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Tuesday, May 5, 2026

LIVE: Iran unleashes 70 missiles and 59 drones on Bahrain

Bahrain has declared it has intercepted 70 missiles and 59 drones launched by Iran as Tehran retaliates against the Gulf states over the US-Israel war.

According to Bahrain’s National Communications Centre, the interceptions resulted in some debris falling onto sites across the island kingdom where a ship burst into flames after it was struck at port.

Meanwhile, gas prices have increased by almost 50 per cent after Iranian drone attacks disrupted production facilities in Qatar – one of the world’s biggest exporters.

Qatar’s state-run energy firm said it ceased its liquefied natural gas production following two attacks in Ras Laffan and Mesaieed as the country cuts its ties with Iran.

And earlier today, Saudi Arabia dramatically halted operations at one of the world’s biggest oil refineries after another Iranian drone strike.

The Saudi defence ministry has confirmed two missiles were intercepted and destroyed at its huge Ras Tanura plant which produces around 550,000 barrels per day and is a cornerstone of the kingdom’.

It comes after Iran rejected an ultimatum by Donald Trump to lay down its weapons after two days of fighting and launched new attacks on Israel and across the Middle East.

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

Iran steps up drone attacks on Gulf states as Bahrain and Qatar face missile barrage

Iran has stepped up its attacks on Gulf states across the Middle East in retaliation over the US-Israel war which resulted in the death of its supreme leader Ayatollah Khamenei on Saturday.

Bahrain has announced its air defences have intercepted 70 missiles and 59 drones in the latest wave of attacks, while Qatar’s state-run energy firm was targeted, forcing it to stop gas production.

Elsewhere, Saudi Arabia halted operations at its huge Ras Tanura oil refinery which caught fire earlier today.

The latest onslaught comes after Iran rejected an ultimatum by Donald Trump to lay down its weapons after two days of fighting and launched new attacks on Israel and across the Middle East.

Donald Trump says he’ll put US boots on the ground in Iran ‘if necessary’

Donald Trump will not rule out putting troops on the ground in Iran while warning that the next ‘big wave’ of strikes is impending.

The President said on Monday that he would allow for US service members to enter Iran ‘if they were necessary.’

‘I don’t have the yips with respect to boots on the ground — like every president says, “There will be no boots on the ground.” I don’t say it,’ he told the New York Post.

‘I say “probably don’t need them,” [or] “if they were necessary.”‘

Trump also struck a defiant tone about the possible political consequences of such an action, telling the outlet ‘I don’t care about polling.’

In a separate interview, Trump alluded to major forthcoming action in Iran.

Qatar air force shoots down two aircraft from Iran

Qatar’s air force shot down two aircraft inbound from Iran, Doha’s defence ministry said in a statement.

It comes after the Islamic republic earlier targeted gas facilities in the Gulf state.

In a statement, the defence ministry said: ‘Qatar Emiri Air Force successfully shot down two (SU24) aircraft coming from the Islamic Republic of Iran.

‘They also successfully intercepted seven ballistic missiles through air defenses, and intercepted five drones by Qatar Emiri Air Force and Qatar Emiri Navy Forces, which targeted several areas in the state today.’

Starmer: UK ‘looking at all options’ to help people stranded in Middle East

Sir Keir Starmer said the situation on the ground ‘may remain challenging for some time’ but the Government is ‘looking at all options to support our people’.

The Prime Minister told the Commons: ‘We’re asking all British citizens in the region to register their presence so we can provide the best possible support and to monitor the Home Office travel advice, which is being regularly updated.

‘Across much of the region, airspace remains closed, and local authorities are advising individuals to shelter in place.

‘The situation on the ground may remain challenging for some time, so we’re sending rapid deployment teams to the region to support our British nationals on the ground.

‘And we’re in close contact with the travel industry and governments in the region, including with our friends in the UAE (United Arab Emirates), given the concentration of British nationals in that country, and we’re looking at all options to support our people.

‘We want to ensure that they can return home as swiftly and safely as possible. The FCDO (Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office) phone lines are open to provide consular support, and ministers are available to meet MPs to discuss any individual cases.’

Starmer: UK will not join US and Israel in Iran attacks

In this video grab taken from footage broadcast by the UK Parliamentary Recording Unit (PRU) via the Parliament TV website on March 2, 2026, Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer, makes a statement to parliament on the situation in Middle East following the actions of the US and Israeli militaries in Iran over the weekend. The United States and Israel launched strikes against Iran on February 28, killing Iran's supreme leader and top military leaders, prompting authorities to retaliate with strikes on Israel and across the Gulf. (Photo by PRU / AFP via Getty Images) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - NO USE FOR ENTERTAINMENT, SATIRICAL, ADVERTISING PURPOSES - MANDATORY CREDIT

The UK is not joining the US and Israel in their attacks on Iran, the Prime Minister has said.

