logo
Iran Guardian Council warns US of 'harsh response' if it intervenes

Iran Guardian Council warns US of 'harsh response' if it intervenes

Nahar Net12 hours ago

by Naharnet Newsdesk 9 hours
Iran's deputy foreign minister warned the United States on Thursday against intervening in the war to back up its ally Israel, adding that his country was ready to defend itself in case of escalation.
"If the United States wants to actively enter the field in favor of the Zionist regime, Iran will have to use its tools to both teach a lesson to aggressors and defend its national security and national interests," said deputy foreign minister Kazem Gharibabadi, according to state TV.
"Naturally, our military decision makers have all the necessary options on the table," he added.
- Iran Guardian Council warns US of 'harsh response' -
A key Iranian body warned the United States on Thursday that any intervention in support of its ally Israel would be met with a "harsh response".
"The criminal American government and its stupid president must know for sure that if they make a mistake and take action against Islamic Iran, they will face a harsh response from the Islamic Republic of Iran," the Guardian Council said in a statement carried by state television.
- China says opposes 'use of force' -
China said Thursday it opposed the "use of force", in response to a question about U.S. President Donald Trump warning he was weighing U.S. military action in the Israel-Iran conflict.
Beijing "opposes any act that... infringes upon the sovereignty, security and territorial integrity of other countries, and opposes the use or threat of use of force in international relations", foreign ministry spokesman Guo Jiakun told a regular press briefing.
China also urged countries in the Middle East, "especially Israel", to cease fighting.
"China strongly calls on all parties involved in the conflict, especially Israel, to put the interests of the region's people first, immediately cease fire and stop fighting," Jiakun said.
- Russia warns US against 'military intervention' -
Russia's foreign ministry on Thursday warned the United States not to take military action against Iran.
"We would like to particularly warn Washington against military intervention in the situation, which would be an extremely dangerous step with truly unpredictable negative consequences," the ministry's spokeswoman Maria Zakharova told reporters.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Hezbollah Pledges Unwavering Allegiance to Imam Khamenei, Blasts Foolish Assassination Threat
Hezbollah Pledges Unwavering Allegiance to Imam Khamenei, Blasts Foolish Assassination Threat

Al Manar

time35 minutes ago

  • Al Manar

Hezbollah Pledges Unwavering Allegiance to Imam Khamenei, Blasts Foolish Assassination Threat

Hezbollah pledged on Thursday unwavering allegiance to Supreme Leader of the Islamic Revolution in Iran Imam Sayyed Ali Khamenei, as it blasted as 'foolish and reckless' assassination threats made by the US and the Zionist entity against the Leader. In a statement, Hezbollah said: 'It seems that some regional actors fail to comprehend the great stature of the senior religious reference and Grand Ayatollah Imam Khamenei (may his shadow endure), a leader revered by Iran, Muslim Ummah (nation), the world, and all free nations.' The Lebanese resistance party described threats against Imam Khamenei's life as 'foolish and reckless act that has grave consequences.' 'Despite its absurdity and the low level of those threatening, such rhetoric insults hundreds of millions of faithful, lovers, and those are connected to Islam and the path of authenticity, resistance, and dignity. It is denounced and condemned in the most eloquent terms.' Hezbollah voiced unwavering allegiance to Imam Khamenei and his path. 'Today, we stand more determined behind the great leader, Imam Khamenei. We are keener to adhere by his great path and heroic stances in confronting, along with the Iranian nation, the Israel-US aggression.' In this context, it warned that the US will soon find out that it has fallen into 'a deep abyss over its tyrannical support for the Israeli aggression on Gaza, the resistance in the region and the Islamic Republic of Iran.' Hezbollah affirmed, meanwhile, that 'no force can defeat millions who are united under Imam Khamenei's leadership, even if the world's infidels and criminals gathered.' 'The coming days will prove the resistance victorious,' Hezbollah concluded the statement. Senior Israeli officials, along with US President Donald Trump have been since last week threatening, Implicitly or explicitly, to assassinate Imam Khamenei.

Iran may produce a nuclear bomb if the US attacks it or Khamanei is killed, NYT
Iran may produce a nuclear bomb if the US attacks it or Khamanei is killed, NYT

