
US warplanes transit through UK as Trump considers striking Iran
Flight tracking data shows extensive movement of US military aircraft towards the Middle East in recent days, including via the UK.
Fifty-two US military planes were spotted flying over the eastern Mediterranean towards the Middle East between Monday and Thursday.
That includes at least 25 that passed through Chania airport, on the Greek island of Crete - an eight-fold increase in the rate of arrivals compared to the first half of June.
The movement of military equipment comes as the US considers whether to assist Israel in its conflict with Iran.
Of the 52 planes spotted over the eastern Mediterranean, 32 are used for transporting troops or cargo, 18 are used for mid-air refuelling and two are reconnaissance planes.
Forbes McKenzie, founder of McKenzie Intelligence, says that this indicates "the build-up of warfighting capability, which was not [in the region] before".
Sky's data does not include fighter jets, which typically fly without publicly revealing their location.
An air traffic control recording from Wednesday suggests that F-22 Raptors are among the planes being sent across the Atlantic, while 12 F-35 fighter jets were photographed travelling from the UK to the Middle East on Wednesday.
Many US military planes are passing through UK
A growing number of US Air Force planes have been passing through the UK in recent days.
Analysis of flight tracking data at three key air bases in the UK shows 63 US military flights landing between 16 and 19 June - more than double the rate of arrivals earlier in June.
On Thursday, Sky News filmed three US military C-17A Globemaster III transport aircraft and a C-130 Hercules military cargo plane arriving at Glasgow's Prestwick Airport.
Flight tracking data shows that one of the planes arrived from an air base in Jordan, having earlier travelled there from Germany.
What does Israel need from US?
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on 15 March that his country's aim is to remove "two existential threats - the nuclear threat and the ballistic missile threat".
Israel says that Iran is attempting to develop a nuclear bomb, though Iran says its nuclear facilities are only for civilian energy purposes.
A US intelligence assessment in March concluded that Iran is not building a nuclear weapon. President Trump dismissed the assessment on Tuesday, saying: "I think they were very close to having one."
Forbes McKenzie says the Americans have a "very similar inventory of weapons systems" to the Israelis, "but of course, they also have the much-talked-about GBU-57".
The GBU-57 is a 30,000lb bomb - the largest non-nuclear bomb in existence. Mr McKenzie explains that it is "specifically designed to destroy targets which are very deep underground".
Experts say it is the only weapon with any chance of destroying Iran's main enrichment site, which is located underneath a mountain at Fordow.
Air-to-air refuelling could allow Israel to carry larger bombs
Among the dozens of US aircraft that Sky News tracked over the eastern Mediterranean in recent days, more than a third (18 planes) were designed for air-to-air refuelling.
"These are crucial because Israel is the best part of a thousand miles away from Iran," says Sky News military analyst Sean Bell.
"Most military fighter jets would struggle to do those 2,000-mile round trips and have enough combat fuel."
The ability to refuel mid-flight would also allow Israeli planes to carry heavier munitions, including bunker-buster bombs necessary to destroy the tunnels and silos where Iran stores many of its missiles.
Satellite imagery captured on 15 June shows the aftermath of Israeli strikes on a missile facility near the western city of Kermanshah, which destroyed at least 12 buildings at the site.
At least four tunnel entrances were also damaged in the strikes, two of which can be seen in the image below.
Writing for Jane's Defence Weekly, military analyst Jeremy Binnie says it looked like the tunnels were "targeted using guided munitions coming in at angles, not destroyed from above using penetrator bombs, raising the possibility that the damage can be cleared, enabling any [missile launchers] trapped inside to deploy".
"This might reflect the limited payloads that Israeli aircraft can carry to Iran," he adds.
Penetrator bombs, also known as bunker-busters, are much heavier than other types of munitions and as a result require more fuel to transport.
Israel does not have the latest generation of refuelling aircraft, Mr Binnie says, meaning it is likely to struggle to deploy a significant number of penetrator bombs.
Israel has struck most of Iran's western missile bases
Even without direct US assistance, the Israeli air force has managed to inflict significant damage on Iran's missile launch capacity.
Sky News has confirmed Israeli strikes on at least five of Iran's six known missile bases in the west of the country.
