
Israel-Iran latest: Trump suggests US could intervene in conflict
EU foreign ministers will gather on Tuesday for an emergency meeting on the conflict and 'possible next steps' to bring about de-escalation, an official for the bloc's foreign policy chief said.
'In light of the gravity of the situation in the Middle East, EU high representative Kaja Kallas has convened a meeting of EU foreign affairs ministers via video link for Tuesday,' an official said.
By Haroon Janjua
Some residents of Tehran are fleeing the capital. Families are heading towards the more rural and less populated north, situated near the Caspian Sea. Reports suggest that traffic is so congested that movement is difficult.
In Shiraz, long queues for petrol have been seen throughout the city and residents are stocking up on food, water and nappies. Families can be seen in cars loaded with suitcases and water strapped to the roofs, making their way to the countryside.
Israel's military has said several sites have been hit by the latest Iranian missile barrage and firefighters reported that a residential building had been struck on the coast.
'Homefront Command search and rescue teams have been dispatched to several hit sites in Israel, following the latest barrage from Iran,' the military said in a statement shortly after telling the public they could leave protected shelters.
The fire services said rescuers were heading to building on the coast that sustained a 'direct hit'.
Iran's armed forces told Israeli residents to leave the vicinity of 'vital areas' for their safety in a video statement. It was broadcast by state TV at about the time that Iran sent a new barrage of missiles towards Israel.
'We have a data bank of vital and critical areas in occupied territories (Israel) and call upon you not to let the brutal regime use you as human shields. Do not stay or travel near these critical areas,' an armed forces spokesperson said.
Israel's air force has begun striking dozens of surface-to-surface missile targets in western Iran, the military said in a statement.
Israel's strikes have killed at least 406 people in Iran and wounded another 654, according to Human Rights Activists, a group based in Washington which checks local reports against a network of sources.
Earlier, Iranian media reported that the death toll from Israeli strikes on Friday and Saturday had risen to at least 128. Hundreds more were said to have been wounded.
The outbreak of hostilities has stranded 40,000 tourists in Israel, the Ministry of Tourism has calculated. Among them is Karen Tuhrim, from London, visiting her daughter in Tel Aviv.
'Within two days of being here, Israel attacked Iran. So now I'm stuck,' she said. 'For me, at the moment, I feel better being here than in London, watching it all on the news, knowing my daughter is here. So, for now, we're good.'
All Israel's museums have closed until further notice, entrance to the Old City of Jerusalem is barred to non-residents and many shops are closed.
'The streets and shops are empty,' said Anwar Abu Lafi, of Jerusalem. 'People are yearning for a break, to find something good in this existing darkness. We are deluding ourselves into thinking that the future will be better.'
President Trump vetoed an Israeli plan to kill Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran's supreme leader, according to two US officials.
'Have the Iranians killed an American yet? No. Until they do we're not even talking about going after the political leadership,' said a senior official in the Washington administration.
The officials told Reuters that top US and Israeli officials had been in constant communication since the conflict started. The Israelis reported that they had an opportunity to kill Khamenei, but Trump dissuaded them.
Binyamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, told Fox News: 'There are so many false reports of conversations that never happened, and I'm not going to get into that. But I can tell you, I think that we do what we need to do, we'll do what we need to do. And I think the United States knows what is good for the United States.'
Iran 'must not develop or possess nuclear weapons', Friedrich Merz, the German chancellor, has said as he travelled to the G7 summit in Canada.
He defended Israel's decision to launch strikes on Tehran, claiming that 'Iran's progress toward nuclear weapons led to Israel attacking military targets in Iran on Friday'.
He said: 'This would be a threat to Israel, the Middle East, and the international community as a whole.'
Iran's top intelligence chiefs have been eliminated, Benjamin Netanyahu has claimed.
Mohammad Kazemi, the head of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps' intelligence organisation, and his deputy Hassan Mohaqeq are reportedly buried under rubble following an Israeli airstrike on the corps' intelligence headquarters.
Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, told Fox News that they were killed in an IDF attack on the organisation's building in Tehran.
President Erdogan has told President Trump in a phone call that Ankara was ready to play a role in resolving the nuclear dispute that led to the conflict between Israel and Iran.
Erdogan welcomed Trump's latest statement on a possible peace between Iran and Israel, his office said, and urged his US counterpart to take action immediately to prevent a disaster 'that could set the region on fire'.
Israeli intelligence found that Iran had enough uranium to build nine nuclear bombs, Binyamin Netanyahu has said in his first television interview since Israel launched its strikes.
'The intel we got was absolutely clear, Iran was working on a secret plan to weaponise the uranium, a test device in months. We show enough uranium for nine bombs,' the Israeli prime minister told Fox News.
