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Monday, May 4, 2026

LIVE: Iranian warship sunk following submarine attack off Sri Lanka

An Iranian warship has sunk off Sri Lanka following a submarine attack that has left more than 100 sailors missing and 78 injured.

Sri Lanka’s defence ministry said that it was searching for crew of the IRIS Dena, which went down about 25 miles south of the island.

No information was immediately available on the cause of the explosion that sank the vessel but it is believed the ship was attacked by a submarine.

Both Sri Lanka’s navy and air force said they would not release footage of the rescue because it involved the military of another state.

It comes days after the US military said it had struck Iran’s largest naval warship following the launch of Trump’s ‘Operation Epic Fury.’

Follow the latest updates on the US-Israel war with Iran 

Iranian warship sinks off Sri Lanka after ‘submarine’ attack

An injured person moves on a wheelchair at the National Hospital Galle where he will receive treatment after a submarine attack on an Iranian ship off Sri Lanka, in Galle, Sri Lanka, March 4, 2026. REUTERS/Thilina Kaluthotage

More than 100 Iranian sailors are missing and 78 have been injured after a warship sunk off Sri Lanka following an apparent submarine attack.

A major search and rescue operation is under way in the Indian Ocean today after IRIS Dena was hit by an ‘explosion’ around 25 miles south of the the island.

Sri Lankan politicians have refused to confirm what caused the warship to sink but a military source told Reuters that the ship was attacked by a submarine.

The source did not say whose submarine was used in the attack.

Both Sri Lanka’s navy and air force said they would not release footage of the rescue because it involved the military of another state.

Police stepped up security outside the Galle hospital as the wounded Iranians were brought there by the local navy.

It comes days after The US military said it had struck Iran’s largest naval warship following the launch of Trump’s ‘Operation Epic Fury.’

UAE and Qatar say drone and missile barrages have been intercepted

The United Arab Emirates and Qatar separately said they had intercepted drone and missile barrages as Iran pressed its campaign targeting its neighbours into a fifth day.

The UAE’s ministry of defence said its air defences ‘successfully engaged today (March 4, 2025) with 3 ballistic missiles and detected 129 drones, of which 121 drones were intercepted while 8 fell on state territory’.

Qatar’s military said it was targeted ‘at dawn today, by 10 drones and 2 cruise missiles coming from the Islamic Republic of Iran,’ with all of the projectiles intercepted by its forces.

Macron backs Spain and declares US strikes on Iran illegal

Mandatory Credit: Photo by Paoloni Jeremy/ABACA/Shutterstock (16723566g) Screen grab of French President Emmanuel Macron delivering a televised address to the nation in Paris, France on March 3, 2026, on the situation in Iran and the Middle East, outlining France's position on the escalating conflict following Israeli-American strikes on Iran and Tehran's retaliation and announcing military and diplomatic measures including the deployment of the aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle to the Mediterranean. President Macron Speech On Iran War - France, Paris - 03 Mar 2026

France’s president has joined Spain in condemning US and Israeli strikes on Iran, branding them illegal.

In a televised address on Tuesday evening, Emmanuel Macron declared the attacks were ‘outside the bounds of international law.’

He is the second Western leader to question the legality of the conflict after Spain’s Pedro Sanchez warned that strikes from the US and Israel risked bringing about a ‘more uncertain and hostile international order.’

The French leader also said he had ordered his country’s nuclear-powered aircraft carrier and fleet to the Mediterranean and a frigate to Cyprus to ramp up military support in the region.

He added that Rafale fighter jets, air defence systems and airborne radar systems have been deployed over the Middle East.

The Blitz spirit of Brits trapped on Dubai cruiseliner

Cruise line passengers who are trapped in ports in the Gulf ‘danced around the pool’ while suicide drone bombardment took place overhead, the Daily Mail reveals today.

Passengers and crews have been confined to their ships after escalating hostilities raised fears over safety in the Strait of Hormuz, one of the world’s most vital shipping lanes.

Darren Lee, from Manchester, is currently stuck with his family, including a 12-year-old son, on MSC Euribia in Dubai and is among thousands of cruise passengers scattered across at least six docked ships as they await news.

The father-of-two explained that despite the ship being surrounded by ‘booms’ as Iranian drones were intercepted, some people ‘carried on with their life as if nothing was happening’ and ‘danced outside around the pool’.

Israel shoots down Iranian fighter jet in ‘world’s first downing’

Israel has declared it shot down an Iranian fighter jet in the world’s first downing of its kind.

The IDF announced one of its F-35 warplanes brought down an Iranian Air Force YAK-130 plane over Tehran earlier today.

According to the military, it marked the first time a manned fighter jet had been shot down by an F-35.

