Level 1 — Absolute Beginner
The war between the U.S., Israel, and Iran is not over. U.S. forces attacked Iran again last night. This was the seventh night of attacks in a row.
Iran says the attacks have killed at least 50 people. More than 500 people are hurt. About 10,000 people in Iran have no water now. This happened after attacks on 20 villages.
Iran fired back at other countries. Iran hit a water plant in Kuwait. The plant makes clean water from the sea. Iran also sent missiles at Bahrain, Oman, Jordan, and Iraq.
Jordan shot down 10 Iranian missiles. Iraq shot down Iranian drones. No one in Jordan was hurt. The war is now bigger and touches many countries near Iran.
- war
- fighting between countries or groups
- attack
- an action to hurt or damage someone
- missile
- a weapon that flies to hit a target far away
- drone
- a small flying machine with no pilot inside
- village
- a very small town
- water plant
- a building that makes clean water
- wounded
- hurt by a weapon or attack
- shot down
- hit and destroyed while flying
Level 2 — Elementary
The war between the United States, Israel, and Iran is getting bigger. Overnight from July 17 to 18, U.S. forces attacked Iran for the seventh night in a row. The strikes hit surveillance sites, military supply buildings, underground weapon stores, and targets at sea.
Iran's Health Ministry said on Saturday that the U.S. strikes have killed at least 50 people and wounded more than 500 since July 6. Iran's water company also said that about 10,000 people in 20 villages now have no water because of the overnight attacks.
Iran fought back by sending missiles and drones toward several countries near it. Iran's Revolutionary Guard hit a power and water desalination plant in Kuwait. The attack damaged power units and started a fire. Kuwait needs desalination plants for most of its water, so this kind of attack is very dangerous for the country.
Iran also sent missiles toward Jordan, Bahrain, Oman, and Iraq. Jordan's army shot down 10 Iranian missiles and said no one was hurt. Iraq shot down Iranian drones near the city of Irbil. Air-raid sirens sounded several times in Bahrain, and Iran said it attacked radar systems in Oman.
- surveillance
- watching or gathering information, often for military reasons
- underground
- below the surface of the ground
- retaliation
- fighting back after being attacked
- desalination
- removing salt from seawater to make it drinkable
- generation unit
- a machine that produces electric power
- air-raid siren
- a loud alarm that warns people of an incoming attack
- radar
- equipment that finds aircraft or ships using radio waves
- casualties
- people killed or hurt in an attack or accident
Level 3 — Intermediate
The war centered on Iran has entered its eighth day of overnight U.S. strikes with no sign of resolution. Between July 17 and 18, American forces carried out a seventh consecutive night of attacks, targeting surveillance installations, military logistics infrastructure, underground weapons storage, and maritime capabilities across Iran.
The human and infrastructural cost inside Iran continues to climb. Iran's Health Ministry reported Saturday that U.S. airstrikes have killed at least 50 people and wounded more than 500 since the campaign intensified on July 6. Separately, Iran's national water company said the latest wave of overnight attacks left roughly 10,000 residents across 20 villages without running water, pointing to damage that extends well beyond military targets.
Iran's response has broadened the conflict's geographic footprint considerably. The Revolutionary Guard launched missiles and drones at several U.S.-aligned states in the Gulf and its neighbors, including Kuwait, Bahrain, Oman, Jordan, and Iraq. A strike on a power and water desalination plant in Kuwait damaged generation units and ignited a fire, echoing a March 2026 strike on similar Kuwaiti infrastructure that killed an Indian worker. Because Kuwait depends heavily on desalination for its water supply, the attack exposes a real vulnerability across the arid Gulf region.
Elsewhere, Jordan's army said it intercepted 10 Iranian missiles early Saturday without casualties or damage, while Iraq shot down Iranian attack drones over Irbil. Air-raid sirens sounded repeatedly in Bahrain, prompting government alerts, and the Revolutionary Guard claimed it destroyed long-range aerial and vessel-detection radar systems in Oman. With an earlier interim ceasefire having collapsed, the four-month-old war shows no clear end in sight, and fighting increasingly centers on control of the Strait of Hormuz.
- infrastructure
- the basic physical systems a country relies on, such as power and water plants
- maritime capabilities
- military assets and systems related to operations at sea
- footprint
- the extent or scope of something's effect or reach
- arid
- extremely dry, receiving very little rainfall
- intercepted
- stopped or destroyed something, such as a missile, before it reached its target
- vulnerability
- a weakness that could be exploited or attacked
- interim
- temporary, existing only for a limited time until something else happens
- strait
- a narrow waterway connecting two larger bodies of water
Level 4 — Advanced
The war centered on Iran shows no sign of abating as it enters its eighth day, with American forces having completed a seventh consecutive night of strikes overnight between July 17 and 18. The overnight campaign targeted surveillance installations, military logistics infrastructure, underground weapons storage, and maritime capabilities, part of a sustained effort to degrade Iran's operational capacity more than four months into a conflict the United States and Israel initiated.
The toll inside Iran continues to mount. Iran's Health Ministry disclosed Saturday that U.S. airstrikes have killed at least 50 people and wounded upward of 500 since the campaign's escalation on July 6, while the country's national water utility reported that overnight attacks have left approximately 10,000 residents across 20 villages without running water, evidence that the strikes' consequences extend well past strictly military infrastructure.
Tehran's retaliatory posture, meanwhile, has widened the conflict's regional dimensions markedly. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps launched missiles and drones against an array of U.S.-aligned Gulf states and neighboring countries, among them Kuwait, Bahrain, Oman, Jordan, and Iraq. A strike on a power and water desalination facility in Kuwait damaged generation units and touched off a fire, recalling a March 2026 attack on comparable Kuwaiti infrastructure that killed an Indian laborer. Given Kuwait's near total reliance on desalination for potable water, the strike underscores a structural vulnerability shared across the arid Gulf, where civilian water security is inseparable from a handful of exposed industrial sites.
The response elsewhere was similarly fraught. Jordan's army said it intercepted 10 Iranian missiles that breached its airspace early Saturday, reporting neither casualties nor damage, while Iraqi forces downed Iranian attack drones over Irbil. Bahrain sounded air-raid sirens on multiple occasions and issued government alerts, and the IRGC claimed to have destroyed long-range aerial and vessel-detection radar systems in Oman. With an earlier interim ceasefire having disintegrated and no diplomatic off-ramp apparent, the fighting has increasingly gravitated toward contesting the Strait of Hormuz, a chokepoint whose strategic weight now looms over the entire trajectory of the war.
- abating
- becoming less intense or severe
- degrade
- to reduce the effectiveness or capability of something, often militarily
- retaliatory
- relating to an action taken in return for an attack or harm
- structural vulnerability
- a fundamental weakness built into a system, not just an isolated flaw
- potable water
- water that is safe and suitable for drinking
- fraught
- filled with tension, danger, or difficulty
- off-ramp
- a way to exit or de-escalate from a conflict or difficult situation