TBN Israel’s Yair Pinto and Mati Shoshani reports on the Israel-Iran and regional war.
The Strait of Hormuz is burning again after Iran launched drones toward civilian ships and the United States struck targets inside Iran in response. According to the report, the M/V Ever Lovely was hit near the coast of Oman, while another tanker, Kiko, was also struck by an Iranian drone. The U.S. responded by targeting missile warehouses, drone facilities, coastal radar stations, and command infrastructure connected to the Revolutionary Guards along Iran’s southern coast.
Iran’s secret wave of attacks is now being exposed. Bahrain says Iranian drones entered its territory, with one intercepted and another crashing near a local airport compound. Bahrain strongly condemned Tehran and warned that it reserves the right to defend its sovereignty, security, and stability. This turns the crisis from a maritime confrontation into a wider Gulf threat.
Iran is trying to turn the Strait of Hormuz from an international shipping route into an Iranian-controlled passage, with approved routes, warning fire, insurance threats, and possible passage fees. President Trump called the attack a “stupid violation of the ceasefire,” while the U.S. made clear that if Iran attacks civilian shipping, it will lose the systems used to threaten it.
Israel and Lebanon signed a historic framework agreement with American mediation, but Iran and Hezbollah are already trying to sabotage it. The agreement keeps Israel in essential security areas in southern Lebanon as long as Hezbollah is not disarmed and the threat is not removed. Israel is not returning to the reality of October 6 on the northern border.
Naim Qassem harshly attacked the agreement, warning that direct negotiations with Israel are “free concessions” and declaring that the agreement is not valid. Hezbollah is threatening that implementing the agreement could lead to civil war, because the deal challenges the organization’s weapons, its control over southern Lebanon, and its role as Iran’s front line against Israel.
Inside Iran, the panic around Mojtaba Khamenei is growing. Reports describe a paranoid security system around the new leader, with rings of compartmentalization, removal of associates, restricted access, and more power moving from the government to the Revolutionary Guards. Tehran is threatening the world — but inside the regime, fear is spreading.
The negotiations over Iran’s frozen assets are expected to take place in Qatar in July, while Iran continues trying to connect Hormuz, Hezbollah, Lebanon, and its nuclear talks into one pressure campaign. The question now is simple: will the United States and Israel force Iran back, or will the Revolutionary Guards tear the region into another war?
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