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Friday, April 24, 2026

LIVE: Iran issues threat to any US troops who set foot on their soil

A senior Iranian official has warned Donald Trump will be unable to protect American troops if they enter Iran as the President mulls over whether to launch an invasion.

‘How can the US, which can’t even protect its own soldiers at its bases in the region and instead leaves them stashed away in hotels and parks, protect them on our soil?’ Iran’s parliamentary speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf said in a statement on X.

His remarks come after Iran claimed US soldiers have been forced into hiding across the Middle East because of damage to US military bases.

Meanwhile Iran’s Revolutionary Guards accused Trump of telling ‘lies’ about the Strait of Hormuz and claimed three ships have been turned away today as it remains shut to allies of the US and Israel .

The IRGC’s navy has said the strait remains ‘prohibited’ and that any attempts to transit will be met with a ‘harsh response’ in a statement published on its Sepah news website.

It comes after Trump said Iran allowed 10 ships to pass through the Strait of Hormuz as a ‘present’. Last night, the President pushed back a deadline on striking Iranian power plants by 10 days with talks ‘going very well’.

Day 28 of the Iran war – Everything you need to know this morning

Here are the latest developments in the US-Israel war with Iran:

  • Donald Trump has pushed back a deadline not to strike Iranian power plants by 10 days and claimed talks are going ‘very well’ with Tehran
  • Iranian hardliners are ramping up calls to build a nuclear bomb as the regime claims it has one million fighters on standby for a US ground invasion
  • US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has claimed Iranian missiles could strike London
  • Iran’s military has warned that hotels housing US soldiers across the region would be targets in the war
  • Israel has said it has struck the Iranian regime’s main facility for producing sea mines and missiles launched to attack ships
  • Saudi Arabia said six missiles have been launched towards Riyadh while a maintenance facility for US air defence system Patriot was targeted in Bahrain
  • The UAE is pushing countries to join an international force to reopen and defend the Strait of Hormuz
  • Kuwait said its main commercial port has been attacked by ‘hostile’ drones

Stick with us throughout the day as we bring you the latest updates

Trump mulls over plan to send 10,000 more ground troops to the Middle East

Mandatory Credit: Photo by Andrew Thomas - CNP/Shutterstock (16800699h) United States President Donald J Trump speaks at a reception to celebrate Greek Independence Day in the East Room of the White House in Washington, DC, USA,. Trump Hosts a Greek Independence Day Reception in the East Room, Washington, District of Columbia, USA - 26 Mar 2026

by Stephen M. Lepore, US Senior Reporter

Donald Trump is reportedly considering the deployment of 10,000 additional ground troops to the Middle East to give Washington more military options as ​the president seeks peace talks with ‌Tehran.

The president has repeatedly insisted on a strategy of ‘peace through strength’ in his foreign policy while giving Iran 10 additional days before his threat to destroy their energy hubs unless Tehran reopens the Strait of Hormuz.

The additional troops would likely be sent to a US military base within striking distance of Iran’s Kharg Island. Trump has threatened to seize its energy assets.

Department of Defense officials with knowledge of the planning told The Wall Street Journal the deployment would likely include infantry and armored vehicles.

Already, about 5,000 Marines and several thousand paratroopers from the 82nd Airborne Division have been sent to the Middle East to bolster defenses.

Iran ‘well advised’ to negotiate with US, G7 minister says

Iran would be ‘well advised’ to negotiate with the US after almost a month of conflict in the Middle East, Germany’s foreign minister has said

‘The Iranian regime would be well advised to enter into serious negotiations with the United States now,’ Johann Wadephul said, after meeting G7 counterparts in France, including US Secretary of State Marco Rubio.

‘There are initial indications that such talks should be taking place,’ he added, without giving further details.

Iran-linked hackers claim breach of FBI director’s personal email

Kash Patel appearing before a Senate Judiciary Committee

FILE PHOTO: FBI Director Kash Patel gestures as he testifies before a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on oversight of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., U.S., September 16, 2025. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst/File Photo

Iran-linked hackers have publicly claimed the breach of FBI Director Kash Patel’s personal email after publishing photographs of the director and documents online.

