US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude increased $1.65, or 2.1%, to $79.79 a barrel at 00:51 GMT.

    The gain followed a dramatic Monday session in which Brent surged 9.6%, marking its largest one-day increase since May 2020.

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    Bahrain intercepted Iranian aerial attacks

    Nabeel Alhamer, press adviser to the King of Bahrain, says the kingdom’s air defense systems intercepted and destroyed multiple Iranian aerial attacks in recent hours.

    /estados-unidos/2026/07/14/tras-los-nuevos-ataques-contra-iran-donald-trump-aseguro-que-hay-posibilidad-de-llegar-a-otro-acuerdo-con-teheran/

    Air-raid sirens activated in Bahrain

    Alert sirens are sounding in Bahrain, and authorities are urging residents to seek shelter immediately.

    The Interior Ministry ordered the public to “remain calm and proceed to the nearest safe location” after the latest alarms were activated.

    Two tankers attacked by Iran: one Indian crew member killed

    The United Arab Emirates Ministry of Defense reported on Monday that two national tankers were hit by two Iranian cruise missiles in the southern channel of the Strait of Hormuz, within Omani territorial waters. The attack killed one Indian crew member and injured eight others, four of them seriously.

    The ministry said fires broke out on both vessels but were brought under control. It condemned the attack as a serious violation of international law and said the UAE reserves the full right to respond and take all necessary measures to protect its sovereignty and security.

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    Trump says Iran wanted further negotiations after the deal

    The US president said the United States had reached an agreement with Iran two days earlier, but that Tehran wanted to continue negotiating.

    When asked by a reporter whether he had decided that a negotiated agreement with Iran was no longer possible, Trump replied: “I never came to that conclusion.”

    He added that he believed the most effective way to pressure Iran was through a combination of blockade and strikes.

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    The International Maritime Organization (IMO) insisted on Monday that vessel passage through the Strait of Hormuz must remain free of tariffs, after US President Donald Trump said the United States would charge a 20% fee for what he called protection services.

    Under international law, passage must remain free of customs duties and charges, the UN agency based in London said. The IMO emphasized that any arrangement among littoral states should ensure the right of innocent and non-discriminatory passage for all ships.

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/las-acciones-tecnologicas-hundieron-a-wall-street-tras-la-escalada-entre-estados-unidos-e-iran/

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/el-petroleo-registro-su-mayor-alza-diaria-desde-el-inicio-del-conflicto-entre-estados-unidos-e-iran/

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    Donald Trump announced he will address the nation in prime time on Thursday, in an announcement that comes amid a significant escalation of hostilities with Iran.

    “President Trump will address the nation on Thursday night at 9 p.m. Eastern Time (01:00 GMT on Friday). Thank you for your attention!” Trump posted on Monday on his social network Truth.

    US missions in the United Arab Emirates suspend consular appointments

    The United States announced the suspension of consular appointments in the United Arab Emirates for three days starting Monday because of rising military tensions in the Gulf region.

    “The US Embassy in Abu Dhabi and the US Consulate General in Dubai have canceled consular appointments from July 13 to 15 due to the regional security situation. If you have an appointment scheduled for those dates, please do not come to the embassy or consulate. We will contact you to reschedule,” the notice said.

    Iran’s foreign minister mocks Trump over proposed fee to protect ships in Hormuz

    Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi mocked US President Donald Trump’s proposal to charge fees for protecting ships transiting the Strait of Hormuz and said his country would charge a cheaper toll.

    “Whoever guarantees the safe passage of commercial vessels through the Strait of Hormuz should be compensated for this service. Iran has always been and will remain the GUARDIAN of the strait FOREVER. Twenty percent is, of course, too much. We will be fair,” the minister wrote on social media, referring to the fee proposed earlier by Trump.

    Oil prices surge more than 9%

    Oil prices surged on Monday, driven by the US reinstatement of a naval blockade on Iranian ports and Washington’s intention to impose a toll on vessels wishing to traverse the Strait of Hormuz.

    By 18:20 GMT, the price of a Brent crude barrel rose 9.06% to $82.90. US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) advanced 9.05% to $77.87 per barrel.

    US naval blockade of Iran to begin Tuesday

    The United States will begin enforcing a naval blockade against all Iranian ports and oil terminals on Tuesday, the Joint Maritime Information Center (JMIC) of the US-led Combined Maritime Forces said in a statement on Monday.

    According to the JMIC, the blockade will apply to all vessels regardless of flag. The blockade will not prevent neutral traffic transiting the Strait of Hormuz to or from destinations outside Iran, the statement added.

    Humanitarian shipments will be allowed to pass, subject to inspections, the JMIC said.

    /estados-unidos/2026/07/13/nueva-ofensiva-contra-iran-estados-unidos-bombardeo-una-instalacion-naval-del-regimen-con-drones-maritimos-no-tripulados/

    Saudi-led coalition says it responded to Houthi ballistic missile attack from Yemen

    The Saudi-led military coalition intervening in Yemen since 2015 said on Monday it had responded to a ballistic missile attack launched by the Houthi rebels after the movement accused Riyadh of bombing Sanaa international airport.

    “Air defenses have responded to a ballistic missile threat launched by the terrorist Houthi militia toward the southern region,” Turki al-Maliki, spokesman for the Coalition to Support the Legitimacy in Yemen, said on X.

    European markets close slightly higher amid Middle East uncertainty

    European stock markets closed with small gains on Monday after a session marked by the resumption of hostilities, rising oil prices, concerns about the technology sector, and uncertainty over future interest rates.

    London closed up 0.01%, Paris gained 0.31%, Frankfurt 0.19%, Milan 0.37%, and Madrid 0.25%.

    Guterres warns over military escalation in the Gulf after US and Iranian strikes

    United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres warned on Monday about US strikes against Iran as well as Tehran’s attacks on ships in the Strait of Hormuz and on neighboring countries.

    Guterres expressed his “deep concern over the serious escalation of renewed military confrontations in the Gulf region,” his spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric said.

    Oil rises more than 4% as US-Iran tensions grow

    Oil prices jumped strongly on Monday, with West Texas Intermediate trading at $74.53 a barrel, a gain of 4.37%, while Brent rose 4.30% to $79.28. The increase came amid growing military tensions between the United States and Iran, reviving doubts about the security of transit through the Strait of Hormuz.

    The energy rally also affected equity and bond markets: the VIX volatility index rose 7.77%, while US Treasury yields climbed across the curve — the 10-year up 0.63% and the 5-year up 0.88% — reflecting investor caution about a potential prolonged disruption to global energy trade.

    CENTCOM confirms first combat use of marine drones: struck an Iranian naval base in Bandar Abbas

    US Central Command (CENTCOM) said its forces successfully struck a submarine and ship maintenance facility in Iran using multiple single-use strike aerial drones. According to CENTCOM, three Corsair unmanned surface vessels struck the port of the Bandar Abbas Naval Base.

    The strike marked, CENTCOM said, the first time US forces have used marine drones in combat operations. The command stated that the night’s strikes “degraded Iran’s ability to continue attacking commercial maritime traffic,” amid the military escalation that has put transit through the Strait of Hormuz on edge.

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    Trump says US will charge a 20% fee to protect ships in the Strait of Hormuz

    President Donald Trump announced that the Strait of Hormuz is and will remain “OPEN,” with or without Iran, and that the United States is reinstating what he called the “IRANIAN BLOCKADE,” which he said would only prevent the entry or exit of Iranian vessels or customers.

    “All other countries will have fair and open use of the strait,” the president wrote on Truth Social.

    Trump said that from now on the United States will be known as “THE GUARDIAN OF THE STRAIT OF HORMUZ,” and argued that, “as a matter of FAIRNESS,” the country would be reimbursed at a rate of 20% on all cargo transported, to cover the costs necessary to provide security for “this very volatile section of the world.” “The process and training will begin immediately,” the president concluded.

    The announcement deepens Trump’s rhetorical offensive over the strait, after he had earlier told Fox News that Washington would become the “guardian” of the waterway and should be compensated for safeguarding it, amid a military escalation with Iran and Tehran’s warning that it would consider any Gulf-state cooperation with the United States over the strait “an act of war.”

    The full story is available at this link.

    The Revolutionary Guards accuse the US of endangering global oil supplies by “interfering” in Hormuz

    Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps accused the United States on Monday of endangering global oil and gas supplies by “interfering” in the Strait of Hormuz after hostilities between the two countries resumed. IRGC spokesman Hosein Mohebi said the United States “must be held accountable” for jeopardizing global energy security.

    In a post on X, Mohebi added that Tehran “will continue to exercise its sovereignty and management of the Strait of Hormuz,” signaling that Iran is unwilling to cede operational control of the waterway despite US pressure.

    The accusation followed a warning earlier from the Khatam Al-Anbiya military command, which called any Gulf cooperation with Washington over management of the strait “an act of war,” after President Trump said the United States would become its “guardian” and should be compensated for custodianship.

    Wall Street opens lower amid US-Iran escalation and a drop in semiconductors

    US stocks mostly fell on Monday morning as markets weighed higher oil prices and a pullback in semiconductor shares, while investors eyed upcoming corporate earnings and economic data. Crude oil prices rose more than 3% amid rising US-Iran tensions, renewing concerns about oil infrastructure in the Strait of Hormuz.

    US semiconductor shares fell early after a weak session in South Korea’s Kospi, led by a sharp decline in SK hynix. About 10 minutes after the open, the Dow Jones was up 0.1% at 52,676.53, the S&P 500 was down 0.4% at 7,547.53, and the Nasdaq Composite was down 0.9% at 26,039.50.

    “Tensions with Iran, which are intensifying, are pushing oil prices higher, which is lifting Treasury yields, while the sell-off in SK hynix drags down memory-linked stocks, pressuring the Nasdaq and S&P,” said Art Hogan of B. Riley Wealth Management. This week’s agenda includes major US bank earnings, a congressional appearance by Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh, and the latest consumer price index data.

    Iran warns Gulf states: cooperating with the US in the Strait of Hormuz will be considered “an act of war”

    The Iranian military warned Gulf states on Monday that any cooperation with the United States in managing the Strait of Hormuz would be considered “an act of war,” as hostilities between Tehran and Washington resumed. A spokesman for the Khatam Al-Anbiya military command delivered the warning in a video message to regional countries.

    The same spokesman said Iran “under no circumstances will allow… the United States to interfere in the management” of the strategic waterway, in an attempt to dissuade Washington’s regional allies from joining any joint administration scheme for the strait.

    The statement came hours after President Trump said the US would become the “guardian” of the Strait of Hormuz and should be compensated for protecting it, amid the military escalation that has put transit through this key energy trade route at risk.

    Trump says the US is “taking control” of the Strait of Hormuz

    President Donald Trump said on Monday that the United States was “taking control” of the Strait of Hormuz after several days of exchanged strikes with Iran over the waterway. “We are taking control of the strait. They have nothing. They have nothing,” Trump said in an interview with Fox News, referring to what he described as Iran’s military vulnerability.

    The president added that his country would become the “guardian” of the strait and that Washington should be paid to protect it. “We will become the guardian of the strait (…) And we should be compensated for that,” he said in the phone interview.

    He also issued a stern warning to Iran after the collapse of the existing military agreement, saying US forces had struck Iranian equipment overnight. “Most of their equipment no longer exists. Their anti-aircraft gun, we hit it very hard last night,” he said. “Every time they send a drone, we hit them very hard.” Trump said Washington had reached an agreement with Tehran that was later broken: “We had a deal… and they broke it. They always break it. So we are going to hit them very hard and we are going to keep the strait, and probably we will manage it.”

    The remarks come amid the dispute over control of the strait, after Iran threatened to close it and fired “warning shots” at ships attempting to transit, while Washington insists maritime traffic continues to flow normally despite the military escalation.

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    Video: US releases footage of new wave of strikes against Iran

    US forces completed a new wave of strikes against Iran on Sunday, hitting dozens of targets at multiple locations with precision munitions, the US Central Command (CENTCOM) said. CENTCOM said it struck air defense systems, coastal radars, missile and drone capabilities, and small Iranian vessels using combat aircraft, warships, aerial and marine single-use strike drones.

    Iranian media reported strikes and explosions around the port cities of Sirik and Bandar Abbas — where military facilities on the strait are located — and the nearby island of Qeshm. Iran’s foreign ministry condemned the weekend strikes as “aggressive.” Reuters could not independently verify the location or date of the footage, and no earlier version of the video was found online before July 12.

    Houthis warn they will respond to the attack on Sanaa airport

    Yemen’s Houthi rebels, backed by Iran, said on Monday they would respond to the attack on Sanaa airport, which they blamed on Saudi Arabia, although the operation was claimed by the Yemeni government backed by Riyadh. Houthi military spokesman Yahya Saree accused Saudi Arabia of “ending the détente phase and assuming full responsibility for the consequences of its aggression.”

    Saree also warned that “this aggression will not go unanswered or unpunished,” signaling the group might intensify actions amid the region’s growing tensions linked to the US-Iran confrontation.

    Yemeni government claims attack on Sanaa airport; Houthis blame Saudi Arabia

    The internationally recognized Yemeni government said on Monday it attacked Sanaa airport following a dispute over an Iranian plane carrying a Houthi delegation, an operation the government says was necessary after the rebels prevented national Yemeni aircraft from landing and insisted on allowing an Iranian plane to violate Yemeni airspace. “The terrorist Houthi militias — backed by the Iranian regime — prevented national Yemeni aircraft from landing at the capital’s airport, while insisting on allowing an Iranian plane to violate Yemeni territory; consequently, the airport runway was attacked,” the Yemeni Defense Ministry said.

    Earlier, the Houthi channel Al Masirah had reported that “the Saudi aggression attacked the takeoff and landing runways of Sanaa International Airport.” The Houthis, backed by Iran, said on Monday they would respond to the airport attack, attributing it to Saudi Arabia, while the Yemen government aligned with Riyadh claimed responsibility for the strike. Houthi spokesman Yahya Saree accused Saudi Arabia of “ending the détente phase and bearing full responsibility for the consequences of its aggression,” and warned: “We affirm that this aggression will not remain unanswered or unpunished.”

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    Bahrain intercepted Iranian drones and missiles amid reports of attacks in southern Iran

    Bahrain’s military said on Monday that its air defense systems intercepted and destroyed several Iranian missiles and drones launched during the day, after the Revolutionary Guard claimed to have struck US military installations in the Gulf, including bases on Bahraini soil. Bahrain’s Defense Forces accused Iran of continuing to target the kingdom’s civilian population.

    In parallel, the semi-official Iranian news agency ISNA reported that a US strike on a target in Isfahan province in central Iran left one person dead and seven wounded in the early hours of Monday, according to the province’s deputy governor for security. Iran has not released an official casualty toll since the renewed large-scale strikes began last week, but state media reports and statements about isolated incidents suggest roughly 20 people have been killed by the renewed US bombardments. At the start of the war, thousands had died, mostly in Iran and Lebanon.

    Bahrain’s armed forces accuse Iran of attacking civilians

    On Monday, Bahrain’s armed forces accused Iran of attacking civilians in its recent strikes against the kingdom, after Tehran said it had hit US military facilities and infrastructure in Bahrain.

    “Iran continues its systematic hostile conduct through its heinous missile and drone attacks directed at civilians in the Kingdom of Bahrain,” the armed forces’ general command said in a statement, adding that air defenses “intercepted and destroyed several Iranian aerial attacks” on Monday morning.

    Iranian media report explosions near the Strait of Hormuz

    Explosions of unknown origin were heard on Monday in southern Iran, near the Strait of Hormuz, a news agency reported, following an exchange of strikes between Tehran and Washington.

    “Media outlets and residents reported hearing explosions on Monday at midday near Bandar Abbas and the island of Qeshm,” the Mehr news agency said, adding that the explosions “appear to originate from the western coast of Bandar Abbas.”

    Iran says it continues talks with mediators to “avoid escalation” with the US

    Iran said on Monday it is continuing diplomatic contacts with mediators Qatar, Pakistan, and Oman to “avoid an escalation” with the United States amid renewed hostilities between the two countries.

    “The role of the mediators is to continue their efforts to prevent a rise in tensions,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmail Baqai said, adding that Tehran had been in contact “in recent days” with Qatar and Oman — both countries that Iran has attacked militarily — as well as Pakistan.

    Iran says it will stop complying with the agreement if the US does not honor its commitments

    Iran announced on Monday that it would no longer honor the memorandum of understanding signed with the United States if Washington did not fulfill its commitments to end the war.

