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US-Iran war as it happened: Trump threatens Iran with ‘four-hour bombing blitz’ if Strait of Hormuz not reopened; 45-day ceasefire proposal rejected

Emily Kaine, Ellen Connolly and Angus Delaney
Updated ,first published
Pinned post from 6.00pm on Apr 7, 2026
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What we covered today

By Angus Delaney and Ellen Connolly

Thank you for reading out to our rolling coverage of the war in the Middle East. Our live blog has closed for the day, and will return tomorrow.

Here’s a recap of key developments:

  • US President Donald Trump has threatened Iran with major strikes if there was no deal by Tuesday night (10am on Wednesday AEST). Trump told reporters at the White House “the entire country can be taken out in one night, and that night might be tomorrow night” if the Strait of Hormuz is not reopened.
  • Iran’s new supreme leader Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei is hurt and unable to run the country, UK-based newspaper The Times reports, citing a diplomatic memo based on American and Israeli intelligence that was shared with their Gulf allies.
  • Iranian state television claims 14 million people have volunteered to fight for the country if there is a ground invasion by the United States and Israel.
  • The Australian sharemarket has finished in the green. Iran’s grip on the Strait of Hormuz caused continued to cause oil prices to soar and shaken the world economy.
  • Iran has rejected a 45-day ceasefire proposal and insisted it wants a permanent end to the war.

Read more of our war coverage:

Latest Posts

Bahrain-Saudi bridge reopens after Iranian threat

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The King Fahd Causeway, a key bridge linking Saudi Arabia and the island kingdom of Bahrain, has reopened after closing for hours over possible threats of airstrikes by Iran.

The King Fahd Causeway Authority made the announcement in a post on X, saying the only route by road between Bahrain and the Arabian Peninsula had reopened. Bahrain’s airport has been closed over the threat of Iranian attacks for weeks.

The hours-long closure came after a ballistic missile attack from Iran targeted Saudi Arabia and might have done damage to energy infrastructure there.

Saudi Arabia has not elaborated on damage from that attack.

Damage from an Iranian drone attack at Ras Tanura oil refinery in Saudi Arabia last month.AP

AP

Australian shares, oil higher pre-Trump deadline

By Staff writers

The Australian sharemarket closed in the green today amid uncertainty ahead of US President Donald Trump’s latest Iran deadline, as the oil price also moved higher.

The S&P/ASX 200 rose 1.7 per cent, or 149.3 points, to 8728.8 in its first day of trading after the Easter long weekend, with all 11 industry sectors in the green. Trump has given Iran a deadline of 10am on Wednesday (AEST) to agree to a deal.

Adam Dawes, a senior investment adviser at Shaw and Partners, said the move higher in oil prices suggested markets were hedging that the conflict could take longer to resolve than Trump’s preferred timeline. “Higher prices mean that this issue is going to take longer,” Dawes said.

Mining stocks were sharply higher, with BHP rising 3.3 per cent, Rio Tinto gaining 3 per cent and Fortescue up 2.1 per cent. Gold players were mixed with Northern Star up 2 per cent and Evolution Mining down 1.6 per cent.

Oil and gas giant Woodside also rallied and rose 2.5 per cent, while Santos edged 0.1 per cent higher. Oil prices advanced. Brent, the international standard, rose 1.2 per cent to trade above $US111 a barrel in the afternoon.

Read the full market wrap here.

Iran’s new supreme leader hurt, being treated in holy city

By Supratim Adhikari

Iran’s new supreme leader Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei is hurt and unable to run the country, UK-based newspaper The Times reports, citing a diplomatic memo based on American and Israeli intelligence that was shared with their Gulf allies.

The Times report also said Khamanei was receiving medical treatment for a “severe” medical condition in the Iranian holy city of Qom, a city considered sacred in Shia Islam.

Iranian Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei in an undated photo.Getty Images

Khamenei has been absent from the public eye despite being appointed the supreme leader in March, following the death of his father, the late supreme leader Ali Khamenei, at the start of the war.

However, information on Mojtaba Khamenei’s location has reportedly been known to US and Israeli spy agencies for some time, The Times reported.

Mojtaba Khamenei was wounded in the same February 28 airstrike that killed his father. The strike also killed his mother, his wife and one of their sons.

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Iran launches cluster munition strike at Israel

By Angus Delaney

Israeli medics are attending sites in central Israel and the Sharon plain following an Iranian cluster munitions attack, the Israel Defence Forces said.

CNN reported that Iran had earlier launched a salvo of missiles at Israel.

Non-profit organisation Human Rights Watch determined Iranian cluster munitions had killed at least four Israelis in the war so far. Cluster munitions randomly dispel “bomblets” which explode over a wide area and kill indiscriminately.

