Israeli military says it fired to stop suspects reaching Lebanon no-go zone
Israeli military says it fired to stop suspects reaching Lebanon no-go zone/node/2580907/middle-east
Israeli military says it fired to stop suspects reaching Lebanon no-go zone
A vehicle transporting mattresses drives past a damaged pedestrian bridge in Beirut's southern suburbs, after a ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah took effect, Lebanon November 27, 2024. (Reuters)
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Updated 27 November 2024
Reuters
Israeli military says it fired to stop suspects reaching Lebanon no-go zone
Updated 27 November 2024
Reuters
DUBAI: Israeli forces on Wednesday fired at several vehicles with suspects to prevent them from reaching a no-go zone in Lebanese territory and the suspects moved away, the Israeli military said in a statement, hours after a ceasefire between Israel and Lebanese militant group Hezbollah came into effect at 0200 GMT.
Iran vows retaliation for US strikes as Israel keeps up attacks
Updated 11 sec ago
Tehran: Tehran threatened on Monday to inflict âseriousâ damage in retaliation for US strikes on the Islamic republicâs nuclear facilities, as the Iran-Israel war entered its 11th day despite calls for de-escalation. Aerial assaults meanwhile raged on, with air raid sirens sounding across Israel and AFP journalists reporting several blasts were heard over Jerusalem. The Israeli military said it had struck missile sites in western Iran as well as âsix Iranian regime airportsâ across the country, destroying fighter jets and helicopters. President Donald Trump said US warplanes used âbunker busterâ bombs to target sites in Fordo, Isfahan and Natanz, boasting the strikes had âobliteratedâ Iranâs nuclear capabilities. Other officials said it was too soon to assess the true impact on Iranâs nuclear program, which Israel and some Western states consider an existential threat. Iranian armed forces spokesman Ebrahim Zolfaghari said on state television that the US âhostile act,â following more than a week of Israeli bombardments, would âpave the way for the extension of war in the region.â âThe fighters of Islam will inflict serious, unpredictable consequences on you with powerful and targeted (military) operations,â he warned. Global markets reacted nervously, with oil prices jumping more than four percent early Monday. China urged both Iran and Israel to prevent the conflict from spilling over, warning of potential economic fallout. Oman, a key mediator in the stalled Iran-US nuclear talks, condemned the US strikes and called for calm. Iranâs foreign ministry accused Washington of betraying diplomacy. âFuture generations will not forget that the Iranians were in the middle of a diplomatic process with a country that is now at war with us,â said ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei. Britain, France and Germany called on Iran ânot to take any further action that could destabilize the region.â As the world awaited Iranâs response, supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei called the bombing campaign Israel launched on June 13 âa big mistake.â US Secretary of State Marco Rubio called on China to help deter Iran from closing the Strait of Hormuz, a chokepoint for one-fifth of the worldâs oil supply. With Iran threatening US bases in the region, the State Department issued a worldwide alert cautioning Americans abroad. In central Tehran on Sunday, protesters waved flags and chanted slogans against US and Israeli attacks. In the province of Semnan east of the capital, 46-year-old housewife Samireh said she was âtruly shockedâ by the strikes. âSemnan province is very far from the nuclear facilities targeted, but Iâm very concerned for the people who live near,â she told AFP. Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian said the US strikes revealed Washington was âbehindâ Israelâs campaign against the Islamic republic and vowed a response. After the Pentagon stressed the goal of American intervention was not to topple the Iranian government, Trump openly toyed with the idea. âItâs not politically correct to use the term, âRegime Change,â Trump posted on his Truth Social platform. âBut if the current Iranian Regime is unable to MAKE IRAN GREAT AGAIN, why wouldnât there be a Regime change???â Hours later he doubled down on emphasising the success of his strikes. âMonumental Damage was done to all Nuclear sites in Iran, as shown by satellite images. Obliteration is an accurate term!â Trump wrote, without sharing the images he was referencing. At a Pentagon press briefing earlier in the day, top US general Dan Caine said âinitial battle damage assessments indicate that all three sites sustained extremely severe damage.â Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, meanwhile, said his countryâs bombardments would âfinishâ once the stated objectives of destroying Iranâs nuclear and missile capabilities have been achieved. âWe are very, very close to completing them,â he said. Israeli strikes on Iran have killed more than 400 people, Iranâs health ministry said. Iranâs attacks on Israel have killed 24 people, according to official figures. Rafael Grossi, director of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), told an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council that craters were visible at the Fordo facility, but it had not been possible to assess the underground damage. âArmed attacks on nuclear facilities should never take place,â he added. Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, who was due to meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday, had accused the United States of deciding to âblow upâ nuclear diplomacy with its intervention in the war. While Russia condemned the Israeli and US strikes, it has not offered military help and has downplayed its obligations under a sweeping strategic partnership agreement signed with Tehran just months ago. On Sunday, Russia, China and Pakistan circulated a draft resolution with other Security Council members that calls for an âimmediate ceasefireâ in Iran.
