
Israel and Iran move to war footing on third day of strikes
Israel and Iran were on a war footing on Sunday as a third day of strikes led to evacuations, emergency shelter plans and frantic efforts to contain the Middle East conflict.
The Israeli military said it was hitting 'dozens more targets' in Tehran, hinting at a lengthy campaign as warplanes bombed military sites, laboratories and a tanker aircraft in Iran. Iranian state media said car bombs had blown up near government buildings on Sunday.
Iran retaliated with missile attacks, prompting Israel to order its citizens to take shelter. Yemen's Houthis also launched missiles in an operation 'co-ordinated' with Iran, with sources saying the rebels were considering strikes on US targets.
US President Donald Trump threatened to retaliate with America's 'full strength and might' in the event of an attack by Iran. Mr Trump and his fellow G7 leaders were in Canada for a summit.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan spoke to several Middle East leaders in a diplomatic push on Sunday, warning that Israel's attacks could 'drag the whole region into the fire'. US-Iran talks scheduled for Sunday, which were intended to ease the situation by peaceful means, did not take place.
Iranian government spokesman Fatemeh Mohajerani said metro stations and mosques would be available as bomb shelters for the public beginning on Sunday night, state media reported. It said plans were being made to supply food and medicine as the conflict widens and civilian areas come under attack.
In Tehran, residents heard warplanes and explosions overhead, with one reporting that drones flew 'very low' over the capital. Local media said air defences were activated in several areas of the city.
Flights were cancelled across the Middle East. Etihad Airways cancelled flights between Abu Dhabi and Tel Aviv until June 22, while Egyptair suspended routes to Beirut, Amman, Baghdad and Erbil. Egyptian authorities held air defence drills nationwide.
The Israeli air force announced late on Sunday it had struck an Iranian refuelling plane at an airport 2,300 kilometres from Israel, in its longest-range strike so far. The Israeli military said it was 'operating to establish aerial superiority over Iranian airspace'.
Israel said 14 people had been killed and 400 injured since Friday, when its military launched a surprise attack on Iran that killed several senior military leaders. Israel said it is acting to prevent Iran from advancing a nuclear weapons programme, something Tehran says it has no intention of doing.
Israelis were told to avoid gatherings and minimise 'movement in public areas' as sirens signalled incoming fire. The army said about 20 drones had been intercepted, with more Iranian retaliation expected.
'We are removing an existential threat and reinforcing our security,' said Israel's army chief Lt Gen Eyal Zamir. Iranian media, meanwhile, reported that at least 128 people had been killed in Israeli attacks on Friday and Saturday.
The conflict could consolidate Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's hold on power, just days after his coalition had appeared on the brink of collapse over exceptions to military service for ultra-Orthodox men. Opposition leader Yair Lapid said the operation against Iran was a 'necessity'.
In Israel's first apparent attack on energy infrastructure, Iran's Tasnim news agency said production was partially suspended at South Pars, the world's biggest gasfield. Russia was drawing up plans to evacuate citizens from Iran, as Mr Trump suggested President Vladimir Putin could help to mediate in the conflict.
'Iran and Israel should make a deal, and will make a deal,' Mr Trump wrote on social media. He added that 'we will have PEACE, soon.'
President Nikos Christodoulides of Cyprus said his country had been asked to convey 'some messages' to Israel, which Iran later denied.
Iran's President Masoud Pezeshkian, meanwhile, urged neighbouring Iraq to show 'greater vigilance' in preventing Israel from using its airspace for attacks. Iraq, in turn, called on the US to prevent that.
Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia Al Sudani said his country is 'keen to prevent the war from expanding' and assured Mr Pezeshkian of Iraq's solidarity 'in the face of the blatant Zionist aggression'.
The Iranian government insists its nuclear activities are peaceful and civilian in nature. UN inspectors said they cannot verify that and the US and Europe have accused Iran of enriching uranium to a level close to weapons grade.