On Monday, the IDF said that its strategy of targeting western launch sites had forced Iran to rely on its bases in the centre of the country, such as Isfahan - around 1,500km (930 miles) from Israel.
Among Iran's most advanced weapons are three types of solid-fuelled rockets fitted with highly manoeuvrable warheads: Fattah-1, Kheibar Shekan and Haj Qassam.
The use of solid fuel makes these missiles easy to transport and fast to launch, while their manoeuvrable warheads make them better at evading Israeli air defences. However, none of them are capable of striking Israel from such a distance.
Iran is known to possess five types of missile capable of travelling more than 1,500km, but only one of these uses solid fuel - the Sijjil-1.
On 18 June, Iran claimed to have used this missile against Israel for the first time.
Iran's missiles have caused significant damage
Iran's missile attacks have killed at least 24 people in Israel and wounded hundreds, according to the Israeli foreign ministry.
The number of air raid alerts in Israel has topped 1,000 every day since the start of hostilities, reaching a peak of 3,024 on 15 June.
Iran has managed to strike some government buildings, including one in the city of Haifa on Friday.
And on 13 June, in Iran's most notable targeting success so far, an Iranian missile impacted on or near the headquarters of Israel's defence ministry in Tel Aviv.
Most of the Iranian strikes verified by Sky News, however, have hit civilian targets. These include residential buildings, a school and a university.
On Thursday, one missile hit the Soroka Medical Center in Beersheba, southern Israel's main hospital. More than 70 people were injured, according to Israel's health ministry.
Iranian foreign minister Abbas Araghchi said that Iran had struck a nearby technology park containing an IDF cyber defence training centre, and that the "blast wave caused superficial damage to a small section" of the hospital.
However, the technology park is in fact 1.2km away from where the missile struck.
Photos of the hospital show evidence of a direct hit, with a large section of one building's roof completely destroyed.
Iran successfully struck the technology park on Friday, though its missile fell in an open area, causing damage to a nearby residential building but no casualties.
Israel has killed much of Iran's military leadership
It's not clear exactly how many people Israel's strikes in Iran have killed, or how many are civilians. Estimates by human rights groups of the total number of fatalities exceed 600.
What is clear is that among the military personnel killed are many key figures in the Iranian armed forces, including the military's chief of staff, deputy head of intelligence and deputy head of operations.
Key figures in the powerful Revolutionary Guard have also been killed, including the militia's commander-in-chief, its aerospace force commander and its air defences commander.
On Thursday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that US assistance was not necessary for Israel to win the war.
"We will achieve all our objectives and hit all of their nuclear facilities," he said. "We have the capability to do that."
3:49
Forbes McKenzie says that while Israel has secured significant victories in the war so far, "they only have so much fuel, they only have so many munitions".
"The Americans have an ability to keep up the pace of operations that the Israelis have started, and they're able to do it for an indefinite period of time."
Additional reporting by data journalist Joely Santa Cruz and OSINT producers Freya Gibson, Lina-Sirine Zitout and Sam Doak.
