WORLDNEWS HEADLINE-US IRAN CONFLICT: ABU DHABI, U.A.E. | ran missiles target Gulf Arab states | PALM BEACH, U.S.: I Iran leader Khamenei killed in massive US and Israeli attack, Trump says

This handout picture provided by the office of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei shows him during a religious gathering in Tehran on February 19, 2026, on the first day of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan according to local observation./ Handout / Khamenei.ir / AFP

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Iran leader Khamenei killed in massive US and Israeli attack, Trump says

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BREAKING LIVE: Israel Launches Attack on Iran, Explosions Rock in Tehran | US Iran Attack | Tehran LIVE | CNBC TV18 President Donald Trump says Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was killed in today’s massive US and Israeli attack, which Trump said will continue with heavy bombing throughout the week. Iran has claimed its leaders are “safe and sound.” • About the strikes: Trump has indicated the military operation is aimed at overturning Tehran’s government. One strike killed scores of students in an elementary school in southern Iran, according to state media. • Unprecedented retaliation: Iran unleashed strikes on US military bases, Israel and other targets across the Middle East, rocking densely populated areas and disrupting air travel and oil shipments. The US military has reported no combat-related American casualties. The United Arab Emirates called the attacks a “historic moment” in the Middle East, saying world leaders had failed to ensure the region’s stability. Donald Trump has said that Iran’s supreme leader Ali Khamenei – “one of the most evil people in history” – is dead. “This is not only justice for the people of Iran, but for all Great Americans,” Trump said in a post on Truth Social. He said of Khamenei: “He was unable to avoid our Intelligence and Highly Sophisticated Tracking Systems and, working closely with Israel, there was not a thing he, or the other leaders that have been killed along with him, could do.” “This is the single greatest chance for the Iranian people to take back their Country,” Trump went on. Washington is hearing that many among the Iranian Revolutionary Guards, military and other security and police forces “no longer want to fight”, Trump claimed. He suggested he would now be willing to give them “immunity”. Significantly, the US president also said that “heavy and pinpoint bombing” would continue “uninterrupted throughout the week or, as long as necessary to achieve our objective”.

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Today's Front Page

PALM BEACH, United States — Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran’s supreme leader since 1989 and sworn enemy of the West, was killed Saturday in the opening salvo of a massive US and Israeli attack, President Donald Trump said, as he urged the overthrow of the Islamic republic.

Cheers could be heard on Tehran’s streets after reports first emerged from Israel of the death of Khamenei, as plumes of black smoke hovered over the district where he usually resides, witnesses told AFP.

The attack came weeks after Iranian authorities ruthlessly put down mass protests, killing thousands.

“Khamenei, one of the most evil people in History, is dead,” Trump said in a statement.

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Trump vowed no let-up in the strikes until the fall of the Islamic republic as he urged security forces to stand down.

“This is the single greatest chance for the Iranian people to take back their Country,” Trump said.

Iran responded to the attack with a flurry of missile and drone strikes across the Middle East, killing at least one person in Abu Dhabi and another in Tel Aviv as explosions rocked the showcase cities of Gulf Arab monarchies.

There was no immediate confirmation from Iranian authorities of Khamenei’s death.

US President Donald Trump said the strikes were aimed at destroying Iranian missiles and annihilating its navy.

US President Donald Trump said the strikes were aimed at destroying Iranian missiles and annihilating its navy.

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Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi had earlier told NBC News that Khamenei was alive “as far as I know” and foreign ministry spokesman Esmail Baqaei told the BBC he was “not in a situation to confirm anything”.

Speaking before Trump, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said of Khamenei that there were “many signs that this tyrant is no longer alive” and said to Iranians, “This is your time to join forces, to overthrow the regime and to secure your future.”

The Israeli army said that Ali Shamkhani, a top advisor to Khamenei, and the head of Iran’s powerful Revolutionary Guards, General Mohammad Pakpour, were both also killed.

One apparent survivor, Ali Larijani, head of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, vowed defiance.

“The brave soldiers and the great nation of Iran will teach an unforgettable lesson to the international oppressors,” he said.

Reza Pahlavi, the son of the late pro-Western shah deposed in the 1979 Islamic revolution, called on Iranians to “stay vigilant” and then to take to the streets in massive numbers when he issues a call.

