
Iran is defiant after Trump calls US attacks 'success'
Israeli military officials say Iran has fired multiple missiles toward their country. This is believed to be Tehran's first military response since the United States struck three Iranian nuclear sites early Sunday local time.
Iran's Tasnim News Agency linked to the country's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps reports Iran has launched 40 missiles toward Israel. The agency says targets included an airport near Tel Aviv.
Israel's local media say at least 86 people have been injured.
CNN says the strikes damaged a building in Tel Aviv.
Earlier, US President Donald Trump announced the strikes on nuclear sites in Fordow, Natanz and Esfahan, and called them successful. The attacks were the first ever carried out by the United States on Iranian soil.
Trump said "Iran, the bully of the Middle East, must now make peace. If they do not, future attacks would be far greater."
Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has justified the US attacks on Iranian nuclear sites, which he said were carried out in full coordination between the US and Israel.
In a video message to the Israeli people, Netanyahu said Iran's nuclear program "threatened our very existence and also endangered the peace of the entire world."
The prime minister thanked US President Donald Trump and praised him.
Netanyahu said: "President Trump is leading the free world with strength. He is a great friend of Israel."
On the strikes targeting Iranian sites, he said that "from the beginning of the operation, I promised you that Iran's nuclear facilities would be destroyed, one way or another." He added, "That promise was kept."
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Kyodo News
38 minutes ago
- Kyodo News
Kyodo News Digest: June 23, 2025
KYODO NEWS - 14 minutes ago - 09:00 | All, Japan, World The following is the latest list of selected news summaries by Kyodo News. ---------- LDP wins record-low seats in Tokyo assembly race, in blow to PM TOKYO - Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba's Liberal Democratic Party suffered a record-low result in Sunday's Tokyo assembly election, seen as a prelude to July's House of Councillors race, further straining his minority government in national politics. Tomin First no Kai, a regional party established by Tokyo Gov. Yuriko Koike, won 32 seats, the most in the 127-member metropolitan assembly, indicating the popularity of her public welfare and child-rearing policies. One affiliated independent is included in the figure. ---------- Japan vigilant amid Iran conflict, mum on support for U.S. attacks TOKYO - Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba said Sunday that Japan is monitoring with "grave concern" the developments in the Middle East after the United States attacked Iranian nuclear facilities, though he refrained from expressing immediate support for the military action taken by its closest ally. Speaking to reporters, Ishiba underscored the importance of de-escalating the situation while stressing that Iran's nuclear development must be "blocked." ---------- U.S. defense chief says strikes on Iran were not about regime change WASHINGTON - The U.S. military's strikes on Iran's key nuclear sites were not aimed at regime change and targeted neither its troops nor civilians, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said Sunday. Speaking of Saturday's attacks against Iran, Hegseth touted U.S. President Donald Trump's "bold and visionary leadership, and his commitment to peace through strength," asserting that the United States has shown the world that its "deterrence is back." ---------- FOCUS: Tokyo rebuke puts Ishiba at risk in national election TOKYO - A sharp warning from voters for Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba's party in Sunday's Tokyo assembly election has signaled that his tenure could be at risk, with his ruling bloc in danger of losing its majority in the upcoming national vote. The House of Councillors election, expected to take place on July 20, is shaping up as a de facto referendum on Ishiba's leadership, as the ruling coalition led by his Liberal Democratic Party has already become a minority in the House of Representatives. ---------- Most Japanese worried about Mideast war's impact on daily lives: poll TOKYO - Most people in Japan are worried about how the outbreak of war in the Middle East could impact their daily lives, given the country's heavy dependence on the region for oil, a Kyodo News survey showed Sunday. In the nationwide telephone poll, a total of 83.7 percent of respondents said they have concerns about the repercussions of the escalating Israel-Iran war. ---------- Chinese ships spotted near Senkakus for record 216th straight day NAHA, Japan - Chinese coast guard ships were spotted near the Senkaku Islands in the East China Sea for the 216th consecutive day, the Japan Coast Guard said Sunday, marking the longest streak since Japan placed the islets under state control in 2012. The uninhabited islets, which China claims and calls Diaoyu, have remained a source of friction between the Asian neighbors. ---------- 2 Japanese men among 14 prisoners released by Belarus MOSCOW - Two Japanese nationals have been released from detention in Belarus and are in good health, a Japanese government source said Sunday. Belarusian state-run media reported Saturday that President Aleksandr Lukashenko decided to pardon 14 people, including two Japanese citizens, at the request of U.S. counterpart Donald Trump. ---------- Mt. Shinmoe in southwestern Japan erupts, alert level maintained FUKUOKA - Mt. Shinmoe on the southwestern Japanese island of Kyushu erupted Sunday, the Japan Meteorological Agency said. The 1,421-meter volcano straddling Kagoshima and Miyazaki prefectures erupted around 4:37 p.m. and spewed smoke as high as 500 meters, the agency said. Video: Promotion party for sumo grand champion Hoshoryu

Japan Times
an hour ago
- Japan Times
