8.25pm

Trump: Iranian missile evades UAE defences

President Trump said an Iranian missile evaded defences in the UAE. Speaking to ABC in a phone interview, Trump said: “They [Iranian missiles] were shot down for the most part … One got through. Not huge damage.”

In the same interview, Trump stopped short of saying Iran has violated the ceasefire.

8.15pm

UAE intercepts ‘12 Iranian missiles’

The UAE has claimed that its air defence systems engaged 12 ballistic missiles, three cruise missiles and four drones launched from Iran in a post on X.

“The Ministry of Defence affirmed that it remains fully prepared and ready to deal with any threats and will firmly confront anything that aims to undermine the security of the country, in a manner that ensures the protection of its sovereignty, security and stability and safeguards its interests and national capabilities,” it said.

7.50pm

Comment: Deals with Iran don’t come easy

Every time I hear President Trump give an upbeat assessment of talks with Iran — “they’re making an offer”, they are “very reasonable”, “they’d like to work a deal”, “they called this morning” — I wonder whether he has ever met any Iranians (William Hague writes). Anyone who has been involved in negotiations with them, as I was as foreign secretary in 2013, knows that a combination of pride, cunning, complex decision-making and natural brinkmanship makes doing a deal with them a slow and exhausting business.

It was in November 2013 in Geneva that we achieved a breakthrough in the nuclear talks with Iran. It had its comical aspects: we had to point out to the Russians before they opened champagne that the Iranians didn’t drink.

But it was an important moment, in which Iran agreed to freeze nuclear enrichment in return for a freeze on new sanctions, and that talks on a full deal — which later became the JCPOA (Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action) — would begin. The final deal took another 20 painstaking months. It limited Iran’s nuclear activities, opened them up to rigorous international inspection and in return lifted sanctions on Iranian oil.

7.40pm

Trump threatens Iran in Fox interview

President Trump has told Fox News that if the Iranians targeted US ships in the Gulf region they would be “blown off the face of the Earth”.

Trump said in a phone interview there were two pathways: Iran makes a deal in good faith or combat operations could resume. Trump praised Iran for showing some flexibility in talks and called the US naval blockade the greatest military manoeuvre in history.

6.55pm

UAE flights disrupted by missile threat

Flights into the UAE have been affected as missiles and drones continued to be fired from Iran, according to reports

While Iran said it had no plans to target the UAE, there have been at least four missiles and a drone shot down by the Gulf state.

The UAE said its air defences were engaging missiles and drone threats on Monday night which had affected the country’s air space.

6.50pm

Trump’s Star Wars meme

The White House has posted a meme of President Trump as a character from Star Wars.

“In a galaxy that demands strength — America stands ready,” it said on the post on X. “This is the way. May the 4th be with you.”

May 4 is known by fans as Star Wars day.

In the AI-generated image, it appears the US president is the character from The Mandalorian, a TV series and upcoming movie, carrying baby Yoda in a pouch.

6.31pm

‘Perhaps it is time for South Korea to join the mission’

President Trump’s Truth Social post

President Trump has urged South Korea to help open the Strait of Hormuz after one of its cargo ships was damaged in the crucial shipping channel.

The US president has repeatedly called on allies to help join the US naval blockade in the strait, but so far no other nations have signed up.

Trump gave an update on the latest developments, including claims Iranian ships that had been sunk by US forces.

He posted on Truth Social: “Iran has taken some shots at unrelated Nations with respect to the Ship Movement, PROJECT FREEDOM, including a South Korean Cargo Ship. Perhaps it’s time for South Korea to come and join the mission!

“We’ve shot down seven small Boats or, as they like to call them, ‘fast’ Boats. It’s all they have left. Other than the South Korean Ship, there has been, at this moment, no damage going through the Strait.”

Vessel movements in the Strait of Hormuz on MondayAFP/Getty Images

6.22pm

Attacks are violation of law, UAE says

The United Arab Emirates has warned Iran it reserved the right to respond to today’s missile and drone attacks, which is said were violations of international law.

