Explainer
Trump
says US strikes on Iran were a ‘success’: what we know so far
US
president Donald Trump has said the US has successfully struck three nuclear
enrichment sites in Iran. This is what we know so far
Full
story: Trump announces strikes on three sites in Iran
Guardian
staff
Sun 22
Jun 2025 02.04 BST
Donald
Trump announced on Saturday the US had successfully completed strikes on three
nuclear sites in Iran, and claimed that key enrichment facilities there had
been “totally and completely obliterated”. The sites struck were Fordow,
Natanz, and Esfahan.
Iranian
officials said there was no danger to the residents living near the nuclear
facilities hit by US strikes, according to Iranian state media. Quoting the
Crisis Management Headquarters in the province of Qom, where the Fordow
facility is located, the IRNA news service said “there is no danger to the
people of Qom and the surrounding area”. Al Jazeera reported earlier that
another official said Fordow has “long been evacuated and has not suffered any
irreversible damage”. Saudi Arabia’s Nuclear and Radiological Regulatory
Authority has said no radioactive effects have been detected in Gulf states.
Trump
said Iran must now make peace, adding: “If they do not, future attacks will be
far greater and a lot easier. For 40 years, Iran has been saying death to
America, death to Israel.” He said there were “many targets left” in the
country for the US to hit. He later warned that any retaliation by Tehran
against the US would be met with “force far greater than what was witnessed
tonight”.
He
praised Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu, saying they “worked as a
team like perhaps no team has ever worked before”, and gone a long way towards
“erasing this horrible threat to Israel”.
Netanyahu
praised the attack, saying that the “awesome and righteous might of the United
States will change history”. The Israeli prime minister said in a video
address, the US “has done what no other country on Earth could do”.
Early on
Sunday Iran’s state TV announced on new missile launches against Israel.
Explosions were heard above Jerusalem and Tel Aviv.
Iran’s
foreign minister condemned the US attack as a breach of international law which
will have “everlasting consequences”. In a statement posted to social media,
Seyed Abbas Araghchi said: “The United States, a permanent member of the United
Nations Security Council, has committed a grave violation of the UN Charter,
international law and the NPT by attacking Iran’s peaceful nuclear
installations.”
A Yemeni
Houthi official said on Sunday that the Iran-aligned group’s response to the US
attack on Iran was “only a matter of time”.
United
Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Saturday branded the US strikes
on Iran as a “dangerous escalation in a region already on the edge – and a
direct threat to international peace and security.” He added: “There is a
growing risk that this conflict could rapidly get out of control - with
catastrophic consequences for civilians, the region, and the world.”
The
Iranian Atomic Energy Organisation called the US attack “a barbaric act that
violated international law, especially the nuclear non-proliferation treaty”.
The
decision to directly involve the US comes after more than a week of strikes by
Israel on Iran that have moved to systematically eradicate the country’s air
defences and offensive missile capabilities, while damaging its nuclear
enrichment facilities. Iran has retaliated with strikes against Israel.Israel
launched the attacks on Iran saying that it wanted to remove any chance of
Tehran developing nuclear weapons. Iran has argued that its nuclear program is
intended for peaceful purposes.
Iran’s
President Masoud Pezeshkian had warned earlier on Saturday of a “more
devastating” retaliation should Israel’s nine-day bombing campaign continue,
saying the Islamic republic would not halt its nuclear program “under any
circumstances.”
Iran’s
supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei warned on Wednesday that US strikes
targeting the Islamic Republic will “result in irreparable damage for them”.

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