Erdogan says wonât let terror âdrag Syria back to instabilityâ/node/2605483/middle-east
Erdogan says wonât let terror âdrag Syria back to instabilityâ
Updated 23 June 2025
AFP
ISTANBUL: Turkiye will not allow extremists to drag Syria back into chaos and instability, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Monday after a suicide attack killed 22 at a Damascus church.
âWe will never allow our neighbor and brother Syria... be dragged into a new environment of instability through proxy terrorist organizations,â he said, vowing to support the new governmentâs fight against such groups.
Air raid sirens sound as Israel warns of incoming Iran missiles as conflict enters 11th day
Israeli strikes on Iran have killed at least 950 people and wounded 3,450 others
Australiaâs Prime Minister Anthony Albanese says Canberra supports US strike on Iran
Updated 13 min 55 sec ago
Agencies
Tehran: Tehran threatened on Monday to inflict âseriousâ damage in retaliation for US strikes on the Islamic republicâs nuclear facilities, as the Iran-Israel war entered its 11th day despite calls for de-escalation.
Aerial assaults meanwhile raged on, with air raid sirens sounding across Israel and AFP journalists reporting several blasts were heard over Jerusalem.
The Israeli military said it had struck missile sites in western Iran as well as âsix Iranian regime airportsâ across the country, destroying fighter jets and helicopters.
President Donald Trump said US warplanes used âbunker busterâ bombs to target sites in Fordo, Isfahan and Natanz, boasting the strikes had âobliteratedâ Iranâs nuclear capabilities.
Other officials said it was too soon to assess the true impact on Iranâs nuclear program, which Israel and some Western states consider an existential threat.
Iranian armed forces spokesman Ebrahim Zolfaghari said on state television that the US âhostile act,â following more than a week of Israeli bombardments, would âpave the way for the extension of war in the region.â
âThe fighters of Islam will inflict serious, unpredictable consequences on you with powerful and targeted (military) operations,â he warned.
Iran has not been offering regular death tolls during the conflict and has minimized casualties in the past. (AFP)
Israeli strikes on Iran kill at least 950, wound 3,450 others, says human rights group
Israeli strikes on Iran have killed at least 950 people and wounded 3,450 others, a human rights group said Monday.
The Washington-based group Human Rights Activists offered the figures, which covers the entirety of Iran. It said of those dead, it identified 380 civilians and 253 security force personnel being killed.
Human Rights Activists, which also provided detailed casualty figures during the 2022 protests over the death of Mahsa Amini, crosschecks local reports in the Islamic Republic against a network of sources it has developed in the country.
Iran has not been offering regular death tolls during the conflict and has minimized casualties in the past. On Saturday, Iranâs Health Ministry said some 400 Iranians had been killed and another 3,056 wounded in the Israeli strikes.
Iran foreign minister to meet key ally Putin
Iran foreign minister Abbas Araghchi described Sundayâs attacks âlawless and criminalâ behavior. (AFP)
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi was due to hold âimportantâ talks with key ally Vladimir Putin on Monday, 48 hours after a major US attack on Iranâs key nuclear facilities.
Moscow is a crucial backer of Tehran, but has not swung forcefully behind its partner since Israel launched a wave of attacks on June 13, strikes that triggered Iran to respond with missiles and drones.
While Russia condemned the Israeli and US strikes, it has not offered military help and has downplayed its obligations under a sweeping strategic partnership agreement signed with Tehran just months ago.
âIn this new dangerous situation ... our consultations with Russia can certainly be of great importance,â Russian state media reported Araghchi as saying after landing in Moscow.
Australia says it supports US strike, calls for return to diplomacy
Australiaâs Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said on Monday that Canberra supported the United States strike on Iran and called for de-escalation and a return to diplomacy.
