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Israel admits Iran hit military targets

Israel admits Iran hit military targets

Telegraph5 hours ago

Israel has admitted Iranian missiles struck military targets for the first time since open warfare broke out between the two countries five days ago.
A military official refused to comment on what was hit, but emphasised that the capabilities of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) were not damaged in Tehran's latest aerial onslaught.
The fourth night of Israel's war with Iran had been quieter until Iran launched a barrage of some 20 missiles just before daybreak that resulted in multiple direct hits in the centre of the country.
Sirens were triggered across Israel as some Iranian missiles evaded the shield of Israel's missile defence system, triggering a series of huge explosions in the central city of Herzliya, north of Tel Aviv.
Iran's Revolutionary Guards said they hit the headquarters of Mossad, Israel's intelligence agency, adding that a base was on fire. They also claimed to have struck Israel's military intelligence centre.
The claims have not been verified and journalists were not allowed close to the impact site, which authorities reported belongs to the military.
Israeli censorship rules do not allow reporters within the country to identify strikes on military and other sensitive facilities.
Footage showed smoke billowing from a tall building, while elsewhere in the city a parking lot was hit, injuring five people and causing a bus to explode.
During Iran's ballistic missile barrage on Israel in October, an area close to the Mossad headquarters was hit, but media organisations were prevented from publishing the exact locations targeted.
In an update, the IDF emphasised the 'strict' censorship guidelines around strikes on Israel, citing fears that such coverage could give the enemy an advantage.
'In Gaza and now here in Israel the press should be doing more to challenge these rules,' said one veteran media operator. 'We are not seeing the full story.'
Iran has so far launched around 400 ballistic missiles and hundreds of drones at Israel, targeting civilian and military sites, the Israeli military official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said on Tuesday morning.
He added that the fall-off in the number of missiles fired showed Israel is succeeding in damaging Iran's ability to launch them.
The escalating violence between the two countries does not show signs of abating, despite world leaders urging restraint on both sides.
Israel has said it will continue with 'Operation Rising Lion' until Iran's nuclear and ballistic missile programme is dismantled, with strikes expected to increase in the coming days.
Overnight, Israel's military said it killed Ali Shamdani, Iran's wartime chief of staff, just four days after Israel killed his predecessor in a strike on Tehran.
It also said it struck dozens of targets linked to Iran's nuclear and ballistic missile programmes overnight after claiming to have control of its airspace following the knocking out of its air defences.
A military official said Iran's military leadership is now 'on the run', leaving Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the supreme leader, increasingly isolated amid reports he was moved to an underground bunker last Friday.
Most analysts say that Israel has by far had the upper hand, with military and intelligence functions that are significantly more sophisticated than those of the Iranians.
On Monday, Israel claimed to have destroyed one-third of Iran's surface-to-surface missile launchers, and Iran's interceptor supplies are reported to be running thin as Israel targets its stockpiles.
However, there is no doubt that Iran has managed to take a toll of its own, and analysts believe the country is holding its most advanced weaponry back in preparation for a sustained conflict.
Iran's Revolutionary Guards said on Tuesday that a 'more powerful' new wave of missiles was launched towards Israel in the morning barrage, while a senior Iranian army commander said a new wave of drones would hit Israel.
Israel, bracing for further attacks, was calling for people to come forward and give blood on Tuesday morning amid a 'severe shortage of blood units'.
Although overall Israeli fatalities remain relatively low at 24, hundreds have sustained blast injuries over the last five days. More than 640 people have been wounded.
On Tuesday, Donald Trump said he was aiming for a 'real end' to the conflict, rather than just a ceasefire, with Iran 'giving up entirely' on nuclear weapons.
Boarding Air Force One on his way back from the G7 summit in Canada, he said the world 'will find out' in the next few days whether Israel would scale back its attacks on Iran, adding: 'Nobody's slowed up so far.'

