
Israel-Iran conflict live: hospital in southern Israel hit in Iran missile strike, say Israeli officials
Update:
Date: 2025-06-19T05:04:47.000Z
Title: Welcome and summary
Content: Hello and welcome to the Guardian's continuing coverage of the Israel-Iran war.
A hospital in southern Israel has been hit by a missile after Iran launched a round of retaliatory strikes on the country early on Thursday.
Soroka Hospital in Beersheba was among several areas to be directly hit after Iran fired around 20 ballistic missiles at Israel, an Israeli military official said. There was no immediate information on any casualties.
Israel's military has meanwhile warned people to evacuate the area around the Iranian city of Arak's heavy water reactor. The warning came in a social media post and included a satellite image of the plant in a red circle.
The Iranian Student News Agency (ISNA) later reported that the area had been hit but that the area had been evacuated beforehand and that there was no radiation risk. It was not possible to independently confirm the report.
In the past week, Israel's campaign has targeted Iran's enrichment site at Natanz, centrifuge workshops around Tehran and a nuclear site in Isfahan.
Meanwhile, Donald Trump said he has not decided whether or not to take his country into Israel's war with Iran and said he was still open to reaching a deal with Iran.
The president has reportedly suggested to defence officials it would make sense for the US to launch strikes against Iran only if the so-called 'bunker buster' bomb was guaranteed to destroy the critical uranium enrichment facility at Fordow, according to people familiar with the deliberations.
Elsewhere today:
Donald Trump told reporters that 'a deal could still happen' and that he thinks 'Iran was a few weeks away from having a nuclear weapon.' The news came shortly before several US media outlets reported that Trump approved plans to attack Iran on Tuesday, but has not yet given the final order to do so. US intelligence sources briefed US senators on Monday that Iran was not working to develop a nuclear weapon.
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said Israel had made a 'huge mistake' by launching the war and warned the US against becoming involved, in his first comments since Friday. 'The Americans should know that any US military intervention will undoubtedly be accompanied by irreparable damage,' he said in a statement read out by a presenter on state TV.
European leaders are pushing for diplomacy between Israel and Iran, with officials set to meet with Iran's foreign minister in Geneva on Friday. The foreign ministers of Germany, France and Britain, as well as EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas, will join the nuclear talks.
Iran announced that it had fired ultra-heavy, long-range, two-stage missiles at Israel, while Israeli strikes hit targets across Iran, including the police central command building in Tehran. French president Emmanuel Macron has voiced concerns that Israeli strikes are 'increasingly targeting sites unrelated to Iran's nuclear and ballistic programs', leading to 'a growing number of civilian casualties'. So far, more than 224 people in Iran and more than 24 in Israel have been killed in the conflict. Rights groups suspect the death toll in Iran may actually be closer to 600.
Longtime supporters of Donald Trump have voiced their disapproval of the possibility that the president may seek to involve the United States in the Israel-Iran conflict, a rare break within the deeply loyal Make America Great Again coalition. Former Trump advisor Steve Bannon said 'this is not something you play around with' while Republican senator Rand Paul told reporters that Trump would need congressional approval to bomb Iran. At the same time, some Trump allies voiced their support for the president, with Republican senator Ted Cruz saying the US could 'quite reasonably' strike an underground nuclear facility in Iran, but that 'there is zero possibility of American boots on the ground'.
Internet connection across all of Iran has slowed to a near halt. The reduction in internet speeds comes after an anti-Iranian government hacking group with potential ties to Israel claimed that it hacked Iran's state-owned Bank Sepah. Fatemeh Mohajerani, a spokesperson for Iran's government, said on X that officials in Tehran had restricted internet access to ward off additional cyberattacks.
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