    “Whenever the other party has not complied with its obligations, we have not complied with ours… We will continue acting in this way,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei said at a press conference in Tehran after the latest wave of hostilities between the adversaries.

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/el-petroleo-sube-mas-de-4-tras-la-reanudacion-de-los-ataques-entre-eeuu-e-iran-y-la-amenaza-de-cierre-del-estrecho-de-ormuz/

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  • Live: Iran attacks two tankers in Strait of Hormuz, one crew member killed

    Live: Iran attacks two tankers in Strait of Hormuz, one crew member killed

    The United States launched a third round of strikes against Iran and announced the reimposition of a naval blockade on Iranian ports, amid the collapse of the memorandum of understanding (MoU) signed between the two parties after hostilities resumed last week.

    Hours before his statements about the strikes, Trump had said the Strait of Hormuz is open and will remain so “with or without Iran.” He also announced that the United States would reimpose its blockade on Iranian ports and begin charging fees to ships transiting that waterway.

    The president set a 20% levy “for all and every cost necessary” to ensure the safety of vessels in the strait. The United States Central Command stated that preparations to resume the blockade of ships bound for or departing Iranian ports would begin at 20:00 GMT on Tuesday.

    The International Maritime Organization (IMO) rejected both the proposed fees and the military actions in the area. In a statement, the IMO Council reaffirmed its commitment to protecting vital sea lanes and said that passage through the Strait of Hormuz “must remain free of tolls and charges, in accordance with international law.”

    Below is minute-by-minute coverage:

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    Air-raid sirens sound again in Bahrain

    Air-raid sirens sounded for the third time on Tuesday morning in Bahrain, where the Interior Ministry urged residents to seek shelter immediately.

    Oil prices surge to four-week high

    Oil prices rose 2%, reaching a four-week high amid the ongoing reciprocal attacks between the United States and Iran.

    Brent futures climbed $1.68, or 2%, to $84.98 per barrel, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude rose $1.65, or 2.1%, to $79.79 per barrel at 00:51 GMT.

    The increase follows a dramatic Monday session when Brent jumped 9.6%, its largest single-day rise since May 2020.

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    Bahrain intercepted Iranian air attacks

    Nabeel Alhamer, press advisor to the King of Bahrain, says the kingdom’s air defense systems have intercepted and destroyed multiple Iranian aerial attacks in recent hours.

    /estados-unidos/2026/07/14/tras-los-nuevos-ataques-contra-iran-donald-trump-aseguro-que-hay-posibilidad-de-llegar-a-otro-acuerdo-con-teheran/

    Air-raid sirens activated in Bahrain

    Alert sirens are sounding in Bahrain, and authorities are urging residents to seek shelter immediately.

    The Interior Ministry instructed the public to “remain calm and proceed to the nearest safe location” following the activation of the latest alarms.

    Two tankers attacked by Iran: one Indian crew member killed

    The United Arab Emirates Ministry of Defense reported on Monday that two domestic tankers were struck by two Iranian cruise missiles in the southern channel of the Strait of Hormuz, in Omani territorial waters. The attack killed one Indian crew member and left eight injured, four of them seriously.

    The ministry said fires broke out on both vessels but were brought under control. It condemned the attack as a serious violation of international law and stated that the UAE reserves the full right to respond and take all necessary measures to protect its sovereignty and security.

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    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/el-comando-central-de-estados-unidos-confirmo-que-el-bloqueo-naval-contra-iran-comenzara-este-martes/

    Trump says Iran sought further negotiations after the agreement

    The U.S. president said the United States had reached an agreement with Iran two days earlier, but that Tehran wanted to continue negotiating it.

    When a journalist asked whether he had decided that a negotiated agreement with Iran was no longer possible, Trump replied: “I never came to that conclusion.”

    He added that he believed the most effective way to pressure Iran was through a combination of blockade and strikes.

    /estados-unidos/2026/07/13/estados-unidos-lanzo-una-nueva-ronda-de-ataques-contra-iran-para-degradar-su-capacidad-militar-en-estrecho-de-ormuz/

    The International Maritime Organization (IMO) reiterated on Monday that vessel passage through the Strait of Hormuz must be toll-free, following a post by U.S. President Donald Trump the same day in which he said the United States would charge a 20% fee for what he called security protection.

    Under international law, passage must remain free of customs duties and charges, the U.N. specialized agency based in London said. The IMO emphasized that any agreement among littoral states in the region must guarantee non-discriminatory, unimpeded transit rights for all ships.

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/las-acciones-tecnologicas-hundieron-a-wall-street-tras-la-escalada-entre-estados-unidos-e-iran/

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/el-petroleo-registro-su-mayor-alza-diaria-desde-el-inicio-del-conflicto-entre-estados-unidos-e-iran/

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/las-defensas-saudies-interceptaron-misiles-huties-en-la-mayor-escalada-en-yemen-desde-2022/

    Donald Trump announced he will address the nation in prime time on Thursday, in a move that comes amid a major escalation of hostilities with Iran.

    “President Trump will address the nation on Thursday night at 9 p.m. Eastern Time (01:00 GMT Friday). Thank you for your attention!” Trump posted on his social network Truth on Monday.

    U.S. missions in the UAE suspend consular appointments

    The United States announced the suspension of consular appointments in the United Arab Emirates for three days starting Monday, due to the escalation of military tensions in the Gulf region.

    “The U.S. Embassy in Abu Dhabi and the U.S. Consulate General in Dubai have canceled consular appointments from July 13 to 15 due to the regional security situation. If you have an appointment scheduled for those dates, please do not come to the embassy or consulate. We will contact you to reschedule,” the statement said.

    Iran’s foreign minister mocks Trump’s fee to protect ships in Hormuz

    Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi mocked President Donald Trump’s proposal to impose fees to protect vessels transiting the Strait of Hormuz and said his country would charge a cheaper toll.

    “Whoever ensures the safe passage of commercial ships through the Strait of Hormuz should receive compensation for this service. Iran has always been the GUARDIAN of the strait and will remain so FOREVER. Twenty percent is, of course, too much. We will be fair,” the minister wrote on social media, referring to the fee proposed earlier by Trump.

    Oil prices jump more than 9%

    Oil prices surged on Monday, driven by the U.S. reestablishment of a naval blockade on Iranian ports and Washington’s intention to impose a toll on ships that wish to transit the Strait of Hormuz.

    By 18:20 GMT, North Sea Brent, the international benchmark, was up 9.06% at $82.90 per barrel. Its U.S. counterpart, West Texas Intermediate (WTI), rose 9.05% to $77.87 per barrel.

    U.S. naval blockade of Iran to begin Tuesday

    The United States will begin enforcing a naval blockade against all Iranian ports and oil terminals on Tuesday, the Joint Maritime Information Center (JMIC) of the U.S.-led Combined Maritime Forces said in a statement on Monday.

    According to the JMIC, the blockade will apply to all vessels, regardless of their flag. The blockade will not prevent neutral traffic transiting the Strait of Hormuz destined for or coming from locations outside Iran, the statement added.

    Humanitarian shipments will be permitted, subject to inspections, the JMIC added.

    /estados-unidos/2026/07/13/nueva-ofensiva-contra-iran-estados-unidos-bombardeo-una-instalacion-naval-del-regimen-con-drones-maritimos-no-tripulados/

    Saudi Arabia says it responded to Houthi ballistic missile attack from Yemen

    The Saudi-led military coalition intervening in Yemen since 2015 said on Monday that it had responded to a ballistic missile attack launched by Houthi rebels, after the movement accused Riyadh of bombing Sanaa International Airport, the Yemeni capital’s airport.

    “Air defenses have responded to a ballistic missile threat launched by the Houthi terrorist militia toward the southern region,” Turki al-Maliki, spokesman for the so-called Coalition to Support the Legitimacy in Yemen, said on X.

    European stocks close slightly higher amid Middle East uncertainty

    European stock markets closed with modest gains on Monday after a session marked by the resumption of hostilities and rising oil prices, as well as concerns about the technology sector and the future path of interest rates.

    London closed up marginally by 0.01%, Paris gained 0.31%, Frankfurt 0.19%, Milan 0.37% and Madrid 0.25%.

    Guterres warns about military escalation in the Gulf after US and Iranian attacks

    United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres warned on Monday about the attacks by the United States against Iran, as well as Tehran’s attacks on ships in the Strait of Hormuz and on neighboring countries.

    Guterres expressed his “deep concern over the serious escalation in the resumption of military confrontations in the Gulf region,” his spokesman Stéphane Dujarric said.

    Oil rises more than 4% as US-Iran tensions grow

    Oil prices climbed strongly on Monday, with West Texas Intermediate trading at $74.53 per barrel, up 4.37%, while Brent rose 4.30% to $79.28. The increase occurred amid rising military tensions between the United States and Iran, which renewed doubts about the safety of transit through the Strait of Hormuz.

    The energy-driven rebound also affected stock and bond markets: the VIX volatility index jumped 7.77%, while U.S. Treasury yields rose across the curve — the 10-year yield gained 0.63% and the 5-year yield 0.88% — reflecting investor caution about an escalation that could lead to a prolonged disruption of global energy trade.

    CENTCOM confirms first combat use of maritime drones: struck an Iranian naval base in Bandar Abbas

    U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) reported that its forces successfully struck a submarine and ship maintenance facility in Iran using multiple single-use aerial attack drones. According to the command, three unmanned surface vessels of the Corsair model impacted the port of Bandar Abbas Naval Base.

    The strike marked, CENTCOM said, the first time U.S. forces have employed maritime drones in combat operations. The command stated that the night strikes “degraded Iran’s ability to continue attacking commercial maritime traffic,” amid the military escalation that has put transit through the Strait of Hormuz on edge.

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    Trump says the US will charge a 20% fee to protect ships in the Strait of Hormuz

    President Donald Trump announced that the Strait of Hormuz is and will remain “OPEN,” with or without Iran, and that the United States is reinstating what he called the “IRANIAN BLOCKADE,” so named, he explained, because it will only prevent entry or exit for Iranian vessels or customers.

    “All other countries will have fair and open use of the strait,” the president wrote in a post on Truth Social.

    Trump said that from now on the United States will be known as “THE GUARDIAN OF THE STRAIT OF HORMUZ,” and argued that, “as a matter of FAIRNESS,” the country will be reimbursed at a 20% rate on all cargo carried, to cover the costs necessary to provide security to “this very volatile section of the world.” “The process and training will begin immediately,” the president added.

    The announcement deepens Trump’s rhetorical offensive regarding the strait, after he had earlier told Fox in an interview that Washington would become the “guardian” of the waterway and would be compensated for guarding it, amid the military escalation with Iran and Tehran’s warning that it would consider “an act of war” any Gulf cooperation with the United States in managing the passage.

    The full report at this link.

    Iran’s Revolutionary Guards accuse the US of endangering global oil supplies by “interfering” in Hormuz

    Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps accused the United States on Monday of endangering the global supply of oil and gas by “interfering” in the Strait of Hormuz, after hostilities between the two countries resumed. IRGC spokesperson Hosein Mohebi said the United States “must be held accountable” for jeopardizing the security of the global energy supply.

    In a post on X, Mohebi added that Tehran “will continue to exercise its sovereignty and the management of the Strait of Hormuz,” signaling that Iran is unwilling to cede operational control of the waterway despite U.S. pressure.

    The accusation followed an earlier warning from the Khatam Al-Anbiya military command, which called any cooperation by Gulf states with Washington in managing the strait “an act of war,” after President Trump said the United States would become its “guardian” and should be compensated for guarding it.

    Wall Street opens lower on US-Iran escalation and a drop in semiconductors

    U.S. stocks mostly fell on Monday morning as markets weighed higher oil prices and a retreat in semiconductor shares, while investors looked ahead to upcoming corporate earnings and economic data. Oil prices rose more than 3% amid rising tensions between the United States and Iran, reviving concerns about energy infrastructure in the Strait of Hormuz.

    U.S. semiconductor stocks fell early after a weak session on South Korea’s Kospi, led by a sharp drop in SK hynix. About ten minutes after the open, the Dow Jones was up 0.1% at 52,676.53 points, while the S&P 500 was down 0.4% at 7,547.53 and the Nasdaq Composite fell 0.9% to 26,039.50.

    “Tensions with Iran, which are intensifying, are pushing oil prices up, and that is raising Treasury yields, while the liquidation of SK hynix is dragging down memory-linked stocks, which in turn pressures the Nasdaq and the S&P,” said Art Hogan of B. Riley Wealth Management. This week’s agenda includes the earnings of major U.S. banks, a congressional appearance by Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh, and the latest consumer price index data.

    Iran warns Gulf states: cooperating with the US in the Strait of Hormuz will be considered “an act of war”

    The Iranian military warned on Monday that any cooperation by Gulf states with the United States in managing the Strait of Hormuz would be considered “an act of war,” as confrontations between Tehran and Washington resumed. A spokesperson for the Khatam Al-Anbiya military command delivered the warning in a video message to regional states.

    The same spokesperson said Iran “under no circumstances will allow… the United States to interfere in the management” of the strategic waterway, in remarks intended to deter U.S. regional allies from joining any joint management scheme for the strait.

    The statement came hours after President Donald Trump said his country would become the “guardian” of the Strait of Hormuz and should be paid to protect it, amid the military escalation that has put transit through this key route for energy trade on edge.

    Trump says the US is “taking control” of the Strait of Hormuz

    President Donald Trump said on Monday that the United States was “taking control” of the Strait of Hormuz after several days of exchanges of attacks with Iran over the vital waterway. “We are taking control of the strait. They have nothing. They have nothing,” Trump said in an interview with Fox News, referring to Iran’s perceived military weakness.

    The president added that his country will become the “guardian” of the strait and that Washington should be paid for protecting it. “We will become the guardian of the strait (…) And we should be compensated for that,” he said in the interview.

    He also issued a strong warning to Iran after the breakdown of the existing military agreement, saying the United States struck Iranian military equipment overnight. “Most of their equipment no longer exists. Their anti-aircraft gun, we hit it very hard last night,” he said. “Every time they send a drone, we hit them very hard.” Trump said the U.S. had reached an agreement with Tehran that was then violated: “We had a deal… and they broke it. They always break it. So we are going to hit them very hard and we are going to keep the strait, and we will probably administer it.”

    The remarks come amid a dispute over control of the strait, after Iran threatened to close it and fired “warning shots” at vessels attempting to cross, while Washington insists maritime traffic is continuing to flow normally despite the military escalation.

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    Video: US releases footage of new wave of strikes against Iran

    U.S. forces completed a new wave of strikes against Iran on Sunday, striking dozens of targets in multiple locations with precision munitions, U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) said. According to the command, air defense systems, coastal radars, missile and drone capabilities, and small Iranian vessels were targeted using combat aircraft, warships, and single-use aerial and maritime attack drones.

    Iranian media reported Sunday missile strikes and explosions around the port cities of Sirik and Bandar Abbas — where military facilities near the strait are located — and the nearby island of Qeshm. Iran’s foreign ministry condemned the U.S. strikes over the weekend as “aggressive.” Reuters could not independently verify the location or date of the footage, and no earlier version was found online before July 12.

    The Houthis warn they will retaliate for the attack on Sanaa airport

    The Iran-backed Houthis in Yemen said on Monday they will respond to the attack on Sanaa airport, which they attributed to Saudi Arabia, though the operation was claimed by the Yemeni government backed by Riyadh. Houthi military spokesman Yahya Saree accused Saudi Arabia of “ending the de-escalation phase and assuming full responsibility for the consequences of its aggression.”

    Saree also warned that “this aggression will not go unanswered or unpunished,” signaling that the rebel group could intensify its actions amid growing regional tensions linked to the US-Iran confrontation.

    Yemeni government claims attack on Sanaa airport; Houthis blame Saudi Arabia

    The internationally recognized Yemeni government said on Monday it had struck Sanaa airport after a dispute over an Iranian plane carrying a Houthi delegation, an attack the rebel group initially blamed on Saudi Arabia. “The Houthi terrorist militias — backed by the Iranian regime — prevented national Yemeni aircraft from landing at the capital’s airport, while insisting that an Iranian plane violate Yemeni airspace; accordingly, the airport runway was targeted,” the Yemeni Defense Ministry said. Earlier, the Houthi channel Al Masirah reported that “the Saudi aggression attacked the departure and arrival runways of Sanaa International Airport.”

