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Israel's strikes on Iran just the latest step in Netanyahu's plan to reshape the Middle East

Israel's strikes on Iran just the latest step in Netanyahu's plan to reshape the Middle East

CBC18 hours ago

Israel's attack on Iran, its nuclear sites and its military leadership are part of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's larger ambition to reform the dynamics of the Middle East and vanquish longtime foes.
With the Islamic Republic weakened by the near defeat over the past year of key proxies such as Hamas and Hezbollah, the final — and arguably most dangerous — elements of Israel's military strategy were put in play early Friday local time in Iran.
"Pandora's box has been cast wide open with Israel's sweeping overnight air campaign against Iranian targets — an escalation that risks reshaping the strategic landscape of the Middle East," the London-based Royal United Services Institute said in a briefing note.
"For Tehran, this is not only a tactical loss, but a profound strategic humiliation," said the defence and security think-tank.
Netanyahu outlined his maximalist goals for the military operation in a video statement.
"'Operation Rising Lion' is a targeted operation to roll back the Iranian threat to Israel's survival," he said.
Raising the spectre of what he termed a potential future "nuclear holocaust," Israel's leader said now was the time to destroy Iran's nuclear program before the "tyrants of Tehran" can develop an atomic bomb.
"In recent months, Iran has taken steps it has never taken before to weaponize this enriched uranium," Netanyahu said as justification for the extraordinary and unprecedented attacks on nuclear facilities, military installations and the assassination of key military and scientific leaders.
Nuclear progress?
Iran's actual progress toward making an atomic bomb remains murky.
Does the country have such a weapon at the moment? In a report released just a day earlier by the International Atomic Energy Agency the conclusion appeared to be, likely not.
Do they have the fuel to make one? Probably. Are they hiding things from inspectors? The nuclear watchdog's verdict: most definitely.
Israel says it hit at least one hundred targets, including several nuclear facilities. The heads of Iran's armed forces, its revolutionary guard and its emergency command were all assassinated, as were six top nuclear scientists — some apparently in their homes alongside their families.
Unverified images posted on social media pinpoint missile strikes, with holes punched in the side of concrete buildings where those inside were presumably killed, likely as they slept.
Other reports suggest many of the military leaders were killed together by an Israeli missile taking out an underground command bunker.
Just hours before the attacks, Iran had boasted its forces were at the "highest level" of readiness and there would be payback if Israel attacked — but by afternoon no such retaliation had materialized.
Israel's military reported a token force of 100 hundred Iranian drones had been intercepted outside its borders as they flew over Syrian and Jordanian territory, but Iran's Fars News Agency says no drones were launched.
Caught by surprise
A former cabinet minister for veterans in the first Trump administration noted that the demise of Hezbollah in Lebanon — thanks to Israeli decapitation strikes last summer — combined with December's removal of the Assad regime in Syria to clear a path for Israel's military to operate more freely against Iran.
"What struck me was apparently how unprepared the Iranians were," Robert Wilkie told BBC News.
Israeli security sources reportedly briefed local media that Israel had teams of special operatives on the ground in Iran who launched pre-emptive drone strikes on Iranian ballistic missile launchers to thwart an Iranian response.
Wilkie says the other important factor was U.S. President Donald Trump.