âThe world has long agreed that Iran cannot be allowed to get a nuclear weapon and we support action to prevent that,â Albanese told reporters in Canberra on Monday.
Albanese said âthe information has been clearâ that Iran had enriched uranium to 60 percent and âthere is no other explanation for it to reach 60, other than engaging in a program that wasnât about civilian nuclear power.â
The International Atomic Energy Agency, the UN nuclear watchdog that inspects Iranâs nuclear facilities, reported on May 31 that Iran had enough uranium enriched to up to 60 percent, if enriched further, for nine nuclear weapons.
âHad Iran complied with the very reasonable requests that were made, including by the IAEA, then circumstances would have been different,â said Albanese, referring to limitations on enrichment.
What do we know about US strikes on Iranâs nuclear facilities?
Tehran says damage limited, no radiation leaks after Trump declares Iranâs uranium-enrichment capabilities destroyed
Assault involved 14 bunker-buster bombs, more than two dozen Tomahawk missiles and over 125 military aircraft
Updated 23 June 2025
Asharq News
DUBAI: Amid mounting speculation, the US launched air strikes on three of Iranâs nuclear facilities on Saturday.
The operation aimed to support Israel in its war against Iran â ongoing since June 13 â by crippling Tehranâs uranium enrichment capacity, according to Asharq News.
US President Donald Trump later announced that Iranâs uranium-enrichment abilities had been eliminated, warning Tehran against any âretaliatory response.â Tehran, however, described the damage as âlimitedâ and dismissed any indications of radiation leaks.
US President Donald Trump addresses the nation from the White House in Washington on June 21, 2025, following the announcement that the US bombed nuclear sites in Iran. (POOL / AFP)
The US strikes included 14 bunker-buster bombs, more than two dozen Tomahawk missiles and over 125 military aircraft, in an operation the top US general, General Dan Caine, said was named âOperation Midnight.â
Asharq News reported that the strikes targeted three critical nuclear facilities instrumental in Iranâs nuclear fuel cycle: Fordo, Natanz and Isfahan nuclear complex.
These sites span the entire fuel-enrichment chain â from raw uranium conversion, through enrichment, to the production of fuel and technical components for research reactors.
FASTFACTS:
⢠The first B-2 bomber was publicly displayed on Nov. 22, 1988, but its first flight was on July 17, 1989.
⢠The combat effectiveness of the B-2 was proved in the Balkans, where it was responsible for destroying 33 percent of all Serbian targets in the first eight weeks.
⢠In support of Operation Enduring Freedom, the B-2 flew one of its longest missions to date from Whiteman to Afghanistan and back.
⢠The B-2 completed its first-ever combat deployment in Iraq, flying 22 sorties and releasing more than 1.5 million pounds of munitions.
This handout satellite image provided by Maxar Technologies and taken on December 11, 2020 shows an overview of Iran's Fordow Fuel Enrichment Plant (FFEP), northeast of the Iranian city of Qom. (AFP)
Fordo facility
Location and structure: Fordo is 30 kilometers northeast of Qom, embedded within a mountain at an altitude of approximately 1,750âŻm, with over 80âŻmeters of rock and volcanic shielding â making it one of Iranâs most fortified sites.
Technical role: It houses two underground halls that can hold about 3,000 IR-1 centrifuges, enriching uranium up to 60 percent â a level nearing weapons -grade.
Strategic importance: It is a primary target in any military effort to prevent Iran from achieving nuclear military capability, due to its high capacity and protection.
This handout satellite image courtesy of Maxar Technologies shows Iran's shows Natanz nuclear research center in the central Iranian province of Isfahan. (AFP)
Natanz reactor
Location and structure: Situated near Kashan in central Iran, partially buried under about 8âŻmeters of earth with a 220meter-thick concrete roof, naturally shielded by surrounding mountainous terrain.
Technical role: Contains primary and experimental plants with over 14,000 centrifuges (IR-1, IR-2m, IR-4, IR-6), making it Iranâs main industrial enrichment hub.
Strategic importance: Responsible for producing most of Iranâs low-enriched uranium and plays a key role in centrifuge development.
This handout satellite picture provided by Maxar Technologies and taken on June 22, 2025, shows damage after US strikes on the Isfahan nuclear enrichment facility in central Iran. (AFP)
Isfahan nuclear complex
Location and structure: Located south of Isfahan on an arid plateau away from populated areas, it is neither buried nor heavily fortified.
