The United States, Israel, and Iran are currently engaged in an active, direct military conflict that began on February 28, 2026. This marks a major escalation from previous shadow wars, proxy conflicts, and limited direct exchanges (including a brief 12-day war in June 2025).
How It Started
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- On February 28, 2026, the US and Israel launched large-scale joint airstrikes (nearly 900 in the first 12 hours) under US operation names like “Epic Fury.”
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- Targets included Iranian missile sites, air defenses, nuclear-related facilities, military bases, naval assets, and leadership.
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TOPSHOT – Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei adjusts his eyeglasses during a press conference after casting his ballot for the parliamentary runoff elections in Tehran on May 10, 2024. (Photo by ATTA KENARE / AFP) (Photo by ATTA KENARE/AFP via Getty Images)
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- The stated goals include regime change (or at least severely weakening the Islamic Republic), destroying Iran’s ballistic missile program, preventing nuclear weapon development, and neutralizing threats from Iran’s “Axis of Resistance” (proxies like Hezbollah, Houthis, etc.).
This came after failed nuclear negotiations in 2025–2026, years of sanctions, Iran’s weakened position post-2025 exchanges and regional losses, and assessments that military action had a window of opportunity. Current Status (as of March 10, 2026)
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- The war is in its 11th–12th day (depending on exact counting), with no signs of de-escalation.
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- US and Israeli strikes continue intensively on Iran, targeting remaining missile infrastructure, leadership, military sites, and naval forces. US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth described March 10 as potentially the “most intense” day yet, with massive use of fighters, bombers, and munitions.

Smoke and flames rise at the site of airstrikes on an oil depot in Tehran on March 7, 2026. The United States and Israel launched strikes against Iran on February 28, prompting Iranian retaliation with missile attacks across the region and intensifying concerns about disruption to global energy and transport. (Photo by Sasan / Middle East Images / AFP via Getty Images)
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- Iran has launched multiple waves of ballistic missiles and drones at Israel (including barrages hitting central areas like Tel Aviv, killing civilians and causing damage). Recent strikes (March 9–10) killed at least two in Israel and wounded others; Hezbollah (from Lebanon) has also fired rockets, injuring more.
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- Iran has struck back regionally: attacks toward Gulf states (e.g., UAE/Qatar intercepting missiles), threats to close the Strait of Hormuz (critical oil chokepoint), and hits on shipping/oil infrastructure.
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- Casualties: Over 1,200 reported killed in Iran (per Iranian sources); civilian deaths on both sides; exact figures are disputed and rising.
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- Iran’s new leadership: Mojtaba Khamenei (son of the late Supreme Leader) has been named as successor.
Key Impacts So Far
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- Oil and economy — Benchmark oil prices have surged past $100/barrel (first time since 2022) due to disruption fears. Global markets are volatile.
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- Regional spillover — Hezbollah attacks from Lebanon; strikes in/around Lebanon; Iranian missiles/drones reaching Gulf states; some incidents affecting neighboring countries (e.g., Jordan, Azerbaijan injuries reported).
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- Iran’s stance — Iranian officials (IRGC, Foreign Minister) say they’re ready for a prolonged fight (claims of “six-month war” capability), reject negotiations with the US (“bitter experience”), and insist Iran—not the US—will decide when it ends. No ceasefire interest signaled.

SRINAGAR, INDIA – MARCH 2: Kashirimi Shiite Muslim protester drag the U.S. flag during a protest march against the U.S. and Israel, after Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was killed in Israeli and U.S. airstrikes on March 2, 2026 in Srinagar, India. Security forces in Indian-administered Kashmir sealed off Srinagar’s commercial center on Monday and fired teargas to disperse protests over the killing of Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Authorities imposed restrictions, closed schools, and slowed internet services in the disputed Himalayan region following anti-U.S. and anti-Israel rallies. (Photo by Yawar Nazir/Getty Images)
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- US/Israel stance — President Trump has said the war will end “very soon” (though not this week), claims Iran was planning regional takeover/domination (including nuclear threats), vows massive response if oil flows are blocked (e.g., “20 times harder”). Officials say operations are ahead of schedule, Iran’s missile/drone capabilities are severely degraded, and Iran “stands alone” and is “badly losing.”
This is not just Israel vs. Iran anymore—it’s a direct US-Israel vs. Iran war with heavy airstrike/missile exchanges. It has upended Middle East stability, rattled global energy markets, and drawn in proxies.
At the moment Russia and China have shown restrained or critical responses without direct intervention. No major ground invasion has occurred (so far it’s air/missile/naval focused), but escalation risks remain high, especially around oil routes or if proxies widen attacks.
Binance开户
February 17, 2026 at 9:12 pm
Your point of view caught my eye and was very interesting. Thanks. I have a question for you.
Samuel Kobina Amu
February 18, 2026 at 12:33 am
ok, all ears