Iran fired ballistic missiles and drones at two US bases in two Gulf states on Sunday 28 June, and Washington's answer was to stand down 1. The IRGC (Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps), Iran's ideological military force, hit Ali Al Salem air base in Kuwait and the US Fifth Fleet headquarters at Port Salman in Bahrain 2. The IRGC had struck these same two bases once before, a seven-missile salvo on 5-6 June ; the truce signed on 16 June then pushed Iran's pressure offshore onto tankers. Returning to the bases, now with drones added to the missiles, is the hardest test of that truce since it was signed.
The IRGC released video of its launches, with anti-Trump messages written on the missiles, and claimed eight US sites were hit 3. US officials denied any damage or casualties at their facilities 4. No independent battle-damage assessment has settled the two accounts. A Qatari citizen was killed by shrapnel amid the strikes; Qatar attributed the death to "military operations in the area" and did not name Iran 5.
Kuwait condemned the attack as "repeated heinous Iranian aggressions" and a violation of its sovereignty; Bahrain said it had undermined de-escalation 6. The strikes capped a four-day ladder that ran from the drone attack on the tanker Ever Lovely to ballistic missiles landing near a Gulf capital's airport. Each earlier rung had drawn a measured US reply, which left Washington choosing between the devastation Trump has promised and the de-escalation he keeps reaching for.
