The United States struck bridges and other infrastructure in southern Iran overnight into Friday, extending a campaign now in its sixth consecutive night as Washington tries to force Tehran to relinquish control of the Strait of Hormuz.
The latest strikes targeted routes linking Bandar Abbas, Iran’s main port city, to the rest of the country. U.S. Central Command said the overnight operation hit “military logistics infrastructure” and “maritime capabilities.” Iranian officials and state media described the damage differently, saying the strikes hit civilian infrastructure.
Iran’s state news agency IRNA reported at least eight people killed and 20 injured. It said at least six bridges were hit, including one still under construction. The state-run IRIB news agency reported a separate strike on a railway junction just west of Bandar Abbas.
The bridge and railway strikes appear designed to cut Bandar Abbas off from roads leading to Tehran. Other routes into the port remain open for now, but the campaign could widen further, with consequences for both military transport and the flow of goods to Iran’s population of roughly 90 million.
For the first time since the strikes began, Iran acknowledged damage to power infrastructure. The country’s Energy Ministry asked residents in southern provinces to cut electricity use, according to the state news agency ISNA.
A separate wave of strikes hit a maritime control tower in Chabahar, a port on the Gulf of Oman that Iran operates jointly with India. The facility sits outside the Strait of Hormuz itself. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth posted footage on X showing the tower collapsing under smoke. Iran’s Mehr news agency said this marked the third strike on the tower in recent days, and that continued attacks could affect port operations there.
Iran strikes back across the region

Iran’s Revolutionary Guard said it responded Friday by firing missiles and drones at U.S. military positions in Jordan, Kuwait and Qatar. Qatar has served as a key mediator in the broader conflict.
In Qatar, a child was hurt by falling shrapnel during interception operations, the country’s Interior Ministry said. Bahrain sounded air raid sirens Friday morning and told residents to seek shelter. In Kuwait, the water and electricity ministry reported that one of its power and desalination plants had been hit, sparking a fire and damaging several generation units.
The Revolutionary Guard said it had targeted radar sites and two HIMARS missile launchers in Kuwait, along with U.S. fighter jets and refueling aircraft in Jordan. It also claimed a strike on Al-Tanf base in Syria, which it said hit a U.S. Special Operations command center there. This marked Iran’s first direct attack on a Syrian base in the current campaign. NBC News could not independently verify the claims, and the Pentagon had not commented as of Friday. The U.S. military handed control of Al-Tanf over to Syrian forces in February.
Hormuz traffic near a standstill
The fight over the Strait of Hormuz has all but halted the shipping route that once carried a fifth of the world’s oil supply. Shipping data firm Kpler recorded only about a dozen ships transiting the strait this week, down sharply from the volume seen during the recent ceasefire. Just eight ships passed through on Thursday, compared with 15 the day before.
Iran wants vessels to travel a route close to its own shoreline, where it can collect a transit fee, and has declared the entire waterway closed to traffic that doesn’t comply. The U.S. has pushed ships to route closer to Oman instead, aiming to reduce Iran’s leverage over the passage, and has reimposed a naval blockade in the area.
The Revolutionary Guard framed the standoff as a matter of economic retaliation. “As long as the American atrocities continue, not a single drop of oil and gas will be exported from this region,” the Guard said, according to Mehr.
In Tehran, banners appeared this week showing President Trump alongside his staff and family members above flag-draped coffins, with a Persian phrase translating to “Blood for blood.”
Trump addresses the nation

President Trump delivered a primetime address Thursday night, ahead of the midterm elections, defending the campaign’s progress despite growing concern over its effect on the global economy. “We are likewise winning big in Iran, and you will see the fruits of that labor very, very shortly,” he said.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters Thursday that Iran wants to negotiate, and that the U.S. strikes came in response to Iranian attacks on commercial vessels in the strait. Trump also pointed to what he called a “goodwill” gesture from Tehran: the release of Dena Karari, an American citizen who had been imprisoned in Iran since 2024. A White House official said Thursday that Karari was safely out of the country and expected home within days.
How the standoff collapsed

The current round of strikes followed the breakdown of a ceasefire and interim agreement between the two countries. That collapse triggered a week of near-daily strikes and counterstrikes, reversing the brief recovery in Hormuz shipping traffic that followed the earlier truce.
Trump had warned before the ceasefire’s collapse that he would target Iranian infrastructure directly if tensions over the strait escalated. That threat materialized once daily exchanges of fire resumed and the U.S. reinstated its naval blockade.
Despite the intensity of the exchanges, contact between Washington and Tehran appears to have continued. Officials on both sides have pointed to ongoing signals, even as military operations expand into new territory, from Chabahar’s port infrastructure to Syrian and Kuwaiti bases that had not previously been drawn into the fighting.
The scope of the campaign now touches five countries beyond Iran and the U.S. directly, Jordan, Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain and Syria, each affected by strikes, interceptions or military buildup tied to the Hormuz standoff. With Bandar Abbas increasingly isolated from Tehran by the bridge and rail strikes, and Iran’s Energy Ministry now asking citizens to conserve power, the economic and logistical strain on Iran’s population is becoming a visible part of the conflict alongside the military exchanges themselves.

























