
Netanyahu Vows To Thwart "Any Attempt" By Iran To Rebuild Nuclear Programme
Tel Aviv:
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared a "historic victory" on Tuesday after agreeing a ceasefire with Iran and insisted that his country's arch-foe would never achieve a nuclear weapon.
The premier's comments, delivered in an address to the nation, came after Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian said his country was willing to return to negotiations over its nuclear programme.
Pezeshkian insisted, however, that Iran would continue to "assert its legitimate rights" to the peaceful use of atomic energy.
"Iran will not have a nuclear weapon," Netanyahu said after the ceasefire ended 12 days of deadly air and missile strikes between the arch foes.
"We have thwarted Iran's nuclear project. And if anyone in Iran tries to rebuild it, we will act with the same determination, with the same intensity, to foil any attempt."
Israel's strikes eventually drew in the United States, which on Sunday hit Iran's underground nuclear facilities with powerful "bunker-buster" bombs that Israel lacked.
After Iran retaliated with a missile attack Monday night targeting a US base in Qatar, President Donald Trump called for de-escalation, announcing the contours of a truce deal hours later.
In a phone call Tuesday, Pezeshkian told his Emirati counterpart "to explain to them, in your dealings with the United States, that the Islamic Republic of Iran is only seeking to assert its legitimate rights".
"It has never sought to acquire nuclear weapons and does not seek them," he was quoted as saying by the official IRNA news agency, adding that Iran was "ready to resolve the issues... at the negotiating table".
Israel has said its war, which began on June 13, was aimed at preventing Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon, an ambition Tehran has consistently denied.
Israel's military said that its strikes had set back Iran's nuclear programme "by years" and that the campaign against the country was now "entering a new phase".
After Trump angrily berated both sides for early violations of the truce on Tuesday, Tehran announced it would respect the terms of the deal if Israel did the same, while Israel said it had refrained from further strikes.
- Claims of victory -
Before Netanyahu spoke, Israel's government said its military had removed the "dual existential threat" of Iran's nuclear and ballistic missile programmes.
"We've set Iran's nuclear project back by years, and the same applies to its missile programme," Israel's chief of staff Lieutenant General Eyal Zamir said in a later statement.
Iran's top security body, meanwhile, said the Islamic republic's forces had "compelled" Israel to "unilaterally" stand down.
Its Revolutionary Guards also hailed a last-minute missile salvo fired at Israel as "a historic and unforgettable lesson to the Zionist enemy".
- Strikes on US base -
Israeli strikes hit nuclear and military targets -- killing scientists and senior military figures -- as well as residential areas, prompting waves of Iranian missile fire on Israel.
While Iran and Israel have been locked in a shadow war for decades, it has been by far the most destructive confrontation between the arch-foes.
The war culminated in US strikes on Iranian nuclear sites using massive bunker-busting bombs, followed by an Iranian reprisal targeting the largest US military facility in the Middle East.
Trump shrugged off that response as "weak", thanking Tehran for giving advance notice and announcing the outline of the ceasefire just hours later.
- 'Everyone is tired' -
Some Israelis on Tuesday welcomed the prospect of a truce.
"Everyone is tired. We just want to have some peace of mind," said Tel Aviv resident Tammy Shel, voicing hope for a lasting ceasefire. "For us, for the Iranian people, for the Palestinians, for everyone in the region."
In Iran, people remained uncertain whether the peace would hold.
Amir, 28, fled from Tehran to the Caspian Sea coast and told AFP by phone, "I really don't know... about the ceasefire but honestly, I don't think things will return to normal."
Israeli strikes on Iran have killed at least 610 civilians and wounded more than 4,700, according to the health ministry.
Iran's attacks on Israel have killed 28 people, according to official figures and rescuers.
The international community reacted with cautious optimism to the truce.
Saudi Arabia and the European Union welcomed Trump's announcement, while Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Russia hoped "that this will be a sustainable ceasefire".
But French President Emmanuel Macron warned there was an "increased" risk that Iran would attempt to enrich uranium secretly following the strikes on its nuclear sites.
During their talks, Iran and the United States had been at odds over uranium enrichment, which Tehran considers a "non-negotiable" right and which Washington has called a "red line".
After the truce was announced, Israel's military chief Zamir said Israel's focus would now shift back to Gaza.
The Israeli opposition, the Palestinian Authority and the main group representing the families of Israeli hostages all called for a Gaza truce to complement the Iran ceasefire.
Hashtags

