Summary

  1. BBC Verify

    How the US-Israel war with Iran is jeopardising shippingpublished at 23:38 GMT

    The Strait of Hormuz is a crucial artery for the movement of global energy supplies.

    Iran has warned it will "set fire" to ships passing through strait - only about 50km (31 miles) wide at its entrance and exit - threatening key supply chains.

    BBC Verify's Ben Chu takes a look at what's been happening to marine traffic in the strait since the US-Israel war with Iran broke out.

    Media caption,

    How the US-Israel war with Iran is jeopardising shipping

  2. Iran fires missiles towards Israel, IDF sayspublished at 23:15 GMT

    Iran has launched missiles towards several areas of Israel, the Israeli military warns, after sending out phone alerts across the country for people to take shelter.

    Anti-air defence systems are "operating to intercept the threat", the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) says.

    An Iranian missile flies towards Israel as Israeli air defence operates, amid the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran, as seen from Hebron, in the Israeli-occupied West BankImage source, Reuters
    Image caption,

    Israeli defences intercept Iranian missiles as seen from Hebron, in the occupied West Bank

  3. State Department urges Americans to depart much of Middle Eastpublished at 23:10 GMT

    The US State Department is now urging Americans in much of the Middle East to depart now via commercial means due to "serious safety risks".

    The advisory applies to citizens in Bahrain, Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Israel, the West Bank, Gaza, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Syria, the United Arab Emirates and Yemen.

  4. Israel attacks Iranian state broadcasterpublished at 22:54 GMT

    Ghoncheh Habibiazad
    BBC Persian

    Head of Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting (IRIB), Peyman Jebeli, says parts of the internal premises of the broadcaster in Tehran have been hit.

    The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) also says it has targeted the IRIB’s complex.

    "The Israeli army targeted the Islamic Republic of IRIB complex, the beating heart of the IRGC's machine of lies and repression," a post on the IDF in Persian X account said.

    Iranian outlets reported yesterday that some buildings of the state broadcaster had been targeted.

    The state broadcaster was also targeted by Israel during Iran-Israel 12-day war back in June last year.

  5. Global News Podcast: What comes next?published at 22:39 GMT

    Global News Podcast logo on red background

    What will happen in Iran now that Supreme Leader Aytollah Ali Khamenei is dead? Will we see regime change? Or a changed regime?

    The Global News Podcast speaks, external to the BBC's chief international correspondent Lyse Doucet, who has covered Iran for years and is one of the few Western journalists to report from inside the country in recent months.

  6. 'I've never been so scared': Exhausted passengers land in London from Abu Dhabipublished at 22:22 GMT

    Tom Symonds
    Reporting from Heathrow Airport

    Outside Terminal 4, a couple smile at the camera while holding their luggage, with the woman holding her thumbs upImage source, PA Media
    Image caption,

    Jeff and Rebecca Moses, from Manchester

    I'm at Heathrow, where an Etihad Airways Airbus A380 carrying hundreds of passengers from Abu Dhabi has arrived. Exhausted passengers say they watched missiles pass overhead while hoping to get a flight home.

    Penny Harrison, on a trip with friends in Dubai, tells me: "We heard explosions, we heard the hotel shake, we saw columns of black smoke, we saw drone interceptions. While we were having breakfast there was black ash falling on the breakfast table."

    An exhausted Fay McCaul, arriving with her 7-year-old son Moss, says there were a lot of military jets flying over, and little information about what was going on. "They were talking about having to do an evacuation through Saudi Arabia. I was on my own just with my son," she says.

    For Alison Ager, an alarm went off on her phone on the first night, and families with children went to the basement of their hotel. "We just laid there and thought we’ve got to get through this," she tells me.

    "I just wanted to get home to see the family, that's just what we kept thinking. I’ve never been so scared in all my life," Alison says.

    "You go to the Middle East and you think the Emirates are safe but clearly they're not," she adds.

  7. Rubio asked about reports that a school was hit on Saturdaypublished at 22:04 GMT

    Tom Bateman
    US State Department correspondent

    I just asked Rubio what the administration knows about Iranian reports that a school was struck on Saturday, reportedly killing dozens of civilians including children.

    He said he had seen the reports and the Department of Defense would be investigating "if that was our strike".

    I pressed him whether they knew it was the result of a US strike. He said: "The United States would not deliberately target a school," accusing the Iranians instead of targeting civilians in the region. I asked for his response if children had indeed been killed. He said that would be "a tragic outcome if it’s happened" but said he didn’t have the details about what led to it.

    Iranian officials on Saturday said a girls' school was struck in Minab, while video showed distraught crowds gathered around a destroyed building. The site is near an Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) base which has previously been a target.

    Iranian officials said least 153 people including children were killed. The US military's Central Command (Centcom) said on Sunday it was looking into reports of the incident.

