US Strikes Bridges and Collapses a Tower as its Iran Campaign Expands

Smoke rises following a strike at an unknown location during what the US military says is its latest wave of strikes on Iran. US Central Command/Handout via REUTERS
Smoke rises following a strike at an unknown location during what the US military says is its latest wave of strikes on Iran. US Central Command/Handout via REUTERS
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US Strikes Bridges and Collapses a Tower as its Iran Campaign Expands

Smoke rises following a strike at an unknown location during what the US military says is its latest wave of strikes on Iran. US Central Command/Handout via REUTERS
Smoke rises following a strike at an unknown location during what the US military says is its latest wave of strikes on Iran. US Central Command/Handout via REUTERS

The United States expanded its airstrike campaign against Iran early Friday by hitting more bridges and collapsing a tower at a key Iranian port, part of US President Donald Trump’s threats to start striking infrastructure to pressure Tehran to ease its chokehold on the Strait of Hormuz.

Iran launched new missile attacks several countries in the Middle East, including Qatar, a key mediator in the war.

The interim ceasefire agreed to last month has collapsed, and the region has endured days of back-and-forth attacks by the US and Iran as they battle for control of the strait. Iranian officials say US strikes have killed dozens of people and wounded hundreds of others, with new casualties reported in Friday’s strikes.

When the US and Israel launched the war on Iran on Feb. 28, Tehran effectively closed the strait to shipping traffic, a move that sent the price of oil soaring and gave Iran major leverage in negotiations.

Speaking in a primetime address to the American public, Trump insisted the war was going well.

“We are likewise winning big in Iran, and you will see the fruits of that labor very, very shortly,” Trump said.

The US airstrikes hit bridges overnight into Friday in Iran’s southern Hormozgan province, killing at least seven people, Iranian state television reported. The attacks hit Bandar Khamir, a city on Iran’s coast on the Strait of Hormuz.

The highway and railway bridge strikes appeared aimed at cutting off Bandar Abbas, Iran’s main port, from roads leading into Iran’s central region onward to Tehran, the capital.

While other routes still are open, the US strikes could expand further, potentially disrupting both the movement of military materiel and goods needed for Iran’s 90 million people.

The US military’s Central Command said it hit dozens of targets in its latest airstrikes, which concluded at dawn Friday, the sixth night in a row of American attacks.

The strikes also collapsed a tower at Iran’s Chabahar port on the Gulf of Oman, a key trade route for landlocked, neighboring Afghanistan, the state-run IRNA news agency reported.

US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth shared the image of the surveillance tower collapsing, part of his effort to assert American control over the strait.

That image had circulated social media via activists prior to Hegseth sharing it.

Chabahar port, which Iran had been running with support from India, has been a repeated target of American airstrikes. Iranian state media acknowledged a third round of strikes on the facility without immediately acknowledging the tower’s collapse.

According to The Associated Press, Iran described the tower as overseeing commercial traffic into the port. However, the Revolutionary Guard also operates at ports across the country.

On Friday, Qatar twice warned the public to take shelter as a barrage of Iranian missiles targeted the nation. People heard explosions overhead as air defenses fired to intercept the missiles. Qatar’s Interior Ministry said falling debris wounded a child.

Qatar, along with Pakistan, is a key mediator in trying to reach an end to the Iran war. But talks have broken down over Iran’s chokehold on the Strait of Hormuz.

Iran also targeted Bahrain and Kuwait early Friday. Jordan's military said it intercepted three incoming missiles Friday morning launched by Iran.

Explosions also could be heard Friday morning in Irbil and Sulaymaniyah in northern Iraq’s semiautonomous Kurdish region as air defenses targeted incoming fire. There was no immediate word on any damage.



Trump Accuses China of 2020 Election Interference, Contradicting US Intel

President Donald Trump speaks in the East Room of the White House, Thursday, July 16, 2026, in Washington. (Saul Loeb/Pool via AP)
President Donald Trump speaks in the East Room of the White House, Thursday, July 16, 2026, in Washington. (Saul Loeb/Pool via AP)
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Trump Accuses China of 2020 Election Interference, Contradicting US Intel

President Donald Trump speaks in the East Room of the White House, Thursday, July 16, 2026, in Washington. (Saul Loeb/Pool via AP)
President Donald Trump speaks in the East Room of the White House, Thursday, July 16, 2026, in Washington. (Saul Loeb/Pool via AP)

US President Donald Trump declassified documents on Thursday that he asserted showed Chinese interference in US elections, reviving his long-running attacks on election security despite a US intelligence assessment that found no evidence Beijing affected the 2020 vote that he lost.