    The Iran-backed Houthis said on Monday they would respond to the attack on Sanaa airport, which they attributed to Saudi Arabia, while the Riyadh-backed Yemeni government claimed responsibility for the operation. Houthi military spokesman Yahya Saree accused Saudi Arabia of “ending the de-escalation phase and assuming full responsibility for the consequences of its aggression,” warning: “We state that this aggression will not go unanswered or unpunished.”

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/como-esta-el-trafico-maritimo-en-el-estrecho-de-ormuz-que-iran-asegura-haber-cerrado-y-eeuu-quiere-mantener-abierto/

    Bahrain intercepted Iranian drones and missiles amid reports of attacks in southern Iran

    Bahrain’s military said on Monday that its air defense systems intercepted and destroyed several Iranian missiles and drones launched during the day, after the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps claimed to have attacked U.S. military facilities in the Gulf, including bases on Bahraini territory. Bahrain’s Defense Forces accused Iran of continuing to target the kingdom’s civilian population.

    Meanwhile, semi-official Iranian agency ISNA reported that a U.S. strike on a site in Isfahan province in central Iran left one person dead and seven wounded in the early hours of Monday, according to the province’s deputy governor for security. Iran has not released an official casualty count since the cross-border strikes resumed last week, but state media reports and statements about isolated incidents suggest roughly 20 people have died in the renewed U.S. bombardments. At the start of the war, thousands had died, mostly in Iran and Lebanon.

    Bahrain’s military accuses Iran of attacking civilians

    On Monday, Bahrain’s armed forces accused Iran of targeting civilians in its recent attacks against the kingdom, after Tehran said it had struck U.S. military facilities and infrastructure in the country.

    “Iran continues its systematic hostile conduct through its atrocious missile and drone attacks aimed at civilians in the Kingdom of Bahrain,” the armed forces’ general command said in a statement, adding that air defenses “intercepted and destroyed several Iranian aerial attacks” on Monday morning.

    Iranian media report explosions near the Strait of Hormuz

    Explosions of unknown origin were heard on Monday in southern Iran near the Strait of Hormuz, a news agency reported, following an exchange of strikes between Tehran and Washington.

    “Media outlets and residents reported hearing explosions around midday on Monday near Bandar Abbas and the island of Qeshm,” the Mehr news agency said, adding that the explosions “appear to originate from the west coast of Bandar Abbas.”

    Iran says it continues talks with mediators to “avoid an escalation” with the US

    Iran said on Monday it is continuing diplomatic contacts with mediators Qatar, Pakistan and Oman in order to “avoid an escalation” with the United States amid the resumption of hostilities.

    “The role of the mediators is to continue their efforts to prevent a further escalation of tensions,” Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmail Baqaei said, adding that Tehran had been in contact “in recent days” with Qatar and Oman, two countries that had been militarily attacked by Iran, as well as with Pakistan.

    Iran says it will stop complying with the agreement if the US does not meet its commitments

    Iran announced on Monday that it would no longer abide by the memorandum of understanding signed with the United States if Washington did not fulfill its obligations to end the war.

    “Whenever the other party has not fulfilled its obligations, we have also not fulfilled ours… We will continue to act in this manner,” Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baqaei said at a press conference in Tehran following the latest wave of hostilities between the two adversaries.

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/el-petroleo-sube-mas-de-4-tras-la-reanudacion-de-los-ataques-entre-eeuu-e-iran-y-la-amenaza-de-cierre-del-estrecho-de-ormuz/

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/el-regimen-de-iran-lanzo-ataques-contra-bases-militares-de-estados-unidos-en-jordania-bahrein-y-kuwait/

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  • Iran attacks two tankers in Strait of Hormuz, one crew member killed

    Iran attacks two tankers in Strait of Hormuz, one crew member killed

    The United States launched a third round of strikes against Iran and announced the reinstatement of a naval blockade on Iranian ports, amid the collapse of the memorandum of understanding (MoU) signed by both sides after fighting resumed last week.

    Hours before his statements about the strikes, Trump said the Strait of Hormuz is open and will remain so “with or without Iran.” He also announced that the United States would reimpose its blockade on Iranian ports and begin charging fees to vessels transiting that waterway.

    The president set a levy of 20% “for each and every cost necessary” to ensure the security of ships in the strait. The United States Central Command said preparations to resume the blockade of vessels bound for or departing from Iranian ports would begin at 20:00 GMT on Tuesday.

    The International Maritime Organization (IMO) rejected both the fees and the military actions in the area. In a statement, the IMO Council reaffirmed its commitment to protecting vital shipping routes and said passage through the Strait of Hormuz “must remain free of tolls and charges, in accordance with international law.”

    Below is live, minute-by-minute coverage:

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    Air-raid sirens sound again in Bahrain

    Air-raid sirens sounded for the third time on Tuesday morning in Bahrain, where the Interior Ministry urged residents to seek shelter immediately.

    Oil prices surge to their highest level in four weeks

    Oil prices rose 2%, reaching their highest level in four weeks amid ongoing reciprocal strikes between the United States and Iran.

    Brent crude futures climbed $1.68, or 2%, to $84.98 a barrel, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude rose $1.65, or 2.1%, to $79.79 a barrel at 00:51 GMT.

    The increase follows a dramatic Monday session in which Brent jumped 9.6%, recording its largest one-day gain since May 2020.

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    Bahrain intercepted Iranian air attacks

    Nabeel Alhamer, the press adviser to Bahrain’s king, said the kingdom’s air defenses intercepted and destroyed multiple Iranian air attacks in recent hours.

    /estados-unidos/2026/07/14/tras-los-nuevos-ataques-contra-iran-donald-trump-aseguro-que-hay-posibilidad-de-llegar-a-otro-acuerdo-con-teheran/

    Air-raid sirens activated in Bahrain

    Alert sirens are sounding in Bahrain, and authorities are urging residents to seek shelter immediately.

    The Interior Ministry instructed the public to “remain calm and go to the nearest safe place” after the latest alarms were activated.

    Two tankers attacked by Iran: one crew member from India killed

    The United Arab Emirates Ministry of Defense reported on Monday that two national tankers were struck by two Iranian cruise missiles in the southern channel of the Strait of Hormuz, in Omani territorial waters. The attack killed one Indian crew member and left eight people injured, four of them seriously.

    The ministry said fires broke out on both vessels but were brought under control. It condemned the attack as a serious violation of international law and said the UAE reserves its full right to respond and take all necessary measures to protect its sovereignty and security.

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    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/el-comando-central-de-estados-unidos-confirmo-que-el-bloqueo-naval-contra-iran-comenzara-este-martes/

    Trump says Iran wanted further negotiations after the deal

    The U.S. president said the United States had reached an agreement with Iran two days earlier, but that Tehran wanted to continue negotiating.

    When asked by a reporter whether he had decided that a negotiated deal with Iran was no longer possible, Trump replied: “I never came to that conclusion.”

    He added that he believed the most effective way to pressure Iran was through a combination of blockade and strikes.

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    The International Maritime Organization (IMO) reiterated on Monday that the transit of vessels through the Strait of Hormuz must be free of charges, after U.S. President Donald Trump said that the United States would impose a 20% fee for what he called protection services.

    Under international law, passage must remain free of customs duties and charges, the U.N. specialized agency based in London said. The IMO emphasized that any agreement between the littoral states of the region must guarantee non-discriminatory, unobstructed right of passage for all ships.

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/las-acciones-tecnologicas-hundieron-a-wall-street-tras-la-escalada-entre-estados-unidos-e-iran/

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/el-petroleo-registro-su-mayor-alza-diaria-desde-el-inicio-del-conflicto-entre-estados-unidos-e-iran/

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/las-defensas-saudies-interceptaron-misiles-huties-en-la-mayor-escalada-en-yemen-desde-2022/

    Donald Trump announced he will address the nation in prime time on Thursday, in a move that comes amid a major escalation of hostilities with Iran.

    “President Trump will address the nation Thursday night at 9 p.m. Eastern (01:00 GMT Friday). Thank you for your attention!” Trump posted on his social network Truth on Monday.

    U.S. missions in the United Arab Emirates suspend consular appointments

    The United States announced the suspension of consular appointments in the United Arab Emirates for three days starting Monday due to the escalation of military tensions in the Gulf region.

    “The U.S. Embassy in Abu Dhabi and the U.S. Consulate General in Dubai have canceled consular appointments from July 13 through July 15 due to the regional security situation. If you have an appointment scheduled for those dates, please do not come to the embassy or consulate. We will contact you to reschedule,” the statement said.

    Iran’s foreign minister mocks Trump over proposed fee to protect ships in Hormuz

    Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi mocked U.S. President Donald Trump’s proposal to impose fees to protect ships transiting the Strait of Hormuz, saying his country would charge a lower toll.

    “Whoever ensures the safe passage of commercial vessels through the Strait of Hormuz should receive compensation for that service. Iran has always been the GUARDIAN of the strait and will remain so FOREVER. Twenty percent is, of course, too much. We will be fair,” the minister wrote on social media, referring to the fee earlier proposed by Trump.

    Oil prices jump more than 9%

    Oil prices surged on Monday, driven by the U.S. reinstatement of a naval blockade on Iranian ports and Washington’s intention to impose a toll on vessels transiting the Strait of Hormuz.

    By 18:20 GMT, the price of a North Sea Brent barrel, the international benchmark, was up 9.06% at $82.90. Its U.S. equivalent, West Texas Intermediate (WTI), rose 9.05% to $77.87 a barrel.

    U.S. naval blockade of Iran to begin Tuesday

    The United States will begin imposing a naval blockade on all Iranian ports and oil terminals on Tuesday, the Joint Maritime Information Center (JMIC) of the U.S.-led Combined Maritime Forces said in a statement on Monday.

    According to the JMIC, the blockade will apply to all vessels regardless of their flag. The blockade will not prevent neutral traffic transiting the Strait of Hormuz to or from locations outside Iran, the statement added.

    Humanitarian shipments will be permitted subject to inspections, the JMIC said.

    /estados-unidos/2026/07/13/nueva-ofensiva-contra-iran-estados-unidos-bombardeo-una-instalacion-naval-del-regimen-con-drones-maritimos-no-tripulados/

    Saudi Arabia says it responded to Houthi ballistic missile attack from Yemen

    The Saudi-led military coalition intervening in Yemen since 2015 said on Monday it had responded to a ballistic missile attack launched by Houthi rebels, after the movement accused Riyadh of bombing Sanaa International Airport, the Yemeni capital’s airport.

    “Air defenses have responded to a ballistic missile threat launched by the terrorist Houthi militia toward the southern region,” Coalition spokesman Turki al-Malki said on X. The coalition supports Yemen’s internationally recognized government.

    European markets end with slight gains amid Middle East uncertainty

    European stock markets closed with modest gains on Monday after a day marked by the resumption of hostilities and rising oil prices, along with concerns about the tech sector and the outlook for interest rates.

    London closed up a marginal 0.01%, Paris gained 0.31%, Frankfurt 0.19%, Milan 0.37% and Madrid 0.25%.

    Guterres warns about military escalation in the Gulf after US and Iranian attacks

    U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres warned on Monday about the United States’ attacks on Iran, as well as Tehran’s strikes on vessels in the Strait of Hormuz and on neighboring countries.

    Guterres expressed his “deep concern about the serious escalation of renewed military confrontations in the Gulf region,” his spokesman Stéphane Dujarric said.

    Oil rises more than 4% as tensions between the US and Iran grow

    Oil prices climbed strongly on Monday, with West Texas Intermediate trading at $74.53 a barrel, up 4.37%, while Brent rose 4.30% to $79.28. The gains occurred amid growing military tensions between the United States and Iran, which renewed doubts over the safety of transit through the Strait of Hormuz.

    The energy price surge also affected equity and bond markets: the volatility index VIX jumped 7.77%, and U.S. Treasury yields rose across the curve — the 10-year yield increased 0.63% and the 5-year 0.88% — reflecting investor caution over a potential prolonged disruption to global energy trade.

    CENTCOM confirms first combat use of maritime drones: struck an Iranian naval base in Bandar Abbas

    U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) said its forces successfully struck, using multiple one-way aerial attack drones, a submarine and ship maintenance facility in Iran. According to the command, three uncrewed surface vessels of the Corsair model impacted the port at Bandar Abbas Naval Base.

    CENTCOM said the attack marked the first time U.S. forces have used maritime drones in combat. The command added that the overnight strikes “degraded Iran’s capability to continue attacking commercial maritime traffic,” part of the military escalation that has put transit through the Strait of Hormuz on edge.

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/operaciones-militares-en-yemen-bombardearon-el-aeropuerto-de-sana-controlado-por-rebeldes-huties/

    Trump says the US will charge a 20% fee to protect ships in the Strait of Hormuz

    President Donald Trump announced that the Strait of Hormuz is and will remain “OPEN,” with or without Iran, and that the United States is reinstating what he called the “IRANIAN BLOCKADE,” so named, he explained, because it will only prevent the entry or exit of Iranian ships or customers.

    “Everyone else will have fair and open use of the strait,” the president wrote on Truth Social.

    Trump said that going forward the United States will be known as “THE GUARDIAN OF THE STRAIT OF HORMUZ,” and argued that, “as a matter of FAIRNESS,” the country will be reimbursed at a 20% rate on all cargo transported, to cover costs necessary to provide security for “this very volatile section of the world.” “The process and training will begin immediately,” the president concluded.

    The announcement deepens Trump’s rhetorical offensive over the strait, after he had earlier told Fox in an interview that Washington would become the “guardian” of the waterway and be compensated for guarding it, amid the military escalation with Iran and Tehran’s warning that it would consider “an act of war” any Gulf cooperation with the United States in managing the passage.

    The full story at this link.

    Iran’s Revolutionary Guards accuse the US of endangering global oil supplies by ‘interfering’ in Hormuz

    Iran’s Revolutionary Guards accused the United States on Monday of endangering the global supply of oil and gas by “interfering” in the Strait of Hormuz after hostilities between the two countries resumed. Revolutionary Guards spokesman Hosein Mohebi said the United States “must be held accountable” for putting global energy supply security at risk.

    In a post on X, Mohebi added that Tehran “will continue to exercise its sovereignty and management of the Strait of Hormuz,” signaling that Iran is unwilling to cede operational control of the waterway despite U.S. pressure.

    The accusation followed an earlier warning from the Khatam al-Anbiya military command, which labeled any Gulf cooperation with Washington in managing the strait “an act of war,” after President Donald Trump said the United States would become its “guardian” and should be compensated for protecting it.

    Wall Street opens lower as US-Iran escalation and semiconductor decline weigh

    U.S. stocks mostly fell on Monday morning as markets digested rising oil prices and a pullback in semiconductor shares, while investors looked ahead to upcoming corporate earnings and economic data. Crude prices rose more than 3% amid growing tensions between the United States and Iran, reviving concerns about oil infrastructure in the Strait of Hormuz.

    U.S. semiconductor stocks fell early following a poor session on South Korea’s Kospi, driven by a sharp drop in SK hynix. About ten minutes after the open, the Dow Jones was up 0.1% at 52,676.53, while the S&P 500 was down 0.4% at 7,547.53 and the Nasdaq Composite was down 0.9% at 26,039.50.

    “Tensions with Iran, which are intensifying, are pushing oil prices higher, and that is lifting Treasury yields, while the sell-off in SK hynix is dragging down memory-related stocks, which in turn pressures the Nasdaq and the S&P,” said Art Hogan of B. Riley Wealth Management. This week’s agenda includes major U.S. bank earnings, a congressional appearance by Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh, and the latest consumer price index data.

    Iran warns Gulf states: cooperating with the US in the Strait of Hormuz will be considered ‘an act of war’

    The Iranian military warned Gulf states on Monday that any cooperation with the United States in managing the Strait of Hormuz would be considered “an act of war,” as hostilities between Tehran and Washington resumed. A spokesman for the Khatam al-Anbiya military command delivered the warning in a video message to regional nations.

    The same spokesman said Iran “under no circumstances will allow… the United States to interfere in the management” of the strategic waterway, in an effort to dissuade U.S. regional allies from joining any joint administration scheme for the strait.

    The statement came hours after President Donald Trump said his country would become the “guardian” of the Strait of Hormuz and should be paid to protect it, amid a military escalation that has put passage through this key energy trade route in doubt.

    Trump says the US is ‘taking control’ of the Strait of Hormuz

    President Donald Trump said on Monday that the United States was “taking control” of the Strait of Hormuz after several days of exchanges of strikes with Iran in the key waterway. “We are taking control of the strait. They have nothing. They have nothing,” Trump said in an interview with Fox News, referring to Iran’s alleged military vulnerabilities.

