
Iran and Israel trade missile strikes as Europe begins negotiations with Tehran
Iran and Israel traded daytime missile attacks to cap a week of relentless bombing as Europe began negotiations with Tehran in an attempt to deescalate the conflict.
Israeli emergency services reported that at least 17 people were injured, including a teenager in serious condition, after Iranian ballistic missiles evaded Israel's air defence systems and slammed into a building near the port city of Haifa in the early afternoon of Friday.
Israel said it had conducted multiple strikes on Iran earlier that day.
After the attack on Haifa, images from the scene showed the building in ruins as people were stretchered away.
Moments earlier, Iran's religious ruler, Ali Khamenei, had posted on social media warning that Israel was about to see revenge. 'The Zionist enemy is getting his comeuppance; he is getting his comeuppance now,' he wrote on X.
Israel's military issued a rare nationwide warning on social media following Khamenei's post as it urged civilians to head for shelters. They later said Iran fired around 25 ballistic missiles. Israeli cabinet secretary Yossi Fuchs said Iran had fired a total of 525 missiles at Israel over the past week. He claimed only 25 of those missiles had breached air defences.
There were reports of additional impacts in southern and central Israel. In Tel Aviv, after authorities gave the all clear, people emerged from bomb shelters into an early Friday evening but to none of the partying for which the city is best known.
That atmosphere has vanished, blown away by Iran's missiles and, for a minority, the growing horror at what continues to unfold in Gaza where the Israeli military ordered Palestinians to flee Gaza City to 'sheltered' areas on the west of the enclave. There are no 'sheltered' or safe areas for Gaza's populations.
Israel said it conducted airstrikes in Iran with more than 60 aircraft hitting what it said were industrial sites to manufacture missiles.
It said it hit the headquarters of Iran's Organization of Defensive Innovation and Research, known by its acronym in Farsi, SPND. The US in the past has linked that agency to alleged Iranian research and testing tied to the possible development of nuclear explosive devices.
It also carried out airstrikes targeting the areas around Kermanshah and Tabriz in western Iran, where the military said 25 fighter jets struck 'missile storage and launch infrastructure components'. There had been reports of anti-aircraft fire in the areas.
'We are strengthening our air control in the region and advancing our air offensive,' Israeli military spokesperson Brig Gen Effie Defrin told reporters. 'We have more sites to strike in Tehran, western Iran and other places.'
Israeli airstrikes also reached into the city of Rasht on the Caspian Sea, according to Iranian media.
The Israeli military had warned the public to flee the area around Rasht's Industrial City, southwest of the city's downtown. But with Iran's internet shut off to the outside world, it's unclear just how many people could see the message.
The Washington-based human rights organisation Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA) estimates that 639 people have been killed by Israeli strikes on Iran. Israeli officials say two dozen Israelis have been killed in Iranian strikes.
The UK said it was temporarily withdrawing staff from its embassy in Iran due to the ongoing threat of strikes. The families of British embassy diplomats in Tel Aviv have also been removed as a precautionary but the officials themselves are remaining.
The attacks on each side came as Iran's foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, arrived in the Swiss city of Geneva for negotiations with the European Union and the UK focused on addressing allegations that Iran is enriching uranium at a dangerous level.
An Israeli government official said their intelligence showed that three months ago 'the Iranians had the equivalent for six nuclear bombs', but that figure had now increased to nine.
US estimates about how close Iran is to producing weapons-grade uranium appear to be more conservative.
In Geneva, Araghchi accused Israel of committing war crimes by bombing Tehran's nuclear facilities, having already said prior to his arrival that he was opposed to negotiations.
'It is the Americans who want talks,' he said in comments on Thursday that were broadcast on Friday by Iranian state television. 'They've sent messages several times — very serious ones — but we made it explicitly clear to them that as long as this aggression and invasion continues, there is absolutely no room for talk or diplomacy. We are engaged in legitimate self-defense, and this defence will not stop under any circumstances.'
He added that he expected the Switzerland talks to focus only on Iran's nuclear program, and that Iran's missile capabilities were 'for defending the country' and not up for discussion.
French president Emmanuel Macron said top European diplomats in Geneva will make a 'comprehensive, diplomatic and technical offer of negotiation' to Iran, as a key response to the 'threat' represented by Iran's nuclear program.
'No one can seriously believe that this threat can be met with (Israel's) current operations alone,' he told reporters on the sidelines of the Paris Air Show, saying some plants are heavily fortified and nobody knows exactly where all uranium enrichment is taking place.
'We need to regain control on (Iran's nuclear) program through technical expertise and negotiation.'
The United Nations secretary general Antonio Guterres, meanwhile, urged Israel and Iran to 'give peace a chance'. He added in a post on social media that 'the expansion of this conflict could ignite a fire that no one can control'. 'We must not let that happen,' he said.
Hashtags

