Dubai, March 9 -- An Indian and a Bangladeshi were killed in Saudi Arabia when a "military projectile" fell onto a residential area in Al Kharj governorate south of Riyadh, the country's civil defence agency said on Sunday, as the Iran war's targets widened into civilian infrastructure. Saudi Arabia said 12 other Bangladeshis were wounded in the Al Kharj attack, which came even as Israel struck oil depots late night in Tehran, after which Iran's president vowed to expand strikes on US targets across the region. Meanwhile, Iran's Assembly of Experts met privately and chose their next leader. The clerics did not say who had been selected, but later indicated Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's son Mojtaba will be named. US president Donald Trump and Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu have vowed to press ahead with the coordinated campaign against Iran, even as Washington's stated war aims have varied. Trump told ABC News he wants a say in who comes to power in Iran once the war is over, adding that the new leader "is not going to last long" without his approval. "The name of Khamenei will continue," said Ayatollah Hosseinali Eshkevari, a member of the clerical council charged with electing a new leader, in a video published in Iranian media. "The vote has been cast and will be announced soon," Eshkevari said, without providing further details. Trump had previously demanded a say in the appointment and dismissed the younger Khamenei as an unacceptable "lightweight". The war, which Israel and the United States launched with airstrikes on February 28 that killed Khamenei, has killed at least 1,230 people in Iran, at least 397 in Lebanon and at least 11 in Israel, according to officials. Six US troops have been killed. The conflict has rattled global markets, disrupted air travel and left Iran's leadership weakened by several thousand Israeli and US airstrikes. In Israel, the military reported the first soldier deaths since the war began, saying two were killed in southern Lebanon while Israel targets the Iran-backed militant group Hezbollah. Three people were injured in Israel in an afternoon strike. Iranian president Masoud Pezeshkian backtracked from conciliatory comments a day earlier in which he apologised for attacks on Gulf neighbours' soil. Iranian hard-liners had swiftly contradicted him, saying war strategy would not change. "The more pressure they impose on us, the stronger our response will naturally be," Pezeshkian said on Sunday. "Our Iran, our country, will not bow easily in the face of bullying, oppression or aggression - and it never has." Pezeshkian has urged neighbouring states not to take part in US and Israeli attacks. The US strikes have not come from the Gulf Arab governments but from US bases and vessels in the region....