
UK Removes Family Members of Foreign Office Staff in Israel
Britain said on Wednesday it was temporarily withdrawing the family members of staff who work at the country's embassy and consulate in Israel due to the significant risks posed from the conflict between Iran and Israel.
"Family members of staff at the British embassy in Tel Aviv and the British consulate in Jerusalem have been temporarily withdrawn as a precautionary measure," Britain's foreign office said on its travel advice page for Israel.
"The embassy and consulate continue with essential work including services to British nationals," it added.
Hashtags

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

Al Arabiya
27 minutes ago
- Al Arabiya
Operation in Iran not aimed at toppling regime, Israeli official tells Al Arabiya English
Israel's strikes on Iran are aimed at destroying Iran's nuclear capabilities, not toppling supreme leader Ali Khamenei's regime, an Israeli official told Al Arabiya English on Wednesday. 'Our operation in Iran isn't aimed at toppling the regime but to remove Iran's threat to destroy Israel,' the official said. Claiming that Iran has produced enough nuclear material to build nine nuclear bombs, the Israeli official said that Israel's only targets are nuclear facilities in Iran and sites pertaining to the ballistic missile program. The official added that Iran plans to manufacture 10,000 ballistic missiles in the future. 'We will continue our precision attacks against nuclear facilities and ballistic missiles,' the Israeli official said, adding that the operation in Iran will not exceed the time required to achieve the objectives. Israel began launching an unprecedented wave of strikes across Iran on Friday, saying it aims to prevent Tehran from acquiring a nuclear weapon — a charge Iran denies. The Israeli attacks have killed at least 224 people in Iran and wounded more than 1,000, according to an official toll released Sunday. In retaliation, Iran has carried out attacks that have killed at least 24 people in Israel since Friday, according to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office.

Al Arabiya
27 minutes ago
- Al Arabiya
Israel to resume natural gas exports when military deems it's safe, energy minister says
Israel will resume its natural gas exports when the country's military believes it would be safe to do so, Israel's Energy Ministry Eli Cohen said on Wednesday, as an air battle between Israel and Iran entered its sixth day. Two of Israel's three gas fields - Chevron-operated Leviathan and Energean's Karish - off its Mediterranean coast that provide the bulk of exports to Egypt and Jordan, have been shut since June 13 amid the conflict between Israel and Iran. That leaves in operation only the older Tamar field, used mainly for domestic supplies. Cohen said he has been in contact with Egypt and Jordan about the cut in supplies. 'They can see that we are in a war. I don't want to use our strategic storage, so therefore, I needed to cut exports,' Cohen told Reuters after a news briefing. 'I hope I will be able to use another rig as soon as possible and use it for the supply of gas (exports). For me, the most important thing is (supplying) Israel,' he said, alluding to fueling needs during the conflict with Iran. It wasn't clear when another gas field will be reopened, Cohen said, noting: 'We are working with them [the military], the Navy, and right now their recommendation is that one (field) will continue to work and two will be shut down.' Israeli gas accounts for about 15-20 percent of Egypt's consumption, data from the Joint Organizations Data Initiative (JODI) shows. The disruption to Israel's gas supply led Egyptian fertilizer producers to halt operations on Friday. Israel launched the air war on Iran on Friday after concluding the latter was on the verge of developing a nuclear weapon. Iran maintains its nuclear program is purely for civilian purposes. Other energy sources Israel's energy sector, Cohen said, was operating normally, with no shortages expected since the country also maintains reserves in coal, diesel and renewable energy. Israel's Oil Refineries in Haifa was hit by an Iranian missile this week, which killed three people and halted operations. Cohen said he hoped the facility would resume operations within a month, though a second refinery in the south remains open. Since Friday, the percentage of renewable, or solar, energy used in electricity production has more than doubled to some 40 percent, Cohen said. There was also some damage to wastewater treatment facilities and pipelines from Iranian air strikes. Cohen acknowledged that victory against Iran could take weeks but Israel's energy demands could be met. 'Although the Iranians struck some of our plants, we have very strong energy facilities that can supply all the energy demands for Israeli citizens and the army, in fuel, gas, electricity and water.'


