The Middle East has been engulfed in a brutal night of fire on two fronts, as joint US–Israeli airstrikes set Iranian oil depots ablaze while a separate wave of Israeli bombardments killed more than 40 people across Lebanon, officials say.

In Iran, precision munitions slammed into fuel storage complexes near Bandar Abbas and along the southwestern pipeline corridor shortly after midnight. Satellite imagery shows giant tank farms ruptured, with walls of fire visible from space and thick black smoke drifting across the Gulf coast. Tehran admits “significant damage” and dozens of casualties among workers battling infernos that continue to rage at dawn.
Simultaneously, Israeli jets hammered Hezbollah strongholds from the outskirts of Beirut to the deep south. In Dahiyeh, a series of strikes flattened apartment blocks believed to house weapons caches and command cells. In Tyre and Nabatieh, missiles struck what the IDF calls “rocket infrastructure,” but rescue teams say entire families were buried under rubble.
Lebanese health officials report at least 42 ᴅᴇᴀᴅ and over 100 wounded, with numbers expected to climb as civil defence crews dig through collapsed buildings. Hospitals across the south have declared emergencies, appealing for blood and medicine.

Washington and Jerusalem insist both campaigns targeted “the financial and military arteries” of Iran’s regional network. Tehran and Hezbollah vow coordinated retaliation on Israeli cities, US bases and Gulf energy hubs.
As oil prices spike and body counts rise on opposite ends of the war zone, one grim reality is sinking in: the conflict has fused into a single, multi‑front inferno — and every new strike is drawing the entire region deeper into the flames.