
Trump says Israel-Iran ceasefire is in effect after deal initially faltered
US President Donald Trump has said a ceasefire between Iran and Israel was in effect on Tuesday after the deal initially faltered and the American leader expressed deep frustration with both sides.
Israel had earlier accused Iran of launching missiles into its airspace after the truce was supposed to take effect and the Israeli finance minister vowed 'Tehran will tremble'.
Iran's military denied firing on Israel, state media reported – but explosions boomed and sirens sounded across northern Israel around mid-morning, and an Israeli military official said two Iranian missiles were intercepted.
Mr Trump told reporters at the White House before departing for a Nato summit that in his view, both sides had violated the nascent agreement.
He had particularly strong words for Israel, a close ally, while suggesting Iran may have fired on the country by mistake.
But later he said the deal was saved.
'ISRAEL is not going to attack Iran. All planes will turn around and head home, while doing a friendly 'Plane Wave' to Iran. Nobody will be hurt, the Ceasefire is in effect!' Mr Trump said in his Truth Social post.
Later, however, he announced that Israel had backed off its threat to attack Tehran and would turn its jets around.
Mr Netanyahu's office said Israel struck an Iranian radar site in response to the Iranian missile attack early Tuesday, but Israeli forces held off on something bigger.
Following Mr Trump's conversation with Mr Netanyahu, 'Israel refrained from additional attacks,' Mr Netanyahu's office said.
Mr Netanyahu said late on Tuesday that Israel's war had brought Iran's nuclear programme 'to ruin' in a historic victory.
The conflict, now in its 12th day, began with Israel targeting Iranian nuclear and military sites, saying it could not allow Tehran to develop atomic weapons – and that it feared the Islamic Republic was close. Iran has long maintained that its programme is peaceful.
Many worried the war might widen after the US joined the attacks by dropping bunker-buster bombs over the weekend and Israel expanded the kinds of targets it was hitting.
But after Tehran launched a limited retaliatory strike on a US military base in Qatar on Monday, Mr Trump announced the ceasefire.
The deal got off to a rocky start.
An Israeli military official said Iran launched two missiles at Israel hours into the tenuous ceasefire. Both were intercepted, the official said.
Iranian state television reported that the military denied firing missiles after the start of the ceasefire – while accusing Israel of conducting strikes.
As Mr Trump spoke to reporters at the White House before departing for the Nato summit in the Netherlands, he expressed disappointment with both sides.
Iran 'violated it but Israel violated it too,' Mr Trump said. 'I'm not happy with Israel.'
Mr Trump's frustration was palpable, using an expletive to hammer home his point.
'We basically have two countries that have been fighting so long and so hard that they don't know what the f*** they're doing,' he said.
Later, however, he announced that Israel had backed off its threat to attack Tehran and would turn its jets around.
Mr Netanyahu's office said Israel struck an Iranian radar in response to the Iranian missile attack early Tuesday – but held off on something bigger.
'Following President Trump's conversation with Prime Minister Netanyahu, Israel refrained from additional attacks,' Mr Netanyahu's office said.
Mr Netanyahu said Israel had agreed to a bilateral ceasefire with Iran, in co-ordination with Mr Trump, after the country achieved all of its war goals, including removing the threat of Iran's nuclear and ballistic missile programmes.
Iranian foreign minister Abbas Araghchi said that his country would not fire at Israel if it was not fired upon, but that a 'final decision on the cessation of our military operations will be made later'.
"CONGRATULATIONS WORLD, IT'S TIME FOR PEACE!" –President Donald J. Trump pic.twitter.com/c5u6uneVBY
— The White House (@WhiteHouse) June 23, 2025
It is unclear what role Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran's leader, played in the talks. He said earlier on social media that he would not surrender.
Mr Trump said Tuesday that he was not seeking regime change in Iran, two days after first floating the idea.
'Regime change takes chaos,' Mr Trump told reporters on Air Force One.
Over the weekend, he mused on his social media account that 'if the current Iranian Regime is unable to MAKE IRAN GREAT AGAIN, why wouldn't there be a Regime change???'.
The ceasefire came after hostilities spread further across the region.
Israel's military said Iran launched 20 missiles towards Israel before the ceasefire began on Tuesday morning. Police said they damaged at least three densely packed residential buildings in the city of Beersheba.
First responders said they retrieved four bodies from one building and were searching for more. Earlier, the fire and rescue service said five bodies were found before revising the number downwards. At least 20 people were injured.
Outside, the shells of burned out cars littered the streets. Broken glass and rubble covered the area. Police said some people were injured while inside their apartments' reinforced safe rooms, which are meant to withstand rockets but not direct hits from ballistic missiles.
Iran launched a limited missile attack on Monday on a US military base in Qatar, retaliating for the earlier American bombing of its nuclear sites. The US was warned by Iran in advance, and there were no casualties.
Drones attacked military bases in Iraq overnight, including some housing US troops, the Iraqi army and a US military official said on Tuesday.
A senior US military official said US forces had shot down drones attacking Ain al-Assad in the desert in western Iraq and at a base next to the Baghdad airport, while another one crashed.
No casualties were reported and no group claimed responsibility for the attacks in Iraq. Some Iran-backed Iraqi militias had previously threatened to target US bases if the US attacked Iran.
In Israel, at least 28 people have been killed and more than 1,000 wounded in the war. Israeli strikes on Iran have killed at least 974 people and wounded 3,458 others, according to the Washington-based group Human Rights Activists.
The group, which has provided detailed casualty figures from Iranian unrest, said of those killed, it identified 387 civilians and 268 security force personnel.

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The Guardian
11 minutes ago
- The Guardian
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Spectator
26 minutes ago
- Spectator
Starmer's directionless national security strategy fools no one
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The NSS contains an 'historic commitment to spend 5 per cent of GDP on national security', which is encouraging, but the detail is teeming with devils. First, the date by which the UK is expected to meet this level of spending is 2035. That is at least two general elections away; Vladimir Putin will turn 83 and Donald Trump will be 89, if either is spared. Meanwhile, the Royal Navy's Vanguard-class ballistic missile submarines will be coming out of service. It is a long time away, and it remains a target without any practical steps to reach it. The NSS also widens the scope of 'national security' further than ever before. Including energy policy may seem defensible, but attaching the label to 'green growth', 'inequality' or 'stripping out red tape' starts to stretch credibility. The interdepartmental nature of the 'national security' umbrella is vital – but the danger is that if everything is 'national security', then nothing is. This matters because if the government simply moves spending from one column on its mother of all spreadsheets to another, it does not acquire a new capability. Equally, there is no deterrent effect on Russia or China, or 'Parma or Spain, or any prince of Europe, should dare to invade the borders of my realm' – as Elizabeth I once so neatly put it. If the Prime Minister designates Border Security Command as a 'national security' asset, that is £150 million he had already earmarked, not new investment. The 2008 national security strategy was a serious and systematic attempt, supervised and delivered by Robert Hannigan and Patrick Turner, to design an overarching framework for the defence of the UK and its interests, then develop policies to support that framework. Its 2025 successor does not –by its nature and timing cannot – achieve that same goal. The national security strategy is not all bad; it comes in large part from the pen of the formidable Professor John Bew, who spent five years in Downing Street as foreign policy adviser to four successive prime ministers. But he has been asked to change the tyres on a moving car, creating a strategy around half a dozen other reviews in various stages of progress. There must be very serious concerns now that it is little more than a centripetal instrument for pulling in enough government expenditure nominally to meet our Nato obligations. Our allies are unlikely to be fooled, and our enemies will certainly not be.