By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
The threat came as
Israel and Iran exchanged fire a day after Israel unleashed strikes that Iran
said hit its nuclear facilities.
TEHRAN - Israel’s defence minister warned on June 14 that “Tehran will burn”
and its residents will pay dearly if Iran continues
its missile strikes against Israeli civilians.
“The Iranian dictator
is turning the citizens of Iran into hostages and bringing about a reality in
which they – especially the residents of Tehran – will pay a heavy price
because of the criminal harm to Israeli civilians,” said Israel Katz.
“If (Iran’s supreme
leader Ayatollah Ali) Khamenei continues to fire missiles towards the Israeli
home front – Tehran will burn,” the minister added.
The threat came as
Israel and Iran exchanged fire a day after Israel unleashed strikes that Iran
said hit its nuclear facilities, “martyred” top commanders, and killed dozens
of civilians.
Iran has hit back
with waves of drone and missile strikes, with a barrage of dozens lighting up
the skies over Jerusalem and Tel Aviv overnight, killing three people and
wounding dozens.
Following decades of
enmity and conflict by proxy, it is the first time that Israel and Iran have
traded fire with such intensity, with fears of a prolonged conflict engulfing
the region.
Israel
launched its surprise attack on Iran early on June 13, only days before Iran and the United States had
been due to hold a sixth round of talks on the Islamic Republic’s nuclear
program.
The operation –
dubbed “Rising Lion” – has since killed Iran’s highest-ranking military
officer, Major-General Mohammad Bagheri, and the head of the Revolutionary
Guards, Major-General Hossein Salami, among other senior generals.
On June 14, the
Israeli military said it had Tehran in its sights after strikes on dozens of
missile launchers and air defenses in the area around the Iranian capital.
“The way to Iran has
been paved,” the military’s chief of staff and air force chief were quoted as
saying in a statement.
The military “is
proceeding according to its operational plans, and Israeli air force fighter
jets are set to resume striking targets in Tehran,” it added.
‘Smoke, dust’
Iran’s ambassador to
the United Nations said 78 people had been killed and 320 wounded in Israel’s
first wave of strikes on June 13.
Iran called on its
citizens to unite in defense of the country as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu urged them to rise up against their government.
Air raid sirens and
explosions rang out across Israel through the night, with many residents holed
up in bomb shelters until home defense commanders stood down alerts.
Israel said dozens of
missiles – some intercepted – had been fired in the latest salvos from Iran,
with AFP images of the city of Ramat Gan near Tel Aviv showing blown-out
buildings, destroyed vehicles and streets strewn with debris.
Israeli rescuers said
two people were killed and 19 wounded on June 14 by rocket fire on a
residential area in the coastal plain.
Iran’s Revolutionary
Guards said they had attacked dozens of targets in Israel.
Israeli firefighters
had worked for hours to free people trapped in a high-rise building in Tel Aviv
on June 13.
Mr
Chen Gabizon, a resident, said he ran to an
underground shelter after receiving an alert.
“After a few minutes,
we just heard a very big explosion, everything was shaking, smoke, dust,
everything was all over the place,” he said.
Rescuers said 34
people were wounded in the Gush Dan area, including a woman who later died of
her injuries, according to Israeli media reports.
Speaking to CNN,
Israel’s ambassador to the United States, Yechiel Leiter, said Iran had fired
three salvos of ballistic missiles on Friday, some 150 in total.
“We expect that the
Iranians, who have a considerable volume of ballistic missiles, somewhere in
the neighbourhood of 2,000, will continue to fire
them,” Mr Leiter said.
In Tehran, fire and
heavy smoke billowed over Mehrabad airport on June
14, an AFP journalist said, as Iranian media reported an explosion.
Blasts were heard
across the capital as Iran activated its air defences
against the incoming fire.
Dozens of Iranians
took to the streets to cheer their country’s military response, with some
waving national flags and chanting anti-Israel slogans.
Time to stop’
The attacks prompted
several countries in the region to temporarily ground air traffic, though on
the morning of June 14, Jordan, Lebanon and Syria reopened their airspace.
Iran’s airspace was
closed until further notice, state media reported.
As fears mounted of
wider conflict, United Nations chief Antonio Guterres called on both sides to
cease fire.
“Enough escalation.
Time to stop. Peace and diplomacy must prevail,” he said on X late on June 13.
Pope Leo XIV appealed for
Israel and Iran to show “responsibility and reason”.
Asked how long the
war would last, Israel’s ambassador to Paris, Joshua Zarka, said: “A small
number of weeks”.
Prime Minister
Netanyahu had said on June 13 that the strikes would “continue as many days as
it takes”.
The conflict has
thrown into doubt the planned Iran-US nuclear talks in the Gulf sultanate of
Oman on June 15.
After the first
strikes, US President Donald Trump urged Iran to “make a deal”, adding the
United States was “hoping to get back to the negotiating table”.
Western governments
have repeatedly accused Iran of seeking a nuclear weapon, an allegation it
denies.
Iran said on June 14
that its participation in the Oman talks remained “unclear”.
“It is still unclear
what decision we will make for Sunday,” state media reported, citing foreign
ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei. Baqaei had called the talks “meaningless” given the Israeli
strikes, which he alleged were carried out with “US permission”.
Western governments
have repeatedly accused Iran of seeking a nuclear weapon, an allegation it
denies.
Iran said on June 14
that its participation in the Oman talks remained “unclear”.
“It is still unclear
what decision we will make for Sunday,” state media reported, citing foreign
ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei.
Baqaei
had called the talks “meaningless” because of the Israeli strikes, which he
alleged were carried out with “US permission”.
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