
Nuclear site destroyed and top military chiefs wiped out as Israel unleashes airstrikes after years-long covert op that saw Mossad set up secret drone base INSIDE Iran - as Middle East war threatens to boil over into WW3
Israel launched an unprecedented offensive against arch foe Iran overnight, battering its nuclear and missile launch facilities, decapitating its military command and leaving the region teetering on the brink of all-out war.
Operation Rising Lion, as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has dubbed it, is the culmination of years of research and planning by Israel's military and Mossad intelligence agency to prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons.
It also constitutes the greatest military threat Iran has faced since its full-scale war with Iraq in the 1980s.
Netanyahu styled the shocking attacks as a ' pre-emptive strike ' on Iran's fledgling nuclear programme, warning that intelligence suggested Tehran was 'approaching the point of no return' in its decades-long pursuit of a nuclear deterrence.
But not only did the strikes target dozens of military and nuclear installations, including Iran's prized Natanz Fuel Enrichment Plant (NEP), they cut off the head of the Islamic Republic's military command structure.
Armed Forces Chief of Staff Mohammad Bagheri, Commander of the Revolutionary Guards (IRGC), Hossein Salami, IRGC Aerospace Forces commander Ali Hajizadeh and Commander of Khatem al-Anbiya (Emergency Command), Khatem-Gulam Ali Rashid were all confirmed dead along with several other high-ranking figures.
A host of Iran's leading nuclear scientists including Dr. Mohammad Mehdi Tehranchi, project supervisor of the Islamic Republic's Amad plan to test nuclear weapons, and Fereydoon Abbasi, the former head of Iran's Atomic Energy Organisation, also perished in the attacks.
Mossad successfully pulled off a daring covert operation designed to cripple Iran's air defences and allow Israel's war planes to launch their attacks safely.
This included deploying precision-guided weapons in open areas near Iranian surface-to-air missile systems sites, advanced technology used against Iran's air defence systems and the establishment of an attack-drone base near Tehran, a security source told Reuters.
Analysts warned Israel's attacks went far beyond the level necessary to cripple Iran's nuclear programme and could be seen as an attempt to 'destabilise the regime'.
But Israeli officials have vowed the operation will continue for 'as long as it takes' to achieve their desired aims, raising the prospect of a full-scale war should Iran be forced to respond to further offensives.
Tehran this morning announced Israel's attacks amounted to a 'declaration of war'.
The dramatic escalation only intensifies an already perilous security climate in the Middle East amid Israel's ongoing war in Gaza, the recent fall of Syria's President Bashar al-Assad and ongoing attacks by Yemen's Houthi rebels.
Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei immediately vowed retribution, declaring that Israel would be met with a 'severe punishment' for its 'crimes against our beloved country'.
Around 100 Iranian drones were spotted soaring over Iraq toward Israel early this morning, but all projectiles are believed to have been intercepted by Israeli and Jordanian air defence systems outside of Israeli territory.
This limited response is likely just the first phase in a longer and more coordinated approach from the Islamic Republic.
Lebanon's Hezbollah - long seen as the jewel in the crown of Iran's so-called 'Axis of Resistance' of proxy forces - warned Friday that Israel's strikes 'threaten to ignite the region' but said it had no immediate plans to retaliate.
That Hezbollah appears unwilling to fight back on Iran's behalf suggests that its capabilities have been heavily degraded by Israel's military operations on Iranian proxy forces following Hamas October 7, 2023 attacks.
Explosions rang out across Iran from around 3am local time as Israel said it sent some 200 warplanes to deliver their munitions.
Attacks were reported at sites across Tehran as well as in cities and provinces known to host key nuclear facilities and military installations, including Isfahan - the location of the Natanz FEP - Tabriz, Kermanshah, Arak and Shiraz.
'The underground area of the (Natanz) site was damaged. This area contains a multi-storey enrichment hall with centrifuges, electrical rooms and additional supporting infrastructure,' the Israeli military said in a statement.
