World

US, Iran exchange military strikes to put fresh strains on ceasefire

Smoke rises from the sites of Israeli airstrikes in the southern city of Nabatieh on June 2, 2026. Israel's growing offensive in Lebanon, including heavy bombardment and its deepest ground invasion in two decades, has threatened to scupper a ceasefire in the wider Middle East war between the United States and Iran. (Abbas Fakih/AFP/Getty Images/TNS)
Smoke rises from the sites of Israeli airstrikes in the southern city of Nabatieh on June 2, 2026. Israel's growing offensive in Lebanon, including heavy bombardment and its deepest ground invasion in two decades, has threatened to scupper a ceasefire in the wider Middle East war between the United States and Iran. (Abbas Fakih/AFP/Getty Images/TNS) TNS

WASHINGTON - U.S. forces intercepted Iranian ballistic missiles and drones aimed at neighboring Middle East countries and struck a command center in the Islamic Republic in response - the latest flare-up to test a fragile ceasefire.

U.S. Central Command said Iran on Tuesday launched several ballistic missiles toward countries including Kuwait and Bahrain. Some were shot down by U.S. and Bahraini air defenses and none hit their targets, Centcom said in a statement.

U.S. forces intercepted an additional wave of drones attempting to strike American forces in Kuwait, Centcom said, adding that no U.S. personnel or assets were harmed. The U.S. hit an Iranian military ground control station on Qeshm Island in response, with Centcom calling the strike an act of self-defense.

The exchange followed days of Israeli military escalation against Iran-backed Hezbollah in Lebanon, prompting a phone call between President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. The leaders offered differing accounts on what was agreed - with the U.S. president initially suggesting a broader truce than his counterpart was willing to declare.

Tensions also remain high after the U.S. attacked Iranian radar and command-and-control sites over the weekend, with Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps trying to target an air base in retaliation.

Trump has spent months projecting confidence that a deal to end the Iran conflict is within reach. Israel's determination to press ahead with its own objectives underscores his tenuous control over the outcome of the crisis.

The episode cast a fresh spotlight on an element of the war Trump has largely refused to acknowledge: The United States and Israel have very different ideas about what an end to the war should look like. That divide is jeopardizing the fragile, long-running negotiations between Washington and Tehran, which insists that Lebanon must be part of any peace agreement.

The primary focus for the oil market remains the Strait of Hormuz, which handled about one-fifth of global oil and liquefied natural gas flows before the war began - with visible commercial traffic through the waterway remaining limited. Brent crude rose 1% to $97 as fresh fighting flared up.

While Trump has repeatedly cast Iran as desperate for a deal, the Islamic Republic said Monday that talks through mediators were suspended. Trump on Tuesday denied that talks had stopped.

Israel has said its campaign against Hezbollah, which is considered a terrorist group by the U.S., is central to its own security and the region's.

The U.S. and Israel started the war together, launching joint attacks on Iran at the end of February, but the signs of a rift between them could now complicate Trump's efforts to end it.

The U.S. president also faces the challenge of convincing observers - including oil-market traders - that he can break the conflict's recurring cycle of escalation and diplomacy.

As a tentative U.S.-Iran ceasefire was brokered in early April, Israel ramped up its campaign in Lebanon, then Iran threatened to quit talks. Trump held a call with Netanyahu, and the Israeli leader offered a pledge to halt attacks - a pattern of events that has more or less repeated itself over the last two days.

U.S. and Iranian negotiators are grappling with several other critical questions, including freedom of navigation through the Strait of Hormuz, the future of Iranian funds frozen abroad and the scope of any broader regional security arrangements.

Iran has denounced Israel's deepening invasion of Lebanon and said it might increase restrictions on traffic in the strait, close the Bab el-Mandeb strait as well, and strike Israel directly.

Here's more on the Iran war:

-American allies in the Arab world and Europe have called for a halt to the Lebanon conflict. Fighting continued there overnight, with attacks reported by both sides. More than 3,000 people have been killed and about 1 million displaced.

-Trump has said that Israeli forces would not move against Beirut, suggesting a broad ceasefire had been struck between Israel and Hezbollah.

-Netanyahu confirmed a tentative ceasefire in northern Lebanon while affirming that Israel would keep up operations in the southern part of the country. Trump later followed with a post that focused on his stated success in convincing Netanyahu to turn "his troops around" from Beirut.

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(With assistance from Derek Wallbank, Michelle Jamrisko, Nick Wadhams and Anand Krishnamoorthy.)

Copyright 2026 Tribune Content Agency. All Rights Reserved.

This story was originally published June 3, 2026 at 12:37 AM.

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