U.S.-Iran Tensions Escalate in Strait of Hormuz
U.S. forces clashed with Iranian threats in the Strait of Hormuz as regional tensions escalated following reported attacks on the United Arab Emirates.
In this handout photograph released by the US Navy on February 6, 2026, Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN 72) sails alongside Arleigh Burke, missile destroyer in the Arabian Sea.
Flights heading to Dubai turned back mid-air. An oil facility in Fujairah was on fire. And in the Strait of Hormuz, U.S. helicopters were sinking Iranian boats.
All of this happened on the same day.
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Monday marked one of the sharpest escalations in the region since the ceasefire took effect in early April. And it happened on multiple fronts simultaneously.
U.S. Central Command chief Admiral Brad Cooper confirmed that American forces destroyed six Iranian vessels that had threatened civilian shipping in the strait. All incoming drones and cruise missiles were intercepted. Two American-flagged commercial ships successfully passed through under a new U.S. protection initiative.
That was the opening Washington wanted to show the strait could be reopened. What Iran did next complicated that message immediately.
The UAE reported being struck by Iranian missiles and drones for the first time since the ceasefire began. Air defenses intercepted 15 missiles and four drones. A drone strike hit a major oil facility in Fujairah, injuring three Indian workers and starting a fire. British military authorities reported two cargo ships burning off the UAE coast. A South Korean-operated vessel anchored nearby suffered an explosion with no casualties reported.
Authorities in Oman reported a residential building near the strait was also hit, injuring two foreign workers.
Tehran did not explicitly claim responsibility. But Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi warned that both the U.S. and UAE risk being pulled back into full conflict. Iranian state media quoted an unnamed official linking the incidents to what it called an unauthorized passage being forced through the strait.
If you have followed this far, here is what makes this moment more dangerous than it looks on the surface.
Iran has now drawn the UAE directly into this confrontation. The UAE has maintained careful neutrality throughout the broader conflict. Strikes on its soil, hitting oil infrastructure and triggering missile alerts over Dubai and Abu Dhabi, change that calculation in ways that are hard to walk back.
Iranian military officials also issued a warning that any vessel transiting the strait must coordinate with Tehran first. Any foreign military presence approaching the area, they said, would be considered a target.
That is not a ceasefire posture. That is an escalation posture.
Shipping firms were already hesitant to use the route before Monday. The U.S.-led Joint Maritime Information Center has advised vessels to navigate closer to Oman within a designated enhanced security area. Global energy prices have risen further as the disruption continues.
The U.S. naval blockade on Iranian ports has been in place since April. Dozens of commercial vessels have been turned away. Iran's oil revenues are being squeezed.
Diplomatically, nothing is moving. Iran has proposed ending the conflict in exchange for sanctions relief, an end to the blockade, withdrawal of U.S. forces and a halt to regional hostilities. Nuclear issues were excluded from the proposal entirely. U.S. officials have not indicated any acceptance. Trump has publicly expressed doubt that a deal gets done.
Six Iranian boats sunk. An oil facility on fire in the UAE. Flights rerouted over the Gulf. Residential buildings hit in Oman.
The ceasefire is technically still in place. What happened on Monday does not look much like one.
Editor's Note: The renewed tensions in the Strait of Hormuz underscore the fragility of the ceasefire and the high global stakes tied to energy security, as escalating confrontations between the U.S. and Iran risk wider regional instability.