A large-scale military confrontation erupted early Saturday as the United States and Israel launched coordinated strikes against key installations and leadership targets associated with the Iranian regime. The operation, described by Israeli officials as pre-emptive and by Donald Trump as “major combat operations,” quickly expanded into a broader regional confrontation after the regime responded with missile and drone attacks across the Middle East.
Explosions were reported across Iran throughout the day, including in Tehran, Isfahan, Karaj, Tabriz, Kermanshah, and Lorestan. State media acknowledged that more than twenty provinces had been targeted, with additional blasts later reported in the southeastern port of Chabahar and in Hormozgan province. Witnesses described repeated waves of strikes hitting military facilities, missile infrastructure, and locations linked to the regime’s security apparatus.
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One of the most consequential targets appears to have been the compound of Ali Khamenei in central Tehran. Satellite imagery cited by state-affiliated outlets reportedly showed the compound completely destroyed following the strikes. Smoke was observed rising from the area while officials declined to confirm the condition or location of the regime’s top leadership.
Israeli officials said the operation had been planned for months and was designed to target sites where senior regime figures were believed to be gathered. Reports indicate that the strikes may also have targeted the residence of Masoud Pezeshkian, though the outcome of that strike remains unclear.
Senior leadership casualties reported
As the scale of the attacks became clearer, reports began to surface indicating significant casualties among senior military figures. Sources cited by Reuters said Iran’s Defense Minister Amir Nasirzadeh and a senior commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps ground forces, Mohammad Pakpour, were believed to have been killed in the bombardment.
Iranian officials have offered only limited confirmation. Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi acknowledged that the regime may have lost “one or two commanders” but insisted that Khamenei was believed to be alive. Iranian authorities also imposed widespread internet restrictions, limiting the flow of information from inside the country as the situation continued to evolve.
Meanwhile, Iranian state media reported that the national Red Crescent had recorded at least 201 deaths and 747 injuries across 24 provinces by Saturday evening. The figures have not been independently verified.
Authorities also claimed that an earlier strike hit a girls’ school in Hormozgan province, killing or injuring more than 150 students. Separate state media reports said a school in Minab had been struck, with around 40 fatalities reported there.
Iranian regime retaliation spreads regionally
Within hours of the initial strikes, Tehran ordered retaliatory operations across the region. The Revolutionary Guard announced that U.S. bases and interests throughout the Persian Gulf would be considered legitimate targets.
Missiles and drones were subsequently launched toward Israel, with Israeli media reporting that at least 125 missiles had been fired during the day. Sirens sounded across multiple Israeli cities as air defenses attempted to intercept the incoming projectiles.
The retaliation quickly expanded beyond Israel. Iranian missiles were reportedly directed toward bases hosting U.S. forces in Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates, and Saudi Arabia.
Authorities in Bahrain reported that residential buildings in the capital, Manama, were struck. Kuwaiti officials said hospitals were treating at least a dozen wounded following missile debris falling near military facilities.
In the UAE, officials confirmed that air defense systems intercepted several incoming missiles, though witnesses in Dubai said the explosions shook windows across parts of the city. In Abu Dhabi, one fatality was reported after debris from an intercepted missile landed near the airport area.
Elsewhere, Jordanian forces intercepted two missiles that entered its airspace, while an errant projectile struck a residential building in southern Syria, killing four people.
Economic and security repercussions
The escalation quickly began affecting global energy markets and regional transport routes. Major oil companies and trading houses reportedly suspended shipments through the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow waterway through which roughly one-fifth of the world’s oil supply normally passes.
Shipping executives told media outlets that tankers had been ordered to remain in place until the security situation became clearer. At the same time, the European Union’s maritime mission in the region warned vessels to remain vigilant amid threats from Iranian-aligned Houthi forces to attack shipping in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden.
Air travel was also disrupted. Major airlines suspended flights across the region as airspace closures and missile alerts spread throughout the Middle East.
Heightened tensions inside Iran
Inside the country, the regime moved quickly to tighten internal control. Schools and universities were shut nationwide, and severe internet disruptions were reported.
The Supreme National Security Council issued a public warning stating that any Iranian citizen accused of “cooperation with the enemy” would face the harshest punishment. The message was widely interpreted as a signal that authorities fear potential unrest during the crisis.
Meanwhile, President Trump issued a public message directly addressing the Iranian population, urging them to “take over your government” and describing the operation as necessary to eliminate what he called imminent threats from the regime’s nuclear and missile programs.
An uncertain trajectory
By Saturday evening, fresh airstrikes were again reported in Tehran and in Bushehr, where missiles were said to have struck neighborhoods near the country’s main nuclear power plant.
With leadership targets struck, regional bases attacked, and the conflict spreading across multiple countries, the confrontation has already moved beyond a limited military exchange. The coming days will determine whether the escalation stabilizes through diplomatic pressure or evolves into a broader regional war.


