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Israelis under attack from Iran shift to full-scale war mode

Israelis under attack from Iran shift to full-scale war mode

Irish Times8 hours ago

''We survived Pharaoh, and we'll survive this, too' is a line from a popular Israeli song by Meir Ariel from the 1980s. It's used by
Israelis
during challenging times: it's been heard a lot since Friday's attack on
Iran
.
Four days on, the country has quickly shifted into full-scale war mode.
The Iranian ballistic missile attacks are pure Russian roulette – they can if not intercepted land anywhere, at any time, and no one is safe. The most noticeable change is the eerie quiet that has descended over the country. No one wants to stray too far from their safe room or bomb shelter (apartments built since 1992 are required to have a safe room, while older buildings have a communal bomb shelter).
Non-essential work places are closed, along with schools and universities. Most people are only leaving home to stock up on basic supplies. Joggers have stopped jogging and walkers have stopped walking: no one wants to be far from home when the sirens sound.
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The people who are out and about look exhausted. It's become normal to be woken once or twice at night by the alerts of incoming projectiles. Many people can't get back to sleep even after the 'All Clear' message is received.
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Iranians respond to Israel's strikes with anger and fear
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Was Iran developing nuclear weapons?
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Israel's air space has been closed since the opening salvo in the early hours of Friday morning. Many thousands of tourists are stuck. There are some 200,000 Israelis waiting to return home and the numbers are growing. Many have made their way to Athens and Larnaca in Cyprus hoping that emergency air lifts will be authorised, but as of Monday the military says it is still too dangerous for flights.
Some of those desperate to return home are flying to the Egyptian resort of Sharm El- Sheikh or the Jordanian capital Amman and returning overland, but the Israeli authorities stress that serious security warnings for Israelis are in place in both of these neighbouring Arab states.
No public gatherings are allowed. This week, Israel's basketball final was postponed, as was the wedding of Avner Netanyahu, the prime minister's youngest son. This is a popular period for weddings and bar mitzvahs, but no such gatherings will take place until this conflict is over.
The tourism industry has been devastated by the Gaza war, and those hotels that are still open rely on domestic Israeli tourism for their custom. No one has been in the mood for taking holidays since Friday. Ironically, the hotel industry may be saved by the growing number of families made homeless by the missile attacks – they are being sent by the government to hotels.
The only apparent positive change is that traffic jams have disappeared - for now at least.

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Trump to leave G7 early after warning of Iran attack
Trump to leave G7 early after warning of Iran attack

RTÉ News​

timean hour ago

  • RTÉ News​

Trump to leave G7 early after warning of Iran attack

US President Donald Trump was leaving a Group of Seven summit early on Monday as he hinted of greater involvement in the Israel-Iran conflict after issuing an ominous warning for the capital Tehran to evacuate. After a day of speaking with G7 leaders at a Canada summit about the need for a negotiated deal, Mr Trump took to social media to back Israel and issue a warning to Tehran, a city of nearly 10 million people. "Everyone should immediately evacuate Tehran!" Mr Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform. Shortly afterward, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said that Mr Trump would return to Washington due to the crisis, a day earlier than planned. Mr Trump will miss a day of meetings in the Rockies resort of Kananaskis that was also expected to include meetings with the leaders of Ukraine and Mexico. The US president has repeatedly declined to say if the United States would participate in Israeli military action, although he says it was not involved in initial strikes. He told reporters before his decision was announced to leave early: "As soon as I leave here, we're going to be doing something. But I have to leave here." Mr Trump, who has praised Israel's strikes despite his stated preference for diplomacy, said Iran would be "foolish" not to agree to a negotiated settlement. "It's painful for both parties, but I'd say Iran is not winning this war, and they should talk, and they should talk immediately, before it's too late," Mr Trump told reporters as he met Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney. Israel has struck major nuclear and military sites and killed leading commanders and nuclear scientists in Iran, which has responded with its own volley of drones and missiles on Israel. Onus on Iran Canada and European leaders had looked to draft a statement on the crisis, but diplomats said that Mr Trump has not committed the United States to joining it. Leaders of the club of industrialized democracies - Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the United States - have mostly backed Israel but concern has mounted as the violence intensifies. French President Emmanuel Macron, speaking to reporters, pleaded with Israel to spare civilians in Iran. Any statement would be expected to put the onus on Iran and stop short of calling for an immediate ceasefire. "We'll highlight the legitimate right of the state of Israel to defend itself and we will also discuss potential additional measures to reach a diplomatic solution," German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said. British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said that G7 leaders share concern about Iran's nuclear program but also: "I do think there's a consensus for de-escalation." Unusually, Japan - which has historic relations with Iran and limited domestic pressure related to the Middle East - has broken with its Western allies to condemn Israel's attack, calling it "completely unacceptable and deeply regrettable." Iran, since Mr Trump pulled out of an earlier nuclear deal in 2018, has ramped up uranium enrichment but not yet at levels to create an atomic bomb. Israel is widely known to have nuclear weapons but does not acknowledge them publicly. Easing tensions with Trump The summit at a wooded lodge under snow-capped mountains comes after months of tumult on the global stage since Mr Trump's return. Seeking to shatter a decades-old US-led global economic order, Mr Trump has vowed sweeping tariffs on friends and foes alike although he has postponed implementation until 9 July. However, Mr Trump voiced optimism about a resolution with Canada and signed documents with Mr Starmer to confirm an agreement with Britain. The Republican president has previously mocked host Canada, stating that the vast but less populated neighbor should become the 51st US state. But he has appeared to show more respect to Canada since Mr Carney, a staid former central banker, took over from Justin Trudeau in March. Mr Trump was "very respectful" and spoke of "how much he likes Canada," said the country's ambassador to Washington, Kirsten Hillman. The US leader had taken office seeking diplomacy both on Iran and Ukraine, which Russia invaded in 2022. Mr Trump has since voiced frustration that Russian President Vladimir Putin has not accepted a US proposal for a ceasefire. He has previously mused about re-admitting Russia to the G8, from which it was expelled in 2014 after invading and annexing Ukraine's region of Crimea, triggering a war which accelerated in 2022 with a full-scale Russian invasion. Mr Trump said that his Russian counterpart was "very insulted" by the G8 expulsion and that if Russia was still a member, "you wouldn't have a war right now."