  8. Analysis

    Rubio's justification miles away from Trump's speech on Saturdaypublished at 21:51 GMT

    Tom Bateman
    US State Department correspondent

    The administration says it struck Iran, when it did, because it was pre-empting Iran’s response to an Israeli attack.

    This is a curious, evolving explanation that is likely to meet heavy scepticism from opposition lawmakers among those being briefed by Rubio here in Congress.

    He just told us gathered reporters that people seemed confused about the offensive and its timing. He offered the justification: The administration knew there was going to be Israeli action against Iran and the US would suffer "much higher casualties" from Iran’s response if the US didn't strike first.

    This is a pre-emptive defence argument that appears to pin the initiative on Israel, not Trump. This is miles away from Trump's combative speech on Saturday, which at least in part framed the US action as timed to draw on popular discontent and bring about regime change.

  9. Rubio: US attacked Iran 'pre-emptively' knowing Israel would strikepublished at 21:46 GMT

    Secretary of State Marco Rubio says the US attacked Iran "pre-emptively" on Saturday because they knew Israel was going to strike, which he says would have meant Iranian retaliation against US forces.

    Speaking a little earlier, he tells reporters: "We knew that there was going to be an Israeli action. We knew that that would precipitate an attack against American forces.

    "And we knew that if we didn't pre-emptively go after them before they launched those attacks, we would suffer higher casualties and perhaps even higher those killed," Rubio says.

    “I'm not going to give away the details of our tactical efforts, but the hardest hits are yet to come from the US military,” he adds.

  10. Iran issues warning to ships passing through Strait of Hormuzpublished at 21:27 GMT

    Ghoncheh Habibiazad
    BBC Persian

    Two large tankers, one further in the distance, in a deep blue seaImage source, Reuters
    Image caption,

    Oil tankers passing through the Strait of Hormuz in December 2018

    An Iranian official says Iran will "set fire to anyone who tries to pass through” the Strait of Hormuz.

    The warning comes from Ebrahim Jabbari, an adviser to the Commander-in-Chief of Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), speaking on state TV.

    He says that the strait is closed and warned ships: "They should not come to this region. They will certainly face a serious response from us."

    Jabbari also says Americans are "thirsty for the region's oil" and that Iran will "strike their pipelines in the region and will not allow oil to be exported from this area".

    The Strait of Hormuz is one of the world’s most important shipping routes and the most vital oil transit choke point. About one-fifth of the world’s oil and gas passes through the strait.

  11. Number of US service members killed rises to sixpublished at 21:06 GMT
    Breaking

    An update from the US Central Command (Centcom) says six US service members have been killed in action as of 16:00 eastern time on Monday.

    The update says US forces recovered the remains of "two previously unaccounted for service members from a facility that was struck during Iran's initial attacks in the region".

    "Major combat operations continue," the update adds.

  12. Rubio: US goal is destruction of Iranian ballistic missilespublished at 21:04 GMT

    Rubio speaking with a blurred background behind himImage source, Reuters

    US Secretary of State Marco Rubio has just been speaking.

    He tells reporters: "Our mission is the destruction of their ballistic missile capabilities, and their ability to manufacture them, as well as the threat posed by their navy to global shipping. That's the objective."

    "That said," he continues. "We would not mind, we would not be heartbroken, and we hope that the Iranian people can overthrow this government and establish a new future for that country. We would love for that to be possible.

    "But the objective of this mission is the destruction of their ballistic missile capabilities, and their naval capabilities," he says.

  13. US embassy in Jordan evacuated over security alertpublished at 21:00 GMT

    The US embassy in Jordan has issued a statement saying all personnel have "temporarily departed" due to a security threat.

    The message, posted on the embassy's website, contains no other details. But yesterday, the embassy posted a similar memo, instructing personnel to shelter in place at the compound "as it may be targeted".

  14. Oil prices surge and stocks waver as investors assess the conflictpublished at 20:48 GMT

    Danielle Kaye
    New York business reporter

    Oil and gas prices surged on Monday as tensions escalate in the Middle East and the conflict disrupts global supply chains. At the same time, gold futures rose as investors seek assets that are seen as safe havens in times of volatility.

    Brent crude, the global oil benchmark, was more than 6% higher in afternoon trading at nearly $78 (£58) a barrel. It had briefly hit $82 (£61) a barrel earlier in the day.

    At least three ships were attacked near the Strait of Hormuz over the weekend, fuelling concern about access to the crucial waterway through which about 20% of the world's oil and gas is shipped.

    "The market will be watching for signs that traffic through the Strait of Hormuz returns, which would see oil prices subside again," Saul Kavonic, head of energy research at MST Marquee, tells the BBC. But some analysts have warned prices could keep surging in the event of a prolonged conflict, which could have a knock-on effect on inflation and interest rates.