    The president added that the country would become the “guardian” of the strait and should be paid for protecting it. “We will become the guardian of the strait (…) And we should be compensated for that,” he said in the telephone interview.

    He also issued a stark warning to Iran after the breakdown of the existing military agreement and revealed that the United States had struck Iranian military equipment overnight. “Most of their equipment no longer exists. Their anti-aircraft gun—we hit it very hard last night,” he said. “Every time they send a drone, we hit them very hard.” Trump said Washington had reached an agreement with Tehran that was later violated: “We had an agreement… and they broke it. They always break it. So we are going to hit them very hard and we are going to keep the strait, and we will probably administer it.”

    The remarks come amid the dispute over control of the strait, after Iran threatened to close it and fired “warning shots” at vessels attempting to cross, while Washington insists maritime traffic continues to flow normally despite the military escalation.

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/el-reino-unido-acuso-a-iran-de-respaldar-ataques-a-objetivos-judios-en-londres-y-declaro-ilegal-a-la-guardia-revolucionaria/

    Video: US releases footage of the new wave of strikes against Iran

    U.S. forces completed a new wave of strikes against Iran on Sunday, hitting dozens of targets at multiple locations with precision munitions, the U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) said. According to the command, air defenses, coastal radars, missile and drone capabilities, and small Iranian vessels were struck using fighter jets, warships, aerial drones and one-way maritime attack drones.

    Iranian media reported missile strikes and explosions around the port cities of Sirik and Bandar Abbas — where military facilities near the strait are located — and the nearby island of Qeshm. Iran’s foreign ministry condemned the U.S. weekend strikes as “aggressive.” Reuters could not independently verify the location or date of the video footage, and no earlier version of the video was found online before July 12.

    The Houthis say they will respond to the strike on Sanaa airport

    The Iran-backed Houthis in Yemen said on Monday they will respond to the strike on Sanaa airport, which they attributed to Saudi Arabia, although the operation was claimed by the Yemeni government backed by Riyadh. Houthi military spokesman Yahya Saree accused Saudi Arabia of “ending the phase of de-escalation and assuming full responsibility for the consequences of its aggression.”

    Saree also warned that “this aggression will not go unanswered or unpunished,” signaling the group could intensify its actions amid growing regional tensions linked to the conflict between the United States and Iran.

    Yemeni government claims attack on Sanaa airport; Houthis blame Saudi Arabia

    The internationally recognized Yemeni government said on Monday it had attacked Sanaa airport after a dispute over an Iranian plane carrying a Houthi delegation, an operation the rebel group had initially blamed on Saudi Arabia. “The Houthi terrorist militias — backed by the Iranian regime — prevented national Yemeni aircraft from landing at the capital’s airport while insisting on allowing an Iranian plane to violate Yemeni territory; consequently, the airport runway was struck,” Yemen’s Defense Ministry said.

    Houthi channel Al Masirah had earlier reported that “the Saudi aggression attacked the takeoff and landing runways of Sanaa International Airport.”

    The Houthis, backed by Iran, said on Monday they would respond to the strike on Sanaa airport, which they attributed to Saudi Arabia, although the Riyadh-backed Yemeni government claimed responsibility. Houthi military spokesman Yahya Saree accused Saudi Arabia of “ending the phase of de-escalation and assuming full responsibility for the consequences of its aggression,” and warned: “We affirm that this aggression will not go unanswered or unpunished.”

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/como-esta-el-trafico-maritimo-en-el-estrecho-de-ormuz-que-iran-asegura-haber-cerrado-y-eeuu-quiere-mantener-abierto/

    Bahrain intercepted Iranian drones and missiles amid reports of attacks in southern Iran

    Bahrain’s military said on Monday that its air defenses intercepted and destroyed several Iranian missiles and drones launched during the day, after the Revolutionary Guards claimed to have attacked U.S. military facilities in the Gulf, including bases in Bahraini territory. Bahrain’s Defense Forces accused Iran of continuing to target the kingdom’s civilian population.

    Meanwhile, the semi-official Iranian news agency ISNA reported that a U.S. attack on a target in Isfahan province in central Iran left one person dead and seven wounded in the early hours of Monday, according to the province’s deputy governor for security. Iran has not released an official casualty count since the renewed large-scale strikes began last week, but state media reports and statements about isolated incidents suggest roughly 20 people have died in recent U.S. bombardments. At the start of the war, thousands had died, mostly in Iran and Lebanon.

    Bahrain’s military accuses Iran of attacking civilians

    On Monday, Bahrain’s armed forces accused Iran of attacking civilians in its latest strikes against the kingdom, after Tehran said it had targeted U.S. military facilities and infrastructure in Bahrain.

    “Iran continues its pattern of hostile actions through its atrocious missile and drone attacks directed at civilians in the Kingdom of Bahrain,” the general command of Bahrain’s armed forces said in a statement, adding that air defenses “intercepted and destroyed several Iranian air attacks” on Monday morning.

    Iranian media report explosions near the Strait of Hormuz

    Explosions of unknown origin were heard in southern Iran on Monday near the Strait of Hormuz, an agency reported, following an exchange of strikes between Tehran and Washington.

    “Media outlets and residents reported hearing explosions on Monday at midday near Bandar Abbas and Qeshm Island,” the Mehr news agency said, adding that the blasts “appear to have come from the west coast of Bandar Abbas.”

    Iran says it continues talks with mediators to “avoid an escalation” with the US

    Iran said on Monday it is continuing diplomatic contacts with mediators Qatar, Pakistan and Oman to “avoid an escalation” with the United States amid the renewed hostilities between the two countries.

    “The role of the mediators is to continue their efforts to prevent an escalation of tensions,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmail Baqaei said, adding that Tehran had been in contact “in recent days” with Qatar and Oman, two countries that have been attacked militarily by Iran, and with Pakistan.

    Iran says it will stop complying with the agreement if the US does not meet its commitments

    Iran announced on Monday that it would no longer abide by the memorandum of understanding signed with the United States if Washington failed to fulfill its commitments to end the war.

    “Whenever the other party has not met its obligations, we have not met ours either… We will continue to act in this manner,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaee said at a press conference in Tehran following the latest wave of hostilities between the adversaries.

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/el-petroleo-sube-mas-de-4-tras-la-reanudacion-de-los-ataques-entre-eeuu-e-iran-y-la-amenaza-de-cierre-del-estrecho-de-ormuz/

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/el-regimen-de-iran-lanzo-ataques-contra-bases-militares-de-estados-unidos-en-jordania-bahrein-y-kuwait/

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  • Live: Iran attacked two oil tankers in Strait of Hormuz, one crew member killed

    Live: Iran attacked two oil tankers in Strait of Hormuz, one crew member killed

    Estados Unidos lanzó una tercera ronda de ataques contra objetivos en Irán y anunció la reimposición de un bloqueo naval sobre puertos iraníes, después del colapso del memorando de entendimiento (MoU) entre ambas partes tras la reanudación de los enfrentamientos la semana pasada.

    Horas antes de anunciar las nuevas operaciones, el presidente Donald Trump declaró que el estrecho de Ormuz permanece abierto y que continuará así “con o sin Irán”. También anunció que EE. UU. reinstaurará el bloqueo sobre los puertos iraníes y comenzará a cobrar tasas a los buques que transiten por esa ruta.

    Trump fijó una tasa del 20% para cubrir “todos y cada uno de los costos necesarios” relacionados con la seguridad de las embarcaciones en el estrecho. El Comando Central de las Fuerzas Armadas de EE. UU. informó que los preparativos para reanudar el bloqueo de barcos con destino o procedencia de puertos iraníes comenzarían a las 20:00 GMT del martes.

    La Organización Marítima Internacional (OMI) rechazó tanto la aplicación de tarifas como las acciones militares en la zona y afirmó que el paso por el estrecho de Ormuz debe permanecer libre de peajes y cargos, conforme al derecho internacional.

    A continuación, la cobertura minuto a minuto:

    /estados-unidos/2026/07/13/estados-unidos-lanzo-una-nueva-ronda-de-ataques-contra-iran-para-degradar-su-capacidad-militar-en-estrecho-de-ormuz/

    Las sirenas antiaéreas vuelven a sonar en Bahréin

    Las sirenas antiaéreas sonaron por tercera vez la mañana del martes en Bahréin; las autoridades del Ministerio del Interior instaron a los residentes a buscar refugio de inmediato.

    Los precios del petróleo suben al nivel más alto en cuatro semanas

    Los precios del petróleo subieron alrededor de un 2%, alcanzando su mayor nivel en cuatro semanas en medio de los intercambios de ataques entre Estados Unidos e Irán.

    Los futuros del crudo Brent aumentaron 1,68 dólares (2%) hasta 84,98 dólares por barril, y el West Texas Intermediate (WTI) subió 1,65 dólares (2,1%) hasta 79,79 dólares por barril a las 00:51 GMT.

    El repunte ocurre tras una jornada intensa el lunes en la que el Brent registró una subida diaria del 9,6%, su mayor avance en un solo día desde mayo de 2020.

    /america/mundo/2026/07/14/iran-ataco-dos-petroleros-en-el-estrecho-de-ormuz-un-tripulante-muerto/

    Bahréin interceptó ataques aéreos iraníes

    El asesor de prensa del rey de Bahréin, Nabeel Alhamer, informó que los sistemas de defensa aérea del país interceptaron y destruyeron múltiples ataques aéreos procedentes de Irán en las últimas horas.

    /estados-unidos/2026/07/14/tras-los-nuevos-ataques-contra-iran-donald-trump-aseguro-que-hay-posibilidad-de-llegar-a-otro-acuerdo-con-teheran/

    Sirenas antiaéreas activadas en Bahréin

    Las autoridades de Bahréin activaron las sirenas de alerta y pidieron a la población mantener la calma y dirigirse al lugar seguro más cercano tras las alarmas.

    Dos petroleros atacados: un tripulante indio falleció

    El Ministerio de Defensa de los Emiratos Árabes Unidos informó que dos petroleros nacionales fueron alcanzados por misiles de crucero iraníes en el canal sur del estrecho de Ormuz, en aguas cercanas a Omán. Un tripulante indio murió y ocho personas resultaron heridas, cuatro de ellas con gravedad.

    Hubo incendios en ambas embarcaciones que fueron controlados. El ministerio condenó el ataque como una grave violación del derecho internacional y afirmó que los EAU se reservan el derecho a responder para proteger su soberanía y seguridad.

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/la-onu-y-la-organizacion-maritima-exigieron-el-paso-libre-en-el-estrecho-de-ormuz/

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/el-comando-central-de-estados-unidos-confirmo-que-el-bloqueo-naval-contra-iran-comenzara-este-martes/

    Trump afirma que Irán quería más negociaciones tras el acuerdo

    El presidente dijo que Estados Unidos había alcanzado un acuerdo con Irán días atrás, pero acusó a Teherán de intentar prolongar las negociaciones.

    Al ser preguntado si consideraba que un acuerdo negociado ya no era posible, Trump respondió: “Nunca llegué a esa conclusión”. Añadió que la combinación de bloqueo y acciones militares es la vía más eficaz para presionar a Irán.

    /estados-unidos/2026/07/13/estados-unidos-lanzo-una-nueva-ronda-de-ataques-contra-iran-para-degradar-su-capacidad-militar-en-estrecho-de-ormuz/

    La OMI reiteró que, según el derecho internacional, el paso por el estrecho de Ormuz debe permanecer libre de aranceles y tasas. Además, subrayó que cualquier acuerdo regional debe garantizar el derecho de paso no discriminatorio y sin obstáculos para todos los buques.

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/las-acciones-tecnologicas-hundieron-a-wall-street-tras-la-escalada-entre-estados-unidos-e-iran/

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/el-petroleo-registro-su-mayor-alza-diaria-desde-el-inicio-del-conflicto-entre-estados-unidos-e-iran/

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/las-defensas-saudies-interceptaron-misiles-huties-en-la-mayor-escalada-en-yemen-desde-2022/

    Donald Trump anunció que dará un mensaje al país el jueves por la noche, en un contexto de fuerte escalada de hostilidades con Irán. Indicó que se dirigirá a la nación a las 21:00 hora del Este (01:00 GMT del viernes).

    Misiones estadounidenses en Emiratos suspenden citas consulares

    La Embajada de EE. UU. en Abu Dabi y el Consulado General en Dubái cancelaron las citas consulares del 13 al 15 de julio debido a la situación de seguridad regional, e indicaron que contactarán a los usuarios para reprogramar.

    El canciller de Irán se burla de la propuesta de Trump sobre una tasa para la protección de buques en Ormuz

    El ministro de Exteriores iraní, Abás Araqchi, criticó la propuesta de Trump de imponer una tasa del 20% y dijo en redes sociales que Irán, que considera ser el guardián del estrecho, aplicaría un peaje más bajo y “sería justo” en la compensación.

    Precios del petróleo suben más de un 9%

    Los precios del petróleo se dispararon el lunes, impulsados por el restablecimiento del bloqueo naval estadounidense sobre los puertos iraníes y la intención de Washington de cobrar un peaje por el tránsito en el estrecho de Ormuz.

    Hacia las 18:20 GMT, el Brent subió un 9,06% hasta 82,90 dólares por barril y el WTI avanzó 9,05% hasta 77,87 dólares.

    El bloqueo naval estadounidense a Irán comenzará el martes

    El Centro Conjunto de Información Marítima (JMIC) informó que EE. UU. empezará a aplicar un bloqueo naval dirigido a puertos y terminales petroleras iraníes el martes, que se aplicará a todos los buques sin importar su bandera.

    El JMIC aclaró que el bloqueo no impedirá el tráfico neutral que transite por el estrecho con destino o procedencia fuera de Irán y que los envíos humanitarios podrán pasar sujetos a inspecciones.

    /estados-unidos/2026/07/13/nueva-ofensiva-contra-iran-estados-unidos-bombardeo-una-instalacion-naval-del-regimen-con-drones-maritimos-no-tripulados/

    Arabia Saudita dice haber respondido a ataque con misiles balísticos desde Yemen

    La coalición liderada por Arabia Saudita afirmó haber respondido a un ataque con misiles balísticos lanzado por los rebeldes hutíes, después de que los hutíes acusaran a Riad de bombardear el aeropuerto internacional de Saná.

    Turki al Malki, portavoz de la coalición que apoya al gobierno reconocido internacionalmente, dijo en X que las defensas respondieron a la amenaza en la región sur.

    Bolsa europea cierra con ligeras alzas ante la incertidumbre en Oriente Medio

    Las principales bolsas europeas cerraron con ganancias moderadas tras una jornada marcada por la reanudación de hostilidades, el alza del petróleo y dudas sobre el sector tecnológico y la trayectoria de los tipos de interés.

    Londres subió 0,01%, París 0,31%, Fráncfort 0,19%, Milán 0,37% y Madrid 0,25%.

    Guterres advierte sobre la escalada militar en el Golfo

    El secretario general de la ONU, António Guterres, expresó profunda preocupación por la escalada de enfrentamientos militares en la región del Golfo tras los ataques de Estados Unidos e Irán y llamó a la contención.

    El petróleo sube más de 4% ante la creciente tensión

    Los precios del petróleo registraron fuertes incrementos; el WTI cotizó a 74,53 dólares por barril (+4,37%) y el Brent a 79,28 dólares (+4,30%), por el aumento de las tensiones que plantea riesgos para el tránsito por el estrecho de Ormuz.

    El repunte elevó la volatilidad en los mercados: el índice VIX subió 7,77% y los rendimientos de los bonos del Tesoro estadounidense aumentaron en la curva, reflejando la cautela de los inversores.

    CENTCOM confirma uso de drones marinos en ataque a base iraní en Bandar Abbas

    El Mando Central de EE. UU. (CENTCOM) informó que atacó una instalación de mantenimiento naval en Bandar Abbas mediante drones marítimos y aéreos. Según CENTCOM, tres embarcaciones no tripuladas de superficie modelo Corsair impactaron en el puerto de la base naval, marcando el primer uso declarado de drones marinos en combate por fuerzas estadounidenses.

    El organismo señaló que los ataques degradaron la capacidad iraní para atacar el transporte marítimo comercial en la zona.