They are prohibited under the 2008 convention on cluster munitions, to which Iran is not a signatory.

Australia looks to Singapore for more fuel

By Angus Delaney

Australia can capitalise on its strong relationship with Singapore to secure more fuel, Industry Minister Tim Ayers says.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese today announced he would head to Singapore in hope of securing pole position ahead of other nations if Singaporean firms become selective in deciding where its fuel shipments go.

Industry Minister Tim Ayres. Alex Ellinghausen

While Ayers conceded “the longer the conflict goes on the tougher this will be for Australia”, he said the government’s good diplomatic standing with Singapore was an asset.

“The work that the prime minister is doing later this week for instance … meeting Prime Minister [Lawrence] Wong in Singapore, they are a really important fuel security for Australia,” Ayers told the ABC.

“So making sure that we’re leaning into the relationships that we have in the region with our fuel security partners is really important. Australia’s improved standing in the region is a real asset now when we’re facing a shortage in global assets.”

Iran TV says 14 million people keen to fight US, Israel

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Iranian state television claims 14 million people have volunteered to fight for the country if there is a ground invasion by the United States and Israel.

The claim by state TV, which included no other information, doubles an earlier claim by Iran’s parliamentary Speaker, Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf, that 7 million had volunteered to fight.

Funerals in Tehran for members of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps killed in US-Israeli strikes. Getty Images

Iran is home to 90 million people. Iran had conducted a bloody crackdown on nationwide demonstrations in January that killed thousands and saw tens of thousands detained.

State media and text message campaigns have urged people to volunteer. The government also has called on retired soldiers to express their interest in fighting, while the paramilitary Revolutionary Guard’s all-volunteer Basij force has begun accepting children as young as 12 into its ranks.

AP

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Russia giving Iran cyber support, Ukraine says

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Russian satellites have made dozens of detailed imagery surveys of military facilities and critical sites across the Middle East to help Iran strike US forces and other targets, according to a Ukrainian intelligence assessment.

The conclusions, reviewed by news agency Reuters, also found that Russian and Iranian hackers were collaborating in the cyber domain. They represent the most detailed account yet of how Russia has provided secret support to Iran since Israel and the US launched their assault on February 28.

Russian satellites made at least 24 surveys of areas in 11 Middle Eastern countries from March 21 to March 31, covering 46 “objects”, including American and other military bases and sites including airports and oil fields. Within days of being surveyed, military bases and headquarters were targeted by Iranian ballistic missiles and drones, the assessment said, in what it described as a clear pattern.

Russian President Vladimir Putin and the late Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in Tehran in 2022.AP

A Western military source and a separate regional security source told Reuters that their intelligence also indicated intense Russian satellite activity in the region and said that imagery had been shared with Iran.

The AI war within the war

By Calum Jaspan

If the Vietnam War was the first major televised conflict and the Gulf War was launched alongside burgeoning cable networks, then Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu’s strikes on Iran are landing in the early days of the AI media age.

That is having strange consequences: real footage of mass civilian graves in Iran has been dismissed by AI chatbots as fake, while Instagram users have been fooled into following an account ostensibly belonging to a beautiful US soldier who happens to also post sexualised pictures of her feet.

With Iran essentially a black box for reliable journalism and Trump’s reputation with the international community and domestic voters on the line ahead of this year’s midterm elections, the stakes are high in the media war.

The widespread use of artificial intelligence in war propaganda has been expected for some time, says David Wroe, resident senior fellow at Canberra-based think tank the Australian Strategic Policy Institute. But the speed at which this content is now being created and pushed out on social media is unprecedented.

Propagandists build a haystack around the needle of truth and pump out so much information – both true and false – that it is impossible to discern fact from fiction.

Read the full story here.

Analysis: This might be Trump’s biggest TACO moment

By Michael Koziol

It was a supremely confident Donald Trump who appeared behind the podium in the White House briefing room on Monday, full of verve and vigour and some leftover Easter cheer.

“We had a great Easter – this is one of our better Easters, I think, in a lot of different ways. Militarily, it’s been one of the best,” he began.

And why not? The US just pulled off a daring mission in hostile territory to rescue two airmen whose F-15E fighter jet was shot down by Iranian forces. It was, as chairman of the joint chiefs of staff Dan Caine said, “an incredibly dangerous mission”, which succeeded with minimal injuries.

Trump relishes his recent military successes: the B-2 bombers’ 36-hour round trip to blow up Iran’s nuclear facilities last June, the strikes on alleged drug boats in the Caribbean and the audacious capture of Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro this year – and now this.

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