Europe scrambles to revive diplomacy after the US strikes Iran's nuclear sites
LONDON (AP) — European nations worked to keep diplomatic efforts to curb the Israel-Iran war alive as the two countries traded strikes following the United States' weekend attack on Iran's nuclear program, followed by a retaliatory Iranian missile strike Monday on a U.S. base in Qatar.
Calls for Tehran to enter talks with Washington appeared to fall on deaf ears as it reached out to ally Russia for support instead.
The crisis topped the agenda for European Union foreign ministers meeting Monday in Brussels, where diplomats agonized about the potential for Iranian retaliation to spark a wider war and global economic instability.
Iran launched missile attacks Monday on a U.S. military base in Qatar. Qatar condemned the attack on Al Udeid Air Base, and said it successfully intercepted the short- and medium-range ballistic missiles.
Before that attack, EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said "the concerns of retaliation and this war escalating are huge.'
Kallas said any attempt by Iran to close the Strait of Hormuz, a key route for global shipping, would be 'extremely dangerous and not good for anybody.'
Europe seeks more talks
Along with the EU, the 'E3' of Britain, France and Germany have led efforts to find a diplomatic solution, holding a tense seven-hour meeting in Geneva on Friday with Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi. A day after those talks ended with a vague promise to "meet again in the future,' U.S. bombers struck three Iranian nuclear and military sites.
No further E3 talks with Iran are currently planned, a European diplomatic official said on condition of anonymity to discuss the negotiations.
Still, U.K. Foreign Secretary David Lammy urged Iran to meet the E3 again, and to open negotiations with the United States. Planned U.S.-Iran talks in Oman were scuttled after Israel began attacking Iran's nuclear facilities on June 13. Iran has since ruled out negotiating while it is under attack.
'Take the off-ramp, dial this thing down and negotiate with the United States immediately and seriously," said Lammy, who spoke to both Araghchi and U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Sunday.
German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul said Europe had a role to play, but that 'a real precondition for a settlement to the conflict is that Iran be ready to negotiate directly with the U.S.'
Italian Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani told reporters in Brussels that he was proposing a meeting between the United States and Iran in Rome.
Iran's envoy visits Russia
It was Moscow that Iran reached out to Monday, though, sending Araghchi to meet President Vladimir Putin at the Kremlin. Putin condemned the United States' 'unprovoked aggression' against Iran and said Russia would help the Iranian people.
Putin said he saw the visit as a chance to explore 'how we can get out of today's situation.' Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Russia had offered to mediate.
European diplomatic efforts were complicated by a lack of foreknowledge of the Trump administration's moves. Some countries had no advance notice of the strikes. Britain was notified, but only shortly before bombs fell.
Another hurdle was Trump's post on social media late Sunday musing about the potential for 'regime change' in Iran, despite U.S. officials' insistence that Washington is not seeking to change the government in Tehran.
French Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot stressed Monday that 'we reject all attempts to organize a change of regime by force.'
'It would be illusory and dangerous to think that such a change can be provoked through force and bombs,' he said.
Iran insists its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes only, and U.S. intelligence agencies have assessed that Tehran is not actively pursuing a bomb. However, Trump and Israeli leaders have argued that Iran could quickly assemble a nuclear weapon, making it an imminent threat.
Mixed emotions among US allies
The U.S. strikes have brought mixed emotions in European capitals. Amid alarm at the potential for a wider war and calls for de-escalation, some American allies expressed relief that Iran's nuclear program had been set back.
'We can't pretend that the prevention of Iran getting nuclear weapons isn't a good thing for this country. But we're prioritizing diplomacy as the way forward,' said Tom Wells, a spokesman for British leader Starmer. 'The prime minister's priority is getting parties back around the table to negotiate a lasting settlement.'
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, whose country is a particularly staunch ally of Israel, said he saw 'no reason to criticize what Israel began a week ago, and also no reason to criticize what America did last weekend.'
He acknowledged 'it is not without risk, but leaving things the way they were was also not an option.'
Merz said he was 'somewhat optimistic' that the conflict would not widen. He said Iran's response so far has been far short 'of what we had to fear,' and that Iran's regional proxies had shown 'relatively little' reaction so far.
But he cautioned that 'it doesn't have to stay that way.'
