Iran is using force in an attempt to maintain its control over the Strait of Hormuz in the immediate future. Iran fired four drones into the strait over the past 24 hours, according to US President Donald Trump.[1] Trump subsequently called this attack a ceasefire violation.[2] An Iranian drone targeted a Singapore-flagged cargo ship approximately eight nautical miles southeast of Dahit, Oman, in the Strait of Hormuz on June 25.[3] The IRGC Navy issued a public warning that demanded vessels coordinate with Iranian authorities and use the Iranian-approved traffic separation scheme some time before it attacked the ship.[4]
Iran is likely attempting to prevent vessels from using non-Iranian shipping channels with force in the immediate term as it continues negotiations with the Gulf Arab states to secure long-term recognition of its control. Oman and the International Maritime Organization (IMO) announced on June 23 that they have established a joint mechanism to help hundreds of vessels move through a designated safe route along the Omani coast. US Central Command (CENTCOM) said on June 26 that it is providing “safe passage coordination” in the strait as well, though it did not specify whether “safe passage coordination” by CENTCOM is related to the IMO-Omani scheme. Iran responded with the attacks outlined above and claimed that the safe route was “completely dangerous.” This claim is an implicit threat that Iran will attack shipping using the safe route because Iran is the only threat to shipping in the strait. Iranian Deputy Foreign Affairs Minister for Legal and International Affairs Kazem Gharibabadi explicitly stated on June 26 that safe passage through the strait cannot rely on “parallel routes” or decision-making outside Iran's considerations as a coastal state.[5] Iran is standing firm on its requirement to approve vessels’ passage through the strait, as it provides Iran with significant leverage that it could exploit at will.
CENTCOM struck an unspecified number of Iranian missile and drone storage sites and coastal radar sites on June 26 in response to Iran's June 25 drone attack on a commercial vessel.[6] CENTCOM added that US forces will continue to provide “safe passage coordination” and support to commercial vessels transiting the strait.[7]
Iran is also using diplomacy and threats to secure long-term diplomatic recognition of its control of the Strait of Hormuz because continued Iranian strikes in the Strait of Hormuz would be difficult to maintain. Iran needs Gulf states’ recognition of its control over Iran's route to maintain control over the strait because it cannot conduct attacks in perpetuity without risking instability and additional attacks. Iran has met with various Gulf states in recent days as part of this effort. An Iranian negotiating team member claimed on Iranian TV that Oman and Iran had formed a committee to address the strait issue. But Iran's diplomatic efforts nonetheless appear to be faltering. Oman and the IMO are also collaborating to undermine Iran's unrecognized transit scheme, as described above. The Gulf states and international organizations appear united against Iranian efforts to control the strait, however. The United States and the Gulf Cooperation Council ministers emphasized in a joint statement on June 25 that free, unconditional, and unrestricted navigation through the strait remains essential to regional and global security, and explicitly rejected any tolls, fees, or attempts to assert control over the strait.[8]
Iranian officials and state media are reacting to their faltering diplomatic efforts with a significantly more hostile tone towards the Gulf states. Iranian officials attempted on June 24 to frame Iran's post-war approach to the strait's management as part of a new regional security framework that would remove non-littoral Persian Gulf states from decision making over the strait, which would ultimately be in the Gulf states’ interests.[9] Iranian officials and entities have since become much more aggressive in response to increased opposition from the Gulf states to Iranian efforts to control the strait. The Iranian Foreign Affairs Ministry called the US-Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) statement “interventionist, irresponsible, and provocative” and warned against continued US-backed “belligerent and interventionist” behavior in the region.[10] The ministry asserted that Iran and Oman have rights and responsibilities over safe passage through the waterway.[11] Other officials, including two advisers to the supreme leader, also harshly condemned the US-GCC statement.[12] One of the advisers called the Gulf states “peripheral minor players” who have “no seat at the table” and can only survive thanks to Iranian tolerance.[13] The Gulf states have a seat at the table in the memorandum of understanding to discuss control of the strait with Iran, notably. Iranian Parliament National Security and Foreign Policy Committee Chairman Ebrahim Azizi warned the GCC on June 26 that “outsourcing your security has made you less secure” and claimed that US military bases in the region have become a source of threats rather than security.[14]