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Later on Tuesday, his foreign minister, Gideon Sa'ar, described it differently as a mission to 'severely damage [the Iranians'] plan to eliminate the state of Israel'. Asked how that would be achieved, Sa'ar told the Guardian: 'We are doing that gradually. First we cut the [tentacles] of the octopus, when we dealt with Hamas and Hezbollah. Now we are dealing with the head of the octopus.' 'Regime change is not an objective of this war,' the minister insisted however, during a visit to a missile strike site in Rishon LeZion, east of Tel Aviv. He added that regime change 'may be a result, but its not an objective' of the war. Israel's choice of targets has broadened over the course of the campaign, in line with its rhetoric. In recent days it has bombed the Iranian capital, ordering the residents of a part of northern Tehran, a third of a million people, to leave their homes. On Tuesday night, loud blasts were reported across the city. The Israeli evacuation order was modelled on those routinely issued to Palestinians in Gaza, where bombing by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) has flattened entire residential neighbourhoods over the course of a 20-month conflict. The Israeli ultimatum on Monday said the bombing of Tehran would be aimed at 'military infrastructure', but one of the targets hit was a state television station, killing three staff and ending live broadcasts. Israel has also been bombing Iran's oil and gas installations, and Iran has retaliated with strikes on Haifa, damaging a power station and a refinery in the Mediterranean port. Israeli airstrikes killed at least 24 Iranians across the country on Tuesday morning, bringing the toll since Friday's surprise attack to at least 224 people dead and more than 1,400 injured, Iran's health ministry said. The scale of destruction and the threats from the IDF and Trump triggered an exodus of Tehranis, jamming the roads out of the capital overnight. In Israel, the death toll after four days was 24, with about 600 injured. Iran fired a total of 20 to 30 missiles on Tuesday morning, according to the IDF, lightly wounding five people, marking a significant drop in the tempo of its attack compared with the previous few days. The IDF said Iran had used 370 missiles in eight salvoes out of a US-estimated arsenal of 3,000 ballistic missiles. The IDF further claims to have destroyed 200 of Iran's missile launchers, half the total. Israel has also struck a severe blow to Iran's chain of command, killing at least 11 top generals and, in some cases, their replacements. On Tuesday the IDF said it had killed the acting armed forces commander, Maj Gen Ali Shadmani, who had been in the post for only four days, after his predecessor was targeted in the first wave of strikes on Friday morning. 'Iran is completely naked and we have full freedom of action. This is an unprecedented achievement,' an IDF general staff officer told the newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth. Iran continued to threaten Israeli cities however, with its senior army commander echoing Israeli methods by calling for the residents of Haifa and Tel Aviv to evacuate immediately. If those threats prove empty and IDF claims of its dominance are borne out, it will leave Iran with few cards to play. The Iranian parliament has prepared a bill that would withdraw Iran from the 1968 nuclear non-proliferation treaty, so that it would no longer be legally bound to forgo nuclear weapons, but the government insists it remains opposed to all weapons of mass destruction. State TV has also aired calls from hardline politicians suggesting that Iran block the strategically important strait of Hormuz, potentially stopping the passage of more than 17m barrels of oil a day and producing a dramatic spike in world oil prices and global inflation. On Tuesday, the International Atomic Energy Agency confirmed that Israeli bombing sorties on the enrichment plant in Natanz had penetrated to its underground levels. But, as the war enters its sixth day, the focus of key decisions in Israel and the US is likely to be the underground facility at Fordow, near the religious centre of Qom, which houses Iran's stockpile of highly enriched uranium as well as an enrichment plant. However, Kelsey Davenport, the director for nonproliferation policy at the Arms Control Association, said its presence was not likely to be relevant to military calculations 'Blowing up the stockpiles at Fordow would release a limited amount of radiation and chemical toxicity from the UF6, but it would be confined to the site,' Davenport said. 'There may be a very slight risk that if Iran has enough 60 percent enriched uranium stored at the site, an explosion could trigger a chain reaction. But I would be very surprised if that is the reason Fordow is not being bombed. Israel knows it cannot destroy the site.'

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