___
Joyner reported from Brussels. Associated Press writers Elise Morton in London, Lorne Cook and Sam McNeil in Brussels, John Leicester in Paris, Geir Moulson in Berlin and Stephanie Liechtenstein in Vienna contributed.

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CNBC
31 minutes ago
- CNBC
Was it all 'just a big show?' Anxiety and frustration for Middle East residents after Iran-Israel attacks
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Escalating regional war, or a bunch of choreographed theatre? Millions across the Middle East were told to shelter in place Monday night as the airspace closed above them and Iran fired a barrage of missiles over Al-Udeid air base in Qatar, the U.S.' largest and most fortified military base in the region. Videos of interceptors lighting up the night sky over Doha went viral on social media, while flight tracking platforms showed passenger jets on their way to Dubai and Abu Dhabi abruptly reversing course. The Iranian strike, which U.S. President Donald Trump later described as "weak" and which the White House says was telegraphed before it was carried out in order to minimize casualties, came in response to unprecedented U.S. strikes on Iran's nuclear facilities last week, which were carried out with the largest non-nuclear bombs on earth. Trump has declared a cease-fire and called for peace. It remains to be seen whether Israel and Iran will both accept and stick to a ceasefire, and still more questions remain: what happened to Iran's enriched uranium supplies? How much damage was done in all the strikes? Does it end here? Will Iran's government survive? Will airspace reopen and flights resume all over the region? People around the region expressed their feelings, fears and hopes in conversations with CNBC. Several of those individuals chose to do so on the condition of anonymity, due to the sensitive nature of their comments, and over concerns of repercussions from the state or from their employers. "In my opinion, this war had one winner — and that was the United States. Because it also showed Israel that without the United States, it cannot win — or even end —a war. And the second loser was the Islamic Republic, which realized it had no military capability to counter U.S. airstrikes, and that the U.S. could access every part of Iran whenever it wished. And the biggest losers were the people of Iran, whose national wealth was spent on nuclear enrichment — only for it all to be destroyed in a matter of nights." — H., oil and gas business director in Tehran, Iran "I'm so 'ehhh' about this. It just seemed like a big show. I guess everyone was waiting on how Iran will respond. This is probably the best case scenario to calm things down. I hope the focus goes back to Gaza now. Many people are still getting killed there everyday." — Saed Elayan, Palestinian entrepreneur living in Dubai "People are laughing at the very limited scope of Iran's operation against Al-Udeid. Yet Tehran actually managed to deliver a potent geostrategic message to the Gulf states: Instead of being a wellspring of protection, hosting American forces on their soil could — and indeed would — only invite devastating attacks." — Mo, Egyptian-American living in Cairo "We're completely fed up. We're angry, frustrated, sad, and scared. We feel helpless and we feel a massive amount of injustice. We're tired of being attacked and destabilized by the U.S. and Israel under the guise of 'freeing us from tyranny'. It's laughable and we all see through it — we just want to live in peace and not watch our cousins get slaughtered for simply wanting to exist." — Kareem, Egyptian entrepreneur living in Dubai "Honestly I am not all that bothered about Iran. They caused more deaths in Iraq in the last 70 years than Israel did in Palestine. And if they decide to bomb each other, who am I to object. My only hope is that they keep it to themselves without dragging the rest of the region into it." — A., Iraqi expat living in Dubai "Just like all the other little interactions between Iran and Israel this has been very, very short lived, and they basically just kind of had a little skirmish and then called it a day. I knew this was going to be nothing different. And the real telltale sign was the fact that ... the Islamic Republic has never officially entered a state of war. Because a war inherently needs a winner and a loser. But this wasn't a war. This was just kind of like a little, I don't know, slap fight, little like a b---- slap fight every now and then, and either way, both parties could walk away and save face and say both of them won, and they technically did, because there was no war, so there is technically no loser." — Amir Hamidfar, content