Summary

  • Iran warns of "broader" and "crushing" attacks in response to Trump's latest threat to hit Iran "extremely hard" over the coming weeks

  • A spokesperson for Iran's military says US-Israeli attacks on the country have been "insignificant", claiming the two countries have "incomplete" information about Tehran's military capabilities and equipment

  • In a national address, Trump told Americans he would finish the job "very fast", without setting any timeline for ending the conflict - what else did he say?

  • His speech was largely a rehash of what he's been saying for days - and it leaves four big questions unanswered, our chief North America correspondent writes

  • Global markets weren't reassured by the president's words, writes our Asia business reporter. Oil prices jumped to $106 a barrel and stocks slumped in Asia, a region where many countries are heavily reliant on Middle Eastern oil

  • Meanwhile, the war is causing deep rifts among Iranian families. Even among those opposed to the government, people disagree over whether the war will help or hinder change - read BBC Persian's report

  1. UK foreign secretary condemns Iranian 'recklessness' over global economypublished at 12:22 BST

    Yvette Cooper speaking to camera.Image source, AFP

    Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper condemns Iran's "recklessness" for "hitting global economic security", as she addresses a virtual meeting of foreign ministers.

    The meeting is aimed at reopening the Strait of Hormuz - a vital shipping route in the Middle East.

    We will bring you more from the meeting when we can.

  2. When it comes to Hormuz, there are no easy answerspublished at 12:18 BST

    Frank Gardner
    Security correspondent, reporting from the FCDO

    How to reopen the Strait of Hormuz for normal business through diplomacy?

    That’s the question being addressed today in a virtual ‘summit’ of foreign ministers, hosted by UK Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper here at the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) in Westminster.

    There are no easy answers.

    President Trump and Israel’s war on Iran has, bizarrely, left the Iranian regime in a far stronger bargaining position than it had before the war started. By threatening shipping passing through this vital waterway, Iran can effectively hold the global economy to ransom.

    With hundreds of ships stranded on either side of the strait, oil, gas and diesel prices have risen sharply.

    President Trump has vacillated between setting Iran an ultimatum to reopen the strait or indicating he will walk away from the problem.

    Now, he says that the countries that need the product coming out of the Gulf should deal with it themselves.

    We're keeping an eye on the developments at the virtual summit between 35 foreign ministers - stay with us.

  3. Iranian city Karaj 'hit hard' by strikes, sources saypublished at 12:04 BST
    Breaking

    Ghoncheh Habibiazad
    Senior reporter, BBC Persian

    I'm hearing from two sources that Karaj, a city west of Tehran, has been "hit hard".

    A source in Tehran tells me he could hear fighter jets passing above his house. Iranian outlets have also reported on strikes on Karaj.

  4. Iran internet blackout enters day 34published at 11:52 BST

    Ghoncheh Habibiazad
    Senior reporter, BBC Persian

    Iran's internet blackout has now entered day 34, with most users cut off from the outside world for over 792 hours, according to internet monitoring group NetBlocks.

    Connectivity to the outside world remains at 1% of normal levels.

    NetBlocks has said that “friends and family remain largely cut off from the outside world amid growing anxiety over wartime casualties, arrests, and executions”.

    A few people have managed to connect using satellite internet such as Starlink and other methods, but it comes at a high cost.

    In Iran, using or possessing Starlink can lead to up to two years in prison, and authorities are trying to crack down on it. Iranian outlets have reported that “hundreds” of Starlink devices have been confiscated since the war started.

  5. Badenoch says she disagrees with anything 'undermining Nato' after Trump commentspublished at 11:31 BST

    Conservative party leader Kemi Badenoch visits the Well-Safe Protector Oil Rig at Aberdeen's South HarbourImage source, Getty Images

    UK Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch has told the BBC that any signals of division within Nato could be a "gift" to countries like Iran and Russia.

    Badenoch was giving her reaction to Trump's threats to leave Nato in response to the perceived lack of support for his military action in Iran.

    "I think that we need to make sure that we do not give gifts to countries like Russia or Iran, making it seem as if there is a split in the Western alliance," Badenoch told BBC Breakfast. "What President Trump's words are, is creating that.

    "If they see that the Western countries are squabbling, that's a gift to them.

    "That's a gift to Russia and Iran and other enemies. We need to show that the Western alliance is still strong. I certainly disagree with anything that looks like it's undermining Nato."