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Times
29 minutes ago
- Times
‘We can't sleep underground for ever — Iran must fall'
As night falls, the two sisters pack their essentials and leave their shared flat to head underground. They do so in the full knowledge that there may be nothing to return to when they emerge from Tel Aviv's subterranean vaults. 'We sleep here a week, since the start of the war. It's the safest place you can be. When there's a siren, we don't have to move. Even if there's a huge boom. This is the most protected place in the city,' said Yehudit Batat, 92ft deep inside a light railway station that has been carved into the alluvial sands on which Tel Aviv is built. Just the day before, an Iranian missile evaded Israel's air-defence system and hit close to their home in Ramat Gan, in Tel Aviv's diamond exchange district. For a week, residents without safe shelter, including single people afraid no one would find them if they were injured, the elderly, families, the homeless and immigrants have made use of Tel Aviv's vast underground realm, from car parks and hospitals to bus and railway stations. They are all hiding from Iran's powerful missile volleys. 'I'm sleeping in a public place, not in my bed, in my house, where everything is familiar to me. It's hard to fall asleep when there's noise in the background and there are fluorescent lights, but I prefer to sleep under these terms and know I am in a safe place,' said Yonatan Luzon, 15. Yonatan had camped out in the corner of the station with his two dogs, grandmother, mother and all his neighbours, as their building's shelter was too mouldy to hide in. Despite having missed out on years of schooling, with the wars almost immediately following the Covid lockdowns, Luzon believes Israel is doing the right thing by going to war with Iran. 'I think the war is right. Iran will have a nuclear weapon; if we didn't get rid of it, a catastrophe far worse than what what is happening now will happen,' he said. 'It's really hard to grow up here. I had plans that will never see the light of day.' Many Israelis have pinned their hopes on President Trump to finish the job — to use America's weaponry to hit the site of Iran's nuclear enrichment programme at Fordow, built into the side of a mountain 70-80m deep and impervious to Israeli strikes. Holding her daughter's hand as they walked through the rows of mattresses that lined the station walls, Katya, a swimming instructor, said Trump 'has to' go in. 'They won't let them [Iran] get the weapon. He has to go in. If not now, then when? We can't sleep here for ever,' she said. Noa, a kindergarten teacher who arrived at the shelter with her three sons, the youngest of whom was only two weeks old, said she hoped Trump would 'finish it off' so they could go back to their normal lives. 'I think that he wants to finish Iran because they tried to assassinate him, and because he doesn't want them to have a weapon,' Noa, 35, said. 'All those countries he's got friendly with — Saudi, Gulf [states] — they don't want that either. He has a responsibility to finish this off, to go all the way.' Yonatan added: 'I think Trump will go to war. I heard they have a weapon that can destroy the Iran nuclear facility, and it's the only one that can do it — and we don't have that. So I hope yes, he'll go in.' In the car park of the Dizengoff shopping centre, which was targeted by a suicide bomber in 1996, Ronen Koehler has organised tents to house those who need safe shelter as part of the 'Brothers and Sisters in Arms' social justice movement, initially formed to stop the prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, enacting judicial reforms. 'It's absolutely one of the safest places,' Koehler said. 'It's four floors down. I think someone even told me it's certified at an atomic level. These are iron-plated windows.' Tel Aviv almost has a mirror city beneath its sunny surface. Near the military headquarters, an underground network of tunnels dating back to the time of the Templer settlement — German colonies in the late 19th century — is reportedly used for military purposes, possibly leading to the so-called Fortress of Zion, the military command in the heart of Tel Aviv. • Building deep underground has allowed hospitals to shelter its most vulnerable. At the largest hospital in Israel, Sheba Medical Center, more than 500 people have been moved into underground facilities, and they are attempting to move many more. In Tel Aviv, which has borne the brunt of Iran's missile attacks, the belief is that if America cannot destroy the regime in Iran, Israel can. 'We don't need Trump. Israel doesn't,' said Tracey Papirani, 65, who emigrated with her entire family from New Zealand two years ago. 'We'll have to see what happens tonight; on the news they said something big is coming,' she said. 'Most Americans know, or they should know, that Iran hates them even more than Israel,' Papirani said, as her two grandchildren ran around barefoot on the filthy car park floor. 'They call us the Little Satan, but America is the Big Satan. They're possibly weeks away from a nuclear bomb. If they finish us, where do they go next? [Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali] Khamenei is not shy. He's saying it like it is. Israel's got this. They've had to take it all on, because no other country has had the chutzpah to do it. We've had to do it, because they were very close to annihilating us.' Batat and her sister were born near the Kiriya, a military base just outside Ramat Gan, before the Israel Defence Forces' headquarters were even built there. They too believe the army can take on Iran, with or without America. 'Donald Trump is crazy,' Batat said. 'He helps us. He provides weaponry; he arms our military. Rockets, interceptors, all of that — he's good. But he doesn't want to go to war. You know why? So World War Three won't break out. All the world powers will have to go in, and then it's a world war. 'Bibi [Netanyahu] says that they will get what they can, and if they can't, they'll bring in the Mossad to blow up the place — they'll send them in by foot, not by air. Israel will do it alone. We have no other choice.'