    In the US stock market, reaction to the attacks by the US and Israel - and Iran's retaliatory strikes across the Middle East - was relatively muted by the afternoon. The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq had opened sharply lower, but both indexes pared back their losses over the course of the day.

    Airlines, which are grappling with airport closures and widespread global disruptions, have seen sharp losses. American Airlines' shares fell more than 4% on Monday, while AirFrance-KLM fell more than 9%.

  15. Analysis

    Democrats, and even some Republicans, are not happy with Trump's actionspublished at 20:40 GMT

    Tom Bateman
    US State Department correspondent

    Here in Congress, we’re waiting for Secretary of State Marco Rubio to show up.

    He’s due to brief Republican and Democrat leaders in a Sensitive Compartmented Information Facility - a so-called “SCIF” room.

    There’s a clamour from Democrats against the way Trump launched the attack on Iran which is without Congressional approval. Some lawmakers are calling it illegal.

    The Democrats are trying to force a vote later this week under the 1973 War Powers Resolution which Congress passed during the Vietnam war as a check on executive authority. That effort is almost certain not to succeed.

    But perhaps a bigger problem for Trump are the loud voices in parts of his Republican base who see the military action as a betrayal of his promise not to launch foreign “forever wars”.

  16. More than a dozen US service members 'seriously wounded' in Iran operationspublished at 20:31 GMT

    As of Monday morning, 18 American service members have been "seriously wounded" in its operation against Iran, the US Central Command (Centcom) tells the BBC's US partner CBS News.

  17. US aircraft leave Spain after ban on using bases for Iran strikespublished at 20:24 GMT

    Sergi Forcada Freixas
    in Madrid

    Images of the Eurofighter hangars at the Moron Air Base in southern SpainImage source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Rota and Morón military bases are jointly operated by US and Spanish forces

    Several US aircraft have departed the Rota and Morón military bases in southern Spain after the Spanish government denied Washington permission to use the jointly operated facilities for military action against Iran.

    Foreign Minister José Manuel Albares said Spain would not authorise the use of its territory for “anything that is not in accordance with the Charter of the United Nations”.

    The decision places Spain at odds with several European partners.

    Although Nato Secretary General Mark Rutte told BBC News that Europe is “absolutely supportive” of US action in Iran, Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez has condemned what he called the “unilateral military action” carried out by the United States and Israel against Iran.

  18. Centcom provides details of assets and targets of Iran operationspublished at 20:15 GMT

    A US aircraft carrier with jets on board in the middle of the seaImage source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    The US Navy aircraft carrier USS Gerald R. Ford pictured near the Island of Crete at the end of February

    US Central Command (Centcom) has issued a fact sheet providing further details on "Operation Epic Fury".

    In the first 48 hours since the launch, it says US forces have been "striking targets to dismantle the Iranian regime's security apparatus" and "prioritising locations that pose an imminent threat". Here's more from Centcom's breakdown:

    • The operation is described as having launched at 01:15 ET on 28 February
    • More than 1,250 targets have been struck in the first 48 hours, according to Centcom
    • A list of US assets employed includes B-1 bombers, F-16 fighter jets, nuclear-powered aircraft carriers, and guided-missile destroyers
    • The US also says it has employed "special capabilities we can't list here!"
    • As for types of targets, Centcom says this includes Iranian Navy ships and submarines as well as integrated air defence systems and anti-ship missile sites
    • Also listed as targets are the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps joint headquarters, and the IRGC aerospace forces headquarters
  19. Photos show explosions across the Middle Eastpublished at 20:01 GMT

    smoke rising from buildings in the dense city of Tehran. A central grey cloud billows upwards from close to a high-rise building while a smaller plume is visible to the right of the frameImage source, AFP via Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Plumes of smoke rise following reported explosions in Tehran earlier today

    Smoke rising from a town with buildings and patches of green grassImage source, AFP via Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Israel has also launched a fresh wave of strikes on Lebanon, heavily targeting its capital Beirut and the south of the country

    Large cloud of black and grey smoke emerges from among houses in Beirut following a strikeImage source, EPA
    Image caption,

    Lebanon's health authorities say 52 people have been killed in Israeli strikes so far

  20. BBC Verify

    Satellite imagery indicates damage to Iranian Navy vessel in portpublished at 19:51 GMT

    By Barbara Metzler

    Satellite images captured today show damage at an Iranian naval port on the Strait of Hormuz, near the city of Bandar Abbas.

    In the imagery, at least one vessel appears to have sustained damage, with dark smoke rising from it.

    At about 230m (750ft) in length, it is among the larger ships typically seen at the port in southern Iran and has visual characteristics matching a Makran-class forward base ship operated by the Iranian Navy.

    Satellite image shows a damaged ship near the entrance to Bandar Abbas Naval Base, with smoke over nearby facilities and a map inset locating the site in Iran.