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JD Vance claims US is at war with Iran's nuclear program, not Iran
JD Vance claims US is at war with Iran's nuclear program, not Iran

The Guardian

time8 hours ago

  • Politics
  • The Guardian

JD Vance claims US is at war with Iran's nuclear program, not Iran

JD Vance has said the US is 'not at war' with Iran – but is with its nuclear weapons program, holding out a position that the White House hopes to maintain over the coming days as the Iranian regime considers a retributive response to Saturday's US strike on three of its nuclear installations. In an interview Sunday with NBC News' Meet the Press, the US vice-president was asked if the US was now at war with Iran. 'We're not at war with Iran,' Vance replied. 'We're at war with Iran's nuclear program.' But Vance declined to confirm with absolute certainty that Iran's nuclear sites were completely destroyed, a position that Donald Trump set out in a Saturday night address when the president stated that the targeted Iranian facilities had been 'completely and totally obliterated' in the US strikes. Vance instead said that he believes the US has 'substantially delayed' Iran's ability to develop a nuclear weapon. 'I'm not going to get into sensitive intelligence about what we've seen on the ground there in Iran, but we've seen a lot, and I feel very confident that we've substantially delayed their development of a nuclear weapon, and that was the goal of this attack,' Vance said. He continued: 'Severely damaged versus obliterated – I'm not exactly sure what the difference is. 'What we know is we set their nuclear program back substantially.' An Iranian member of parliament claimed on Sunday that the Fordo enrichment plant, the focus of seven B-2 bombers armed with 14 premier bunker-busters from the US arsenal, was not seriously damaged. Separately, Bloomberg News said satellite images of the site undermined the Trump administration's claims that Iran's underground nuclear sites at Fordo and Natanz had been destroyed. Satellite images distributed by Maxar Technologies showed new craters, possible collapsed tunnel entrances and holes on top of a mountain ridge. But the main support building at the facility remained undamaged, the report said. Maxar said in a statement that images of Natanz showed a new crater about 5.5 meters (18ft) in diameter over the underground facility – but they did not offer conclusive evidence that the 40-meter-deep nuclear engineering site had been breached. The chair of the joint chiefs of staff, Gen Dan Caine, said at a Pentagon briefing on Sunday: 'Final battle damage will take some time, but initial battle damage assessments indicate that all three sites sustained extremely severe damage and destruction.' Nuclear non-proliferation analysts are conflicted on whether the strikes will be effective in bringing Iran to the negotiating table or convince them to move more decisively toward enriching uranium stockpiles to weapons-grade, assembling a bomb, and manufacturing a delivery system. In a statement to Bloomberg, Darya Dolzikova, a senior research fellow at the Royal United Services Institute, said there were slim prospects that the US entering the war would convince Iran to increase International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) cooperation. The nuclear watchdog has said it is not sure where Iran's 400lb stockpile of 60% uranium is. 'The more likely scenario is that they convince Iran that cooperation and transparency don't work and that building deeper facilities and ones not declared openly is more sensible to avoid similar targeting in future,' Dolzikova said.

Israel says it is on track for objectives after Iranian missiles hit Israeli cities
Israel says it is on track for objectives after Iranian missiles hit Israeli cities

CNA

time7 days ago

  • Politics
  • CNA

Israel says it is on track for objectives after Iranian missiles hit Israeli cities

