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US-Iran war live updates: IEA to release 400 million barrels of oil; Israel launches new strikes on Lebanon as humanitarian concerns grow; Iran using cluster munitions on Israel

Emily Kaine, Sarah McPhee, Lynette Eyb, Brittany Busch and Alexander Darling
Updated ,first published

What we covered today

By Alexander Darling

Thanks for reading our live coverage of the conflict in the Middle East. Our rolling blog will continue at a new link, which you can find here.

Here’s a wrap of what we covered in the last 24 hours.

  • At least 19 commercial ships have been damaged so far in the war, figures showed Thursday. Through Wednesday night, there had been at least 16 vessels attacked in the Persian Gulf and the wider region. An oil rig separately was attacked off Saudi Arabia, as well. Overnight, two ships were hit by Iranian fire at a port near Basra, Iraq. Another was attacked Thursday off the coast of the United Arab Emirates.
  • As a result of the war and Iran’s targeting of commercial vessels, petrol prices are at risk of rising to levels “not seen in history” as war in the Middle East causes unprecedented disruption to oil supplies, a leading commodities expert warns. The price of a barrel of crude oil, the international standard, topped $US100 ($142) a barrel on Thursday.
  • The International Energy Agency announced its 32 member countries had agreed to release 400 million barrels of oil to cater for the soaring demand. Australia is weighing up exactly how to contribute to this total.
  • Energy Minister Chris Bowen has also announced Australia will temporarily relax fuel quality standards for the next 60 days. The move is aimed at increasing the amount of sulphur permitted in fuel to 50 parts per million, compared to the usual 10 parts per million.
  • Mortgage holders are being warned interest rates could hit a 15-year high by the end of the year, as surging oil prices prompt all four big banks to tip an impending rate hike next Tuesday.
  • The Australian Government has directed the departure of non-essential Australian officials posted to Israel and the UAE, due to the deteriorating security situation. Essential staff remain in the region to help the estimated 115,000 Australians still in the Middle East.
  • Israel’s defence minister Israel Katz held a security assessment with military officials Thursday in the army’s headquarters in Tel Aviv, after the largest attack yet by Lebanon-based Hezbollah in the Iran war. He warned Lebanon that if its government does not prevent Hezbollah from attacking, Israel “will take the territory and do it ourselves.”
  • And Australia will provide humanitarian assistance to members of the Iranian women’s soccer team who have been granted asylum there. Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles said during a visit to Jakarta on Thursday that it was a “sensitive issue” since Australia granted asylum to seven team members. One changed her mind and departed Australia with the remainder of the team. “From here, those six people have stayed and they will be given all the assistance that people on humanitarian visas in Australia are given,” Marles said.

IDF claims to have struck Iranian nuclear weapon development compound

By Alexander Darling

In an update on its Telegram channel this hour, the Israeli Defence Force has claimed it struck an “additional Iranian nuclear program site” during its waves of strikes in Tehran in the last few days.

“The ‘Taleghan’ compound was used to advance … developing nuclear weapons,” the IDF said, claiming Iran had tried to rehabilitate Taleghan after it was last struck in October 2024.

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Meanwhile, Israel’s military said Hezbollah launched some 200 rockets at Israel’s north and deeper into the country earlier today.

Many rockets were intercepted and no serious injuries were reported.

Australia directs ‘non-essential’ officials to leave Israel, UAE

By Alexander Darling

Foreign Minister Penny Wong has just shared an update to X, saying: “The Australian Government has directed the departure of non-essential Australian officials posted to Israel and the UAE, due to the deteriorating security situation.”

“Essential Australian officials will remain in-country to support Australians who need it.”

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The minister did not go into detail about what was meant by “non-essential” officials.

Families of Australian officials in Israel and Lebanon were directed to leave on February 25, three days before the current war began.

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Persian Gulf will ‘run with the blood of invaders’: Iran speaker

By Alexander Darling

The speaker of Iran’s parliament has further escalated the rhetoric in this war, writing that any invasion of Iran’s islands will “make the Persian Gulf run with the blood of invaders”.

It wasn’t immediately clear what prompted Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf’s comments.

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Iran holds three islands near the Strait of Hormuz – Abu Musa, Greater Tunbs and Lesser Tunbs – which it took from the United Arab Emirates just two days before the UAE was founded as a country in 1971. The UAE maintains Iran occupies the islands illegally.