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


Time of India
19 minutes ago
- Time of India
Both Israel and Iran deny violating truce
After US President Donald Trump harshly criticised Israel and Iran on Tuesday for mounting attacks after his announcement that a ceasefire deal had been reached, both countries denied having violated the truce and pushed back with their own timelines of events. The absence of details surrounding the truce deal added to the confusion about the sequence of the strikes and counter-strikes that took place in the hours after the initial announcement. Trump did not publicly specify a start time when he announced the truce, for example. There are also time differences involved. Iranian time is half an hour ahead of Israeli time, which is seven hours ahead of Eastern Daylight Time. Yet despite the discordant Iranian and Israeli claims about timelines, the mutual denials of violations strongly suggested that each side wanted the ceasefire to hold. PM Netanyahu of Israel said Tuesday afternoon that the ceasefire had been set to take effect at 7am Israel time. Four hours earlier, at 3am, Israel attacked targets "in the heart of Tehran," his office said in a statement, adding that shortly before the truce came into effect Iran fired a barrage of missiles at Israel. One hit an apartment building in the southern Israeli city of Beersheba, killing four people. At 7.06am in Israel, Iran fired another missile, and then two more at 10.25am, according to Israel. Netanyahu's office said those missiles were intercepted or fell in open areas. In response, Netanyahu's office said, Israeli forces destroyed a radar position near Tehran. By then, Trump had publicly demanded that Israel not respond, describing the last volley of missiles fired by Iran at northern Israel as "one rocket that didn't land, that was shot perhaps by mistake." Despite earlier threats from the Israeli defence minister and military that Israel would respond forcefully to the missile fire, the actual Israeli response appeared to be limited and symbolic. "Following a conversation between President Trump and PM Netanyahu, Israel refrained from further attacks," Netanyahu's office said. Around the same time, Trump wrote on social media that Israel's warplanes would "turn around and head home." Iran, for its part, said its missile fire came as retaliation for Israel's pre-dawn bombardment, and only before the cease-fire was meant to start. The Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps said that in retaliation for "savage" Israeli attacks on Iran overnight, Iran had launched 14 missiles at military and logistical centres in Israel in the "final minutes" before the cease-fire came into effect, according to a statement published on the Telegram channel of Press TV, an Iranian state news channel. The statement made no mention of the firing any missiles after the cease-fire came into force, as Trump and Israel charged. In addition, an Iranian military spokesman, Lt. Col. Ebrahim Zolfaqari, said Israel had launched "three waves of attacks" against Iran on Tuesday morning, after the ceasefire was supposed to take effect, with the last ending at 9 am Iranian time, according to a Press TV report citing a report from Defa Press, another Iranian news agency. Fars, a news agency managed by the Revolutionary Guards, reported that explosions were heard in Babol and Babolsar, Iranian cities to the northeast of Tehran, without providing a time or any other details. Trump first announced that Israel and Iran had agreed to a ceasefire deal on Monday evening - around 1.30am Tuesday in Tehran - and Iran's state television later announced a ceasefire early on Tuesday morning local time. The Israeli govt remained silent until it made its own announcement of a ceasefire at about 9am. Israel time, saying Israel had agreed to the truce. nyt


Mint
22 minutes ago
- Mint
Iran hangs 3 for spying for Israel; arrested 700 in sweeping crackdown during 12-day conflict with Tel Aviv
In a sweeping crackdown to punish those with links to Israel, Iran said on Wednesday, June 25, that it has executed three men for spying for Benjamin Netanyahu. The hanging comes a day after Israel and Iran agreed to the Donald Trump-initiated mediation after 12 days of heightened conflict over Tehran's possession of nuclear weapons. During the conflict, Iran also arrested at least 700 persons, accused of ties with Israel. The three men who have been executed by Iran have been identified as Idris Ali, Azad Shojai and Rasoul Ahmad Rasoul. Iran claims that the three men attempted to bring in assassination equipment into the country. The Iranian judiciary said, 'Idris Ali, Azad Shojai and Rasoul Ahmad Rasoul, who attempted to import equipment into the country to carry out assassinations, were arrested and tried for... cooperation favouring the Zionist regime.' 'The sentence was carried out this morning…and they were hanged.'


Indian Express
23 minutes ago
- Indian Express
‘Fake news': Trump rejects intelligence report suggesting US strikes didn't destroy Iran nuclear sites
US President Donald Trump, on Tuesday (June 24), pushed back against a CNN report which, citing an early US intelligence assessment, suggested that the US military strikes on Iran's nuclear infrastructure failed to destroy the core components of Tehran's nuclear programme. Trump rebuffed the report, calling it 'fake news', claiming the airstrikes were 'ONE OF THE MOST SUCCESSFUL MILITARY STRIKES IN HISTORY.' He reiterated that 'THE NUCLEAR SITES IN IRAN ARE COMPLETELY DESTROYED!' While on his way to the NATO summit in the Netherlands, he told reporters aboard Air Force One that the press was very 'disrespectful' of the US strikes. 'And our B2 pilots made this all possible. They had a magnificent hit in the dark of night with no moon, no light, no nothing. They hit the target perfectly, wiped it out, and the press is very disrespectful. I saw CNN fake news going: Well, maybe it wasn't a perfect hit. It was perfect. They said maybe it did destroy it, we agree, it did destroy it, but maybe it could have destroyed it more. No, No. Everyone hit, and it's very disrespectful to those great geniuses and patriots that flew those planes through tremendous dangers,' Trump said. The CNN report The CNN report claimed that US military strikes on three Iranian nuclear facilities, Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan, likely set back the country's nuclear programme by only a few months, citing an early US intelligence assessment. Quoting two people familiar with the developments, the report suggested that the stockpile of Iran's enriched uranium was not destroyed in the US strikes and Tehran's centrifuges, targeted by Israel and the United States, remain largely 'intact'. The DIA reports stated that the enriched uranium, which could be put to use for manufacturing nuclear weapons, may have been moved to other secret nuclear sites maintained by Iran. 'So the (DIA) assessment is that the US set them back maybe a few months, tops,' CNN quoted one of the people as saying. White House Press Secretary disputes report White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt swiftly disputed the report, labelling it 'flat-out wrong'. In a post on X, Leavitt said, 'This alleged 'assessment' is flat-out wrong and was classified as 'top secret' but was still leaked to CNN by an anonymous, low-level loser in the intelligence community.' 🚨FAKE NEWS CNN STRIKES AGAIN: This alleged 'assessment' is flat-out wrong and was classified as 'top secret' but was still leaked to CNN by an anonymous, low-level loser in the intelligence community. The leaking of this alleged assessment is a clear attempt to demean… — Karoline Leavitt (@PressSec) June 24, 2025 'Everyone knows what happens when you drop fourteen 30,000-pound bombs perfectly on their targets: total obliteration,' she added. The report casts doubt on Trump's claims, who has repeatedly asserted that the recent US military strikes had 'completely and totally obliterated' Tehran's nuclear infrastructure.