  6. Oil prices rose after Trump began national address on Wednesdaypublished at 11:12 BST

    A chart showing oil prices from 00:00 BST on 1 April to 08:24 BST on 2 April. Brent crude futures at US dollars per barrel are around $100 - $105 before Trump's national address, but then jump up to $108 as he begins his address, and continue to remain high.

    In Trump's address last night, he said countries that need oil from the Middle East should now take the lead to keep the Strait of Hormuz - a key oil shipping route - open.

    Around 20% of the world's oil supply normally passes through the strait.

    Our business reporter Peter Hoskins said earlier that Trump's address seemed to do nothing to reassure global oil markets - and the price of oil has jumped since his address.

  7. Strait of Hormuz - its significancepublished at 10:55 BST

    Iran's foreign ministry has, as we've just reported, reiterated that the Strait of Hormuz is open to ships as long as they do not belong to the US or Israel.

    And, later today, UK Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper will discuss plans to ensure the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz with counterparts from 35 countries later today.

    The strait has been all but closed by Iran putting significant pressure on global supply chains and energy prices.

    Iran has said the route is only closed to tankers and ships belonging to countries involved in attacks against it.

    Let's take a look at why restoring regular traffic through the waterway is so important:

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  8. Strait of Hormuz open for ships 'not related' to US or Israel - Iran foreign ministrypublished at 10:33 BST

    Esmail Baghaei, Iran's foreign ministry spokesperson, stood at a podium speakingImage source, Anadolu via Getty Images

    Iran's foreign ministry spokesperson says it is allowing ships to pass through the Strait of Hormuz - the key oil shipping route - as long as they "do not belong to the aggressor and are not related to them".

    In an interview with TV channel Newzroom Afrika, Esmail Baghaei says ships would be allowed to pass through the strait "after necessary co-ordination with our authorities".

    Referring to the wider conflict, Baghaei says Iran would not tolerate a "vicious cycle of war, negotiations, ceasefire". In June, a 12-day war between Iran and Israel involved the US attacking several of Iran's nuclear and military sites.

    "They said let's stop, so we stopped, and after nine months, they started again," Baghaei says.

  9. Trump and Iran renew threats of escalationpublished at 10:24 BST

    Donald Trump in dark blue suit, white shirt and red tie, with a US flag pin at the top of his left lapel, waits outside a wooden doorImage source, Reuters

    Earlier today, Tehran warned the US and Israel of "crushing" attacks as strikes continue for the fifth consecutive week.

    The warning came only hours after President Donald Trump warned the US will hit Iran "extremely hard" over the next two to three weeks - this is the latest back and forth of threats between the two nations.

    On 21 March, Trump said American forces would "obliterate" Iranian power plants if Tehran failed to reopen the Strait of Hormuz within 48 hours.

    The threat was met with a strike near the Israeli town of Dimona, an area linked to Israel's undeclared nuclear programme. Meanwhile, Iran reiterated that the strait remains open to countries not participating in attacks against it.

    On 23 March, Trump said Washington and Tehran had had a "very good and productive conversation" and postponed strikes on energy infrastructure by five days.

    Three days later, on 26 March, the pause was extended to 10 days, following what he claimed was a request by the Iranian government.

    On 31 March, the IRGC renewed threats to American tech companies with operating sites in the Middle East - including Microsoft, Apple, and IBM. Trump brushed off the threat, telling reporters he questions what Iran could do, saying will they use "bb guns".

  10. BBC Verify

    Is Trump right to claim US imports 'almost no oil' via Strait of Hormuz?published at 10:08 BST

    A cargo ship in the Gulf, near the Strait of Hormuz.Image source, Reuters

    By Tom Edgington

    In his address to the nation last night, Donald Trump downplayed the importance of the Strait of Hormuz and claimed the US imports "almost no oil" through the route.

    However, data from the US Energy Information Administration (EIA) shows that the US imported about 0.4 million barrels per day of crude oil and condensate via the strait in the first half of 2025. This accounted for about 7% of US crude oil and condensate imports., external

    While this share is relatively small, it is not negligible. The EIA also notes US imports from countries in the Gulf have “fallen to the lowest level in 40 years as domestic production has increased”.

    Overall the US is a net exporter of oil, but it still imports some because its refineries are designed to process different types of crude - including some that can’t be produced domestically.