Al Arabiya
28 minutes ago
- Al Arabiya
How much damage have Israeli strikes caused to Iran's nuclear program?
Israel has carried out wide-ranging military strikes on Iran, hitting sites including some of its most important nuclear installations. Below is a summary of what is known about the damage inflicted on the Islamic Republic's nuclear program, incorporating data from the UN nuclear watchdog's last quarterly report on May 31. Overview Iran is enriching uranium to up to 60 percent fissile purity. This could easily be refined further to the roughly 90 percent that is weapons-grade material. The International Atomic Energy Agency, which inspects Iran's nuclear sites including its enrichment plants, says this is of 'serious concern' because no other country has enriched to that level without producing nuclear weapons. Western powers say there is no civil justification for such high-level enrichment. Iran denies seeking nuclear weapons. It points to its right to nuclear technology for peaceful purposes, including enrichment, as a party to the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. Israel, which is not a party to the NPT, is the only country in the Middle East widely believed to have nuclear weapons. Israel neither confirms nor denies that. Heart of the program: Uranium enrichment Iran had three operating uranium enrichment plants when Israel began its attacks on June 13: The Fuel Enrichment Plant at Natanz (power supply destroyed) The FEP is a vast underground facility designed to house 50,000 centrifuges, the machines that enrich uranium. There has long been speculation among military experts about whether Israeli airstrikes could destroy the FEP given that it is several floors underground. There were about 17,000 centrifuges installed there at last count, of which around 13,500 were operating, refining uranium to up to 5 percent. The electricity infrastructure at Natanz was destroyed by Israel, IAEA chief Rafael Grossi told the UN Security Council on Friday, specifically an electrical sub-station, the main electric power supply building, emergency power supply and back-up generators. 'With this sudden loss of external power, in great probability the centrifuges have been severely damaged if not destroyed altogether,' Grossi told the BBC on Monday. The IAEA said on Tuesday there were indications of 'direct impacts on the underground enrichment halls at Natanz.' The IAEA has not carried out inspections since the attacks and is using satellite imagery to assess the damage. The Pilot Fuel Enrichment Plant at Natanz (destroyed) The PFEP is the smallest and softest target, being above-ground, of Iran's three enrichment plants. Long a research and development center, it used fewer centrifuges than the other plants, often connected in smaller clusters of machines known as cascades. It did, however, have two interconnected, full-size cascades of up to 164 advanced centrifuges each, enriching uranium to up to 60 percent. Apart from that, there were only up to 201 centrifuges operating at the PFEP enriching to up to 2 percent. The PFEP was destroyed in the Israeli attack, Grossi said. The Fordow Fuel Enrichment Plant (little or no visible damage) Iran's most deeply buried enrichment installation, dug deep into a mountain, has suffered little or no visible damage, Grossi reiterated on Monday. While Fordow has only about 2,000 centrifuges in operation, it produces the vast majority of Iran's uranium enriched to up to 60 percent, using roughly the same number of centrifuges as the PFEP did, because it feeds uranium refined to up to 20 percent into those cascades, compared to 5 percent at the PFEP. Fordow therefore produced 166.6 kg of uranium enriched to up to 60 percent in the most recent quarter. According to an IAEA yardstick, that is enough in principle, if enriched further, for just under four nuclear bombs, compared to the PFEP's 19.2 kg, less than half a bomb's worth. Other facilities Israeli strikes damaged four buildings at the nuclear complex at Isfahan, the IAEA has said, including the Uranium Conversion Facility (UCF) and facilities where work on uranium metal was conducted. While it has other uses, mastering uranium metal technology is an important step in making the core of a nuclear weapon. If Iran were to try to make a nuclear weapon, it would need to take weapons-grade uranium and turn it into uranium metal. Uranium conversion is the process by which 'yellowcake' uranium is turned into uranium hexafluoride, the feedstock for centrifuges, so that it can be enriched. If the UCF is out of use, Iran will eventually run out of uranium to enrich unless it finds an outside source of uranium hexafluoride. The IAEA said on Tuesday two centrifuge production facilities in Karaj and Tehran had been hit. They had previously been under IAEA monitoring. The IAEA does not know how many centrifuge workshops Iran has, officials say. Scientists At least 14 Iranian nuclear scientists have been killed in Israeli attacks since Friday, including in car bombings, two sources in the Gulf said on Sunday. Israel's armed forces named nine of them on Saturday, saying they 'played a central part of the progress toward nuclear weapons' and that 'their elimination represents a significant blow to the Iranian regime's ability to acquire weapons of mass destruction.' That assertion could not immediately be verified. Western powers have often said Iran's nuclear advances provide it with an 'irreversible knowledge gain', suggesting that while losing experts or facilities may slow progress, the advances are permanent. Uranium stockpile Iran has a large stock of uranium enriched to different levels. As of May 17, Iran was estimated to have enough uranium enriched to up to 60 percent for it to make nine nuclear weapons, according to an IAEA yardstick. At lower enrichment levels it has enough for more bombs, though it would take more effort: enough enriched to up to 20 percent for two more, and enough enriched to up to 5 percent for 11 more. Much of Iran's most highly enriched uranium stockpile is stored underground at Isfahan under IAEA seal, officials have said. The IAEA does not report where it is stored. Grossi said in his BBC interview Isfahan's underground spaces 'do not seem to have been affected', but the IAEA has already walked back a similar assessment - of the underground plant at Natanz, saying on Monday that high-resolution satellite imagery indicated there had been direct hits. Open questions How will Iran respond? Deputy Foreign Minister Kazem Gharibabadi told state TV on Saturday Iran would take measures to protect nuclear materials and equipment that would not be notified to the IAEA and it would no longer cooperate with the IAEA as before. Lawmakers are also preparing a bill that could prompt Iran to pull out of the NPT, following in the footsteps of North Korea, which announced its withdrawal in 2003 and went on to test nuclear weapons. The IAEA does not know how many centrifuges Iran has outside its declared enrichment plants. Any further reduction in cooperation with the IAEA could increase speculation that it will or has set up a secret enrichment plant using some of that supply. Existing centrifuge cascades can also be reconfigured to enrich to a different purity level within a week, officials have said. What is the status of the uranium stock? If Iran can no longer convert, its existing stock of uranium hexafluoride and enriched uranium becomes even more important. Will there be more attacks? Soon after the attacks started on Friday, US President Donald Trump urged Iran to make a deal with the United States to impose fresh restrictions on its nuclear program 'before there is nothing left.' Talks scheduled for June 15 were called off.