
Family describe 'disbelief' after man's wife and two daughters killed in Iranian strike on Arab Israel town
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Cups of coffee are being carefully poured into small paper cups, each one served with a comforting embrace.
Close by, huddled under an arched courtyard, women of all ages are sitting, grieving in their own way.
Some are sobbing, others look dazed, others desperate.
Their intermittent wails of grief puncture the silence. Yet there's a beautiful stillness about it all.
We've arrived just at the moment Tamra, Israel, has come to a standstill.
Everyone here is waiting for the bodies of four members of the Khatib family to return, killed when a ballistic missile from Iran hit their home on Saturday night.
Manar Khatib was killed alongside two of her daughters - 20-year-old Shada, and 13-year-old Hala - and her sister-in-law, also called Manar.
Layan Diab, 23, is a cousin of the girls. She's in disbelief.
"It's a deep loss. It hurts my soul. We lost our entire family. Four people here. I can't fathom it. I don't understand. It's unbelievable," she says. And she's fearful of the coming days.
"Every time we hear the sirens, people start to scream and remember," she says.
Tamra is a tight-knit town. Most living here are Palestinian citizens of Israel.
Videos circulating online showed Jewish Israelis celebrating as the missiles fell, singing: "May your village burn."
It is a reminder of the bitter divides in this society, at war on multiple fronts.
"No-one is protected. Not Arabs, not Israelis, not Jews, not Palestinians, not Israelis," Layan says with a desperate frustration in her voice.
Just down the street is the girls' grieving father, Raja Khatib.
A lawyer with a charming warmth, he starts to speak Italian, assuming we may be from Italy.
He'd just returned from a holiday there with his wife and children in Ferrara.
His eyes fill with tears as he says that if only he'd stayed a day longer, they would all be alive today.
'I feel terrible. I feel fire in my body… I hope that I will survive this moment. I've lost my family, but for what? A missile from Iran?"
I ask if he sees an end to this conflict between Iran and Israel. He seems despairing.
"Conflict with Iran, Lebanon, Gaza. We have a government who want[s] war. We want peace. We want to live."
3:08
Listening in supportively from the side is his middle daughter, 17-year-old Razan, who miraculously survived the blast.
That evening, she'd been out to buy cookies with her sisters.
When they returned, Razan and her older sister Shada played music and watched videos on their phones.
When the alarms started to sound, they dismissed them at first.
But after a loud boom, Razan was unsettled and started to make her way to one of the safe rooms, imploring Shada to do the same.
But only Razan went.
0:24
"In one moment, everything went dark. I couldn't see anything. I asked Allah, please don't take my life," she describes with searing clarity.
She could hear her father calling out for them all. But his cries were met with silence.
Razan's family home is now a mound of rubble.
When we arrive there, we find neighbours and friends clearing the rubble. Many are deeply traumatised.
Hamad, who's sweeping debris outside the house opposite, tells me he saw body parts flung across the road and into a nearby garden, and there's blood on the walls.
It is a deeply visceral and harrowing account of an attack that took everyone by surprise.
This is a residential neighbourhood. It's thought the missile was bound for Haifa, more than an hour away and home to oil refineries.
But this time, with this missile, it fell on civilians. And took with it, futures.

