NPR
Iran war widens, threatens to engulf Lebanon
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Special Series Middle East conflict Conflict in the Middle East has been escalating. These stories provide context for current developments and the history that led up to them.
Embassy is located in Kuwait City on Monday. service member was killed in action.
Central Command (CENTCOM) said Monday the fourth U.S. service member died after being wounded during Iran's initial attacks in response to U.S. and Israeli strikes across Iran Saturday. A U.S. official not authorized to speak publicly told NPR that the troops who were killed were ground-based forces stationed in Kuwait.
"We expect to take additional losses, and as always, we will work to minimize losses," Gen. Dan Caine, chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said on Monday.
President Trump on Sunday had pledged that the U.S. would "avenge" the deaths of American troops.
In a separate incident, CENTCOM said three U.S. F-15E fighter jets crashed in Kuwait "due to an apparent friendly fire incident" Sunday night.
Middle East conflict 3 American troops killed, and Trump says more 'likely,' in war against Iran "During active combat—that included attacks from Iranian aircraft, ballistic missiles, and drones — the U.S. Air Force fighter jets were mistakenly shot down by Kuwaiti air defenses," it said in a statement. CENTCOM said all six members of the crew were "ejected safely, have been safely recovered, and are in stable condition."
It added that Kuwait acknowledged the incident and said that "the cause of the incident is under investigation."
Meanwhile, the Iranian Red Crescent Society, a humanitarian organization, said at least 555 Iranians have been killed since the beginning of U.S. and Israeli attacks on Saturday.
They include Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and members of his family. Iranian officials also said more than 168 schoolgirls were killed in a direct hit on a school.
Israel said it intercepted one of the missiles while others fell into open areas, and responded to the attacks with airstrikes.
Lebanon's Health Ministry said Israeli airstrikes killed at least 31 people and wounded at least 149 — most of them in southern Lebanon.
In the capital Beirut, residents leaving southern Lebanon and Beirut's southern suburbs streamed into shelters set up in schools, which have been closed by the government.
At the Renee Mouawad public school in central Beirut, many of those arriving had been displaced two years ago during fighting between Israel and Hezbollah. Families arrived in cars piled high with mattresses and other belongings.
Abu Ali, a taxi driver who did not want to give his full name out of fear of being ostracized in his pro-Hezbollah neighborhood, said he left Dahiya, a Beirut suburb that is a Hezbollah stronghold, with his family at three in the morning after hearing air strikes.
"I spent the morning looking for a school and then I found this," he said. He and his family were last displaced during the war between Israel and Hezbollah in 2024.
"Last time I stayed in the streets," he said. "The schools were all full, and I couldn't pay rent for a house."
"The Israeli enemy is an enemy in the end. But enough — we also want to live," he said.
Israel continued a wave of strikes across the Iranian capital overnight that it said were aimed at security targets.
Nine of those killed were at a public shelter that was hit by a missile in a city outside Jerusalem on Sunday.
Another missile attack in Tel Aviv killed a caregiver from the Philippines.
Shay Shor, an Israeli in Tel Aviv, said he wants Iranians to be free but is concerned Israel's killing of Supreme Leader Khamenei might not achieve that.
"We killed their leader, but the leadership in Iran is not completely destroyed and within a few months they're just going to come back," Shor says. They fired at a U.S. base in Irbil in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq and claimed responsibility for a drone attack targeting U.S. forces at Baghdad airport.
A drone strike hit a British air force base on the Mediterranean island nation of Cyprus, according to Britain's Defence Ministry. There were no casualties reported.
Middle East conflict Iran's Ayatollah Ali Khamenei is killed in Israeli strike, ending 36-year iron rule Iran's military said it shot down a U.S. F-15 fighter jet. It also said it fired 15 cruise missiles at the huge Ali al-Salem U.S. air base in Kuwait and what it called enemy vessels in the Indian Ocean. It did not mention fighter aircraft.
Gulf countries have so far largely left the fighting to U.S. forces stationed on their territory but increasing Iranian attacks are raising the specter of direct involvement by those states.
Saudi Arabia said Monday that it shot down two drones targeting one of its major refineries. It said the debris started what it called a limited fire at the Ras Tanura refinery but no civilian injuries.
The U.S. military said it had hit an Iranian warship, which was sinking Sunday in an Iranian port. Trump said in a video on social media that the U.S. had sunk nine Iranian warships and "largely destroyed" Iran's naval headquarters. The U.S. military's Central Command said it could not confirm those claims.
Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps said it had hit three U.S. and U.K. oil tankers in the Gulf. On Saturday Iran said it was closing the Strait of Hormuz, a waterway vital to the global oil trade.
