Netanyahu asserts Israel’s strikes on Iran cripple missile capabilities
Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu confirmed that Israeli airstrikes over the weekend damaged Iran’s missile production and defense capabilities, affirming its success in achieving its goals.
Satellite imagery has shown Israel struck nuclear testing sites in its weekend air attacks on Iran, in addition to air defense systems, perhaps opening the way for future raids if threatened by Tehran.
Iran’s president, Masoud Pezashkian, wrote to the UN on Sunday warning that Tehran has the right to respond to the attacks while countries including the US, UK and France, said the cycle of tit-for-tat strikes must now end.
Images from satellite firm Planet Labs showed that in the four-hour attack overnight Saturday, a military base in Parchin near Tehran, where nuclear tests were allegedly conducted in the past, was damaged.
While Israel had been warned by its biggest ally, the US, not to strike Iran’s nuclear sites, Parchin was marked by Iran as military, not nuclear, allowing them to evade the veto. It was also one of the sites which had been banned from inspections by the UN’s nuclear team.
The UN atomic agency, IAEA, had marked it as a site where Iran once worked on nuclear weapons. At least three buildings were hit, including solid-propellant facilities for missiles.
Iran's Russian-made S-300 air defense system, extensively targeted in the Israel attack on October 26, 2024.
David Albright, a former UN weapons inspector who heads the Institute for Science and International Security research group, and Decker Eveleth, an associate research analyst at CNA, a Washington think tank, told Reuters that as well as Parchin, Israel struck Khojir, which according to Eveleth, is a sprawling missile production site near Tehran.
In posts on X, Albright said commercial satellite imagery showed that Israel hit a building in Parchin called Taleghan 2 that was used for testing activities during the Amad Plan, Iran's defunct nuclear weapons development program shuttered in 2003.
Albright, head of the Institute for Science and International Security research group, was given access to the program's files for a book after they were stolen from Tehran by Israel's Mossad intelligence agency in 2018.
On X, he said the archives revealed that Iran kept important test equipment at the site called Taleghan 2. While Iran may have removed key materials before the airstrike, he said, "even if no equipment remained inside" the building would have provided "intrinsic value" for future nuclear weapons-related activities.
Analysis from the think tank, The Institute of Science, also said that while the UN’s International Atomic Energy Agency never visited the building, not deemed a high priority site, “it is possible Iran only removed the most incriminating equipment in its clean up effort, in the high explosive test chamber,” it said in a post on X.
The non-proliferation group research explained: “If so, Israel’s alleged destruction may have destroyed valuable equipment useful in further nuclear weapons development.”
From the imagery, Taleghan 2 appears to have been destroyed, as were the other three buildings associated with rocket motor production nearby and secured separately.
The photographs also confirm that Israel attacked another base, in Hujir east of Tehran, where buildings used to mix fuel for ballistic missiles were also damaged.
It is consistent with Israel’s policy of targeting nuclear related sites without touching the sensitive facilities such as the nuclear enrichment facility, Natanz.
Jason Brodsky, from United Against Nuclear Iran, said the attacks this weekend send “a very clear message” to Iran.
“Israel is laying the groundwork to attack your oil and petrochemical refineries in the next round should you retaliate,” he wrote on X after Israel struck with great accuracy air defences around Iran’s critical energy sites. While the facilities were avoided, there were clear warnings of what could come should Iran hit back.
The sites targeted by Israel, according to the New York Times, included defenses at the Bandar Imam Khomeini petrochemical complex, in Khuzestan Province; at the major economic port Bandar Imam Khomeini, adjacent to it; and at the Abadan oil refinery.
Air-defense systems were also struck in Ilam Province, at the refinery for the gas field, called Tange Bijar, officials told the newspaper, including one from Iran’s oil ministry.
Pezeshkian’s letter to the UN Secretary General said Iran “reserves its inherent right to legal and legitimate response to these criminal attacks at the appropriate time”.
World leaders have been urging for an end to the cycle of violence.
In the early hours of Sunday morning Tehran time, US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin warned Iran against responding to Israel’s strikes.
After speaking to Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, he wrote on X: “ I reaffirmed the United States’ ironclad commitment to Israel’s security and support for Israel's right to defend itself … and made clear that Iran should not make the mistake of responding to Israel’s strikes, which should mark the end of this exchange.”
On Saturday, British PM Keir Starker said: "I am clear that Israel has the right to defend itself against Iranian aggression. I'm equally clear that we need to avoid further regional escalation and urge all sides to show restraint. Iran should not respond.”
The Israeli military said three waves of Israeli jets struck missile factories and other sites near Tehran and in western Iran early on Saturday in retaliation for Tehran's October 1 barrage of more than 200 ballistic missiles against Israel.