Sir Keir Starmer told the Commons: ‘It is simply not possible to shoot down every Iranian missile and every drone after they’ve been launched. The only way to stop the threat is to destroy the missiles at source, in their storage depots or at the launches.’

He said yesterday evening the US requested permission to use British bases ‘for that specific and limited defensive purpose’, which the Government accepted.

He added: ‘To be clear, the use of British bases is limited to the agreed defensive purposes; we are not joining the US and Israeli offensive strikes.

‘The basis for our decision is the collective self-defence of long-standing friends and allies and protecting British lives.

‘It is in accordance with international law, and we produced a summary of our legal advice, which clearly sets this out. We will keep the decision under review.’

Starmer stands by decision not to join US and Israel in Iran strikes

In this video grab taken from footage broadcast by the UK Parliamentary Recording Unit (PRU) via the Parliament TV website on March 2, 2026, Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer, makes a statement to parliament on the situation in Middle East following the actions of the US and Israeli militaries in Iran over the weekend. The United States and Israel launched strikes against Iran on February 28, killing Iran's supreme leader and top military leaders, prompting authorities to retaliate with strikes on Israel and across the Gulf. (Photo by PRU / AFP via Getty Images) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - NO USE FOR ENTERTAINMENT, SATIRICAL, ADVERTISING PURPOSES - MANDATORY CREDIT

Sir Keir Starmer has defended the decision not to join in with the wave of strikes by the US and Israel on Iran at the weekend, as he said it was his job to look after Britain’s national interest.

Speaking in the Commons, the Prime Minister said: ‘That decision was deliberate. We believe that the best way forward for the region and for the world is a negotiated settlement in which Iran agrees to give up any aspirations to develop a nuclear weapon, and ceases its destabilising activity across the region. That has been the long-standing position of successive British governments.

‘President Trump has expressed his disagreement with our decision not to get involved in the initial strikes, but it is my duty to judge what is in Britain’s national interest. That is what I’ve done, and I stand by it.’

However, he added that Iran’s retaliation to the attacks had threatened British people and the country’s interests. He said Iran had launched hundreds of missiles and thousands of drones at countries which did not take part in the attack.

Sir Keir said: ‘But, it is clear that Iran’s outrageous response has become a threat to our people, our interests, and our allies and it cannot be ignored.’

Netanyahu says day is ‘near’ for Iranians to oust leadership

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said it is almost time for Iranians to oust their leadership following the joint US-Israeli campaign against Iran.

Mr Netanyahu said Operation Epic Fury is aimed in part to create the conditions for Iranians to oust their leaders, adding that the time was approaching for them to do so.

‘That day is drawing near. And when it comes, Israel and the United States will be there, together with the Iranian people. And it is important that the Iranian people be there with us.

‘That depends on them, we will be there,’ Netanyahu told journalists in televised remarks when he visited a site hit by an Iranian missile.

Since Israel and the United States first launched strikes on Iran on Saturday, Netanyahu has said it is time for Iranians to ‘cast off the yoke of tyranny’ and US President Donald Trump has told them to ‘take back your country.’

Watch: Iranians celebrate Khamenei’s death by ‘doing the Trump dance’

Iranians have taken to social media to share videos of them doing the famous ‘Trump dance’ after a joint US-Israel military operation killed Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Khamenei on Saturday.

President Donald Trump announced on Saturday evening that the US had killed Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.

‘Khamenei, one of the most evil people in History, is dead,’ the president wrote on Truth Social.

Khamenei, the chief Islamic cleric and ruler of Iran for over 36 years since 1989, has long been an adversary of the US for decades throughout multiple presidential administrations.

His rule saw the increased Islamification of Iran and the growth of its proxy forces in Yemen, Lebanon, Gaza and beyond.

Bahrain faces furious Iranian onslaught as island intercepts 70 missiles and 59 drones

Bahrain has declared its air defence systems have intercepted 70 ballistic missiles and 59 drones as Iran retaliates against the Gulf states over the US-Israel military operation.

Bahrain’s National Communications Centre said the interceptions resulted in some debris falling onto sites across the island kingdom.

Earlier in the day, a ship was hit at a Bahrain port, causing a fire that was extinguished and no casualties.

