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Write about: Middle East crisis live: Israel warns it will pursue Iran’s next supreme leader; fire engulfs Kuwait city tower as Iranian strikes hit the Gulf | US-Israel war on Iran
SOURCE
The Israeli military warned it would continue pursuing every successor of Iran’s next supreme leader.
In a post on X in Farsi, the Israeli military said it would also pursue every person who seeks to appoint a successor for slain supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, referring to the clerical body charged with selecting Iran’s next supreme leader.
The comments came after Iranian news agency Mehr news reported that he clerical body that will choose Iran’s next supreme leader has more or less reached a majority consensus.
Key events
Angelique Chrisafis
The French president, Emmanuel Macron, will visit Cyprus on Monday to meet the president Nikos Christodoulides. France sent defence systems and a frigate to the Mediterranean island last week after it was hit by a drone strike on the British RAF base Akrotiri.
Macron will also meet the Greek prime minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis on the trip.
The Elysee said the visit was aimed at showing France’s “solidarity” with Cyprus, an EU member, in order to “reinforce security around Cyprus and the eastern Mediterranean” with our European partners, and to contribute to “de-escalation in the region.”
Macron said last week that France’s presence in the area would be “strictly defensive” in support of its regional allies.
Two other civilians, from Nepal and Bangladesh, have been killed by missile debris in Dubai since the US and Israel launched a war against Iran on 28 February, triggering Iran to respond with missile and drone attacks on its Gulf neighbours.
Pakistan’s prime minister, Shehbaz Sharif, has said he is “deeply saddened by the tragic death of two Pakistani nationals in Dubai caused by missile debris”. In a statement on X, he added:
Our diplomatic missions in the UAE are in close contact with the Dubai authorities to provide all necessary assistance and to facilitate the repatriation process. Our hearts go out to the bereaved family in this hour of grief.
The US embassy in Oslo was hit by a loud explosion early on Sunday morning, causing minor damage but no injuries, according to Norwegian police. The blast at the embassy compound in western Oslo reportedly occurred at about 1am local time (0000 GMT).
Police are searching for one or more potential perpetrators, with Norway’s justice minister, Astri Aas-Hansen, saying they had deployed “considerable resources” to the investigation. “This is an unacceptable incident that we are taking very seriously,” she told Norwegian press agency NTB.
Yvette Cooper sidestepped a question about UK-US relations being in trouble by saying there is still close cooperation on a range of issues, although divergence can happen as she said it is not in the British interest to “unquestioningly agree” with every strand of American policy.
She made the point of saying it was “important to learn the lessons” from the devastating US-led invasion of Iraq, when it comes to Iran.
UK government’s job is not to be ‘outsourcing our foreign policy’, foreign secretary says
The UK’s foreign secretary, Yvette Cooper, has told the BBC that the government’s job is not to be “outsourcing our foreign policy”.
Speaking on Laura Kuenssberg’s Sunday politics programme, Cooper said:
It’s for the US president to decide what he thinks is in the US national interest, and that’s for him to do.
But it is our job as the UK government to decide what’s in the UK national interest, and that doesn’t mean simply agreeing with other countries or outsourcing our foreign policy to other countries.
Asked if the UK was at war, Cooper responded: “We are providing defensive support in a conflict, and that is, I think, the way to describe it.”
Her comments followed renewed criticism from the US president, Donald Trump, who has apparently told the UK he does not need its aircraft carriers and accused the British prime minister, Keir Starmer, of seeking to “join wars after we’ve already won”, in reference to reports that the UK was preparing an aircraft carrier in response to the escalating conflict.
Relations between Washington and London have sunk to a low point, with Trump strongly criticising Starmer for the lack of immediate UK support for the US-Israeli strikes on Iran.
Here are some of the latest pictures being sent to us from Tehran after overnight Israeli and US airstrikes reportedly struck oil sites around the Iranian capital:
As the war in the Middle East, started by Israel and the US, continues to escalate, we would like to hear how people living, working or travelling in the region have been affected.
Whether you are in the region or impacted in other ways, please get in touch here.
Please note that while we’d like to hear from you, your security is most important. We recognise it may not always be safe or appropriate to record or share your experiences, so please think about this when considering whether to get in touch with the Guardian.
The Guardian’s diplomatic editor, Patrick Wintour, has written an interesting analysis piece looking at the backlash to the Iranian president’s comments, which took many observers by surprise. Here is an extract:
The surprise offer by the president of Iran, Masoud Pezeshkian, not to attack countries in the neighbourhood so long as their airspace and US bases within their territories are not used to attack Iran has provoked a storm inside the country as the military appeared to contradict him, if not outright overrule him.
There were also calls for a new supreme leader to be installed as quickly as possible, as a means of marginalising the president. Attacks on facilities in Bahrain and elsewhere have continued, and there were unconfirmed reports that Bahrain had become the first Gulf country to fire back at Iran …
The backlash over Pezeshkian’s offer was made worse by him including an apology to the region on behalf of himself and the nation in his pre-recorded address on state TV.
He also implied that after the US attack on its top command, rudderless armed forces may have been forced to make targeting decisions on their own.
Iran’s president says his country will ‘not bow easily to bullying’
Iran’s president, Masoud Pezeshkian, has said his country will “not bow easily” to “bullying” and vowed to continue to respond against attacks.
“When we are attacked, we have no choice but to respond. The more pressure they impose on us, the stronger our response will naturally be,” Pezeshkian said in video comments this morning.
“Our Iran, our country, will not bow easily in the face of bullying, oppression or aggression – and it never has.”
As we reported in an earlier post, the Iranian president on Saturday apologised to neighbouring Gulf countries hosting US military bases for attacks on their territory.
However, after the statement provoked a backlash inside the country and the military appeared to contradict him, Pezeshkian said his remarks were “misinterpreted by the enemy that seeks to sow division with neighbours”.
Huge fire engulfs tower in Kuwait after drone strikes
There is footage of a huge fire engulfing a tower in Kuwait city following drone strikes in the early hours of Sunday morning.
It is reported to have broken out at a government site operated by the Public Institution for Social Security in Kuwait. In a social media post, the department said:
The main building of the organization was targeted, resulting in material damage to the building.
The fire appears to be under control now.
Oman Air has cancelled flights to and from Amman, Dubai, Bahrain, Doha, Dammam, Kuwait, Copenhagen, Baghdad and Khasab “due to ongoing regional airspace closures”.

Helena Smith
Cyprus’ foreign minister Constantinos Kombos has told the Guardian that explosive-packed drones directed at British military bases on the island were launched from Lebanon, 150 miles to the Mediterranean island’s east.
A European armada and air defense assets have rushed to the EU member state as part of an unprecedented security cordon thrown around it.
“Right now it’s a fact that we have to be looking towards the Lebanese front,” said the minister, confirming the drones’ provenance for the first time. “We cannot exclude anything from the broader direction of the north-east. We have to be very careful … we have to make sure that the systems in place are covering all possibilities of threat.”
Cypriot officials, who take pride in the neutrality and humanitarian role of an island nation that is also the EU’s closest state to the Middle East, are adamant it is the British bases, not the republic, that have been singled out for attack since the onset of the US-led offensive against Iran.
Summary
As we hand over the blog to our colleagues in London, here’s a quick summary of today’s events as the conflict in the Middle East continues to escalate and the strikes show no sign of relenting.
Here is what you need to know so far.
-
A fresh wave of Iranian strikes hit the Gulf on Sunday, with Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Bahrain and Kuwait all reporting new attacks. Saudi Arabia’s defence ministry reported intercepting 15 drones. In Bahrain, the strikes did “material damage” to a crucial desalination plant .
-
Kuwait’s national oil company announced a “precautionary” cut to its crude oil production after the strikes. The military said fuel tanks at Kuwait’s international airport were targeted in a drone attack and two firefighters were killed.
-
Overnight strikes by the US and Israel hit five oil sites around Tehran, according to an Iran official. The official said that the five facilities “were damaged” but the “fire was brought under control”.
