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As of April 8, 2026, the core of the latest fighting between the United States and Iran is a chaotic situation in which “ceasefire” and “engagement” coexist. Although the United States and Iran have reached a temporary ceasefire agreement, missile and drone attacks on Israel and Gulf countries continued before and after the agreement took effect.
⚔️ The Final Struggle Before the Ceasefire
According to the latest reports, the conflict has been ongoing for more than a month:
· Airstrikes and attrition: The U.S. military has repeatedly carried out airstrikes on Iranian military targets. As of April 7, 365 U.S. military personnel have been injured and 13 have died. The total value of aircraft lost by the U.S. military exceeds $400 million, including at least 3 F-15E aircraft shot down, 16 MQ-9 drones, and several helicopters. Both sides have become locked in a brutal war of attrition.
· Iran’s retaliation and losses: Iran continues to launch attacks against U.S. military bases in the region and strikes Israel’s infrastructure. But it has also suffered severe losses: 25 people have been killed (including civilians). Its largest petrochemical facility and its top university were targeted, and two senior IRGC commanders were killed.
· Maximum pressure: On April 7, U.S. Vice President Vance said military objectives were “basically achieved.” Trump issued a threat that “the entire civilization could disappear,” and continued applying military pressure before the deadline. Ultimately, through mediation by multiple countries, the two sides agreed to a ceasefire at the last moment.
🔥 Current Situation: Ceasefire Taking Effect Synchronized with “Chaos”
Even though a ceasefire agreement has been reached, gunfire on the battlefield has not completely stopped:
· The U.S.-Iran ceasefire posture: Iran’s supreme leader ordered a ceasefire at 8:30 a.m. Beijing time on the 8th and claimed to have achieved a “great victory”; U.S. forces have also paused airstrikes within Iran. Both sides plan to hold negotiations in Islamabad on April 10.
· Israel’s continued strikes: But Israel has clearly expressed concern and, in the early hours of the 8th, carried out large-scale attacks on Iran’s heavy industry and missile facilities.
· Iran’s attacks on Gulf countries: After the ceasefire took effect, Iran still launched missiles and drones at Israel and multiple Gulf countries. Alarms were sounded and targets were intercepted in many places. In one of the United Arab Emirates’ natural gas facilities, a fire broke out, and in southern Israel, 3 teenagers were injured by cluster munitions fired by Iran.
· Analysis of the causes: This chaos stems from struggles among multiple parties. Iran’s decentralized defense command system has led to delays in transmitting orders; meanwhile, Israel insists on taking the opportunity to destroy more Iranian targets, which diverges from U.S. demands.
🔮 Analysis of Future Developments
Looking ahead, the direction of the situation will depend on the following factors:
· The ceasefire’s fragile foundation: This ceasefire is more like a tactical breather after massive conflict exhaustion. Iran argues for opening the Strait, but wants to control it, demanding that U.S. forces withdraw and that all sanctions be fully lifted; the U.S. aims to verify Iran’s nuclear and missile capabilities, and the two sides’ core demands are fundamentally at odds.
· Bleak negotiation prospects: Given the huge differences in fundamental positions, the hope of reaching a “permanent peace agreement” within two weeks is extremely slim.
· Future outlook: The most likely scenario is that the U.S. and Iran (especially Israel) will conduct periodic airstrikes on Iran to curb its development. Therefore, the two-week ceasefire is more likely to be only a brief “half-time break” before the next round of conflict. #Gate广场四月发帖挑战