creator and video editor, Isfahan, Iran "As a Lebanese with a business in Saudi and UAE I want this to be over as soon as possible. We stand at equal distance from not liking both countries [Iran and Israel] and are so resilient that we are not worried, but want this to be over." — Cam Khoury, Lebanese entrepreneur, Dubai "For me personally as a Swiss citizen, I feel safe in Dubai. But I feel very weird, living a normal life, posting on social media, it feels wrong. Currently mainly worried about the flight situation – while other people are scared for their life. And I'm just so shocked how Israel could just attack a sovereign state without little to no consequences." — Luisa, Swiss expat working in Dubai "I hate waking up and wondering what happened. I go to sleep having no idea what the region will look like in the morning. I should have gotten out of here sooner than I planned to, now if flights stay grounded I'm stuck. But hopefully this is the end of it and it doesn't get worse from here." — H., American expat in Dubai "There's been a deep sense of fear — not just of war, but of something unravelling. We're living under the shadow of an escalating existential threat, where the future feels somewhat fragile and uncertain. And yet, alongside that fear, there's a persistent hope: that this moment of crisis could also be a turning point for something better." — Cochav Elkayam Levy, chair of the Civil Commission, central Israel "My family are ok thank god… I think I'm more anxious than them. Holy s--- man, like this is it. It's now or never [for the Iranian regime to fall]. So much to be nervous about. So much to be hopeful about. So much to cry about. So much to express joy about. It's a goddamn bipolar experience right now to be Iranian." — S., Iranian expat and consultant in Dubai "I basically am concerned about safe havens like Dubai no longer being safe havens because the USA and Israel can act independently of any international rules and with impunity. That the rest of the region will be dragged into this war all because of egos. Will my property price be affected? Will Dubai no longer be a safe place to live? Will my relatives in Iraq be safe considering they are so close to Iran?" — F., Iraqi expat and lawyer in Dubai ""There's a sense of relief that Iran's nuclear, disruptive capabilities and proxies have been seriously degraded — but also deep anxiety about the risk of another full-scale regional war, and a fragile ceasefire unlikely to hold. Starting a war is one thing — ending it is another. You have to wonder if the Middle East is doomed to 'forever wars,' or if true conflict prevention and peacebuilding will ever take root." — Mazen Hayek, media consultant, Dubai "Neighboring countries have to unite and pressure Israel to stop their relentless attacks on Iran immediately for any chance of peace. The current environment is a little scary for many and will negatively impact tourism, real estate, investors, and overall safety in the Persian Gulf. As a long time resident who lived through all the conflicts since Gulf War I, I am deeply concerned – for Iran and all countries on the Arabian Peninsula." — K., energy consultancy founder, European expat in Dubai
Yahoo
41 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Netanyahu says Israel accepts ceasefire and has achieved war goals against Iran
Israel and Iran on Tuesday accepted a ceasefire plan proposed by US President Donald Trump to end their 12-day war, after Tehran launched a retaliatory limited missile attack on a US military base in Qatar. The acceptance of the deal by both sides came after Tehran launched a final onslaught of missiles targeting Israel that killed at least four people early on Tuesday morning, while Israel launched a blitz of airstrikes targeting sites across Iran before dawn. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel had agreed to a bilateral ceasefire with Iran in co-ordination with Mr Trump. Mr Netanyahu said that he had reported to Israel's security cabinet on Monday night that Israel had achieved all of its war goals in the 12-day operation against Iran, including removing the threat of Iran's nuclear and ballistic missile programmes. Israel also damaged Iran's military leadership and several government sites and achieved control over Tehran's skies, Mr Netanyahu said. 