Mr Trump abandoned a deal in 2018 that limited Iran's enrichment. The US and Iran have held five rounds of talks since April to try to find a path to a new accord.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Al Etihad
3 hours ago
- Al Etihad
Middle East conflict only resolved through diplomacy
16 June 2025 00:33 By Dr. Mohammed Abdullah Al-Ali* The Middle East is a region that rarely finds calm before slipping back into tension. Over the past two years, the intensity of the escalation has increased sharply, with no clear path to sustainable proliferation of conflicts, the emergence of competing actors and contradictory objectives, along with mounting human suffering and economic strain, have created a growing sense of uncertainty. This uncertainty hit a new high on June 13, 2025, when Israel launched strikes on Iran, ushering in a dangerous new chapter in a region already divided and though there had been indications of a potential confrontation between Israel and Iran, especially with the ongoing war in Gaza since October 7, 2023, the weakening of Iran's regional proxies, advances in Iran's nuclear programme (according to both Tel Aviv and the International Atomic Energy Agency), and tense US-Iran nuclear negotiations risking the threat of war, the scale of the Israeli escalation, targeting nuclear and military facilities, and Iran's response following the killing of top commanders came as a predictions are that the war will be brief, as its continuation means it would spread, perhaps to other fronts in the longer the war drags on and expands geographically, the more likely it is that the sound of drones and fighter jets will eclipse diplomacy and political dialogue. The possibility of the conflict engulfing the entire region increases if containment efforts fail. As a result, growth forecasts have dimmed, and states have turned to policies aimed at shielding their economies from shocks in the hope of maintaining stability. Trade and tourism have been affected. Furthermore, the political and economic fallout will not be limited only to combat zones and neighbouring nations, but it will also threaten the entire region and perhaps the world if the situation spirals out of control - a possibility that cannot be ruled and financial markets cannot remain stable in a constantly volatile environment, especially when warfare is no longer bound by borders. Some may have found solace in the fact that in the last two years, the wars in Gaza and Lebanon, or US strikes in Yemen, did not cause major disruptions. But if the current pace of escalation continues, the region may soon face severe turmoil in the energy markets, not to mention further human and material future of the Middle East now hinges on political settlements to its many conflicts, as well as on the regional and international arrangements that will region's long-term stability depends on its ability to develop a model of security and economic cooperation that promotes prosperity, not destruction, and that preserves the wealth of nations rather than squandering it on endless is no shortage of crises in the Middle East. The priority for countries should be to focus on economic development and the wellbeing of their people, not on wars that resolve no crisis and settle no force alone will not resolve long-standing issues. Many countries in the region face deep political, economic and security challenges that will take years of sustained effort to overcome. Yet there are also ambitious states working for the progress of their people and the wider region. These countries are determined not to let instability derail their aspirations for progress in all tensions continue to paralyse the region and obstruct cross-border development powers have shown only limited commitment to promoting peace and stability in the Middle East. As a result, there is a significant risk that the conflict will spread from one country to is spared today may not be spared tomorrow, especially if the same international standards continue to govern responses to crises in the the competing agendas of global powers often reflect broader rivalries, further complicating the path to current conflict points to significant shifts in the regional balance of power, especially if the confrontation between Israel and Iran escalates further, resulting in a nuclear incident, or Iran does battle on multiple regional makes the situation even more dangerous is that neither a decisive victory nor a surrender appears likely. It won't be the last round, even if this one does of the justifications offered by either side, being drawn into a full-scale regional war or tipping the regional balance of power too far in favour of a certain side will only harm the Middle East as a whole.A prolonged war could worsen economic instability in the region and globally, fuel uncertainty, and undermine development by contrast, offers a path to prosperity for the people of the region. But real stability requires more than just halting wars. It demands a new approach to resolving conflicts, an approach that is based on negotiation and diplomacy. *The writer is the CEO of think tank TRENDS Research & Advisory


Middle East Eye
4 hours ago
- Middle East Eye
Trump on Israel-Iran tensions: 'It's possible we could get involved'
US President Donald Trump said that "it's possible we could get involved" in the ongoing exchange of attacks between Israel and Iran. Speaking to ABC News' Rachel Scott, he noted that Washington is not involved "at this moment" in the conflict, adding that he would be open to Russian President Vladimir Putin being a mediator. "He is ready. He called me about it. We had a long talk about it," the US president said.


Middle East Eye
4 hours ago
- Middle East Eye
Opinion: By allowing Israel to bomb Iran, Trump is pushing Tehran to go nuclear
US President Donald Trump's decision to allow Israel to attack Iran is the worst miscalculation a US president has made since George W Bush invaded Iraq. Bush's decision heralded eight years of conflict in Iraq, killed at least 655,000 people, according to The Lancet, spawned an extreme group of Takfiri militants in the Islamic State group and brought a major state to the verge of collapse from which it has yet to recover 14 years on. Trump's decision could yet prove to be more calamitous. Allowing Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to attack Iran, when US envoys were engaged in negotiations with Tehran, places the US presidency on the same level of trustworthiness as Al Capone or Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman. This is the way you behave if you are in charge of a drug cartel, not a global power. US President Donald Trump shakes hands with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as he departs the White House in Washington, DC, on 7 April 2025 (AFP)