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War in the Middle East: latest developments Paris, France, May 12 (AFP) May 12, 2026 Here are the latest developments in the Middle East war:
The price of international benchmark Brent crude jumped one percent to $105 a barrel during Tuesday morning trade in Asia, while benchmark US oil contract West Texas Intermediate (WTI) also rose one percent to $99 a barrel.
Lebanon's state-run National News Agency (NNA) reported that Israeli strikes Monday night hit a house in Kfar Dounine, a town about 95 kilometres (59 miles) from capital Beirut.
AFP has not been able to independently verify the Emirati attacks, which the American newspaper reported on Monday. The Journal did not specify a date or time but said the attacks took place around the time US President Donald Trump announced a ceasefire in April.
The move comes hours after the UK issued its own distinct set of sanctions and days before US President Donald Trump was scheduled to visit China.
"Our armed forces are ready to respond and to teach a lesson for any aggression," Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf said on X. "A bad strategy and bad decisions always lead to bad results -- the world already understands this."
US federal taxes on gasoline amount to 18.4 cents per gallon on gasoline and 24.4 cents per gallon for diesel. Suspending the tax would require an act of Congress, where Trump's Republican party holds a razor-thin majority in both houses.
Amid growing pressure at home over the war's impact on the US economy, Trump warned that Iran's rejection over the weekend of Washington's demands meant the already tenuous ceasefire is now "unbelievably weak." "I would say the ceasefire is on massive life support," he told reporters at the White House.
"The energy supply shock that began in the first quarter is the largest the world has ever experienced," said Amin H. Nasser. "If the Strait of Hormuz opens today, it will still take months for the market to rebalance, and if its opening is delayed by a few more weeks, then normalisation will last into 2027."
About a third of a world's fertilizer normally passes through the key waterway in the Gulf that Iran has blocked. "We have a few weeks ahead of us to prevent what will likely be a massive humanitarian crisis," Jorge Moreira da Silva, executive director of the UN Office for Project Services (UNOPS) and leader of the task force, told AFP in an interview.
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