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People stand on a street in Tehran following air strikes on March 10.
People stand on a street in Tehran following air strikes on March 10.

live Trump Warns Iran Against Mining The Strait Of Hormuz

As the US-Israeli war with Iran continues to impact and shape the region, journalists from RFE/RL deliver ongoing updates and analysis.

Key Takeaways:

  • Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) said it had struck a Liberian-flagged vessel in the Strait Of Hormuz that it claimed was owned by Israel.
  • Three ships in the Strait of Hormuz had been struck by projectiles of unknown origin.
  • A day earlier, US President Donald Trump had warned Iran against mining the Strait of Hormuz, saying in a post on Truth Social that any such move would trigger severe retaliation.
  • Trump will determine what constitutes "unconditional surrender" by Iran in the face of US-Israeli bombardment, the White House said on March 10, amid questions about how long the war may last.
  • An Iranian women’s national soccer team member who initially sought asylum in Australia has withdrawn her request after speaking with teammates.
  • About 140 US service members have been wounded in the first 10 days of the war with Iran, the Pentagon said on March 10.
  • Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi has said talks with Washington are no longer on Iran's agenda and warned that Tehran is prepared to continue missile attacks for "as long as it takes."
09:30

Iran Women’s Footballer Withdraws Asylum Bid In Australia

The Iranian women's football team were denounced as "wartime traitors" at home after they declined to sing their country's national anthem before a game at the AFC Asian cup in Australia.
The Iranian women's football team were denounced as "wartime traitors" at home after they declined to sing their country's national anthem before a game at the AFC Asian cup in Australia.

An Iranian women’s national soccer team member who initially sought asylum in Australia has withdrawn her request after speaking with teammates, Australian Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke said on March 11.

Seven members of the visiting squad had sought sanctuary after being branded “traitors” in Iran for silently protesting during the national anthem before a match.

Burke told the Australian parliament that one player reversed her decision after contacting teammates who had returned with the team and encouraged her to speak with the Iranian Embassy.

Because the embassy learned the group’s location, Australian authorities moved the remaining asylum-seeking players from a safe house to another location.

The rest of the team flew from Sydney to Kuala Lumpur early on March 11.

With reporting by AFP
16:45

Is The US Considering Seizing Iran's Kharg Island?

Iran's Kharg Island, the country's main oil export outlet, could be a target for the United States, experts say, in a move that could cut off the revenues that sustain Tehran's sanctions-hit economy.

But the possible capture of the tiny island in the Persian Gulf, which handles around 90 percent of all Iranian oil exports, would mark a major escalation in the US-Israeli war on Iran. It is also unlikely to land a fatal economic blow to the Islamic republic, experts say.

To read the full report, click here.

If the United States attempts to seize control of the island, a scrubby piece of land, Iran could decide to destroy the oil terminals located on Kharg.
If the United States attempts to seize control of the island, a scrubby piece of land, Iran could decide to destroy the oil terminals located on Kharg.
15:56

Iran Says 'Under No Circumstances' Will Play In World Cup

Iranian Sports Minister Ahmad Donyamali announced on March 11 that Iran cannot participate in the FIFA World Cup that will be held this year in the United States, Canada, and Mexico.

Donyamali told Iranian state TV that after the killing of Ali Khamenei, the former supreme leader of the Islamic republic, in attacks by the United States and Israel, "Under no circumstances can we participate in the World Cup."

"Our sons are not safe, and fundamentally there are no conditions for participating in these competitions," he said, referring to the players of the national soccer team.

Hours earlier, FIFA President Gianni Infantino announced he had met with US President Donald Trump, who he said told him he welcomes Iran's participation in the 2026 World Cup.

Referring to the news of players from Iran's women's soccer team seeking asylum while in Australia, Mehdi Taj, president of the Iranian football federation, said on March 10, that a "similar scenario" could happen with the men's national team at the World Cup.

"No reasonable person would support sending Iran's national soccer team to the United States," he said.

15:18

IRGC Claims Strike On Liberian-Flagged Vessel

Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) said it had struck a Liberian-flagged vessel in the Strait Of Hormuz that it claimed was owned by Israel.

Tehran has indicated it considers the ships transferring oil to the United States, Israel, and "their partners" as "legitimate" targets.

"We won't allow even one liter of ‌oil to reach the US, Zionists, and their partners. Any vessel or tanker bound to them will be a legitimate ‌target," said Iran's military command spokesman Ebrahim Zolfaqari on March 11.

15:10

Amid Ongoing Public Absence, Is Iran's New Leader In Control?

Iran's new supreme leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, is probably in charge despite making no public appearance since being appointed on March 8 and amid reports that he was injured in an air strike, according to a leading Israeli expert on Iran.

Speaking to RFE/RL in Tel Aviv on March 11, Raz Zimmt, who is head of the Iran program at the Institute for National Security Studies, said the question is whether Khamenei would be capable of maintaining "daily contacts with the political and security establishment" to preserve "the ability of the regime to function."