The 25-minute prime-time address underscored Trump's effort to make election security a central political issue ahead of November's midterm elections, when his fellow Republicans will be defending their slender congressional majorities.

Trump used his remarks to again press Republicans in Congress to pass legislation imposing new voter identification and citizenship requirements, despite longstanding findings that voter fraud in US elections is rare. The bill has stalled in the Senate amid fierce Democratic opposition.

TRUMP ASSERTS 'SHOCKING VULNERABILITIES'

Trump said the declassified material would reveal "shocking vulnerabilities in our election infrastructure." But many appeared to show the opposite, or were not related to US election infrastructure at all.

The speech came at a challenging political moment for Trump and Republicans, with his approval rating weighed down by the unpopular Iran war and high energy prices.

Trump briefly mentioned the war at the outset, saying the US was "winning big," while listing a series of domestic accomplishments, including tax cuts and his immigration crackdown, before turning to election security.

The president said he was declassifying sensitive information that showed China had illicitly acquired 220 million US voter files, including names, addresses and other data.

He asserted ‌that members of the ‌US intelligence community deliberately suppressed information about the extent of China's activities.

An unclassified 2021 US intelligence assessment found no indications any ‌foreign actor ⁠attempted to or ⁠succeeded in altering "any technical aspect" of the 2020 presidential election vote, including voter registrations, ballots, tabulations or results.

That assessment was conducted under John Ratcliffe, then Trump's director of national intelligence and now his CIA director.

The report also found China had pursued an effort dating to at least 2008 to collect information on US voters, public opinion, political parties, candidates and top government officials, likely aiming to use the material to predict election results.

Two people familiar with the matter said the US voter data obtained by China was not confidential – voter files are routinely purchased by political consultants – and could not be manipulated.

Ahead of Trump's speech, some White House officials expressed concern that disclosing the China information could be misleading, sources told Reuters.

Trump's harsh language about China risked rocking a relationship that has steadied following last year's costly trade war. Trump hopes to meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping in September about improving trade relations.

China's Foreign Ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment on ⁠the speech. Before the address, Liu Chang, spokesperson for the Chinese embassy in Washington, said: "China has never and will never ‌interfere in the presidential elections of the US."

FAMILIAR CLAIMS GOING BACK YEARS

Trump has spent years raising doubts about ‌electoral outcomes, falsely asserting that his 2020 loss to Democrat Joe Biden was rigged. He has also advanced other false claims, including that mail-in balloting is rife with fraud, voting machines are untrustworthy and ‌non-citizen voting is widespread.

Numerous courts and vote recounts found no evidence of large-scale fraud in the 2020 election.

Nevertheless, Trump's campaign has gained traction with his supporters. A Reuters/Ipsos ‌poll in April found 63% of Republicans believe Trump's claim that the 2020 election was stolen, a share that has remained largely unchanged in recent years despite the absence of evidence.

Trump said on Thursday that his administration had uncovered evidence of more than 275,000 non-citizens registered to vote in just four states, but it was not clear how many had actually voted.

In some previous cases, systems intended to verify citizenship status have mistakenly flagged some naturalized US citizens as non-citizens. Studies have found that non-citizens casting actual ballots is exceedingly uncommon.

POLITICAL HEADWINDS

While Trump cast US elections as highly vulnerable, he did not provide evidence of any actual votes in 2020 that were altered or manipulated.

Two of the three major US television networks and CNN decided not to broadcast the speech on their primary platforms, eschewing a practice typically reserved for major addresses on issues of national import.

Trump again urged Republican lawmakers to advance a bill, the SAVE America Act, that would require photo ID to vote and proof of US citizenship to register and would significantly curtail mail-in voting. Democrats and voting-rights advocates say the legislation is intended to suppress legitimate votes.

The bill has passed the Republican-controlled US House of Representatives several times with a simple majority, but it does not have the 60 votes to overcome a Democratic filibuster in the Republican-controlled Senate.