Israel and Lebanon signed a US-brokered “framework agreement” on June 26 that describes a path towards eventual full Israeli withdrawal.[15] The Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF) will backfill the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) at two positions in southern Lebanon.[16] The IDF will eventually withdraw under the agreement if it is fully actualized. The full details of the plan remain unclear. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that the IDF will remain in its security zone in southern Lebanon.[17] An Israeli source also told Axios that the IDF would remain in southern Lebanon until Hezbollah is disarmed.[18] Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu stated that the IDF and the LAF will start their first “pilot zone” in two unnamed “connected villages” in southern Lebanon.[19] Israeli and US officials also told Axios that US military officers will help oversee LAF forces backfilling these positions to provide training and to confirm that Hezbollah has been removed from the area.[20] Lebanese Ambassador to the United States Nada Maawad Hamad stated that the ”framework agreement” with Israel is the “first step toward restoring Lebanon's sovereignty.“[21]
Iranian and Hezbollah officials’ response to the signing of the agreement has remained limited at the time of this writing. Both the Iranian and Hezbollah leadership have emphasized the need for Israel's withdrawal to be unconditional, however.[22] Hezbollah Parliamentarian Hassan Fadlallah condemned the signing of the “framework agreement” and warned that the Lebanese government cannot implement the agreement ”unless they resort to a civil war.”[23] Fadlallah also noted that the ”framework agreement” represents an intentional obstruction of the US-Iran MoU.[24]
The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) and Hezbollah continued to engage each other on June 25 and June 26 in southern Lebanon. Israeli media reported that Hezbollah fighters threw a hand grenade at IDF forces operating near Beit Yahoun, South Governorate, injuring four soldiers on June 25.[25] The IDF struck Hezbollah positions in the area with artillery fire in response.[26] The IDF reported that it later conducted two airstrikes targeting Hezbollah fighters in Nabatieh al Fawqa on June 26.[27] The IDF reported that it killed seven Hezbollah fighters who were transporting weapons from a vehicle to a combat and observation post in the second strike on Nabatieh al Fawqa.[28]
The IDF separately reported on June 26 that its forces took “complete control” of Ali al Taher, Nabatieh Governate, which reportedly hosts one of Hezbollah's largest underground command and control facilities.[29] IDF Arabic-language Media Spokesperson Lieutenant Colonel Ella Waweya stated that Ali al Taher “no longer serves as a base [for Hezbollah] to threaten Israel's security.”[30] Hezbollah disputed the IDF’s control of Ali al Taher and stated that the area ”is free of any presence of [Israeli] forces.”[31] The IDF previously struck Hezbollah positions near Ali al Taher once on June 23, and twice on June 24.[32]
https://understandingwar.org/research/middle-east/iran-update-special-report-june-26-2026/
updated link https://www.iranintl.com/en/liveblog/202606274036
Iran has continued to use force to try to deter the United States from undermining Iranian efforts to control the Strait of Hormuz. Iran conducted a drone attack targeting a Singapore-flagged cargo ship approximately eight nautical miles southeast of Dahit, Oman, on June 25.[1] A US official told the New York Times on June 26 that US forces struck four Iranian missile and drone storage facilities along the strait and on Qeshm Island in response.[2] Iranian forces then conducted a drone attack against US positions in Bahrain on June 27.[3] Bahraini air defenses intercepted one drone, while a second drone landed in a remote area.[4] United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) subsequently reported on June 27 that an unspecified projectile struck a tanker off the coast of Oman.[5] Iran likely attacked the vessel because it was presumably using the southern route along Oman's coast to transit through the strait instead of Iran's illegitimate traffic separation scheme (TSS).[6] The international community has recently attempted to circumvent Iran's TSS, undermining Iranian efforts to establish control over the strait. The International Maritime Organization (IMO) and Oman announced a joint effort on June 23 to move hundreds of stranded vessels through the strait through a designated safe route along the Omani coast.[7] The IMO paused this effort on June 26 after Iran attacked the Singapore-flagged cargo ship on June 25, however.[8] The Joint Maritime Information Center (JMIC), which operates under the US-led Combined Maritime Forces, told UKMTO on June 27 that the southern route in the Strait of Hormuz has been expanded to accommodate simultaneous inbound and outbound traffic.[9] It is unclear whether the southern route described by the JMIC is distinct from the IMO-Omani route.
