logo
Live Updates: Iran's State Television Announces Cease-Fire With Israel

Live Updates: Iran's State Television Announces Cease-Fire With Israel

New York Times3 hours ago

F.B.I. and Department of Homeland Security officials held a call with state and local law enforcement officials on Sunday to warn of potential consequences of U.S. action in Iran.
Federal officials are increasingly concerned about the possibility of Iran or its supporters retaliating on American soil after the bombing of nuclear sites in Iran by U.S. forces.
In an internal email on Sunday, top officials at the F.B.I. cautioned that Iran and its proxies have 'historically targeted U.S. interests in response to geopolitical events, and they are likely to increase their efforts in the near term.'
They urged field offices to monitor their collection platforms and stay in close contact with the Defense Department, including the National Guard, 'who may be targeted for retaliation' while 'specific attention should be paid to' U.S. military facilities connected to the strikes in Iran.
In New York City, Mayor Eric Adams said that more police officers would be on duty around religious, cultural and diplomatic sites 'out of an abundance of caution,' given the situation in the Middle East.
Iran, which the United States has designated as a state sponsor of terrorism, has long backed a network of militias across the Middle East in an attempt to extend its influence across the region and undermine Israel. Those militias include Hamas, Hezbollah and the Houthis, who control parts of Yemen.
Separately, the Department of Homeland Security issued a security bulletin stating that the 'ongoing Iran conflict' had elevated security concerns in the country and adding that cyberattacks by pro-Iranian hackers were likely.
'The likelihood of violent extremists in the homeland independently mobilizing to violence in response to the conflict would likely increase if Iranian leadership issued a religious ruling calling for retaliatory violence against targets in the homeland,' the bulletin said.
It noted that 'cyberactors affiliated with the Iranian government may conduct attacks against U.S. networks.'
Such advisories are typical after American forces take significant military action overseas, reflecting a worry by national security officials that people living in the United States may be angry or compelled to lash out. The relationship between Iran and the United States is particularly fraught in recent years, particularly given that U.S. officials have accused Iran of trying to assassinate American officials, as well as Iranian dissidents in the country.
In a conference call on Sunday, D.H.S. and F.B.I. officials cautioned state and local law enforcement officials of the possibility of threats to U.S. communities. During the call, the nonprofit organization Secure Community Network, which provides safety consulting and training for Jewish facilities across North America, said that the level of threats was very high.
'Iran would not strike in the U.S. unless a red line was crossed,' said Michael Masters, the group's chief executive, according to a summary of the call. 'That red line was assessed to be direct military engagement, especially targeting Iran's nuclear facilities. That red line has now been crossed.'
The bulletin by the Department of Homeland Security said that the Iran-Israel war 'could also motivate violent extremists and hate crime perpetrators seeking to attack targets perceived to be Jewish, pro-Israel, or linked to the US government or military in the homeland.'
Former F.B.I. officials said the bureau was well versed in these situations and would ask informants to find out if there were any new threats while scrutinizing existing cases, including possible surveillance of those being investigated.
In its email on Sunday, the F.B.I. said to prioritize tips potentially associated with Iran or its proxies.
Carlos Fernandez, a former senior F.B.I. agent in charge of New York's counterterrorism division, said the agents had to take seriously the possibility of sleeper cells in the United States, especially since Iran has been accused of plotting to kill President Trump before the election and a human-rights activist in Brooklyn.
Indeed, the bureau has also uncovered members of Hezbollah, who trained in Lebanon but then moved to the United States, where they were eventually arrested in Michigan and New York and charged with terrorism.
'It's very real,' he said. 'It's a legitimate concern.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump announces Iran, Israel cease-fire is 'now in effect'
Trump announces Iran, Israel cease-fire is 'now in effect'

UPI

time14 minutes ago

  • UPI

Trump announces Iran, Israel cease-fire is 'now in effect'

