US Military – Iran – The United States military has significantly escalated its bombing campaign against Iran, targeting air defenses, coastal radars, and missile sites along the Strait of Hormuz. Following the collapse of a June ceasefire memorandum of understanding, President Donald Trump declared the truce over after repeated Iranian attacks on commercial shipping. U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) is executing massive “shaping operations” to degrade Iranian defenses, while explicitly considering advanced options including ground operations to seize Kharg Island or launching a direct airstrike against the deeply buried “Pickaxe Mountain” nuclear facility. In response, Iran has launched retaliatory drone and missile salvos against U.S. allies in the Persian Gulf, triggering widespread airspace advisories and threats to global energy corridors.
WASHINGTON, D.C. / PERSIAN GULF – July 16, 2026 (STL.News) The high-stakes military standoff between the United States and Iran has erupted into open conflict once again, completely shattering the fragile mid-June ceasefire memorandum of understanding (MoU) that was intended to bring an end to the 2026 Iran War.
Over the last 48 hours, United States Central Command (CENTCOM) has unleashed its heaviest rate of bombing since the initial phases of the war, striking hundreds of targets across Iran. What began as targeted maritime deterrence to open the vital Strait of Hormuz chokepoint has rapidly expanded. Senior U.S. defense officials now openly acknowledge that the heavy bombardment is serving as a series of tactical “shaping operations”—deliberately weakening Iranian defense grids to clear a path for far more intensive military operations.
The Fall of the MoU and the Battle for Hormuz
The conflict reignited after weeks of escalating brinkmanship over the Strait of Hormuz, a maritime chokepoint responsible for more than 20 percent of the world’s seaborne energy trade.
Under the terms of the June 14 agreement, shipping was intended to resume. However, the truce rapidly deteriorated as Tehran attempted to assert absolute sovereign control over the waterway, warning commercial vessels to adhere to strict Iranian protocols and demanding transit fees. Following a series of missile and drone attacks by Iran against three commercial tankers transiting the strait on July 6–7, President Donald Trump officially declared the ceasefire over.
In a public declaration on Fox News, President Trump stated that the U.S. would assume direct, unilateral control of the strategic waterway.
“We’re taking over the strait,” Trump said. “We’ll become the guardian of the strait… And we should be reimbursed for that, because the other nations are very wealthy.”
To enforce this mandate, the U.S. military has re-established a strict naval blockade, targeting any shipping bound to or from Iranian ports. In a striking escalation of this policy, a U.S. military aircraft fired Hellfire missiles directly into the smokestack of an unladen oil tanker that ignored multiple warnings while attempting to sail toward Iran’s Kharg Island terminal.
Preparing the Battlefield: “Shaping Operations”
Pentagon officials confirm that current waves of airstrikes are specifically targeting long-range radar networks, surface-to-air missile batteries, drone launch facilities, and coastal cruise missile sites, including heavily fortified positions on Greater Tunb Island and the coastal hub of Bandar Abbas.
According to defense analysts, the heavy operational tempo (OPTEMPO) indicates that the U.S. is systematically eliminating Iran’s ability to fight back before launching a broader offensive.
Following a high-level briefing in the White House Situation Room, President Trump is reportedly weighing an expanded list of targets. Two major objectives dominate the current strategic planning:
- Pickaxe Mountain: A heavily fortified, underground nuclear site buried under more than 100 meters of solid granite. President Trump explicitly confirmed the asset is on his radar during a recent interview on the Hugh Hewitt Show, stating, “Pickaxe is a possible target for a nice, big, fat shot right into the front door.” While independent nuclear watchdogs suggest the facility might require an eventual ground assault to fully sabotage, the U.S. is currently targeting its external vulnerabilities, including power grids, ventilation shafts, and support personnel infrastructure.
- Kharg Island: The primary logistical hub handling roughly 90 percent of Iran’s oil exports. While the administration has given strict instructions to avoid destroying the actual oil terminals to prevent a catastrophic shock to the global economy, the deployment of ground forces to seize the island remains on the table if Iranian defenses are sufficiently degraded.
A Region Ablaze: Iranian Retaliation Spreads
As American bombs fall on targets from the Hormozgan province to the outskirts of Tehran, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) has launched aggressive counter-strikes across the Persian Gulf.
Air raid sirens have sounded throughout the island kingdom of Bahrain and near Kuwait City as local air defense systems scramble to intercept incoming salvos of Iranian attack drones and ballistic missiles. Commercial shipping has faced secondary strikes, including an unidentified drone strike hitting a vehicle-carrier ship just off the southern Iraqi port of Basra.
The conflict is threatening to spill over into a multi-theater energy war. Intelligence reports indicate that Tehran has formally requested Yemen’s Houthi movement to prepare for a total shutdown of the vital Bab el-Mandeb Strait and Red Sea oil routes if the U.S. military targets Iran’s domestic civilian power and infrastructure network.
With international airspace advisories actively warning commercial airlines away from the Persian Gulf and energy markets bracing for severe disruption, the U.S. military finds itself walking an incredibly thin wire: attempting to break the Iranian regime’s maritime leverage without igniting a continuous, uncontrollable wildfire across the Middle East.