TEL AVIV: Iranian missiles struck major Israeli cities on Monday (Jun 16) while Israel's prime minister said his country was on its way to eliminating "threats" from nuclear and missile facilities in Iran and civilian casualties mounted on both sides. After four days of conflict between the regional foes, Iran said its parliament was preparing a Bill to leave the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), adding that Tehran remained opposed to developing weapons of mass destruction. Passing the Bill could take several weeks, but the move risks stoking deeper concerns about Iran's nuclear programme in Western countries, which have long suspected Tehran wants to build nuclear weapons, a charge Iran denies. "Government has to enforce parliament Bills but such a proposal is just being prepared and we will coordinate in the later stages with parliament," said foreign ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei, when asked at a press conference about Tehran potentially leaving the NPT. Israel, which said its military campaign will escalate in the coming days, began bombing Iran on Friday, saying Tehran was on the verge of building a nuclear bomb and targeting the nuclear and ballistic missile programmes. "We are on our way to achieving our two main objectives: eliminating the nuclear threat and eliminating the missile threat," Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in comments to soldiers at the Tel Nof airbase. Iran has always said its nuclear programme is peaceful, although the United Nations nuclear watchdog the IAEA declared last week that Tehran was in violation of its NPT obligations. Israel is presumed to have a sizable nuclear arsenal but neither confirms nor denies it. It is the only Middle East state that has not signed the NPT. Before dawn on Monday, Iranian missiles struck Israel's Tel Aviv and the port city of Haifa, killing at least eight people and destroying homes, prompting Israel's defence minister to warn that Tehran residents would "pay the price and soon". Israeli authorities said a total of seven missiles fired overnight had landed in Israel. At least 100 people were wounded in Israel. CURRENCY DROPS Israel's military, which has gutted Iran's nuclear and military leadership with airstrikes, said on Monday it had killed four senior intelligence officials, including the head of the elite Revolutionary Guards' intelligence unit. Tehran, facing its worst security breach since the 1979 Islamic revolution toppled a US-backed secular monarch, said dozens of alleged saboteurs and "spies" linked to Israel had been arrested since the start of the conflict. Its currency has lost at least 10 per cent of its value against the US dollar since the start of Israel's attack. The dangers of further escalation loomed over a meeting of G7 leaders in Canada, with US President Donald Trump expressing hope on Sunday that a deal could be done. Geopolitical stability in the Middle East has already been undermined by spillover effects of the Gaza war between Israel and Palestinian militant group Hamas. Iran has watched its longtime foe decimate its regional allies Hamas in the Gaza and Lebanon's Hezbollah with assassinations of their top leaders. In total, 24 people in Israel have been killed so far in the Iranian missile attacks, all of them civilians. The death toll in Iran has reached at least 224, with civilians accounting for 90 per cent of the casualties, an Iranian official said. Iran's state media reported that the Farabi hospital and surrounding areas in the western province of Kermanshah were hit in a missile attack, causing serious material damage. In Israel, search and rescue operations were underway in Haifa, where some 30 people were wounded, emergency services said. Fires were seen burning at a power plant near the port. Video footage showed several missiles over Tel Aviv and explosions could be heard there and over Jerusalem. Several residential buildings in a densely populated neighbourhood of Tel Aviv were destroyed in a strike that blew out the windows of hotels and homes near the US embassy branch in the city. "IT'S TERRIFYING" Guydo Tetelbaun, who was in his apartment in Tel Aviv when the alerts came in shortly after 4am local time, said he headed for a shelter but the door was blown in. "It's terrifying because it's so unknown. This could be the beginning of a long time like this, or it could get worse, or hopefully better, but it's the unknown that's the scariest,' the 31-year-old chef said. The pre-dawn missiles also struck near Shuk HaCarmel, a popular fresh fruit and vegetable market in Tel Aviv. Iran's Revolutionary Guards said the latest attack employed a new method that caused Israel's multi-layered defence systems to target each other and allowed Tehran to successfully hit many targets, without providing further details. The Israeli Defence Force did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the strikes. Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz said in a statement: "The arrogant dictator of Tehran has become a cowardly murderer who targets the civilian home front in Israel to deter the IDF." "The residents of Tehran will pay the price, and soon." Katz later issued a separate statement saying that Israel had no intention of deliberately harming Tehran's residents. Oil prices edged down on Monday, after surging 7 per cent on Friday, as the military strikes by Israel and Iran over the weekend left oil production and export facilities unaffected. While investors remain on edge, stock and currency markets in Asia were little moved.

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