Below you will find pages that utilize the taxonomy term “Iran War”
Iran Fires on a Tanker While Its Diplomats Were in Doha
The ceasefire was already fragile. The Iranian delegation had barely landed in Doha. And then the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Navy fired on a US oil tanker attempting to transit the Strait of Hormuz.
That is the situation as of the early hours of May 28. According to IRGC-affiliated Tasnim News, an American oil tanker entered the strait with its radar system switched off — a provocation, in Tehran’s framing — and was turned back after IRGC naval forces fired toward the vessel. The US struck what it described as a “burnt area” near Bandar Abbas in response. No casualties were reported on either side.
The CIA's Quiet Verdict on the Hormuz Blockade
A confidential CIA analysis delivered to administration policymakers this week reaches a conclusion that cuts against the White House’s public posture on the war: Iran can survive the U.S. naval blockade for at least three to four months before experiencing severe economic hardship. Four people familiar with the document described its findings to the Washington Post. One U.S. official said the actual figure is likely far higher — that Tehran’s capacity to absorb prolonged pressure exceeds even the agency’s estimate.
Why Saudi Arabia Killed Project Freedom
Project Freedom lasted less than 48 hours. Trump announced it on Truth Social on Sunday afternoon — a plan to escort commercial vessels through the Strait of Hormuz under U.S. military protection — and by Tuesday he had suspended it, citing “great progress” in Pakistani-mediated negotiations with Iran. The diplomatic cover was thin. The operational reality was simpler: Saudi Arabia pulled the plug.
According to two U.S. officials who spoke to NBC News, Riyadh informed Washington that U.S. aircraft would not be permitted to operate from Prince Sultan Air Base southeast of Riyadh, nor fly through Saudi airspace to support the escort mission. Kuwait followed. With those two pieces of geography removed, the defensive air umbrella that Project Freedom required to function could not be constructed. Fighter jets, refueling tankers, and support aircraft all depend on ABO — access, basing, and overflight — from regional partners. In this part of the world, Saudi Arabia and Jordan are the critical basing nodes, Kuwait the critical overflight corridor, Oman essential for both overflight and naval logistics. The operation needed all of them. It got none.
Saudi Arabia Vetoed Project Freedom. The White House Had No Answer.
The collapse of Project Freedom within 36 hours of its launch was not a strategic pause. It was a veto — issued not by Iran, but by Riyadh.
According to two U.S. officials who spoke to NBC News, Saudi Arabia suspended American military access to Prince Sultan Air Base southeast of Riyadh and closed its airspace to U.S. aircraft supporting the operation. The decision came directly in response to President Trump’s announcement of Project Freedom on Truth Social — a post that caught Gulf allies off guard and, by multiple accounts, angered the Saudi leadership. A subsequent phone call between Trump and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman failed to resolve the dispute. With the aerial support structure pulled, the operation became logistically untenable. The president halted it hours later, framing the pause as voluntary and diplomatically motivated.