|

Zee Live News News, World's No.1 News Portal

Sporadic attacks reported in Iran, Gulf countries hours after Trump announces ceasefire | CBC News

Author: admin_zeelivenews

Published: 08-04-2026, 11:19 AM
Sporadic attacks reported in Iran, Gulf countries hours after Trump announces ceasefire | CBC News
Telegram Group Join Now

The United States and Iran agreed to a two-week ceasefire brokered by Pakistan, potentially suspending a six-week-old war that has killed thousands, spread across the Middle East and caused unprecedented disruption to the world’s energy supplies.

Trump announced the agreement late on Tuesday, just two hours before a deadline he had set for ‌Iran to open the blockaded Strait of Hormuz or face the destruction of its “whole civilization.”

Since the war began, Trump has repeatedly backed off deadlines just before they expire. In doing so again Tuesday, Trump said in a social media post he had come to the decision “based on conversations” with Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and Gen. Asim Munir, Pakistan’s powerful army chief.

Sharif has invited Iranian and U.S. delegations to meet in Islamabad on Friday.

Hours after the announcement, however, the United Arab Emirates reported an incoming Iranian missile barrage, and Kuwait’s military said its forces were responding to drones. Iran then said an oil refinery on its Lavan Island came under attack.

Two women and a small child walk past a badly damaged strip mall
People walk past a cafe that was damaged in the aftermath of an Israeli strike in Sidon, Lebanon on Wednesday. (Aziz Taher/Reuters)

Israel backed the U.S. ceasefire with Iran, but Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Wednesday it won’t stop his country’s fight against Hezbollah in Lebanon, which continued through the morning. That contradicted comments from Pakistan which said the ceasefire included the fighting in Lebanon.

The Lebanese state news agency ⁠NNA reported continued Israeli ⁠strikes across southern Lebanon, including artillery shelling and a dawn airstrike on ​a building near a hospital that killed four people. Israel’s military issued repeated urgent warnings to residents that it planned to attack the city of Tyre in southern Lebanon.

Quick shipping turnaround not likely

Trump told the French news agency AFP that the ceasefire represented a “total and complete victory” and said on Truth Social that the U.S. had achieved its military objectives. The deal is subject to Iran’s agreement to pause its blockade of oil and gas passing through the strait, Trump has said.

The waterway typically handles about one-fifth of global oil and liquefied natural gas shipments, and one-third of the world’s fertilizer supply. News of the deal, and the prospect that the worst disruption to global energy markets in history could finally come to a close, caused a sharp fall ​in oil prices and a surge in share markets around the world.

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi said in ​a statement Tehran would cease counter-attacks and provide safe passage through the waterway — if attacks against it stopped.

Reviving shipping from the Gulf could take time: shipping companies will need assurances of safety before sailing.

Container shipper Maersk said it was ⁠not yet making changes.

“Any decision to transit the Strait of Hormuz will be based on continuous risk assessments, close monitoring of the security situation, and available guidance from relevant authorities and partners,” the company said in a statement.

Anoop Singh, global head of shipping research at Oil Brokerage, said it should be expected that tankers and oil flowing to Iranian-friendly countries will be the first ones to transit the strait.

Key issues not publicly addressed

The ceasefire suspends the war launched on ⁠Feb. 28 by Trump and Netanyahu, which has included the killing of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and several top Iranian officials.

Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian said the ceasefire “with the acceptance of the general principles desired by Iran, was the fruit of the blood of our great martyred leader Khamenei and the achievement of the presence of all the people on the scene.”

WATCH | Objectives met?:

Iran ceasefire: ‘Huge strategic defeat for the U.S.’

With the U.S and Iran agreeing to a two-week ceasefire, CBC’s chief correspondent Adrienne Arsenault asks Munk School of Global Affairs founding director Janice Stein if the deal can hold and what position it leaves both countries in.

U.S. and Israeli officials sought ‌to prevent Iran from projecting force beyond its borders, end its nuclear program and create conditions for Iranians to topple their rulers.

But the war has yet to deprive Iran either of its stockpile of near-weapons-grade highly enriched uranium or its ability to hit its neighbours with missiles and drones. The clerical leadership, which faced a mass uprising months ago, withstood the superpower onslaught with no sign ⁠of domestic opposition.

“The enemy, in its unjust, illegal and criminal war against the Iranian nation, has suffered an undeniable, historic and crushing defeat,” Iran’s Supreme National Security Council said in a statement.

There’s little public sign that Iran and the United States had resolved disagreements over the fate of Iran’s nuclear program, its ballistic missiles or its regional proxies.

In addition to control of the strait, Iran’s demands for ending the war are likely to be unpalatable for Washington. They include withdrawal of U.S. combat forces from the region, the lifting of sanctions and the release of its frozen assets.

Criticism in Israel

Crowds took to the streets of Iran overnight to celebrate, waving Iranian flags and burning flags of the United States and Israel. But there was also wariness the deal would not hold.

“Israel will not allow ​diplomacy to work and Trump might change his view tomorrow. But at least we can sleep tonight without strikes,” Alireza, 29, a government employee in Tehran, told Reuters ⁠by phone.

A young girl sits on a man's shoulders waving a flag in a crowd of people.
The United States and Iran agreed to a two-week ceasefire Tuesday barely an hour before U.S. President Donald Trump’s deadline to obliterate the rival country was set to expire. (AFP/Getty Images)

In Israel, Yair Golan, a former military deputy chief of staff who plans to run in the next election, wrote on X that the outcome was a “complete failure that endangered Israel’s security.”

“The nuclear program ​was not destroyed. The ballistic threat remains. The regime is still intact and is even emerging from this war stronger,” said Golan.

Opposition politician Yair Lapid said it would take Israel “years to repair the diplomatic and strategic damage that Netanyahu caused due to arrogance, negligence and lack of strategic planning.”

But elsewhere around the world, the announcement was met with relief and cautious optimism. , and UN Security General Antonio Guterres, through a spokesperson, and Pope Leo, at his weekly audience from the Vatican, each urged the parties to resolve differences through negotiation.

After ⁠Trump threatened Iran on Tuesday that “a whole civilization will ⁠die ⁠tonight” if ​the country did not meet U.S. demands for a truce, ​Leo had told ⁠journalists that threat was “truly unacceptable.”

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said on X that while “ceasefires are always good news,” his government “will not applaud those who set the world on fire just because they show up with a bucket.”

LISTEN | Trump’s alarming threat, then pause:

Front Burner33:04‘A whole civilization will die’: Trump to Iran


“What’s needed now: diplomacy, international legality, and PEACE,” said Sanchez, who has been Europe’s loudest critic of the U.S. and Israel’s military actions in the Middle East.

More than 1,900 people had been killed in Iran as of late March, but the government has not updated the war’s toll for days.

In Lebanon, more than 1,500 people have been killed, while in Gulf Arab states and the occupied West Bank, more than two dozen people have died.

Eleven Israeli soldiers have died and 23 people have been reported dead in Israel, while 13 U.S. service members have been killed.

Source link
#Sporadic #attacks #reported #Iran #Gulf #countries #hours #Trump #announces #ceasefire #CBC #News

Related News

Leave a Comment

Plugin developed by ProSEOBlogger
Facebook
Telegram
Telegram
Plugin developed by ProSEOBlogger. Get free Ypl themes.
Plugin developed by ProSEOBlogger. Get free gpl themes