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


Telegraph
14 minutes ago
- Telegraph
‘She's wrong': Trump throws Tulsi Gabbard under the bus on Iran
Donald Trump has said that Tulsi Gabbard and the US intelligence community is 'wrong' about Iran's nuclear capabilities. The US president doubled down on his claim that his own government officials are mistaken about how close Iran is to building a nuclear bomb when challenged by a reporter on Friday. 'What intelligence do you have that Iran is building a nuclear weapon?', Mr Trump was asked outside Air Force One. 'Your intelligence community have said they have no evidence that they are at this point.' 'Well then my intelligence community is wrong,' Mr Trump responded, before asking: 'who in my intelligence community said that?' 'Your director of national intelligence Tulsi Gabbard,' the reporter replies, before the president retorts: 'She's wrong.' Mr Trump added: 'Within a matter of weeks, or certainly within a matter of months, they're going to be able to have a nuclear weapon. We can't let that happen.' In March, Ms Gabbard told Congress the intelligence community 'continues to assess that Iran is not building a nuclear weapon and Supreme Leader Khamenei has not authorised the nuclear weapons program he suspended in 2003.' She also said the US was closely monitoring Iran's nuclear program, noting that the country's 'enriched uranium stockpile is at its highest levels and is unprecedented for a state without nuclear weapons.' Its the second time Mr Trump has directly contradicted Ms Gabbard on the issue, with the US president saying on Thursday that he did not 'care what she thinks'. Speaking aboard Air Force One on his return from the G7 summit in Canada, Mr Trump told reporters: 'I think they were very close to having a weapon.' Ms Gabbard later told CNN that her comments had been taken out of context and that she was on 'the same page' as Mr Trump. General Erik Kurilla, who leads US forces in the Middle East, recently testified to Congress that Iran could produce enough nuclear material for 10 weapons in three weeks. However, he did not say how long it would take to assemble the pieces into a bomb. On Thursday, Mr Trump's press secretary said Iran could produce a nuclear bomb 'within weeks'. '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 of weeks to complete the production of that weapon, which would of course pose an existential threat not just to Israel, but to the United States and to the entire world.' A senior intelligence official said Mr Trump was right to be concerned because its uranium enrichment far exceeds what would be needed for domestic purposes. Another senior administration official said Iran was as close to having a nuclear weapon as it could be without having one. Both spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive issues. Mr Trump's contradiction of Ms Gabbard echoed his feuds with US spy leaders during his first term, when he viewed them as part of a 'deep state' that was undermining his agenda. Most notably, he sided with Vladimir Putin in 2018 when asked if Moscow had interfered in the 2016 election, saying Mr Putin was 'extremely strong and powerful in his denial.'


The Independent
16 minutes ago
- The Independent
Stunning map shows the lengths pilots go through to avoid conflict zones
A stunning map of current global flight routes has shown the lengths pilots have to go through to avoid conflict zones. As the Russia-Ukraine war rages on and the Israel-Iran conflict intensifies, the world has become more chaotic, and so has its airspace. A live flight tracking map from Flightradar24 showed planes bustling in western Europe and most of Asia. But there are startling holes in the map, which happen to be where the world's major conflicts are currently taking place. Ukraine had no planes in its airspace, and there were very few planes flying over Russia late Friday afternoon, according to Flightradar24's map. Some Middle Eastern countries, including Israel, Iran and the surrounding nations of Lebanon, Syria, Iraq and Kuwait, also had no flights coming in or out based on the map. The lack of air travel can be linked to the air strikes Russia and Ukraine as well as Israel and Iran have been launching against each other in respective conflicts. It's been more than three years since Russian President Vladimir Putin launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine. The missile and drone strikes and their counterattacks have been non-stop. Earlier this week, Russia launched an overnight attack on Kyiv, killing 28 people and injuring over 100 more, The Associated Press reported, citing local officials. Israel had already been at war with Hamas when it struck Iran's nuclear facilities and hit military targets in the region last Friday. The attacks killed several of Tehran's top military leaders and leading nuclear scientists, and Iran subsequently launched heavy retaliatory strikes against Israel. Besides man-made conflict, natural disasters can also make the jobs of pilots more difficult. 'Airspace closures have become quite common,' Singapore -based aviation consultant Brendan Sobie told CNN. 'It's almost like the new normal for airlines to have to navigate this kind of thing.'


Sky News
26 minutes ago
- Sky News
Trump's credibility gap and why Iran may want to take its chances in Israel conflict
After hours of talks, the ayatollah's chief diplomat emerged giving little away. All eyes were on Abbas Aragchi. Would he give ground in the face of Israel's fierce bombardment of his country? Yes, but only if Israel stops that bombardment which is not going to happen. Especially after a day when two of Israel's big cities suffered direct hits from Iranian missiles. The best that can be said for almost four hours of talks, is they happened and might again. There were no breakthroughs to report, no ground shifting on either side. The talks were flawed in concept from the beginning. The countries meeting Aragchi here are not involved in the conflict. Israel and America were absent. The US did send a message, via Britain's foreign secretary David Lammy. We want to talk but we're serious about getting involved with military force if you do not. But the UK was delivering an American ultimatum and threat of force it does not itself believe to be a good idea. Britain and its European partners want de-escalation and oppose any idea of Donald Trump and his military getting involved. Iran is embattled, beleaguered and bombarded. But if its government is worried, its calm and collected foreign minister was showing none of it. The Iranians know Trump may send in the bombers and bunker busters within two weeks, but do they believe him? The president for whom they coined the acronym 'Trump Always Chickens Out' has a credibility gap. And if he takes action that leads to a chain of events where Americans end up dying, he will be crucified for it by his own MAGA movement.