US Iran War: The simmering US-Iran conflict has erupted into its most intense exchange of fire yet. In a dramatic sequence of events on June 2, 2026, Iran launched ballistic missiles toward two US-allied Gulf nations, targeted civilian vessels with attack drones, and triggered a swift and calculated American military response.
Iran Strikes First — Missiles at Kuwait and Bahrain
CENTCOM confirmed that Iran fired several ballistic missiles toward regional neighbours, though all failed to strike their intended targets. Two missiles fired toward Kuwait either fell short or disintegrated mid-flight, while three missiles launched at Bahrain were successfully intercepted by US and Bahraini air defence systems.
DON'T MISS
CENTCOM Hits Back: Qeshm Island Targeted
The American response was rapid and precise. US fighter aircraft swiftly responded by eliminating Iranian air defences, a ground control station, and two one-way attack drones that posed clear threats to ships transiting regional waters. CENTCOM confirmed the self-defence strikes on the Iranian military ground control station on Qeshm Island in the Persian Gulf, stating that no US personnel were harmed.
The strikes came in direct response to Iran’s shootdown of an American MQ-1 surveillance drone operating over international waters. Notably, the hardware destroyed on those islands included Chinese-supplied JY-27A radar systems and HQ-9 missiles.
Iran Retaliates Again — Fifth Fleet in the Crosshairs
Tehran refused to stand down. Iran stated it targeted the headquarters of the US Fifth Fleet in Bahrain and a ship identified as Pananya. The US confirmed that all Iranian attacks on American forces failed, with missiles and drones either intercepted or falling short of their targets.
The Oil Tanker Incident That Lit the Fuse
US Iran War: Tuesday night’s hostilities appear to have begun when the US military used a Hellfire missile to disable a Botswana-flagged oil tanker heading toward an Iranian port on Kharg Island after the ship failed to comply with the US blockade of Iranian ports. CENTCOM identified the vessel as M/T Lexie, which was travelling through international waters toward Kharg Island — Iran’s primary oil export terminal — after ignoring US directives over a 24-hour period.