Iran's strikes against Bahrain may also be part of an ongoing Iranian effort to coerce the Gulf states to accept Iran's control of the strait and deter them from supporting US efforts to undermine Iran's control. The Iranian Foreign Affairs Ministry responded to the US retaliatory strikes against Iran on June 26 by warning Gulf states not to allow the United States to attack Iran from bases within their territory.[10] Iran's attack against Bahrain comes after the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) and the United States explicitly rejected on June 25 any Iranian attempts to assert control over the strait, including by charging tolls.[11] The Iranian Foreign Affairs Ministry called the US-GCC statement “interventionist, irresponsible, and provocative.”[12] Iran's attack on Bahrain may have been, in part, intended to signal to the Gulf states that Iran could take military action against them if they support US efforts to undermine Iranian attempts to control the strait. Multiple Gulf states condemned Iran's drone attack against Bahrain.[13]
The Israel-Lebanon-United States Trilateral Framework challenges Iranian and Hezbollah efforts to facilitate an Israeli capitulation in Lebanon and threatens Hezbollah's existence as an armed group. The US State Department released the full text of the framework agreement on June 26.[14] The agreement seeks the disarmament of all non-state armed groups in Lebanon, particularly Hezbollah.[15] The second and third clauses of the agreement confirm that the Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF) will “gradually” reassert control over all of southern Lebanon and that the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) will “progressively redeploy” out of mutually determined “pilot zones.”[16] These clauses assert that the LAF will assume full security responsibility for areas where armed groups have been successfully disarmed and dismantled, suggesting that the IDF’s withdrawal from Lebanon is contingent upon Hezbollah's disarmament.[17] The fourth clause of the agreement emphasizes that the LAF will completely disarm all non-state groups and ensure that they possess “no armed capabilities anywhere in Lebanon,” which would include Hezbollah's weapons north of the Litani River.[18] Hezbollah has long resisted disarmament north of the Litani River because the group has stockpiled much of its weapons in the Bekaa Valley.[19] The seventh clause of the agreement clarifies that Israel and Lebanon retain the right to self-defense, which similarly challenges Iran's demand that the IDF cease all military activity in Lebanon.[20] The eleventh clause of the agreement stipulates that the United States and Lebanon will restrict the flow of unspecified funds to any entity affiliated with Lebanese non-state armed groups.[21] Such funds presumably include Iranian funding for Hezbollah. International media reported on June 17 that Iran would use potential economic relief gained from the memorandum of understanding (MoU) with the United States to fund and reconstitute Hezbollah.[22]
Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz reiterated on June 27 that the IDF will maintain its “security zone” in southern Lebanon amid continued Israeli strikes on Hezbollah targets.[23] An Israeli military correspondent reported on June 27 that Katz lauded the “historic” deal between Israel and Lebanon but said that the IDF will not “entirely withdraw” from Lebanon and that Israeli forces will maintain their “security zone,” including the Beaufort Castle ridge area.[24] He also directed the IDF to prepare for a prolonged deployment in the “security zone” and to continue to protect northern Israel from Hezbollah attacks.[25] The IDF continued strikes on Hezbollah targets on June 27. Lebanese media reported multiple IDF airstrikes on Nabatieh el Fawqa, Nabatieh District, on June 27.[26] The IDF told Reuters that one of the strikes targeted an individual who posed a threat to IDF forces but did not provide further details.[27] Lebanese media separately reported an Israeli strike near Tallouseh, Marjaayoun District, on June 27.[28] A Hezbollah-aligned journalist also claimed on June 27 that the IDF had advanced toward the outskirts of Kfarchouba, Hasbaya District, but the IDF has not confirmed this report at the time of this writing.[29]