Decoy stealth bombers and Tomahawk missiles: How the U.S. hit Iran
The heart of operation "Midnight Hammer' was a feint. A group of American B-2 bombers — the only jets capable of deploying 30,000-pound bunker-buster munitions with a shot at breaching the mountains shrouding Iran's Fordo nuclear facility — flew west across the Pacific Ocean. When those planes were spotted on flight-tracker data, they were seen as being deployed as a way to strong-arm the Islamic Republic into negotiations. But in reality, they were decoys meant to maintain tactical surprise, according to U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth. While those planes got all the attention, another group of B-2s flew east — literally under the radar. Those moves were part of a 37-hour operation that resulted in strikes at the Fordo, Isfahan and Natanz nuclear sites this weekend, plunging the U.S. directly into a conflict between Iran and Israel in the Middle East and raising fears over deeper violence to come in the region and beyond. The concerns are extending to markets as well, with traders predicting stocks will drop, oil prices will spike and the dollar will strengthen. In the end, the Saturday night operation, which the U.S. said was necessary to prevent Iran from acquiring a nuclear bomb, was deemed a success by the Pentagon. No U.S. service members were lost, and Iran didn't fire at any of the U.S. military assets, according to the officials. Hegseth said members of Congress were only notified after the planes were out of danger, contradicting earlier reports that President Donald Trump had informed Republican congressional leadership beforehand. Addressing the nation late Saturday, Trump said Iran's "key nuclear enrichment facilities have been completely and totally obliterated.' But independent analysis has yet to verify that claim, and the strikes may have created a new challenge to work out what's left and where of the Islamic Republic's atomic facilities. The extensive U.S. operation included 125 aircraft overall, strikes by Tomahawk missiles launched from a submarine, and the use of 14 Massive Ordnance Penetrator bombs — the first time such bunker busters were used in combat. There were few hints that the mission was set to be carried out this weekend. The White House had promised on Thursday that Trump would make a decision on a strike "within two weeks,' suggesting there might be more time. But the president — who often spends weekends away from Washington — landed in the capital from New Jersey for a meeting in the White House's Situation Room on Saturday. He was joined there by key members of his administration, including Vice President JD Vance, Chief of Staff Susie Wiles, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Hegseth. Rubio signaled on Sunday that Trump didn't give his final go-ahead for the bombing campaign until the very last minutes before it was carried out. "There are multiple points along the way in which the President has decisions to make about 'go' or 'no-go,'' he said in a Fox News interview Sunday morning. "And it really comes right up to 10 minutes before the bombs are actually dropped.' The flights in the mission amounted to the second-longest in the B-2 stealth bomber's operational history, according to Hegseth and Air Force Gen. Dan Caine, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. The longest was a 40-hour round trip in October 2001 in the initial phase of the Afghanistan war. U.S. officials said 75 precision-guided weapons were used. The battle damage would take time to assess but "all three sites sustained extremely severe damage and destruction,' according to Caine. "It would not be a surprise to me if, after an assessment period, we went back in and re-struck some of these targets to make sure that we achieved the effect,' said Joseph Votel, a former commander of the U.S. Central Command and now a fellow at the Middle East Institute. "That actually is a normal part of our military targeting process, is to strike, assess, and then if necessary, strike again to achieve the results that we're looking for.' Prior to the B-2 strikes on Fordo, a submarine with the Carl Vinson carrier strike group in the Arabian Sea fired 24 Tomahawk cruise missiles, according to Caine and a graphic released by the Pentagon. Hegseth said earlier on Sunday that "our boys in those bombers are on their way home right now.' A U.S. official said a woman was among those who piloted the B-2s. Later Sunday on social media, Trump posted that the damage to Iran's nuclear sites was "monumental.' "The hits were hard and accurate,' he said. The defense secretary also said the mission was focused on destroying Iran's nuclear program and not regime change in Tehran. "The mission was not, has not, been about regime change,' he said. "This is a plan that took months and weeks of positioning and preparation, so that we could be ready when the president of the United States called,' Hegseth said. "It took a great deal of precision. It involved misdirection and the highest of operational security.' But Rubio made clear that Iran needs to abandon its nuclear weapons ambitions. "At the end of the day, if Iran is committed to becoming a nuclear weapons power, I do think it puts the regime at risk,' Rubio said Sunday on Fox News. "I really do. I think it would be the end of the regime if they tried to do that.' While the damage assessments are still coming in, Vance said he's confident the U.S. strikes on Iranian sites "have substantially delayed their development of a nuclear weapon — and that was the goal of this attack.' Iran's nuclear program has been pushed back "by a very long time,' he said in an interview with NBC's "Meet the Press." "I think that it's going to be many, many years before the Iranians are able to develop a nuclear weapon."


The Mainichi
an hour ago
- The Mainichi
US boosts emergency Mideast evacuations and travel warnings after Trump orders strikes in Iran
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