'Israel will respond forcefully to any violation of the ceasefire,' Mr Netanyahu said. The Iranian barrages had sent Israelis hurrying into bomb shelters as the sun rose, killing at least four people and injuring eight others, Israel's Magen David Adom rescue services said. Iran on its state television announced an overall ceasefire had begun at 7.30am local time. The barrage damaged at least three densely packed residential buildings in the city of Beersheba, police said. First responders said they retrieved four bodies from one building and were searching for more. Outside, the shells of burned out cars littered the streets. Broken glass and rubble covered the area. Hundreds of emergency workers gathered to search for anyone else trapped in the buildings. Police said some people were injured even while inside their apartments' reinforced safe rooms, which are meant to withstand rockets and shrapnel but not direct hits from ballistic missiles. The direct hit in the largest city in southern Israel came just days after the city's hospital sustained significant damage in a missile strike. The Israeli military said people could leave bomb shelters but cautioned the public to stay close to shelter for the coming hours. Mr Trump's announcement that Israel and Iran had agreed to a 'complete and total ceasefire' came soon after Iran launched a limited missile attack on Monday on a US military base in Qatar, retaliating for the American bombing of its nuclear sites. The US was warned by Iran in advance, and there were no casualties. "CONGRATULATIONS WORLD, IT'S TIME FOR PEACE!" –President Donald J. Trump — The White House (@WhiteHouse) June 23, 2025 Mr Trump's announcement on his Truth Social platform said the ceasefire beginning about midnight Washington time would bring an 'Official END' to the war. There were no reports of Israeli strikes in Iran after 4am in Tehran. Heavy Israeli strikes continued in Iranian cities until shortly before that time. Under the Trump plan, Israel was to halt its attacks on Iran by 1.30pm Tehran time. There was no report of Israel launching attacks against Iran since early Tuesday morning. Writing more than an hour after the first phase of the tentative ceasefire, which called for Iran to halt its attacks, Mr Trump added: 'THE CEASEFIRE IS NOW IN EFFECT. PLEASE DO NOT VIOLATE IT! DONALD J. TRUMP, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES!' Mr Trump gave the conflict between Israel and Iran a name: the '12 Day War'. That recalls the 1967 Mideast war, known by some as the 'Six Day War,' in which Israel fought a group of Arab countries including Egypt, Jordan and Syria. Mr Trump's reference carries emotional weight for the Arab world, particularly Palestinians. In the 1967 war, Israel captured the West Bank and east Jerusalem from Jordan, the Gaza Strip and the Sinai Peninsula from Egypt, and the Golan Heights from Syria. Though Israel later gave the Sinai back to Egypt, it still holds the other territories. Mr Trump communicated directly with Mr Netanyahu to secure the ceasefire, according to a senior White House official who insisted on anonymity to discuss the Monday talks. Vice president JD Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and special envoy Steve Witkoff communicated with the Iranians through direct and indirect channels. The White House has maintained that the Saturday bombing helped get the Israelis to agree to the ceasefire and that the Qatari government helped to broker the deal. It is unclear what role Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran's leader, played in the talks. He said earlier on social media that he would not surrender. Israel's Airports Authority said Iran's barrage forced them to close the country's airspace to emergency flights for several hours. Some flights were forced to circle over the Mediterranean Sea, according to Israeli media. Israel's airports have been closed since the war with Iran began, but a handful of emergency flights started arriving and departing over the past few days. By early on Tuesday, Qatar Airways resumed its flights after Qatar shut down its airspace over the Iranian attack on Al Udeid Air Base. Flight-tracking data showed commercial aircraft again flying in Qatari airspace, signalling Doha believed the threat on the energy-rich nation had passed. In Israel, at least 24 people have been killed and more than 1,000 wounded in the war. Israeli strikes on Iran have killed at least 974 people and wounded 3,458 others, according to the Washington-based group Human Rights Activists. The group, which has provided detailed casualty figures from Iranian unrest such as the protests surrounding the death of Mahsa Amini in 2022, said of those killed, it identified 387 civilians and 268 security force personnel. The US has evacuated some 250 American citizens and their immediate family members from Israel by government, military and charter flights that began over the weekend, a State Department official said. There are roughly 700,000 American citizens, most of them dual US-Israeli citizens, believed to be in Israel.