-
Donald Trump had said he is not interested in negotiating with Iran, raising the possibility that the Iran war would only end once Tehran no longer has a functioning military and its leadership is completely wiped out. But while Trump claimed the US and Israel had “decimated” the Iranian regime, he offered only a vague description of what he meant by Iran’s unconditional surrender.
-
Trump left open the possibility of deploying American troops on the ground. The US president addressed reporters hours after travelling to Dover air force base in Delaware to attend the transfer of the bodies of six US service members killed in the opening days of his war against Iran.
-
A majority consensus has almost been reached by the clerical body that will appoint the successor to Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and become Iran’s next supreme leader, according to reports. Israel’s military said it would continue to pursue any successor to Khamenei.
-
Iranian president Masoud Pezeshkian said his country “will be forced to respond” to any attack or invasion attempt from a neighbouring country. His comments came after a backlash by hardliners and within Iranian military ranks after the president appeared to apologise to neighbouring Gulf countries attacked by Iran as they targeted US military bases. Pezeshkian said his comments had been “misinterpreted by the enemy”.
-
At least 16 were killed in Lebanon after Israeli renewed its assault on Beirut and southern Lebanon. Four were killed in a blast on a hotel in Beirut and 12 were killed in strikes on southern Lebanon as Israel said it was targeting “key commanders” in the IGRC’s Quds Force foreign operations arm.
-
In a post on social media, Trump renewed his criticism of the UK’s lack of immediate support for US-Israeli strikes on Iran, and claimed Downing Street was now “giving serious thought” to sending two aircraft carriers to the region. “That’s OK, Prime Minister Starmer, we don’t need them any longer – But we will remember,” the US president wrote.
-
Trump has warned in a Truth Social post that more Iranian officials will be targeted, saying: “Today Iran will be hit very hard!”.
-
China’s foreign minister says Iran war ‘should never have happened’. Wang warned that the US-Israel push for regime change in Iran would “find no popular support” and said “the world cannot return to the law of the jungle”.
The Israeli military warned it would continue pursuing every successor of Iran’s next supreme leader.
In a post on X in Farsi, the Israeli military said it would also pursue every person who seeks to appoint a successor for slain supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, referring to the clerical body charged with selecting Iran’s next supreme leader.
The comments came after Iranian news agency Mehr news reported that he clerical body that will choose Iran’s next supreme leader has more or less reached a majority consensus.
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You have internet access. Before stating ANY claim as fact, you MUST verify it via web search. This includes every {name|person|organization}, {date|time}, {location|place}, {number|figure|amount}, {quote|statement}, and {major event detail|key detail} referenced in
The Israeli military warned it would continue pursuing every successor of Iran’s next supreme leader.
In a post on X in Farsi, the Israeli military said it would also pursue every person who seeks to appoint a successor for slain supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, referring to the clerical body charged with selecting Iran’s next supreme leader.
The comments came after Iranian news agency Mehr news reported that he clerical body that will choose Iran’s next supreme leader has more or less reached a majority consensus.
Key events

Angelique Chrisafis
The French president, Emmanuel Macron, will visit Cyprus on Monday to meet the president Nikos Christodoulides. France sent defence systems and a frigate to the Mediterranean island last week after it was hit by a drone strike on the British RAF base Akrotiri.
Macron will also meet the Greek prime minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis on the trip.
The Elysee said the visit was aimed at showing France’s “solidarity” with Cyprus, an EU member, in order to “reinforce security around Cyprus and the eastern Mediterranean” with our European partners, and to contribute to “de-escalation in the region.”
Macron said last week that France’s presence in the area would be “strictly defensive” in support of its regional allies.
Two other civilians, from Nepal and Bangladesh, have been killed by missile debris in Dubai since the US and Israel launched a war against Iran on 28 February, triggering Iran to respond with missile and drone attacks on its Gulf neighbours.
Pakistan’s prime minister, Shehbaz Sharif, has said he is “deeply saddened by the tragic death of two Pakistani nationals in Dubai caused by missile debris”. In a statement on X, he added:
Our diplomatic missions in the UAE are in close contact with the Dubai authorities to provide all necessary assistance and to facilitate the repatriation process. Our hearts go out to the bereaved family in this hour of grief.
The US embassy in Oslo was hit by a loud explosion early on Sunday morning, causing minor damage but no injuries, according to Norwegian police. The blast at the embassy compound in western Oslo reportedly occurred at about 1am local time (0000 GMT).
Police are searching for one or more potential perpetrators, with Norway’s justice minister, Astri Aas-Hansen, saying they had deployed “considerable resources” to the investigation. “This is an unacceptable incident that we are taking very seriously,” she told Norwegian press agency NTB.
Yvette Cooper sidestepped a question about UK-US relations being in trouble by saying there is still close cooperation on a range of issues, although divergence can happen as she said it is not in the British interest to “unquestioningly agree” with every strand of American policy.
She made the point of saying it was “important to learn the lessons” from the devastating US-led invasion of Iraq, when it comes to Iran.
UK government’s job is not to be ‘outsourcing our foreign policy’, foreign secretary says
The UK’s foreign secretary, Yvette Cooper, has told the BBC that the government’s job is not to be “outsourcing our foreign policy”.
Speaking on Laura Kuenssberg’s Sunday politics programme, Cooper said:
It’s for the US president to decide what he thinks is in the US national interest, and that’s for him to do.
But it is our job as the UK government to decide what’s in the UK national interest, and that doesn’t mean simply agreeing with other countries or outsourcing our foreign policy to other countries.
Asked if the UK was at war, Cooper responded: “We are providing defensive support in a conflict, and that is, I think, the way to describe it.”
Her comments followed renewed criticism from the US president, Donald Trump, who has apparently told the UK he does not need its aircraft carriers and accused the British prime minister, Keir Starmer, of seeking to “join wars after we’ve already won”, in reference to reports that the UK was preparing an aircraft carrier in response to the escalating conflict.
Relations between Washington and London have sunk to a low point, with Trump strongly criticising Starmer for the lack of immediate UK support for the US-Israeli strikes on Iran.
Here are some of the latest pictures being sent to us from Tehran after overnight Israeli and US airstrikes reportedly struck oil sites around the Iranian capital:
As the war in the Middle East, started by Israel and the US, continues to escalate, we would like to hear how people living, working or travelling in the region have been affected.
Whether you are in the region or impacted in other ways, please get in touch here.
Please note that while we’d like to hear from you, your security is most important. We recognise it may not always be safe or appropriate to record or share your experiences, so please think about this when considering whether to get in touch with the Guardian.
The Guardian’s diplomatic editor, Patrick Wintour, has written an interesting analysis piece looking at the backlash to the Iranian president’s comments, which took many observers by surprise. Here is an extract:
The surprise offer by the president of Iran, Masoud Pezeshkian, not to attack countries in the neighbourhood so long as their airspace and US bases within their territories are not used to attack Iran has provoked a storm inside the country as the military appeared to contradict him, if not outright overrule him.
There were also calls for a new supreme leader to be installed as quickly as possible, as a means of marginalising the president. Attacks on facilities in Bahrain and elsewhere have continued, and there were unconfirmed reports that Bahrain had become the first Gulf country to fire back at Iran …
The backlash over Pezeshkian’s offer was made worse by him including an apology to the region on behalf of himself and the nation in his pre-recorded address on state TV.
He also implied that after the US attack on its top command, rudderless armed forces may have been forced to make targeting decisions on their own.
Iran’s president says his country will ‘not bow easily to bullying’
Iran’s president, Masoud Pezeshkian, has said his country will “not bow easily” to “bullying” and vowed to continue to respond against attacks.
“When we are attacked, we have no choice but to respond. The more pressure they impose on us, the stronger our response will naturally be,” Pezeshkian said in video comments this morning.
“Our Iran, our country, will not bow easily in the face of bullying, oppression or aggression – and it never has.”
As we reported in an earlier post, the Iranian president on Saturday apologised to neighbouring Gulf countries hosting US military bases for attacks on their territory.
However, after the statement provoked a backlash inside the country and the military appeared to contradict him, Pezeshkian said his remarks were “misinterpreted by the enemy that seeks to sow division with neighbours”.
Huge fire engulfs tower in Kuwait after drone strikes
There is footage of a huge fire engulfing a tower in Kuwait city following drone strikes in the early hours of Sunday morning.