‘UKMTO received a report of an incident in the Port of Bahrain. The Company Security Officer reported that the vessel had been struck by two unknown projectiles causing a fire. The fire has been extinguished and the vessel remains in port. All members of the ships crew are safe and have evacuated the vessel,’ the United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) said.

Watch: The most shocking videos of the Iran conflict so far

From some of the world’s most expensive fighter jets spectacularly sinking through the sky to luxury hotels bursting into flames, these are the most shocking moments of the conflict so far caught on video.

In scenes that have been likened to 9/11, an Iranian drone was filmed smashing into the top of a high-rise block in Bahrain.

A fireball erupts into the night sky and flaming debris spews out in all directions.

While a terrifying close call was captured in Qatar’s capital, Doha where a tube-shaped missile falls through the sky and explodes violently when it meets the ground.

Top story: Pete Hegseth issues battle cry to US troops fighting in Iran

by Phillip Nieto

US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth claimed that America ‘didn’t start this war’ as he revealed Iran’s plans to build a ‘missile shield’ to protect its nuclear ambitions.

‘We didn’t start this war, but under President Trump, we are finishing it,’ Hegseth told a press conference at the Pentagon in Arlington, Virginia, on Monday.

He warned that ‘war is hell and it always will be’ as a fourth US soldier was confirmed dead following Iranian strikes on a base in Kuwait.

Hegseth explained that ‘Iran was building powerful missiles and drones to create a conventional shield for their nuclear blackmail ambitions’.

He vowed that the US would crush the Islamic regime. ‘We will finish this,’ he said.

Emmanuel Macron announces France will increase its nuclear warheads

French President Emmanuel Macron reviews the troops during his visit to the nuclear submarine navy base of Ile Longue in Crozon, France, Monday March 2, 2026. (Yoan Valat/Pool Photo via AP)

French President Emmanuel Macron said his country would increase the number of its nuclear warheads as he laid out how the European Union’s only atomic arsenal could protect the continent.

‘An upgrade of our arsenal is essential,’ he said from France’s Ile Longue nuclear submarine base. ‘That’s why I ordered an increase in the number of nuclear warheads in our arsenal.’

Macron added however that France – which holds the world’s fourth-largest nuclear arsenal, estimated at around 290 warheads – would no longer be disclosing details on its contents.

Key Updates

  • Donald Trump says he’ll put US boots on the ground in Iran ‘if necessary’
  • Starmer: UK will not join US and Israel in Iran attacks
  • Starmer stands by decision not to join US and Israel in Iran strikes
  • Flights to resume from Dubai tonight
  • Hegseth calls on Iranians to seize ‘incredible opportunity’ as US missiles rain down hell
  • Hegseth vows to crush Iran and promises vengeance after 4th US soldier dies
  • Pete Hegseth says ‘we didn’t start this war’ as he reveals Iran nuclear plot
  • US confirms fourth soldier has been killed by Iran attacks
  • Qatar ceases gas production after Iranian drone strike
  • Iran target Benjamin Netanyahu’s office in latest strikes
  • RAF shoots down two drones heading for British base
  • Trump hits out at Starmer after US blocked from British military bases
  • US confirms three F-15 jets crash over Kuwait
  • Cypriot airport evacuated after suspicious object found in airspace
  • RAF base in Cyprus warns soldiers to take cover following ‘security threat’
  • Bomb-carrying drone boat attacks oil tanker in Gulf of Oman
  • Iran steps up drone attacks on Gulf states as Bahrain and Qatar face missile barrage
  • Israel claims it has struck senior Hezbollah operative in Beirut
  • Expert warns Saudi oil refinery attacks marks ‘significant escalation’
  • Saudi Arabia shuts down one of world’s largest oil refineries following drone attack – report
  • Israel to target Hezbollah chief after taking out Khamenei
  • Trump warns fighting could go on for ‘next four weeks’
  • How global shipping could be impacted by US-Israel war with Iran
  • ‘Several’ US warplanes crash in Kuwait but crews survive, officials say
  • UK draws up overland rescue plan for 94,000 Britons trapped in Gulf states
  • Cyprus president confirms Iranian drone struck British RAF base
  • US military insiders warn America’s stockpile of missiles and interceptors could run dry
  • Fighter jet crashes over Kuwait near US military base – report
  • RAF base in Cyprus struck by drone
  • US Embassy in Kuwait urges Americans to take shelter
  • Israel launches strikes on Lebanon as conflict widens
  • Iran rejects Trump ultimatum and vows no surrender as Tehran launches new attacks

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