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/operaciones-militares-en-yemen-bombardearon-el-aeropuerto-de-sana-controlado-por-rebeldes-huties/

    Trump anuncia que EE. UU. cobrará una tasa del 20% por proteger el estrecho de Ormuz

    Trump dijo que el estrecho de Ormuz seguirá “abierto” con o sin Irán y que EE. UU. reinstaurará lo que llamó “bloqueo iraní” para impedir la entrada o salida de buques iraníes, mientras permite el uso por parte de otros países.

    El presidente sostuvo que Estados Unidos se convertirá en “el guardián del estrecho de Ormuz” y que, por equidad, aplicará una tasa del 20% sobre la carga transportada para cubrir los costos de seguridad. Indicó que los preparativos comenzarían de inmediato.

    El anuncio amplifica la retórica de la administración sobre el control del paso marítimo en medio de la escalada con Irán y la advertencia de Teherán de considerar “un acto de guerra” cualquier cooperación regional con Washington.

    La nota completa en este enlace.

    Los Guardianes de la Revolución acusan a EE. UU. de poner en riesgo el suministro global

    La Guardia Revolucionaria de Irán acusó a Estados Unidos de poner en peligro el suministro mundial de petróleo y gas al “interferir” en el estrecho de Ormuz y exigió responsabilidades por los riesgos creados para la seguridad energética.

    Un portavoz militar iraní dijo que Teherán seguirá ejerciendo soberanía sobre el estrecho y advirtió que considerará “acto de guerra” cualquier cooperación de los países del Golfo con Washington en su gestión.

    Wall Street abre en baja por la escalada y caída en semiconductores

    El mercado estadounidense abrió con mayoría de caídas mientras los inversores evaluaban el alza del petróleo y la fuerte caída en valores de semiconductores, tras malos resultados en Corea del Sur. El aumento del crudo elevó las preocupaciones sobre la inflación y los rendimientos de los bonos.

    A los pocos minutos de la apertura, el Dow Jones subía 0,1%, el S&P 500 retrocedía 0,4% y el Nasdaq caía 0,9%, en un contexto de incertidumbre por la situación geopolítica y la agenda económica de la semana.

    Irán advierte a países del Golfo: cooperar con EE. UU. en Ormuz será “un acto de guerra”

    El comando militar iraní Khatam Al-Anbiya advirtió a los países del Golfo que cualquier cooperación con Estados Unidos en la gestión del estrecho de Ormuz sería considerada “un acto de guerra”, en un mensaje dirigido a los aliados regionales de Washington.

    El vocero afirmó que Irán no permitirá que EE. UU. interfiera en el manejo de la estratégica vía marítima y buscó disuadir a los socios del Golfo de sumarse a esquemas de administración conjunta.

    Trump afirma que EE. UU. está “tomando el control” del estrecho de Ormuz

    En una entrevista, Trump declaró que Estados Unidos está “tomando el control” del estrecho y reiteró que su país se convertirá en el “guardián” del paso, por el que debería recibir compensación por su protección. Afirmó además que las fuerzas estadounidenses habían golpeado equipos militares iraníes durante la noche.

    Las declaraciones se enmarcan en la disputa por el control del estrecho, tras amenazas iraníes de cerrarlo y episodios de disparos de advertencia contra buques, mientras Washington asegura que el tráfico marítimo continúa fluyendo.

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/el-reino-unido-acuso-a-iran-de-respaldar-ataques-a-objetivos-judios-en-londres-y-declaro-ilegal-a-la-guardia-revolucionaria/

    Video: EE. UU. difunde imágenes de la nueva ola de ataques contra Irán

    CENTCOM informó que fuerzas estadounidenses llevaron a cabo una nueva serie de ataques contra Irán, alcanzando decenas de objetivos con munición guiada, incluidas defensas aéreas, radares costeros, capacidades de misiles y drones, y embarcaciones menores, mediante aviones, buques y drones aéreos y marítimos.

    Medios iraníes reportaron explosiones y ataques con misiles cerca de Sirik, Bandar Abbas y la isla de Qeshm. El Ministerio de Exteriores iraní calificó los bombardeos de “agresivos”. Reuters no pudo verificar de forma independiente la hora ni el lugar de las imágenes difundidas.

    Los hutíes prometen responder al ataque contra el aeropuerto de Saná

    Los rebeldes hutíes, respaldados por Irán, dijeron que responderán al ataque contra el aeropuerto de Saná, que atribuyeron a Arabia Saudita, y advirtieron que no dejarán la agresión sin represalia.

    El gobierno yemení reivindica un ataque al aeropuerto de Saná; los hutíes responsabilizan a Arabia Saudita

    El gobierno yemení reconocido internacionalmente declaró haber atacado la pista del aeropuerto de Saná en respuesta a una disputa por un avión iraní con una delegación hutí, mientras los hutíes responsabilizaron a Arabia Saudita por el bombardeo.

    El vocero hutí Yahya Saree calificó la acción como el fin de una fase de distensión y advirtió sobre consecuencias por la “agresión”.

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/como-esta-el-trafico-maritimo-en-el-estrecho-de-ormuz-que-iran-asegura-haber-cerrado-y-eeuu-quiere-mantener-abierto/

    Baréin interceptó drones y misiles iraníes; se reportan explosiones en el sur de Irán

    El ejército de Baréin dijo haber interceptado y destruido varios misiles y drones iraníes lanzados durante el día, tras declaraciones de la Guardia Revolucionaria sobre ataques a instalaciones estadounidenses en la región. Las fuerzas bareníes acusaron a Irán de dirigir ataques contra la población civil.

    Paralelamente, la agencia ISNA informó que un ataque estadounidense en la provincia de Isfahán dejó una persona muerta y siete heridas, según autoridades locales. Las cifras oficiales de víctimas en Irán no han sido publicadas de forma global desde la reanudación de los enfrentamientos.

    El ejército de Baréin acusa a Irán de atacar a civiles

    Las Fuerzas Armadas de Baréin acusaron a Irán de realizar ataques con misiles y drones dirigidos contra civiles en el reino y afirmaron haber interceptado y destruido varios de esos ataques.

    Medios iraníes informan de explosiones cerca del Estrecho de Ormuz

    Medios y residentes informaron haber escuchado explosiones alrededor de Bandar Abbas y la isla de Qeshm, en el sur de Irán, en el contexto del intercambio de ataques entre Teherán y Washington.

    Irán mantiene diálogos con mediadores para evitar una escalada

    Irán dijo que continúa negociaciones con mediadores como Qatar, Pakistán y Omán para evitar una escalada con Estados Unidos y que estos países siguen trabajando para contener las tensiones.

    Irán advierte que dejará de cumplir el acuerdo si EE. UU. incumple

    El portavoz del Ministerio de Exteriores iraní, Esmaeil Baqaei, declaró que Irán dejará de respetar el memorando de entendimiento si Estados Unidos no cumple sus compromisos para poner fin a la guerra, y señaló que la reciprocidad ha sido la práctica de Teherán ante incumplimientos.

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/el-petroleo-sube-mas-de-4-tras-la-reanudacion-de-los-ataques-entre-eeuu-e-iran-y-la-amenaza-de-cierre-del-estrecho-de-ormuz/

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/el-regimen-de-iran-lanzo-ataques-contra-bases-militares-de-estados-unidos-en-jordania-bahrein-y-kuwait/

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  • Live: Iran attacks two tankers in Hormuz Strait, one dead

    Live: Iran attacks two tankers in Hormuz Strait, one dead

    The United States launched a third round of strikes against Iran and announced the reimposition of a naval blockade on Iranian ports, amid the collapse of the memorandum of understanding (MoU) signed between the two sides after the resumption of hostilities last week.

    Hours before his remarks about the strikes, Trump had said the Strait of Hormuz is open and will remain so “with or without Iran.” He also announced that the United States would reimpose its blockade on Iranian ports and begin charging fees to ships transiting that sea lane.

    The president set a levy of 20% “for all and every cost necessary” to ensure the security of vessels in the strait. The United States Central Command said preparations to resume the blockade of ships bound for or departing Iranian ports would begin at 20:00 GMT on Tuesday.

    The International Maritime Organization (IMO) rejected both the fees and the military actions in the area. In a statement, the IMO Council reaffirmed its commitment to protecting vital sea routes and said passage through the Strait of Hormuz “must remain free of tolls and charges, in accordance with international law.”

    Below is the minute-by-minute coverage:

    /estados-unidos/2026/07/13/estados-unidos-lanzo-una-nueva-ronda-de-ataques-contra-iran-para-degradar-su-capacidad-militar-en-estrecho-de-ormuz/

    Air-raid sirens sound again in Bahrain

    Air-raid sirens sounded for a third time on Tuesday morning in Bahrain, where the Interior Ministry urged residents to seek shelter immediately.

    Oil prices surge to a four-week high

    Oil prices rose about 2%, reaching a four-week high amid ongoing reciprocal strikes between the United States and Iran.

    Brent crude futures rose $1.68, or 2%, to $84.98 a barrel, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude increased $1.65, or 2.1%, to $79.79 a barrel at 00:51 GMT.

    This gain follows a dramatic Monday when Brent jumped 9.6%, its largest one-day increase since May 2020.

    /america/mundo/2026/07/14/iran-ataco-dos-petroleros-en-el-estrecho-de-ormuz-un-tripulante-muerto/

    Bahrain intercepted Iranian air attacks

    Nabeel Alhamer, press adviser to the king of Bahrain, said the kingdom’s air defense systems intercepted and destroyed multiple Iranian air attacks in recent hours.

    /estados-unidos/2026/07/14/tras-los-nuevos-ataques-contra-iran-donald-trump-aseguro-que-hay-posibilidad-de-llegar-a-otro-acuerdo-con-teheran/

    Air-raid sirens activated in Bahrain

    Alert sirens are sounding in Bahrain, and authorities are urging residents to seek shelter immediately.

    The Interior Ministry ordered people to “remain calm and proceed to the nearest safe place” after the latest alarms were activated.

    Two tankers attacked by Iran: one Indian crew member killed

    The United Arab Emirates Ministry of Defense said on Monday that two national tankers were struck by two Iranian cruise missiles in the southern channel of the Strait of Hormuz, in Omani territorial waters. The attack caused the death of one Indian crew member and left eight injured, four of them seriously.

    The ministry said fires broke out on both ships but were brought under control. It condemned the attack as a serious violation of international law and said the UAE reserves the full right to respond and take all necessary measures to protect its sovereignty and security.

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/la-onu-y-la-organizacion-maritima-exigieron-el-paso-libre-en-el-estrecho-de-ormuz/

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/el-comando-central-de-estados-unidos-confirmo-que-el-bloqueo-naval-contra-iran-comenzara-este-martes/

    Trump says Iran wanted further negotiations after the agreement was reached

    The U.S. president said the United States had reached an agreement with Iran two days earlier, but that Tehran wanted to continue negotiating.

    When asked by a reporter whether he had concluded that a negotiated agreement with Iran was no longer possible, Trump replied: “I never came to that conclusion.”

    He added that he believed the most effective way to pressure Iran was through a combination of blockade and strikes.

    /estados-unidos/2026/07/13/estados-unidos-lanzo-una-nueva-ronda-de-ataques-contra-iran-para-degradar-su-capacidad-militar-en-estrecho-de-ormuz/

    The International Maritime Organization (IMO) insisted on Monday that ship passage through the Strait of Hormuz must be free of charges, after U.S. President Donald Trump said the same day that the United States would charge a 20% fee for what he called security protection.

    Under international law, passage must remain free of customs duties and charges, the U.N. specialized agency based in London said. The IMO stressed that any agreement among the region’s littoral states must guarantee non-discriminatory and unobstructed right of passage for all ships.

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/las-acciones-tecnologicas-hundieron-a-wall-street-tras-la-escalada-entre-estados-unidos-e-iran/

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/el-petroleo-registro-su-mayor-alza-diaria-desde-el-inicio-del-conflicto-entre-estados-unidos-e-iran/

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/las-defensas-saudies-interceptaron-misiles-huties-en-la-mayor-escalada-en-yemen-desde-2022/

    Donald Trump announced he will address the nation in prime time on Thursday, a move that comes amid a major escalation of hostilities with Iran.

    “President Trump will address the nation on Thursday night at 9 p.m. Eastern (01:00 GMT Friday). Thank you for your attention!” Trump posted Monday on his social network Truth.

    U.S. missions in the United Arab Emirates suspend consular appointments

    The United States announced the suspension of consular appointments in the United Arab Emirates for three days starting Monday, due to the escalation of military tensions in the Gulf region.

    “The U.S. Embassy in Abu Dhabi and the U.S. Consulate General in Dubai have cancelled consular appointments from July 13 to 15 due to the regional security situation. If you have an appointment scheduled for those dates, please do not come to the embassy or consulate. We will contact you to reschedule,” it said.

    Iran’s foreign minister mocks Trump over fee to protect ships in Hormuz

    Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi mocked U.S. President Donald Trump’s proposal to set fees to protect ships sailing through the Strait of Hormuz and said his country would charge a cheaper toll.

    “Whoever guarantees the safe passage of commercial ships through the Strait of Hormuz should receive compensation for this service. Iran has always been the GUARDIAN of the strait and will remain so FOREVER. The 20% is, of course, too much. We will be fair,” the minister wrote on social media, referring to the fee proposed earlier by Trump.

    Oil prices jump more than 9%

    Oil prices surged on Monday, driven by the U.S. reinstatement of a naval blockade on Iranian ports and Washington’s intention to impose a toll on vessels that cross the Strait of Hormuz.

    By 18:20 GMT, the price of a barrel of North Sea Brent, the international benchmark, had risen 9.06% to $82.90. Its U.S. equivalent, West Texas Intermediate (WTI), advanced 9.05% to $77.87 a barrel.

    The U.S. naval blockade of Iran will begin on Tuesday

    The United States will begin enforcing a naval blockade against all Iranian ports and oil terminals on Tuesday, the Joint Maritime Information Center (JMIC) of the U.S.-led Combined Maritime Forces said in a statement on Monday.

    According to the JMIC, the blockade will apply to all vessels, regardless of their flag. The blockade will not prevent neutral traffic transiting the Strait of Hormuz to or from locations outside Iran, the statement added.

    Humanitarian shipments will be allowed to pass subject to inspections, the JMIC said.

    /estados-unidos/2026/07/13/nueva-ofensiva-contra-iran-estados-unidos-bombardeo-una-instalacion-naval-del-regimen-con-drones-maritimos-no-tripulados/

    Saudi Arabia says it responded to a ballistic missile attack by Yemen’s Houthis

    The Saudi-led military coalition intervening in the Yemen war since 2015 said on Monday it had responded to a ballistic missile attack launched by Houthi rebels, after the movement accused Riyadh of bombing Sana’a International Airport, Yemen’s capital.

    “Air defenses have responded to a ballistic missile threat launched by the Houthi terrorist militia toward the southern region,” Turki al-Malki, spokesman for the Coalition to Support Legitimacy in Yemen, said on X.

    European stock markets close with small gains amid uncertainty over the Middle East

    European stock markets closed with modest gains on Monday after a day marked by the resumption of hostilities and rising oil prices, along with concerns about the technology sector and the future path of interest rates.

    London closed up 0.01%, Paris gained 0.31%, Frankfurt 0.19%, Milan 0.37% and Madrid 0.25%.

    Guterres warns about military escalation in the Gulf after US and Iranian strikes

    U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres warned on Monday about U.S. strikes against Iran as well as Tehran’s attacks on vessels in the Strait of Hormuz and on neighboring countries.

    Guterres expressed his “deep concern about the serious escalation in the resumption of military confrontations in the Gulf region,” said his spokesman Stéphane Dujarric.

    Oil rises more than 4% as tensions between the US and Iran grow

    Oil prices climbed strongly on Monday, with West Texas Intermediate trading at $74.53 a barrel, up 4.37%, while Brent rose 4.30% to $79.28. The increase came amid growing military tension between the United States and Iran, which revived doubts about the security of transit through the Strait of Hormuz.

    The energy rally also affected stock and bond markets: the volatility index VIX jumped 7.77%, while U.S. Treasury yields rose across the curve — the 10-year yield advanced 0.63% and the 5-year yield 0.88% — reflecting investor caution about an escalation that could lead to a prolonged interruption of global energy trade.

    CENTCOM confirms first combat use of sea drones: attacked an Iranian naval base in Bandar Abbas

    U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) said its forces successfully struck a maintenance facility for submarines and ships in Iran using multiple one-way aerial attack drones. According to the command, three Corsair-model unmanned surface vessels impacted the port at Bandar Abbas Naval Base.

