The latest strikes on Iran have been finished, according to the United States military, marking the seventh night in a row of attacks.

The United States military has announced that it has finished carrying out its most recent wave of strikes on Iran. These strikes were carried out at the command of President Donald Trump and marked the seventh night in a row that the United States has carried out operations.According to a statement released by the United States Central Command, the United States Armed Forces utilised a variety of assets, including fighter planes, aerial drones, and battleships.
US strikes impacted “surveillance sites, military logistics infrastructure, underground weapons storage, and maritime capabilities,” the statement said.
On Friday, Iran launched an attack against US partners in the Gulf region. Both sides targeted infrastructure, and shipping in the Strait of Hormuz came under additional attack.
Earlier reports from Iranian state media stated that at least five bridges in the southern region were destroyed by the United States on Friday.
It has been claimed that seven people have been murdered as a result of strikes on bridges in the southern port of Bandar Khamir, which also included the attack on the train station.
It was stated that an airport in Iranshahr, which is located in a province that borders Pakistan, was struck much further east and away from the shore.
Authorities in Kuwait, a country that is a close ally of the United States, have reported that an Iranian strike has targeted one of the country’s power generation and water desalination units.
It was this week when President Trump reaffirmed his threats to attack Iranian energy facilities, and he also threatened to attack bridges the following week.
Attacks against locations that are regarded as critical for civilians are prohibited by the Geneva Conventions of 1949, which govern humanitarian conduct during times of war.
At the beginning of this year, international law experts in the United States expressed their opinion that such assaults may be considered war crimes, after Trump’s previous threats to strike such sites.
When President Trump made a warning in April to destroy Iran’s whole civilisation before establishing a truce with Tehran, he was met with global condemnation.