Ya Libnan

timean hour ago

  • Ya Libnan

Iran may produce a nuclear bomb if the US attacks it or Khamanei is killed, NYT

File : Fordów uranium enrichment facility which is embedded in a mountain inside Iran and which Israel wants the US to bomb but president Trump is not convinced it can be done and decided to take 2 weeks to make the decision on whether to join Israel in the war 'The US should let Israel finish the job it started. PM Netanyahu says Israel is capable of finishing the job. President Trump claims to be a peacemaker not a warmonger . The last thing the US should do is join Israel in the war . This will be much worse than the war on Iraq in 2003', analysts say and the US never won any war since WWII A missile on display in Tehran in February. American spy agencies believe that it could take several months, and up to a year, for Iran to make a nuclear weapon. U.S. intelligence agencies continue to believe that Iran has yet to decide whether to make a nuclear bomb even though it has developed a large stockpile of the enriched uranium necessary for it to do so, according to intelligence and other American officials. That assessment has not changed since the intelligence agencies last addressed the question of Iran's intentions in March, the officials said, even as Israel has attacked Iranian nuclear facilities. Senior U.S. intelligence officials said that Iranian leaders were likely to shift toward producing a bomb if the American military attacked the Iranian uranium enrichment site Fordo or if Israel killed Iran's supreme leader. The question of whether Iran has decided to complete the work of building a bomb is irrelevant in the eyes of many Iran hawks in the United States and Israel, who say Tehran is close enough to represent an existential danger to Israel. But it has long been a flashpoint in the debate over policy toward Iran and has flared again as President Trump weighs whether to bomb Fordo. White House officials held an intelligence briefing on Thursday and announced that Mr. Trump would make his decision within the next two weeks. At the White House meeting, John Ratcliffe, the C.I.A. director, told officials that Iran was very close to having a nuclear weapon. Karoline Leavitt, the White House spokeswoman, said later at a news briefing that Iran had the material it needed to make a bomb. 'Let's be very clear: Iran has all that it needs to achieve a nuclear weapon,' she said. 'All they need is a decision from the supreme leader to do that and it would take a couple weeks to complete the production of that weapon.' Some American officials said those new assessments echoed material provided by Mossad, Israel's intelligence agency, which believes that Iran can achieve a nuclear weapon in 15 days. While some American officials find the Israeli estimate credible, others emphasized that the U.S. intelligence assessment remained unchanged, and American spy agencies believe that it could take several months, and up to a year, for Iran to make a weapon. Intelligence assessments are often drafted in a way that allows policymakers to draw different conclusions. And many intelligence officials believe that the reason Iran has accumulated such a large arsenal of uranium is to have the ability to move toward making a bomb quickly. Some officials believe Israeli assessments have been colored by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's desire to gain American support for his military campaign against Iran. Mr. Netanyahu said on Thursday, however, that Israel could achieve its goals alone when it came to Iran's nuclear facilities. None of the new assessments on the timeline to get a bomb are based on newly collected intelligence, according to multiple officials. Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, issued a religious ruling, or fatwa, in 2003 that has prevented the country from developing nuclear weapons. That is 'right now holding,' a senior intelligence official said, adding that the Israeli assessment that Iran was 15 days away was alarmist. Mr. Netanyahu has repeatedly warned over the years that Iran is close to a nuclear weapon. And since Israel began its attacks on Iran's nuclear facilities, Israeli officials have warned that Iran was weeks away from having the components for a bomb. Mr. Netanyahu has not been specific on the time frame. 'In recent months, Iran has taken steps that it has never taken before, steps to weaponize this enriched uranium, and if not stopped, Iran could produce a nuclear weapon in a very short time,' Mr. Netanyahu said. 'It could be a year. It could be within a few months, less than a year. This is a clear and present danger to Israel's very survival.' Still, American officials acknowledge that the large stockpile poses a threat. Testifying before Congress on June 10, Gen. Michael E. Kurilla, the head of Central Command, said Iran's nuclear stockpile and available centrifuges could allow it to produce weapons-grade material in a week, and were enough to make 10 weapons in three weeks if the government decided 'to sprint to a nuclear weapon.' In testimony in March, Tulsi Gabbard, the director of national intelligence, noted that the Iranian stockpile was at a high, a level that she said was unprecedented for a nonnuclear state. Officials said Ms. Gabbard's comments remained accurate and were in line with the idea that Iran is gathering the components of a weapon. Iran's stockpile is enriched to 60 percent. To make a bomb, it would need to be enriched further, to 90 percent. Enriching uranium means reducing the percentage of naturally occurring uranium, U-238, and increasing the percentage of a lighter isotope, U-235, that can sustain a nuclear reaction. But producing a weapon requires more than uranium. Iran would also have to make a bomb, and potentially miniaturize it to place on a warhead. While the United States and Israel believe that Iran has the expertise to build a bomb, there is no intelligence that it has set out to do that. U.S. intelligence believes that Iran could potentially shorten the timeline if it pursued a cruder weapon that might not be able to be miniaturized and put on a missile. Such a cruder weapon might be more akin to the bomb that the United States dropped on Hiroshima, which was nearly 10,000 pounds and 10 feet long and had to be dropped from a plane, rather than delivered on a missile. Senior officials, including Vice President JD Vance, have said that new information has come in since the U.S. intelligence position was made public in March. But officials said that information from Israel and other sources was not new intelligence about the program or Iranian intent to build a bomb, but rather new analysis of existing work. THE NEW YORK TIMES

Trump  still pursuing diplomacy with Iran, will make a decision ‘within 2 weeks  on whether to join Israel'
Trump  still pursuing diplomacy with Iran, will make a decision ‘within 2 weeks  on whether to join Israel'

Ya Libnan

time2 hours ago

  • Ya Libnan

Trump  still pursuing diplomacy with Iran, will make a decision ‘within 2 weeks on whether to join Israel'

Trump still pursuing diplomacy with Iran, will make a decision 'within two weeks' on whether to join Israel' President Trump will make a decision 'within two weeks' on whether to join Israel's war against Iran to eliminate its nuclear program, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters on Thursday. Citing the 'chance for substantial negotiations' with Iran, Trump is leaving the door open to a diplomatic solution in the coming days that could avert a major escalation in the Middle East. Trump met with his top national security team in the Situation Room on Thursday — the third such meeting in three days. He's seriously considering joining the war, but wants to ensure three things are true, U.S. officials say: 'I have a message directly from the president: 'Based on the fact that there is a chance for substantial negotiations that may or may not take place with Iran in the near future, I will make my decision on whether or not to go within the next two weeks,'' Leavitt said at Thursday's White House briefing. As Trump has deliberated in recent days over whether to join the war, special envoy Steve Witkoff has maintained direct communication with Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, as Axios reported Wednesday. The foreign ministers of France, Germany and the U.K., along with the European Union's foreign policy chief, are set to meet with Araghchi in Geneva on Friday, a source with knowledge of the situation said. AXIOS

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

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