'We had to stop that. That was the intel we shared with the United States and that was something we couldn't ignore. We will not have a second Holocaust, a Jewish Holocaust. Never again is now and we have to act now.'
'They intend to give these nuclear weapons to the Houthis and their proxies. They have plans to develop intercontinental ballistic missiles (capable of) reaching the eastern seaboard of the United States.
'We had to act. It was the 12th hour. We acted to save ourselves but by doing so we're protecting many others.'
Israel's military says it has bombed an Iranian refuelling plane at Mashhad airport in northeast Iran. The airport is 2,300km from Israel, which the Israel Defence Forces said would make this the 'most distant strike since the beginning of the operation'.
By Josie Ensor, US Correspondent
Top Pentagon officials have been divided over the extent of American military support for Israel, US media reports suggest.
General Michael Kurilla, chief of US Central Command, is among those requesting more resources to support and defend Israel, including a second aircraft carrier strike group, according to Semafor.
Elbridge Colby, the undersecretary of defence for policy, has resisted their requests. He has long opposed moving US military assets from Asia to the Middle East.
There are wider rifts in President Trump's circle, roughly along the lines of hawks versus doves.
While JD Vance, vice-president, and Steve Witkoff, Middle East envoy, have pushed for detente with Iran through a new nuclear deal, cabinet figures including Mike Waltz, the former national security adviser, and Marco Rubio, the secretary of state, have called for a maximalist approach.
President Macron, who is visiting Greenland, has called for a return to negotiations over Iran's nuclear programme.
'I hope that the coming hours will bring calm and a road forward for discussion, to avoid any escalation of nuclear capabilities, acquisition of nuclear capacities in Iran, and to prevent any unrest in the region,' he said.
'Yesterday (Saturday) I was able to speak with the president of Iran, and I called for a discussion among us as soon as possible. This is also what I conveyed in my conversation with President Trump, who shares this vision.
'We will have the opportunity, in a few hours, to revisit this matter with G7 leaders' who are meeting in Canada until Tuesday, he added.
President Trump has said it was possible that the US 'could get involved' in the conflict between Israel and Iran. America was 'not at this moment involved', he told ABC News.
Trump also said that he would be open to President Putin mediating between Israel and Iran. 'He is ready. He called me about it. We had a long talk about it, ' Trump said.
Five car bombs detonated in Tehran this afternoon, according to Iran's IRNA news agency. Each went off at a different location and some reports said that all were close to government buildings.
An Israeli official, speaking to the public broadcaster KAN, denied any Israeli involvement.
The ballistic missile attack on Israel is the first launched by Tehran in daylight since the conflict began.
Another airline has cancelled flights in the region because of escalating risks to flying in the region. Etihad Airways has cancelled flights between Abu Dhabi and Tel Aviv until June 22.
Kirill Dmitriev, Russia's envoy for investment and economic co-operation, said in a post on X that Moscow could play 'a key role' in mediating between Israel and Iran.
Dmitriev was responding to a post from President Trump in which he said he had spoken about the conflict to President Putin.
Israel's military says there have been no reports of missile impacts within the country. Tehran claimed to have fired 50 ballistic missiles, but Israel said the attack comprised just 'several'.
At least 14 Iranian nuclear scientists have been killed in Israeli attacks since Friday, including in car bombs, according to sources in the Gulf.
President Trump has just posted the following on Truth Social:
'Iran and Israel should make a deal, and will make a deal, just like I got India and Pakistan to make, in that case by using TRADE with the United States to bring reason, cohesion, and sanity into the talks with two excellent leaders who were able to quickly make a decision and STOP! Also, during my first term, Serbia and Kosovo were going at it hot and heavy, as they have for many decades, and this long time conflict was ready to break out into WAR. I stopped it (Biden has hurt the longer term prospects with some very stupid decisions, but I will fix it, again!). Another case is Egypt and Ethiopia, and their fight over a massive dam that is having an effect on the magnificent Nile River. There is peace, at least for now, because of my intervention, and it will stay that way! Likewise, we will have PEACE, soon, between Israel and Iran! Many calls and meetings now taking place. I do a lot, and never get credit for anything, but that's OK, the PEOPLE understand. MAKE THE MIDDLE EAST GREAT AGAIN!'
Explosions have been heard in Tel Aviv. The IDF said: 'A short while ago, the IDF identified missiles launched from Iran toward the territory of the State of Israel.
'Defensive systems are operating to intercept the threat. Upon receiving an alert, the public is instructed to enter a protected space and remain there until further notice.'
Iranian state media is reporting the launch of a fresh wave of ballistic missiles towards Israel.
In Israel, air raid sirens are reported to have been sounded in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv.
