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Trump announces ‘complete and total' ceasefire between Israel and Iran

Trump announces ‘complete and total' ceasefire between Israel and Iran

There was no immediate official comment from Israel. The Jerusalem Post reported Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu convened a late-night cabinet meeting and instructed his cabinet not to comment publicly. He had said in a video message the previous day that Israel was 'very, very close' to achieving its objectives in Iran.
Trump said the war could have gone on for years and destroyed the entire Middle East, 'but it didn't, and never will'.
He later told NBC News he believed the ceasefire was 'unlimited' and would 'go forever'. He said he did not think Israel and Iran 'will ever be shooting at each other again.'
Reuters reported that Qatar Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani had secured Tehran's agreement to the US ceasefire proposal during a call with Iranian officials held after the Iranian strikes on a US base in Qatar on Monday, citing an official briefed on the negotiations.
The phone call came after Trump told Qatar's emir that Israel had agreed to the ceasefire and asked for Doha's help persuading Tehran to also agree to the ceasefire deal, the official said.
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Australia's Prime Minister Anthony Albanese welcomed Trump's announced ceasefire. 'We have consistently called for dialogue, diplomacy and de-escalation,' he said in a statement.
Trump's ceasefire announcement came after Iran attacked America's Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar in retaliation for the US's weekend strikes on three Iranian nuclear facilities. The airbase hosts the Qatari, US and UK air forces, and the forward headquarters of US Central Command in the region.
Trump described Iran's missile attack as a 'very weak response' which the US had anticipated, but thanked Iran for giving advance warning 'which made it possible for no lives to be lost, and nobody to be injured'.
He also said: 'Perhaps Iran can now proceed to peace and harmony in the region, and I will enthusiastically encourage Israel to do the same.'
Trump gave the number of Iranian retaliatory missiles as 14, and said 13 were 'knocked down', with one other 'set free' as it was not heading in a threatening direction. 'Most importantly, they've gotten it all out of their 'system', and there will, hopefully, be no further HATE.'
Qatar, however, said Iran had fired 19 missiles at the US air base and hit one, but caused no casualties. Qatar's Defence Ministry earlier said its defence systems intercepted the attack.
While there was no harm to humans, air travel was disrupted by the incident. Qantas was among the airlines forced to divert planes away from Qatari airspace, which was closed shortly before Iran's missile attack.
Iran fired the missiles at Al Udeid early on Tuesday AEST, the regime's first act of retaliation for the American bombardment of its nuclear facilities at the weekend.
In a statement, the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps said the attack was a response to 'the blatant military aggression by the criminal regime of the United States'.
It described the operation as 'powerful and destructive', said Iran 'will never leave any aggression against its territorial integrity, sovereignty, or national security unanswered'.
Built on a flat stretch of desert about 30 kilometres southwest of Qatar's capital, Doha, Al Ubdeid is one of the most significant American military assets in the region.
The sprawling facility hosts thousands of US service members and served as a major staging ground for the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. At the height of both, it housed some 10,000 US troops, but that number dropped to about 8000 as of 2022. Trump visited the base during his trip to Qatar last month, and spoke to troops.
Last week, ahead of the US strikes on Iran's nuclear sites, many of the transport planes, fighter jets and drones typically on Al Udeid's tarmac dispersed. In a June 18 satellite photo taken by Planet Labs and analysed by The Associated Press, the airbase's tarmac had emptied.
The US hit Iran's nuclear assets with 75 projectiles on the weekend, including 14 so-called 'bunker buster' bombs aimed at obliterating the country's ability to develop nuclear weapons - though the full extent of the damage is still uncertain.
Iran said the number of missiles it fired on Tuesday matched the number of bombs dropped by the US, and that any future US attacks would also meet retaliation, in comments widely interpreted as an indication Tehran was not planning any further action at this stage.
The statement from Iran's Supreme National Security Council also noted the attack on the US base took place away from populated areas and posed no threat to Qatar, 'our friendly and brotherly country'.

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Yesterday, bombs fell on the prison where I was jailed. It may be a metaphor for the Iranian people's fate
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Yesterday, bombs fell on the prison where I was jailed. It may be a metaphor for the Iranian people's fate