'In addition, critical infrastructure enabling the site's continuous operation and the Iranian regime's ongoing efforts to obtain nuclear weapons were targeted,' it added.
Tehran later confirmed nuclear facilities in Khondab and Khorramabad had also suffered strikes.
Early this morning, Israel's military signalled it had completed its operation.
But Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz then issued a statement declaring that the military would 'continue its activities to thwart the Iranian nuclear program and remove threats on the State of Israel', suggesting that subsequent strikes could be in the offing.
'The precise hit on the heads of the commanders of the Revolutionary Guards, the Iranian army and the nuclear scientists, who were all involved in promoting the plan to destroy Israel, is a strong and clear message - those who work to destroy Israel will be eliminated,' he said.
Further strikes have since been reported at more locations across Iran, including in the northwestern province of East Azerbaijan.
Matthew Savill, Director of Military Sciences at the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) think tank, told MailOnline the scale of the attacks by Israel was unprecedented.
'The breadth and scale of these strikes – against senior Iranian officials in addition to nuclear sites – suggest this operation is intended to not just dissuade Iran from pursuing nuclear weapons, but also cripple any potential military response and even to destabilise the regime.
'Targeting of the commander of the IRGC, the head of the conventional military and top advisers are all beyond what is necessary for a purely pre-emptive strike on the nuclear programme.
'Israel has once again demonstrated its considerable conventional military superiority, and the size of the force allegedly assembled for this series of attacks represents the overwhelming bulk of its longer-range strike aircraft.'
Rescue teams work at damaged buildings in Nobonyad Square following Israeli airstrikes on June 13, 2025 in Tehran, Iran
Israel's stunning offensive came just hours after US President Donald Trump urged Netanyahu not to interfere with Iran.
The Trump administration was engaged in negotiations to steer Tehran away from nuclear weapons development, but was forced to evacuate staff from its embassy amid rumblings that Israel was considering an attack.
When asked at the White House yesterday about the possibility of an Israeli strike on Iran, Trump warned an attack at this stage of negotiations could cause a 'massive conflict'.
'It's very simple - not complicated. Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon. Other than that, I want them to be successful. We'll help them be successful. We'll trade with them, we'll do whatever's necessary,' he said.
'I want to have an agreement with Iran. We're fairly close. As long as there is an agreement, I don't want [Israel] going in because I think that would blow it.
'There's a chance of massive conflict. We have a lot of American people in this area, and I said: 'We've gotta tell them to get out because something could happen soon, and I don't want to be the one who didn't give them any warning.'
'We've had very good discussions with Iran. Whether or not we get there, I can't tell you - but it'll happen soon.'
Washington sought to distance itself from the attacks this morning, with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio insisting that Israel had taken 'unilateral' action against Iran.
'We are not involved in strikes against Iran and our top priority is protecting American forces in the region,' he said in a statement.
'Let me be clear: Iran should not target US interests or personnel.'
But analysts said it was unlikely that Israel would have conducted attacks of this magnitude without consulting Washington.
And Netanyahu this morning delivered a speech that praised Trump for his condemnation of Iran's nuclear programme and clearly sought to paint Israel and the US as twin targets of Khamenei's regime.
'Remember, Iran calls Israel the Small Satan. It calls America the Great Satan. This is why for decades, it's led millions in the chant 'Death to Israel and death to America', Netanyahu drawled.
'Today, Israel is responding to those genocidal calls with action and a call of our own: Long live Israel and long live America! Our action will help make the world a much safer place'.
He added: 'I want to thank President Trump for his leadership in confronting Iran's nuclear weapons programme. He has made clear time and time again that Iran cannot have a nuclear enrichment programme.'
Trump today declared in a post on his Truth Social platform that 'the next already planned attacks' would be 'even more brutal' and urged Iran to make a deal 'before there is nothing left'.