Gaza's civil defence agency said 16 people were killed today in Israeli military operations in the Palestinian territory, most of them while waiting for aid.
At least three were killed and many injured when Israeli forces 'targeted a gathering of hundreds of citizens near the aid distribution point' in central Gaza.
Mahmud Bassal, civil defence spokesman, claimed that seven were killed while heading towards an area northwest of Gaza City where aid was being distributed from lorries.
In southern Gaza, two more died and 50 were injured 'when (Israeli) forces opened fire on citizens near an aid distribution point,' Bassal said.
The Israeli army said it was 'not aware of gunshots near Netzarim or Rafah' and that it was investigating events in northern Gaza.
The death toll in Iran from Israeli strikes on Friday and Saturday has risen to at least 128, Iranian media says. Hundreds more were said to have been wounded.
At least '128 people were martyred in these military attacks, and around 900 injured individuals were admitted' to hospitals, said Etemaad Daily, quoting numbers from the health ministry.
At least 40 women were among the dead and the 'number of martyred children is significant', the report claimed.
Continuing the war of words, Iran's President Pezeshkian said that any further attacks on Israel will be 'more decisive and severe'.
Pezeshkian added that Iran's military has so far responded 'strongly and appropriately', state media in Tehran reported.
The hardline national security minister Itamar Ben-Gvir also visited Bat Yam on Sunday and said Israel was 'at peace' with the price paid by Iran's attacks.
'We are at peace with this … and God willing, the State of Israel will win,' he said, and claimed Israel was 'obligated' to attack Iran.
'We worked on the campaign against Iran for a very long time. It was clear to all of us that an Iranian nuclear weapon is the most serious thing that could happen and therefore we took into account what could happen if there were an Iranian nuclear weapon,' he added.
Last week, Ben-Gvir was sanctioned by the British government for 'repeated incitements of violence against Palestinian communities'.
A social media star from north London has been in central Tel Aviv since June 4 for a holiday and work trip and said the escalating attacks from Iran were 'really frightening'.
Zach Margolin, 31, has booked himself three flights on June 18, 19 and 20 to give himself the best chance of getting home for his sister's wedding next weekend.
'It's really frightening. Last night was the most I've seen or felt,' he said. 'We could hear enormous explosions, we could hear the Iron Dome flying up and then the building is shaking. It's proper explosions.'
On Friday night, he rushed from his central Tel Aviv Airbnb at 10pm, 1am and 5am as sirens signalled missiles were headed towards the city.
'You'd be crazy not to be afraid. I've been to Israel many times during sirens, and usual protocol is you go in the shelter, wait ten minutes and then go out, but this is a different beast,' he said. 'It's not one missile from Yemen, or rockets from Gaza — it's hundreds of ballistic missiles coming from Iran.'
He added: 'Ideally the UK government should be putting on a repatriation flight. The only update [from the Foreign Office] is don't go to Israel.'
Binyamin Netanyahu has said that Iran will pay 'a very heavy price' for killing Israeli civilians, in the first reported remarks during his visit to Bat Yam.
'Iran will pay a very heavy price for the premeditated murder of civilians, women and children,' Netanyahu said during his visit.
At least six people were killed during the Iranian attack, including a child. Israeli media said another three people were missing.
A British grandfather stranded in Jerusalem said he is weighing up a bus escape through the Negev desert to flee Iranian missile fire.
James Eden, 72, from Newcastle-upon-Tyne, flew to Israel last Monday for a six-day Christian pilgrimage.
But now he is trapped in a near-deserted city with missiles flying overhead and outbound flights suspended.
Eden said that although the Foreign Office had called him, he was told 'there wasn't a lot they could do'.
He said: 'They can't put on any planes because the airspace is shut — all they can do is send out alerts and keep track of us.'
When he asked about crossing the border, officials told him he could travel to Egypt at his own risk, 'but they're not going to help me get out of Egypt either'.
A FCDO spokesperson said: 'We're in contact with a British man in Israel.'
Lord Hogan-Howe, the former Metropolitan Police commissioner, said a 'strict eye' must be kept on the Iranian threat to the UK.
The Times Radio presenter Adam Boulton asked him if Britons should fear Iranian terrorist activity in this country.
He replied: 'I think there's certainly evidence that this country (already) has been targeted.
'I think the question now is, are there going to be state-backed plans to attack this country rather than just people in this country?
'So I think… all the security services and the police are going to have to be aware of that.
'If there's not a negotiated end [to the conflict] and this runs on for years, as we've already had problems in the Middle East, you're going to have to keep a very strict eye on what the Iranian state might be thinking about in the UK.'