In a statement it said: “These attacks constitute a dangerous escalation and an unacceptable transgression.”

Iran state television quoted an unnamed military officials who said that “Iran has no plans to target the UAE”.

Earlier, Admiral Brad Cooper, the head of US Central Command said: “[The] UAE has exceptional capability. They’re well positioned to defend themselves”.

5.55pm

US ‘destroys six Iranian small boats’

Admiral Brad Cooper is an US Apache helicopter

The US military has destroyed six Iranian small boats and intercepted Iranian cruise missiles and drones fired by Tehran, the head of US Central Command said.

Admiral Brad Cooper said he “strongly advised” Iranian forces to remain clear of US military assets, as the US launches an operation to free up shipping through the Strait of Hormuz.

He said a US blockade of Iran, which prevents ships from going to or from Iranian ports, also remained in effect.

Iran has denied the US had sunk the six ships.

5.15pm

Starmer’s Strait proposals welcomed

Starmer and the Italian prime minister in Yerevan on MondayStefan Rousseau/AFP/Getty Images

Sir Keir Starmer’s proposal for a “reassurance” and “military” presence to ensure vessels can transit through the Strait of Hormuz safely is welcome in a “crucial waterway,” the principal director of marine at the International Chamber of Shipping has said.

John Stawpert told Times Radio the organisation had “been discussing this with the UK government, the Royal Navy and other partners”.

“It’s an interesting concept. It’s still, to my understanding, on the drawing board. We do have experience of these sorts of constructs, in the fight against piracy was the most notable example of this.”

The prime minister told reporters in Armenia earlier: “The situation is clearly evolving. It is really important that we get the Strait of Hormuz open, because that is directly impacting on our economy in the United Kingdom.”

5.10pm

UAE again under attack

Iranian missiles fired at the UAE is the first such attack since the ceasefire started last month, as concerns mount over the resumption of Tehran’s war with the US.

Iran had focused much of its fire on the UAE during the war, targeting everything from oil infrastructure and airports to data centres. It also shut down the main natural gas field in Qatar and repeatedly tried attacking some of Saudi Arabia’s largest oil fields.

The four missiles fired at the UAE on Monday — including three shot down and one which fell into the sea — as well as the drone attack which caused a fire at the oil refinery in Fujairah could result in US forces retaliating.

4.35pm

UAE ‘intercepts three Iranian missiles’

The UAE defence ministry said it intercepted three missiles from Iran on Monday, while a fourth missile landed in the sea.

It comes as authorities said a fire broke out at the Fujairah oil industry zone following a drone attack originating from Iran.

Civil defence teams were deployed immediately to contain the blaze, Fujairah media office said in a statement.

Three people, all Indian nationals, were injured in the attack, according to the Fujairah government.

Earlier today missile alerts sounded in the UAE for the first time since the ceasefire in the Iran war started on April 8.

4.05pm

Iran: No commercial ships have crossed Strait

The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps said no commercial vessels had crossed the Strait of Hormuz on Monday, saying claims by US officials that two US-flagged ships had passed were  “baseless and entirely false”.

The IRGC said any other movements in the crucial shipping lane would “face serious risks”.

Vessels in the Strait of Hormuz near Bandar Abbas, Iran, on MondayAmirhosein Khorgooi/ISNA/WANA/Reuters

4.00pm

Bessent: US petrol prices will come down

Scott Bessent, the US treasury secretary, admitted that higher petrol prices were affecting Americans, but said they were expected to come down quickly when the conflict with Iran ends.

With President Trump visiting China on May 14, Bessent also urged the Chinese to join the US in supporting the opening of the Strait of Hormuz.

He defended the naval blockade in the strait, saying it was hurting the Iranian regime.

“We have blockaded the ships going into or out of Iranian ports. Their economy is in freefall,” he said in an interview with Fox News.