1 of 6 | Protesters march against U.S. involvement in the Israel-Iran war in downtown Los Angeles on Saturday. Late Monday afternoon Eastern time, President Donald Trump announced a cease-fire between Israel and Iran. Photo by Jim Ruymen/UPI | License Photo June 23 (UPI) -- President Donald Trump early Tuesday announced a cease-fire between Israel and Iran was in effect, seven hours after he announced plans for the truce, half a day after Iran struck a U.S. military base in Qatar and 11 days after Israel's first airstrikes. After his 6 p.m. Monday truce plans, Trump posted on Truth Social after 1 a.m. EDT: "THE CEASEFIRE IS NOW IN EFFECT. PLEASE DO NOT VIOLATE IT! DONALD J. TRUMP, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES!" On Tuesday morning in Iran and Israel, media in both countries reported the cease-fire began after strikes were reported on both sides. Earlier, Trump posted on Truth Social that the war pause would take effect just after midnight on the U.S. East Coast, with the war slated to officially end a day later. The U.S. president said there are two 12-hour cease-fire periods, starting with Iran and then Israel. Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said his nation would stop fighting if Israel stops strikes, posting on X: "The military operations of our powerful Armed Forces to punish Israel for its aggression continued until the very last minute, at 4 a.m. [8 p.m. EDT[." Israel hadn't confirmed the cease-fire and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was meeting with his security cabinet, a source told CNN. "During each CEASEFIRE, the other side will remain PEACEFUL and RESPECTFUL." Trump wrote. "On the assumption that everything works as it should, which it will, I would like to congratulate both Countries, Israel and Iran, on having the Stamina, Courage, and Intelligence to end, what should be called, 'THE 12 DAY WAR'. This is a War that could have gone on for years, and destroyed the entire Middle East, but it didn't, and never will! God bless Israel, God bless Iran, God bless the Middle East, God bless the United States of America, and GOD BLESS THE WORLD!" Trump later told NBC News in an interview that "I think the cease-fire is unlimited. It's going to go forever." Trump said he doesn't believe Israel and Iran "will ever be shooting at each other again." And in a follow-up post on Truth Social at 10:18 p.m., Trump wrote: "Israel & Iran came to me, almost simultaneously, and said, "PEACE!" I knew the time was NOW. The World, and the Middle East, are the real WINNERS! Both Nations will see tremendous LOVE, PEACE, AND PROSPERITY in their futures. They have so much to gain, and yet, so much to lose if they stray from the road of RIGHTEOUSNESS & TRUTH. The future for Israel & Iran is UNLIMITED, & filled with great PROMISE. GOD BLESS YOU BOTH!" Trump and his U.S. Vice President JD Vance negotiated with top Qatari leaders, who took the proposal to Iran, a diplomat told NBC News and CNN. Trump spoke with Netanyahu and Emir of Qatar Tamim bin Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani. "We were actually working on that just as I left the White House to come over here," Vance told Fox News. "So that's good news, that the president was able to get that across the finish line." Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who also is Trump's National Security adviser, and Special Envoy Steve Witkoff negotiated the terms, CNN reported. The United States entered the war early Sunday with B-2 bomber airstrikes on three nuclear sites two days ago in an effort to present Iran from having an atomic bomb. The seven planes took 18 hours to fly from Missouri to Iran. Decoys also flew west to Guam. After Trump's announcement, Israel military told residents in the Tehran neighborhoods of Mehran and District 6 that it will carry out operations there. And Iran warned people in the Ramat Gan suburb of Tel Aviv to evacuate, according to the semi-official Mehr News Agency. A residential building in southern Israel took a "direct hit" from an Iranian missile strike early Tuesday in the city of Beer Sheva , according to Israel's emergency services, Magen David Alom. At least three people were killed and six others were being treated with light to moderate injuries,. Before Trump's announcement, Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei posted on X: "Those who know the Iranian people and their history know that the Iranian nation isn't a nation that surrenders." It was his first comments since U.S. struck the nation. Iran strikes major U.S. base Iran retaliated though it gave the United States advance notice it would strike the U.S. airbase in Qatar. Qatar's defense ministry said its air defenses "successfully" intercepted the