Binyamin Netanyahu, Israel's prime minister, has toured areas of Bat Yam that were destroyed in overnight strikes by Iranian missiles.
Although there was no statement from the Israeli leader, footage showed him inspecting the ruins of an apartment building in the city. Six residents of the building died in the attack.
Isaac Herzog, the Israeli president, was also present, according to The Times of Israel website.
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'Dozens of homes in this area were completely damaged by a single missile launched from Iran in a cruel and terrible missile attack that was launched across the entire country,' Herzog said.
He added: 'This is a very significant moment in the history of Israel. We must show the emotional and mental resilience that we always have.'
Israel's military has said its air force targeted 'more than 80' positions in Iran's capital Tehran overnight.
The strikes were conducted 'throughout the night', the military said in a statement, and 'targeted more than 80 objectives, including the headquarters of the Iranian Ministry of Defence, the headquarters of the nuclear project (SPND), and additional targets where the Iranian regime hid the nuclear archive'.
Iranians will be able seek shelter in mosques and schools during any Israeli attacks, as well as subway systems, which will be open at all times from tonight, a government spokesperson, Fatemeh Mohajerani, told state TV .
'There is no problem with the provision of food, medicine, fuel,' she added.
Iran's nuclear programme is a threat to the security of Israel and Europe, France's foreign minister has claimed, saying diplomacy was the only way to avoid an escalation in the conflict.
'The Iranian nuclear programme is an existential threat for the security of Israel and beyond the security of Europe. We always said the best way to prevent that threat, to contain it, remains diplomacy,' Jean-Noel Barrot told RTL radio.
Germany, France and Britain are ready to hold immediate talks with Iran over Tehran's nuclear programme in an effort to de-escalate the situation in the Middle East, Johann Wadephul, the German foreign minister, said.
On Sunday morning Israel's ambassador to Britain, Tzipi Hotovely, told the BBC that Europe 'owes a huge thank you' to Israel for the strikes.
Fresh explosions have been heard in Tehran, the AFP news agency is reporting.
At the same time, the Iranian news outlets Khabar Online and Ham Mihan reported that air defence systems over the west and northwest of the Iranian capital had been activated 'to counter new attacks', while Shargh daily shared a video of columns of smoke in the city's east.
The Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office has updated its guidance to advise against all travel to Israel amid the conflict with Iran.
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Iran has asked Cyprus to convey 'some messages' to Israel, President Christodoulides has said, adding that he expected to speak to Binyamin Netanyahu, the prime minister of Israel, later in the day.
Christodoulides said he was not happy with what he described as a slow reaction by the European Union to the unfolding crisis in the Middle East.
Cyprus is the closest EU member state to the growing conflict and has asked for an extraordinary meeting of the EU Foreign Affairs Council.
Darren Jones, the chief secretary to the Treasury, has not ruled out repatriation flights from Israel.
The Times Radio presenter Adam Boulton asked Rachel Reeves's number two whether there would be repatriation flights, and whether the government would change its advice on travel to Israel.
Jones replied: 'It's for the Foreign Office to confirm the travel advice in the normal way.
'It's not appropriate for us to speculate about Foreign Office travel advice, because it has real-world implications for people who may or may not be travelling in terms of their tickets with airlines and hotel bookings.'
Boulton asked him: 'Would you organise flights to get people out? Because obviously there's problems with the airspace.'
Jones responded: 'Again, that would be something for the Foreign Office to answer in due course.'
By Tom Witherow
The Foreign Office advice for Britons not to travel to Israel will be significant for many people.
Britain was in the top three nations to visit Israel last year with 80,000 tourists, meaning the UK was behind only France and the USA.
Last month, when Jews celebrated Passover, the number of Britons heading to Israel more than doubled to 14,700 compared with the same month in 2024.
But any hope that tourist numbers from the UK were recovering will now be dashed.
Israel's tourism industry has already been decimated by the war, with the number of tourists falling from a pre-Covid high of 4.9 million in 2019 to 1 million in 2024.
Israelis living in Bat Yam near Tel Aviv spoke of their shock after their homes were destroyed in an Iranian missile strike.
'There's nothing left. No house. That's it,' Yivgenya Dudka told the AFP news agency.
Shahar Ben Zion said he had been reluctant to go down into the bomb shelter but was persuaded by his mother. 'There was an explosion and I thought the whole house had collapsed,' he said. 'Thank God, it was a miracle we survived.'
Julia Zilbergoltz told AFP she was woken by the explosion having slept through the warning siren early on Sunday morning. ''I'm stressed and in shock. I've been through hard times in my life but I've never been in a situation like this,' she said as she left with her belongings.
Iran says it has arrested two people over alleged links to Israel's Mossad spy agency, claiming they were preparing explosives and electronic devices.
