
Israel-Iran latest: Israel strikes Iran's largest nuclear research facility after huge explosion rocks Haifa
Iran and Israel launched a new round of strikes early Saturday, a day after Tehran ruled out nuclear talks while under threat and European powers continued efforts to revive diplomacy.
The Israeli military said it had carried out a wave of attacks on missile storage and launch sites across Iran. Israeli defence minister Israel Katz confirmed that among those killed was Saeed Izadi, a senior commander in the Quds Force, the overseas wing of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC).
Iran's Fars news agency reported that Israel had targeted the Isfahan nuclear facility, one of the country's largest, but said there was no leakage of hazardous material. Iranian media also reported an Israeli strike on a building in the city of Qom, where a 16-year-old was reportedly killed and two others injured.
Meanwhile, US president Donald Trump slammed the US intelligence Community's assessment of Iran's nuclear weapons program and claimed Tehran could produce a working weapon within a 'matter of weeks'.
At the United Nations Security Council on Friday, Israel's envoy Danny Danon declared the country would continue its military operations 'until Iran's nuclear threat is dismantled.'
Watch: Russia's defence of Iran shows need to tighten sanctions, says Zelensky
21 June 2025 07:20
Experts say Israel's current strikes on Iran's nuclear installations so far pose only limited risks of contamination, but warn any attack on the country's nuclear power station at Bushehr could cause a nuclear disaster.
Fears of a nuclear catastrophe rippled through the Gulf on Thursday after the Israeli military mistakenly announced a strike in Bushehr, home to Iran's only nuclear power station, only to say later that the announcement was a mistake.
Do Israeli attacks on Iran risk nuclear contamination?
Israel has said it is determined to destroy Iran's nuclear capabilities, while avoiding any nuclear disaster in the region
Shahana Yasmin21 June 2025 07:10
UN nuclear watchdog urges restraint as Israel strikes nuclear-linked sites in Iran
The head of the UN's nuclear watchdog has warned against any military action targeting Iran's nuclear reactors.
At an emergency UN Security Council meeting, IAEA chief Rafael Grossi said: 'I want to make it absolutely and completely clear: In case of an attack on the Bushehr nuclear power plant, a direct hit would result in a very high release of radioactivity to the environment. This is the nuclear site in Iran where the consequences could be most serious.'
So far, Israel has avoided targeting nuclear reactors, focusing instead on Iran's Natanz enrichment site, centrifuge workshops near Tehran, and the Arak heavy water facility.
While initial reports indicated no damage at Arak, the IAEA later confirmed 'key buildings at the facility were damaged,' though no radioactive material was present.
Shahana Yasmin21 June 2025 07:00
Israel says it killed Quds Force commander leading Palestine Corps
Israeli defence minister Israel Katz said on Saturday that the military had killed Saeed Izadi, a senior commander in Iran's Quds Force, during a strike on an apartment in the city of Qom, according to Reuters.
Izadi, who led the Palestine Corps within the Quds Force, the overseas arm of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC), was described as a veteran figure in Iran's regional operations.
Shahana Yasmin21 June 2025 06:47
Who's who in the secret group advising Trump on Iran - who has been left out of the planning?
President Donald Trump let it be known on Thursday that he will make a decision on whether to involve the U.S. in Israel's war with Iran within the next two weeks, as tensions over the question continue to divide conservatives.
The president, who signed off on attack plans on Tuesday but resisted giving the go-ahead, is reportedly taking soundings from a small coterie of trusted advisers while also throwing the conversation open to fellow world leaders, as well as allies such as the hawkish Republican senators Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and Tom Cotton of Arkansas.
Keep reading:
Who's who in the secret group advising Trump on Iran
President Donald Trump is huddling with small circle of trusted advisers about whether to join Israeli military offensive
Joe Sommerlad21 June 2025 06:30
Israel vows to continue strikes until Iran's nuclear programme is dismantled
Israel pledged on Friday to keep up its military offensive against Iran until Tehran's nuclear capabilities are fully dismantled, Reuters reported.
'Though our homes, our families and our children are under threat, we will not stop,' Israeli UN Ambassador Danny Danon told the United Nations Security Council. 'Not until Iran's nuclear threat is dismantled. Not until its war machine is disarmed. Not until our people and yours are safe.'
In response, Iran's ambassador to the UN, Amir Saeid Iravani, called on the Security Council to intervene to halt Israel's attacks.
'Israel apparently declared that it will continue this strike for as many days as it takes,' he said. 'We are alarmed by credible reports that the United States... may be joining this war.'
Shahana Yasmin21 June 2025 06:20
Iran faces near-total internet blackout amid conflict with Israel
As the war between Iran and Israel enters its second week, much of Iran remains in a near-total communication blackout, leaving millions unable to connect with the outside world or even with friends and family across the country.
According to internet monitoring group NetBlocks, Iran has been largely cut off from global internet access for more than 60 hours.
'The internet shutdown continues to severely limit the public's ability to express political viewpoints, communicate freely, and follow safety alerts amid ongoing conflict with Israel,' it said on X, formerly Twitter.
Shahana Yasmin21 June 2025 06:10
Do Israeli attacks on Iran risk nuclear contamination?
Do Israeli attacks on Iran risk nuclear contamination?
Israel has said it is determined to destroy Iran's nuclear capabilities, while avoiding any nuclear disaster in the region
Reuters21 June 2025 06:00
Ex-CIA chief warns US would trigger regional war by striking Iran
Former CIA director and defence secretary Leon Panetta has warned that any US military strike on Iran would almost certainly plunge the country into a wider regional war.