Technical role: Includes a Uranium Conversion Facility (UCF); a research reactor fuel production plant; and a metallic fuel pelletizing plant, and three research reactors.
Strategic importance: Serves as the backbone of Iranâs nuclear research and production infrastructure, supplying both Natanz and Fordo.
The Pentagon used some of the worldâs most advanced aircraft for Saturdayâs strikes. The B-2 Spirit is a multi-role bomber capable of delivering both conventional and nuclear munitions.
The bomber represents a major milestone in the US bomber modernization program. The B-2 brings massive firepower to bear anywhere on the globe through seemingly impenetrable defenses.
A B-2 bomber has a range over 11,000âŻkm without refueling, capable of global reach from distant American bases. (Getty Images via AFP)
According to US officials, the bombers that carried out the Iran strikes flew for nearly 37 hours non-stop from its Missouri base, refueling in mid-air multiple times before striking in the early hours of Sunday.
A B-2 bomber offers several key advantages, primarily due to its stealth capabilities and global reach.
⢠A range over 11,000âŻkm without refueling, capable of global reach from distant American bases.
⢠Stealth abilities such as flying-wing design and radar-absorbing materials that allow it to evade air defenses.
⢠It can carry both nuclear and conventional weapons, including the GBUâ57 bunker-buster bomb.
Initial reports quoted by Asharq News indicated that Fordo was hit with the GBUâ57, the most powerful US conventional bunker buster, designed for deeply buried targets like Fordo, which lies 90âŻmeters underground. Fox News reported six bunker-busting bombs were dropped on Fordo, alongside approximately 30 Tomahawk cruise missiles fired at Natanz and Isfahan.
The GBUâ57 âMassive Ordnance Penetratorâ was designed by American military engineers to devastate deeply buried bunkers without radioactive fallout. It was the only nonnuclear weapon that could reach Iranâs hardest target.
⢠Weight: ~13,600âŻkg
⢠Length: 6.2âŻmeters.
⢠Diameter: 0.8âŻmeters.
⢠Explosive payload: 2,400âŻkg of high explosives.
⢠Guidance: GPS + inertial navigation.
* Penetration: Up to 60âŻmeters of reinforced concrete or dense rock.
A Tomahawk cruise missile is a precision weapon that launches from ships, submarines and ground launchers and can strike targets precisely from a great distance, even in heavily defended airspace.
⢠Range: 1,250â2,500âŻkm depending on variant.
⢠Speed: Subsonic (~880âŻkm/h).
⢠Guidance: Inertial navigation, GPS, with some variants using terminal guidance (TERCOM, DSMAC).
⢠Warhead: ~450âŻkg conventional explosives.
⢠Launch platforms: Ships and submarines.
There has been a torrent of responses to the US move against Iran, Asharq News reported. President Trump declared the missionâs success, stating that the Fordo facility was âgone,â and Iranâs primary nuclear enrichment sites âcompletely and utterly destroyed.â Later on Sunday, US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said the strikes were an incredible and overwhelming success that have âobliterated Tehranâs nuclear ambitions.â
For its part, Iranâs Tasnim News Agency quoted an official saying the nuclear sites had been evacuated in advance, and the damage was ânot irreparable.â The Atomic Energy Organization of Iran stated there was âno risk of any radiation leak.â Iran emphasized its nuclear industry would not be halted.
Israel rejects critical EU report ahead of ministersâ meeting
European nations have been increasingly critical of the massive civilian toll of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahuâs military campaign against Palestinian militant group Hamas since its October 7, 2023 attack on Israeli communities
Updated 22 June 2025
Reuters
BRUSSELS: Israel has rejected a European Union report saying it may be breaching human rights obligations in Gaza and the West Bank as a âmoral and methodological failure,â according to a document seen by Reuters on Sunday.
The note, sent to EU officials ahead of a foreign ministersâ meeting on Monday, said the report by the blocâs diplomatic service failed to consider Israelâs challenges and was based on inaccurate information.
âThe Foreign Ministry of the State of Israel rejects the document ... and finds it to be a complete moral and methodological failure,â the note said, adding that it should be dismissed entirely.
European nations have been increasingly critical of the massive civilian toll of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahuâs military campaign against Palestinian militant group Hamas since its October 7, 2023 attack on Israeli communities.