The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
Diplomatic breakthrough elusive as Israel-Iran war stretches into second week
Hours of talks aimed at de-escalating fighting between Israel and Iran failed to produce a diplomatic breakthrough as the war entered its second week with a fresh round of strikes between the two adversaries. European ministers and Iran's top diplomat met for four hours Friday in Geneva, as President Donald Trump continued to weigh U.S. military involvement and worries rose over potential strikes on nuclear reactors. European officials expressed hope for future negotiations, and Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said he was open to further dialogue while emphasizing that Tehran had no interest in negotiating with the U.S. while Israel continued attacking. 'Iran is ready to consider diplomacy if aggression ceases and the aggressor is held accountable for its committed crimes,' he told reporters. No date was set for the next round of talks. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel's military operation in Iran would continue 'for as long as it takes' to eliminate what he called the existential threat of Iran's nuclear program and arsenal of ballistic missiles. Israel's top general echoed the warning, saying the Israeli military was ready 'for a prolonged campaign.' But Netanyahu's goal could be out of reach without U.S. help. Iran's underground Fordo uranium enrichment facility is considered to be out of reach to all but America's 'bunker-buster' bombs. Trump said he would put off deciding whether to join Israel's air campaign against Iran for up to two weeks. The war between Israel and Iran erupted June 13, with Israeli airstrikes targeting nuclear and military sites, top generals and nuclear scientists. At least 657 people, including 263 civilians, have been killed in Iran and more than 2,000 wounded, according to a Washington-based Iranian human rights group. Iran has retaliated by firing 450 missiles and 1,000 drones at Israel, according to Israeli army estimates. Most have been shot down by Israel's multitiered air defenses, but at least 24 people in Israel have been killed and hundreds wounded. Worries rise over the perils of attacking Iran's nuclear reactors Addressing an emergency meeting of the U.N. Security Council, the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency warned against attacks on Iran's nuclear reactors, particularly its only commercial nuclear power plant in the southern city of Bushehr. 'I want to make it absolutely and completely clear: In case of an attack on the Bushehr nuclear power plant, a direct hit would result in a very high release of radioactivity to the environment,' said Rafael Grossi, chief of the U.N. nuclear watchdog. 'This is the nuclear site in Iran where the consequences could be most serious.' Israel has not targeted Iran's nuclear reactors, instead focusing its strikes on the main uranium enrichment facility at Natanz, centrifuge workshops near Tehran, laboratories in Isfahan and the country's Arak heavy water reactor southwest of the capital. Grossi has warned repeatedly that such sites should not be military targets. After initially reporting no visible damage from Israel's Thursday strikes on the Arak heavy water reactor, the IAEA on Friday said it had assessed 'key buildings at the facility were damaged,' including the distillation unit. The reactor was not operational and contained no nuclear material, so the damage posed no risk of contamination, the watchdog said. Iran previously agreed to limit its uranium enrichment and allow international inspectors access to its nuclear sites under a 2015 deal with the U.S., France, China, Russia, Britain and Germany in exchange for sanctions relief. But after Trump pulled the U.S. unilaterally out of the deal during his first term, Iran began enriching uranium up to 60% — a short, technical step away from weapons-grade levels of 90% — and restricting access to its nuclear facilities. Iran has long maintained its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes, but it is the only non-nuclear-weapon state to enrich uranium up to 60%. Israel is widely believed to be the only Middle Eastern country with a nuclear weapons program but has never acknowledged it. Israel says 'difficult days' ahead Israel said its warplanes hit dozens of military targets across Iran on Friday, including missile-manufacturing facilities, while an Iranian missile hit Israel's northern city of Haifa, sending plumes of smoke billowing over the Mediterranean port and wounding at least 31 people. Iranian state media reported explosions from Israeli strikes in an industrial area of Rasht, along the coast of the Caspian Sea. Israel's military had warned Iranians to evacuate the area around Rasht's Industrial City, southwest of the city's downtown. But with Iran's internet shut off — now for more than 48 hours — it's unclear how many people could see the message. The Israeli military believes it has destroyed most of Iran's ballistic missile launchers, contributing to the steady decline in Iranian attacks. But several of the roughly three dozen missiles that Israel said Iran fired on Friday slipped through the country's aerial defense system, setting off air-raid sirens across the country and sending shrapnel flying into a residential area in the southern city of Beersheba, a frequent target of Iranian missiles where a hospital was hit Thursday.