“Their soldiers will not have a high tolerance for not getting paid.”

3.30pm

Trump dismisses Iranian claims

President Trump has responded to Iranian claims it hit two US ships in the Strait of Hormuz today.

In a post on Truth Social, the US leader published four pictures depicting himself, the US navy, air force and missile defence systems. Under each picture, he had the words “100 per cent operational”.

Under the next set of pictures, he depicted the Iranian navy, air force and air defences, with the word “destroyed” underneath and a big red cross.

There was also a picture of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the former supreme leader of Iran, with the word “dead” underneath, accompanied by a red cross.

2.50pm

South Korea investigates damage to ship in Strait

South Korea said it was looking to verify intelligence that a South Korean-flagged vessel was attacked in the Strait of Hormuz.

The country’s maritime ministry said an explosion took place in the engine room of the Korean vessel on Monday.

The foreign ministry in Seoul said no casualties were reported due to the possible attack, according to Yonhap News.

2.41pm

UAE missile alerts sound for first time since ceasefire

Missile alerts have sounded in the United Arab Emirates for the first time since the ceasefire in the Iran war started last month.

The alert told residents to immediately seek a safe place and await further instructions.

But half an hour later authorities in the UAE later sent another phone alert telling residents the situation was safe.

2.36pm

Iran fired missiles near US destroyers, state media claims

The Iranian navy fired cruise missiles, rockets and combat drones near US destroyers crossing the Strait of Hormuz on Monday, according to Iranian state television.

Earlier reports from Fars, the semi-official Iranian news agency, claimed US destroyers were hit by missiles. The US denied this.

The latest report suggests that the Iranians were firing warning shots at US ships. Meanwhile, the US military said two guided-missile destroyers had entered the Gulf to help ships be escorted through the Strait of Hormuz.

2.26pm

The Times View: Iran’s domestic repression must not be forgotten

An unveiled woman standing on a car roof, raising her arms with middle fingers extended, leading a large crowd of protesters and cars on a road.Mourners make their way towards Aichi cemetery in Saqqez, the hometown of Mahsa Amini, who was killed in 2022 while under arrest in Tehran for not wearing a hijab in publicUGC/AFP/Getty Images

The economic and geopolitical consequences of America and Israel’s war in Iran, and the fitful ceasefire that has followed, have become too ­complex to calculate with any certainty. But one feature of the conflict remains as clear as ever: the moral contrast between its participants.

The Iranian regime is a moral blemish on the world order: a purveyor of terror abroad and a ­callous oppressor of its own people. Though reporting from within the country remains hard to verify, the evidence suggests that the authorities have used the pretext of war to brutalise its people to an even greater degree than before. This wickedness should not be forgotten amid the fog of war.

Particularly desperate is the situation of the hundreds of children being held in Iran’s prisons. These children, among an estimated 54,000 citizens detained, were caught up in waves of arbitrary arrests during the regime’s desperate attempts to crush mass protests at the start of the year. Since US and Israeli airstrikes began on February 28, suspected dissidents have been made to pay an ever greater price.

1.57pm

US ships that crossed Strait took an ‘extraordinary risk’

The transiting of two US-flagged merchant vessels through the Strait of Hormuz was “an extraordinary risk”, a former director-general of the European Union Military Staff has said.

David Leakey told Times Radio that if they had been targeted and hit, “that would have perhaps justified a retaliation by the United States military as a warning to Iran that if they don’t open the straits to the freedom of traffic, if they start targeting the merchantmen or warships transiting the strait, then they can expect retribution.

“Maybe that just raises the negotiating stakes a little bit.”

1.46pm

Centcom: Two US-flagged vessels have crossed Strait

Two US-flagged merchant vessels have successfully transited through the Strait of Hormuz as US navy guided-missile destroyers operate in the Gulf, according to US Central Command (Centcom).

Amid conflicting reports about whether Iran has hit a US warship — which the US has denied — Centcom said the US ships had passed through the crucial shipping route.