"There's nothing Trump has done that has held the Israelis back — and I think this was their [Israel's] window of opportunity."
In a social media statement following the attacks, the U.S. president offered Iran's leadership what he called "a second chance" to cut a deal on its nuclear program.
The U.S. has been pushing Iran to end its enrichment activities, the precursor to creating nuclear weapons — something Tehran has refused to do. Talks, which have happened since mid-April, appeared to hit a recent impasse, although another round of discussions was set for Sunday in Oman.
Danny Citrinowicz, a senior researcher on Iran with Israel's Institute for National Security Studies, told CBC News he doesn't believe Tehran's leadership is in a position to back down.
"Because it's capitulation — it's surrendering to the West," he said. "What will happen is probably the contrary, more escalation rather than a deal right now."
Iran's foreign minister termed Israel's attacks a "declaration of war" and Muslim countries accused Israel of "blatant aggression."
Qatar's prime minister said Israel had destroyed any prospect for peace and had put global security in imminent danger.
The Washington-based Cato Institute, a libertarian think-tank, offered one of the more scathing assessments, blasting the Netanyahu government for exposing U.S. military installations and citizens in the Middle East to extreme risk.
"Netanyahu has started a war with Iran that has no justification," the group said in a release.
Iran was not on the precipice of acquiring nuclear weapons, the group said, but rather Tehran was attempting to maximize its leverage in negotiations.
Proxy wars
Since Oct. 7, 2023, when Hamas militants attacked southern Israel and killed more than 1,200 people, Israel has been waging immensely destructive battles with the Iranian proxies that surrounded its borders.
While Israel's military and security services scored surprising successes at neutering Hezbollah in Lebanon, the war in Gaza and the staggering cost Israel has inflicted on the civilian population has led to international condemnation and political isolation.
More than 55,000 Palestinians have died in the bombardment and many Western countries, including Canada, have censured Israel for cutting off humanitarian aid and food — deliberately keeping hundreds of thousands of Palestinians in near starvation conditions.
Retaliation cost
Despite the apparent success of the Israeli strikes Friday, analysts noted Iran's military resources remain vast, and its capacity to inflict damage is high.
"The Iranian response might be delayed or split into multiple phases, but its main weapon will be ballistic missiles," said the Royal United Services Institute in its statement. The think-tank also noted Iran could mobilize terror attacks to strike soft targets inside and outside of Israel.
Israel's foreign ministry announced Friday that it was shutting down many of its foreign embassies in response to the presumed threat.
Earlier this week, the website Axios reported Iran had scaled up the manufacture of long-range missiles to around 50 a week, adding to an already immense arsenal of ballistic missiles.
Last November, Iran fired about 180 long-range missiles at Israel, mostly at military targets, in response to Israel's killing of senior Hamas and Hezbollah leaders.
While most of those projectiles were shot down, some did cause damage at Israeli military facilities and in a neighbourhood on the outskirts of Tel Aviv.
Citrinowicz, the Israeli researcher, says Iran's leadership may be pondering the cost of retaliation. While Israel's attacks hit some nuclear locations, others remain intact and functional — for now.
"The Iranians have a huge dilemma in front of them," he said. "They want to attack Israel to rebuild the deterrence equation with Israel — but on the other hand, if they do so, they will be exposed to [more] Israeli attacks."

