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Iran Conflict 2026
4MAR

US strikes four Iranian sites near Hormuz

3 min read
04:21UTC

Donald Trump ordered CENTCOM onto Iranian soil for the first time in 100 days of war, hours after telling reporters a deal was in its 'final throes'.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Trump's first decisive Iran act in 100 days was a missile strike, not the deal he keeps promising.

CENTCOM (US Central Command) struck Iranian air-defence, radar and ground-control sites at Qeshm Island, Bandar Abbas, Sirik and Jask between 22:00 GMT on Tuesday 9 June and 01:00 GMT on Wednesday 10 June, at Donald Trump's direct order 1. For 100 days the US-Iran front had been sanctions and the Strait of Hormuz blockade while Israel did the kinetic work; this was the first American ordnance on Iranian soil since the war began 2. CENTCOM called it a "proportional response" and "self-defence", citing Iran's downing of a US AH-64 Apache helicopter, the aircraft logged "cause unknown" a day earlier and now resolved .

The strike package hit four named sites, yet Al Jazeera, citing Iranian accounts, reported the damage ran to a single telecoms tower at Sirik and two water tanks 3. The kinetic footprint stayed small while the political signal ran large. A target set of coastal air-defence and radar, not Fordow or Natanz, reads as a deliberately survivable strike: Washington demonstrated reach without forcing the all-out nuclear exchange that hitting an enrichment site would compel.

Trump had told reporters on 9 June that an Iran deal was in its "final throes" ; he ordered missiles onto Iranian territory within hours of saying it. The president who signed nothing across 100 days, no AUMF, no Article 51 notice, no nuclear memorandum, answered a stalled negotiation with ordnance rather than paper. What closed the war's defining action-versus-words gap was a missile order, not a signature, which means every legal instrument remains unsigned even now.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The United States military launched air strikes on Iran overnight on 9-10 June 2026. The targets were radar stations and air-defence equipment near the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow waterway through which a fifth of the world's oil travels. The stated reason was that an American military helicopter, a type called an AH-64 Apache, had gone down near the strait earlier that day. The US President ordered the strikes as retaliation, calling it self-defence. Iran says the radar sites were protecting its own coast. No new permission from the US Congress was sought; the President argued he already had the authority.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The casus belli chain runs from the Apache downing through CENTCOM's 'self-defence' doctrine, but the structural precondition was set earlier: CENTCOM had already struck Iranian radar at Goruk and Qeshm Island in late May and on 31 May to 1 June , establishing a pattern of airspace-denial strikes that Iran had not yet answered with ordnance on American aircraft.

When the Apache went down, CENTCOM's existing strike precedent meant the only doctrinal response it had available was another radar-suppression package.

The deeper root cause is the 100-day gap between the start of hostilities and any signed US legal authority. Defence Secretary Hegseth's May Senate testimony converted Article II self-defence from a fallback into a named policy.

Once it became stated doctrine that no AUMF was required, the threshold for ordering strikes fell to whatever Trump defined as necessary at the moment of decision, with no congressional gate and no UN notification requirement in the administration's own legal theory.

What could happen next?
  • Precedent

    CENTCOM's 9 June strike package marks the first American ordnance on Iranian sovereign territory since the war began on 28 February, establishing a new threshold Iran now must decide whether to accept or escalate above.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Risk

    With no Article 51 notification filed and no AUMF in place, the US legal position on the strikes rests entirely on Trump's Article II self-defence assertion, leaving the action vulnerable to challenge in any subsequent war-powers litigation or allied diplomatic forum.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Consequence

    Degrading Iranian radar and ground-control at four Hormuz-proximate sites reduces Tehran's situational awareness around the strait's chokepoint, potentially increasing Iran's reliance on IRGC missile salvos rather than air-defence coordination as its primary deterrent posture.

    Medium term · Suggested
First Reported In

Update #123 · Trump orders strikes on Iranian soil

Al Jazeera· 10 Jun 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Oil markets / Lloyd's underwriters
Oil markets / Lloyd's underwriters
Futures markets priced CENTCOM's strikes-complete statement as a de-escalation signal and pushed Brent down 1.7 per cent to $94.71, even as the IRGC declared Hormuz closed. Lloyd's war-risk premiums held elevated because institutional de-listing requires a UN Security Council resolution that Russia and China have just shown they will block.
Pakistan (mediator)
Pakistan (mediator)
Interior minister Mohsin Naqvi carried dual civilian and military letters to Mojtaba Khamenei in Tehran on 6-7 June with no public response. The IRGC's Hormuz closure on 11 June shows the corps is acting independently of the channel Pakistan is using, making the mediation structurally unable to produce a binding commitment without direct IRGC access.
Russia and China
Russia and China
Russia and China voted against GOV/2026/40 at the IAEA Board, following through on the blocking position coordinated with Grossi in Geneva on 5 June; both states continue to oppose Western institutional pressure on Iran at every multilateral venue.
E3 and IAEA (UK, France, Germany)
E3 and IAEA (UK, France, Germany)
The E3 co-sponsored IAEA resolution GOV/2026/40, adopted 21-3-10 on 10 June, demanding Iran disclose 440.9 kg of unaccounted HEU and admit inspectors to four denied facilities. The 10 abstentions and Russia-China noes leave any Security Council referral without a viable enforcement path.
IRGC / Iran military command
IRGC / Iran military command
The corps declared Hormuz closed to all traffic on 11 June and claimed two vessels struck, overriding the MoU its own civilian negotiators were pursuing through Pakistan. The closure order used the Persian Gulf Strait Authority apparatus to convert a toll mechanism into a military prohibition.
Trump administration / CENTCOM
Trump administration / CENTCOM
CENTCOM completed a second day of strikes on Tehran, Sirik and Minab, rejected the IRGC Hormuz closure as inconsistent with observed transit, and said strikes were complete. Hegseth framed the bombing explicitly as the negotiation: the method is coercive deal-making with no stated pause threshold.