    In these cases the American Fuel & Petrochemical Manufacturers says it is more practical and cost effective to import it., external

  11. Rifts erupt between Iranian families as war rages onpublished at 09:21 BST

    Ghoncheh Habibiazad
    Senior reporter, BBC Persian

    Wide shot of a residential area of Tehran, a grey cloud of smoke billowing into the air in the far background following an explosionImage source, Getty Images

    "He said to her: 'You're no longer my sister', and she told him to go to hell."

    This argument between a man and his sister in a city near Tehran - witnessed and recounted by one of their relatives - gives a telling insight into the painful rows erupting among families and friends as US and Israeli strikes continue.

    The relative, who we are calling Sina, says that when his family recently got together, emotions quickly exploded, exposing stark divisions.

    His uncle, a member of the Basij - a volunteer militia often deployed to suppress dissent in Iran - refused to even greet his own sister, who is opposed to the ruling regime.

    After their exchange, the uncle was "very quiet… and left early", Sina says.

    In some surprisingly personal notes, he and other young Iranians have described emotional scenes as rifts open up over the war.

    You can read more on how the ongoing war is causing division among families in Iran in my story

  12. Analysis

    Israel's perpetual war with Iran may be hard to win with military might alonepublished at 09:02 BST

    Lucy Williamson
    Middle East correspondent, reporting from Israel

    On the highway from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, American flags now hang alongside Israeli ones – a public sign of appreciation for US involvement in fighting Iran.

    "We used to beg American administrations only to recognise a Credible Military Threat [from Iran]," said Israel's former National Security Advisor, Tzachi Hangebi, who left office four months before this war began.

    "The fact that both Israel and the US are working day in, day out to diminish the capabilities of Iran, that's beyond my most utopian fantasies."

    America's decision to jointly wage war on Iran opened-up possibilities for Israel to attack its old enemy in new ways – officials here talk of dividing up targets with their US counterparts according to their respective capabilities.

    But this war has so far not resolved any of Israel's regional conflicts in the way its prime minister suggested it would.

    The war was framed as a chance to tackle Israel's existential threats. But the lessons from Israel's other wars suggest military might alone may not be enough.

    A billboard in Tel Aviv, pictured on 18 March, with the US and Israeli flags and the message: "Together we will get through this"Image source, Gett
    Image caption,

    A billboard in Tel Aviv, pictured on 18 March, with the US and Israeli flags and the message: "Together we will get through this"

  13. Analysis

    Foreign ministers to discuss reopening Strait of Hormuz - but US won't be therepublished at 08:27 BST

    Iain Watson
    Political correspondent

    UK Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper leaving Downing Street in a suit holding red folders.Image source, PA Media
    Image caption,

    UK Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper will take part in the virtual summit later today

    Leaders of 35 countries recently signed a joint statement in which they said they were willing to contribute to "appropriate efforts to ensure safe passage through the Strait of Hormuz".

    Many of their foreign ministers will take part in a "virtual summit" around lunchtime today. The remit is to discuss "viable diplomatic and political" solutions to reopen the route.

    Given Iran says it remains closed to "enemies of the nation" it’s not surprising that Keir Starmer said yesterday this would not be an easy task.

    While the UK, France, Germany, Australia, and Gulf states are likely virtual attendees at the summit, crucially the US is not.

    Overnight, Trump suggested the strait - a crucial shipping route - could open "automatically" when the conflict ends. Other nations are not so sure.

    De-mining, for example, may be necessary. So, multi-national military planners are also meeting to discuss how the strait could be made safe after the fighting has stopped.

    The priority is to ensure safe navigation for shipping and, in turn, bring oil prices down and push the supply of fertiliser for food production up.

  14. Trump's rhetorical flip-flopping fails to calm traders' fearspublished at 08:07 BST

    Lucy Hooker
    Business reporter

    Earlier this week, Trump seemed eager to calm traders’ fears, promising that an end to this conflict was in sight, and sending Brent Crude briefly below $100 a barrel.

    Wednesday’s speech seems to have done the opposite. On Thursday Brent Crude is back up over $107.

    That’s a reflection in part of the bellicose rhetoric around sending Iran "back to the stone ages".

    But just as importantly perhaps there was nothing in the speech indicating how progress towards peace might be made, or how the Strait of Hormuz, the route for a large proportion of the world’s energy supply, would be reopened, beyond suggesting he doesn’t see it as America’s problem.

    Trump is still talking about an end to the conflict within a few weeks.

