Live: Israel strikes Teheran prison, access routes to Iran's Fordow nuclear site
This handout satellite image provided by Maxar Technologies shows the Fordow Fuel Enrichment Plant in central Iran on 14 June 2025.
Photo:
AFP
Israel has carried out fresh strikes against Iran including on the capital Tehran and the Iranian nuclear facility at Fordow, a target of the US attack at the weekend.
Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz confirmed the notorious Evin prison had been targeted, alongside several other sites, including the flagship building of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard. Corps.
Iran's air defense systems have been activated to intercept "hostile targets" in Ahvaz city, in the southwest region of the country, state-affiliated Fars News Agency reported today.
- CNN / Reuters
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Iran attacks US base in Qatar, Trump says time to make peace
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Iran's National Security Council confirmed having targeted the base "in response to the US aggressive and insolent action against Iran's nuclear sites and facilities". In its statement, the council said the number of missiles used "was the same as the number of bombs that the US had used", in a signal that it had calibrated its response to be directly proportional. After more than a week of Israeli strikes on nuclear and military targets across Iran, the United States joined its ally's campaign on Sunday, carrying out attacks on three key Iranian nuclear facilities, including on an underground uranium enrichment facility at Fordo using massive bunker-busting bombs. US President Donald Trump. Photo: AFP / Brendan Smialowski "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 posted on his Truth Social platform after the attack, thanking Tehran "for giving us early notice, which made it possible for no lives to be lost, and nobody to be injured". Adding that Iran had "gotten it all out of their 'system'," he said: "Perhaps Iran can now proceed to Peace and Harmony in the Region, and I will enthusiastically encourage Israel to do the same." The New York Times, citing Iranian officials, reported that the response had been designed to allow "all sides an exit ramp", drawing a parallel to a similar Iranian attack on a US base in Iraq following Washington's assassination of top Iranian general in 2020. 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This combination of handout satellite photos obtained from Planet Labs PBC on June 19, 2025, of a photo taken on June 5, 2025 (L) shows military planes at the US military base of Al-Udeid in Qatar, and a photo taken June 19, 2025 (R) showing no more planes at the US military base of Al-Udeid in Qatar, one of the main US bases in the region. Photo: Handout/AFP AFP reporters heard blasts in central Doha and in Lusail, north of the capital, on Monday evening, and saw projectiles moving across the night sky. The US defence official said Al Udeid was "attacked by short-range and medium-range ballistic missiles", and Ansari said it had been evacuated as a precaution ahead of time. Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps said six missiles had hit the base, according to state media. Iranians gathered in central Tehran on Monday night to celebrate the attack, images on state TV showed, with some waving the flag of the Islamic republic and chanting "Death to America". Earlier in the day, Qatar had announced the temporary closure of its airspace in light of "developments in the region", while foreign embassies there including that of the United States had warned their citizens to shelter in place. After the attack, Qatar said "the security situation in the country is stable, and there is no cause for concern". Just as Iran was announcing the new attacks, blasts were heard in the north of Tehran, according to an AFP journalist, who reported yellow flashes typical of Iranian air defences in the sky over the capital shortly before 9:00pm (17:30 GMT). Earlier in the day Israel reported carrying out what it said were its most powerful strikes yet on Tehran. Iran, in turn, fired missile barrages at Israel. 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RNZ News
44 minutes ago
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Live: Donald Trump claims ceasefire agreed between Iran and Israel
Iranians check an Iranian Red Crescent ambulance that was destroyed during an Israeli strike, displayed in Tehran on 23 June 2025. Photo: AFP / Atta Kenare Qatar has condemned Iran for attacking the US' Al Udeid Air Base, calling it "a flagrant violation of Qatar's sovereignty and airspace". Iran fired missiles in response to a US attack on Iranian nuclear facilities at the weekend. Explosions were heard over Qatar's capital Doha on Monday, a Reuters witness reported, shortly after a Western diplomat said there had been a credible Iranian threat against the base. Iranian state TV later said the country had begun an operation against a US base in Qatar. Qatar said it reserved the right to respond directly and in accordance with international law. Israel had earlier carried out fresh strikes against Iran including on the capital Tehran and the Iranian nuclear facility at Fordow, a target of the US attack at the weekend. Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz confirmed the notorious Evin prison had been targeted, alongside several other sites, including the flagship building of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard. Corps. - Reuters / CNN

RNZ News
an hour ago
- RNZ News
These strikes look like an Iranian escalation. They're likely the opposite
By Eric Tlozek , ABC Members of the Mexican Association of Islamic Women and some Iranian women march to the Iranian Embassy in Mexico City. Photo: GERARDO VIEYRA/NurPhoto Analysis - Iran has decided to retaliate to the US attack on its nuclear sites with a symbolic and overtly telegraphed strike that has caused no casualties. Iran gave advance notice that allowed the US base to be evacuated and Qatar's air defences to be prepared, with Patriot batteries in the Gulf state shooting down the Iranian missiles. From the outset Iran specified that it didn't attack "the brotherly nation of Qatar", only the huge US base it hosts at Al Udeid. In that, Iran may have misjudged Qatar. It has a very different relationship with Qatar to the near-client state dominance it had over Iraq when it tried the same tactic there in 2020. "We affirm that Qatar reserves the right to respond directly in a manner equivalent with the nature and scale of this brazen aggression, in line with international law," Qatar's government said. Other Gulf states were similarly angry, with Saudi Arabia placing "all of its capabilities" at Qatar's disposal. This is a huge step for a nation that eight years ago was reportedly considering invading its small neighbour (it instead imposed a three-year blockade, along with the UAE, Bahrain and Egypt). Qatar carefully builds alliances and influence and maintains difficult relationships, even with Israel. It will not appreciate Iran using it as a theatre for retaliation, even a symbolic one. Iran may have thought it was demonstrating to Gulf nations that there is a price for hosting US troops, but instead it has angered the countries that had been restoring ties and condemning the US and Israeli strikes. However, Iran appears to have correctly read the US in choosing this option of symbolic rather than escalatory retaliation - likely because it has done it before. In 2020 Iran struck US bases in Iraq in retaliation for the US assassination of senior general Qassem Soleimani. Iraq was given advance warning of the strikes, the Americans were ready (although many US personnel suffered blast trauma) and the US did not strike back. By avoiding casualties among US personnel at Al Udeid - a criteria Trump gave early in this new conflict for preventing US retaliation - Iran is hoping to signal it doesn't want further conflict with the US. The US looks like it is going to "take the win", as former president Joe Biden once said about an earlier round of Iranian strikes against Israel. Iran is clearly looking for an off-ramp and the US wants them to return, significantly weakened, to nuclear control negotiations. Nothing has so far dissuaded Israel, however, which is expanding its strikes to include Iranian military and security agencies that directly support the clerical regime. The US might say it wants the conflict to end in negotiations, without regime change, but Israel has given no sign that it is ready to stop. - ABC