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Israel and Iran launch new attacks as Tehran says it will not negotiate nuclear programme while under threat
Iran and Israel exchanged fresh strikes early on Saturday, after Tehran said it would not negotiate over its nuclear programme while under threat and Israel claimed its attacks had delayed Iran's potential to develop a nuclear weapon by 'at least two or three years'. Shortly after 2.30am the Israeli military warned of an incoming missile barrage from Iran, triggering air raid sirens across parts of central Israel, including Tel Aviv, as well as in the Israeli-occupied West Bank. Interceptions were visible in the sky over Tel Aviv, with explosions echoing across the metropolitan area as Israel's air defence systems responded. An Israeli military official said Iran had fired five ballistic missiles and that there were no immediate indications of any missile impacts. There were no initial reports of casualties. At the same time, Israel launched a new wave of attacks against missile storage and launch infrastructure sites in Iran, the Israeli military said. The war started when Israel launched hundreds of airstrikes on Iran last Friday morning, in what it said was an operation aimed at preventing Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon. Iran quickly responded with a barrage of missiles and drones, triggering a tit-for-tat cycle of bombing between the two countries. Israel knocked out much of Iran's air defences in its initial wave of attacks and Israeli jets have operated with relative freedom over Iran. Iran has sent a steadily diminishing number of ballistic missiles into Israel and managed to get some past air defences, hitting a hospital in southern Israel on Thursday and injuring about 80 people. Israeli bombing has killed at least 639 people and wounded 1,326, according to Iranian media, while Iranian missiles have killed at least 25 people and wounded hundreds in Israel. As fighting continues to escalate, the Israeli military chief of staff, Lt Gen Eyal Zamir, said Israelis must prepare for 'difficult days' ahead. He said on Friday: 'To remove a threat of such magnitude, against such an enemy, we must be ready for a prolonged campaign. Day by day, our freedom to operate is expanding and the enemy's is narrowing.' In an interview published on Saturday, Israel's foreign minister said the strikes on Iran had delayed Tehran's potential to develop a nuclear weapon by 'at least two or three years'. Israel's offensive – which has hit hundreds of nuclear and military sites, killing top commanders and nuclear scientists – has produced 'very significant' results, Gideon Saar told German newspaper Bild. 'We already achieved a lot, but we will do whatever we can do. We will not stop until we will do everything that we can do there in order to remove this threat,' he said. Speaking in Geneva, where he was meeting his counterparts from the UK, France and Germany, the Iranian foreign minster, Abbas Araghchi, said Iran was determined to defend its territorial integrity and sovereignty 'with all force'. But there was no sign of any breakthrough, and Araghchi said Iran would only consider a resumption of diplomacy with Washington if Israel halted its bombardment. Late on Friday, Donald Trump said it was unlikely he would pressure Israel to scale back its offensive to allow negotiations, telling reporters: 'I think it's very hard to make that request right now. If somebody is winning, it's a little bit harder to do than if somebody is losing, but we're ready, willing and able, and we've been speaking to Iran.' The US president reiterated that he would take as long as two weeks to decide whether the US should enter the conflict on Israel's side, enough time 'to see whether or not people come to their senses'. He doubted negotiations with European officials would be able to secure a ceasefire, he added. 'Iran doesn't want to speak to Europe, they want to speak to us,' Trump said. 'Europe is not going to be able to help in this one.' Israel is keen for the US to jump into the fray, as only the US possesses the capacity to strike Iran's most heavily fortified nuclear facility, the Fordow uranium enrichment site, which lies up to 100 metres under a mountain near Qom. On Friday, Trump said his director of national intelligence, Tulsi Gabbard, had been wrong in suggesting there was no evidence Iran is building a nuclear weapon. In March, Gabbard testified to Congress that the US intelligence community continued to believe that Tehran was not building a nuclear weapon. Trump began to publicly contest that assessment after the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, claimed he launched the war because Iran was on the threshold of obtaining a nuclear bomb. On Friday, Gabbard said in a post on social media that the media had taken her March testimony 'out of context' and was trying to 'manufacture division', adding: 'America has intelligence that Iran is at the point that it can produce a nuclear weapon within weeks to months, if they decide to finalise the assembly. President Trump has been clear that can't happen, and I agree.' With Reuters and Agence France-Presse