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Supervisor Elham AbolFateh
Editor in Chief Mohamed Wadie

US Targets 5 Iranian Provinces for 2nd Night, Leaving 14 Dead, Dozens Injured


Fri 10 Jul 2026 | 10:02 AM
By Ahmad Elassasy

The United States military has launched a second consecutive night of airstrikes against multiple locations across Iran, significantly escalating regional tensions. According to reports from the Iranian Ministry of Health, the coordinated operations targeted five separate provinces, resulting in at least 14 fatalities and leaving 78 others injured.

The military operations primarily focused on defensive installations, strategic coastlines, and vital maritime hubs. Local news agencies confirmed that the strikes heavily impacted infrastructure in the southeastern port city of Chabahar, where two maritime docks and a naval traffic control tower sustained direct hits.

Widespread Infrastructure Damage and Casualties

The fallout from the aerial campaign extended into civilian and logistics infrastructure. In the city of Iranshahr, located within the volatile Sistan and Baluchestan province, projectile shrapnel struck the Imam Ali Hospital, causing panic and structural damage.

Simultaneously, a massive explosion rocked the Iranshahr Airport. The provincial governor confirmed that a local firefighter was killed during the facility attack. The strike also resulted in severe destruction to specialized aviation equipment and the airport's meteorological monitoring station. In response to the unfolding emergency, local authorities declared a state of high alert for all emergency, medical, and rescue services across the province.

Meanwhile, further north, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps reported that an American cruise missile successfully targeted and struck specific positions near a strategic bridge in the city of Aq Qala, located in the northern Golestan province.

Diplomatic Backlash and the Strait of Hormuz

The Iranian Ministry of Foreign Affairs issued a strong condemnation of the military campaign, characterizing the strikes on southern coastal monitoring stations as an act of blatant military aggression. Foreign ministry officials argued that the operations constitute a direct violation of both the United Nations Charter and specific military de-escalation clauses previously established in bilateral memorandums of understanding.

"The recent measures taken by the United States Treasury to revoke critical licenses for international oil sales, combined with disruptions to maritime arrangements in the Strait of Hormuz, have effectively hollowed out the core substance of prior diplomatic agreements," the diplomatic statement read.

Furthermore, officials in Tehran directly linked the breakdown of international diplomatic understandings to ongoing military operations in Lebanon, warning that continuous Western intervention is actively dismantling established pathways toward regional de-escalation.