missiles, and there were no deaths or injuries. The U.S. also used Patriots to stop the missiles. The base in Doha was attacked "by short-range and medium-range ballistic missiles originating from Iran," a U.S. defense official told CNN. "At this time, there are no reports of U.S. casualties," the official said. "We are monitoring this situation closely and will provide more information as it becomes available." Iran's Armed Forces said they "targeted the Al Udaid base in Qatar with destructive and forceful missiles," according to a statement obtained by The New York Times. "The Islamic Republic of Iran, relying on Almighty God and the faithful, proud people of Iran, will never leave any aggression against its territorial integrity, sovereignty, or national security unanswered," the statement read. Iran said it used the same number of bombs the U.S. used to strike Iranian nuclear facilities, the secretariat of Iran's Supreme National Security Council said. The seven B-2's dropped 14 GBU-57 Massive Ordnance Penetrators. U.S. Tomahawk missiles also were used. Trump thanked Iran for giving advance notice of the airstrikes. "Iran has officially responded to our Obliteration of their Nuclear Facilities with a very weak response, which we expected, and have very effectively countered," Trump wrote on Truth Social. "There have been 14 missiles fired - 13 were knocked down, and 1 was 'set free,' because it was headed in a nonthreatening direction. I am pleased to report that NO Americans were harmed, and hardly any damage was done. Most importantly, they've gotten it all out of their "system," and there will, hopefully, be no further HATE." Qatar called the attack "a flagrant violation of Qatar's sovereignty and airspace." "We affirm that the state of Qatar reserves the right to respond directly, proportionate to the nature and scale of this blatant aggression and in accordance with international law," Majed Al-Ansari, a spokesperson for the Qatari Foreign Ministry, said in a statement Monday. Video by CNN shows burning debris falling next to a highway in Qatar after Iranian missiles fired at US base Al-Udeid were intercepted. Air raid sirens sounded in Bahrain, which is close to Qatar and where the U.S. Fifth Fleet is headquartered. In addition to Qatar, United Arab Emrites, Kuwait and Iraq closed their airspace. But they later were reopened. Airspace remains closed in Iran but flights resumes in Israel on Monday. U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Dan Caine were in the Situation Room, a White House official told CNN. The New York Times reported loud booms were heard in Doha, the capital of Qatar. Lights were going upward, apparently part of a missile defense system, and some objects were seen falling to earth. The base, which is heavily fortified, has been on high alert in the past few days for Iranian retaliatory attack after missiles targeted nuclear facilities early Sunday local time. The base is the headquarters of U.S. Central Command and has 10,000 military and civilian personnel. Non-sheltered American planes were moved from the base, according to a satellite image taken Thursday that shows tarmacs nearly empty. Also, all U.S. Navy ships deployed at the base Bahrain left port last week. The U.S. has two aircraft carriers in the region -- the USS Carl Vinson and the USS Nomitz -- and the USS Ford, the newest carrier in the 11-ship fleet, will deploy from Norfolk Va., this week. Destroyers are part of the strike group. The State Department has also begun organizing departure flights from Israel, and Americans can leave through Jordan via land crossings. Approximately 250 U.S. citizens, permanent residents and their immediate family members departed Israel on U.S.-facilitated flights, a State Department official said Monday. The United States has not fought Iran since the B-2 bombers' attacks. Israeli attacks Israel's military targeted Iran's Evin prison in Tehran where dissidents and political prisoners are held. France's foreign minister condemned the strikes on the prison, which houses two French nationals. "The strike aimed at Evin Prison in Tehran put in danger two of our nationals, Cecile Kohler and Jacques Paris, hostages for the past three years. It's inacceptable," Jean-Noël Barrot said in a post on X. The Israeli strikes on Tehran also damaged the main power lines in the northern part of Iran's capital, according to the Iranian government-affiliated Mehr news agency. The area has more than 1 million people. In Vienna, Rafael Grossi, the head of the U.N.'s nuclear watchdog, warned on Monday at an emergency meeting in Vienna that "violence and destruction could reach unimaginable levels" if Iran, Israel and the United States do not find a pathway to diplomacy.