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Reuters
an hour ago
- Reuters
Israeli air power reigns over Iran, but needs US for deeper impact
JERUSALEM, June 17 (Reuters) - Israel's command of Iranian air space leaves few obstacles in the way of its expanding bombardment, though it will struggle to deal a knock-out blow to deeply buried nuclear sites without the U.S. joining the attack, experts say. While Iran has responded with deadly missile strikes on Israeli cities, Israel has shown its military and intelligence pre-eminence as its warplanes have crisscrossed the Middle East, hitting Iranian nuclear installations, missile stockpiles, scientists, and generals - among other targets. On Monday, several Israeli officials declared the establishment of air superiority over Iran. The military likened its control of Iranian skies to its command of the air space over other arenas of conflict with Iran-aligned enemies, such as over Gaza and Lebanon - where Israel continues to bomb at will. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Monday Israel's control of Iranian air space was "a game-changer". National Security Adviser Tzachi Hanegbi said pilots could operate "against countless more targets" over Tehran, thanks to the destruction of "dozens and dozens" of air defence batteries. But even as Israeli officials laud the damage done so far, some publicly acknowledge Israel won't be able to completely knock out Iran's nuclear program - unless the U.S. joins the campaign with strategic bombers that can drop ordnance with the potential to penetrate sites buried deep underground. Andreas Krieg, a senior lecturer at the School of Security Studies at King's College London, said Israel had achieved "quite a lot of operational and tactical successes ... But translating that into a strategic success will require more than what air power can deliver". Krieg said even the heaviest U.S. bunker-busting bombs might struggle to penetrate Iran's deepest sites - in the event President Donald Trump decides to join the attack - suggesting special, commando-style forces might be needed on the ground. Nevertheless, "Israel can act with impunity now, and they can do that in the way they did in it in Lebanon". Israel launched its campaign on Friday, saying Tehran was on the verge of building a nuclear bomb - something Iran has always denied seeking from its uranium enrichment program. While the Iranian military says it has downed Israeli warplanes, Israel denies this and says no crews or planes have been harmed during their missions to Iran, a return journey of some 3,000 km (2,000 miles) or more. A senior Western defence source said Israeli warplanes have been refuelling over Syria - a bastion of Iranian influence until Bashar al-Assad was toppled in December. Israel is now operating over Syria with "near-total freedom", the source said. Israel's assault bears echoes of last year's devastating offensive against Hezbollah in Lebanon, during which Israel wiped out the Tehran-aligned group's top command - including its leader Hassan Nasrallah - within the first days. Two U.S. officials told Reuters on Sunday that President Donald Trump had vetoed an Israeli plan in recent days to kill Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Netanyahu on Monday did not rule out targeting Khamenei, saying doing so would end the conflict. Further echoing its 2024 campaign in Lebanon, the Israeli military on Monday issued an evacuation warning for a specific area of Tehran, saying in a post on X that it planned to target the "Iranian regime's military infrastructure" in the capital. A regional intelligence source said Israel had built a "truly surprising" network of agents in Tehran, likening the targeted killings of top officials to the blows directed at Hezbollah's leadership. The source said Israel's ability to "penetrate Tehran from the inside" had been astonishing. Justin Bronk, a senior research fellow at the RUSI think-tank in London, said Iran has "few technical answers" to the combination of Israeli F-35 aircraft capable of waging electronic warfare against its anti-aircraft systems, supported by F-16s and F-15s carrying precision-guided ballistic missiles. Though Israel was long assessed to have the upper hand, the speed, scale and effectiveness of its strikes - particularly against top Iranian generals - caught many off guard, said Barin Kayaoglu, a Turkish defence analyst. Iran's military appeared to have been "sleeping at the wheel", he said. However, he cited challenges for Israel, saying its air force could find it difficult to maintain the current tempo of its operations because of the need to replenish ammunition stocks and maintain warplanes. In April, Israeli media reported an unusually large shipment of bombs arriving from the U.S. An unsourced report by public broadcaster Kan on April 17 said the delivery included hundreds of bombs, among them bunker busters. Iranian air defences were damaged by Israeli strikes during exchanges of fire last year, Israeli officials said then. As last week's attack began, Israel said Mossad commandos on the ground in Iran destroyed more of Iran's anti-aircraft systems. Despite Israeli air supremacy, Israeli officials have