The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps issued a statement overnight declaring it had "begun efforts to destroy American political centres across the region" — designating every US embassy and consulate in the Middle East as a target for armed attack. Within hours, drones struck the US Embassy in Riyadh. President Trump responded: "You'll find out soon."
Iran's retaliatory targeting has followed a visible escalation sequence over 72 hours. The initial response struck military installations — US bases across seven countries . The second phase degraded Gulf energy infrastructure: Ras Laffan and Mesaieed in Qatar , Ras Tanura in Saudi Arabia , commercial tankers near the Strait of Hormuz , related event, . The embassy declaration opens a third category. Each step extends the war's cost to a wider set of actors and raises the price of hosting American forces or maintaining diplomatic ties with Washington. The logic is coercive: make proximity to the United States painful enough that host governments reconsider.
The declaration carries a specific weight under international law. The 1961 Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations establishes the inviolability of diplomatic premises as one of the oldest codified norms between states. Iran's own history with this norm is fraught — the 1979 seizure of the US Embassy in Tehran, which held 52 American hostages for 444 days, remains the defining breach. But that seizure was carried out by students with the revolutionary state's tacit backing; this is the IRGC itself — Iran's primary military institution — openly declaring diplomatic premises as targets for military attack. The escalation is from proxy action with deniability to state policy without it.
The practical consequence is immediate. The State Department's departure advisories now cover 16 countries — the widest such directive since the 2003 Iraq invasion. Every US diplomatic post from Beirut to Muscat must operate under the assumption that it sits on an active target list. The IRGC's declaration arrived hours after Iran's foreign minister told his Omani counterpart that Tehran remained open to mediated de-escalation . Either the diplomatic and military arms of the Iranian state are pursuing contradictory strategies, or — as that same foreign minister warned earlier — military units are now operating outside central government direction, and the declaration reflects the IRGC's war rather than Tehran's diplomacy.
