Explosions were heard in Jerusalem after warnings of incoming Iranian missile fire, according to AFP journalists, but Israel’s emergency services said there were no known casualties.
🚨 BREAKING — #Israel:
New wave of Iranian ballistic missiles reportedly striking Tel Aviv.#TelAvivBlast https://t.co/Y86fBXA0cD
— أنيس منصور (@anesmansory) March 5, 2026
Iranian news agency Tasnim reported that several explosions were heard in Tehran on Thursday morning. It said the country had activated its defences in response.
Füzeler İsrail semalarında #TelAviv #TelAvivBlast
pic.twitter.com/mhtlF6IWxB
— Haber Perisi (@haberperisi_) March 5, 2026
Republican senators in Washington voted against a motion aimed at stopping the air campaign and requiring that military action be authorised by Congress, leaving President Donald Trump’s power to direct the war largely unbound, as the conflict continues to widen across the Middle East and beyond.
The US Senate voted 53 to 47 not to advance the resolution, largely along party lines, with all but one Republican voting against the procedural motion and all but one Democrat supporting it.
Meanwhile in Lebanon, an air strike hit the Hezbollah stronghold of south Beirut early Thursday, after Israel had issued a warning to residents.
Smoke rises from the site of an Israeli airstrike that targeted an area in Beirut’s southern neighborhood on March 5, 2026. PHOTO: AFP
“We are facing aggression… our choice is to confront it until the ultimate sacrifice, and we will not surrender,” Hezbollah leader Naim Qassem declared in his first speech since the latest round of fighting broke out.
“For us, this is an existential defence,” he added.
Elsewhere, three people were killed in a pair of Israeli strikes on vehicles along Beirut’s airport highway, Lebanon’s health ministry said.
Lebanese authorities announced at least 72 people killed, 437 wounded and 83,000 displaced from their homes since Monday.
Qatar has begun evacuating residents of its capital living near the US embassy as a precautionary measure, the interior ministry said, after Iranian strikes.
Rocket trails are seen in the sky above Tel Aviv amid a fresh barrage of Iranian missile attacks on March 5, 2026. PHOTO: AFP
Repatriation flights departed the Middle East on Wednesday as governments rushed to bring home tens of thousands of citizens stranded by the war. A British flight to repatriate UK nationals did not take off as scheduled from Oman and was rescheduled for later on Thursday, Sky News reported.
Commercial air traffic remained largely absent across much of the region, with major Gulf hubs, including Dubai, the world’s busiest airport for international passengers, affected.
President Donald Trump hailed the US performance in the war, saying Iran’s leaders were rapidly being killed, and vowing to push on.
“We’re doing well on the war front, to put it mildly. Somebody said on a scale of 10, where would you rate it? I said about a 15,” Trump told a gathering of tech bosses.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said that Israel and Washington had made “historic gains” in the war.
The US, Israel-Iran war has widened sharply, with a US submarine sinking an Iranian warship off Sri Lanka on Wednesday, killing at least 80 people, and NATO air defences destroying an Iranian ballistic missile fired towards Turkey.
The missile incident is the first time that Turkey, which borders Iran and has NATO’s second-largest military, has been drawn into the conflict, but US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth said there was no sense that it would trigger the Atlantic alliance’s collective-defence clause.
The escalation came as the powerful son of Iran’s slain supreme leader emerged as a frontrunner to succeed him, suggesting Tehran was not about to buckle to pressure from the United States and Israel’s military campaign that has killed hundreds and convulsed global markets.
The war continued to paralyse shipping through the Strait of Hormuz on Thursday, choking off vital Middle East oil and gas flows. Trump has pledged to provide insurance and naval escorts for ships to contain soaring costs, with oil prices rising on Thursday. At least 200 vessels remain anchored off the coast, according to Reuters estimates.
Smoke rises from the site of an Israeli airstrike that targeted an area in Beirut’s southern neighborhood on March 5, 2026. PHOTO: REUTERS
The US Navy will escort oil tankers through the Strait of Hormuz “as soon as it can” but is focused on the conflict for now, US Energy Secretary Chris Wright said on Fox News on Wednesday.
“No, not yet … We’ll do that as soon as we can. Right now, our Navy, and of course, our military, is focused on other things, which is disarming this Iranian regime,” Wright said, when asked if any commercial vessels had requested US Navy assistance in the Gulf.
Asian shares rallied on Thursday after days of sharp losses, while US stocks closed up on Wednesday on hopes that the war might end soon. Some traders said the improved sentiment followed a New York Times report that Iranian intelligence had reached out to the CIA early in the war about a path towards ending it.
A source from the Iranian intelligence ministry rejected the article as “absolute lies and psychological warfare in the midst of war”, Iran’s semi-official news agency Tasnim reported.
Repatriation flights departed the Middle East on Wednesday as governments rushed to bring home tens of thousands of citizens stranded by the war.
Commercial air traffic remained largely absent across much of the region, with major Gulf hubs, including Dubai, the world’s busiest airport for international passengers, affected.