'I gave Iran chance after chance to make a deal... No matter how close they got, they just couldn't get it done. I told them it would be much worse than anything they know, anticipated, or were told.'
Trump added in separate comments that the United States will defend itself, and Israel, if Iran retaliates. He is also set to hold a meeting with the National Security Council later this morning.
RUSI's Matthew Savill told MailOnline Iran could seek to retaliate against US targets as well as Israeli ones.
'The Iranian response might be delayed or split into multiple phases, but their main weapon will be ballistic missiles, which have the best chance of inflicting damage on Israel, whereas drone and cruise missile attacks will face more extensive Israeli defences.
'Offensive cyber capabilities and terrorist attacks remain an option, but Iran's proxies are much diminished in the region.
'If Iran believes the US or others were involved, then regional targets include the US Fifth Fleet in Bahrain, and air facilities in Qatar, though both would widen the conflict to drag in others.'
The full list of targets struck by Israel is yet to be confirmed, and Iran's known enrichment and centrifuge production facilities are mostly kept underground away from prying eyes.
Natanz FEP, one of Iran's prized nuclear facilities, is located in Isfahan province south of Tehran.
Iran had previously cited the 'possibility' of an air attack from Israel in its decision to shelter the site with some 22 metres of earth, on top of 12 metres of reinforced concrete.
But Israel's bunker-busting bombs appeared to have penetrated these defences.
Iran admitted that Israel's operation had 'damaged several parts of the facility', though it declined to give further information.
The UN's nuclear watchdog (IAEA) confirmed Natanz had been hit but said there appeared to be no sign of radioactive or chemical contamination.
It appears that Israel chose not to target Fordow - Iran's second major enrichment plant after Natanz - which is believed to have been constructed even deeper underground at some 80-90 metres.
Iran has long maintained that its nuclear programme is entirely peaceful, but Israeli and US analysts said that the secrecy surrounding Fordow's operations, and its proximity to a military base, suggest it could be used to produce weapons-grade uranium.
Besides nuclear facilities, Israel's jets, missiles and bombs sought to knock out Iran's missile launch facilities, air defence platforms and missile manufacturing plants.
In October last year, the Air Force attacked a military facility at Parchin (about 30km southeast of Tehran), which is reportedly linked to the Khojir missile production complex.
Israel confirmed today that the Parchin facility was targeted again in this morning's strikes.
The Bakhtaran Missile Base, a site the Nuclear Threat Initiative (NTI) global security organisation assesses to be a 'potential launching point for ballistic missiles against Israel, the Gulf States and Europe', is likely to have been targeted amid the strikes on Kermanshah.
The base houses an underground facility, two munitions storage areas, and missile launch pads.
Other likely targets include the Imam Ali missile base further south, which houses underground silos believed to be capable of launching Shahab-3 missiles.
That missile has a range of about 1,250 miles, which could put Israel and US bases in the Gulf within reach, according to officials in Tehran.
Further south still, a missile production facility in Shiraz is believed to be used to produce fuel and components for Shahab-1/Scud-B missiles, and to conduct research and development.
Production facilities might not pose as immediate a threat as operational military bases, but are desirable targets for an air force looking to cripple functionality.
World leaders urgently called for restraint amid fears Israel's operation could trigger a regional war.
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said the British Government urged 'all parties to step back and reduce tensions urgently' after Israeli strikes on Iran, adding that 'now is the time for restraint, calm and a return to diplomacy'.
Starmer has said stability in the Middle East 'must be the priority'. Reports have suggested Britain will not protect Israel in the event of an Iranian retaliation, having recently sanctioned key Israeli officials and scaled back arms exports over the war in Gaza.
Sir Keir's sentiments were echoed by Foreign Secretary David Lammy, who said stability in the Middle East was 'vital' for global security.
'Further escalation is a serious threat to peace & stability in the region and in no-one's interest,' he said in a post on X.