Some Republican leaders have urged Trump to focus on issues that matter most to Americans, including high living costs, rather than focus on the 2020 vote.

Democrats need to flip only three Republican seats to take a majority in the 435-seat US House. They face an uphill battle to win control of the 100-seat Senate with critical races unfolding in Republican-leaning states.


China, Pakistan Call on US, Iran to Resume Talks

Iranians drive past an anti-US billboard featuring pictures of US President Donald Trump and his family on top of US flag-draped coffins, accompanied by a sentence in Persian that reads "Blood for Blood," that hangs at Palestine Square in Tehran, Iran, 16 July 2026. (EPA)
Iranians drive past an anti-US billboard featuring pictures of US President Donald Trump and his family on top of US flag-draped coffins, accompanied by a sentence in Persian that reads "Blood for Blood," that hangs at Palestine Square in Tehran, Iran, 16 July 2026. (EPA)
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China, Pakistan Call on US, Iran to Resume Talks

Iranians drive past an anti-US billboard featuring pictures of US President Donald Trump and his family on top of US flag-draped coffins, accompanied by a sentence in Persian that reads "Blood for Blood," that hangs at Palestine Square in Tehran, Iran, 16 July 2026. (EPA)
Iranians drive past an anti-US billboard featuring pictures of US President Donald Trump and his family on top of US flag-draped coffins, accompanied by a sentence in Persian that reads "Blood for Blood," that hangs at Palestine Square in Tehran, Iran, 16 July 2026. (EPA)

China and Pakistan's foreign ministers on Friday called on the United States and Iran to end fighting and return to the negotiating table, after they met in Shanghai, according to a government statement. 

China's Wang Yi and Pakistan's Ishaq Dar jointly "expressed concern over the deterioration of the current situation, calling on the involved parties to immediately cease hostilities... (and) return to dialogue", the statement by Beijing's foreign ministry said. 

Wang urged all parties to ‌fulfill their commitments and abide by ⁠the ⁠ceasefire memorandum of understanding, it added. 

The United States expanded its airstrike campaign against Iran early Friday by hitting more bridges and collapsing a tower at a key Iranian port, part of US President Donald Trump’s threats to start striking infrastructure to pressure Tehran to ease its chokehold on the Strait of Hormuz.  

Iran launched new missile attacks several countries in the Middle East, including Qatar, a key mediator in the war alongside Pakistan. 

The interim ceasefire agreed to last month has collapsed, and the region has endured days of back-and-forth attacks by the US and Iran as they battle for control of the strait.  

Iranian officials say US strikes have killed dozens of people and wounded hundreds of others, with new casualties reported in Friday’s strikes. 


Police: Uganda School Bus Crash Kills 21

(FILES) Antelopes cross a road in northwest Uganda, on February 22, 2023. (Photo by BADRU KATUMBA / AFP)
(FILES) Antelopes cross a road in northwest Uganda, on February 22, 2023. (Photo by BADRU KATUMBA / AFP)
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Police: Uganda School Bus Crash Kills 21

(FILES) Antelopes cross a road in northwest Uganda, on February 22, 2023. (Photo by BADRU KATUMBA / AFP)
(FILES) Antelopes cross a road in northwest Uganda, on February 22, 2023. (Photo by BADRU KATUMBA / AFP)

A bus full of schoolchildren returning from a trip veered off the road in Uganda, killing 20 children and one adult, police said Friday.

The east African country has a notorious road safety record, frequently recording bus or truck accidents along poorly maintained highways.

The bus from King David Junior School in the capital, Kampala, was returning from a school trip to Sipi Falls in Kapchorwa District when it veered off the road, according to preliminary investigations by the police.

"The driver reportedly lost control of the vehicle, which veered off the road, struck a large stone along the roadside, and overturned," police said in a statement on X.

"The crash claimed the lives of one adult male and 20 pupils, while three adult males and several juveniles sustained injuries," it added, according to AFP.

Police shared an image of a badly mangled and overturned bus, and said investigations were ongoing, with several children and adults receiving treatment in hospital.

Fatal bus accidents are relatively common in Uganda.

In October, two buses collided on a major highway, killing at least 46 people.

A 2024 report said there were 4,434 fatal collisions and 5,144 deaths that year.