Hezbollah is conducting an information operation to weaken the Lebanese government's resolve to disarm Hezbollah by threatening renewed civil war in Lebanon if the government attempts to implement the framework agreement. Hezbollah Parliamentarian Hassan Fadlallah denounced the tripartite agreement on June 26 and warned that attempts by the Lebanese government to implement the agreement could reignite civil war in Lebanon.[30] Fadlallah said that Hezbollah will retain its weapons and confront any Lebanese government action to disarm the group. Fadlallah also claimed that the LAF is militarily incapable of disarming Hezbollah.[31] Hezbollah supporters protested against the framework agreement in the Beirut area on June 26 and 27 in line with Fadlallah’s threat that the group would mobilize the Lebanese “street” to stop the government from implementing the agreement.[32] Hezbollah has long leveraged the threat of renewed civil war to deter the Lebanese government from attempting to disarm the group. Hezbollah Secretary General Naim Qassem threatened in August 2025 to organize mass anti-government protests and said that there would be “no life” in Lebanon if the LAF attempted to disarm Hezbollah, for example.[33] Other Hezbollah figures have attempted to delegitimize the framework agreement by deeming it unlawful and spreading disinformation about the agreement's provisions. Hezbollah parliamentary bloc leader Mohammad Raad alleged that the tripartite agreement is a “cover up” for a permanent Israeli military presence in Lebanon, despite Israel's affirmation in the agreement that it has no territorial ambitions in Lebanon.[34] Various Hezbollah officials, including Qassem, called the framework agreement unconstitutional and a violation of the sensitive, sectarian National Pact, which suggests that Hezbollah is trying to depict the agreement as both illegal and liable to inflame sectarian tensions.[35]
The Iranian regime likely views the framework agreement as contravening the Lebanon-related clause of the US-Iran MoU and may attempt to use the agreement as a pretext to further delay nuclear negotiations with the United States. Iranian state media claimed that the framework agreement is illegitimate because it exists separately from the MoU and US-Iran negotiations and preserves the IDF’s freedom of movement in Lebanon.[36] The Iranian Foreign Affairs Ministry issued a statement on June 27 that characterized continued Israeli military action in Lebanon as a violation of the first clause of the MoU, which stipulates the “immediate and permanent termination of military operations on all fronts, including in Lebanon.”[37] The Iranian regime likely views the framework agreement, which permits Israel's continued ground presence until Hezbollah is completely disarmed and enables Israel to act against Hezbollah in self-defense, as contravening the first clause of the MoU.[38] Fadlallah claimed on June 26 that Iran would not sign any agreement with the United States until Israel withdraws from Lebanese territory entirely.[39] ISW-CTP has repeatedly assessed that Iran has attempted to condition US-Iran nuclear negotiations on the United States compelling Israel to halt operations against Hezbollah in Lebanon and withdraw from Lebanese territory as part of its efforts to preserve Hezbollah and delay nuclear negotiations.[40]
The Iranian-backed Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF) appointed Haqqi Ismail al Khalidi as the PMF Anbar Operations Command commander on June 24.[41] The PMF is an Iraqi state security service that includes multiple Iranian-backed Iraqi militias that answer to Iran instead of the prime minister.[42] Khalidi replaced Haider al Hammouri, who temporarily held the position after US-Israeli combined force strikes killed former PMF Anbar Operations Command Commander Dawai al Baiji in March 2026.[43] The PMF has also characterized Kataib Hezbollah-affiliated Qasim Musleh al Khafaji as the PMF Anbar Operations Command commander.[44] It is unclear how Khafaji and Khalidi’s responsibilities differ.
https://understandingwar.org/research/middle-east/iran-update-special-report-june-27-2026/