'This is a dangerous moment & I urge all parties to show restraint.'
Regional states roundly condemned Israel's actions.
Jordan's state media says the country's foreign minister has discussed Israel's strikes on Iran with his Egyptian counterpart, and warned that the attack pushes the region into more tension and conflict.
Jordan News Agency said the ministers called the strikes a 'dangerous escalation and a flagrant violation of international law.'
Egypt and Jordan are among Arab countries that signed peace treaties with Israel and have normal relations with it.
Qatar's Prime Minister declared that Israel's 'absurd actions' continue to 'destroy prospects for peace' and put global security in 'imminent danger', while Saudi Arabia's Foreign Ministry said: 'The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia expresses its strong condemnation and denunciation of the blatant Israeli aggressions... which constitute a clear violation of international laws and norms.'
Bahrain issued a stern condemnation of the attack and warned of 'its grave repercussions on regional security and stability'.
Meanwhile, Europe's leading powers appeared divided.
France urged restraint on all sides, with foreign minister Jean-Noel Barrot writing on X: 'We call on all sides to exercise restraint and avoid any escalation that could undermine regional stability'.
French President Emmanuel Macron has been among Netanyahu's harshest critics in recent months and declared the blockade of Gaza by the Israeli a 'disgrace'.
He is also said to be considering an open endorsement of recognition of an independent Palestinian state at a UN conference next week, a move that would enrage Israel.
But Chancellor Friedrich Merz said he was informed about the attack by Benjamin Netanyahu and said in a statement that Israel has a right to defend itself and Iran should not develop nuclear weapons.
He later added that neither side should seek escalation.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said on X: 'The reports emerging from the Middle East are deeply alarming.
'Europe urges all parties to exercise maximum restraint, de-escalate immediately and refrain from retaliation. A diplomatic resolution is now more urgent than ever.'
EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said in a statement that 'diplomacy remains the best path forward, and I stand ready to support any diplomatic efforts toward de-escalation.'
China said it is ready to play a 'constructive role' in easing tensions between Israel and Iran, but Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Lin Jian said Beijing was against what it described as 'violations of Iran's sovereignty, security, and territorial integrity'.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Scottish Sun
30 minutes ago
- Scottish Sun
RAF fighter jets to be scrambled to Middle East as Israel-Iran conflict spirals and Tehran threatens to strike UK bases
It comes as Iran and Israel teeter on the brink of all-out war WAR FOOTING RAF fighter jets to be scrambled to Middle East as Israel-Iran conflict spirals and Tehran threatens to strike UK bases Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) BRITISH fighter jets are being deployed to the Middle East to protect British assets amid the spiralling Israel-Iran conflict, Sir Keir Starmer says. The Prime Minister bolstered our military presence in the region after Tehran warned the UK that our bases and ships are at risk. Sign up for the Politics newsletter Sign up 7 RAF jets will be deployed to the Middle East to protect British assets 7 It comes after Iran's ballistic missile strikes on Tel Aviv, pictured 7 A building is hit by a missile in Tel Aviv, Israel, on June 13 7 Sir Keir Starmer has decided to scramble British jets to the Middle East The escalation came after Iranian state media said American, British and French military bases would be in the firing line if they blocked Iran's drone and missile retaliation. The Prime Minister, on his way to the G7 summit in Canada, said: 'I will always make the right decisions for the UK and our allies. 