News Flash

TEHRAN, March 12, 2026 (BSS/AFP) - Iran's new supreme leader ordered the
vital Strait of Hormuz oil shipping lane to remain closed on Thursday, while
US President Donald Trump said stopping the Islamic republic's "evil empire"
was more important than crude prices.
Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei, who was reportedly injured in an air strike, has
yet to appear publicly since his nomination last Sunday as supreme leader,
and his defiant message was read by a newscaster on state television.
Khamenei, whose father Ali Khamenei was killed in the first wave of US-
Israeli attacks at the start of the Middle East war, called for the Strait of
Hormuz to remain blocked and for Gulf countries to close their US military
bases.
"The lever of blocking the Strait of Hormuz must definitely be used,"
Khamenei said of the waterway through which a quarter of world's oil and
liquefied natural gas (LNG) usually transit.
He added that "a limited amount of" Iran's revenge for US and Israeli strikes
had "taken concrete form, but until it is fully achieved, this case will
remain among our priorities."
Iran launched a new wave of attacks against Gulf energy targets on Thursday
that sent prices oil spiking briefly above $100 a barrel and led to a warning
that the crisis could lead to to "the largest supply disruption" in history.
But Trump dismissed growing concerns, writing on social media that "of far
greater interest and importance to me, as President, is stoping an evil
Empire, Iran, from having Nuclear Weapons, and destroying the Middle East
and, indeed, the World."
- Vessels attacked -
Images from Bahrain on Thursday showed thick smoke rising after a strike on
fuel tanks in Muharraq, with residents told to stay inside and close their
windows.
Drones caused damage again at Kuwait's international airport and in downtown
Dubai, while Saudi Arabia said it had intercepted drones headed towards its
Shaybah oil field and its embassy district.
Shipping in and around the crucial Strait of Hormuz remains at a near-
standstill, with another three vessels attacked in the Gulf off the coast of
the United Arab Emirates and Iraq.
The Paris-based International Energy Authority, a world authority on energy
markets, warned Thursday the 13-day conflict "is creating the largest supply
disruption in the history of the global oil market", which would surpass
those of the 1970s.
With Gulf states slashing production and oil tankers stuck in the Gulf,
benchmark oil prices have risen 40-50 percent since the US and Israel
attacked Iran on February 28, threatening to crimp growth and stoke
inflation.
- 'Mistake' -
A top Iranian military figure warned on Wednesday that the country could wage
a prolonged war that would "destroy" the world economy.
Trump, who is under mounting domestic pressure, ruled out the air campaign
ending "immediately" while indicating that US forces were running out of
targets to hit.
"If the White House imagines the conflict will stop when Donald Trump decides
it... they're making a mistake and ignoring the lessons of history," Pierre
Razoux, director of studies at the Mediterranean Foundation for Strategic
Studies, told AFP.
"The Iranian regime, which no longer has anything to lose, will wage a war of
attrition against the United States and Israel to punish them for their
aggression."
One Tehran resident hoping for the fall of the Islamic republic told AFP she
was worried about the US and Israel calling off their air campaign despite
her fears about the daily bombardment.
"I don't know what will happen to us mentally and emotionally if it doesn't
work out this time," she told AFP on condition of anonymity.
- 'End of the line' -
The conflict has spread across the region, with hundreds killed by Israeli
strikes in Lebanon, including at least eight more who died on Beirut's blood-
stained seafront where displaced families were camping in tents.
After the Iran-backed Hezbollah group announced a new operation against
Israel on Wednesday, Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz said he was
ordering troops to "prepare for expanding" attacks on Lebanon.
The violence has killed more than 687 people in Lebanon, according to
authorities, while more than 800,000 people have registered as displaced.
In Iran, over three million people have been displaced by the war, according
to new figures issued Thursday by the UN's refugee agency.
Israel's military said it had began a new "wide-scale" wave of strikes in
Iran on Thursday, including one southeast of Tehran that it said had targeted
a site used for developing nuclear weapons.
Satellite imagery from Wednesday shows what appeared to be three strikes from
bunker-busting munitions at the Parchin military facility.
US forces said they had struck 28 Iranian mine-laying vessels amid fears that
Tehran could render the Strait of Hormuz unnavigable.
The Strait, through which a fifth of the world's oil and liquefied natural
gas (LNG) passes, lies off Iran and is just 54 kilometres (34 miles) wide at
its narrowest point.
Tehran has vowed that not one litre of oil will be exported from the Gulf
while US-Israeli attacks continue, although industry figures suggest its own
sanction-hit exports are continuing to get through.
- Oil prices spike again -
Oil prices have soared past $100 a barrel despite an announcement that
leading consumer countries would authorise a record release of their
strategic crude reserves in action coordinated by the IEA.
The move was not enough to allay fears of a global crisis.
"In trading desk language, the IEA release is the equivalent of pointing a
garden hose at a refinery blaze," commented Stephen Innes at SPI Asset
Management.
Iran's health ministry said on March 8 that more than 1,200 people have been
killed in the war, a figure AFP has not been able to independently verify.
In Israel, authorities said 14 people have been killed, while attacks in the
Gulf have killed 24 people, including 11 civilians and seven US military
personnel, according to local authorities and the US Central Command.
The war has cost the United States more than $11.3 billion, lawmakers were
told in a Pentagon briefing, according to the New York Times.