World News
US Strikes 80 Iranian Targets; Iran Hits US Bases in Bahrain and Kuwait
The US launched 80 strikes in Iran; Iran retaliated by attacking US military bases in Bahrain and Kuwait.
- Hidabroot
- | Updated

Here is the improved English version:
The United States military struck eighty targets across Iran overnight in one of the most consequential direct military actions Washington has taken against Tehran in decades. The operation was launched in response to Iranian attacks on American naval vessels in the Strait of Hormuz, and was designed to degrade Iran's capacity to threaten freedom of navigation through the critical waterway.
Iran responded swiftly and forcefully. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps launched retaliatory strikes against U.S. military installations in Bahrain and Kuwait — two Gulf states that host substantial American military presences and serve as central hubs for U.S. regional force projection. The strikes represent a sharp and dangerous escalation, raising the prospect of further confrontation, particularly should American personnel have been killed or critical infrastructure seriously damaged.
The Strait of Hormuz — the narrow chokepoint between Iran and the Arabian Peninsula through which roughly one-fifth of the world's oil supply transits daily — has long been among the most volatile flashpoints in the region. An overnight exchange of strikes at this scale opens a dramatic and potentially defining new chapter in the decades-long standoff between Washington and Tehran.
U.S. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth is scheduled to arrive in Israel on Wednesday, within hours of the strikes. The timing ensures that Iran and regional security will dominate his meetings with Israeli officials. Israel regards Iran as its most serious and existential strategic threat, and any shift in the military balance between Washington and Tehran bears directly on Israeli security calculations — including those surrounding Iran's nuclear program and its expansive network of proxy forces across the region.