Oil slumps, rand climbs as Trump announces Iran-Israel ceasefire
Oil slumps, rand climbs as Trump announces Iran-Israel ceasefire

News24

time27 minutes ago

  • News24

Oil slumps, rand climbs as Trump announces Iran-Israel ceasefire

• For more financial news, go to the News24 Business front page. Global shares rallied and the dollar extended declines on Tuesday after US President Donald Trump said Iran and Israel had agreed to a ceasefire, sending oil prices into a deep dive as concerns over supply disruptions ebbed. Writing on his Truth Social site, Trump implied a ceasefire would go into effect in 12 hours, after which the war would be considered "ended". There was no immediate comment yet from Israel. While an Iranian official earlier confirmed that Tehran had agreed to a ceasefire, the country's foreign minister said there would be no cessation of hostilities unless Israel stopped its attacks. Oil prices fell over 3%, having already slid 9% on Monday when Iran made a token retaliation against a U.S. base, which came to nothing and signalled it was done for now. With the immediate threat to the vital Strait of Hormuz shipping lane seemingly over, US crude futures fell another 3.4% to $66.15 per barrel, the lowest since June 11. "With markets now viewing the escalation risk as over, market attention is likely to shift towards the looming tariff deadline in two weeks time," said Prashant Newnaha, senior Asia-Pacific rates strategist at TD Securities. "Our sense is that the quicker than expected resolution to the Middle East conflict leads to expectations for a swifter resolution on tariffs and trade deals." On Tuesday morning, the risk-sensitive rand was trading at R17.77/$ - its best level in more than a week. The Aussie got a lift and last traded 0.3% higher at $0.6480 as did the kiwi, which rose 0.3% to $0.5994. Israel's shekel rallied sharply too, as it jumped 1% against the dollar to its strongest level since February 2023. 'It's obviously positive news for risk sentiment,' said Rodrigo Catril, senior currency strategist at National Australia Bank. 'We need to obviously have a bit more detail in terms of exactly what all this means... I suppose it will be the conditions of the ceasefire, and what are the conditions for a more longer-lasting peace deal.' The dollar, which last week drew support from safe-haven demand, fell broadly in the wake of the news. Adding to headwinds for the dollar were dovish comments from Federal Reserve policymaker Michelle Bowman, who said the US central bank should consider interest rate cuts soon. Bowman's openness to cutting rates soon is supported by Fed Governor Christopher Waller, who said in a television interview last week he'd also consider a rate cut at next month's meeting. 'There appears to be increasing division among the ranks of the Fed board ahead of Fed Chair Powell's testimony,' said Tony Sycamore, a market analyst at IG. 'The chance of a July rate cut... is still underpriced. I think it should be higher than that.' Markets are now pricing in more than a 20% chance the Fed could ease rates in July, up from 14.5% a day ago, according to the CME FedWatch tool. Powell is due to testify before the US Congress on Tuesday and Wednesday, where focus will be on the outlook for U.S. rates. Risk assets rallied, with S&P 500 futures up 0.6% and Nasdaq futures 0.9% higher. EUROSTOXX 50 futures jumped 1.3% and FTSE futures rose 0.4%. The MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan jumped 1.8% while Japan's Nikkei rallied 1.4%. Two sources told Reuters that Japan's tariff negotiator Ryosei Akazawa is arranging his seventh visit to the United States for as early as June 26, aiming to end tariffs that are hurting Japan's economy. China's blue chips rose 1%, while Hong Kong's Hang Seng index gained 1.7%. In cryptocurrencies, bitcoin rose more than 1% to $104,939.26, while ether jumped 2.1% to $2,397.65, in a reflection of the positive risk sentiment. The risk-on mood saw gold prices ease 0.6% to $3,346 an ounce.

Trump claims a ‘forever' peace in the land of forever wars — but is it all one big illusion?
Trump claims a ‘forever' peace in the land of forever wars — but is it all one big illusion?