    But after the last month of rhetorical flip-flopping oil traders will need a bit more convincing than that.

  15. Saudi Arabia intercepts drones and downs ballistic missile - Ministry of Defensepublished at 07:57 BST

    In the last hour, a spokesperson for the Saudi Arabian Ministry of Defense said the country has intercepted a new wave of drones.

    They say four unmanned vehicles were intercepted and destroyed.

    Earlier, the ministry said it had also downed a ballistic missile heading to the eastern region of the country.

  16. Iran says US-Israeli attacks have been 'insignificant' and warns of 'broader' responsepublished at 07:29 BST

    A spokesperson for the Iranian military says the US and Israel have been striking "insignificant" targets as he warns of incoming "crushing, broader and destructive" attacks.

    In a statement shared by the IRGC-affiliated Tasnim news agency and the semi-official Fars news agency, he says the two countries have "incomplete" information about Tehran's military capabilities and equipment.

    The spokesperson adds that Iran's military production "takes place in places that you do not know at all" - as he rejects Trump's claims that Iran's weapons stock has been widely depleted.

    He says the US and Israel "must pay for the aggression you initiated".

  17. What Trump said in his primetime address to the nationpublished at 07:18 BST

    US President Donald Trump arrives to address the nation from the Cross Hall of the White House. He is wearing a red tie and is flanked by US flagsImage source, Getty Images

    Trump's address to the nation last night was largely repetitive, with little new information garnered.

    The president offered few answers. Our North America correspondent takes a closer look at the glaring omissions and plethora of questions unanswered.

    Here's a look back at what Trump said in his primetime address:

    • Trump said the US is on track to soon complete all of its military objectives against Iran
    • He vowed the US would hit the Iranians extremely hard over the next two to three weeks
    • The president urged countries reliant on oil from the Middle East to go to the Strait of Hormuz and "just take it". Trump also called for countries to buy US oil instead
    • He claimed Iran was "right at the doorstep" of making a nuclear weapon, adding the US "obliterated" the country's nuclear sites
    • He warned that if no deal was made within the next few weeks the US would strike Iran's power plants
  18. A quick guide to oil, as prices climb after Trump's addresspublished at 06:42 BST

    In the hours after President Donald Trump's primetime address to the nation oil prices have climbed. Brent crude oil jumped 5% to $106 a barrel.

    Trump's address appears to have done nothing to reassure global oil markets that disruption to the key Strait of Hormuz shipping route will ease anytime soon, our business reporter writes.

    In his address, the US president said countries that need oil from the Middle East should now take the lead to keep the key waterway open - around 20% of the world’s oil supply normally passes through the strait.

    Iran has effectively blocked the Strait of Hormuz, causing energy prices to become volatile and remain well above levels before the conflict began.

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  19. Trump's 'mission nearly accomplished' momentpublished at 06:13 BST

    Tom Bateman
    US State Department correspondent

    This appeared to be President Trump’s "mission nearly accomplished" moment; but with the extraordinary caveat that Iran’s grip over oil transiting through the Strait of Hormuz was essentially not America’s problem.

    While he said the US would help, he reiterated his demand that countries who rely on the strait for their energy supplies should take the lead in re-opening it.

    Trump suggested the US could wrap up its military operations soon; but in the meantime he threatened overwhelming destruction.

    "We will hit them extremely hard over next two to three weeks," he says. "We will bring them back to the Stone Ages where they belong."

    Despite saying Iran had been crushed militarily, Trump still demanded that it do a deal with the US, without setting out anything about the terms. He once again vowed that if it didn’t, the US would bomb all of Iran’s power plants.

  20. Trump did not mention Nato in his 19-minute speechpublished at 05:51 BST

    US President Donald Trump speaks about about the Iran war on 1 April 2026.Image source, EPA

    One glaring omission from President Trump's speech was Nato - made all the more obvious after he reportedly told the Telegraph he was considering pulling the US out of the alliance late on Wednesday evening.

    The president told the paper that the alliance is a "paper tiger" and when asked if he would reconsider the US's membership of the alliance after the conflict in the Middle East, said: "Oh yes, I would say [it’s] beyond reconsideration."

    As pointed out by the BBC's White House correspondent earlier, the president would face significant legislative hurdles if he was to go ahead with this withdrawal.

    Given that Trump has revisited a number of previous talking points in his primetime address, it's notable that the alliance hasn't been one of them.