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Visualizing the US-Israeli war with Iran and retaliation in maps and charts

<i>CNN via CNN Newsource</i><br/>The United States and Israel have launched a major attack on Iran
<i>CNN via CNN Newsource</i><br/>The United States and Israel have launched a major attack on Iran

By Lou Robinson, Renée Rigdon, Rosa de Acosta, Janie Boschma, Matt Stiles, Soph Warnes, Rhyannon Bartlett-Imadegawa, Henrik Pettersson, Gillian Roberts, Annette Choi, Amy O’Kruk, CNN

(CNN) — War in the Middle East continues after the United States and Israel attacked Iran late last month, and Tehran retaliated with strikes against several of its neighbors, including US-allied Gulf states. Israel and Hezbollah are also trading blows in the expanded conflict.

CNN is tracking the war in maps and charts.

Strikes in the Strait of Hormuz

Iran has intensified attacks on vessels in the Strait of Hormuz — a crucial connection point in oil shipping routes for the entire world — after the United States destroyed multiple Iranian naval ships near the strait on Tuesday. Iran’s new leader vowed the strait will remain closed.

Shipping activity has fallen off dramatically since the war began on February 28. Thousands of ships are stuck waiting for the strait to reopen, while the number of new ships arriving has dropped.

Implications of shipping disruptions in Strait of Hormuz

Iran controls the north side of the strait, where about one-fifth of daily global production typically flowed through before the current conflict, according to the US Energy Information Administration.

Oil prices have surged, hiking gas prices when Americans are already struggling with affordability.

The AAA national average for regular gasoline has surged to the highest average gas price of either of Trump’s two terms in the White House.

See the strikes across the region

CNN is tracking the US-Israeli strikes across Iran, and Tehran’s retaliatory attacks on US military bases and consulates, Israel and other targets across the region.

US and Israeli military air strikes killed numerous members of the Iranian leadership, including the Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Iran has since selected Khamenei’s son — Mojtaba Khamenei — as the new supreme leader.

Nearly 2,000 people have been killed in Iran and Lebanon since the war began, as well as dozens more across the region. Lebanese authorities said more than 800,000 people inside the country are registered as displaced.

A look at some of the damage across the region

US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said the Trump administration is investigating a strike that, according to Iranian state media, killed at least 168 children and 14 teachers at a girls’ elementary school in southern Iran. Footage has emerged that appears to show a US missile targeting the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps naval base adjacent to the school.

Iran’s top official said Tehran “will not negotiate” with the United States, as Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Dan Caine said March 4 that the US will start striking “progressively deeper” into Iran.

The US military says all six service members aboard an American refueling aircraft were killed when it crashed in Iraq on March 12. Earlier in the conflict, at least six US service members were killed in Kuwait in a direct hit on a makeshift operations center and another US soldier died from injuries sustained in Saudi Arabia. Trump acknowledged that there could be more US casualties as the war escalates.

The conflict has damaged air hubs, and civilian infrastructure, rocked densely populated areas and disrupted oil shipments.

Internet access disrupted across Iran

The people of Iran have been in a near-total internet blackout since the air strikes started. Internet shutdowns have previously been a go-to tactic for the regime, with a previous period of inactivity recorded in January during anti-government protests.

Flight disruptions

As of March 10, at least 21,000 flights scheduled to depart from major airports in 10 countries have been canceled since the conflict began, data from Flightradar24 shows. A wide corridor of Middle East airspace has remained empty, though some area airports’ departing flights are slowly starting to tick up.

—CNN’s Jake Tapper, Christian Edwards, Karina Tsui, Tim Lister, Gianluca Mezzofiore, Lauren Kent, Billy Stockwell, John Towfighi, Sophie Tanno and Adam Pourahmadi contributed to this report.

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This story has been updated with additional developments.

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