Iran warns: 'Supporting a US strike will lead to severe consequences'

Report: 50% of Iran's missile launchers remain intact

The estimate, CNN reported, includes launchers buried underground by strikes but not destroyed. In addition, about 50% of Iran’s drone capabilities remain intact, and a large portion of its anti-ship missiles threatening shipping in the Strait of Hormuz were not hit at all.

Only one man knows whether a US attack is coming

Trump clouds path to ceasefire with conflicting messages on Iran

The latest statements by US President Donald Trump only adds to the confusion, and may have been intended to do exactly that. In the absence of an official Iranian response, attention is shifting to developments on the ground: If there is indeed a significant increase in the movement of ships and tankers through the Strait of Hormuz, that could point to advanced contacts.

US rejects Iran's ceasefire request

Report: Trump weighs ending war without reopening Strait of Hormuz

The decision could leave Tehran in control of one of the world's most important trade routes. According to The Wall Street Journal, Trump wants to meet the operation's core objectives, damaging Iran's navy and missile stockpile, within four to six weeks, and then scale back the fighting while shifting to diplomatic pressure.

This is a window of opportunity for an attack on Iran

Iran tries to lure US with oil as regime rifts threaten deal

Amid secret contacts between Washington and Tehran, Iran is trying to tempt the US with a foothold in the oil industry. Diplomatic sources told Israel Hayom that the US is demanding guarantees from the heads of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, who in turn oppose the talks. The American plan: direct sanctions targeting the regime elite’s “pockets.”