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Iran retaliates after Israeli strikes targeting its nuclear program and military
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Iran retaliates after Israeli strikes targeting its nuclear program and military

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Iran retaliates after Israeli strikes targeting its nuclear program and military
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Winnipeg Free Press

time5 hours ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Iran retaliates after Israeli strikes targeting its nuclear program and military

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Iran launched retaliatory missile strikes on Israel into Saturday morning, killing at least two people and wounding others, after a series of blistering Israeli attacks on the heart of Iran's nuclear program and its armed forces. Israel's assault used warplanes, as well as drones smuggled into the country in advance, to assault key facilities and kill top generals and scientists. Israel asserted the barrage was necessary before Iran got any closer to building an atomic weapon, although experts and the U.S. government have assessed that Tehran was not actively working on such a weapon before the strikes. It also threw talks between the United States and Iran over an atomic accord into disarray days before the two sides were set to meet Sunday. Iran retaliated by launching drones and later firing waves of ballistic missiles at Israel, where explosions lit the night skies over Jerusalem and Tel Aviv and shook the buildings below. The Israeli military urged civilians, already rattled by the raging Israel-Hamas war in the Gaza Strip, to head to shelter for hours. Iranian missiles strike Israel Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said in a recorded message Friday: 'We will not allow them to escape safely from this great crime they committed.' Iran's U.N. ambassador said 78 people were killed and more than 320 wounded in Israeli attacks. Iran launched waves of missiles at Israel late Friday and early Saturday. A hospital in Tel Aviv treated seven people wounded in the second Iranian barrage; all but one of them had light injuries. Israel's Fire and Rescue Services said they were injured when a projectile hit a building in the city. Hours later, an Iranian missile struck near homes in the central Israeli city of Rishon Lezion, killing two people and injuring 19, according to Israel's paramedic service Magen David Adom. Israel's Fire and Rescue service said four homes were severely damaged. Meanwhile, the sound of explosions and Iranian air defense systems firing at targets echoed across central Tehran shortly after midnight on Saturday. An Associated Press journalist could hear air raid sirens near their home. Iran's semiofficial Tasnim news agency reported a fire at Tehran's Mehrabad International Airport, with a video posted on X of a column of smoke and orange flames rising from what the outlet said was the airport. Israel's paramedic services said 34 people were wounded in the barrage on the Tel Aviv area, including a woman who was critically injured after being trapped under rubble. In Ramat Gan, east of Tel Aviv, an AP journalist saw burned-out cars and at least three damaged houses, including one where the front was nearly entirely torn away. U.S. ground-based air defense systems in the region were helping to shoot down Iranian missiles, said a U.S. official who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the measures. Strikes raise fears of all-out war Israel's ongoing airstrikes and intelligence operation and Iran's retaliation raised concerns about all-out war between the countries and propelled the region, already on edge, into even greater upheaval. Countries in the region condemned Israel's attack, while leaders around the globe called for immediate deescalation from both sides. Israel had long threatened such a strike, and successive American administrations sought to prevent it, fearing it would ignite a wider conflict across the Middle East and possibly be ineffective at destroying Iran's dispersed and hardened nuclear program. But a confluence of developments triggered by Hamas' Oct. 7, 2023, attack — plus the reelection of U.S. President Donald Trump — created the conditions that allowed Israel to finally follow through on its threats. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the U.S. was informed in advance of the attack. On Thursday, Iran was censured by the U.N.'s atomic watchdog for not complying with obligations meant to prevent it from developing a nuclear weapon. Israel's military said about 200 aircraft were involved in the initial attack on about 100 targets. Its Mossad spy agency positioned explosive drones and precision weapons inside Iran ahead of time, and used them to target Iranian air defenses and missile launchers near Tehran, according to two security officials who spoke on condition of anonymity. It was not possible to independently corroborate the officials' claims. Among the key sites Israel attacked was Iran's main nuclear enrichment facility in Natanz, where black smoke could be seen rising into the air. It also appeared to strike a second, smaller nuclear enrichment facility in Fordo, about 100 kilometers (60 miles) southeast of Tehran, according to an Iranian news outlet close to the government that reported hearing explosions nearby. Israel said it struck a nuclear research facility in Isfahan, too, and said it destroyed dozens of radar installations and surface-to-air missile launchers in western Iran. Iran confirmed the strike at Isfahan. Israel military spokesman Brig. Gen. Effie Defrin said the Natanz facility was 'significantly damaged' and that the operation was 'still in the beginning.' Above-ground section of Natanz facility destroyed U.N. nuclear chief Rafael Grossi told the Security Council that the above-ground section of the Natanz facility was destroyed. He said all the electrical infrastructure and emergency power generators were destroyed, as well as a section of the facility where uranium was enriched up to 60%. The main centrifuge facility underground did not appear to have been hit, but the loss of power could have damaged the infrastructure there, he said. The first wave of strikes had given Israel 'significant freedom of movement' in Iran's skies, clearing the way for further attacks, according to an Israeli military official who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss details of the attack with the media. Over the past year, Israel has been targeting Iran's air defenses, hitting a radar system for a Russian-made air defense battery in April 2024 and surface-to-air missile sites and missile manufacturing facilities in October. The official said Israel is prepared for an operation that could last up to two weeks, but that there was no firm timeline. Among those killed were three of Iran's top military leaders: one who oversaw the entire armed forces, Gen. Mohammad Bagheri; one who led the paramilitary Revolutionary Guard, Gen. Hossein Salami; and the head of the Guard's ballistic missile program, Gen. Amir Ali Hajizadeh. Netanyahu said the attack had been months in the making. In a video statement sent to journalists Friday, he said he ordered plans for the attack last November, soon after the killing of Hassan Nasrallah, the leader of Hezbollah in Lebanon, one of Iran's strongest proxies. Netanyahu said the attack was planned for April but was postponed. In its first response Friday, Iran fired more than 100 drones at Israel. Israel said the drones were being intercepted outside its airspace, and it was not immediately clear whether any got through. Israel's military said it called up reservists and began stationing troops throughout the country as it braced for further retaliation from Iran or Iranian proxy groups. Trump urged Iran on Friday to reach a deal with the U.S. on its nuclear program, warning on his Truth Social platform that Israel's attacks 'will only get worse.' 'Iran must make a deal, before there is nothing left, and save what was once known as the Iranian Empire,' he wrote. ___ Lidman and Frankel reported from Jerusalem.

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