It is reported to have broken out at a government site operated by the Public Institution for Social Security in Kuwait. In a social media post, the department said:
The main building of the organization was targeted, resulting in material damage to the building.
The fire appears to be under control now.
Oman Air has cancelled flights to and from Amman, Dubai, Bahrain, Doha, Dammam, Kuwait, Copenhagen, Baghdad and Khasab “due to ongoing regional airspace closures”.

Helena Smith
Cyprus’ foreign minister Constantinos Kombos has told the Guardian that explosive-packed drones directed at British military bases on the island were launched from Lebanon, 150 miles to the Mediterranean island’s east.
A European armada and air defense assets have rushed to the EU member state as part of an unprecedented security cordon thrown around it.
“Right now it’s a fact that we have to be looking towards the Lebanese front,” said the minister, confirming the drones’ provenance for the first time. “We cannot exclude anything from the broader direction of the north-east. We have to be very careful … we have to make sure that the systems in place are covering all possibilities of threat.”
Cypriot officials, who take pride in the neutrality and humanitarian role of an island nation that is also the EU’s closest state to the Middle East, are adamant it is the British bases, not the republic, that have been singled out for attack since the onset of the US-led offensive against Iran.
Summary
As we hand over the blog to our colleagues in London, here’s a quick summary of today’s events as the conflict in the Middle East continues to escalate and the strikes show no sign of relenting.
Here is what you need to know so far.
-
A fresh wave of Iranian strikes hit the Gulf on Sunday, with Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Bahrain and Kuwait all reporting new attacks. Saudi Arabia’s defence ministry reported intercepting 15 drones. In Bahrain, the strikes did “material damage” to a crucial desalination plant .
-
Kuwait’s national oil company announced a “precautionary” cut to its crude oil production after the strikes. The military said fuel tanks at Kuwait’s international airport were targeted in a drone attack and two firefighters were killed.
-
Overnight strikes by the US and Israel hit five oil sites around Tehran, according to an Iran official. The official said that the five facilities “were damaged” but the “fire was brought under control”.
-
Donald Trump had said he is not interested in negotiating with Iran, raising the possibility that the Iran war would only end once Tehran no longer has a functioning military and its leadership is completely wiped out. But while Trump claimed the US and Israel had “decimated” the Iranian regime, he offered only a vague description of what he meant by Iran’s unconditional surrender.
-
Trump left open the possibility of deploying American troops on the ground. The US president addressed reporters hours after travelling to Dover air force base in Delaware to attend the transfer of the bodies of six US service members killed in the opening days of his war against Iran.
-
A majority consensus has almost been reached by the clerical body that will appoint the successor to Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and become Iran’s next supreme leader, according to reports. Israel’s military said it would continue to pursue any successor to Khamenei.
-
Iranian president Masoud Pezeshkian said his country “will be forced to respond” to any attack or invasion attempt from a neighbouring country. His comments came after a backlash by hardliners and within Iranian military ranks after the president appeared to apologise to neighbouring Gulf countries attacked by Iran as they targeted US military bases. Pezeshkian said his comments had been “misinterpreted by the enemy”.
-
At least 16 were killed in Lebanon after Israeli renewed its assault on Beirut and southern Lebanon. Four were killed in a blast on a hotel in Beirut and 12 were killed in strikes on southern Lebanon as Israel said it was targeting “key commanders” in the IGRC’s Quds Force foreign operations arm.
-
In a post on social media, Trump renewed his criticism of the UK’s lack of immediate support for US-Israeli strikes on Iran, and claimed Downing Street was now “giving serious thought” to sending two aircraft carriers to the region. “That’s OK, Prime Minister Starmer, we don’t need them any longer – But we will remember,” the US president wrote.
-
Trump has warned in a Truth Social post that more Iranian officials will be targeted, saying: “Today Iran will be hit very hard!”.
-
China’s foreign minister says Iran war ‘should never have happened’. Wang warned that the US-Israel push for regime change in Iran would “find no popular support” and said “the world cannot return to the law of the jungle”.
The Israeli military warned it would continue pursuing every successor of Iran’s next supreme leader.
In a post on X in Farsi, the Israeli military said it would also pursue every person who seeks to appoint a successor for slain supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, referring to the clerical body charged with selecting Iran’s next supreme leader.
The comments came after Iranian news agency Mehr news reported that he clerical body that will choose Iran’s next supreme leader has more or less reached a majority consensus.
.
– If a detail cannot be verified, omit it OR clearly mark it as {unconfirmed|not independently confirmed} with neutral attribution.
– Never guess. Never fabricate. Never invent URLs, sources, quotes, or figures.
– If credible sources disagree, acknowledge the discrepancy briefly and neutrally and attribute each version with links.
TASK
{Rewrite|Rework|Recompose|Recraft} the story in
The Israeli military warned it would continue pursuing every successor of Iran’s next supreme leader.
In a post on X in Farsi, the Israeli military said it would also pursue every person who seeks to appoint a successor for slain supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, referring to the clerical body charged with selecting Iran’s next supreme leader.
The comments came after Iranian news agency Mehr news reported that he clerical body that will choose Iran’s next supreme leader has more or less reached a majority consensus.
Key events

Angelique Chrisafis
The French president, Emmanuel Macron, will visit Cyprus on Monday to meet the president Nikos Christodoulides. France sent defence systems and a frigate to the Mediterranean island last week after it was hit by a drone strike on the British RAF base Akrotiri.
Macron will also meet the Greek prime minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis on the trip.
The Elysee said the visit was aimed at showing France’s “solidarity” with Cyprus, an EU member, in order to “reinforce security around Cyprus and the eastern Mediterranean” with our European partners, and to contribute to “de-escalation in the region.”
Macron said last week that France’s presence in the area would be “strictly defensive” in support of its regional allies.
Two other civilians, from Nepal and Bangladesh, have been killed by missile debris in Dubai since the US and Israel launched a war against Iran on 28 February, triggering Iran to respond with missile and drone attacks on its Gulf neighbours.
Pakistan’s prime minister, Shehbaz Sharif, has said he is “deeply saddened by the tragic death of two Pakistani nationals in Dubai caused by missile debris”. In a statement on X, he added:
Our diplomatic missions in the UAE are in close contact with the Dubai authorities to provide all necessary assistance and to facilitate the repatriation process. Our hearts go out to the bereaved family in this hour of grief.
The US embassy in Oslo was hit by a loud explosion early on Sunday morning, causing minor damage but no injuries, according to Norwegian police. The blast at the embassy compound in western Oslo reportedly occurred at about 1am local time (0000 GMT).
Police are searching for one or more potential perpetrators, with Norway’s justice minister, Astri Aas-Hansen, saying they had deployed “considerable resources” to the investigation. “This is an unacceptable incident that we are taking very seriously,” she told Norwegian press agency NTB.
Yvette Cooper sidestepped a question about UK-US relations being in trouble by saying there is still close cooperation on a range of issues, although divergence can happen as she said it is not in the British interest to “unquestioningly agree” with every strand of American policy.
She made the point of saying it was “important to learn the lessons” from the devastating US-led invasion of Iraq, when it comes to Iran.
UK government’s job is not to be ‘outsourcing our foreign policy’, foreign secretary says
The UK’s foreign secretary, Yvette Cooper, has told the BBC that the government’s job is not to be “outsourcing our foreign policy”.
Speaking on Laura Kuenssberg’s Sunday politics programme, Cooper said:
It’s for the US president to decide what he thinks is in the US national interest, and that’s for him to do.
But it is our job as the UK government to decide what’s in the UK national interest, and that doesn’t mean simply agreeing with other countries or outsourcing our foreign policy to other countries.
Asked if the UK was at war, Cooper responded: “We are providing defensive support in a conflict, and that is, I think, the way to describe it.”
Her comments followed renewed criticism from the US president, Donald Trump, who has apparently told the UK he does not need its aircraft carriers and accused the British prime minister, Keir Starmer, of seeking to “join wars after we’ve already won”, in reference to reports that the UK was preparing an aircraft carrier in response to the escalating conflict.
