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World Iran Vs Israel 2025 War Discussion

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World Iran Vs Israel 2025 War Discussion
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Iran hits back with barrage of missiles as Israel targets nuclear sites
Agence France-Presse. Tehran, Iran 14 June, 2025, 04:43

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Israeli first responders arrive at a site hit by a missile fired from Iran, in Ramat Gan on the outskirts of Tel Aviv on June 13, 2025. Iran fired a barrage of ballistic missiles at Israel in a counter-strike on June 13, after an unprecedented onslaught hammered the Islamic republic's top military brass and targeted its nuclear facilities and bases. | AFP Photo

Iran fired a barrage of ballistic missiles at Israel in a counter-strike Friday, after an unprecedented onslaught hammered the Islamic republic's top military brass and targeted its nuclear facilities and bases.

Iran said it had activated its air-defense system Friday night and explosions could be heard Friday night across Tehran, AFP reporters said.

Air raids sirens and explosions rang out across Israel after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu took to the airwaves to warn he expected ‘several waves of Iranian attacks’ in response.

Smoke could later be seen billowing above the skyscrapers in downtown Tel Aviv, an AFP journalist reported, as Iran's Revolutionary Guard said it had attacked dozens of targets in Israel.

Israel's firefighting service said Friday its teams were responding to several "major" incidents resulting from Iranian missile attacks.

They included efforts to rescue people trapped in a high-rise building. Rescuers said 34 people had been wounded, including a woman in critical condition.

Even as the latest strikes started, Iran's ambassador to the UN said Friday that 78 people had been killed and 320 wounded in the first wave of strikes.

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Iranians celebrate in the streets of Tehran a missile attack that hit Tel Aviv on June 13, 2025.

Calls for dialogue

US officials said they were helping Israel defend against the missile attacks, even as Washington insisted it had nothing to Israel's strikes on Iran.

US President Donald Trump agreed on a call with UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer that ‘dialogue and diplomacy’ were needed to calm the crisis, Starmer's office said.

Trump also spoke with Netanyahu Friday, US officials said, without elaborating.

Iran's missile salvo came hours after Israel said its wide-spread air raids had killed several top Iranian generals, including most of the senior leadership of the Revolutionary Guards' air force

It had launched several rounds of strikes that hit about 200 targets including nuclear facilities and air bases.

Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei vowed to bring Israel ‘to ruin’ during a televised address.

‘The armed forces of the Islamic republic will inflict heavy blows upon this malevolent enemy,’ Khamenei told the nation.

In Israel, Netanyahu issued a video statement addressed to the Iranian public, calling on them to unite against an ‘evil and oppressive regime.’

But he also warned that more attacks were on the way.

‘In the past 24 hours, we have taken out top military commanders, senior nuclear scientists, the Islamic regime's most significant enrichment facility and a large portion of its ballistic missile arsenal,’ Netanyahu said in the video statement.

Following the first wave of strikes early Friday, Trump urged Iran to ‘make a deal’ on its nuclear programme, warning of ‘even more brutal’ attacks to come.

While stressing that it was not involved in the Israeli attacks, the United States warned Iran not to attack its personnel or interests.

Tehran nevertheless said Washington would be ‘responsible for consequences’.

Security Council meeting

The strikes killed Iran's highest-ranking military officer, armed forces chief of staff Mohammad Bagheri, and the head of the Revolutionary Guards, Hossein Salami, Iranian media reported.

Khamenei swiftly appointed new commanders to replace those killed, while state media said a senior adviser to the supreme leader had himself been wounded.

‘The senior chain of command of the air force of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps had assembled in an underground command centre to prepare for an attack on the State of Israel,’ the Israeli military said, adding that its attacks had killed most of them.

Iran confirmed that the Guards aerospace commander had been killed, along with ‘a group of brave and dedicated fighters’.

AFP images showed a gaping hole in the side of a Tehran residential building that appeared to have sustained a targeted strike.

Tasnim news agency said six nuclear scientists were among the dead.

Friday's evening UN Security Council emergency meeting was called by Iran, and supported by Russia and China, a diplomatic source told AFP.