Playing down the damage, Iran’s military said the Israeli warplanes used "very light warheads" to strike border radar systems in the provinces of Ilam, Khuzestan and around Tehran.
Supporters of an Israeli attack on the Islamic Republic have taken to social media to express their frustration with Israel’s choice of targets in Saturday’s air strikes, excluding the political leadership.
Many Iranians invested their hopes in Israel in the past few months to help them overthrow the Islamic Republic by launching wide-ranging air strikes against it.
They expected Israel to target Iran’s top officials including Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei as well as sensitive government centers such as the headquarters of the state broadcaster IRIB to paralyze the state propaganda machine.
Supporters of Israeli military action against Iran used several hashtags such as #اسرائیل_بزن (Strike them, Israel) in their social media posts to encourage the Israeli government to take quicker action against the Islamic Republic.
Israel, however, seems to have focused its operation, dubbed “Days of Reckoning”, on striking only Iran's sensitive military targets and said it had achieved its objectives, at least for now.
“[The attack] was very weak and limited. [Israel] didn’t strike [Khamenei’s] residence, it didn’t strike nuclear and oil production facilities, we are very disheartened,” one of the seemingly disillusioned Iranians who had hoped an Israeli strike would help bring about a change in the government wrote.
“I believe that we ordinary people are not aware of the behind-the-scenes equations … But we, the people of Iran, need breathing space to get rid of the Islamic Republic. This attack, whatever it was, has not created opportunities yet for the [Iranian] people [to overthrow the Islamic Republic],” another post on X read.
Many complaints were posted as comments to the Israeli foreign ministry and Israeli Defense Force’s Persian-language posts on X following the air strikes.
“You should have done it twenty days ago if you wanted to launch such a weak attack. You dallied so long and caused the rate of the dollar and gold coins to soar. You put pressure on the suffering people so that you would strike four military garrisons. The Iranian people were your best allies [but] you ruined our hopes,” one of the comments to an IDF post said.
“The head of the snake in Tehran, the residences of the heads of the government, even the mausoleum of the scoundrel Khomeini are still all standing. Did you really want to target the heart of the Hezbollah like this??????” an X account that usually tweets in favor of monarchy commentedunder a tweet by Hananya Naphtali, a popular Israeli social media activist who tweets in Persian, about the strikes.
“Only this? Did you make so much noise for this? ... You struck in a way that they can deny [damages] to end everything,” another seemingly disillusioned Iranian responded to a Naphtali post.
Tens of others expressed similar sentiments in their comments to Naphtali’s tweet.
Naphtali also launched a poll on X after the strikes to find out if Iranians were happy with the attacks. Over 14,000 took part in the poll within nine hours from the time the poll was launched. Nearly 70 percent of the respondents chose the “No” option.
“We are happy that you struck but our expectations were not met. The Octopus is still breathing and its arms will grow again and it will harm you, let us tell you,” one of the comments under the poll read.
But not all were unhappy, those who approved of the Israeli military action used the hashtags #نتانیاهو_مچکریم(Thank you, Netanyahu), and #اسرائیل_متشکریم(Thank you Israel) in the early hours of the air strikes and later. Some of them contended that the overnight Saturday strikes were only the beginning, and Israel would continue to strike at the Islamic Republic to weaken and eventually destroy it.
“We definitely expected a more crushing attack but I think it is too early to judge now … I think it is unlikely that Israel will stop at this and will eventually destroy the regime, not if for our sake, but at least for its own survival,” one of them said.
Iranian officials have so far not indicated a clear decision to strike back. The statements released by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Joint Staff of the Armed Forces Saturday underlined Iran's “right to self-defense” but rather than revenge, highlighted the need for a “sustainable ceasefire” in Gaza and Lebanon “to avoid further casualties in these regions.
Iran has been demanding a ceasefire, as its proxies, the Lebanese Hezbollah and Hamas face continued military pressure by Israel, losing leaders and cadres to constant attacks.
In his first response to the Israeli attack on Iran’s military installations, Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei refrained from an outright call for retaliation and delegated the decision to “authorities”.
Khamenei emphasized that Iran must make Israel understand “the power, determination, and innovation of the Iranian nation and its youth” while declaring that the decision on “how best to convey Iran's might and resolve to the Zionist regime” must be taken by the authorities in a manner that the best interests of the nation and the country are secured.
This may suggest that he has delegated the decision to the Supreme National Security Council, where many members are his appointees. It could also reflect Khamenei’s tendency to appear distanced from certain controversial policies that might carry political risks for him.
President Masoud Pezeshkian on Saturday saidin an X post that the Iranian nation would “stand fearlessly in defense of its soil and respond to any act of folly with prudence and intelligence” after the confirmation that several military installations in Tehran, Khuzestan, and Ilam provinces had come under Israeli attack in three separate waves overnight.