Relations between Washington and London have sunk to a low point, with Trump strongly criticising Starmer for the lack of immediate UK support for the US-Israeli strikes on Iran.
Here are some of the latest pictures being sent to us from Tehran after overnight Israeli and US airstrikes reportedly struck oil sites around the Iranian capital:
As the war in the Middle East, started by Israel and the US, continues to escalate, we would like to hear how people living, working or travelling in the region have been affected.
Whether you are in the region or impacted in other ways, please get in touch here.
Please note that while we’d like to hear from you, your security is most important. We recognise it may not always be safe or appropriate to record or share your experiences, so please think about this when considering whether to get in touch with the Guardian.
The Guardian’s diplomatic editor, Patrick Wintour, has written an interesting analysis piece looking at the backlash to the Iranian president’s comments, which took many observers by surprise. Here is an extract:
The surprise offer by the president of Iran, Masoud Pezeshkian, not to attack countries in the neighbourhood so long as their airspace and US bases within their territories are not used to attack Iran has provoked a storm inside the country as the military appeared to contradict him, if not outright overrule him.
There were also calls for a new supreme leader to be installed as quickly as possible, as a means of marginalising the president. Attacks on facilities in Bahrain and elsewhere have continued, and there were unconfirmed reports that Bahrain had become the first Gulf country to fire back at Iran …
The backlash over Pezeshkian’s offer was made worse by him including an apology to the region on behalf of himself and the nation in his pre-recorded address on state TV.
He also implied that after the US attack on its top command, rudderless armed forces may have been forced to make targeting decisions on their own.
Iran’s president says his country will ‘not bow easily to bullying’
Iran’s president, Masoud Pezeshkian, has said his country will “not bow easily” to “bullying” and vowed to continue to respond against attacks.
“When we are attacked, we have no choice but to respond. The more pressure they impose on us, the stronger our response will naturally be,” Pezeshkian said in video comments this morning.
“Our Iran, our country, will not bow easily in the face of bullying, oppression or aggression – and it never has.”
As we reported in an earlier post, the Iranian president on Saturday apologised to neighbouring Gulf countries hosting US military bases for attacks on their territory.
However, after the statement provoked a backlash inside the country and the military appeared to contradict him, Pezeshkian said his remarks were “misinterpreted by the enemy that seeks to sow division with neighbours”.
Huge fire engulfs tower in Kuwait after drone strikes
There is footage of a huge fire engulfing a tower in Kuwait city following drone strikes in the early hours of Sunday morning.
It is reported to have broken out at a government site operated by the Public Institution for Social Security in Kuwait. In a social media post, the department said:
The main building of the organization was targeted, resulting in material damage to the building.
The fire appears to be under control now.
Oman Air has cancelled flights to and from Amman, Dubai, Bahrain, Doha, Dammam, Kuwait, Copenhagen, Baghdad and Khasab “due to ongoing regional airspace closures”.

Helena Smith
Cyprus’ foreign minister Constantinos Kombos has told the Guardian that explosive-packed drones directed at British military bases on the island were launched from Lebanon, 150 miles to the Mediterranean island’s east.
A European armada and air defense assets have rushed to the EU member state as part of an unprecedented security cordon thrown around it.
“Right now it’s a fact that we have to be looking towards the Lebanese front,” said the minister, confirming the drones’ provenance for the first time. “We cannot exclude anything from the broader direction of the north-east. We have to be very careful … we have to make sure that the systems in place are covering all possibilities of threat.”
Cypriot officials, who take pride in the neutrality and humanitarian role of an island nation that is also the EU’s closest state to the Middle East, are adamant it is the British bases, not the republic, that have been singled out for attack since the onset of the US-led offensive against Iran.
Summary
As we hand over the blog to our colleagues in London, here’s a quick summary of today’s events as the conflict in the Middle East continues to escalate and the strikes show no sign of relenting.
Here is what you need to know so far.
-
A fresh wave of Iranian strikes hit the Gulf on Sunday, with Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Bahrain and Kuwait all reporting new attacks. Saudi Arabia’s defence ministry reported intercepting 15 drones. In Bahrain, the strikes did “material damage” to a crucial desalination plant .
-
Kuwait’s national oil company announced a “precautionary” cut to its crude oil production after the strikes. The military said fuel tanks at Kuwait’s international airport were targeted in a drone attack and two firefighters were killed.
-
Overnight strikes by the US and Israel hit five oil sites around Tehran, according to an Iran official. The official said that the five facilities “were damaged” but the “fire was brought under control”.
-
Donald Trump had said he is not interested in negotiating with Iran, raising the possibility that the Iran war would only end once Tehran no longer has a functioning military and its leadership is completely wiped out. But while Trump claimed the US and Israel had “decimated” the Iranian regime, he offered only a vague description of what he meant by Iran’s unconditional surrender.
-
Trump left open the possibility of deploying American troops on the ground. The US president addressed reporters hours after travelling to Dover air force base in Delaware to attend the transfer of the bodies of six US service members killed in the opening days of his war against Iran.
-
A majority consensus has almost been reached by the clerical body that will appoint the successor to Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and become Iran’s next supreme leader, according to reports. Israel’s military said it would continue to pursue any successor to Khamenei.
-
Iranian president Masoud Pezeshkian said his country “will be forced to respond” to any attack or invasion attempt from a neighbouring country. His comments came after a backlash by hardliners and within Iranian military ranks after the president appeared to apologise to neighbouring Gulf countries attacked by Iran as they targeted US military bases. Pezeshkian said his comments had been “misinterpreted by the enemy”.
-
At least 16 were killed in Lebanon after Israeli renewed its assault on Beirut and southern Lebanon. Four were killed in a blast on a hotel in Beirut and 12 were killed in strikes on southern Lebanon as Israel said it was targeting “key commanders” in the IGRC’s Quds Force foreign operations arm.
-
In a post on social media, Trump renewed his criticism of the UK’s lack of immediate support for US-Israeli strikes on Iran, and claimed Downing Street was now “giving serious thought” to sending two aircraft carriers to the region. “That’s OK, Prime Minister Starmer, we don’t need them any longer – But we will remember,” the US president wrote.
-
Trump has warned in a Truth Social post that more Iranian officials will be targeted, saying: “Today Iran will be hit very hard!”.
-
China’s foreign minister says Iran war ‘should never have happened’. Wang warned that the US-Israel push for regime change in Iran would “find no popular support” and said “the world cannot return to the law of the jungle”.
The Israeli military warned it would continue pursuing every successor of Iran’s next supreme leader.
In a post on X in Farsi, the Israeli military said it would also pursue every person who seeks to appoint a successor for slain supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, referring to the clerical body charged with selecting Iran’s next supreme leader.
The comments came after Iranian news agency Mehr news reported that he clerical body that will choose Iran’s next supreme leader has more or less reached a majority consensus.
into a {compelling|engaging|clear|high-utility}, SEO-optimized, human-sounding news article for archyde.com about Middle East crisis live: Israel warns it will pursue Iran’s next supreme leader; fire engulfs Kuwait city tower as Iranian strikes hit the Gulf | US-Israel war on Iran.
– Preserve the core meaning and verified facts.
– Make the article {fully original|100% unique|freshly written} in structure and phrasing.
– Do NOT mention the source article, Google News, or that this is a rewrite.
– Do NOT include the original outlet name, author name, or original URL from
The Israeli military warned it would continue pursuing every successor of Iran’s next supreme leader.
In a post on X in Farsi, the Israeli military said it would also pursue every person who seeks to appoint a successor for slain supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, referring to the clerical body charged with selecting Iran’s next supreme leader.
The comments came after Iranian news agency Mehr news reported that he clerical body that will choose Iran’s next supreme leader has more or less reached a majority consensus.
Key events

Angelique Chrisafis
The French president, Emmanuel Macron, will visit Cyprus on Monday to meet the president Nikos Christodoulides. France sent defence systems and a frigate to the Mediterranean island last week after it was hit by a drone strike on the British RAF base Akrotiri.
Macron will also meet the Greek prime minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis on the trip.