Oil prices surged while stocks sank on the Israeli strikes, which came after Trump's warning of a ‘massive conflict’ in the region.

Radiation 'unchanged' in Natanz area

The violence raised questions as to whether Sunday's sixth round of talks planned between the US and Iran to seek a deal on Iran's nuclear programme would go ahead in Oman.

Trump said Washington was ‘hoping to get back to the negotiating table’.

Iran confirmed that above-ground sections of the Natanz enrichment plant had been destroyed, but the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said radiation levels outside the site ‘remained unchanged’.

‘Most of the damage is on the surface level,’ said the Atomic Energy Organisation of Iran's spokesman Behrouz Kamalvandi.

Iran said there was only limited damage to the Fordo and Isfahan nuclear sites.

The United States and other Western governments have repeatedly accused Iran of seeking a nuclear weapon, an ambition it has consistently denied.

Netanyahu said Israeli intelligence had concluded that Iran was approaching the ‘point of no return’ on its nuclear programme.

Israel had called for global action after the IAEA accused Iran on Thursday of non-compliance with its obligations.

Iran currently enriches uranium to 60 per cent, far above the 3.67-per cent limit set by a largely moribund 2015 agreement with major powers, but still short of the 90 per cent threshold needed for a nuclear warhead.​
 

Israel kills six nuclear scientists in Iran: media
Agence France-Presse . Tehran 13 June, 2025, 14:53

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Rescue teams work outside a heavily damaged building, targeted by an Israeli strike in the Iranian capital Tehran on June 13, 2025. | AFP photo

At least six nuclear scientists were killed on Friday in Israel’s attacks on Iran, media outlets in the Islamic republic reported.

Tasnim news agency named the six scientists, including Mohammad Mehdi Tehranchi, who was the president of the Islamic Azad University of Iran.

Fereydoun Abbasi, a former head of the Atomic Energy Organisation of Iran, was also among the scientists killed, it added.

Friday’s strikes hit multiple targets across Iran, including residential buildings in Tehran as well as key nuclear enrichment facility in Iran’s centre.

Iran’s Revolutionary Guards chief Hossein Salami and armed forces chief of staff Mohammad Bagheri were killed in the Israeli operation.​
 

Israel strikes on Iran threaten to ignite region: Hezbollah
Agence France-Presse . Beirut, Lebanon 13 June, 2025, 22:03

Lebanese militant group Hezbollah condemned Israel’s wave of strikes on its backer Iran on Friday, warning that they threaten to ‘ignite the region’.

‘This enemy adheres to no logic or laws and knows only the language of killing, fire, and destruction,’ Hezbollah said in a statement that condemned the strikes as a ‘brutal’ aggression.

Long seen as the Iran-led axis’s most powerful group, Hezbollah was severely weakened after its latest war with Israel, which ended in a ceasefire agreement in November.

Most of the group’s leaders were killed and much of its military capacity destroyed in a conflict that started when Hezbollah launched attacks in support of its ally Palestinian Hamas in Gaza.

Under the ceasefire agreement, Hezbollah was to withdraw from border areas and hand over its weapons to the Lebanese state.

Hezbollah leader Naim Qassem expressed his support for Iran ‘in all the steps and measures it takes to defend itself and for its choices’.

The Lebanese foreign ministry condemned Israel’s attack, and said it was ‘continuing its contacts’ to spare the country from being dragged into any conflict.

Lebanese president Joseph Aoun said Israel’s strikes ‘did not target the Iranian people alone, but also targeted all international efforts being made to maintain stability in the Middle East and neighbouring countries’.

Aoun called on the international community to ‘take effective and swift action to prevent Israel from achieving its goals, which are no longer hidden from anyone’.

Amid the regional developments, Lebanon’s national carrier Middle East Airlines cancelled all flights on Friday to and from Jordan and Iraq.​
 

Iran strikes back at Israel with missiles over Jerusalem, Tel Aviv

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Photo: Reuters
  1. Iran launches hundreds of missiles after Israeli strikes on nuclear site​
  2. Israel aims to prevent Iran from building nuclear weapons, Netanyahu says​
  3. Trump urges Tehran to halt bombing by reaching nuclear deal​
  4. Iran's Supreme Leader accuses Israel of initiating war, vows painful revenge​
  5. Oil prices surge amid fears of wider regional conflict, OPEC holds supply steady​
Iran launched retaliatory airstrikes at Israel on Friday night, with explosions heard in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, the country's two largest cities, following Israel's biggest-ever military strike against its longstanding enemy.