The IDF said on X: ‘An Israeli Air Force F-35I recently shot down an Iranian fighter jet (YAK-130) over Tehran. This is the world’s first downing of a manned fighter jet by an F-35.’

It comes as Israel launches its 10th wave of airstrikes on Tehran today while the Israeli government has vowed to assassinate Iran’s new supreme leader as clerics decide who will succeed Ayatollah Khamenei.

Iranian warship sinks after ‘submarine attack’ off Sri Lanka

An ambulance enters Sri Lanka’s naval HQ in Galle

An ambulance enters Sri Lanka's southern naval head quarters in Galle on March 4, 2026, to pick up Iranian sailors rescued from Iranian frigate Iris Dena that was sunk off their island earlier in the day. Sri Lanka rescued 32

by Sabrina Prenty

At least 101 people are missing, and 78 more are wounded after a submarine attack on an Iranian ship off Sri Lanka’s coast.

Sri Lanka’s defence ministry said that it was searching for the other crew of the IRIS Dena, which went down about 25 miles south of the island.

No information was immediately available on the cause of the explosion that sank the vessel, but Sri Lanka’s Foreign Minister Vajitha Herath told parliament that the injured sailors were taken to a hospital in the island’s south.

The 180-crew frigate had issued a distress call at dawn.

‘We are keeping up a search, but we don’t know yet what happened to the rest of the crew,’ an official told AFP, dimming prospects for finding any more survivors.

Herath said two Sri Lankan navy vessels and an aircraft were deployed for the rescue operation, but did not say what caused the Iranian warship to sink.

Saudi Arabia confirms attempted attack at Ras Tanura oil refinery

Crude oil storage tanks at the Ras Tanura oil refinery

FILE: Crude oil storage tanks at the Juaymah Tank Farm in Saudi Aramco's Ras Tanura oil refinery and oil terminal in Ras Tanura, Saudi Arabia, on Monday, Oct. 1, 2018. All eyes are on this weekends G-20 summit in Argentina, where Russias Vladimir Putin and Saudi Arabias Mohammed bin Salman are likely to discuss how to coordinate oil policy. The nations are in talks over the timing of any reduction in supply, Reuters reported Thursday, a week before producers are due to meet in Vienna to discuss the market and a possible cut in 2019. Photographer: Simon Dawson/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Saudi Arabia has today intercepted a drone targeting its massive Ras Tanura refinery in an attempted attack.

The incident comes following an earlier hit on the major oil complex along its Gulf coast which has the capacity to produce up to 550,000 barrels per day.

‘Initial estimates indicate that the attack was carried out by a drone and did not result in any damage,’ the ministry said in a statement posted on X.

On Monday, some operations at the Ras Tanura refinery were halted following an attack that caused a fire at the complex.

The Ras Tanura facility along the kingdom’s eastern Gulf coast is home to one of the largest refineries in the entire Middle East and a cornerstone of the kingdom’s energy sector.

Iran shows off sprawling underground missile city with row after row of drones and rockets

by Perkin Amalaraj

Iran has showed off a sprawling underground network of tunnels filled with row after row of drones and rockets, amid fears the US and its allies are burning through expensive weaponry in their war against the regime.

Footage released by the Fars News Agency, which is closely linked to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, shows long lines of missiles and Shahed drones.

With a ticking clock playing in the background, the propagandistic video used dramatic drone footage to show off the extent of their cheap arsenal.

One shot appeared to show a wall-to-wall hanging depicting the now-dead Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei looking out over the massive arsenal of drones.

A series of Iranian flags were seen hanging down from the roof of the tunnels, which appear to have been hewn from rock deep beneath the earth.

Another showed a pair of lorries carrying Shahed drone launchers, each one holding four of the cheap drones.

Gulf states could run out of anti-drone rockets in four days

by Mark Nicol

Gulf states facing an Iranian drone blitz may only have enough anti-drone defence missiles to last four days.

In a tactic that has surprised the US and its allies, Iran has responded to attempts to force regime change by raining down missiles and drones on its neighbours.

By spreading strikes across more than five countries at once and sustaining over 2,500 drones per day, Tehran is forcing its adversaries to divide their defences.

A source told the Daily Mail: ‘At the current rates the supplies could run out within four days. The interceptors are being used at an unprecedented speed.’

The vast majority of Iranian projectiles have been blocked, but only a few need to breach the defences of Gulf nations to change the perception of the conflict.

Israel vows to target Iran’s next supreme leader as Gulf states endure night of chaos

Iran’s next supreme leader will become a ‘certain target’ for the US and Israel after it emerged the late Ayatollah Khamenei’s son Mojtaba is the favourite to succeed him.