'We are moving assets to the region, including jets, and that is for contingency support in the region. "I will be clear-eyed in relation to our duties and obligations and my duties as Prime Minister.' read more politics TUCH RAP Vile chants about PM 'not acceptable' Tuchel tells England fans after Andorra win Military capabilities such as further refuelling aircraft and additional fast jets will be deployed in the wake of the threat – adding to our presence there under Operation Shader. The aircraft started their preparation for heading to the Middle East on Friday morning when Ministers realised the situation was rapidly deteriorating. It comes after Israel launched strikes on Iran's nuclear plants which triggered Tehran to hit back across the country with ballistic missiles - raising fears of an all-out war. Israel vowed "Tehran will burn" after they were hit with four deadly waves of missiles aimed at the Israeli Defence Force (IDF) headquarters in Tel Aviv which have killed at least three people. Sir Keir Starmer's intervention comes after a diplomatic blitz by telephone in the last 48 hours to the leaders of the US, Saudi Arabia and Israel, to calm tensions. Speaking about his conversation with Donald Trump, the PM added: 'I've obviously discussed that with President Trump yesterday, as you would expect, and what the possible routes to de-escalation are given the situation, we find ourselves in. 'I think there's a widespread concern about escalation, everybody can see what's going on and it can have on the region and beyond the region is obvious.' Iran Responds to Israeli Missile Attacks with strikes of its own The PM insisted he will be holding 'intense negotiations' face-to-face with fellow leaders at the G7 on Sunday. He refused to get into any detail on whether he knew about the Israel attack in advance. He said: 'We do have long standing concerns about the nuclear program Iran has. "We do recognize Israel's right to self-defence, but I'm absolutely clear that this needs to de-escalate. He continued: 'There is a huge risk of escalation for the region. More widely in terms of conflict, you can see the impact already on the economy and oil prices. 'And of course, all of this is linked to what's going on in Gaza. So you can see why my strong position is this needs to de-escalate, and that is the primary focus of the discussions that I've been having and will continue to be.' Foreign Secretary David Lammy had conversations with representatives from Iran, Jordan and Saudi Arabia as well as European foreign ministers on Friday. Tensions between Israel, the US and Iran have ramped up in recent weeks, amid negotiations over the Iranian nuclear deal - which is aimed at stopping the country from developing nuclear weapons. The Iranian ballistic missile strikes on Israel descended on the civilian population across the country and managed to severely damage some neighbourhoods in Tel Aviv. The country's defence minister Israel Katz said Iran "crossed red lines after it dared to attack the civilian population" and will now "pay a heavy price for it". He added: "If Khamenei continues to fire missiles at the Israeli home front, Tehran will burn." Russian President Vladimir Putin discussed the conflict between Israel and Iran, as well as efforts towards a Ukraine settlement in a phone call with US counterpart Donald Trump, Russian state media reported Saturday. "The dangerous escalation in the Middle East was of course at the centre of the exchange," the agencies cited the Kremlin as saying. It added that Putin also informed Trump about the "implementation of the agreements reached at the meeting between the Russian and Ukrainian delegations in Istanbul on June 2". 7 Israeli air defence systems do battle with Iranian missiles in the skies Credit: AP 7 The first strikes hit Tehran in the early hours of Friday Credit: AP


The Guardian
30 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Israel claims it has gained control of airspace over Tehran
Israel has claimed to have gained control of the skies over the Iranian capital and warned that 'Tehran will burn' if more missiles are fired at its territory, but the Iranian leadership remained defiant, vowing a 'more severe and powerful response' and threatened to widen the war by striking ships and bases of Israeli allies. The mutual threats reflected the risks of a dramatic escalation in the conflict, as US-Iranian negotiations planned before the war in Oman were abandoned after Tehran said they would be 'meaningless', and Israel appeared to target Iran's gas industry. Israeli rhetoric reflected its leaders' growing confidence that they have gained the upper hand, and raised questions over whether Israeli war aims could go beyond the stated objective of crippling Iran's nuclear programme. The threat to destroy Tehran was delivered by Israel's defence minister, Israel Katz, after Iran responded to the surprise Israeli attack on Friday morning with a barrage of several hundred ballistic missiles and drones, a small percentage of which succeeded in penetrating Israeli defences and killed three people in Tel Aviv and Rishon LeZion. Katz, whose forces have already razed large parts of Gaza, held Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, responsible for Tehran's fate. 