Yahoo

time37 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Trump claims a ‘forever' peace in the land of forever wars — but is it all one big illusion?

So much for the quagmire. Donald Trump seems to have emerged from the worst crisis in America's estrangement with Iran's Islamic Republic with a win. The president leaped on Tehran's modest missile response Monday to the US pounding of its nuclear sites as a sign it wants to end escalations. 'CONGRATULATIONS WORLD, ITS TIME FOR PEACE!' he posted on Truth Social. Trump's exuberance was a sign that he sees the US involvement in the conflict as over, at least for now. And he followed up by announcing a ceasefire between Iran and Israel due to come into force later Tuesday. Ceasefires in the Middle East are often fragile and fleeting, as was underscored by attacks by both Israel and Iran in the hours before the truce was due to be established. But the president was already trumpeting his chosen image as a peacemaker and consummate deal maker, only 48 hours after US stealth bombers slammed Iran. 'I think the ceasefire is unlimited. It's going to go forever,' Trump told NBC News on Monday night, predicting that Israel and Iran will never 'be shooting at each other again.' That's a bold claim given the Middle East's reputation as a graveyard of American presidencies. And for all Trump's marketing skills, events will decide whether his breakthrough is for real or just another illusion. Has the United States, as Trump claimed, really ensured the 'obliteration' of Iran's nuclear program, an existential threat to Israel? Or is it all a classic Trump mirage, and does the glaring unfinished business of this conflict — an apparently missing stockpile of highly enriched uranium that can be quickly made into a bomb — mean a deeper crisis looms? A quick end to the fighting would shape Trump's presidency and legacy and boost a foreign policy previously marked by failures like the stalled peace effort in Ukraine. But will the world change its mind about the master of chaos if he really does help ease tensions in a blood-soaked region? What is next for Israel? Does Trump trust Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to halt his attacks on Iran? And will Israel finally take steps to relieve the agony of Palestinian civilians, starving and dying by the thousands in the onslaught in Gaza? And in Tehran, will the humiliation of Iran's clerical regime and the splintering of its Middle East network of fear promote a political spring that many of its citizens crave? The president can claim the most significant foreign policy and military success of his time in the Oval Office. Trump made a bet that many skeptics saw as irresponsible — that he could hammer Iran's nuclear plants without plunging the US into a new Middle East quagmire to mirror Iraq. So far, he's been proved right. While Trump might have initially been uneasy about Israel's assault on Iran, which seemed calculated to draw him in, he asserted control and exploited an opening to severely degrade Iran's nuclear program with little cost to the US. After days of public teases, his approach looked like a risky hunch. For sure he got lucky. But he also demonstrated strategic acumen and decisiveness and will always bask in the daring mission by B-2 bombers carrying bunker-buster bombs on a marathon flight from Missouri. If the conflict cools now, Trump may get a domestic political boost, at least in the GOP, and be able to heal rifts in his MAGA base, where some supporters felt he has broken his promise to start no new wars. The crisis also gave important insights into Trump's second presidency. It revealed that he's neither a tool of the remnant Republican hawks nor the 'America First' populists. And a core circle of trust emerged around Trump, including Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Dan Caine, CIA Director John Ratcliffe and presidential envoy Steve Witkoff, according to CNN reporting. The futures of Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth seem less assured, however. The president is also determined to try again to get a deal with Iran to end its nuclear program through negotiations. But he's also shown he's willing to wield overwhelming military force, putting a dent in the caricature of his TACO ('Trump always chickens out') diplomacy. Still, the crisis also highlighted more troubling sides of Trump's leadership. He committed the US to military action without preparing the nation ahead of time and politicized the mission by keeping top Democrats out of the loop. This was only the latest occasion when Trump has shown contempt for Congress's constitutional role and any sense he's the president of all Americans. And he's still not shown Americans intelligence that he used to justify the attacks on the grounds that Iran was weeks away from a weapon. He ignored US spy agencies that found Tehran