Live
Updates: Israel Wipes Out Iran’s Top Military Chain of Command
Israel
struck bases and nuclear sites across Iran multiple times overnight in what
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said was a pre-emptive strike. Israel was
bracing for a forceful response.
June 13,
2025, 12:50 a.m. ET31 minutes ago
Farnaz
Fassihi Qasim Nauman Aaron Boxerman Patrick Kingsley and Ronen Bergman
https://www.nytimes.com/live/2025/06/12/world/israel-iran-us-nuclear
Here’s the
latest.
Israel
launched a stunning series of strikes against Iran on Friday morning, targeting
nuclear and missile facilities and killing the nation’s top three generals.
Fears grew that the long-simmering tensions between the heavily armed rivals
could explode into a full-blown regional war.
Israel
described the strikes as a pre-emptive step to keep Iran from acquiring nuclear
weapons. In addition to nuclear targets, Israel also struck Iran’s air
defenses, long-range missile facilities, weapons depots, laboratories and the
homes and headquarters of senior officials, according to Israeli defense
officials.
The
strikes were a major blow to Iran’s chain of command. Brig. Gen. Mohammad
Bagheri, the commander in chief of the military and the second highest
commander after the supreme leader, was killed, semi-official Iranian media
reported. The commander in chief of Iran’s powerful Islamic Revolutionary
Guards Corps, Gen. Hossein Salami, and another ranking commander, Gen.
Gholamali Rashid, were also among those killed in the strikes, Iran’s state
media said.
Residents
of Tehran, the Iranian capital, reported hearing huge explosions, and Iranian
state television broadcast images of smoke and fire billowing from buildings.
Iran’s
supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, said in a statement read on state
television that Israel “should anticipate a harsh punishment.” A spokesman for
the country’s armed forces said Israel and the United States would “receive a
forceful slap.”
The
United States, Israel’s main ally, said it was not involved in the strikes.
“Israel advised us that they believe this action was necessary for its
self-defense,” Secretary of State Marco Rubio said, warning Iran to not attack
American “interests or personnel.”
Nuclear
crown jewel: Israel said Iran’s main nuclear enrichment facility at Natanz was
among the targets. Rafael Grossi, the chief of the International Atomic Energy
Agency, confirmed that Natanz had been struck and that his organization was in
touch with Iranian authorities regarding radiation levels at the site.
Trump
hopes: President Trump has been pushing for a deal with Iran on its nuclear
program. In recent weeks, he had urged Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of
Israel to refrain from any strikes while the negotiations were underway, but it
is not known what, if anything, he did to deter Israel. It is unclear if a
scheduled meeting on Sunday between Mr. Trump’s special envoy, Steve Witkoff,
and Iran’s foreign minister will still take place.
Threats
to U.S. facilities: This week, the United States withdrew diplomats from Iraq,
Iran’s neighbor to the west, and authorized the voluntary departure of the
family members of U.S. military personnel from the Middle East. The U.S.
military has a large fleet of warplanes, naval vessels and thousands of troops
stationed in the region.
Oil
prices rise: Crude oil prices jumped sharply following the Israeli attack, with
the Brent crude oil price jumping 9 percent to $78 a barrel. Iran lies on the
northern side of the Strait of Hormuz, at the exit of the Persian Gulf,
positioning Iran to block much of the oil exports of Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia
and smaller Persian Gulf states if it wishes to do so in retaliation for the
Israeli strike.
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