'The Iranian dictator is taking the citizens of Iran hostage, bringing about a reality in which they, and especially Tehran's residents, will pay a heavy price for the flagrant harm inflicted upon Israel's citizens,' Katz said. 'If Khamenei continues to fire missiles at the Israeli home front, Tehran will burn.' The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) targeted the air defences around the capital city on Saturday morning and became increasingly confident they had achieved complete air superiority and freedom of action. 'The aerial roadTehran is effectively open,' an IDF official said. Later in the day, Benjamin Netanyahu said: 'In the very near future, you will see Israeli air force jets over the skies of Tehran.' Air force warplanes, the Israeli prime minister said, would target 'any site and any target of the Ayatollah regime', after dealing a 'real blow' to Iran's nuclear programme. A few hours later, Iranian media reported a 'massive explosion' at a refinery in the port city of Kangan, linked to the South Pars gas field, the world's largest. The media reports said it had been struck by an Israeli drone, which would be the first attack on Iran's oil and gas industry, a development with potentially huge economic and environmental consequences. The IDF did not immediately comment on the attack, and Iran's oil ministry said the resulting fire had been extinguished by late evening. Iranian leaders maintained a defiant front. The president, Masoud Pezeshkian, pledged that continued Israeli attacks would produce a 'more severe and powerful response', the new Revolutionary Guards commander vowed his forces would 'open the gates of hell' on Israel, and Iranian state media quoted officials as warning the US, UK and France that their military bases and ships will be targeted if they helped shoot down Iran's missiles and drones. The US and France have already stated their readiness to defend Israel, and American media reports have suggested that US forces have already been in action. The UK government has said its forces had not provided any military assistance to Israel and the prime minister, Keir Starmer, has emphasised the need for de-escalation. Following through on the threat would be an enormous gamble for Iran, drawing western forces further into the conflict when it is already reeling under the force of sustained Israeli bombing. Speaking at a session of the UN security council on Friday, the US diplomat McCoy Pitt warned: 'No government proxy or independent actor should target American citizens, American bases or other American infrastructure in the region. The consequences for Iran would be dire.' At the same time, Israel's air defences have shown themselves capable of minimising the danger posed by Iranian missiles and drones. The IDF said Iran had so far fired about 200 ballistic missiles at Israel and launched more than that number of drones but claimed the overwhelming majority had been intercepted. The Iranian response has also been further blunted by Israel's targeted killing of Tehran's senior generals, almost completely wiping out the top echelons of the chain of the command. On Saturday, the IDF claimed to have killed two more: the head of intelligence for the armed forces, Gholam-Reza Marhabi, and the commander of the Revolutionary Guards' ballistic missile arm, Mohammad Hossein Bagheri. In total since the start of the war, the IDF said Israeli warplanes had attacked 150 targets inside Iran with hundreds of munitions. Iranian state media said that a fighter jet hangar at Tehran's Mehrabad airport had also been targeted. Iran's state TV said about 60 people, including 20 children, had been killed in an attack on a housing complex in Tehran. Iran's envoy to the UN security council, Amir Saeid Iravani, said on Friday that 78 people had been killed in the Israeli attacks, and that more than 320 were injured, most of them civilians. Alongside Iran's top generals there were nine nuclear scientists among the dead, as Tehran was caught unawares by the Israeli assault. An IDF official described the targeted scientists as the 'people who were main sources of knowledge, the main forces advancing the nuclear programme'. The Iranian government also said there was limited damage at its uranium enrichment plant at Fordow, its second enrichment facility but Israel denied having bombed it. . On Friday, the IDF claimed to have inflicted 'significant damage' at the plant at Natanz. The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) confirmed the above-ground part of the Natanz plant had been destroyed but noted no apparent damage to its underground chambers. An IAEA report said that attacks caused radiological and chemical contamination in