Iran and Israel broaden attacks as conflict escalates
Iran and Israel broaden attacks as conflict escalates

Irish Times

time5 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Iran and Israel broaden attacks as conflict escalates

Israel and Iran issued evacuation orders to residents of both countries as the conflict escalated on a fourth day, underlining the potential to trigger a broader war. Iran on Monday threatened to leave the nuclear non-proliferation treaty (NPT) and separately told the United Nations Security Council that its strikes on Israel were self- defence. In a letter to the Security Council, Iran's UN envoy Amir Saeid Iravani added that any co-operation with Israel would make countries 'complicit in the legal responsibility and consequences of this crisis'. Meanwhile, Israeli forces issued an evacuation order to residents of a large part of Tehran, warning them of the imminent bombing of 'military infrastructure' in the area in a social-media post very similar to those regularly directed at Palestinians in Gaza over the past 20 months. READ MORE The post on X was from the account of the Israel Defense Forces ' Arabic spokesperson, Col Avichay Adraee, and is a further sign of the evolving nature of the Israeli campaign against Iran, which began with attacks on air defences, nuclear sites and the military chain of command, but appears to have drifted towards a war of attrition focused on Iran's oil and gas industry and on the capital. Meanwhile, Iranian state television reported on Monday evening that a new wave of missile attacks on Israel had begun. The attacks include drones and missiles, believed to be targeting the Israeli cities of Haifa and Tel Aviv. More than 1,800 people in Iran have been injured since Israel launched its attack on June 13th, according to the country's health minister. A total of 24 people in Israel have been killed so far in the Iranian missile attacks, all of them civilians. In another sign of the changing targets of the Israeli offensive, Iran's state TV announced on Monday evening that it was under attack, and had to cease live broadcasting. The sound of an explosion could be heard in a live transmission, and the news presenter hurried off camera as dust and debris appeared in the studio. Speaking to personnel at Tel Nof air force base, the Israeli prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu , confirmed the evacuation orders on the Iranian capital. 'The Israeli air force controls the skies over Tehran. This changes the entire campaign,' he said. 'When we control the skies over Tehran, we strike regime targets, as opposed to the criminal Iranian regime which targets our civilians and comes to kill women and children. We tell the people of Tehran to evacuate, and we act.' Netanyahu later said killing Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Hosseini Khamenei, would 'end the conflict' in what would be another ominous escalation. After the surprise Israeli attack on Friday morning, Iran has carried out retaliatory missile strikes on Israeli cities, focusing on the most populated areas between Tel Aviv and the port of Haifa. Both sides have targeted each other's oil and gas facilities, increasing the threat of environmental disaster, and explosions were reported on Monday near oil refineries in southern Tehran. Earlier on Monday, Iran threatened to leave the NPT as Israeli bombing raids entered a fourth day, underlining the conflict's potential to trigger a broader war and Tehran's race to construct a nuclear weapon. The human cost of the war continued to escalate with both sides broadening their range of targets, as G7 leaders convened in the Canadian Rockies with no clear plan to end the conflict. There were reports on Monday that Donald Trump was refusing to sign a joint statement calling for the conflict to be scaled down. 'They should talk, and they should talk immediately,' Trump said of Tehran during the summit. 'I'd say Iran is not winning this war.' [ Israelis under attack from Iran shift to full-scale war mode Opens in new window ] The Iranian foreign ministry spokesperson, Esmaeil Baghaei, announced on Monday that Iran's parliament, the Majlis, was preparing a Bill that would withdraw the country from the 1968 NPT agreement, which obliges it to forgo nuclear weapons and to undergo international inspections to verify compliance. Baghaei added that Tehran remained opposed to the development of weapons of mass destruction. Israel is the only Middle East state with nuclear weapons and did not sign the NPT, but has never formally acknowledged its arsenal. US forces have so far helped Israel intercept Iranian missiles, but have not taken part, at least overtly, in offensive bombing operations. – Guardian and Reuters

Watch: Iran's nuclear ambitions in focus amid tensions
Watch: Iran's nuclear ambitions in focus amid tensions

RTÉ News​

time5 hours ago

  • RTÉ News​

Watch: Iran's nuclear ambitions in focus amid tensions

As Iran and Israel continue to exchange heavy strikes, Tehran's nuclear capabilities have come into focus. On Friday, Israel launched a surprise aerial campaign against targets across Iran prompting the country to launch several waves of missiles in retaliation. The Israeli prime minister said Israel was pursuing three main objectives, which included "the elimination of the nuclear programme" in Iran. A round of US-Iran nuclear talks due to be held in Oman were cancelled in the aftermath of Israel's initial strikes.

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