On their website, the hacker group Handala Hack Team said Patel ‘will now find his name among the list of successfully hacked victims.’

A Justice Department official confirmed that Patel’s email had been breached and said the material published online appeared authentic.

The FBI did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The hackers did not immediately respond to messages.

Handala, which calls itself a group of pro-Palestinian vigilante hackers, is considered by Western researchers to be one of several personas used by Iranian government cyberintelligence units

US congressman says Iran ‘not using everything they have’

A Democrat congressman has suggested Iran are not using all the weapons they have at their disposal.

Seth Moulton, a Marine Corps veteran, has disputed Trump’s claims about the impact of the war on Iran’s arsenal.

‘If Iran is smart they’ve retained some of their capability – they’re not using everything that they have. And they’re laying in wait,’ Moulton said.

The Trump administration has said it aims to weaken Iran’s military by sinking its navy, destroying its missile and drone capability as well as ensuring Tehran never has a nuclear weapon.

US strikes have hit more than 10,000 Iranian military targets as of Wednesday and have sunk 92 percent of the Iranian navy’s large vessels, according to Central Command.

US may have only destroyed a third of Iran’s missiles, intelligence officials suggest

The US can only be certain it has destroyed about a third of Iran’s missile arsenal, according to five people familiar with American intelligence.

The status of around another third is less clear but bombings likely damaged, destroyed or buried those missiles in underground tunnels and bunkers, four of the sources told Reuters.

The sources spoke on condition of anonymity given the sensitive nature of the information.

One of the sources said the intelligence was similar for Iran’s drone capability, saying there was some degree of certainty about a third having been destroyed.

The assessment, which has not been previously reported, shows that while most of Iran’s missiles are either destroyed or inaccessible, Tehran still has a significant missile inventory and may be able to recover some buried or damaged missiles once fighting stops.

The intelligence stands in contrast to President Donald Trump’s public remarks on Thursday that Iran had ‘very few rockets left’.

‘A ceasefire isn’t enough’: What Gulf nations are asking for in any US-Iran deal to end war

Gulf states have told the US any deal with Tehran must permanently curb the Iranian threat, Reuters is reporting.

Gulf officials have privately told Washington Iran’s retaliatory actions since the start of the war had left them no diplomatic ‘off-ramp’, according to multiple sources.

They want any deal to ensure Iran’s missile and drone capabilities are permanently curbed while global energy supplies are never again ‘weaponised’.

Yousef al-Otaiba, the United Arab Emirates’ ambassador to the United States, has framed the war not as a crisis to be frozen but as a test of whether Iran can again shold the economy hostage.

‘A simple ceasefire isn’t enough,’ Otaiba wrote in a column for the Wall Street Journal. ‘We need a conclusive outcome that addresses Iran’s full range of threats: nuclear capabilities, missiles, drones, terror proxies and blockades of international sea lanes.’

UK supermarket chain warns of ‘temporary’ petrol shortages caused by Iran war

Signs on fuel pumps at the Asda Texaco petrol station in Clapham, south London.  Some petrol pumps are witnessing

Asda is today warning that some of its petrol stations are experiencing ‘temporary shortages’ caused by the war in Iran.

The supply issues at some forecourts come as the price of petrol jumped above 150p per litre for the first time in almost two years.

Fuel costs have been spiralling amid the conflict in the Middle East which has seen Iran effectively shut the Strait of Hormuz – a vital shipping lane which sees 20 per cent of the world’s oil pass through it every year.

Allan Leighton, executive chairman of Asda, said: ‘Our fuel volumes are up quite significantly and clearly demand has been outstripping supply. Supply is tight and we are all trying hard on that.

The issue is a temporary one, and some could see issues when we are waiting for delivery, and we can expect to see that continue.

‘The spikiness at the moment makes this tricky for us, as spikes can lead to temporary shortages. These are temporary and are addressed very quickly.’