The Joint Staff of the Armed Forces in a statement Saturday claimed the military had intercepted a large number of Israeli missiles and succeeded in preventing Israeli aircraft from entering Iran's airspace but did not make any threat of immediate retaliation.
Speaker Mohammad-Bagher Ghalibaf, however, on Sunday said at a session of the Parliament that the Islamic Republic’s response to Israel's attack would be “definite and calculated,” while demanding that the United States compel Israel to accept a sustainable ceasefire in Gaza and Lebanon and prevent the conflict from spreading in West Asia.
Iran has been demanding a ceasefire, as its proxies, the Lebanese Hezbollah and Hamas face continued military pressure by Israel, losing leaders and cadres to constant attacks.
Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi on Sunday also accused the United States of complicity in Israel’s Saturday attack by providing an air corridor to Israel in Iraq. US officials say Washington had no direct involvement in it.
Authorities have reported that four personnel from the regular army (Artesh) were killed and several others wounded in the attacks but have downplayed the extent of infrastructural damage caused by the Israeli strikes. Independent reports in Western media, however, indicate extensive Israeli targeting of air defense systems and missile production facilities.
Iran's Supreme Leader on Sunday also warned that the Israeli strikes must neither be exaggerated nor underestimated but insisted that Israel must be stopped from making “wrong calculations”.
The remarks were made in a speech to the families of “martyrs of security” at the meeting hall of his residence compound in central Tehran.
In his speeches after Israel’s attack on the Iranian embassy compound in Damascus in April and the targeted killing of the Hamas Leader Esmail Haniyeh in Tehran in July Khamenei vowed tough punishment of Israel.
His tone Sunday, however, was much more cautious and evasive regarding responding to Israel’s “Days of Reckoning” operation. Israeli warplanes reportedly penetrated Iranian airspace and operated freely, a fact that has probably not escaped Khamenei's attention.
Ultra-hardliners including lawmaker Hamid Rasaei have been demanding a quick and strong response to Israel and have already dubbed their proposed attack as “Operation True Promise 3”. The state broadcaster IRIB has also aired extreme demands for retaliation in its programs and interviews since the attack.
Iran's reform front in a statement Saturday condemned the Israeli attack. Still, it urged authorities to take an initiative to “prevent all-encompassing war from a position of dignity, wisdom, and expediency” and to support “ceasefire in Gaza and Lebanon and formation of an independent Palestinian state”.
Israeli F-35 fighters entered Iran's airspace for the first time in raids earlier on Saturday, an informed Israeli source told Iran International, adding that they flew over Tehran and bombed targets in the area.
The General Staff of Iran's Armed Forces had earlier said in a statement that Israeli aircraft used the airspace provided by the US military in Iraq to launch several long-range air-launched missiles towards some border radars in the provinces of Ilam, Khuzestan, and around Tehran province.
Israel launched the airstrikes in the early hours of Saturday in retaliation for Tehran's October 1 missile barrage, which Iran called a response to the Israeli assassinations of Hamas chief Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran and Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah in Beirut, among others.
The Israeli airstrikes only targeted Iran's military sites and facilities, following weeks of US efforts to dissuade Israel from targeting nuclear and energy infrastructure in Iran in a bid to avoid further escalation of conflict in the volatile region.
US President Joe Biden on Saturday said it appeared Israel had only struck military targets in its attack on Iran, and that he hoped they were "the end."
The Israeli attacks killed at least four Iranian army personnel, including two officers working in the missile unit, according to IRGC-affiliated Tasnim News.
Air defenses, missile program component hit by Israel
"Four S-300 air defense batteries that were in strategic locations and protected Tehran and nuclear and energy facilities in Iran were attacked," Axios quoted the sources as saying, confirming an earlier report by The New York Times about Israel's targeting of the Russian-made defense system.
The report also said that 12 'planetary mixers' that are a critical component in Iran's ballistic missile program were attacked in the Israeli air raids. "The planetary mixers are used to produce solid fuel for long-range ballistic missiles, and their destruction severely damages Iran's ability to renew its missile stockpile," the report explained.
The Israeli sources speaking to Axios said that the mixers are highly sophisticated equipment that Iran cannot produce on its own and must purchase it in China. "Remanufacturing of the mixers could take at least a year."
Iran downplaying the Israeli attack
The General Staff of Iran's Armed Forces says the Israeli attacks resulted in "limited and minimal" damage thanks to the "timely performance of the country's air defense." It acknowledged damages to several radar systems, saying that some of the radars were immediately repaired, while others are in the process of being repaired.
Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said on Saturday that Tehran "has no limits in defending its interests and territorial integrity, and we will defend not just every inch but every centimeter of our land.
Speaking in an interview with the official website of Iran's Supreme Leader, Araghchi emphasized that the Iranian government will continue its policy of confronting Israel with determination but refrained from talking of revenge or retaliation.
