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In Brief
- A US submarine has sunk an Iranian warship in the Indian Ocean off the southern coast of Sri Lanka, killing 87.
- More than 83,000 people in Lebanon have reportedly been displaced as clashes continue between Israel and Hezbollah.
Iran has leveled accusations against the United States, alleging a grievous act by sinking an Iranian naval vessel near Sri Lanka.
On Thursday, a U.S. submarine reportedly submerged an Iranian warship off the southern coast of Sri Lanka, resulting in the loss of numerous sailors’ lives and significantly escalating U.S. military engagement with the Iranian navy.
Sri Lanka’s deputy foreign minister confirmed the vessel as the frigate IRIS Dena, noting it was en route back to Iran after departing from a port in eastern India.
This incident unfolded in the Indian Ocean, far from the Gulf, where U.S. and Israeli forces are actively targeting Iran. In response, Iran has been launching missile and drone attacks.
U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth addressed the press at the Pentagon, stating, “An American submarine targeted an Iranian warship that presumed safety in international waters.”
Hospital authorities in the Sri Lankan port city of Galle said 87 bodies were brought in by military rescuers who responded to an early morning distress call.
Another 32 people were rescued and were being treated at hospital and about 60 people were likely unaccounted for from an estimated 180 people on board, Sri Lankan authorities said.
“Mark my words: The US will come to bitterly regret precedent it has set”, Iran’s foreign minister Abbas Araghchi said in a post on X on Thursday afternoon.
A Pentagon video purporting to have captured the attack showed the warship being hit by a huge explosion, which blew apart the rear of the vessel, lifting it from the water and causing it to begin sinking from the stern.
The Iranian vessel had taken part in a naval exercise organised by India in the Bay of Bengal from 18 to 25 February, according to the drill’s website.
Continued Israeli strikes on Lebanon, new Iranian strikes on Israel
An airstrike hit the Hezbollah stronghold of south Beirut early Thursday, images showed, shortly after Israel issued a warning ahead of an attack.
Israel’s military earlier told residents to leave a Beirut suburb, warning it was about to strike targets it said were linked to Hezbollah.
Israeli strikes on Lebanon have killed 72 people, wounded 437 and displaced more than 83,000 since the start of a new round of fighting between Israel and Hezbollah, Lebanese officials announced Wednesday.
Israel’s Magen David Adom (MDA) emergency services said that since the start of the war, its teams had provided medical treatment to 414 people, including “10 fatalities, two seriously injured, six moderately injured, and 396 lightly injured”.
Israel is carrying out airstrikes on multiple areas of Lebanon after the pro-Iran group began launching rockets and drones towards it on Monday in retaliation for the US and Israeli attack that killed Iran’s supreme leader.
The Israeli military said it struck several Hezbollah targets across Lebanon on Wednesday, including rocket and missile launch sites south of the Litani River.
“Among the targets struck were numerous Hezbollah rocket and missile launch sites south of the Litani River … including a drone production facility,” the military said, hours after issuing an evacuation order for residents living in the targeted area.
The Litani River is a strategic boundary in southern Lebanon used in a 2006 UN resolution and a November 2024 Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire deal as one demarcation line of a zone in which only Lebanese authorities and UN peacekeepers are permitted.
Lebanese state media said an Israeli strike had killed a senior Hamas official on Thursday, the first reported targeted killing of a member of the Palestinian militant group since US-Israeli strikes on Iran triggered regional war.
Iran, meanwhile, launched a wave of airstrikes against Israel on Thursday, triggering alerts in several cities. Israel’s emergency service said no casualties were reported.
Iran said Thursday it had targeted the headquarters of Kurdish forces in Iraqi Kurdistan with three missiles, following strikes on Kurdish regions in both Iran and Iraq.
The strikes which killed a member from an exiled Iranian Kurdish group, according to a representative, followed a warning from Iranian officials.
Israel’s military said in a statement on Thursday it had “just begun a large-scale wave of strikes against infrastructure of the Iranian terror regime across Tehran”.
Iranian news agency Tasnim and local media reported several explosions had been heard in Tehran on Thursday.
‘That’s the way it is,’ Trump says on US casualties
On Sunday, six American soldiers were killed at an operations centre targeted by an Iranian drone strike in the heart of a civilian port in Kuwait, miles away from the main Army base.
Those killed included Captain Cody Khork, 35, of Winter Haven, Florida; Sergeant 1st Class Noah Tietjens, 42, of Bellevue, Nebraska; and Sergeant Declan Coady, 20, of West Des Moines, lowa, who was posthumously promoted from specialist.
No other names were released.
“These men and women all bravely volunteered to defend our country, and their sacrifice will never be forgotten,” army secretary Daniel Driscoll said.
All were assigned to the 103rd Sustainment Command, which provides food, fuel, water and ammunition, transport equipment and supplies.
“Sadly, there will likely be more before it ends. That’s the way it is,” US President Donald Trump said of the deaths.
On Wednesday, Trump claimed the war was progressing well for the US.
“We’re doing well on the war front, to put it mildly. Somebody said on a scale of 10, where would you rate it? I said about a 15,” Trump told a gathering of tech bosses at the White House.
“We’re in a very strong position now, and [Iran’s] leadership is just rapidly going. Everybody that seems to want to be a leader, they end up dead.”
Asked about what the Trump administration knows about the strike on an Iranian girls’ school on Saturday, which killed more than 160 people, Hegseth said only that the US is “investigating”.
On Thursday, Republicans in the US Senate voted down an effort to halt the US’ war on Iran.
The legislation, known as a war powers resolution, failed on a 47-53 vote tally. The vote fell mostly along party lines, though Republican senator Rand Paul of Kentucky voted in favour and Democratic senator John Fetterman of Pennsylvania voted against.
The war powers resolution would have given politicians an opportunity to demand congressional approval before any further attacks are carried out.
— With reporting by the Associated Press via the Australian Associated Press.
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