'Two members of the Mossad terrorist team who were making bombs, explosives, booby traps and electronic equipment were arrested' in Alborz province, west of Tehran, the Tasnim news agency reported.
Rachel Reeves has warned that the conflict between Israel and Iran could lead to higher levels of inflation.
The chancellor said that 'what happens in the Middle East affects us here at home' as she pointed to the fact that oil prices had risen by 10 per cent.
She also highlighted concerns that Iran could close the Strait of Hormuz, one of the world's most important shipping routes.
She said: 'We are very concerned about the developments in the Middle East because of the implications here at home but also in the Middle East.'
By Steven Swinford, Political Editor
Britain is poised to advise against all travel to Israel amid concerns about the escalating conflict with Iran.
The government will update its travel guidance from 'amber' to 'red', putting Israel on the same footing as Iran.
On Friday the UK advised against all but 'essential' travel to Israel. It is now going a step further and advising against all travel entirely.
There are thousands of British citizens in Israel and ministers are drawing up contingency plans to evacuate them. However, they are unlikely to be carried out quickly because Israeli airspace is closed and there are no land routes out of the country.
By Gabrielle Weiniger, reporting from the city
You can tell that people are seeking a semblance of normality by the number of coffee shops that are open, more than in the past two days. Some adventurers are even playing volleyball or swimming in the sea — but there is no doubt that Tel Aviv is quieter and more sombre than in recent memory.
Israelis are horrified by the climbing toll from an Iranian strike in Bat Yam, an outer suburb of the city. The extent of the destruction is not something people are used to here.
Some locals have turned off the news — a background hum for many homes in the country — because they could not bear to witness the carnage as rescue workers try to recover people stuck beneath the rubble.
The mayor of Bat Yam said at least 20 people were unaccounted for after Saturday night's strike, which is confirmed to have killed six people and injured 180 more.
Flights to and from Israel have been grounded for a third consecutive day during the exchange of strikes with Iran.
The effect of the airspace closure on Friday was mapped by the tracking site Flightradar24.
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Iran was posing an 'imminent threat' before the strikes on its nuclear weapons program, Israel's ambassador to Britain has said.
Tzipi Hotovely told Laura Kuenssberg on the BBC: 'They were racing fast to get nuclear bombs with the combination of enrichment and weaponisation. We had to move fast to operate against Iran's nuclear ambitions.'
She said Europe 'owes a huge thank you' to Israel for the strikes. 'Our region would have been a place that is not safe for anyone if Iran had accomplished their plan,' Hotovely said.
'There was an imminent threat … Our enemies are saying clearly they want to eliminate Israel … We should believe them.'
An Israeli oil-refining company has reported damage to pipelines in Haifa, northern Israel, from Iran's overnight missile salvo.
Bazan said its refining facilities were still running, with no injuries, but that some parts of the complex had been shut down.
In a statement to the stock exchange this morning quoted by Globes, the company said that it is 'examining the impact on its operations' including the financial implications for the energy sector as well as an assessment on the damage and repairs needed. Attacks on Israeli energy production are rare.
The UK government is calling for 'calm heads' and de-escalation, Rachel Reeves has said.
The chancellor told Sky News on Sunday that it was right for Britain to send combat jets to the Middle East to protect its assets in the region. 'It does not mean that we are at war. It does not mean that we have been involved in these strikes and this conflict. It's a precautionary move.'
However, Reeves did not rule out British assets being used to defend Israel. 'The prime minister and our allies are urging for de-escalation, that is what is really critical now, calm heads and a de-escalation of the conflict,' she said.
Doubts remain about how effectively Israel can hit Tehran's nuclear programme but there is room for escalation — and danger of catastrophic miscalculation, Mark Urban writes
Israel's military has told Iranians to evacuate 'military production factories', suggesting further strikes are likely.
Avichay Adraee, a spokesman for the Israel Defence Forces, issued an 'urgent warning to all Iranian citizens'.
It reads: 'All individuals who are currently or will soon be inside or near military weapons production factories and their supporting institutions must immediately evacuate these areas and not return until further notice.'
Earlier on Sunday Iran's foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, said Iran would cease fire if Israel did the same. He also claimed that Israel had 'crossed a new red line' by targeting nuclear facilities.
Britain, France and Germany are ready to hold 'immediate negotiations' with Iran about its nuclear programme, according to the German foreign minister.
Johann Wadephul said he hoped talks were still possible despite the cancellation of a US-Iran meeting due to be held in Oman on Sunday.
'Germany, together with France and Britain are ready,' he told the German broadcaster ARD. 'We're offering Iran immediate negotiations about the nuclear programme. I hope it is accepted.
