Israel
launches strikes on ‘dozens’ of targets in Iran, targeting nuclear programme
Israel’s
prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, says attack dubbed Rising Lion would take
‘many days’
Julian
Borger in Jerusalem
Fri 13 Jun
2025 04.05 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/jun/13/israel-strikes-iran-nuclear-program-netanyahu
Israel has
launched an attack on Iran aimed at “dozens” of targets including its nuclear
facilities, military commanders and scientists, claiming it took unilateral
action because Tehran had begun to build nuclear warheads.
Israel’s
prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, said the attack, dubbed Rising Lion, was
aimed at “rolling back the Iranian threat to Israel’s very survival”, adding
that it would take “many days”.
“We struck
at the heart of Iran’s nuclear enrichment programme,” Netanyahu said in a
recorded televised address. “We struck at the heart of Iran’s nuclear
weaponisation programme. We targeted Iran’s main enrichment facility in Natanz.
We targeted Iran’s leading nuclear scientists working on the Iranian bomb. We
also struck at the heart of Iran’s ballistic missile programme.”
Later, in
comments that suggest the operation could be long and difficult, Netanyahu said
“Israeli citizens may have to remain in sheltered areas for lengthy periods of
time.”
Iranian
state media said the head of the Revolutionary Guard, Gen Hossein Salami, and
the army chief of staff, Maj Gen Mohammad Bagheri, had been killed in the
strikes, as well as two scientists whom it named as Fereydoun Abbasi and
Mohammad Mehdi Tehranchi.
Abbasi was
the head of Iran’s Atomic Energy Organization from 2011 to 2013 and survived an
assassination attempt in 2010 that was part of a wave of targeted killings
reportedly masterminded by the Mossad. Tehranchi was a theoretical physicist.
They appear
to have been targeted in their homes. Iranian state television reported that
children had been killed in at least one of the airstrikes, on a residential
area of Tehran.
Donald Trump
insisted that he had not been taken by surprise by the strike though he had
previously warned Israel not to attack while the US was negotiating with Iran.
“Iran cannot
have a nuclear bomb and we are hoping to get back to the negotiating table,”
the president told Fox News. “We will see. There are several people in
leadership that will not be coming back.”
Explosions
were reported in Natanz, Tehran and elsewhere in Iran, while sirens and mobile
phone alerts went off across Israel as it braced for a response. Tel Aviv’s Ben
Gurion airport was closed to all flights.
“The
response to the Israeli attack will be harsh and decisive,” an Iranian security
source told the Reuters news agency, adding that details of Iran’s retaliation
“are being discussed at the highest levels”.
Iran’s
foreign ministry said the US – as Israel’s main supporter - would held be
responsible for the consequences of “Israel’s adventurism”. In a statement, the
ministry said the Israeli attack “exposes global security to unprecedented
threat” and called on the international community to condemn it.
The Israel
Defense Forces (IDF) issued a statement describing the operation as “a
pre-emptive, precise, combined offensive to strike Iran’s nuclear programme”.
“Dozens of
[Israeli air force] jets completed the first stage that included strikes on
dozens of military targets, including nuclear targets in different areas of
Iran,” the statement added.
Justifying
the attack, Netanyahu said Iran was not only building up its supply of fissile
enriched uranium, with enough for nine warheads, but also that it had taken
unprecedented steps towards building bombs.
“In recent
months, Iran has taken steps that it has never taken before, steps to weaponise
this enriched uranium, and if not stopped, Iran could produce a nuclear weapon
in a very short time. It could be a year. It could be within a few months, less
than a year.
“That is why
we have no choice but to act and act now. The hardest decision any leader has
to make is sworn in danger before it is fully materialised,” he said, pointing
to the western allies’ failure to stop Nazi aggression in the 1930s.
The attack
on Iran comes a few days before a new round of US-Iranian talks were due in
Oman aimed at finding a diplomatic solution to the standoff over Iran’s nuclear
programme, which has expanded rapidly since 2018 when Donald Trump withdrew
from an international deal constraining it.
In the hours
before the strikes began, Trump had acknowledged there was a risk of an Israeli
attack on Iran and had sought to discourage it while talks with Tehran were
still under way. “I don’t want them going in,” he said, warning it would “blow”
the chances for a diplomatic solution. It was unclear how much, if any, warning
Israel gave Washington of its strikes.
Trump’s
secretary of state, Marco Rubio, said the US had not taken part in the Israeli
attack. “Tonight, Israel took unilateral action against Iran,” Rubio said. “We
are not involved in strikes against Iran and our top priority is protecting
American forces in the region. Israel advised us that they believe this action
was necessary for its self-defence.
“President
Trump and the administration have taken all necessary steps to protect our
forces and remain in close contact with our regional partners. Let me be clear:
Iran should not target US interests or personnel.”
Democratic
senator Chris Murphy said Israel’s decision to act unilaterally was a measure
of Trump’s weakness on the world stage.
“Israel’s
attack on Iran, clearly intended to scuttle the Trump administration’s
negotiations with Iran, risks a regional war that will likely be catastrophic
for America and is further evidence of how little respect world powers –
including our own allies – have for President Trump,” Murphy said.
Israel is
likely to need US support in its defence if Israel responds with a missile
barrage. In his speech, Netanyahu praised Trump for his efforts in confronting
Iran but claimed that Tehran was just using negotiations to “buy time”. He
claimed that Israel was not just acting in its own defence.
“I want to
assure the civilised world, we will not let the world’s most dangerous regime
get the world’s most dangerous weapons, and Iran plans to give those weapons –
nuclear weapons – to its terrorist proxies that would make the nightmare of
nuclear terrorism all too real,” he said. “The increasing range of Iran’s
ballistic missiles would bring that nuclear nightmare to the cities of Europe
and eventually to America.”
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