To read the full interview, click here.

Amid Ongoing Absence, Questions Raised About Iran's New Leader
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14:58

War With Iran Has 'No Time Limit,' Israeli Defense Minister Says

Israeli Defense MInister Israel Katz (file photo)
Israeli Defense MInister Israel Katz (file photo)

Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz said the US–Israeli military campaign against Iran will continue indefinitely until its objectives are achieved, The Times Of Israel reports.

Speaking after a meeting with senior military officials on March 11, Katz said the operation would "continue without any time limit, as long as required, until we accomplish all objectives and achieve victory in the campaign."

He said the strikes are targeting Iranian leadership figures as well as the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps and the Basij, a pro-government militia involved in suppressing protests.

Katz also repeated Israel’s message that military pressure could create conditions for Iranians to rise up against the government.

Some reports suggest Israeli officials are concerned that US President Donald Trump might seek to end the war sooner than Israel prefers.

14:48

Iran has seen 16 of its mine-laying ships attacked in the Strait of Hormuz, according to US Central Command, which released footage of several strikes on the vessels. The ships were hit on March 10, US officials say, following warnings by US President Donald Trump to Iran against laying mines in the strait.

Commercial Ships Hit In Strait Of Hormuz After US Targets Iranian Mine-Laying Vessels Commercial Ships Hit In Strait Of Hormuz After US Targets Iranian Mine-Laying Vessels
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14:44

Footage shared on social media shows what appears to be an air strike on the Marivan border regiment, a military unit stationed near the city of Marivan, in the Kuh-e Emam mountain area close to the Iran-Iraq border.

From another angle, the footage also appears to show an attack near Norouz Square in Marivan, a city in Kurdistan Province.

According to RFE/RL's Radio Farda, reports also indicate that several locations across Kurdistan Province -- a largely Kurdish region of western Iran bordering Iraq -- were targeted in attacks on March 11.

14:22

Italian PM Criticizes Iran War As Conflict Enters 12th Day

Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni (file photo)
Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni (file photo)

Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni has delivered her strongest criticism yet of the US-Israeli war against Iran, warning that such interventions risk undermining international law.

Speaking to the Italian parliament on March 11, Meloni said the strikes should be viewed in the context of a broader crisis in the global order marked by "increasingly frightening and unilateral interventions."

At the same time, she stressed that Iran must not obtain nuclear weapons, warning this would have “dramatic repercussions for global security.”

Meloni also said Italy was supplying air defense assets to Persian Gulf partners and highlighted the need to protect thousands of Italian citizens and about 2,000 troops stationed in the region as the conflict entered its 12th day.

With reporting by Reuters


13:37

Ksenia Svetlova, an associate fellow at the Chatham House and a former member of the Israeli Knesset, said Iran’s leadership has been weakened but is unlikely to collapse in the near term.

“The Iranian regime has been seriously weakened, but it is unlikely to collapse immediately," she told Current Time. "It is quite possible that the collapse of the regime has already begun, but it may stretch over a fairly long period of time.”

“Given Iran's extremely difficult economic situation and the possibility of continued military pressure, for example from Israel alone, there are factors that could eventually undermine the regime,” she said.

Svetlova said Iran relies on asymmetric tactics -- including drones and threats to the Strait of Hormuz -- to buy time, adding that simply surviving the conflict would amount to a victory for the regime.

13:27

Commercial Ships Targeted As Iran Threatens Key Gulf Energy Transit Point

A photo released by the Royal Thai Navy shows smoke rising from the Thai-flagged bulk carrier Mayuree Naree near the Strait of Hormuz after an attack on March 11.
A photo released by the Royal Thai Navy shows smoke rising from the Thai-flagged bulk carrier Mayuree Naree near the Strait of Hormuz after an attack on March 11.

Three vessels were damaged in incidents across the Persian Gulf's key maritime artery, where about one-fifth of the world's oil and gas supplies travel, as Iran continued to launch air attacks around the Middle East.

Commercial ships sailing under the flags of Thailand, Japan, and the Marshall Islands were targeted by unknown projectiles across the Strait of Hormuz, United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO), a shipping security monitor, said on March 11.

While no crew members were reported dead following the attacks, UKMTO advised ships in the Strait of Hormuz "to transit with caution and report any suspicious activity," adding that investigations into the incidents were ongoing.

Just off the shores of Oman and the United Arab Emirates (UAE), where the shipping lane narrows to a width of less than 4 kilometers, the attacks are the latest in at least a dozen incidents since US and Israeli forces began their military campaign against Iran on February 28. Those attacks have prompted retaliatory strikes by Iran on targets in many neighboring Gulf states.

The flurry of strikes on commercial ships in the Strait of Hormuz follows US President Donald Trump's earlier warning to Iran, in which he demanded Tehran to remove any mines in the area, or otherwise, meet "military consequences" that will be at "a level never seen before."

Read more here.

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