    The attack marked, CENTCOM said, the first time U.S. forces used sea drones in combat operations. The command said the overnight strikes “degraded Iran’s ability to continue attacking commercial maritime traffic” amid the military escalation that has put transit through the Strait of Hormuz on edge.

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/operaciones-militares-en-yemen-bombardearon-el-aeropuerto-de-sana-controlado-por-rebeldes-huties/

    Trump says the U.S. will charge a 20% fee to protect ships in the Strait of Hormuz

    President Donald Trump announced that the Strait of Hormuz is and will remain “OPEN,” with or without Iran, and that the United States is reinstating what he called the “IRANIAN BLOCKADE,” so named, he explained, because it will only prevent the entry or exit of Iranian ships or customers.

    “All other countries will have fair and open use of the strait,” the president wrote in a post on Truth Social.

    Trump said that from now on the United States will be known as “THE GUARDIAN OF THE STRAIT OF HORMUZ,” and maintained that, “as a matter of FAIRNESS,” the country will be reimbursed at a rate of 20% on all cargo transported, to cover the costs required to provide security to “this very volatile section of the world.” “The process and training will begin immediately,” the president concluded.

    The announcement intensifies Trump’s rhetoric regarding the strait, after he had earlier told Fox in an interview that Washington would become the “guardian” of the sea lane and be compensated for safeguarding it, amid the military escalation with Iran and Tehran’s warning that it would consider “an act of war” any Gulf cooperation with the United States in managing the passage.

    Full story at this link.

    Iran’s Revolutionary Guards accuse the US of endangering global oil supplies by “interfering” in Hormuz

    Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps accused the United States on Monday of endangering the global supply of oil and gas by “interfering” in the Strait of Hormuz after the resumption of hostilities between the two countries. IRGC spokesman Hosein Mohebi said the United States “must be held accountable” for jeopardizing global energy security.

    In a post on X, Mohebi added that Tehran “will continue to exercise its sovereignty and management of the Strait of Hormuz,” a new sign that Iran is unwilling to cede operational control of the sea lane despite U.S. pressure.

    The accusation followed a warning hours earlier from the Khatam al-Anbiya military command, which said it would regard as “an act of war” any Gulf states’ cooperation with Washington in managing the strait, after President Donald Trump said the United States would become its “guardian” and should be compensated for doing so.

    Wall Street opens lower on US-Iran escalation and semiconductor slump

    U.S. stocks mostly fell on Monday morning as markets weighed rising oil prices and a downturn in semiconductor shares while investors looked ahead to upcoming corporate earnings and economic data. Crude prices rose more than 3% amid mounting U.S.-Iran tensions, reviving concerns about oil infrastructure in the Strait of Hormuz.

    U.S. semiconductor stocks dropped early after a weak session on South Korea’s Kospi, with a sharp decline in SK hynix. About 10 minutes after the open, the Dow Jones was up 0.1% at 52,676.53, while the S&P 500 was down 0.4% at 7,547.53 and the Nasdaq Composite fell 0.9% to 26,039.50.

    “Tensions with Iran, which are intensifying, are pushing oil prices higher, and that is lifting Treasury yields, while the sell-off in SK hynix drags down memory-related stocks, which in turn pressures the Nasdaq and the S&P,” said Art Hogan of B. Riley Wealth Management. This week’s agenda includes major U.S. bank earnings, a congressional appearance by Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh, and the latest consumer price index data.

    Iran warns Gulf states: cooperating with the US in the Strait of Hormuz will be considered “an act of war”

    The Iranian military warned Gulf states on Monday that any cooperation with the United States in managing the Strait of Hormuz would be considered “an act of war,” after hostilities between Tehran and Washington resumed. The spokesman for the Khatam al-Anbiya military command delivered the warning in a video message to regional nations.

    The same spokesman said Iran “under no circumstances will allow… the United States to interfere in the management” of the strategic waterway, in a message aimed at deterring Washington’s regional allies from joining any joint administration scheme for the strait.

    The declaration came hours after President Donald Trump said his country would become the “guardian” of the Strait of Hormuz and should be paid to protect it, amid the military escalation that has put transit through this key energy trade route at risk.

    Trump says the US is “taking control” of the Strait of Hormuz

    President Donald Trump said on Monday that the United States was “taking control” of the Strait of Hormuz after several days of exchanges of strikes with Iran in the key waterway. “We are taking control of the strait. They have nothing. They have nothing,” Trump said in an interview with Fox News, referring to what he described as Iran’s military vulnerability.

    The president added that his country will become the “guardian” of the strait and that Washington should be paid for protecting it. “We will become the guardian of the strait (…) And we should be compensated for that,” he said in the phone interview.

    He issued a stern warning to Iran after the breakdown of the existing military agreement, saying the United States had struck Iranian military equipment overnight: “Most of their equipment no longer exists. Their anti-aircraft gun—we hit it very hard last night,” he said. “Every time they send a drone, we hit them very hard.” Trump said Washington had reached an agreement with Tehran that was then broken: “We had an agreement… and they broke it. They always break it. So we are going to hit them very hard and we are going to take the strait, and we will probably administer it.”

    The statement comes amid the dispute over control of the strait, after Iran threatened to close it and fired “warning shots” at ships attempting to cross, while Washington insists maritime traffic continues to flow normally despite the military escalation.

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/el-reino-unido-acuso-a-iran-de-respaldar-ataques-a-objetivos-judios-en-londres-y-declaro-ilegal-a-la-guardia-revolucionaria/

    Video: US releases footage of the new wave of strikes against Iran

    U.S. forces completed a new wave of strikes against Iran on Sunday, hitting dozens of targets across multiple locations with precision munitions, the U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) reported. The command said air defenses, coastal radars, missile and drone capabilities, and small Iranian vessels were struck using combat aircraft, warships, and one-way aerial and maritime attack drones.

    Iranian media reported Sunday missile strikes and explosions around the port cities of Sirik and Bandar Abbas — where military facilities near the strait are located — and the nearby island of Qeshm. Iran’s foreign ministry condemned the U.S. weekend strikes as “aggressive.” Reuters could not independently verify the location or date of the footage, and no earlier version was found online prior to July 12.

    The Houthis warn they will respond to the attack on Sana’a airport

    Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthis said on Monday they would respond to the attack on Sana’a airport, which they blamed on Saudi Arabia, although the operation was claimed by the Yemeni government backed by Riyadh. Houthi military spokesman Yahya Saree accused Saudi Arabia of “ending the phase of détente and assuming full responsibility for the consequences of its aggression.”

    Saree also warned that “this aggression will not go unanswered or unpunished,” suggesting the rebel group could intensify its actions amid growing regional tensions linked to the conflict between the United States and Iran.

    Yemen’s government claims an attack on Sana’a airport; the Houthis blame Saudi Arabia

    The internationally recognized Yemeni government said on Monday it had struck Sana’a airport following a dispute over an Iranian plane transporting a Houthi delegation, an attack the rebel group had initially attributed to Saudi Arabia. “The Houthi terrorist militias — backed by the Iranian regime — prevented national Yemeni aircraft from landing at the capital’s airport while insisting on allowing an Iranian plane to violate Yemeni airspace; accordingly, the airport runway was attacked,” Yemen’s Defense Ministry said.

    Earlier, the Houthi channel Al Masirah reported that “Saudi aggression attacked the takeoff and landing runways of Sana’a International Airport.”

    The Houthis, backed by Iran, said on Monday they would respond to the attack on Sana’a airport, which they attributed to Saudi Arabia, although the Yemeni government supported by Riyadh claimed responsibility. Houthi military spokesman Yahya Saree accused Saudi Arabia of “ending the phase of détente and assuming full responsibility for the consequences of its aggression,” and warned: “We affirm that this aggression will not go unanswered or unpunished.”

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/como-esta-el-trafico-maritimo-en-el-estrecho-de-ormuz-que-iran-asegura-haber-cerrado-y-eeuu-quiere-mantener-abierto/

    Bahrain intercepted Iranian drones and missiles amid reports of attacks in southern Iran

    Bahrain’s military said on Monday that its air defenses intercepted and destroyed several Iranian missiles and drones launched during the day, after the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps claimed to have attacked U.S. military installations in the Gulf, including bases on Bahraini territory. Bahrain’s Defense Forces accused Iran of continuing to target the kingdom’s civilian population.

    In parallel, the semi-official Iranian news agency ISNA reported that a U.S. strike on a target in Isfahan province in central Iran killed one person and injured seven in the early hours of Monday, according to the province’s deputy governor for security. Iran has not released an official casualty toll since the cross-border strikes resumed last week, but state media reports and statements about isolated incidents suggest about 20 people have died in the renewed U.S. bombardments. At the start of the war, thousands were killed, mostly in Iran and Lebanon.

    Bahrain’s military accuses Iran of attacking civilians

    On Monday, Bahrain’s armed forces accused Iran of targeting civilians in its recent attacks on the kingdom after Tehran said it had struck U.S. military facilities and infrastructure there.

    “Iran continues its systematic hostile behavior through its heinous missile and drone attacks directed at civilians in the Kingdom of Bahrain,” the armed forces’ general command said in a statement, adding that air defenses “intercepted and destroyed several Iranian aerial attacks” on Monday morning.

    Iranian media report explosions near the Strait of Hormuz

    Explosions of unknown origin were heard on Monday in southern Iran near the Strait of Hormuz, an agency reported, after an exchange of strikes between Tehran and Washington.

    “Media and residents reported hearing explosions near Bandar Abbas and the island of Qeshm at midday on Monday,” the Mehr news agency said, adding that the blasts “appear to have come from the west coast of Bandar Abbas.”

    Iran says it is still in talks with mediators to “avoid escalation” with the US

    Iran said on Monday it continues diplomatic efforts with mediators Qatar, Pakistan and Oman to “avoid an escalation” with the United States amid the resumption of hostilities between the two countries.

    “The role of mediators is to continue their efforts to prevent a further escalation of tensions,” Iran’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmail Baqai said, adding that Tehran had been in contact “in recent days” with Qatar and Oman, two countries that have been attacked militarily by Iran, as well as with Pakistan.

    Iran says it will stop complying with the agreement if the US does not meet its commitments

    Iran announced on Monday that it will no longer respect the memorandum of understanding signed with the United States if Washington fails to fulfill its commitments to end the war.

    “Whenever the other party has not fulfilled its obligations, we have not fulfilled ours… We will continue to act in this way,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei said at a press conference in Tehran after the latest wave of hostilities between the adversaries.

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/el-petroleo-sube-mas-de-4-tras-la-reanudacion-de-los-ataques-entre-eeuu-e-iran-y-la-amenaza-de-cierre-del-estrecho-de-ormuz/

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/el-regimen-de-iran-lanzo-ataques-contra-bases-militares-de-estados-unidos-en-jordania-bahrein-y-kuwait/

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  • Live Middle East war: Iran attacks two tankers in Strait of Hormuz, one crew member killed

    Live Middle East war: Iran attacks two tankers in Strait of Hormuz, one crew member killed

    The United States launched a third round of strikes against Iran and announced the reinstatement of a naval blockade on Iranian ports, after the memorandum of understanding (MoU) signed between the two sides collapsed following the resumption of hostilities last week.

    Hours before his statements about the attacks, Donald Trump said the Strait of Hormuz is open and will remain so “with or without Iran.” He also announced that the United States would reinstate its blockade of Iranian ports and begin charging fees to vessels transiting that waterway.

    The president set a 20% levy “for each and every cost necessary” to ensure the safety of ships in the strait. The United States Central Command said preparations to reinstate the blockade of ships bound for or departing Iranian ports would begin at 20:00 GMT on Tuesday.

    The International Maritime Organization (IMO) rejected both the fees and military actions in the area. In a statement, the IMO Council reaffirmed its commitment to protecting vital sea routes and said passage through the Strait of Hormuz “must remain free of tolls and charges, in accordance with international law.”

    Below is minute-by-minute coverage:

    /estados-unidos/2026/07/13/estados-unidos-lanzo-una-nueva-ronda-de-ataques-contra-iran-para-degradar-su-capacidad-militar-en-estrecho-de-ormuz/

    Air-raid sirens sound again in Bahrain

    Air-raid sirens sounded for the third time on Tuesday morning in Bahrain, where the Interior Ministry urged residents to seek shelter immediately.

    Oil prices surge to their highest level in four weeks

    Oil prices rose 2%, reaching their highest level in four weeks amid ongoing reciprocal attacks between the United States and Iran.

    Brent crude futures rose $1.68, or 2%, to $84.98 per barrel, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude increased $1.65, or 2.1%, to $79.79 per barrel at 00:51 GMT.

    This increase follows a dramatic Monday in which Brent crude jumped 9.6%, its largest single-day gain since May 2020.

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    Bahrain intercepted Iranian air attacks

    Nabeel Alhamer, press adviser to the king of Bahrain, said the kingdom’s air defense systems intercepted and destroyed multiple Iranian air attacks in recent hours.

    /estados-unidos/2026/07/14/tras-los-nuevos-ataques-contra-iran-donald-trump-aseguro-que-hay-posibilidad-de-llegar-a-otro-acuerdo-con-teheran/

    Air-raid sirens activated in Bahrain

    Warning sirens are sounding in Bahrain, and authorities are urging residents to seek shelter immediately.

    The Interior Ministry ordered the public to “remain calm and proceed to the nearest safe location” after the latest alarms were activated.

    Two tankers attacked by Iran; one Indian crew member killed

    The United Arab Emirates Ministry of Defense reported on Monday that two national tankers were struck by two Iranian cruise missiles in the southern channel of the Strait of Hormuz, in Omani territorial waters. The attack killed one Indian crew member and injured eight people, four of them seriously.

    The ministry said fires occurred on both ships but were brought under control. It condemned the attack as a serious violation of international law and said the UAE reserves the right to respond and take all necessary measures to protect its sovereignty and security.

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/la-onu-y-la-organizacion-maritima-exigieron-el-paso-libre-en-el-estrecho-de-ormuz/

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/el-comando-central-de-estados-unidos-confirmo-que-el-bloqueo-naval-contra-iran-comenzara-este-martes/

    Trump says Iran sought further negotiations after the agreement

    The U.S. president said the United States had reached an agreement with Iran two days earlier, but that Tehran wanted to continue negotiating.

    When asked by a reporter whether he had concluded that a negotiated agreement with Iran was no longer possible, Trump replied: “I never reached that conclusion.”

    He added that he believed the most effective way to pressure Iran was through a combination of blockade and strikes.

    /estados-unidos/2026/07/13/estados-unidos-lanzo-una-nueva-ronda-de-ataques-contra-iran-para-degradar-su-capacidad-militar-en-estrecho-de-ormuz/

    The International Maritime Organization (IMO) insisted on Monday that ship passage through the Strait of Hormuz must remain free of charges, after U.S. President Donald Trump said earlier that day that the United States would levy a 20% fee for what he called protection services.

    Under international law, passage must remain free of customs duties and charges, the U.N. specialized agency based in London said. The IMO emphasized that any agreement among littoral states in the region must guarantee non-discriminatory and unimpeded right of passage for all vessels.

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/las-acciones-tecnologicas-hundieron-a-wall-street-tras-la-escalada-entre-estados-unidos-e-iran/

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/el-petroleo-registro-su-mayor-alza-diaria-desde-el-inicio-del-conflicto-entre-estados-unidos-e-iran/

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/las-defensas-saudies-interceptaron-misiles-huties-en-la-mayor-escalada-en-yemen-desde-2022/

    Donald Trump announced he will address the nation in prime time on Thursday, in a move that comes amid a major escalation of hostilities with Iran.

    “President Trump will address the nation on Thursday night at 9 p.m. Eastern Time (01:00 GMT Friday). Thank you for your attention!” Trump posted on his social media platform Truth on Monday.

    U.S. missions in the United Arab Emirates suspend consular appointments

    The United States announced the suspension of consular appointments in the United Arab Emirates for three days starting Monday, citing the escalation of military tensions in the Gulf region.

    “The U.S. Embassy in Abu Dhabi and the U.S. Consulate General in Dubai have canceled consular appointments from July 13 to 15 due to the regional security situation. If you have an appointment scheduled for those dates, please do not come to the embassy or consulate. We will contact you to reschedule,” the notice said.

    Iran’s foreign minister mocks Trump over fee to protect ships in Hormuz

    Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi ridiculed U.S. President Donald Trump’s proposal to impose fees to protect ships transiting the Strait of Hormuz and said his country would charge a cheaper toll.