Two major Iranian steel plants damaged by airstrikes

Two major steel plants in Iran have been damaged in new airstrikes, Iranian media is reporting.

‘Minutes ago, the American-Zionist enemy targeted the Khuzestan Steel (in southwest Iran) and Mobarakeh Steel factories in Isfahan (central Iran) in two separate attacks,’ the Fars news agency said, with state broadcaster IRIB also reporting the strikes.

‘Rescue forces have immediately arrived at the scene of the incident,’ Fars wrote.

The news agency added that initial information suggested an ‘electrical substation and an alloy steel production line’ were targeted at Mobarakeh Steel complex, while a warehouse was hit at the Khuzestan Steel Factory.

Steel is a strategically important material essential for industrial and military production, including of missiles, drones and ships.

Iranian speaker warns Trump about deploying US boots on the ground

Iran’s parliamentary speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf has issued a warning amid reports Donald Trump is considering deploying boots on the ground in Iran.

Ghalibaf, who is understood to be playing a key role in Iranian negotiations to end the war, has questioned how the US can protect its soldiers in the event of an invasion.

In a statement written in English on X, he said: ‘How can the US, which can’t even protect its own soldiers at its bases in the region and instead leaves them stashed away in hotels and parks, protect them on our soil?’

It has been reported that some US soldiers have been forced to leave their bases because of strike damage.

Trump is said to be weighing up whether to send an extra 10,000 troops to Iran as Washington draws up a series of military options.

Polish PM warns of ‘new escalation’ in Iran war

There are reasons to believe that there could be an escalation in the conflict in the Middle East in the coming days, Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk has said.

‘I have reasons to believe, also based on information we’ve received from our allies, that stabilisation is unlikely in the coming days. On the contrary, a new escalation may occur,’ Tusk told reporters.

His warning comes as Donald Trump reportedly considers the deployment of 10,000 additional ground troops to the Middle East.

Two Chinese container ships turned away from Strait of Hormuz

Two Chinese container ships were turned back from the Strait of Hormuz today as Iran looks to reassert its authority over the waterway, it has been reported.

The ships, named as the CSCL Indian Ocean and CSCL Arctic Ocean which are linked to China’s state-owned Cosco Shipping, attempted to exit the Persian Gulf before making a u-turn.

According to Bloomberg, the container vessels turning back near Iran’s Larak and Qeshm islands near the narrow opening of the strait after travelling northeast from waters off Dubai.

It comes as Iran claimed three ships of different nationalities were denied access to the strait today.

Tehran has said the strait is closed to ‘hostile’ shipping including vessels of US and Israeli allies but Chinese ships have previously been allowed to transit through.

Key Updates

  • Iran-linked hackers claim breach of FBI director’s personal email
  • US congressman says Iran ‘not using everything they have’
  • US may have only destroyed a third of Iran’s missiles, intelligence officials suggest
  • Two Chinese container ships turned away from Strait of Hormuz
  • Billions flooded into a mystery oil bet just minutes before Trump’s Iran bombshell
  • Vance rips into Netanyahu for selling ‘easy’ Iran war in tense phone call
  • European markets fall as Trump delays deadline for Iran strikes
  • Iran’s Revolutionary Guards say three ships turned away from Hormuz after Trump ‘lies’
  • Mothers of Israeli soldiers call for a stop to the war in Lebanon
  • Iran’s Revolutionary Guards urge civilians to leave areas near US forces
  • MARK ALMOND: The trap that awaits US troops on Iran’s Kharg Island
  • Pete Hegseth claims Iranian missiles could hit London
  • Mixed picture for oil prices as Trump extends Hormuz deadline by 10 days
  • Iran says hotels housing US soldiers will be targeted

  • Kuwait port attacked by ‘hostile’ drones
  • Thai cargo ship believed to have run aground after Iran attack
  • Trump mulls over plan to send 10,000 more ground troops to the Middle East
  • Israel says it has struck the ‘heart of Tehran’ in ‘wide-scale wave of strikes’
  • Iranian hardliners pushing for a nuclear bomb

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