The Hill
44 minutes ago
- The Hill
US strikes on Iran add to global travel disruptions and flight cancellations
NEW YORK (AP) — The U.S. entry into Israel's war with Iran has caused travel disruptions to pile up globally. Following unprecedented bombings ordered by President Donald Trump on three Iranian nuclear and military sites over the weekend, Iran on Monday launched a missile attack on U.S. forces at Qatar's Al Udeid Air Base. Qatar had closed its airspace just hours earlier, after both the U.S. and U.K. also urged their citizens to shelter in place there. The region has been on edge following the weekend strikes from the U.S. — and since Israel began the war with a surprise bombardment on Iran, which has responded with its own missile and drone strikes, earlier this month. As deadly attacks escalated between Israel and Iran, sections of airspace and airports throughout the region have temporarily closed. And airlines canceled more flights in recent days, with some halting select routes through the middle of the week — particularly in Qatar and the United Arab Emirates, just across the Persian Gulf from Iran. The Middle East carriers were severely affected with cancellations and delays. Qatar Airways said its flights were suspended because of the closure of air traffic in Qatar. 'The airline is working closely with government stakeholders and the relevant authorities to support impacted passengers, and will resume operations when the airspace reopens,' it said, while warning that delays were likely even after operations resume. Additional ground staff was sent to Hamad International Airport and other key airports to assist affected passengers, it said. Emirates suspended all flights to Iran and Iraq, including those serving Baghdad and Basra, until and including Monday 30 June 2025. An unspecified number of other Emirates flights were rerouted but continuing to operate flights as scheduled, using flight paths well distanced from conflict areas. Some flights may be delayed. Etihad Airways, the other of the two flag carriers of the United Arab Emirates, suspended all flights between Abu Dhabi and Tel Aviv through 15 July, and also announced several regional flight cancellations for Monday and Tuesday, including those connecting Abu Dhabi to and from Kuwait, Doha, Dammam and Muscat. Gulf Air, the carrier of the Kingdom of Bahrain, extended the cancellation of scheduled flights to Jordan and until June 27. 'As the safety of its passengers and crew members remains a top priority, Gulf Air will continue to monitor developments in the region closely, and work with its partners to help accommodate and reroute passengers affected by these flight cancellations,' it said. Singapore Airlines, for example, canceled some flights to and from Dubai starting Sunday and through Wednesday, citing 'a security assessment of the geopolitical situation in the Middle East.' And British Airways has similarly suspended flights to and from Doha through Wednesday. 'Safety is always our highest priority,' British Airways said in a statement confirming its cancellations to The Associated Press, adding that it 'will keep the situation under review.' Air India on Monday announced it was ceasing 'all operations to the region as well as to and from the East Coast of North America and Europe' immediately until further notice. The airline, which is still reeling from a plane crash that killed at least 270 people earlier this month, added that India-bound flights from North America were being diverted or rerouted away from closed airspaces. Air tracking data from FlightAware showed 243 cancellations worldwide as of Tuesday. Dubai International Airport topped the list with 26 cancellations in and out of the airport as of 0600 GMT. And Air India had had the highest amount of cancellations among carriers, totaling 25 at about 0600 GMT. In other developments, Philippine Airlines canceled several flights to the Middle East, including those to Doha, Dubai and Riyadh for Tuesday and one to Doha Wednesday. Japan Airlines said a flight from Tokyo's Haneda airport to Doha had to return Monday, and subsequently scheduled flights have all been canceled through June 27. Such disruptions have snarled travel, particularly as central hubs in the Middle East often connect flights worldwide — but experts stress that these kind of airspace closures and flight diversions are critical to ensuring safety, especially if future escalation emerges suddenly. 'It is the responsibility of states, countries to ensure that their airspace is safe for passage of aircraft,' Hassan Shahidi, president and CEO of the Flight Safety Foundation. He added that on Monday 'the Qataris did the absolutely right thing to close their airspace because of the threat of conflict.' Beyond Qatari airspace, Flightradar24 reported that UAE airspace was also closed on Monday. After several hours of diversions, flights appeared to be landing and taking off in the country again. Monday marks the latest 'dramatic increase' in this kind of impact, said Ian Petchenik, director of communications at Flightradar24. And while the future is unknown, he added that it's important to remember airspace closures and flight cancellations reflect that 'airlines, air traffic controllers and flight crews are doing their best to keep everybody safe.' Shahidi adds that it's important for travelers to monitor government guidance — such as safety notices from the U.S. State Department. How long the war lasts and what, if any, future escalation comes next could carry more widespread implications. Beyond disrupting global flight networks farther down the road, Shahidi stresses that it's very difficult for people who may need or want to evacuate countries impacted by the war to do so without access to commercial flights. At the same time, he adds, it's critical that state authorities focus on keeping their skies safe — pointing to past tragedies of passenger flights that were shot down by strikes. That includes Malaysia Airlines Flight 17, which was shot down by Russian-backed forces while flying over Ukraine in 2014, killing 298 people. 'We are all praying and urging resolution to this conflict — and especially as it relates to protection of civilian air travel,' Shahidi said. 'We do not want to have an MH17, with innocent lives being lost in a missile strike … We do not want to repeat that history.'