    “Whoever guarantees the safe passage of commercial ships through the Strait of Hormuz should be compensated for this service. Iran has always been the GUARDIAN of the strait and will remain so FOREVER. The 20% is, of course, too much. We will be fair,” the minister wrote on social media, referring to the fee proposed earlier by Trump.

    Oil prices surge more than 9%

    Oil prices surged on Monday, driven by the U.S. reinstatement of a naval blockade on Iranian ports and Washington’s intention to impose a toll on ships crossing the Strait of Hormuz.

    By 18:20 GMT, North Sea Brent was up 9.06% at $82.90 per barrel. U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) rose 9.05% to $77.87 per barrel.

    U.S. naval blockade of Iran to begin Tuesday

    The United States will begin enforcing a naval blockade against all Iranian ports and oil terminals on Tuesday, the Joint Maritime Information Center (JMIC) of the U.S.-led Combined Maritime Forces said in a statement on Monday.

    According to the JMIC, the blockade will apply to all ships regardless of their flag. The blockade will not prevent neutral traffic transiting the Strait of Hormuz to or from destinations outside Iran, the statement added.

    Humanitarian shipments will be allowed to pass, subject to inspections, the JMIC added.

    /estados-unidos/2026/07/13/nueva-ofensiva-contra-iran-estados-unidos-bombardeo-una-instalacion-naval-del-regimen-con-drones-maritimos-no-tripulados/

    Saudi Arabia says it responded to ballistic missile attack by Yemen’s Houthis

    The Saudi-led coalition intervening in the Yemen war since 2015 said on Monday it had responded to a ballistic missile attack launched by the Houthi rebels, after the movement accused Riyadh of bombing Sanaa International Airport.

    “Air defenses have responded to a ballistic missile threat launched by the Houthi terrorist militia toward the southern region,” Turki al-Malki, spokesman for the so-called Coalition to Support Legitimacy in Yemen, said on X.

    European stocks close slightly higher amid Middle East uncertainty

    European stock markets closed with modest gains on Monday after a day marked by resumed hostilities and rising oil prices, along with concerns about the technology sector and the outlook for interest rates.

    London closed up marginally by 0.01%, Paris gained 0.31%, Frankfurt 0.19%, Milan 0.37% and Madrid 0.25%.

    Guterres warns about military escalation in the Gulf following U.S. and Iranian attacks

    United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres expressed concern on Monday about U.S. strikes against Iran and Tehran’s attacks on vessels in the Strait of Hormuz and on neighboring countries.

    Guterres voiced his “deep concern about the serious escalation with the resumption of military confrontations in the Gulf region,” his spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric said.

    Oil rises more than 4% as U.S.-Iran tension grows

    Oil prices climbed strongly on Monday, with West Texas Intermediate trading at $74.53 per barrel, up 4.37%, and Brent up 4.30% at $79.28. The rise came amid growing military tensions between the United States and Iran, renewing doubts about the security of transit through the Strait of Hormuz.

    The energy rally also affected stock and bond markets: the VIX volatility index jumped 7.77%, while U.S. Treasury yields rose across the curve — the 10-year yield advanced 0.63% and the 5-year yield 0.88% — reflecting investor caution over an escalation that could disrupt global energy trade.

    CENTCOM confirms first use of sea drones in combat: attacked a naval base in Bandar Abbas

    The U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) said its forces successfully struck a maintenance facility for submarines and ships in Iran using multiple one-way aerial attack drones. CENTCOM said three unmanned surface vessels of the Corsair model struck the port at the Bandar Abbas Naval Base.

    The strike marked, CENTCOM said, the first time U.S. forces have used sea drones in combat operations. The command said the overnight strikes “degraded Iran’s ability to continue attacking commercial maritime traffic” amid the military escalation imperiling transit through the Strait of Hormuz.

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    Trump says the U.S. will charge a 20% fee to protect ships in the Strait of Hormuz

    President Donald Trump announced that the Strait of Hormuz is and will remain “OPEN,” with or without Iran, and that the United States is reinstating what he called the “IRANIAN BLOCKADE,” so named, he explained, because it will only prevent Iranian ships or clients from entering or leaving.

    “All other countries will have fair and open use of the strait,” the president wrote on Truth Social.

    Trump said that from now on the United States will be known as “THE GUARDIAN OF THE STRAIT OF HORMUZ,” and argued that, “as a matter of FAIRNESS,” the country should be reimbursed at a 20% rate on all cargo transported, for the costs necessary to provide security to “this very volatile section of the world.” “The process and the training will begin immediately,” he added.

    The announcement deepens Trump’s rhetoric about the strait after he had earlier told Fox News that Washington would become the “guardian” of the waterway and be compensated for guarding it, amid the military escalation with Iran and Tehran’s warning that it would regard “an act of war” any Gulf cooperation with the United States in managing the passage.

    Full story at this link.

    Iran’s Revolutionary Guards accuse the U.S. of endangering global oil supply by “interfering” in Hormuz

    Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps accused the United States on Monday of endangering the global supply of oil and gas by “interfering” in the Strait of Hormuz following the resumption of hostilities between the two countries. IRGC spokesman Hosein Mohebi said the United States “must be held accountable” for putting the security of global energy supplies at risk.

    On X, Mohebi added that Tehran “will continue to exercise its sovereignty and management of the Strait of Hormuz,” signaling Iran’s unwillingness to cede operational control of the waterway despite U.S. pressure.

    The accusation followed a warning from the Khatam al-Anbiya military command, which called any Gulf cooperation with Washington in managing the strait “an act of war” after President Donald Trump said the United States would become its “guardian” and should be paid for doing so.

    Wall Street opens lower on U.S.-Iran escalation and weakness in semiconductors

    U.S. stocks largely fell on Monday morning as markets weighed higher oil prices and a pullback in semiconductor shares, while investors prepared for upcoming corporate earnings and economic data. Crude prices rose more than 3% amid growing tension between the United States and Iran, renewing concerns about oil infrastructure in the Strait of Hormuz.

    U.S. semiconductor stocks fell early after a bad session on South Korea’s Kospi, driven by a sharp drop in SK hynix. About 10 minutes after the open, the Dow Jones was up 0.1% at 52,676.53, while the S&P 500 was down 0.4% at 7,547.53 and the Nasdaq Composite fell 0.9% at 26,039.50.

    “Tensions with Iran, which are escalating, are pushing oil prices up, and that’s lifting Treasury yields, while the SK hynix sell-off drags memory-related stocks down, which in turn pressures the Nasdaq and the S&P,” said Art Hogan of B. Riley Wealth Management. This week’s agenda includes major U.S. bank earnings, a congressional appearance by Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh, and the latest consumer price index data.

    Iran warns Gulf states: cooperating with the U.S. in the Strait of Hormuz will be seen as “an act of war”

    The Iranian military warned Gulf countries on Monday that any cooperation with the United States in managing the Strait of Hormuz would be considered “an act of war,” as hostilities between Tehran and Washington resumed. The spokesperson for the Khatam al-Anbiya military command issued the warning in a video message to countries in the region.

    The same spokesperson said Iran “under no circumstances will allow… the United States to interfere in the management” of the strategic waterway, in a message aimed at deterring Washington’s regional allies from joining any joint administration scheme for the strait.

    The statement came hours after President Donald Trump said his country would become the “guardian” of the Strait of Hormuz and should be paid to protect it, amid the military escalation that has put transit through this key energy trade route on edge.

    Trump says the U.S. is “taking control” of the Strait of Hormuz

    President Donald Trump said on Monday that the United States was “taking control” of the Strait of Hormuz after several days of exchanges of attacks with Iran in the critical waterway. “We are taking control of the strait. They have nothing. They have nothing,” Trump said in an interview with Fox News, referring to Iran’s alleged military vulnerability.

    The president added that his country would become the “guardian” of the strait and should be paid for protecting it. “We will become the guardian of the strait (…) And we should be compensated for that,” he said in the phone interview.

    He also issued a stern warning to Iran after the breakdown of the existing military agreement and said the United States had struck Iranian military equipment overnight. “Most of their equipment no longer exists. Their anti-aircraft gun, we hit it very hard last night,” he said. “Every time they send a drone, we hit them very hard.” Trump said Washington had reached an agreement with Tehran that was later breached: “We had an agreement… and they broke it. They always break it. So we are going to hit them very hard and we are going to hold the strait, and we will probably administer it.”

    The remarks came amid the dispute over control of the strait, after Iran threatened to close it and fired “warning shots” at vessels attempting to cross, while Washington insists maritime traffic continues to flow normally despite the military escalation.

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/el-reino-unido-acuso-a-iran-de-respaldar-ataques-a-objetivos-judios-en-londres-y-declaro-ilegal-a-la-guardia-revolucionaria/

    Video: U.S. releases footage of new wave of strikes against Iran

    U.S. forces completed a new wave of strikes against Iran on Sunday, hitting dozens of targets in multiple locations with precision munitions, the U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) said. According to the command, air defenses, coastal radars, missile and drone capabilities, and small Iranian vessels were struck using combat aircraft, warships, and single-use aerial and maritime attack drones.

    Iranian media reported missile attacks and explosions around the port cities of Sirik and Bandar Abbas —where military facilities on the strait are located— and the nearby island of Qeshm. Iran’s foreign ministry condemned the U.S. strikes over the weekend as “aggressive.” Reuters could not independently verify the location or date of the video and found no earlier versions online prior to July 12.

    The Houthis warn they will respond to the attack on Sanaa airport

    The Iran-backed Houthis in Yemen said on Monday they would respond to the attack on Sanaa airport, which they attributed to Saudi Arabia, although the operation was claimed by the Yemeni government backed by Riyadh. Houthi military spokesman Yahya Saree accused Saudi Arabia of “ending the phase of détente and assuming full responsibility for the consequences of its aggression.”

    Saree also warned that “this aggression will not go unanswered or unpunished,” indicating the rebel group could intensify its actions amid the growing regional tensions linked to the conflict between the United States and Iran.

    Yemeni government claims attack on Sanaa airport; Houthis blame Saudi Arabia

    The internationally recognized Yemeni government said on Monday it attacked Sanaa airport over a dispute concerning an Iranian plane carrying a Houthi delegation; the government blamed Houthi militias, which earlier attributed the attack to Saudi Arabia. “The Houthi terrorist militias —backed by the Iranian regime— prevented national Yemeni aircraft from landing at the capital’s airport while insisting on allowing an Iranian plane to violate Yemeni airspace; consequently, the airport runway was targeted,” Yemen’s Defense Ministry said.

    Houthi-affiliated Al Masirah channel earlier reported that “the Saudi aggression targeted the takeoff and landing runways of Sanaa International Airport.”

    The Houthis, backed by Iran, said on Monday they would respond to the attack on Sanaa airport, which they attributed to Saudi Arabia, while the Riyadh-backed Yemeni government claimed responsibility. Houthi military spokesman Yahya Saree accused Saudi Arabia of “ending the phase of détente and assuming full responsibility for the consequences of its aggression,” and warned: “We affirm that this aggression will not go unanswered or unpunished.”

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/como-esta-el-trafico-maritimo-en-el-estrecho-de-ormuz-que-iran-asegura-haber-cerrado-y-eeuu-quiere-mantener-abierto/

    Bahrain intercepted drones and missiles from Iran amid reports of strikes in southern Iran

    Bahrain’s military said on Monday that its air defense systems intercepted and destroyed several Iranian missiles and drones launched during the day, after the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps claimed strikes on U.S. military facilities in the Gulf, including bases on Bahraini soil. Bahrain’s Defense Forces accused Iran of continuing to target the kingdom’s civilian population.

    Separately, semi-official Iranian agency ISNA reported that a U.S. strike on a target in Isfahan province in central Iran left one person dead and seven injured in the early hours of Monday, according to the province’s deputy governor for security. Iran has not issued an official casualty toll since the renewed large-scale attacks began last week, but state media reports and statements on specific incidents suggest around 20 people have died from the renewed U.S. bombings. At the start of the war, thousands died, most in Iran and Lebanon.

    Bahrain’s military accuses Iran of attacking civilians

    On Monday, Bahrain’s armed forces accused Iran of attacking civilians in its most recent strikes against the kingdom, after Tehran claimed to have hit U.S. military facilities and infrastructure in Bahrain.

    “Iran continues its systematic hostile behavior through its heinous missile and drone attacks directed at civilians in the Kingdom of Bahrain,” the General Command of Bahrain’s Armed Forces said in a statement, adding that air defenses “intercepted and destroyed several Iranian aerial attacks” on Monday morning.

    Iranian media report explosions near the Strait of Hormuz

    Explosions of unknown origin were heard on Monday in southern Iran near the Strait of Hormuz, a news agency reported, following an exchange of strikes between Tehran and Washington.

    “Media and residents reported hearing explosions near Bandar Abbas and the island of Qeshm at midday on Monday,” Mehr news agency said, adding that the explosions “appear to come from the west coast of Bandar Abbas.”

    Iran says it continues talks with mediators to “avoid escalation” with the U.S.

    Iran said on Monday it is continuing diplomatic efforts with mediators Qatar, Pakistan and Oman in order to “avoid an escalation” with the United States, amid the resumption of hostilities between the two countries.

    “The role of mediators is to continue their efforts to prevent an escalation of tensions,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmail Baqaei said, adding that Tehran had been in contact “in recent days” with Qatar and Oman — both of which Iran has attacked militarily — as well as Pakistan.

    Iran says it will stop complying with the agreement if the U.S. does not meet its commitments

    Iran announced on Monday that it would no longer adhere to the memorandum of understanding signed with the United States if Washington did not fulfill its commitments to end the war.

    “Whenever the other party failed to meet its obligations, we did not fulfill ours either… We will continue to act in this manner,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei said at a press conference in Tehran following the latest wave of hostilities between the adversaries.

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/el-petroleo-sube-mas-de-4-tras-la-reanudacion-de-los-ataques-entre-eeuu-e-iran-y-la-amenaza-de-cierre-del-estrecho-de-ormuz/

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/el-regimen-de-iran-lanzo-ataques-contra-bases-militares-de-estados-unidos-en-jordania-bahrein-y-kuwait/

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  • Iran attacks two tankers in Strait of Hormuz, one dead

    Iran attacks two tankers in Strait of Hormuz, one dead

    The United States launched a third round of strikes against Iran and announced the reinstatement of a naval blockade on Iranian ports, amid the collapse of the memorandum of understanding (MoU) signed between the two sides after hostilities resumed last week.

    Hours before his statements about the strikes, Trump said the Strait of Hormuz is open and will remain so “with or without Iran.” He also announced that the United States would reimpose a blockade on Iranian ports and begin charging fees to vessels transiting that waterway.

    The president set a levy of 20% “for all and any costs necessary” to ensure the safety of vessels in the strait. The United States Central Command reported that preparations to resume the blockade of ships destined for, or departing from, Iranian ports would begin at 20:00 GMT on Tuesday.

    The International Maritime Organization (IMO) rejected both the fees and the military actions in the area. In a statement, the IMO Council reaffirmed its commitment to protecting vital shipping routes and said that passage through the Strait of Hormuz “must remain free of tolls and charges, in accordance with international law.”

    Below is minute-by-minute coverage:

    Air-raid sirens sound again in Bahrain

    Air-raid sirens sounded for the third time on Tuesday morning in Bahrain, where the Interior Ministry urged residents to take shelter immediately.

    Oil prices surge to a four-week high

    Oil prices rose about 2%, reaching a four-week high amid ongoing reciprocal attacks between the United States and Iran.

    Brent crude futures gained $1.68, or 2%, to $84.98 a barrel, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude rose $1.65, or 2.1%, to $79.79 a barrel at 00:51 GMT.

    The increase follows a dramatic Monday, when Brent jumped 9.6%, its largest one-day rise since May 2020.

    /america/mundo/2026/07/14/iran-ataco-dos-petroleros-en-el-estrecho-de-ormuz-un-tripulante-muerto/

    Bahrain intercepted Iranian aerial attacks

    Nabeel Alhamer, press adviser to the King of Bahrain, said the kingdom’s air defense systems intercepted and destroyed multiple Iranian aerial attacks in recent hours.

    /estados-unidos/2026/07/14/tras-los-nuevos-ataques-contra-iran-donald-trump-aseguro-que-hay-posibilidad-de-llegar-a-otro-acuerdo-con-teheran/

    Air-raid sirens activated in Bahrain

    Warning sirens are sounding in Bahrain, and authorities have urged residents to seek shelter immediately.