acknowledged that Iran's nuclear program cannot be disabled entirely by Israel's military, emphasising goals that fall short of its total destruction. A former senior Israeli security official told Reuters that while U.S. military support was needed to do damage to Iran's most deeply buried facility, the Fordow enrichment plant, Israel was not counting on Washington joining the attack. Israel has said it has not targeted Fordow - built beneath a mountain south of Tehran - to date, rather just the installations at Natanz and Isfahan. Either way, the former official said Israel had already done enough meaningful damage to Iran's nuclear program, declining to be named so he could speak freely about sensitive matters. If after the conflict ends Iran retained a residual uranium enrichment capability but not the people and facilities to do anything of concern with it, then this would be a major achievement, added the official. Trump has repeatedly said Iran could end the war by agreeing to tough restrictions on its enrichment program. Emily Harding from the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies said conventional wisdom held that Israel could not completely eliminate the deepest buried parts of Iran's nuclear program. "But Israel has strongly hinted that it has more capability than that conventional wisdom would suggest. For example, the ability to operate freely over the target allows for multiple sorties that could do a lot of damage," she said.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
World braces for US strikes on Iran: Donald Trump 'surges planes to UK and Europe' after walking out of G7 summit and warning people to 'evacuate Tehran'
Speculation is mounting of a US strike on Iran as military resources are deployed into position. More than 40 extra jets are said to have been sent to the UK and Europe by Donald Trump in recent days. They are thought to include stealth bombers and air-to-air refuellers - which could be critical for any operation in the Middle East. The movements have raised expectations that action is imminent, after Mr Trump denied he was interested in securing a ceasefire between Israel and Iran and told residents to evacuate Tehran. Instead he has stressed the importance of stopping Iran from getting nuclear weapons, and cut short his attendance at the G7 summit in Canada to return to Washington. The US president last night refused to sign a joint statement with fellow leaders calling for de-escalation in the conflict. He went on to furiously deny Macron's claim in a late-night Truth Social post, and ominously revealed his exit was for a 'much bigger' reason as he is set to convene the National Security Council in the White House. 'Publicity seeking President Emmanuel Macron, of France, mistakenly said that I left the G7 Summit, in Canada, to go back to D.C. to work on a 'ceasefire' between Israel and Iran,' Mr Trump wrote. 'Wrong! He has no idea why I am now on my way to Washington, but it certainly has nothing to do with a Cease Fire. Much bigger than that. Whether purposely or not, Emmanuel always gets it wrong. Stay Tuned!' Mr Macron seemed to indicate such a deal was on the table when he spoke to reporters at the summit. 'There is indeed an offer to meet and exchange. An offer was made especially to get a cease-fire and to then kick-start broader discussions. We have to see now whether the sides will follow.' He added optimistically that 'if the United States can achieve a cease-fire, that's a very good thing.' Mr Trump headed back to DC as Israel warned hundreds of thousands of people to evacuate the middle of Iran's capital as Israel's air campaign on Tehran appeared to broaden on the fourth day of an intensifying conflict. Yesterday Israel's military issued an evacuation warning to 330,000 people in a part of central Tehran that houses the country's state TV and police headquarters, as well as three large hospitals, including one owned by Iran's paramilitary Revolutionary Guard. Mr Trump himself seemed to co-sign the warning in a Truth Social post earlier Monday. 'Iran should have signed the 'deal' I told them to sign. What a shame, and waste of human life. Simply stated, IRAN CAN NOT HAVE A NUCLEAR WEAPON. I said it over and over again! Everyone should immediately evacuate Tehran!' The city, one of the region's largest, is home to around 9.5 million people. Israel's military has issued similar evacuation warnings for civilians in parts of Gaza and Lebanon ahead of strikes. The IDF says its sweeping assault on Iran´s top military leaders, nuclear scientists, uranium enrichment sites and ballistic missile program is necessary to prevent its longtime adversary from getting any closer to building an atomic weapon. The strikes have killed at least 224 people since Friday. Iran has retaliated by launching more than 370 missiles and hundreds of drones at Israel.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
DAVID AVERRE answers the five big questions surrounding the Iran Israel war
Here are five big questions surrounding the Iran-Israel conflict as the world continues to watch in horror as the death toll rises and the risk of an all-out war grows by the hour. Click above to watch the video in full.