Panetta said the US made a 'terrible mistake' by invading Iraq two decades ago and urged US president Trump to heed the lessons of the past.
'It's a lesson that the president needs to learn, because if he goes in and attacks Iran, then there's no question that the United States would be in a regional war at that point,' Panetta told CNN, adding that Iran would inevitably retaliate.
'So make no mistake about it. It may be an airstrike, but it would definitely involve the United States in a war.'
Shahana Yasmin21 June 2025 05:50
Iran signals openness to diplomacy, but only if Israel halts attacks
Iran has said it is open to pursuing diplomatic talks with European nations, but only on the condition that Israel ends its military operations and those responsible are held to account.
Following a meeting in Geneva with European diplomats, foreign minister Abbas Araghchi expressed 'serious concern' over the failure of France, Germany, the UK, and the EU to condemn what he described as Israel's surprise strike and ongoing aggression against Iran. He warned that any assault on Iran's peaceful nuclear facilities would represent a severe violation of international law.
'I explicitly and clearly stated that Iran's defensive capabilities are not negotiable,' the minister said, reported the Associated Press. However, he added that Iran is ready to keep talking with the Europeans 'in the near future'.
His comments came as Israel's top military commander said the country was preparing for a potentially prolonged conflict.

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The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
The Latest: 2nd week of Israel-Iran war starts with renewed strikes
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BreakingNews.ie
an hour ago
- BreakingNews.ie
Israel-Iran war stretches into a second week without diplomatic breakthrough
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Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Four-star general reveals Iran's Ayatollah isn't cutting peace deal as Trump's countdown begins
Iran isn't cutting a U.S.-brokered peace deal with Israel because its leaders are confident they can rebuild its nuclear program even if it's wiped out, a retired general says. General Jack Keane, the former Vice Chief of Staff to the U.S. Army, told Fox News that Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei believes the country will be able to restart its nuclear bomb with relative ease after the ongoing conflict with Israel ends. The U.S. has not joined the conflict so far. President Trump says he'll decide whether to do so in the next two weeks, after urging Iran to halt its nuclear bomb building. 'The nuclear enterprise is vast, and it is resilient,' Keane told Fox News. '(There are) multiple sites, centrifuges, so you can spin up enriched uranium. They did that to survive.' Keane said the Ayatollah has 'never made a deal' because 'he has built an enterprise to survive an attack' that he believes is strong enough to withstand airstrikes even if President Trump decides to join the conflict. 'He believes they can absorb an attack, survive it, recover from it, and then rebuild. That is where this guy is,' he said. 'I don't see him, in the near term, making a deal here whatsoever.' Keane, a four-star general, was likely referring to Iran's nuclear bomb factory, which is called Fordow and which sits deep under a mountain. The United States' most powerful 'bunker buster' bomb has been touted as a possible match for the Fordow facility, if President Trump decides to join the conflict at the end of a two week deadline he's just announced. Other experts believe a tactical nuclear weapon would be needed. Using a nuclear bomb in an act of war is a huge taboo unbroken since the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945. "I don't see him in the near term making a deal": @gen_jackkeane on the Ayatollah's approach — FOX & Friends (@foxandfriends) June 20, 2025 The general said for Trump to succeed, he needs to 'take the whole enterprise down' and wipe out the nation's top leadership and military capabilities, after Israel significantly weakened Iran in recent weeks. 'Look, Israel have destroyed all 70 of their air defense batteries, all of them. Air force, gone. The 12 nuclear sites, damages or destroyed. Then, leadership (is) decapitated, military and nuclear scientists. They can replace nuclear scientists, but in the near term, major problem.' Iran has long vowed to obliterate Israel at the first chance it gets, with Israeli intelligence beginning their bombing campaign earlier this month over fears leaders in Tehran were just months off completing a nuclear weapon. World leaders and many military strategists have urged Trump to find a diplomatic solution to the crisis, fearing that any direct US intervention could spiral into all-out war. Trump has warned that if Iran don't agree to stop their nuclear weapons program within two weeks, he will commit US forces to join Israel in the conflict. Iran's allies include Russia and China, meaning the stakes for the current conflict could not be higher. Trump has instated a two-week deadline to make a decision, primarily whether to use a 30,000lb 'bunker buster' bomb to penetrate Iran's underground enrichment plant in Fordow. But Keane, who was heavily involved in the Iraq War, said he 'absolutely' believes Trump should use the bunker buster, saying 'the alternative is unacceptable.' He admitted that using the weapon could face challenges as we've never actually done' it before, but insisted 'that doesn't mean you don't do it.' Keane's urging of Trump to use the 'bunker buster' bomb comes as experts say the weapon is one of the only tools in the US military arsenal that could take out the Fordow enrichment site. The 30,000lb bomb is the largest non-nuclear bomb at America's disposal, and can smash through several hundred feet of earth, with the Fordow site said to be located up to 300ft underground. The GBU-57A/B 'bunker buster' bomb, as it is known, is arguably the top military reason that Israel wants the United States to join its air campaign against arch-foe Iran. The US designed and built the Massive Ordnance Penetrator (MOP) and remains the only nation to possess the bomb, as well as being the only country with warplanes capable of dropping its formidable payload. Crucially, it is also the only weapon widely believed to be capable of smashing through Iran's deeply buried nuclear facility at Fordow.