Hailing the reported demise of Khamenei, only the second supreme leader of the cleric-run state after Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, Pahlavi said, “With his death, the Islamic Republic has effectively come to an end and will soon be consigned to the dustbin of history.”

Pahlavi, who has spent most of his life in exile near Washington, has presented himself as a transitional figure to a secular democracy although he does not enjoy support from all the opposition.

Strikes across Iran

Today’s paper: March 1, 2026

Iranian authorities urged residents to evacuate Tehran, a capital city of 10 million. The country’s Red Crescent society said that at least 201 people had been killed in the strikes and more than 700 wounded.

The Iranian judiciary said one strike that hit a school in the south killed 108 people, although AFP was unable to access the site to verify the toll or the circumstances surrounding the incident.

Meanwhile in Israel, city streets stood deserted as residents took cover in shelters while the blasts of intercepted Iranian missiles reverberated overhead.

Israeli emergency services said that an Iranian missile strike killed a woman in the Tel Aviv area and that some 20 others were wounded.

Residents and AFP correspondents in the Emirati, Qatari and Bahraini capitals heard multiple rounds of explosions from Iran’s retaliatory strikes.

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Smoke poured from US bases in the UAE and Bahrain, home to the US Navy’s Fifth Fleet.

“When we heard the sounds, we cried out of fear,” said Jana Hassan, a 15-year-old student who was near the strike in Bahrain. “I will never forget the sound of those loud blasts.”

In Abu Dhabi, the UAE’s capital, golfers were stunned to see dozens of projectiles flying overhead. One civilian, a Pakistani, was killed by falling debris in Abu Dhabi, authorities said.

Two witnesses told AFP they heard an explosion and saw a plume of smoke rising from Dubai’s famed man-made island The Palm, with authorities reporting four injured.

Iran’s Revolutionary Guards also contacted ships to announce the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, the vital waterway for oil from the Gulf, although it was not clear if the threat was being enforced.

Unprecedented scale

Tehran residents had been going about their usual business when the strikes began. Security forces quickly flooded the streets, shops pulled down their shutters and few pedestrians risked venturing out, an AFP journalist saw.

“I saw with my own eyes two Tomahawk missiles flying horizontally toward targets,” a Tehran office worker told AFP before communications and internet access were cut.

It was the first US military action of this scale apparently aimed at toppling a foreign government since the 2003 invasion of Iraq.

Israel’s army chief Lieutenant General Eyal Zamir said the operation was “taking place at a completely different scale” than the 12-day war it fought against Iran in June, which the US briefly joined.

An Israeli military statement said it was the largest military air raid in the history of its air force.

Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Syria, the UAE and Israel all closed their airspaces to civilian traffic, at least in part, and multiple airlines cancelled flights to the Middle East.

Trump’s envoys had negotiated in Geneva on Thursday with Iran’s foreign minister.

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Trump said that Iran’s leaders had not compromised sufficiently on its disputed nuclear program, although he made clear after the attack that the goal was regime change and not a nuclear deal.

Oman had been mediating and had on Friday reported what it called a breakthrough, with Iran said to agree not to stockpile any uranium.

Oman called Saturday for an immediate ceasefire. Iran also called on the UN Security Council, which held an emergency session Saturday and where the United States holds veto power, to act to stop the attack.

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World

Two dead as Iran launches waves of strikes on wealthy Gulf

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WATCH VIDEO:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Z-GRxd29hY
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ISRAEL LIVE: From the Middle East After US and Israel Launch Attack on Iran | Trump on Iran | N18G

Israel names its operation against Iran ‘Lion’s Roar’: US STRIKES IRAN LIVE: Trump Confirms U.S. Military Strikes on Iran | Israel Attacks Iran | CNBC TV18

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Two dead as Iran launches waves of strikes on wealthy Gulf

This video grab taken from UGC images posted on social media on February 28, 2026, shows smoke rising above Dubai, as Iran carried out retaliatory strikes in the Gulf following US and Israeli attacks. The United States and Israel launched strikes against Iran on February 28, with Israel’s public broadcaster reporting that the Iranian supreme leader had been targeted, as the Islamic republic retaliated with barrages of missiles at Gulf states and Israel./ Various sources via AFP

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WATCH VIDEO: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kfxWyGsBLek

War with Iran | PBS News Special Report

A major U.S.-Israel attack on Iran targeted the country’s top leaders and missile sites Saturday, following weeks of rising tensions over talks on Iran’s nuclear program. Iran has vowed to retaliate. PBS News co-anchors Amna Nawaz and Geoff Bennett host special coverage of the latest developments with correspondents Nick Schifrin, Liz Landers and Lisa Desjardins.