'This is also a key prerequisite for reaching a pacification of this conflict, that Iran presents no danger to the region, for the state of Israel or to Europe.'
The Houthi rebels in Yemen say they have attacked Israel in co-ordination with the Iranian army.
Several ballistic missiles were fired towards the port of Jaffa near Tel Aviv, a spokesman said. He described the strikes as 'triumphing for the oppressed Palestinian and Iranian peoples'.
It followed reports from Israeli media that Israel targeted a meeting of senior Houthi leadership in Yemen on Saturday night.
Israel's military said it had hit Iran's defence ministry headquarters and other military targets linked to the country's 'nuclear weapons project'.
Explosions were heard in Tehran at about 2.30am on Sunday. Fuel depots were also hit during the 'larege-scale wave of attacks' by fighter jets, the IDF added. 'These targets advance the effort to obtain nuclear weapons,' the military said in a post on social media.
Iranian authorities have so far not issued any updates on damage or casualties. The first wave of Israeli strikes from Friday night into Saturday morning killed 78 people and wounded 320, according to Amir-Saeid Iravani, Iran's UN ambassador.
President Trump has threatened Iran with 'the full strength and might of the US armed forces' if it targets the United States.
It follows reports in Iranian media that Tehran had warned the US, the UK and France that it would strike their military bases and naval vessels in the region if they chose to defend Israel.
Trump insisted that the US had 'nothing to do with' Israel's latest attack on Iran overnight.
He added: 'If we are attacked in any way, shape or form by Iran, the full strength and might of the U.S. Armed Forces will come down on you at levels never seen before.'
Trump also claimed that the conflict could be ended 'easily' with a deal between Israel and Iran.
Iran launched a new wave of missile strikes on Israel overnight, killing at least ten people including a ten-year-old boy.
Residents rushed to bomb shelters after air raid sirens sounded in Tel Aviv, Jerusalem and Haifa shortly after 11pm local time.
Strikes were reported in Rehovot and Bat Yam near Tel Aviv, in western Galilee and in the Haifa region.
Six people were killed in Bat Yam, where at least 35 people were said to be missing after an eight-storey building was hit, according to officials. More than 140 were injured in the attacks, according to Israel's ambulance service.
Four other women were said to have been killed in strikes elsewhere.
Binyamin Netanyahu, Israel's prime minister, has toured areas of Bat Yam that were destroyed in overnight strikes by Iranian missiles.
Although there was no statement from the Israeli leader, footage showed him inspecting the ruins of an apartment building in the city. Six residents of the building died in the attack.
The Israeli president Isaac Herzog was also present, according to The Times of Israel website.
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'Dozens of homes in this area were completely damaged by a single missile launched from Iran in a cruel and terrible missile attack that was launched across the entire country,' Herzog said.
He added: 'This is a very significant moment in the history of Israel. We must show the emotional and mental resilience that we always have.'
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The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
What Trump must decide in his two week pause on the Israel-Iran conflict
Britain, France, Germany and the European Union are all rushing their foreign ministers to Geneva for talks with Iran in the desperate attempt to give peace a chance. But it is not clear that peace now is the best option. A week into Israel's bombardment of Iran, and its assassination of its top nuclear scientists and securocrats, the Islamic State has tightened its grip – and the nuclear facilities half a mile underground in Fordow remain intact. If Iran is brought back to the negotiating table at Geneva, whatever it says, the last week has shown that the only future for the survival of the current rulers of Tehran is to build a nuclear weapon. From the Israeli and American perspective, they may feel the only way to ensure this doesn't happen is to double down on the targeting of Iran and change the regime. On top of that Russia, a close ally of Tehran and part of a Fearsome Foursome that includes North Korea and China, will see diplomacy now as an opportunity to stop regime change and reinforce its waning influence in the Middle East. Before the planned Geneva meeting, David Lammy said: 'We are determined that Iran must never have a nuclear weapon.' Trying to slow the imminent sense of global war, Donald Trump has said that he's pausing any decision on backing Israel for a couple of weeks because he wants to give diplomacy a chance. In terms of strikes, the US has the only weapon that could, conceivably, destroy the Fordow nuclear programme 18 miles north of the central Iranian city of Qom half a mile under ground: the GBU-57/B, is a MOP – Massive Ordinance Penetrator. It weighs 13.6 tonnes, is 6.2m long but only 0.8m wide and carries about 2.5 tonnes of explosive. It can penetrate 60m of rock before exploding as it hits the ground like a needle travelling at around double the speed of sound. It would take several MOPs to clear up Fordow and wipe away Iran's nuclear programme – with no guarantee of a clean slate. If the Iranian government that took power after the 1979 revolution - and maintains control through a vast network of military and security services underpinned by the Basij citizen's militia - survived this assault, it would be surprising if it did not secretly re-start building nukes to ensure that next time Israel thinks twice about bombing the capital and killings Iran's commanders. 