Air raid sirens sounded across Israel as authorities urged the public to take shelter. Missiles were seen over Tel Aviv's skyline, with the military saying Iran had fired two salvos.

Israel's military said Iran fired fewer than 100 missiles and most were intercepted or fell short. The US military helped shoot down Iranian missiles headed for Israel, two US officials said.

Israel's Channel 12 said two people were critically injured, eight moderately and 34 slightly from shrapnel.

Several buildings were struck in the attack including an apartment block in a residential neighbourhood in Ramat Gan near Tel Aviv. Another building in central Tel Aviv was also struck, causing significant damage to multiple floors.

The Israeli strikes on Iran throughout the day and the Iranian retaliation raised fears of a broader regional conflagration, although Iran's allies Hamas in Gaza and Hezbollah in Lebanon have been decimated by Israel.

Iran's state news agency IRNA said Tehran launched hundreds of ballistic missiles at Israel after Israel blasted Iran's huge Natanz underground nuclear site and killed its top military commanders. Iran says its nuclear programme is only for peaceful purposes.

Israeli officials said it may be some time before the extent of damage at Natanz was clear. Western countries have long accused Iran of refining uranium there to levels suitable for a bomb rather than civilian use.

The above-ground pilot enrichment plant at Natanz has been destroyed, UN nuclear watchdog chief Rafael Grossi told the Security Council on Friday. He said the UN was still gathering information about Israeli attacks on two other facilities, the Fordow fuel enrichment plant and at Isfahan.

Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei accused Israel of starting a war. A senior Iranian official said nowhere in Israel would be safe and revenge would be painful.

Iran's UN envoy Amir Saeid Iravani said 78 people, including senior military officials, were killed in Israel's strikes on Iran and more than 320 people were wounded, most of them civilians.

He accused the US of being complicit in the attacks and said it shared full responsibility for the consequences.

'AS MANY DAYS AS IT TAKES'

Israel's operation "will continue for as many days as it takes to remove this threat," Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a TV address.

"Generations from now, history will record our generation stood its ground, acted in time and secured our common future."

Netanyahu, who for decades has raised the alarm about Iran's nuclear programme, said he authorised the assault to prevent Iran from building nuclear weapons. Israel and its Western allies have said this is Tehran's objective but Iran denies it.

Israel's UN envoy Danny Danon said intelligence had confirmed that within days Iran would have produced enough fissile material for multiple bombs.

Iran has long insisted its nuclear programme is for civilian purposes only. The UN nuclear watchdog concluded this week that it was in violation of its obligations under the global non-proliferation treaty.

US President Donald Trump said it was not too late for Tehran to halt the Israeli bombing campaign by reaching a deal on its nuclear programme.

Tehran had been engaged in talks with the Trump administration on a deal to curb its nuclear programme to replace one that Trump abandoned in 2018. Tehran rejected the last US offer.

The price of crude LCOc1 leaped on fears of wider retaliatory attacks across the oil-producing region, although there were no reports that oil production or storage was damaged. OPEC said the escalation did not justify any immediate changes to oil supply.

'WE KNEW EVERYTHING,' TRUMP TELLS REUTERS

In a phone interview with Reuters, Trump said nuclear talks between Tehran and the United States, scheduled for Sunday, were still on the agenda though he was not sure if they would take place.

"We knew everything," Trump said of the Israeli attack plans.

"I tried to save Iran humiliation and death. I tried to save them very hard because I would have loved to have seen a deal worked out," Trump said. "They can still work out a deal, however, it's not too late."

Israeli national security adviser Tzachi Hanegbi said military action by itself would not destroy Iran's nuclear programme, but could "create the conditions for a long-term deal, led by the United States" to get rid of it.