There also has been speculation that the United States could target Kharg Island, Iran’s main oil terminal further up the gulf, near the border with Iraq.

With AP

Weeks of air travel chaos guaranteed even if war ends soon

By Chris Zappone

With the Iran war continuing to escalate, the company overseeing take-off and landing slots at Sydney Airport expects travel disruptions to drag on for weeks even after the conflict ends.

Airport Coordination Limited, which manages the slots at Australia’s busiest airport, said it would not penalise airlines that needed to “cancel services as a direct result” of airport and airspace closures due to the conflict in the Middle East.

In fresh guidance on the impact of the war on airport operations, the company told airlines that “where exceptional circumstances exist because of the situation, ACL will grant alleviation for the period of the disturbance plus six weeks”.

That means even if the war stopped today, the airport slot co-ordinator plans for up to six more weeks of flight disruptions as airlines adjust networks, reposition planes and redeploy crews to reactivated routes.

Read more from our aviation reporter Chris Zappone here.

‘We’re the ones who are losing’

By David Crowe

Below is the latest dispatch from our Middle East correspondent David Crowe, who is on the ground in Lebanon:

We’re hearing more about the Israeli strikes on the cars parked near the Beirut beach where displaced people are living in tents to escape the war. There were at least two strikes in the early hours of the morning here – about seven hours ago – and the Lebanese Ministry of Public Health is saying that eight people died and another 31 were injured.

Destroyed residential buildings in the Abbassiyeh District in Tyre on Monday, where an Israeli airstrike hit.KATE GERAGHTY

The attacks are making headlines because of the scale of the death and injuries and the proximity to the centre of Beirut, highlighting the way the war is intensifying here.

There have been many other strikes. We heard four or five missile or drone explosions in the night in Beirut.

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Iran war causing biggest ever oil market disruption

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The Iran war is causing unprecedented turmoil in oil markets, hitting 7.5 per cent of global supply and an even bigger swath of exports, the International Energy Agency said.

“The war in the Middle East is creating the largest supply disruption in the history of the global oil market,” the IEA said in its monthly report on Thursday.

International Energy Agency executive director Fatih Birol.Getty Images

The previous day, its members agreed to release an unprecedented 400 million barrels from emergency reserves in a bid to calm the market.

Oil prices surged after the US and Israel launched attacks on Iran on February 28 with tankers stopping transit through the critical Strait of Hormuz waterway as a result.

At least 19 commercial ships damaged so far in war

By Alexander Darling

At least 19 commercial ships have been damaged so far in the war, figures showed Thursday.

Through Wednesday night, there had been at least 16 vessels attacked in the Persian Gulf and the wider region, according to the Joint Maritime Information Centre, a coalition overseen by the US Navy.

Oil tankers and cargo ships line up in the Strait of Hormuz as seen from Khor Fakkan, United Arab Emirates.AP

An oil rig separately was attacked off Saudi Arabia as well.

Overnight, two ships were hit by Iranian fire at a port near Basra, Iraq. Another was attacked on Thursday off the coast of the United Arab Emirates.

Hard-liner threatens possible protesters on Iran state TV

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A hard-line television presenter has threatened possible protesters against Iran’s theocracy.

Reza Mollaei, speaking Wednesday on the television program Samt-e Khoda – “Towards God” in Farsi – said hardliners were “waiting, when the dust of this unrest settles ... [to] grab you by the collar, every single one of you. And that’s already happening.”

A billboard in downtown Tehran depicting Iran’s late supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei handing the country’s flag to his son and successor Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei.AP

“Confiscating your properties is nothing, we will make your mothers mourn you,” Mollaei said.

“Those of you who now have foolish ideas and think things are chaotic and something must be done, this message is for you, both inside the country and outside.”

Meanwhile, Al Jazeera is reporting hospitals and health facilities across Iran have suffered damage as US-Israeli strikes intensify.

AP, Al Jazeera

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Watch: Oil tankers burn near Iraq

By Alexander Darling

Footage has emerged of the aftermath of an attack on the Iraqi port of Basra that forced the nation to halt operations at all of its terminals earlier today.

In the vision, an oil tanker can be seen engulfed in flames, one of two tankers ablaze in Iraqi waters.

Iranian explosive-laden boats appear to have attacked the tankers, killing one crew member after. It follows projectiles striking three merchant vessels in the Persian Gulf, port officials, maritime security and risk firms said.

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