'A window now exists within the next two weeks to achieve a diplomatic solution,' said Mr Lammy. 'Now is the time to put a stop to the grave scenes in the Middle East and prevent a regional escalation that would benefit no one." It might, though. Assuming that Trump's advisers have somehow got around the bizarre characters he has put in charge of defence, Pete Hegseth, and the intelligence services, Tulsi Gabbard, they will be helping him wrestle with a conundrum. Should America go back into the business of regime change – which failed horribly in Iran and Afghanistan and left both nations ruined, riddled with extremism, and deeply anti-American? In theory, the US could join the Israeli effort at low physical risk to pilots, bomb Fordow, break the back of the regime and stand back to watch Iranians themselves rise against their oppressors. That's what Benjamin Netanyahu would like. Or should the US stay back – give Israel every help in defending itself against Iranian counter attacks – and hope that ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who may be on an Israeli kill list, reckons that the long-term survival of his regime may depend on not returning to developing nuclear weapons. The gamble for the US is that the Iranian government will still harbour the dream of annihilating Israel and, unless it agrees to a 100 per cent intrusive inspection programme by nuclear experts 24/7, it can never be trusted not to clamber back onto a horse of the apocalypse. Iran's foreign minister Abbas Araqchi is expected to join the European talks in Geneva. They are an opportunity to shoulder the US out of talks, which the Trump administration hoped would persuade Tehran to give up its nuclear programme. But he has also signalled that while Israel continues to bombard his country, Iran won't get involved in diplomacy. This is a moment that Russia can get back in the game. Moscow and Tehran are military bedfellows, share intelligence, missile technology, and Russia is Iran's civilian nuclear power contractor. Vladimir Putin lost his most valuable military foothold in the west, the port at Tartus when Bashar al Assad, Syria's dictator, fled to safety in Moscow. Assad was also Iran's most important regional client and it also controls Hezbollah in Lebanon and Iraq. Putin needs to get back in the game and if he can bring the Iranians to the table he can stymie US and Israeli hopes for regime change by making it impossible for American to join the bombing campaign while talks about peace are going on. A third option for all is to jaw-jaw while really giving Israel's war a chance.


The Independent
2 hours ago
- The Independent
Who is Iran's supreme leader? Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's rise to power explained during Israel conflict
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran 's supreme leader, who has spent more than three decades consolidating power by crushing internal threats, now faces his most significant challenge yet as Israel escalates its punishing air campaign against the Islamic Republic. Israel has reportedly secured free rein over Iranian skies, actively targeting and decimating the country's military leadership and nuclear programme. The severity of the threat has been underscored by Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz, who stated that Khamenei "cannot continue to exist." The 86-year-old leader is now presented with a stark choice: escalate Iran's retaliation against Israel, risking even heavier damage from Israeli bombardment, or pursue a diplomatic solution that could keep the US out of the conflict, but potentially force him to abandon the nuclear programme that has been central to Iranian policy for years. Despite the immense pressure, Ayatollah Khamenei struck a defiant tone in a video address on Wednesday. He vowed that "the Iranian nation is not one to surrender" and issued a stern warning that any intervention by the US would bring "irreparable damage to them." Here's what you need to know about Khamenei: He transformed the Islamic Republic When he rose to power in 1989, Khamenei had to overcome deep doubts about his authority as he succeeded the leader of the Islamic Revolution, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. A low-level cleric at the time, Khamenei didn't have his predecessor's religious credentials. With his thick glasses and plodding style, he didn't have his fiery charisma either. But Khamenei has ruled three times longer than the late Khomeini and has shaped Iran's Islamic Republic perhaps even more dramatically. He entrenched the system of rule by the 'mullahs," or Shiite Muslim clerics. That secured his place in the eyes of hardliners as the unquestionable authority — below only that of God. At the same time, Khamenei built the paramilitary Revolutionary Guard into the dominant force in Iran's military and internal politics. The Guard boasts Iran's most elite military and oversees its ballistic missile program. Its international arm, the Quds Force, pieced together the 'Axis of Resistance,' the collection of pro-Iranian proxies stretching from Yemen to Lebanon that for years gave Iran considerable power across the region. Khamenei also gave the Guard a free hand to build a network of businesses allowing it to dominate Iran's economy. In return, the Guard became his loyal shock force. He fended off domestic challenges The first major threat to Khamenei's grip