    The Interior Ministry instructed the public to “remain calm and proceed to the nearest safe location” after the latest alarms were activated.

    Two tankers attacked by Iran: one Indian crew member killed

    The United Arab Emirates Ministry of Defense reported on Monday that two national tankers were struck by two Iranian cruise missiles in the southern channel of the Strait of Hormuz, in Omani territorial waters. The attack killed one Indian crew member and wounded eight others, four of them seriously.

    The ministry said fires broke out on both vessels but were brought under control. It condemned the attack as a serious violation of international law and said the UAE retains the full right to respond and take all necessary measures to protect its sovereignty and security.

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    Trump says Iran sought further negotiations after the agreement

    The U.S. president said the United States had reached an agreement with Iran two days earlier, but that Tehran wanted to continue negotiating.

    Asked by a reporter whether he had concluded that a negotiated agreement with Iran was no longer possible, Trump replied: “I never reached that conclusion.”

    He added that he believed the most effective way to pressure Iran was through a combination of blockade and strikes.

    /estados-unidos/2026/07/13/estados-unidos-lanzo-una-nueva-ronda-de-ataques-contra-iran-para-degradar-su-capacidad-militar-en-estrecho-de-ormuz/

    The International Maritime Organization (IMO) reiterated on Monday that transit through the Strait of Hormuz must be free of tolls, after U.S. President Donald Trump said earlier that day that the United States would charge a 20% fee for what he called protection services.

    Under international law, passage must remain free of customs duties and charges, the UN specialized agency based in London said. The IMO stressed that any agreement among littoral states in the region must ensure nondiscriminatory and unhindered right of passage for all vessels.

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/las-acciones-tecnologicas-hundieron-a-wall-street-tras-la-escalada-entre-estados-unidos-e-iran/

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/el-petroleo-registro-su-mayor-alza-diaria-desde-el-inicio-del-conflicto-entre-estados-unidos-e-iran/

    /america/mundo/2026/07/13/las-defensas-saudies-interceptaron-misiles-huties-en-la-mayor-escalada-en-yemen-desde-2022/

    Donald Trump announced he will address the nation in prime time on Thursday, in the midst of a significant escalation of hostilities with Iran.

    “President Trump will address the nation on Thursday night at 9 p.m. Eastern Time (01:00 GMT Friday). Thank you for your attention!” Trump posted on his social network Truth on Monday.

    U.S. missions in the UAE suspend consular appointments

    The United States announced the suspension of consular appointments in the United Arab Emirates for three days starting Monday, due to the escalation of military tensions in the Gulf region.

    “The U.S. Embassy in Abu Dhabi and the U.S. Consulate General in Dubai have canceled consular appointments from July 13 to 15 due to the regional security situation. If you have an appointment scheduled for those dates, please do not go to the embassy or consulate. We will contact you to reschedule,” the statement said.

    Iran’s foreign minister mocks Trump over fee to protect ships in Hormuz

    Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi mocked President Donald Trump’s proposal to charge fees to protect vessels transiting the Strait of Hormuz, saying Iran would charge a cheaper toll.

    “Whoever ensures the safe passage of commercial ships through the Strait of Hormuz should receive compensation for that service. Iran has always been the GUARDIAN of the strait and will remain so FOREVER. Twenty percent is, of course, too much. We will be fair,” the minister wrote on social media, referring to the fee proposed earlier by Trump.

    Oil prices surge more than 9%

    Oil prices surged on Monday, driven by the U.S. reinstatement of a naval blockade on Iranian ports and Washington’s intention to impose a toll on vessels transiting the Strait of Hormuz.

    By 18:20 GMT, Brent crude, the international benchmark, rose 9.06% to $82.90 a barrel. U.S. WTI advanced 9.05% to $77.87 a barrel.

    U.S. naval blockade of Iran to begin Tuesday

    The United States will begin implementing a naval blockade against all Iranian ports and oil terminals on Tuesday, the Joint Maritime Information Center (JMIC) of the U.S.-led Combined Maritime Forces said in a statement issued Monday.

    According to JMIC, the blockade will apply to all vessels, regardless of their flag. The blockade will not prevent neutral traffic transiting the Strait of Hormuz to or from locations outside Iran, the statement added.

    Humanitarian shipments will be allowed passage, subject to inspections, JMIC added.

    /estados-unidos/2026/07/13/nueva-ofensiva-contra-iran-estados-unidos-bombardeo-una-instalacion-naval-del-regimen-con-drones-maritimos-no-tripulados/

    Saudi Arabia says it responded to a ballistic missile attack by Yemen’s Houthis

    The Saudi-led coalition intervening in Yemen since 2015 said on Monday it had responded to a ballistic missile attack launched by Houthi rebels, after the group accused Riyadh of bombing Sanaa International Airport.

    “Air defenses have responded to a ballistic missile threat launched by the terrorist Houthi militia toward the southern region,” Turki al-Malki, the coalition’s spokesperson, said on X. The coalition supports Yemen’s internationally recognized government.

    European markets close slightly higher amid Middle East uncertainty

    European stock markets closed slightly higher on Monday after a day marked by renewed hostilities and rising oil prices, along with concerns about the technology sector and the outlook for interest rates.

    London closed up 0.01%, Paris gained 0.31%, Frankfurt 0.19%, Milan 0.37% and Madrid 0.25%.

    Guterres warns about military escalation in the Gulf after U.S. and Iranian attacks

    U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres warned on Monday about U.S. attacks on Iran as well as Tehran’s strikes on ships in the Strait of Hormuz and on neighboring countries.

    Guterres expressed his “deep concern about the serious escalation of renewed military confrontations in the Gulf region,” his spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric said.

    Oil rises more than 4% as tensions between the U.S. and Iran increase

    Oil prices climbed strongly on Monday, with WTI trading at $74.53 a barrel, up 4.37%, while Brent rose 4.30% to $79.28. The rise came amid growing military tension between the United States and Iran, reviving doubts about the safety of transit through the Strait of Hormuz.

    The energy rally also affected stock and bond markets: the VIX volatility index jumped 7.77%, while U.S. Treasury yields rose across the curve — the 10-year climbed 0.63% and the 5-year 0.88% — reflecting investor caution over an escalation that could disrupt global energy trade.

    CENTCOM confirms first combat use of marine drones: attacked an Iranian naval base in Bandar Abbas

    U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) reported that its forces successfully struck a submarine and ship maintenance facility in Iran using multiple single-use attack aerial drones. CENTCOM said three Corsair-model unmanned surface vessels struck the port at Bandar Abbas Naval Base.

    The attack, CENTCOM said, marked the first time U.S. forces used marine drones in combat. The command stated that the overnight strikes “degraded Iran’s ability to continue attacking commercial maritime traffic,” amid the military escalation affecting transit through the Strait of Hormuz.

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    Trump says the U.S. will charge a 20% fee to protect ships in the Strait of Hormuz

    President Donald Trump said the Strait of Hormuz is and will remain “OPEN,” with or without Iran, and that the United States is reinstating what he called the “IRANIAN BLOCKADE,” so named, he explained, because it would prevent only Iranian vessels or customers from entering or leaving.

    “All other countries will have fair and open use of the strait,” the president wrote on Truth Social.

    Trump said that from now on the United States will be known as “THE GUARDIAN OF THE STRAIT OF HORMUZ,” and maintained that, “as a matter of FAIRNESS,” the country will be reimbursed at a rate of 20% on all cargo transported, for costs necessary to provide security for “this very volatile section of the world.” “The process and training will begin immediately,” he concluded.

    The announcement intensified Trump’s rhetoric on the strait, after he had earlier told Fox News that Washington would become the “guardian” of the waterway and should be compensated for overseeing it, amid the military escalation with Iran and Tehran’s warning that it would consider “an act of war” any Gulf cooperation with the United States in managing the passage.

    The full report is at this link.

    Iran’s Revolutionary Guards accuse the U.S. of endangering global oil supplies by “interfering” in Hormuz

    Iran’s Revolutionary Guards accused the United States on Monday of endangering global oil and gas supplies by “interfering” in the Strait of Hormuz after the resumption of hostilities between the two countries. IRGC spokesman Hosein Mohebi said the U.S. “must be held accountable” for putting the security of global energy supplies at risk.

    In a post on X, Mohebi added that Tehran “will continue to exercise its sovereignty and management of the Strait of Hormuz,” signaling that Iran is unwilling to cede operational control of the waterway despite U.S. pressure.

    The accusation followed an earlier warning from the Khatam Al-Anbiya military command, which called any Gulf cooperation with Washington over management of the strait “an act of war,” after President Trump said the U.S. would become its “guardian” and should be compensated for doing so.

    Wall Street opens lower amid U.S.-Iran escalation and semiconductor sell-off

    U.S. stocks mostly fell on Monday morning as markets weighed rising oil prices and a pullback in semiconductor shares, while investors looked ahead to upcoming corporate earnings and economic data. Crude prices climbed more than 3% amid growing U.S.-Iran tensions, reviving concerns about oil infrastructure in the Strait of Hormuz.

    U.S. semiconductor shares dropped early after a weak session on South Korea’s Kospi, fueled by a sharp decline in SK hynix. About 10 minutes after the open, the Dow Jones was up 0.1% at 52,676.53, while the S&P 500 was down 0.4% at 7,547.53 and the Nasdaq Composite fell 0.9% at 26,039.50.

    “Tensions with Iran, which are escalating, are pushing oil prices higher, and that is lifting Treasury yields, while the SK hynix sell-off is dragging down memory-linked stocks, which in turn pressures the Nasdaq and the S&P,” said Art Hogan of B. Riley Wealth Management. This week’s agenda includes earnings from major U.S. banks, testimony before Congress by Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh, and the latest consumer price index data.

    Iran warns Gulf states: cooperating with the U.S. in the Strait of Hormuz will be considered “an act of war”

    The Iranian military warned Gulf states on Monday that any cooperation with the United States in managing the Strait of Hormuz would be considered “an act of war,” as hostilities between Tehran and Washington resumed. A spokesperson for the Khatam Al-Anbiya military command delivered the warning in a video message to regional nations.

    The same spokesperson said Iran “under no circumstances will allow… the United States to interfere in the management” of the strategic waterway, in an effort to dissuade U.S. regional allies from joining any joint administration scheme for the strait.

    The statement came hours after President Donald Trump said the U.S. would become the “guardian” of the Strait of Hormuz and should be paid to protect it, amid the military escalation that has put the vital trade route at risk.

    Trump says the U.S. is “taking control” of the Strait of Hormuz

    President Donald Trump said on Monday that the United States was “taking control” of the Strait of Hormuz after several days of exchanges with Iran in the strategic waterway. “We are taking control of the strait. They have nothing. They have nothing,” Trump said in an interview with Fox News, referring to what he described as Iran’s military weakness.

    The president added that the U.S. will become the “guardian” of the strait and should be paid for protecting it. “We will become the guardian of the strait (…) And we should be compensated for that,” he said on the phone interview.

    He also issued a strong warning to Iran following the breakdown of the existing military agreement, saying U.S. strikes had damaged Iranian military equipment overnight. “Most of their equipment no longer exists. Their anti-aircraft gun, we hit it very hard last night,” he said. “Every time they send a drone, we strike them very hard.” Trump said Washington had reached an agreement with Tehran that was then broken: “We had a deal… and they broke it. They always break it. So we are going to hit them very hard and we will take the strait, and probably administer it.”

    The remarks come amid a dispute over control of the strait, after Iran threatened to close it and fired warning shots at vessels attempting to cross, while Washington insists maritime traffic continues to flow normally despite the military escalation.

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    Video: U.S. releases footage of new wave of strikes against Iran

    U.S. forces completed a new wave of strikes against Iran on Sunday, hitting dozens of targets in multiple locations with precision munitions, U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) said. The command said it struck air defense systems, coastal radars, missile and drone capabilities, and small Iranian vessels using combat aircraft, warships, and single-use attack aerial and marine drones.

    Iranian media reported missile strikes and explosions near the port cities of Sirik and Bandar Abbas — locations of military facilities near the strait — and the nearby island of Qeshm. Iran’s foreign ministry condemned the weekend U.S. strikes as “aggressive.” Reuters could not independently verify the location or date of the video footage, and no earlier version was found online before July 12.

    The Houthis warn they will respond to the attack on Sanaa airport

    The Iran-backed Houthi movement in Yemen said on Monday it would respond to the attack on Sanaa airport, which it blamed on Saudi Arabia, although the operation was claimed by the Yemeni government backed by Riyadh. Houthi military spokesman Yahya Saree accused Saudi Arabia of “ending the phase of de-escalation and assuming full responsibility for the consequences of its aggression.”

    Saree added that “this aggression will not go unanswered or unpunished,” suggesting the group may intensify its actions amid growing regional tensions linked to the U.S.-Iran confrontation.

    Yemen’s government claims attack on Sanaa airport; Houthis blame Saudi Arabia

    Yemen’s internationally recognized government said on Monday it had attacked Sanaa airport after a dispute over an Iranian plane carrying a Houthi delegation, an operation the rebel group had initially attributed to Saudi Arabia. “The Houthi terrorist militias — backed by the Iranian regime — prevented national Yemeni aircraft from landing at the capital’s airport while insisting an Iranian plane should be allowed to violate Yemeni territory; consequently, the runway was targeted,” the Yemeni Defense Ministry said. Earlier, the Houthi channel Al Masirah reported that “Saudi aggression struck the runways of Sanaa International Airport.”

    The Iran-backed Houthis said on Monday they would respond to the attack on Sanaa airport, which they blamed on Saudi Arabia, though the Riyadh-backed Yemeni government claimed responsibility for the operation. Houthi military spokesman Yahya Saree accused Saudi Arabia of “ending the phase of de-escalation and taking full responsibility for the consequences of its aggression,” and warned: “We affirm that this aggression will not go unanswered or unpunished.”

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    Bahrain intercepted Iranian drones and missiles amid reports of attacks in southern Iran

    The Bahraini military said on Monday that its air defense systems intercepted and destroyed several Iranian missiles and drones launched during the day, after the Revolutionary Guard claimed to have attacked U.S. military facilities in the Gulf, including bases on Bahraini territory. Bahrain’s Defense Forces accused Iran of continuing to target the kingdom’s civilian population.

    Meanwhile, the semi-official Iranian agency ISNA reported that a U.S. strike on a target in Isfahan province in central Iran killed one person and wounded seven in the early hours of Monday, according to the provincial security deputy governor. Iran has not released an official casualty tally since large-scale strikes resumed last week, but state media reports and statements about isolated incidents suggest around 20 people have died from the renewed U.S. bombardments. At the start of the war, thousands had died, mostly in Iran and Lebanon.

    Bahrain’s military accuses Iran of attacking civilians

    On Monday, Bahrain’s armed forces accused Iran of attacking civilians in its recent strikes on the kingdom, after Tehran said it had targeted U.S. military installations and infrastructure there.

    “Iran continues its systematic hostile posture through its atrocious missile and drone attacks directed at civilians in the Kingdom of Bahrain,” the General Command of Bahrain’s Armed Forces said in a statement, adding that air defenses had “intercepted and destroyed several Iranian aerial attacks” on Monday morning.

    Iranian media report explosions near the Strait of Hormuz

    Explosions of unknown origin were heard on Monday in southern Iran near the Strait of Hormuz, a news agency reported, following an exchange of strikes between Tehran and Washington.

    “Media and residents reported hearing explosions near Bandar Abbas and Qeshm Island at midday on Monday,” Mehr news agency said, adding that the blasts “seem to originate from the western coast of Bandar Abbas.”

    Iran says it continues talks with mediators to “avoid escalation” with the U.S.

    Iran said on Monday it is continuing diplomatic contacts with mediators Qatar, Pakistan and Oman to “avoid an escalation” with the United States amid the resumption of hostilities.

    “The role of the mediators is to continue their efforts to prevent an escalation of tensions,” Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmail Baqai said, adding that Tehran had been in contact “in recent days” with Qatar and Oman, two countries that had been attacked by Iran, as well as with Pakistan.

    Iran says it will stop complying with the agreement if the U.S. does not honor its commitments

    Iran announced on Monday that it would no longer honor the memorandum of understanding signed with the United States if Washington failed to meet its commitments to end the war.

    “Whenever the other party has not fulfilled its obligations, we have not fulfilled ours… We will continue to act in this manner,” Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baqaei said at a press conference in Tehran following the latest wave of hostilities between the two adversaries.

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