Two regional sources said at least 20 Iranian military commanders were killed, a stunning decapitation reminiscent of Israeli attacks that swiftly wiped out the leadership of Lebanon's once-feared Hezbollah militia last year. Iran also said six of its top nuclear scientists had been killed.

Among the generals killed on Friday were the armed forces chief of staff, Major General Mohammad Bagheri, and the Revolutionary Guards chief, Hossein Salami.

Major General Mohammad Pakpour, promoted to replace Salami as Guards commander, vowed retaliation in a letter to the Supreme Leader read on state television: "The gates of hell will open to the child-killing regime."

MOSSAD OPERATED DEEP IN IRAN

An Israeli security source said Mossad commandos had been operating deep inside the Islamic Republic before the attack, and the Israeli spy agency and military had mounted a series of covert operations against Iran's strategic missile array.

Israel also established an attack-drone base near Tehran, the source added. The military said it had bombarded Iran's air defences, destroying "dozens of radars and surface-to-air missile launchers".

Iranians described an atmosphere of fear and anger, with some people hurrying to change money and others seeking a way out of the country to safety.

"People on my street rushed out of their homes in panic. We were all terrified," said Marziyeh, 39, who was awakened by a blast in Natanz.

While some Iranians quietly hoped the attack would lead to changes in Iran's hardline clerical leadership, others vowed to rally behind the authorities.

"I will fight and die for our right to a nuclear programme. Israel and its ally America cannot take it away from us with these attacks," said Ali, a member of the pro-government Basij militia in Qom.

Iran's ability to retaliate with weapons fired by its regional proxies has been sharply degraded over the past year, with the downfall of its ally Bashar al-Assad in Syria and the decimation of Hezbollah in Lebanon and Hamas in Gaza.

Israel said a missile fired from Yemen - whose Houthi militia are Iran-aligned - had landed in Hebron in the occupied West Bank. The Palestinian Red Crescent said three Palestinian children were wounded by shrapnel there.​
 

Iran launches new wave of missile attacks on Israel: state TV
Air raid sirens heard in Jerusalem

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A missile launched from Iran is seen from Jerusalem, June 14, 2025. Photo: Reuters/Ammar Awad

Iran launched a new wave of missile attacks on Israel early Saturday after numerous sites had been struck across the Islamic republic, state media said.

"A new round of Iranian missile attacks on the Zionist regime begins from Tehran and Kermanshah", a city in western Iran, state TV reported.

The Israeli army on Saturday called on Israelis to take shelter after detecting new missile launches from Iran toward Israel.

"Sirens sounded in several areas across Israel following the identification of missiles from Iran toward the state of Israel," the military said in a statement.

"At this time, the IAF is operating to intercept and strike where necessary to eliminate the threat," it said, instructing citizens to seek shelter as AFP journalists heard numerous explosions in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem.​
 

'We knew everything,' Trump tells Reuters about Israel's strikes on Iran

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US President Donald Trump speaks during a meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, on April 7, 2025. Photo: AFP
  1. US-Iran nuclear talks uncertain after Israeli strikes​
  2. Trump convened advisers at Camp David for Iran discussions​
  3. Trump says he gave Iran 60 days for a deal, deadline passed​

After months of urging Israel not to strike Iran while he worked toward a nuclear deal, President Donald Trump told Reuters in a phone interview on Friday that he and his team had known the attacks were coming - and still saw room for an accord.

"We knew everything, and I tried to save Iran humiliation and death. I tried to save them very hard because I would have loved to have seen a deal worked out," Trump said.

"They can still work out a deal, however, it's not too late," he added.

Trump had repeatedly pushed Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to delay an Israeli attack to give diplomacy more time, though the president himself had threatened to bomb the Gulf nation if nuclear talks failed.

Trump's shifting stance around the Israeli strikes, which he called "excellent" and "very successful" in a series of media interviews on Friday, offered one of the most striking examples yet of how he conducts high-stakes negotiations through both frank public rhetoric and behind-the-scenes maneuvers.

The US president offered support for Israel's decision to launch a series of devastating raids in Iran, showing a willingness to embrace the use of military force to set back Tehran's nuclear program. In contrast, some allies stressed the need for restraint.