had taken no such decision to build a bomb. Trump also snubbed US allies and mocked their peace efforts. This was the clearest sign yet of a volatile new global age when the US has decoupled from its alliances and will ruthlessly pursue its own national interests. The president is already writing his preferred version of history of what he calls the '12-Day War.' His claims to have eradicated the Iranian nuclear program already look like a feint to neuter any contrary evidence that emerges. It will be a brave US official who contradicts the president's great victory. The critical question arising from the conflict is unanswered. But in his late-night national address on Saturday, Trump said the objective of the mission was 'the destruction of Iran's nuclear enrichment capacity and a stop to the nuclear threat posed to the world's number one state sponsor of terror.' Early estimates suggest that the Iranian facilities at Isfahan, Natanz and Fordow were severely damaged. But it's far too early for Trump's bravado. The head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, Rafael Grossi, for instance, told CNN's Fareed Zakaria Sunday that Iran had 'protected' a stock of 400 kg of uranium enriched to 60% — just short of the 90% grade needed to make a nuclear bomb. Trump, meanwhile, is convinced that his strategy will bomb Iran back to the negotiating table to talk about a replacement for President Barack Obama's nuclear deal, which Trump trashed in his first term. But Iran's military leaders might take an opposite lesson from the conflict — that the only way for the revolution to survive is to acquire a nuclear bomb that will deter future attacks. There's no sign yet that Trump's condition for a deal — a verifiable end to Iranian uranium enrichment — will be acceptable to Tehran. 'From a nonproliferation perspective, Trump's decision to strike Iran was a reckless, irresponsible escalation that is likely to push Iran closer to nuclear weapons in the long term,' said Kelsey Davenport of the Arms Control Association. 'The strikes did damage key Iranian nuclear facilities, like the underground Fordow enrichment site. But Tehran had ample time prior to the strikes to remove its stockpile of near-weapons-grade uranium to a covert location, and it's likely that they did so.' Nonproliferation expert Joseph Cirincione told CNN's Phil Mattingly on 'The Lead' that it was impossible to bomb away Iran's knowledge or enriched uranium and that it could build back its facilities. He warned that the missing uranium could be inserted by Iran into any new centrifuges it has to create the core of a bomb within five days and 10 bombs within three weeks. 'That is my greatest concern. Are they racing to develop that weapon before the US or Israel can find the gas or destroy it?' If those fears are realized, Trump's victory lap and Republican adulation will be remembered as pure political negligence and the catalyst for an even worse global crisis in future. Iran's lobbing of missiles toward a vast US base in Qatar, easily thwarted by US and Qatari counter-measures, revealed weakness after it ceded control of its own airspace to Israeli jets. Tehran's grip has also weakened outside its borders. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps' regional network — Hezbollah in Lebanon, Hamas in Gaza and the Houthis in Yemen — was once seen as Iran's insurance policy against Israeli attacks on its nuclear program. But 20 months of Israeli attacks devastated its proxies and left their sponsor exposed. Israel is now a dominant regional power. And US allies like Saudi Arabia and Qatar are ascendent in a transformed Middle East. Uncertainty meanwhile clouds Iran's domestic politics. An already difficult transition as Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's rule enters its twilight is now even more fraught. Outsiders will watch to see whether the regime's grip is loosened when the next of Iran's periodic uprisings erupts. But despite calls for regime change in Washington and Israel, more repression seems likely. Politics are also turbulent in Israel. Netanyahu's unwillingness to reach a ceasefire with Hamas and this zeal to take the fight to Iranian soil are widely seen as a ruse to stay in power amid personal scandals and to forestall an accounting of the October 7, 2023, attacks on his watch. Still, if relative peace returns, Netanyahu may get a political bounce for taking on Iran's nuclear program — a personal calling after decades in power. The Trump-Netanyahu dynamic will also be intriguing. The US president never stops looking for leverage. If he has the inclination, he could exploit the huge debt Israel now owes him to push for a peace agreement in Gaza. This latest scary episode of the Trump show may be about to wrap up. But tune in next week for something equally extreme.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store