was the reform movement that swept into a parliament majority and the presidency soon after he became supreme leader. The movement advocated for giving greater power to elected officials – something Khamenei's hardline supporters feared would lead to dismantling the Islamic Republic system. Khamenei stymied the reformists by rallying the clerical establishment. Unelected bodies run by the mullahs succeeded in shutting down major reforms and barring reform candidates from running in elections. The Revolutionary Guard and Iran's other security agencies crushed waves of protests that followed the failure of the reform movement. Huge nationwide protests erupted in 2009 over allegations of vote-rigging. Under the weight of sanctions, economic protests broke out in 2017 and 2019. More nationwide protests broke out in 2022 over the death of Mahsa Amini after police detained her for not wearing her mandatory headscarf properly. Hundreds were killed in crackdowns on the protests, and hundreds more arrested amid reports of detainees tortured to death or raped in prison. Still, the successive protests showed the strains in Iran's theocratic system and lay bare widespread resentment of clerical rule, corruption and economic troubles. Trying to defuse anger, authorities often eased enforcement of some of the Islamic Republic's social restrictions. He built Iran into a regional power When Khamenei took power, Iran was just emerging from its long war with Iraq that left the country battered and isolated. Over the next three decades, Khamenei turned Iran around into an assertive power wielding influence across the Middle East. One major boost was the US's 2003 ousting of Saddam Hussein, which eventually brought Iranian-allied Shiite politicians and militias to power in Iraq. Iraq provided a linchpin in Iran's Axis of Resistance, grouping Bashar Assad 's Syria, Lebanon's Hezbollah, the Palestinian militant group Hamas and the Houthi rebels in Yemen. By 2015, the alliance was at its height, putting Iran on Israel's doorstep. The past two years brought a dramatic reversal Hamas' Oct. 7, 2023, attack on southern Israel brought a massive Israeli retaliation on the Gaza Strip. It also brought a turnaround in Israeli policy. After years of trying to fend off and tamp down Iran's allies, Israel made crushing them its goal. Hamas has been crippled, though not eliminated, even at the cost of the decimation of Gaza. Israel has similarly sidelined Hezbollah — at least for the moment — with weeks of bombardment in Lebanon last year, along with a dramatic attack with booby-trapped pagers and walkie-talkies that stunned the group. An even heavier blow to Hezbollah was the fall in December of Syria's Bashar Assad when Sunni rebels marched on the capital and removed him from power. Now, a government hostile to Iran and Hezbollah rules from Damascus. Iran's Axis of Resistance is at its lowest ebb ever.


The Sun
3 hours ago
- The Sun
Iran says it STILL has material to make nuke weapon despite Israeli blitz after Trump gives 2-week deadline to surrender
IRAN has boasted that it still has the material to make a nuclear weapon - despite Israel decimating a number of its sites. It comes after Trump gave Ayatollah Ali Khamenei a final two-week deadline to strike a nuclear deal or face 'grave consequences' from US strikes. 4 4 4 4 Iranian commander Mohsen Rezaei said yesterday: "Israel hit Natanz, Isfahan, Khandab, and Arak, but they were already evacuated. "All the materials have been moved to a safe place." But the commander's claims don't appear to align with reality, with shocking satellite pictures showing Iran's nuclear power plant with a gaping hole after Israeli precision airstrikes. Meanwhile President Trump is said to have privately approved plans for bombing Iran's key nuclear site Fordow, but is waiting for Tehran to come back to the negotiating table. On Wednesday he said he "may" join Israel's campaign of bombing Iran, but added: "I may not do it. I mean, nobody knows what I'm going to do." But the White House on Thursday revealed that the president will decide on whether the US will get involved in the Israel-Iran conflict in the "next two weeks". Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt announced the deadline and reiterated claims that Iran is just "weeks away" from producing a nuclear weapon. However, the claim contradicts American and Israeli intelligence analysis, as well as reports by the IAEA and independent experts, which conclude Iran "was not weeks away" from developing an actual bomb. But Israel said it will not wait long for Trump's decision to strike Iran, two sources close to the operation told Iran International. It said that if Trump does not intervene, Israel will take the initiative to attack the Fordow enrichment plant itself, which is at the heart of Tehran's nuclear program. A ground attack on the site would be on a scale never before attempted and involve flying or parachuting in scores of troops and sabotage specialists. European foreign ministers are expected to turn screws on their Iranian counterpart today to try and de-escalate the conflict. Ministers from Britain, France and Germany, as well as the European Union's foreign policy chief spoke to Abbas Araqchi earlier this week and have been coordinating with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio. In a rare call, they pressed upon Araqchi the need to return to the negotiating table and avoid further escalation in the spiralling conflict. At Iran's suggestion, the two sides agreed to meet face-to-face. Despite the new, significant European involvement - Iran shows no sign of backing down.