Asked if the US would support Israel against Iranian counterattacks, Trump said he supported Israel. He said he was not concerned about a regional war breaking out as a result of Israel's strikes but did not elaborate.

"We've been very close to Israel. We're their number one ally by far," Trump told Reuters, adding, "We'll see what happens."

Later on Friday, two US officials said the US military had helped shoot down Iranian missiles headed toward Israel.

TALKS IN DOUBT

Still uncertain is whether Trump's attempt to reach an agreement with Iran to halt uranium enrichment is still viable, with a sixth round of talks still scheduled for Sunday in Oman but now in doubt after the attacks.

In negotiations with Iran, Trump sought to persuade the Iranians to give up uranium enrichment and was awaiting a counter-proposal from Iran. Tehran had balked at giving up enrichment, seemingly leaving little room for an agreement.

"They seek enrichment. We can't have enrichment," Trump told reporters on Monday.

As the week wore on, Trump sounded increasingly resigned to the prospect that Israel would strike and hinted that he knew more than he was willing to talk about publicly.

"I don't want to say it's imminent, but it looks like something that could very well happen. Look, it's very simple, not complicated. Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon. Other than that, I want them to be successful," he told reporters on Thursday before the raids began.

Speaking to Reuters on Friday, Trump said he had given the Iranians 60 days to come to an agreement and that the time had expired with no deal.

"We knew just about everything," he said. "We knew enough that we gave Iran 60 days to make a deal and today is 61, right? So, you know, we knew everything."

Trump said it was unclear if Iran still has a nuclear program following Israeli strikes on the country.

"Nobody knows. It was a very devastating hit," Trump said.

Israel said it had targeted Iran's nuclear facilities, ballistic missile factories and military commanders at the start of what it warned would be a prolonged operation to prevent Tehran from building an atomic weapon.

Trump said the US still has nuclear talks planned with Iran on Sunday but he was unsure they would take place. US special envoy Steve Witkoff was scheduled to meet an Iranian delegation in Oman.

"They're not dead," Trump said of the US-Iran talks. "We have a meeting with them on Sunday. Now, I'm not sure if that meeting will take place, but we have a meeting with them on Sunday."

The president had convened his top national security advisers at Camp David on Sunday night for what he said were discussions that included Iran, and he spoke to Netanyahu on Monday about Iran.

A White House official said Trump spoke with Netanyahu again on Friday. Trump also held talks about the attacks with his National Security Council in the White House Situation Room. No details of the discussions were immediately available.​
 

Bangladesh concerned over Israeli attack on Iran

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File image

Bangladesh has unequivocally expressed its strong condemnation and deep concern over the latest Israeli military attacks against the Islamic Republic of Iran.

"This blatant act of hostility constitutes a clear violation of United Nations Charter and fundamental principles of international law and the sovereignty of Iran," said a foreign ministry statement yesterday.

It poses a serious threat to regional and global peace and security with far reaching consequences, it said.

Bangladesh calls upon all parties to exercise the utmost restraint and refrain from any actions that may further escalate tensions in an already volatile region.

Bangladesh also urged the UN and the international community to act collectively in support of a stable Middle East, underscoring that diplomacy and mutual respect remain the only viable path to lasting peace, it added.​
 
Many hoods of Tel-Aviv been already turned into rubble!

Dozens of Iranian hypersonics have rained down absolutely devastating neighborhoods. 🤣

Out fukkin standing folks.

Gen Pakpour da new IRGC head is sayin, we haven't even started yet.

Now, hocus/ pocus aside........I fully expect da US to join Israel openly. Iran can keep launching thousands of missiles, but the US will intervene now.

Any moment.

What will trump sahb do now? Is he going to put his troops in Tel Aviv hoods n say k ager tunay meri bhund per mayzile maara tay fir achha ne hona?........:ROFLMAO:


You can't insult me like dat, vurna main fir teri maaran ga? I gonna cut up your panty n bra ager tunay meri chaadi ich suraakh kara. :ROFLMAO:


@Vsdoc @Sharma Ji @Krishna with Flute @Saif @Bilal9 @Bagheera0084 @Mainerik
 

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