The Elysee said the visit was aimed at showing France’s “solidarity” with Cyprus, an EU member, in order to “reinforce security around Cyprus and the eastern Mediterranean” with our European partners, and to contribute to “de-escalation in the region.”
Macron said last week that France’s presence in the area would be “strictly defensive” in support of its regional allies.
Two other civilians, from Nepal and Bangladesh, have been killed by missile debris in Dubai since the US and Israel launched a war against Iran on 28 February, triggering Iran to respond with missile and drone attacks on its Gulf neighbours.
Pakistan’s prime minister, Shehbaz Sharif, has said he is “deeply saddened by the tragic death of two Pakistani nationals in Dubai caused by missile debris”. In a statement on X, he added:
Our diplomatic missions in the UAE are in close contact with the Dubai authorities to provide all necessary assistance and to facilitate the repatriation process. Our hearts go out to the bereaved family in this hour of grief.
The US embassy in Oslo was hit by a loud explosion early on Sunday morning, causing minor damage but no injuries, according to Norwegian police. The blast at the embassy compound in western Oslo reportedly occurred at about 1am local time (0000 GMT).
Police are searching for one or more potential perpetrators, with Norway’s justice minister, Astri Aas-Hansen, saying they had deployed “considerable resources” to the investigation. “This is an unacceptable incident that we are taking very seriously,” she told Norwegian press agency NTB.
Yvette Cooper sidestepped a question about UK-US relations being in trouble by saying there is still close cooperation on a range of issues, although divergence can happen as she said it is not in the British interest to “unquestioningly agree” with every strand of American policy.
She made the point of saying it was “important to learn the lessons” from the devastating US-led invasion of Iraq, when it comes to Iran.
UK government’s job is not to be ‘outsourcing our foreign policy’, foreign secretary says
The UK’s foreign secretary, Yvette Cooper, has told the BBC that the government’s job is not to be “outsourcing our foreign policy”.
Speaking on Laura Kuenssberg’s Sunday politics programme, Cooper said:
It’s for the US president to decide what he thinks is in the US national interest, and that’s for him to do.
But it is our job as the UK government to decide what’s in the UK national interest, and that doesn’t mean simply agreeing with other countries or outsourcing our foreign policy to other countries.
Asked if the UK was at war, Cooper responded: “We are providing defensive support in a conflict, and that is, I think, the way to describe it.”
Her comments followed renewed criticism from the US president, Donald Trump, who has apparently told the UK he does not need its aircraft carriers and accused the British prime minister, Keir Starmer, of seeking to “join wars after we’ve already won”, in reference to reports that the UK was preparing an aircraft carrier in response to the escalating conflict.
Relations between Washington and London have sunk to a low point, with Trump strongly criticising Starmer for the lack of immediate UK support for the US-Israeli strikes on Iran.
Here are some of the latest pictures being sent to us from Tehran after overnight Israeli and US airstrikes reportedly struck oil sites around the Iranian capital:
As the war in the Middle East, started by Israel and the US, continues to escalate, we would like to hear how people living, working or travelling in the region have been affected.
Whether you are in the region or impacted in other ways, please get in touch here.
Please note that while we’d like to hear from you, your security is most important. We recognise it may not always be safe or appropriate to record or share your experiences, so please think about this when considering whether to get in touch with the Guardian.
The Guardian’s diplomatic editor, Patrick Wintour, has written an interesting analysis piece looking at the backlash to the Iranian president’s comments, which took many observers by surprise. Here is an extract:
The surprise offer by the president of Iran, Masoud Pezeshkian, not to attack countries in the neighbourhood so long as their airspace and US bases within their territories are not used to attack Iran has provoked a storm inside the country as the military appeared to contradict him, if not outright overrule him.
There were also calls for a new supreme leader to be installed as quickly as possible, as a means of marginalising the president. Attacks on facilities in Bahrain and elsewhere have continued, and there were unconfirmed reports that Bahrain had become the first Gulf country to fire back at Iran …
The backlash over Pezeshkian’s offer was made worse by him including an apology to the region on behalf of himself and the nation in his pre-recorded address on state TV.
He also implied that after the US attack on its top command, rudderless armed forces may have been forced to make targeting decisions on their own.
Iran’s president says his country will ‘not bow easily to bullying’
Iran’s president, Masoud Pezeshkian, has said his country will “not bow easily” to “bullying” and vowed to continue to respond against attacks.
“When we are attacked, we have no choice but to respond. The more pressure they impose on us, the stronger our response will naturally be,” Pezeshkian said in video comments this morning.
“Our Iran, our country, will not bow easily in the face of bullying, oppression or aggression – and it never has.”
As we reported in an earlier post, the Iranian president on Saturday apologised to neighbouring Gulf countries hosting US military bases for attacks on their territory.
However, after the statement provoked a backlash inside the country and the military appeared to contradict him, Pezeshkian said his remarks were “misinterpreted by the enemy that seeks to sow division with neighbours”.
Huge fire engulfs tower in Kuwait after drone strikes
There is footage of a huge fire engulfing a tower in Kuwait city following drone strikes in the early hours of Sunday morning.
It is reported to have broken out at a government site operated by the Public Institution for Social Security in Kuwait. In a social media post, the department said:
The main building of the organization was targeted, resulting in material damage to the building.
The fire appears to be under control now.
Oman Air has cancelled flights to and from Amman, Dubai, Bahrain, Doha, Dammam, Kuwait, Copenhagen, Baghdad and Khasab “due to ongoing regional airspace closures”.

Helena Smith
Cyprus’ foreign minister Constantinos Kombos has told the Guardian that explosive-packed drones directed at British military bases on the island were launched from Lebanon, 150 miles to the Mediterranean island’s east.
A European armada and air defense assets have rushed to the EU member state as part of an unprecedented security cordon thrown around it.
“Right now it’s a fact that we have to be looking towards the Lebanese front,” said the minister, confirming the drones’ provenance for the first time. “We cannot exclude anything from the broader direction of the north-east. We have to be very careful … we have to make sure that the systems in place are covering all possibilities of threat.”
Cypriot officials, who take pride in the neutrality and humanitarian role of an island nation that is also the EU’s closest state to the Middle East, are adamant it is the British bases, not the republic, that have been singled out for attack since the onset of the US-led offensive against Iran.
Summary
As we hand over the blog to our colleagues in London, here’s a quick summary of today’s events as the conflict in the Middle East continues to escalate and the strikes show no sign of relenting.
Here is what you need to know so far.
-
A fresh wave of Iranian strikes hit the Gulf on Sunday, with Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Bahrain and Kuwait all reporting new attacks. Saudi Arabia’s defence ministry reported intercepting 15 drones. In Bahrain, the strikes did “material damage” to a crucial desalination plant .
-
Kuwait’s national oil company announced a “precautionary” cut to its crude oil production after the strikes. The military said fuel tanks at Kuwait’s international airport were targeted in a drone attack and two firefighters were killed.
-
Overnight strikes by the US and Israel hit five oil sites around Tehran, according to an Iran official. The official said that the five facilities “were damaged” but the “fire was brought under control”.
-
Donald Trump had said he is not interested in negotiating with Iran, raising the possibility that the Iran war would only end once Tehran no longer has a functioning military and its leadership is completely wiped out. But while Trump claimed the US and Israel had “decimated” the Iranian regime, he offered only a vague description of what he meant by Iran’s unconditional surrender.
-
Trump left open the possibility of deploying American troops on the ground. The US president addressed reporters hours after travelling to Dover air force base in Delaware to attend the transfer of the bodies of six US service members killed in the opening days of his war against Iran.
-
A majority consensus has almost been reached by the clerical body that will appoint the successor to Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and become Iran’s next supreme leader, according to reports. Israel’s military said it would continue to pursue any successor to Khamenei.
-
Iranian president Masoud Pezeshkian said his country “will be forced to respond” to any attack or invasion attempt from a neighbouring country. His comments came after a backlash by hardliners and within Iranian military ranks after the president appeared to apologise to neighbouring Gulf countries attacked by Iran as they targeted US military bases. Pezeshkian said his comments had been “misinterpreted by the enemy”.