After Israel, Gulf countries that have long been considered as prosperous havens for Western expatriates have received the brunt of Iranian attacks.
After airport attacks and widespread flight cancellations, British Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper told Sky News Monday that the government was considering arranging evacuation if needed for hundreds of thousands of citizens in the region.
Jawad Rizkallah reported from Beirut.
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− By
Jane Arraf
,
Jawad Rizkallah
Motorists drive along a street as smoke rises from a reported Iranian strike in the area where the U.S.
+ By
NPR Staff
Motorists drive along a street as smoke rises from a reported Iranian strike in the area where the U.S.
− AFP/Getty Images hide caption
AMMAN, Jordan — The war over Iran engulfed more of the Middle East and beyond on Monday as strikes intensified, Iran-backed groups stepped up attacks and a fourth U.S.
+ AFP/Getty Images hide caption
The war over Iran engulfed more of the Middle East and beyond on Monday as strikes intensified, Iran-backed groups stepped up attacks and a fourth U.S.
− Middle East conflict Hegseth: 'We didn't start this war but under President Trump we're finishing it' U.S.
+ The Iranian Red Crescent Society, a humanitarian organization, said at least 555 Iranians have been killed since the beginning of the joint U.S.-Israeli military campaign on Saturday.
Middle East conflict Trump defends Iran strikes, offers objectives for military operation They include Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and members of his family.
+ Iranian officials also said more than 168 schoolgirls were killed in a direct hit on a school.
Here are more of the key updates NPR is reporting on.
To jump to specific areas of coverage, use the links below:
U.S. casualties | Lebanon | Inside Israel | Iran talks | Further updates
U.S.
− Hezbollah, the Iran-backed militant group in Lebanon, said it launched attacks in Israel in revenge for the killing of Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, as well as in response to continued Israeli attacks in Lebanon since a ceasefire more than a year ago.
+ — NPR's International and Washington Desks
Hezbollah, the Iran-backed militant group in Lebanon, said it launched attacks in Israel in revenge for the killing of Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, as well as in response to continued Israeli attacks in Lebanon since a ceasefire more than a year ago.
− Middle East conflict Oil prices surge and stocks fall amid fears over Iran war The Lebanese government, facing being drawn into another devastating war, said it planned to arrest those responsible for the rocket attack on Israel.
+ Middle East conflict Oil prices surge amid fears over Iran war The Lebanese government, facing being drawn into another devastating war, said it planned to arrest those responsible for the rocket attack on Israel.
− Since Israel launched surprise attacks in Iran this weekend, Iran has been launching missiles at Israeli cities — killing at least 10 people.
+ — Jane Arraf and Jawad Rizkallah
Since Israel launched surprise attacks in Iran this weekend, Iran has been launching missiles at Israeli cities — killing at least 10 people.
− "Next year is going to be the same thing, same story, same kind of war."
Iran-backed militias in Iraq have also entered the fighting.
+ "Next year is going to be the same thing, same story, same kind of war."
— Daniel Estrin
The White House told NPR that Iran wants to restart negotiations and that Trump will eventually speak with whoever is in charge.
But publicly, the Iranian government has one message for the White House: "We will not negotiate with the United States," top Iranian security official Ali Larijani wrote on X early Monday.
In another post, Larijana said: "TRUMP HAS BETRAYED 'AMERICA FIRST' TO ADOPT 'ISRAEL FIRST.'"
Trump "is sacrificing American treasure and blood to advance Netanyahu's illegitimate expansionist ambitions," he wrote in another.
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said that negotiations between the U.S.
+ and Iran had almost reached a deal but the U.S. attacked instead.
"We left Geneva with understanding that we'd seal a deal next time we meet," Araghchi wrote on X. "But it was Mr. Trump, yet again, who ultimately ordered bombing of the negotiating table."
— Ruth Sherlock and Franco Ordoñez
Iran-backed militias in Iraq have also entered the fighting.
− Middle East conflict Oil prices surge and stocks fall amid fears over Iran war Global crude oil prices surged and stocks fell as the war with Iran entered its third day.
+ Middle East conflict Oil prices surge amid fears over Iran war Global crude oil prices surged and stocks fell as the war with Iran entered its third day.
− Daniel Estrin contributed reporting from Tel Aviv, Israel.
+ Jane Arraf reported from Amman, Jordan.
+ Daniel Estrin reported from Tel Aviv, Israel.
+ Ruth Sherlock reported from Istanbul, Turkey. Camila Domonoske, Franco Ordoñez and Tom Bowman contributed from Washington.