the Natanz facility, but that it was manageable and there was no sign of higher radiation in the area around the plant. Iran also said there had been attacks on its nuclear site in Isfahan, which houses a uranium conversion plant, a fuel production unit and other facilities. The IAEA reminded Israel that attacks on nuclear sites were illegal and contrary to the UN charter, with a potential to cause 'radioactive releases with grave consequences'. Israel's justification for its attack on Iran was that the country was getting unacceptably close to acquiring a nuclear weapon, and specifically that it was working on weaponisation, the assembly of components into a warhead. That is a claim not found in US intelligence assessments or in IAEA reports. An IDF official on Saturday gave more details of Israel's allegation, claiming that Iranian technicians had been working on an explosive trigger mechanism for a nuclear bomb, and that part of that work was being done in Isfahan. 'We have seen clear intelligence indicating that they are taking steps forward rapidly, that cannot be understood in any other way than for a nuclear bomb,' the official said. Israelis in Tel Aviv and other cities spent the dawn hours on Saturday in shelters as a new barrage of Iranian missiles headed towards them, while the IDF said it had intercepted incoming drones in the skies above the Dead Sea. Later in the morning, sirens went off in the West Bank and in northern Israel, near the Sea of Galilee. The worst casualties from the incoming missiles were in the West Bank, where five Palestinians, including three children, were killed, according to the Palestinian Red Crescent, reportedly by a projectile fired by Houthi forces in Yemen, who are Iranian allies. Over the first 24 hours of the conflict, three Israelis were also killed, two in Rishon LeZion and one in nearby Tel Aviv, with dozens injured and extensive damage to buildings. There were reports from Gaza of Israeli shooting of large numbers of Palestinians trying to reach food distribution points, but details were hard to confirm on the third day of a communications blackout after the severing of a critical cable by Israeli forces. The few missiles that pierced Israel's defences caused significant damage but few fatalities. In Tel Aviv on Friday night, smoke from one impact site rose up in columns so thick they obscured the city skyline. Israel's ambulance service said 34 people were injured on Friday night in the Tel Aviv area, most with minor injuries. Police later said one person had died. Another two people were confirmed killed in a direct missile strike on central Israel on Saturday morning. The Israeli leadership and the IDF have insisted that its offensive against Iran, called Rising Lion, would continue until Tehran's nuclear programme – which Netanyahu said was on the brink of producing weapons – was comprehensively destroyed. Addressing the UN security council, the IAEA director-general, Rafael Grossi, warned of the potentially disastrous consequences of such attacks. The US role in the Israeli operation remained murky. In the run-up to the Israeli 200-plane attack, Donald Trump had publicly urged Israel to give diplomacy more of a chance before US-Iranian talks that were planned for Sunday. On Friday, the US president insisted he had been well informed of Israel's plans and described the Israeli attack as 'excellent'. ABC quoted a 'source familiar with the intelligence' as saying the US had provided 'exquisite' intelligence and would help defend Israel as needed.


Reuters
42 minutes ago
- Reuters
Britain moving jets to Middle East to support regional security, PM Starmer says
LONDON, June 14 (Reuters) - Britain is moving additional military assets, including fighter jets, to the Middle East to provide support across the region, Prime Minister Keir Starmer told reporters on Saturday as he was en route to a Group of Seven meeting in Canada. Iran and Israel traded missiles and airstrikes on Saturday, the day after Israel launched an air offensive against its old enemy, killing commanders and scientists and bombing nuclear sites in a stated bid to stop it building an atomic weapon. "We are moving assets to the region, including jets, and that is for contingency support in the region," Starmer said. Britain already has fighter jets in the Middle East as part of an operation to counter threats in Iraq and Syria. Crews began deployment preparations on Friday morning, when it was clear the situation in the region was deteriorating, a spokesperson for the prime minister said. Further refuelling aircraft from British bases have been deployed, and additional fighter jets will be sent, the spokesperson added.