Iran hits Gulf neighbors, Putin digs in, Serbia keeps protesting, and Burnham sketches a reset
2026/6/29 · 8:11

Iran hits Gulf neighbors, Putin digs in, Serbia keeps protesting, and Burnham sketches a reset

A plain-English guide to four political stories from the past day: Iran's strikes on Bahrain and Kuwait, Ukraine's pressure on Russian fuel, Serbia's unresolved protest movement, and Britain's likely next leadership reset.

The past day put pressure on four very different systems: the Gulf security order, Russia's wartime fuel supply, Serbia's long-running ruling party, and Britain's governing Labour Party.
Here are the four moves to know:
  • Iran struck Bahrain and Kuwait after new U.S. attacks on Iran, while warning that talks over the Strait of Hormuz could stop if Washington keeps firing.1
  • Ukraine kept hitting Russia's energy system, setting a southern refinery ablaze as Putin publicly acknowledged fuel shortages.2
  • Serbian protesters stayed in the streets even after President Aleksandar Vucic promised to step down within weeks.3
  • Andy Burnham, now the only declared candidate to replace Keir Starmer, plans to pitch a shift of power away from London.4

Iran brings the Gulf into the line of fire

What happened: Iran's Revolutionary Guard claimed attacks on Bahrain and Kuwait after fresh U.S. strikes on Iran. Kuwait said it intercepted Iranian drones and two missiles with no reported injuries or damage. Bahrain said a residential building near its international airport was damaged, with no deaths reported.1
The U.S. military said it hit Iranian surveillance, communications, air defense, drone storage, and minelayer sites after an attack on a Panamanian-flagged tanker carrying crude oil for Qatar's state energy company.1
Why it matters: Bahrain hosts the U.S. Navy's 5th Fleet, and Kuwait hosts a major U.S. military base. That means Iran is now hitting places that sit directly inside the U.S. security network in the Gulf, not just targets at sea or inside Israel.1
The bigger worry is the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow sea lane that once carried about one-fifth of the world's oil and natural gas. A U.S.-overseen maritime body said 89 U.S.-assisted commercial transits had gone through, below the historical average of 138 vessels a day.1
What to watch next: Pakistan says U.S.-Iran technical talks are still expected to resume Tuesday. The talks are supposed to cover the strait, Iran's ports and sanctions, and Iran's highly enriched uranium stockpile.1 If the firing continues, the talks may become less about a deal and more about stopping the next round.

Ukraine is hitting Russia's fuel system, but Putin says the war plan stays

What happened: Ukrainian drone debris sparked a fire at the Slavyansk-na-Kubani refinery in Russia's Krasnodar region. The refinery processes close to 4 million tons of crude a year and sends fuel products toward Russia's Black Sea ports, according to its operator's website.2
Zelenskyy also said Ukraine hit another refinery in the Yaroslavl region, around 700 kilometers from the Ukrainian border. Russian authorities had not immediately confirmed that strike, though the local governor said some roads were temporarily closed because of a Ukrainian drone attack.2
Why it matters: This is Ukraine trying to make the war felt inside Russia, especially through fuel. Putin acknowledged a fuel shortfall, said Russia would import more fuel and speed repairs, and promised more air defense production.2 In Irkutsk, state-run Rosneft stations will limit drivers to 50 liters per vehicle per day.2
What to watch next: Putin rejected what he described as a Ukrainian proposal to halt long-range strikes, saying Russia would keep trying to fully capture four Ukrainian regions: Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson, and Zaporizhzhia.5 Watch whether fuel shortages spread faster than repairs, and whether U.S.-led diplomacy resumes after the Iran crisis cools.

Serbia's street pressure did not stop with Vucic's promise

What happened: Thousands of protesters gathered in Kraljevo after President Aleksandar Vucic said he would resign within weeks and open the way to early elections. He has run Serbia as president or prime minister for 12 years.3
Many protesters are not treating the promise as a real handover of power. Under Serbian law, Vucic cannot seek another presidential term anyway, and many opponents expect him to move into the prime minister's office or hand the presidency to a loyal ally.3
Why it matters: The protests began after the roof of a railway station in Novi Sad collapsed in late 2024, killing 16 people. Protesters blame corruption and poor work on state building projects; Vucic denies corruption and calls the protesters foreign agents.3
This has become Serbia's biggest protest wave since Slobodan Milosevic was overthrown in 2000. Police have arrested hundreds during months of unrest, and the European Union has accused officers of brutality and detaining demonstrators without proper grounds.3
What to watch next: The first test is whether Vucic sets a clear resignation date. The second is whether early elections are run in a way the opposition sees as fair. If not, the resignation promise may fuel the protests instead of defusing them.

Britain may be heading for another leadership reset

What happened: Andy Burnham, the Labour lawmaker expected to replace Keir Starmer as prime minister, will outline a plan to move more power from London to Britain's regions. Burnham is the only declared candidate to take over from Starmer and could be in Downing Street within weeks.4
Starmer said last week he would step down, only two years after Labour won a large parliamentary majority. If Burnham takes office, Britain would have its seventh prime minister in a decade.4
Why it matters: Burnham is promising a different way of governing. In plain terms, he wants more decisions made closer to towns and regions, not all through central government in London. His office says he will also pitch a 10-year plan on living standards, industry, housing, infrastructure, and utilities.4
The constraint is money. Reuters reported that Britain's economy is under pressure from the war in Ukraine and the energy shock from the U.S. conflict with Iran, while Housing Minister Steve Reed said Burnham would stick to Labour's fiscal rules.4
What to watch next: Watch how much of Burnham's regional-power pitch survives contact with the budget. Also watch Nigel Farage's Reform UK: Reuters says many Labour figures see Burnham as the candidate best placed to counter its rise.4

Bottom line

The Middle East story is about escalation control. The Ukraine story is about pressure on Russia away from the front line. Serbia's story is about whether a resignation promise changes actual power. Britain's story is about whether a new leader can change governing style without much spare money.
The next 48 hours should show which of these are real turning points and which are just another move in longer fights.

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