“American forces are actively assisting efforts to restore transit for commercial shipping,” it said in a statement.

1.40pm

Starmer: Situation evolving in Strait of Hormuz

Sir Keir Starmer with the Italian prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, at a summit in Yerevan on MondayStefan Rousseau/AFP/Getty Images

Sir Keir Starmer said there was “a lot of attention” on the Strait of Hormuz, after the US said it would begin guiding stranded ships through the vital waterway and amid reports Iran fired missiles at a US navy vessel.

The prime minister told reporters in Armenia: “The situation is clearly evolving. It is really important that we get the Strait of Hormuz open, because that is directly impacting on our economy in the United Kingdom.

“And that’s why in recent months we’ve pulled together a group of countries to have a reassurance presence, including a military presence, as soon as it’s safe to get vessels through. We’re discussing that at the European political community summit here this afternoon.”

1.26pm

How Trump’s war will help China woo swathes of Asia

Illustration of leaders and geopolitical tensions, with Donald Trump and Xi Jinping shaking hands over missiles, surrounded by other figures and ships.

Preparations are under way for one of the most anticipated diplomatic encounters of the year. Hundreds of officials in the United States and China are working to ensure that Donald Trump’s visit to Beijing, currently scheduled for May 14-15, goes off without a hitch.

At least two “Beasts” — armoured Cadillacs, rumoured to be fitted with tear gas grenade launchers and door handles capable of electrocuting attackers — will be airlifted to China via military transport plane. Menus and ingredients are being safety-checked, and the itinerary is planned in 15-minute increments.

Control over the practicalities of a summit is one thing; mastery of its political context quite another. Trump had hoped to land in Beijing fresh from an epoch-making victory over Iran. Instead, he has showcased to China the limitations of US power when faced with hard geographical and economic realities like the Strait of Hormuz, the fractured state of Nato and the depletion of America’s stockpile of munitions. Added to all this, he risks, slowly but surely, losing Asia.

1.12pm

Traffic in Strait remains at a near-total standstill

Multiple ships, some with blue superstructures, on the water with a rocky coastline in the background.Ships in the Strait of Hormuz on Monday

There were no signs of increased vessel traffic through the Strait of Hormuz on Monday, a day after President Trump said the US would begin efforts to free up shipping.

Only one tanker, a sanctioned, handy-sized LPG carrier, along with a few cargo ships and a cable-laying vessel passed into the Gulf of Oman, MarineTraffic data showed.

No tankers or other commercial vessels were seen lining up to transit and the German shipping group Hapag-Lloyd said transit for its vessels remained impossible due to a lack of clarity over secure passage procedures.

Centcom said it would begin helping to restore freedom of navigation through the strait, while continuing its blockade of Iranian ports.

The shipping industry has received no guidance regarding the American operation and its intent, while the overall security situation remained unchanged, the Baltic and International Maritime Council (BIMCO) said.

“Without consent from Iran to let commercial ships transit safely through the Strait of Hormuz, it is currently not clear whether the Iranian threat to ships can be degraded or suppressed,” the shipping association’s chief safety and security officer, Jakob Larsen, said. BIMCO provides security alerts for the industry.

1.00pm

Three prisoners hanged in Iran over protests

From left, Ebrahim Dolatabadinejad, Mehdi Rasouli and Mohammadreza Miri were executed on SundayIran Human Rights

Mehdi Rassouli, Mohammad Reza Miri and Ebrahim Dolatabadi were executed in Iran after being convicted over unrest in the eastern city of Mashhad, the judiciary’s Mizan news agency announced.

It was not specified when or where they were executed, but the US-based Human Rights Activists News Agency said that Rassouli, 25, and Miri, 21, were hanged at dawn on Sunday at the Vakilabad prison in Mashhad.

Protests began in December over the cost of living but intensified into nationwide rallies against the Islamic republic, peaking as mass demonstrations on the nights of January 8 and 9.

