Later on Wednesday, the Bahrain Interior Ministry said that air raid sirens were activated across the country following an Iranian attack on its territory.
"The alarm siren has been activated. Citizens and residents are requested to remain calm, head to the nearest safe place, and follow updates through official channels," the Bahrain ministry said in a statement.
Later on Wednesday, Bahrain confirmed the attack was carried out by Iran, with the missile causing a fire without leaving anyone wounded.
Despite that, missile alerts remained active after the ceasefire announcement.
The ceasefire was challenged beyond Israel as well. Reuters reported an Iranian strike on Saudi Arabia’s Jubail petrochemical area, and missile alerts in the United Arab Emirates after the truce announcement, underscoring that the threat was regional from the outset and that the pause in fighting was already under strain.
Israeli skepticism of ceasefire deal
Israeli officials had expressed skepticism about the truce from the outset. However, in the material reviewed, no clearly attributable new statement from the Prime Minister’s Office responding specifically to the post-ceasefire launches had been publicly confirmed.
The White House also had not issued a detailed formal response in the reports reviewed, though the broader situation was described as fluid as regional actors waited to see whether the pause in fighting would survive its first day.
The ceasefire followed weeks of direct confrontation involving Israeli and US strikes on Iranian targets and repeated Iranian missile attacks across the region. Markets reacted positively to the announcement, with oil prices falling sharply on hopes of de-escalation, even as continued alerts suggested the military picture remained unstable. See X here.

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