-
At least 16 were killed in Lebanon after Israeli renewed its assault on Beirut and southern Lebanon. Four were killed in a blast on a hotel in Beirut and 12 were killed in strikes on southern Lebanon as Israel said it was targeting “key commanders” in the IGRC’s Quds Force foreign operations arm.
-
In a post on social media, Trump renewed his criticism of the UK’s lack of immediate support for US-Israeli strikes on Iran, and claimed Downing Street was now “giving serious thought” to sending two aircraft carriers to the region. “That’s OK, Prime Minister Starmer, we don’t need them any longer – But we will remember,” the US president wrote.
-
Trump has warned in a Truth Social post that more Iranian officials will be targeted, saying: “Today Iran will be hit very hard!”.
-
China’s foreign minister says Iran war ‘should never have happened’. Wang warned that the US-Israel push for regime change in Iran would “find no popular support” and said “the world cannot return to the law of the jungle”.
The Israeli military warned it would continue pursuing every successor of Iran’s next supreme leader.
In a post on X in Farsi, the Israeli military said it would also pursue every person who seeks to appoint a successor for slain supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, referring to the clerical body charged with selecting Iran’s next supreme leader.
The comments came after Iranian news agency Mehr news reported that he clerical body that will choose Iran’s next supreme leader has more or less reached a majority consensus.
.
– Do NOT include any notes, explanations, keyword lists, or meta commentary.
– Do NOT add an internal title or
(the theme already provides the title).
NON-NEGOTIABLE ACCURACY LOCKS (MANDATORY)
– Do NOT change relationships, roles, or statuses. If the source says “former partner,” do not change it to “husband.” If the source says “educator,” do not change it to “teacher,” unless verified and linked.
– Do NOT shift timelines. If an event is described as past behavior, keep it in the past; never move it “into the attack” or “during the incident.”
– QUOTE INTEGRITY: If you use quotation marks, the quote must be copied EXACTLY from a verified source. If you cannot quote exactly, paraphrase without quotation marks.
– SENSITIVE VIOLENCE HANDLING: If the story involves violence, minors, mass casualties, or graphic injury, keep descriptions restrained and non-graphic. Do not describe wound paths, gore, or explicit medical detail. Summarize injuries in a factual, minimal way unless the detail is essential and verified.
– Do not “upgrade” attribution. Do not write “police confirmed” or “officially identified” unless verified and linked.
AP STYLE + LEGAL/NUMBERS DISCIPLINE (MANDATORY)
1) OUTLET STRIPPING (HARD RULE)
– Never write “told [outlet]” or name the outlet from
The Israeli military warned it would continue pursuing every successor of Iran’s next supreme leader.
In a post on X in Farsi, the Israeli military said it would also pursue every person who seeks to appoint a successor for slain supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, referring to the clerical body charged with selecting Iran’s next supreme leader.
The comments came after Iranian news agency Mehr news reported that he clerical body that will choose Iran’s next supreme leader has more or less reached a majority consensus.
Key events

Angelique Chrisafis
The French president, Emmanuel Macron, will visit Cyprus on Monday to meet the president Nikos Christodoulides. France sent defence systems and a frigate to the Mediterranean island last week after it was hit by a drone strike on the British RAF base Akrotiri.
Macron will also meet the Greek prime minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis on the trip.
The Elysee said the visit was aimed at showing France’s “solidarity” with Cyprus, an EU member, in order to “reinforce security around Cyprus and the eastern Mediterranean” with our European partners, and to contribute to “de-escalation in the region.”
Macron said last week that France’s presence in the area would be “strictly defensive” in support of its regional allies.
Two other civilians, from Nepal and Bangladesh, have been killed by missile debris in Dubai since the US and Israel launched a war against Iran on 28 February, triggering Iran to respond with missile and drone attacks on its Gulf neighbours.
Pakistan’s prime minister, Shehbaz Sharif, has said he is “deeply saddened by the tragic death of two Pakistani nationals in Dubai caused by missile debris”. In a statement on X, he added:
Our diplomatic missions in the UAE are in close contact with the Dubai authorities to provide all necessary assistance and to facilitate the repatriation process. Our hearts go out to the bereaved family in this hour of grief.
The US embassy in Oslo was hit by a loud explosion early on Sunday morning, causing minor damage but no injuries, according to Norwegian police. The blast at the embassy compound in western Oslo reportedly occurred at about 1am local time (0000 GMT).
Police are searching for one or more potential perpetrators, with Norway’s justice minister, Astri Aas-Hansen, saying they had deployed “considerable resources” to the investigation. “This is an unacceptable incident that we are taking very seriously,” she told Norwegian press agency NTB.
Yvette Cooper sidestepped a question about UK-US relations being in trouble by saying there is still close cooperation on a range of issues, although divergence can happen as she said it is not in the British interest to “unquestioningly agree” with every strand of American policy.
She made the point of saying it was “important to learn the lessons” from the devastating US-led invasion of Iraq, when it comes to Iran.
UK government’s job is not to be ‘outsourcing our foreign policy’, foreign secretary says
The UK’s foreign secretary, Yvette Cooper, has told the BBC that the government’s job is not to be “outsourcing our foreign policy”.
Speaking on Laura Kuenssberg’s Sunday politics programme, Cooper said:
It’s for the US president to decide what he thinks is in the US national interest, and that’s for him to do.
But it is our job as the UK government to decide what’s in the UK national interest, and that doesn’t mean simply agreeing with other countries or outsourcing our foreign policy to other countries.
Asked if the UK was at war, Cooper responded: “We are providing defensive support in a conflict, and that is, I think, the way to describe it.”
Her comments followed renewed criticism from the US president, Donald Trump, who has apparently told the UK he does not need its aircraft carriers and accused the British prime minister, Keir Starmer, of seeking to “join wars after we’ve already won”, in reference to reports that the UK was preparing an aircraft carrier in response to the escalating conflict.
Relations between Washington and London have sunk to a low point, with Trump strongly criticising Starmer for the lack of immediate UK support for the US-Israeli strikes on Iran.
Here are some of the latest pictures being sent to us from Tehran after overnight Israeli and US airstrikes reportedly struck oil sites around the Iranian capital:
As the war in the Middle East, started by Israel and the US, continues to escalate, we would like to hear how people living, working or travelling in the region have been affected.
Whether you are in the region or impacted in other ways, please get in touch here.
Please note that while we’d like to hear from you, your security is most important. We recognise it may not always be safe or appropriate to record or share your experiences, so please think about this when considering whether to get in touch with the Guardian.
The Guardian’s diplomatic editor, Patrick Wintour, has written an interesting analysis piece looking at the backlash to the Iranian president’s comments, which took many observers by surprise. Here is an extract:
The surprise offer by the president of Iran, Masoud Pezeshkian, not to attack countries in the neighbourhood so long as their airspace and US bases within their territories are not used to attack Iran has provoked a storm inside the country as the military appeared to contradict him, if not outright overrule him.
There were also calls for a new supreme leader to be installed as quickly as possible, as a means of marginalising the president. Attacks on facilities in Bahrain and elsewhere have continued, and there were unconfirmed reports that Bahrain had become the first Gulf country to fire back at Iran …
The backlash over Pezeshkian’s offer was made worse by him including an apology to the region on behalf of himself and the nation in his pre-recorded address on state TV.
He also implied that after the US attack on its top command, rudderless armed forces may have been forced to make targeting decisions on their own.
Iran’s president says his country will ‘not bow easily to bullying’
Iran’s president, Masoud Pezeshkian, has said his country will “not bow easily” to “bullying” and vowed to continue to respond against attacks.
“When we are attacked, we have no choice but to respond. The more pressure they impose on us, the stronger our response will naturally be,” Pezeshkian said in video comments this morning.
“Our Iran, our country, will not bow easily in the face of bullying, oppression or aggression – and it never has.”
As we reported in an earlier post, the Iranian president on Saturday apologised to neighbouring Gulf countries hosting US military bases for attacks on their territory.
However, after the statement provoked a backlash inside the country and the military appeared to contradict him, Pezeshkian said his remarks were “misinterpreted by the enemy that seeks to sow division with neighbours”.