Israel’s threat comes as it unleashes its 10th wave of airstrikes on Tehran today, specifically targeting ‘terror infrastructure’ in the capital.

Iran meanwhile has continued its retaliatory attacks in Israel and across the Gulf states on another night of chaos in the Middle East.

As the fighting enters its fifth day, here’s everything you need to know:

  • Israel has vowed to assassinate the successor to Iran’s former supreme leader Ayatollah Khamenei whose funeral will take place in Tehran later today
  • The Ayatollah’s son Mojtaba is reportedly in line to take over from his father though he is not a high-ranking cleric, has never held office and does not have an official role in the regime
  • Israel has launched new attacks on Tehran and Lebanon with the military urging people to evacuate along the southern border as it targets Hezbollah militants
  • Last night Iranian drones struck the US consulate in Dubai, causing it to catch fire while a missile also hit a US air base in Qatar
  • Saudi Arabia has said two cruise missiles have been intercepted over Riyadh while a separate drone attack was also thwarted
  • Iran has claimed it has ‘complete control’ of Strait of Hormuz despite Donald Trump indicating the US Navy was ready to escort oil tankers through the passage
  • Trump also mocked Sir Keir Starmer whom he called ‘no Winston Churchill’ in a major blow to the US-UK Special Relationship

Pentagon names US troops killed in Kuwait drone attack

Top: Cody Khork (L) and Noah Tietjens / Bottom: Nicole Amor (L) and Declan Coady

A combination image of undated photos shows U.S. Army Reserve Captain Cody A. Khork, 35, of Winter Haven, Florida, U.S. Army Reserve Sgt. 1st Class Noah Tietjens, 42, of Bellevue, Nebraska, U.S. Army Reserve Sgt. 1st Class Nicole Amor, 39, of White Bear Lake, Minnesota, and U.S. Army Reserve Sgt. Declan Coady, 20, of West Des Moines, Iowa, who were killed March 1, 2026, at the Port of Shuaiba, Kuwait during a drone attack. THIS IMAGE HAS BEEN SUPPLIED BY A THIRD PARTY. THIS IMAGE WAS PROCESSED BY REUTERS TO ENHANCE QUALITY, AN UNPROCESSED VERSION HAS BEEN PROVIDED SEPARATELY. REFILE - CORRECTING LOCATION FROM

The Pentagon on Tuesday identified four of six US troops killed in the Iran war after they were struck in a drone attack in Kuwait.

The Department of Defense said in a statement that the four service members were killed during an “unmanned aircraft system attack” in Kuwait’s Shuaiba port on Sunday.

It identified the four as Captain Cody Khork, 35, Sergeant Declan Coady, 20, Sergeant 1st Class Nicole Amor, 39, and Sergeant 1st Class Noah Tietjens, 42.

All four were ‘supporting Operation Epic Fury,’ which the US has named its strikes against Iran, it added.

Two others who were also killed in action have not been publicly identified.

On Monday, US Central Command (CENTCOM) said a total of six US military personnel were killed since the start of the Iran war over the weekend.

‘US forces recently recovered the remains of two previously unaccounted for service members from a facility that was struck during Iran’s initial attacks in the region,’ CENTCOM said in a post on X.

Kuwait faces ‘wave of missiles and drones’

Kuwait’s army has declared it is dealing with a ‘wave of missiles and drones’ in its airspace.

In a statement released on X, an army spokesperson said the forces are carrying out missions to counter and intercept the weapons.

‘The General Staff affirms its complete readiness to deal with all threats to ensure the protection of the country’s land and airspace and the safety of citizens and residents,’ the statement reads.

Key Updates

  • Iranian warship sinks off Sri Lanka after ‘submarine’ attack
  • Israel shoots down Iranian fighter jet in ‘world’s first downing’
  • Iranian warship sinks after ‘submarine attack’ off Sri Lanka
  • Iran shows off sprawling underground missile city with row after row of drones and rockets
  • Israel vows to target Iran’s next supreme leader as Gulf states endure night of chaos
  • Suspicious object identified near Cyprus
  • UK charters emergency evacuation flight from Oman for tonight
  • Israel orders Lebanese towns to evacuate as it launches new attacks on Hezbollah
  • Trump mocks Starmer as ‘no Churchill’ in major blow to Special Relationship
  • Israel vows to assassinate successor to Iran’s Ayatollah
  • Ayatollah Khamenei’s funeral to be held today
  • Iran’s new supreme leader is named as Ali Khamenei’s son Mojtaba
  • Top story: Iran strikes CIA base in Saudi Arabia
  • Israel launches new strikes in Iran as conflict enters fifth day

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