Rights groups said that thousands were killed in a crackdown by security forces, while authorities blamed “rioters” who they said that they were backed by the United States and Israel.

Mizan said that Rassouli and Miri were responsible for the death of a member of the security forces and described Dolatabadi as one of the “instigators” of the unrest in Mashhad.

The Norway-based NGO Iran Human Rights described the three as “political prisoners” who had been sentenced “after unfair trials in the revolutionary courts”.

12.42pm

Acts of piracy by IRGC in Strait, says UAE

The UAE said Iran fired two drones at a tanker affiliated with its state oil company Adnoc in the Strait of Hormuz.

“Targeting commercial shipping and using the Strait of Hormuz as a tool of economic coercion or blackmail represents acts of piracy by Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps,” the foreign ministry said, adding that there had been no injuries.

12.13pm

No US navy ships have been hit, says Centcom

US Central Command has said that no US navy ships have been struck.

“CLAIM: Iranian state media claims that Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps hit a US warship with two missiles,” it posted on its official X account.

“TRUTH: No US navy ships have been struck. US forces are supporting Project Freedom and enforcing the naval blockade on Iranian ports.”

However, Iran has asserted that it had and forced the US warship to turn back.

11.54am

US official denies attack on ship

A senior American official has denied that a US ship was struck by Iranian missiles on Monday.

“Senior US official denies a US ship was hit by Iranian missiles,” the global affairs correspondent for Axios, Barak Ravid, wrote on X.

The report conflicts with Iranian accounts claiming it struck a US warship with two missiles as it tried to pass through the Strait of Hormuz .

The Fars news agency said a US frigate ignored Iran’s warning when sailing near Jask, citing local sources.

11.47am

Trump had warned of forceful response to ‘interference’

President Trump arriving in Maryland on Air Force One on SundayAP

Announcing the ship shepherding effort in a social media post on Sunday, President Trump promised to deal “forcefully” with any interference to the effort he has dubbed “Project Freedom”.

“If, in any way, this Humanitarian process is interfered with, that interference will, unfortunately, have to be dealt with forcefully,” the president wrote on his Truth Social platform.

Trump said the US would guide ships from “neutral and innocent” countries through the Strait of Hormuz.

“For the good of Iran, the Middle East, and the United States, we have told these Countries that we will guide their Ships safely out of these restricted Waterways, so that they can freely and ably get on with their business. Again, these are Ships from areas of the World that are not in any way involved with that which is currently taking place in the Middle East,” said Trump.

11.44am

Iran’s threat against US ships entering Strait

Iran’s military command on Monday had warned that ships passing through the critical strait must co-ordinate with them.

“We warn that any foreign military force — especially the aggressive US military — that intends to approach or enter the Strait of Hormuz will be targeted,” Major General Pilot Ali Abdollahi told the state broadcaster IRIB.

11.42am

‘Attack’ follows launch of US mission to guide ships through Strait

Claims of an attack on the US frigate come after as Washington kicked off efforts to “guide” stranded ships from the Strait of Hormuz.

The Joint Maritime Information Center said on Monday the US had set up an “enhanced security area” south of typical shipping routes.

The centre warned that passing close to the usual routes, known as the traffic separation scheme, “should be considered extremely hazardous due to the presence of mines that have not been fully surveyed and mitigated”.

A day after President Trump announced what he called Project Freedom, the US-led maritime task force’s announcement marked the start of the effort to revive traffic and restore confidence among commercial vessels transiting the strait.

11.35am

US warship ‘hit with two missiles’

Iran claimed it had struck a US warship that was trying to pass through the Strait of Hormuz with two missiles.

The Fars news agency said a US frigate ignored Iran’s warning when sailing near Jask, citing local sources.

The American vessel was subsequently forced to abandon its course and flee the area as a result of the strikes, the agency reported.

Iran had repeatedly threatened that any passage through the Strait of Hormuz without official permission from Tehran would be met with a decisive response from its armed forces.