2h ago
02.24 GMT
Welcome
summary
Hello and
welcome to our continuing live coverage of the US-Israel war on Iran and the
effect the conflict is having on the region, the world and the global economy.
Benjamin
Netanyahu has hinted at a possible “ground component” to the US-Israel warn on
Iran – while Donald Trump suggested the US had no plans to put boots on the
ground.
“You
don’t want to replace one ayatollah with another,” the Israeli prime minister
said on Thursday, adding that the Iranian regime was unlikely to be overthrown using air strikes alone.
It is
“often said” that you can’t “do revolutions from the air”, Netanyahu told a
press conference. “There has to be a ground component as well. There are many
possibilities for this ground component and I take the liberty of not sharing
[those] with you.”
Trump,
meanwhile, claimed he had no plans for the US to engage in such an operation.
“I’m not putting troops anywhere,” he told a reporter, when asked about using
ground troops. But he added: “If I were, I certainly wouldn’t tell you.”
The
president also confirmed that the Pentagon has asked Congress to approve a
further $200bn to fund the war.
Some 65%
of Americans believe Trump will order troops into a large-scale ground war in
Iran, according to a new Reuters/Ipsos poll, but just 7% support that idea.
In other
developments:
Benjamin
Netanyahu denied that Donald Trump was “dragged” into the war by Israel, as he
tried to pour cold water on suggestions that Israel influenced the US’s
decision to attack Iran and amid growing signs that the US and Israel are not
aligned on their war aims. “Does anyone really think that someone can tell
President Trump what to do,” the Israeli prime minister said, adding: “I misled
no one.”
Netanyahu
also stated that Israel “acted alone” in striking Iran’s South Pars gasfield,
though he didn’t address whether or not he had told Trump about the attack
beforehand. “President Trump asked us to hold off on future attacks, and we’re
holding out,” he added. Trump has distanced himself from Israel’s attack on the
world’s largest gasfield (which he claimed on Wednesday that Washington “knew
nothing” about), and confirmed today that he told Netanyahu to stop attacking
Iran’s energy facilities.
Netanyahu
also claimed that Iran has “no ability to enrich uranium at the moment and no
capability of manufacturing ballistic missiles”. He said that the war would
take “as long as is necessary”, adding: “We will crush them entirely, all those
capabilities.”
Iranian
attacks on Ras Laffan Industrial City in Qatar have reduced the country’s
liquefied natural gas (LNG) export capacity by 17%, according to QatarEnergy,
the state-run energy giant. The “extensive damage” could reduce its annual
revenues by $20bn and take “up to five years” to repair, Saad al-Kaabi, the
Qatari energy minister and CEO of QatarEnergy, said in a statement.
US
Central Command said that it has destroyed the Iranian regime’s
surface-to-surface missile plant in Karaj. The plant was used to “assemble
ballistic missiles that threatened Americans, neighboring countries, and
commercial shipping,” Centcom said.
France
will double its humanitarian aid to Lebanon to the value of €17m ($19.7m),
foreign minister Jean-Noel Barrot said, as Lebanon grapples with Israel’s
latest military assault. Israeli strikes on Beirut and its ground invasion of
southern Lebanon have killed over 1,000 people, including 118 children, and
wounded more than 2,500 since Tel Aviv’s renewed offensive on 2 March. More
than one million – roughly one in five – of the population have been displaced.
An
Iranian missile attack hit Israel’s oil refineries in the northern port city of
Haifa but did not cause “significant damage“, Israel’s energy ministry said.
Energy minister Eli Cohen said power was briefly disrupted, with electricity
restored to most of those who were affected, Reuters reported.

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