The Iran war is ripping across West Asia, pulling in new fronts by the hour as Hezbollah vows it will “never surrender to the United States”, even if the conflict engulfs Lebanon, Syria and Iraq.

Overnight, Iranian missiles and Shahed‑style drones slammed into US‑linked facilities from northern Iraq to the Gulf, while Israeli jets hammered IRGC and proxy positions around Damascus and deep inside Lebanon. In Baghdad and Erbil, residents filmed anti‑aircraft fire streaking over city skylines; in the Gulf, captains reported sudden course changes as warships raced to shield tankers.
In a fiery speech from Beirut’s southern suburbs, Hezbollah chief Hᴀssan Nasrallah declared that the group is “fully mobilised” and will fight “shoulder to shoulder with Iran” against the US and Israel, warning Washington that “no base, no convoy, no embᴀssy will be safe” if it pushes for regime change in Tehran. Crowds chanted as fighters paraded rockets and drones through packed streets.

US commanders insist they are “containing” the conflict, but privately concede they are now tracking launch sites and militias across at least four countries. Arab governments, terrified of becoming battlegrounds, are urging restraint even as they quietly reinforce borders and harden oil and gas infrastructure.
From Beirut’s burning suburbs to crowded bunkers in Iraq and nervous royal palaces in the Gulf, one question now hangs over West Asia: is this still a war with Iran — or the opening stage of a region‑wide confrontation that no one, not even Washington or Tehran, can truly control?