Huge fire engulfs tower in Kuwait after drone strikes
There is footage of a huge fire engulfing a tower in Kuwait city following drone strikes in the early hours of Sunday morning.
It is reported to have broken out at a government site operated by the Public Institution for Social Security in Kuwait. In a social media post, the department said:
The main building of the organization was targeted, resulting in material damage to the building.
The fire appears to be under control now.
Oman Air has cancelled flights to and from Amman, Dubai, Bahrain, Doha, Dammam, Kuwait, Copenhagen, Baghdad and Khasab “due to ongoing regional airspace closures”.

Helena Smith
Cyprus’ foreign minister Constantinos Kombos has told the Guardian that explosive-packed drones directed at British military bases on the island were launched from Lebanon, 150 miles to the Mediterranean island’s east.
A European armada and air defense assets have rushed to the EU member state as part of an unprecedented security cordon thrown around it.
“Right now it’s a fact that we have to be looking towards the Lebanese front,” said the minister, confirming the drones’ provenance for the first time. “We cannot exclude anything from the broader direction of the north-east. We have to be very careful … we have to make sure that the systems in place are covering all possibilities of threat.”
Cypriot officials, who take pride in the neutrality and humanitarian role of an island nation that is also the EU’s closest state to the Middle East, are adamant it is the British bases, not the republic, that have been singled out for attack since the onset of the US-led offensive against Iran.
Summary
As we hand over the blog to our colleagues in London, here’s a quick summary of today’s events as the conflict in the Middle East continues to escalate and the strikes show no sign of relenting.
Here is what you need to know so far.
-
A fresh wave of Iranian strikes hit the Gulf on Sunday, with Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Bahrain and Kuwait all reporting new attacks. Saudi Arabia’s defence ministry reported intercepting 15 drones. In Bahrain, the strikes did “material damage” to a crucial desalination plant .
-
Kuwait’s national oil company announced a “precautionary” cut to its crude oil production after the strikes. The military said fuel tanks at Kuwait’s international airport were targeted in a drone attack and two firefighters were killed.
-
Overnight strikes by the US and Israel hit five oil sites around Tehran, according to an Iran official. The official said that the five facilities “were damaged” but the “fire was brought under control”.
-
Donald Trump had said he is not interested in negotiating with Iran, raising the possibility that the Iran war would only end once Tehran no longer has a functioning military and its leadership is completely wiped out. But while Trump claimed the US and Israel had “decimated” the Iranian regime, he offered only a vague description of what he meant by Iran’s unconditional surrender.
-
Trump left open the possibility of deploying American troops on the ground. The US president addressed reporters hours after travelling to Dover air force base in Delaware to attend the transfer of the bodies of six US service members killed in the opening days of his war against Iran.
-
A majority consensus has almost been reached by the clerical body that will appoint the successor to Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and become Iran’s next supreme leader, according to reports. Israel’s military said it would continue to pursue any successor to Khamenei.
-
Iranian president Masoud Pezeshkian said his country “will be forced to respond” to any attack or invasion attempt from a neighbouring country. His comments came after a backlash by hardliners and within Iranian military ranks after the president appeared to apologise to neighbouring Gulf countries attacked by Iran as they targeted US military bases. Pezeshkian said his comments had been “misinterpreted by the enemy”.
-
At least 16 were killed in Lebanon after Israeli renewed its assault on Beirut and southern Lebanon. Four were killed in a blast on a hotel in Beirut and 12 were killed in strikes on southern Lebanon as Israel said it was targeting “key commanders” in the IGRC’s Quds Force foreign operations arm.
-
In a post on social media, Trump renewed his criticism of the UK’s lack of immediate support for US-Israeli strikes on Iran, and claimed Downing Street was now “giving serious thought” to sending two aircraft carriers to the region. “That’s OK, Prime Minister Starmer, we don’t need them any longer – But we will remember,” the US president wrote.
-
Trump has warned in a Truth Social post that more Iranian officials will be targeted, saying: “Today Iran will be hit very hard!”.
-
China’s foreign minister says Iran war ‘should never have happened’. Wang warned that the US-Israel push for regime change in Iran would “find no popular support” and said “the world cannot return to the law of the jungle”.
The Israeli military warned it would continue pursuing every successor of Iran’s next supreme leader.
In a post on X in Farsi, the Israeli military said it would also pursue every person who seeks to appoint a successor for slain supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, referring to the clerical body charged with selecting Iran’s next supreme leader.
The comments came after Iranian news agency Mehr news reported that he clerical body that will choose Iran’s next supreme leader has more or less reached a majority consensus.
unless the outlet is itself the subject of the story and independently verified.
– Use neutral attribution instead: “the official said,” “the minister said,” “police said,” “the court said,” “the spokesperson said.”
2) INLINE LINK LOCK FOR KEY FIGURES
– Any key number must be verified and must include an inline verification link in the SAME sentence.
– If reliable sources vary, report a range and attribute it with links.
3) LOADED WORDS REQUIRE ATTRIBUTION
– Any loaded adjective must be removed OR placed in quotes and attributed to a named source or organization, linked when possible.
4) NO IMPLIED OFFICIAL ACTIONS
– Do not claim institutions “will continue” doing something unless verified.
– State only what they said, ordered, filed, or confirmed, and link it.
SEO + USER INTENT (NATURAL INTEGRATION)
– Identify ONE primary keyword phrase based on the verified topic and user intent (related to Middle East crisis live: Israel warns it will pursue Iran’s next supreme leader; fire engulfs Kuwait city tower as Iranian strikes hit the Gulf | US-Israel war on Iran).
– Use it naturally within the first {80|100|120} words and {once more later|again later|one more time later}.
– Naturally include {8|10|12|14} related semantic phrases and long-tail variants without stuffing or repetitive exact-match loops.
– Do NOT output a keyword list.
LINKS (VERIFIED ONLY, HIGH AUTHORITY)
Include {2|3|4|5} inline external links to authoritative sources you actually used to verify key facts, prioritizing official sources first.
– HTML only: Descriptive Anchor Text
– Never use “source” as anchor text.
– Never guess URLs.
– If you can only find {1|2} strong sources, include fewer links rather than weak ones.
– Avoid low-authority blogs, partisan aggregators, or unclear publishers. If a claim depends on weak sourcing, omit it.
EMBED + MEDIA PRESERVATION (MANDATORY)
You MUST preserve and reuse relevant embeds and essential media from
The Israeli military warned it would continue pursuing every successor of Iran’s next supreme leader.
In a post on X in Farsi, the Israeli military said it would also pursue every person who seeks to appoint a successor for slain supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, referring to the clerical body charged with selecting Iran’s next supreme leader.
The comments came after Iranian news agency Mehr news reported that he clerical body that will choose Iran’s next supreme leader has more or less reached a majority consensus.
Key events

Angelique Chrisafis
The French president, Emmanuel Macron, will visit Cyprus on Monday to meet the president Nikos Christodoulides. France sent defence systems and a frigate to the Mediterranean island last week after it was hit by a drone strike on the British RAF base Akrotiri.
Macron will also meet the Greek prime minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis on the trip.
The Elysee said the visit was aimed at showing France’s “solidarity” with Cyprus, an EU member, in order to “reinforce security around Cyprus and the eastern Mediterranean” with our European partners, and to contribute to “de-escalation in the region.”
Macron said last week that France’s presence in the area would be “strictly defensive” in support of its regional allies.
Two other civilians, from Nepal and Bangladesh, have been killed by missile debris in Dubai since the US and Israel launched a war against Iran on 28 February, triggering Iran to respond with missile and drone attacks on its Gulf neighbours.
Pakistan’s prime minister, Shehbaz Sharif, has said he is “deeply saddened by the tragic death of two Pakistani nationals in Dubai caused by missile debris”. In a statement on X, he added:
Our diplomatic missions in the UAE are in close contact with the Dubai authorities to provide all necessary assistance and to facilitate the repatriation process. Our hearts go out to the bereaved family in this hour of grief.
The US embassy in Oslo was hit by a loud explosion early on Sunday morning, causing minor damage but no injuries, according to Norwegian police. The blast at the embassy compound in western Oslo reportedly occurred at about 1am local time (0000 GMT).