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 ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates — Explosions rocked cities across the Gulf on Saturday, killing two people in Abu Dhabi, while smoke and flames rose from Dubai landmark The Palm as Iran launched waves of attacks in retaliation for US and Israeli strikes.

The attacks hit airports in Abu Dhabi, Dubai and Kuwait, as well as Gulf military bases and residential areas, raising fears of a wider conflict and rattling a region long seen as a haven of peace and security.

Across the UAE, Iran fired 137 missiles and 209 drones at the territory, the country’s defence ministry said, as projectiles streaked across the skies of every Gulf state but Oman, a mediator in the recent US-Iran talks.

The UAE defence ministry said most of the missiles and drones were intercepted but at Abu Dhabi’s Zayed International Airport officials said at least one person was killed and seven wounded in an “incident”.

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Earlier, falling debris killed a Pakistani civilian in Abu Dhabi, the United Arab Emirates’ capital, officials said.

At Dubai International Airport four people were injured according to airport authorities and four others were also hurt at the luxury Palm development.

In Qatar, officials said Iran launched 65 missiles and 12 drones towards the Gulf state, most of which were intercepted, but eight people were injured in the salvos, with one of them in critical condition.

“We are scared of what the future is for us now, and we can’t say how the next few days are going to be,” Maha Manbaz, a nursing student in Doha told AFP.

‘Terrified’

Smoke poured from US bases in Abu Dhabi and Bahrain’s capital Manama, home of the American navy’s Fifth Fleet, witnesses saw.

A drone struck Kuwait’s international airport and a base housing US personnel was targeted. Three Kuwaiti soldiers and 12 other people were wounded, authorities said.

After Iran’s Revolutionary Guards reported missile strikes, US Central Command (CENTCOM) said on X that no American naval vessels were hit, damage to US facilities was minimal, and no US casualties had been reported.

Residential buildings were also targeted in Manama, with officials saying firefighters and civil defence teams had been dispatched to the scene.

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“The sound of the first explosion terrified me,” said a 50-year-old retiree living near the US base in Manama’s Juffair area, where residents were quickly evacuated.

The UAE, Saudi Arabia and Qatar warned they reserved the right to respond to the attacks.

The oil-and-gas-rich Arab monarchies, lying just across the Gulf from Iran, are long-term American allies and host a clutch of US military bases.

“The Gulf states are sandwiched between Iran and Israel, and have to bear the worst inclinations of both,” said Bader al-Saif, an assistant professor at Kuwait University.

“Iran’s attacks on the Gulf are misplaced. They’ll only alienate its neighbours and invite further distancing from Iran,” he added.

Conflict is unusual in the Gulf, which has traded on its reputation for stability to become the Middle East’s commercial and diplomatic hub.

‘Significant damage’

The unprecedented barrage targeted Qatar’s Al Udeid base, the region’s biggest US military base, as well as Riyadh and eastern Saudi Arabia.

The UAE, Qatar and Kuwait all announced that their airspace was closed.

An AFP journalist in Qatar saw one missile destroyed in a puff of white smoke, while another in Dubai saw a volley of Patriot interceptors taking off.

Iran fired missiles at Al Udeid last June after US strikes targeted Iranian nuclear facilities during a brief war with Israel.

The escalation also saw Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and UAE President Mohamed bin Zayed speak for the first time since a public row in late December.

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The Saudi de facto ruler called the Emirati president and the pair discussed Iran’s retaliatory strikes on the Gulf and expressed solidarity and sympathy.

In Kuwait, an Iranian missile attack caused “significant damage” to the runway at an air base hosting Italian air force personnel, Italian Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani was quoted by the ANSA news agency as saying.

Late on Saturday, Kuwaiti officials said a drone targeted a naval base there with air defence forces intercepting the projectile, according to a post by the defence ministry on X.

For many residents in the Gulf, which has drawn a cosmopolitan, largely expat population, the reaction was one of shock.

“I heard the explosions, I don’t know what I felt,” a Lebanese woman living in Riyadh told AFP.

“We came to the Gulf because it’s known to be safer than Lebanon. Now I don’t know what to do or how to think really.”

Agence France-Presse
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