The last time I saw the gates of Iran's Evin Prison was November, 25, 2020. Handcuffed, blindfolded yet finally out of my cell, I was driven to a point just outside the prison walls. Behind me was a nondescript blue and white sign proclaiming the name of the prison, and a single-lane entrance point with guard posts on either side of three-story stone walls. It was a relatively unimposing thoroughfare for such a consequential symbol of power and brutality. I was told to stand in front of the gates, now closed to traffic. A man with a television camera mounted on a tripod appeared, and a Revolutionary Guard member started firing questions at me in Farsi. It was clear that I was expected to participate in one final humiliation: a propaganda clip for the evening news broadcast. Knowing that nothing I said now could possibly derail the deal which had been made to secure my freedom, I stood outside those gates and did my best to render the footage unusable. No, I was not a spy and I do not confess. No, I wasn't treated well in prison. No, I am not thankful to my captors for releasing me, having lost two years and three months of my life to this cruel and barbaric place. Those gates are instantly recognisable to every Iranian, whether or not they watch the propaganda clips routinely aired on state TV targeting people, like me, who had been held inside. They stand for the immense coercive power of the Islamic Republic and the supremacy of its behemoth security apparatus. They stand for the ability of a totalitarian state to reach deep into the lives of ordinary people, threatening to take from them everything and everyone they hold dear should they, for whatever reason, be unlucky enough to cross its threshold. Israel's strike on Evin Prison in Tehran in the hours before US President Donald Trump's ceasefire agreement came into effect had no plausible military purpose. Along with other targets, such as the headquarters of the Basij militia and Revolutionary Guard Corps, this was a highly symbolic attack designed to send a message about Israel's longer-term goals for Iran. To the regime, the destruction of the gates of Evin, filmed by the Israeli Defence Force and circulated online shortly after, represented not only the ruination of Iran's feared internal security apparatus, but that of its ideology too. To the political dissidents housed within Evin, and the Iranian people more broadly, the message was similarly clear: The clerical kleptocracy which has oppressed you for four decades is a paper tiger. Rise up, walk out those gates, and free yourselves. Of course amid all this potent symbolism, Israel has its own narrow interests at play, and these do not necessarily align with those of the Iranian people. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his ministers have made numerous statements about regime change in Iran, as has Trump, but it remains to be seen whether Tel Aviv, Washington or other Western powers will actually do anything to advance the Iranian people's well-documented desire to be rid of the Islamic Republic, beyond talking a big game on social media. Reports emerging from inside Evin Prison after the strikes paint a concerning picture of fear, chaos and, even while under fire, repression and crackdown. The account of Reza Khandan, the husband of prominent human rights lawyer Nasrin Sotoudeh and an activist himself who is currently imprisoned in Evin, posted a statement online on behalf of a group of prisoners trapped inside. In it, he described inmates injured from broken glass, and a stampede triggered by the panic of those who had 'nowhere to run'. According to Khandan, prison authorities responded with 'threats, intimidation and pressure on prisoners', and have refused to treat the injured.

Yesterday, bombs fell on the prison where I was jailed. It may be a metaphor for the Iranian people's fate
Yesterday, bombs fell on the prison where I was jailed. It may be a metaphor for the Iranian people's fate

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Yesterday, bombs fell on the prison where I was jailed. It may be a metaphor for the Iranian people's fate

The last time I saw the gates of Iran's Evin Prison was November, 25, 2020. Handcuffed, blindfolded yet finally out of my cell, I was driven to a point just outside the prison walls. Behind me was a nondescript blue and white sign proclaiming the name of the prison, and a single-lane entrance point with guard posts on either side of three-story stone walls. It was a relatively unimposing thoroughfare for such a consequential symbol of power and brutality. I was told to stand in front of the gates, now closed to traffic. A man with a television camera mounted on a tripod appeared, and a Revolutionary Guard member started firing questions at me in Farsi. It was clear that I was expected to participate in one final humiliation: a propaganda clip for the evening news broadcast. Knowing that nothing I said now could possibly derail the deal which had been made to secure my freedom, I stood outside those gates and did my best to render the footage unusable. No, I was not a spy and I do not confess. No, I wasn't treated well in prison. No, I am not thankful to my captors for releasing me, having lost two years and three months of my life to this cruel and barbaric place. Those gates are instantly recognisable to every Iranian, whether or not they watch the propaganda clips routinely aired on state TV targeting people, like me, who had been held inside. They stand for the immense coercive power of the Islamic Republic and the supremacy of its behemoth security apparatus. They stand for the ability of a totalitarian state to reach deep into the lives of ordinary people, threatening to take from them everything and everyone they hold dear should they, for whatever reason, be unlucky enough to cross its threshold. Israel's strike on Evin Prison in Tehran in the hours before US President Donald Trump's ceasefire agreement came into effect had no plausible military purpose. Along with other targets, such as the headquarters of the Basij militia and Revolutionary Guard Corps, this was a highly symbolic attack designed to send a message about Israel's longer-term goals for Iran. To the regime, the destruction of the gates of Evin, filmed by the Israeli Defence Force and circulated online shortly after, represented not only the ruination of Iran's feared internal security apparatus, but that of its ideology too. To the political dissidents housed within Evin, and the Iranian people more broadly, the message was similarly clear: The clerical kleptocracy which has oppressed you for four decades is a paper tiger. Rise up, walk out those gates, and free yourselves. Of course amid all this potent symbolism, Israel has its own narrow interests at play, and these do not necessarily align with those of the Iranian people. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his ministers have made numerous statements about regime change in Iran, as has Trump, but it remains to be seen whether Tel Aviv, Washington or other Western powers will actually do anything to advance the Iranian people's well-documented desire to be rid of the Islamic Republic, beyond talking a big game on social media. Reports emerging from inside Evin Prison after the strikes paint a concerning picture of fear, chaos and, even while under fire, repression and crackdown. The account of Reza Khandan, the husband of prominent human rights lawyer Nasrin Sotoudeh and an activist himself who is currently imprisoned in Evin, posted a statement online on behalf of a group of prisoners trapped inside. In it, he described inmates injured from broken glass, and a stampede triggered by the panic of those who had 'nowhere to run'. According to Khandan, prison authorities responded with 'threats, intimidation and pressure on prisoners', and have refused to treat the injured.

Israel bombs ‘notorious' prison holding Iran's political opponents
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Israel bombs ‘notorious' prison holding Iran's political opponents

Newsweek Senior Editor-at-Large Josh Hammer has commented on Israel's bombing of a 'notorious' Iranian prison which held their political opponents. 'They're stopping short of an attempt at a full-on regime change there, but they are, in this particular case, seeming to aid and abet the jailbreak of many people who have been wrongly detained by one of the most despicable regimes on the face of the earth,' Mr Hammer told Sky News Digital Presenter Gabriella Power. 'The people, frankly, that are going to be escaping from this prison now that it has been bombed by the Israelis, the people that are escaping there are exactly the kind of people that … might be willing to ultimately put their lives on the line to try to decapitate this most evil of regimes.'

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