Police are searching for one or more potential perpetrators, with Norway’s justice minister, Astri Aas-Hansen, saying they had deployed “considerable resources” to the investigation. “This is an unacceptable incident that we are taking very seriously,” she told Norwegian press agency NTB.
Yvette Cooper sidestepped a question about UK-US relations being in trouble by saying there is still close cooperation on a range of issues, although divergence can happen as she said it is not in the British interest to “unquestioningly agree” with every strand of American policy.
She made the point of saying it was “important to learn the lessons” from the devastating US-led invasion of Iraq, when it comes to Iran.
UK government’s job is not to be ‘outsourcing our foreign policy’, foreign secretary says
The UK’s foreign secretary, Yvette Cooper, has told the BBC that the government’s job is not to be “outsourcing our foreign policy”.
Speaking on Laura Kuenssberg’s Sunday politics programme, Cooper said:
It’s for the US president to decide what he thinks is in the US national interest, and that’s for him to do.
But it is our job as the UK government to decide what’s in the UK national interest, and that doesn’t mean simply agreeing with other countries or outsourcing our foreign policy to other countries.
Asked if the UK was at war, Cooper responded: “We are providing defensive support in a conflict, and that is, I think, the way to describe it.”
Her comments followed renewed criticism from the US president, Donald Trump, who has apparently told the UK he does not need its aircraft carriers and accused the British prime minister, Keir Starmer, of seeking to “join wars after we’ve already won”, in reference to reports that the UK was preparing an aircraft carrier in response to the escalating conflict.
Relations between Washington and London have sunk to a low point, with Trump strongly criticising Starmer for the lack of immediate UK support for the US-Israeli strikes on Iran.
Here are some of the latest pictures being sent to us from Tehran after overnight Israeli and US airstrikes reportedly struck oil sites around the Iranian capital:
As the war in the Middle East, started by Israel and the US, continues to escalate, we would like to hear how people living, working or travelling in the region have been affected.
Whether you are in the region or impacted in other ways, please get in touch here.
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The Guardian’s diplomatic editor, Patrick Wintour, has written an interesting analysis piece looking at the backlash to the Iranian president’s comments, which took many observers by surprise. Here is an extract:
The surprise offer by the president of Iran, Masoud Pezeshkian, not to attack countries in the neighbourhood so long as their airspace and US bases within their territories are not used to attack Iran has provoked a storm inside the country as the military appeared to contradict him, if not outright overrule him.
There were also calls for a new supreme leader to be installed as quickly as possible, as a means of marginalising the president. Attacks on facilities in Bahrain and elsewhere have continued, and there were unconfirmed reports that Bahrain had become the first Gulf country to fire back at Iran …
The backlash over Pezeshkian’s offer was made worse by him including an apology to the region on behalf of himself and the nation in his pre-recorded address on state TV.
He also implied that after the US attack on its top command, rudderless armed forces may have been forced to make targeting decisions on their own.
Iran’s president says his country will ‘not bow easily to bullying’
Iran’s president, Masoud Pezeshkian, has said his country will “not bow easily” to “bullying” and vowed to continue to respond against attacks.
“When we are attacked, we have no choice but to respond. The more pressure they impose on us, the stronger our response will naturally be,” Pezeshkian said in video comments this morning.
“Our Iran, our country, will not bow easily in the face of bullying, oppression or aggression – and it never has.”
As we reported in an earlier post, the Iranian president on Saturday apologised to neighbouring Gulf countries hosting US military bases for attacks on their territory.
However, after the statement provoked a backlash inside the country and the military appeared to contradict him, Pezeshkian said his remarks were “misinterpreted by the enemy that seeks to sow division with neighbours”.
Huge fire engulfs tower in Kuwait after drone strikes
There is footage of a huge fire engulfing a tower in Kuwait city following drone strikes in the early hours of Sunday morning.
It is reported to have broken out at a government site operated by the Public Institution for Social Security in Kuwait. In a social media post, the department said:
The main building of the organization was targeted, resulting in material damage to the building.
The fire appears to be under control now.
Oman Air has cancelled flights to and from Amman, Dubai, Bahrain, Doha, Dammam, Kuwait, Copenhagen, Baghdad and Khasab “due to ongoing regional airspace closures”.

Helena Smith
Cyprus’ foreign minister Constantinos Kombos has told the Guardian that explosive-packed drones directed at British military bases on the island were launched from Lebanon, 150 miles to the Mediterranean island’s east.
A European armada and air defense assets have rushed to the EU member state as part of an unprecedented security cordon thrown around it.
“Right now it’s a fact that we have to be looking towards the Lebanese front,” said the minister, confirming the drones’ provenance for the first time. “We cannot exclude anything from the broader direction of the north-east. We have to be very careful … we have to make sure that the systems in place are covering all possibilities of threat.”
Cypriot officials, who take pride in the neutrality and humanitarian role of an island nation that is also the EU’s closest state to the Middle East, are adamant it is the British bases, not the republic, that have been singled out for attack since the onset of the US-led offensive against Iran.
Summary
As we hand over the blog to our colleagues in London, here’s a quick summary of today’s events as the conflict in the Middle East continues to escalate and the strikes show no sign of relenting.
Here is what you need to know so far.
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A fresh wave of Iranian strikes hit the Gulf on Sunday, with Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Bahrain and Kuwait all reporting new attacks. Saudi Arabia’s defence ministry reported intercepting 15 drones. In Bahrain, the strikes did “material damage” to a crucial desalination plant .
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Kuwait’s national oil company announced a “precautionary” cut to its crude oil production after the strikes. The military said fuel tanks at Kuwait’s international airport were targeted in a drone attack and two firefighters were killed.
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Overnight strikes by the US and Israel hit five oil sites around Tehran, according to an Iran official. The official said that the five facilities “were damaged” but the “fire was brought under control”.
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Donald Trump had said he is not interested in negotiating with Iran, raising the possibility that the Iran war would only end once Tehran no longer has a functioning military and its leadership is completely wiped out. But while Trump claimed the US and Israel had “decimated” the Iranian regime, he offered only a vague description of what he meant by Iran’s unconditional surrender.
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Trump left open the possibility of deploying American troops on the ground. The US president addressed reporters hours after travelling to Dover air force base in Delaware to attend the transfer of the bodies of six US service members killed in the opening days of his war against Iran.
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A majority consensus has almost been reached by the clerical body that will appoint the successor to Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and become Iran’s next supreme leader, according to reports. Israel’s military said it would continue to pursue any successor to Khamenei.
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Iranian president Masoud Pezeshkian said his country “will be forced to respond” to any attack or invasion attempt from a neighbouring country. His comments came after a backlash by hardliners and within Iranian military ranks after the president appeared to apologise to neighbouring Gulf countries attacked by Iran as they targeted US military bases. Pezeshkian said his comments had been “misinterpreted by the enemy”.
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At least 16 were killed in Lebanon after Israeli renewed its assault on Beirut and southern Lebanon. Four were killed in a blast on a hotel in Beirut and 12 were killed in strikes on southern Lebanon as Israel said it was targeting “key commanders” in the IGRC’s Quds Force foreign operations arm.
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In a post on social media, Trump renewed his criticism of the UK’s lack of immediate support for US-Israeli strikes on Iran, and claimed Downing Street was now “giving serious thought” to sending two aircraft carriers to the region. “That’s OK, Prime Minister Starmer, we don’t need them any longer – But we will remember,” the US president wrote.
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Trump has warned in a Truth Social post that more Iranian officials will be targeted, saying: “Today Iran will be hit very hard!”.
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China’s foreign minister says Iran war ‘should never have happened’. Wang warned that the US-Israel push for regime change in Iran would “find no popular support” and said “the world cannot return to the law of the jungle”.
The Israeli military warned it would continue pursuing every successor of Iran’s next supreme leader.
In a post on X in Farsi, the Israeli military said it would also pursue every person who seeks to appoint a successor for slain supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, referring to the clerical body charged with selecting Iran’s next supreme leader.
The comments came after Iranian news agency Mehr news reported that he clerical body that will choose Iran’s next supreme leader has more or less reached a majority consensus.
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