"The Islamic Republic is trying to downplay the intensity of Israel's attacks... Essentially, the idea of revenge has been removed from the political rhetoric of its leaders, and they are not looking to show a reaction," political analyst Jamshid Barzegar told Iran International.
The recent Israeli attack appears to be a "temporary endpoint" to the tensions between the two countries, and we are unlikely to see any direct confrontation between them until the upcoming US elections, he added.
SOUTH LEBANON—The vast Hezbollah tunnel system built below the Shiite village of Rab El Thalathine is less than 2.5 kilometers from the northern Israeli city of Kiryat Shmona.
Ten shafts in this underground labyrinth stretch from the bowels of this formerly Hezbollah-controlled village into civilian homes, where ammunition, rocket-propelled grenades, and AK-47 assault rifles were found, said an Israel Defense Forces (IDF) spokesman.
Iran International gained access to the tunnel during a journalist embed with the Israeli military from the evening of October 21 into early the following day. The tunnel system, discovered by Israeli forces who entered Lebanon just a week ago, spans over 1 km in length and ranges between 12 and 40 meters deep. An Israeli soldier commented, “It’s the largest one we’ve found so far.”
Author Benjamin Weinthal inside the Hezbollah tunnel in South Lebanon. Oct. 21, 2024
Intense firefights took place within the tunnel between Israeli forces and Hezbollah militants before Israeli soldiers neutralized the last four militants there, according to an army spokesperson. Clearing the tunnel of Hezbollah fighters took several days. Meanwhile, Israel ‘captured three terrorists’ about 3 km from the tunnel.
As troops moved deeper into Lebanon, Israeli artillery fire echoed overhead. Inside the tunnel, descending in pitch darkness to avoid alerting Hezbollah, they encountered a highly advanced underground complex designed for militant residence and storage.
One Israeli soldier described Hezbollah’s tunnel system as more “stable and sophisticated” than the “Gaza metro,” a vast underground network used by Hamas, estimated at 500 km in length. Compared to Gaza’s narrow passages, Hezbollah’s tunnels are notably larger and more structurally sound, he added.
Hezbollah’s main strategic partner, the Islamic Republic of Iran, played a key role in filling many of the rooms of the tunnel system with armaments, an IDF soldier said.
“Here are Iranian weapons systems,” he said, pointing to a stockpile of weapons. “We can obviously see the fingerprints here of the Iranian regime with the loads of weapons that have been flown into here by them instead of helping Lebanon become a beautiful country,” he added in political tit-for-tat familiar in the decades-long Arab Israeli conflict.
The IDF spokesman said: “We found long-range missiles here that can easily be fired into the Galilee.”
Weapons inside the Hezbollah tunnel displayed by Israeli forces.
The Hezbollah gunmen, “dressed up as civilians, came into here and got their uniforms and weapons systems and their plans to infiltrate Israel,” said the spokesman. The battle to seize the tunnel “saved the lives of thousands of Israelis,” he emphasized.
After 17 years of relative calm between Israel and Hezbollah, skirmishes began one day after the October 7 Hamas invasion of Israel when more than 1,000 civilians were killed and 250 taken hostage. Hezbollah began shelling northern Israel in support of Hamas once the Israeli military began attacking Gaza.
After one year of relentless air strikes and ground fighting, Israel has been able to seriously weaken Hamas and to an extent the Hezbollah, but in the process tens of thousands of people were killed in Gaza, including more than 17,000 militants, according to Israel. Hundreds of Hezbollah militants have also been eliminated. The Lebanese government says that hundreds of civilians have lost their lives and hundreds of thousands have become refugees.
The provisions for the Hezbollah fighters:
The tunnel system can lodge more than 500 gunmen, and the food storage was enough to last for weeks, the IDF said. Crates of canned food filled a sizable part of one room.
One large room was filled with mattresses and in others, mattresses were on the floor. The tunnel is equipped with “lights, backup lights, generators, toilets, washing machine, and a small kitchen,” an IDF spokesman noted. In short, enough “supplies to survive here for months.” Medical provisions and a large shower area were part of the tunnel project.
Israeli officers said they believed the tunnels were only built as a platform for accumulating forces to invade Israel. But in the aftermath of October 7, Hezbollah chose to use its vast arsenal to fire rockets and launch drones into Israel, forcing tens of thousands to evacuate.
Part of the Hezbollah tunnel photographed by the author on Oct. 22, 2024
An Israeli officer said, “We came here with specific intelligence to find this tunnel.”
Almost all of the 22,492 residents of Kiryat Shmona, leaving only around 3,000 behind, were forced to flee after Hezbollah began firing missiles into Israel on October 8, 2023. The town is now nearly deserted. Over 60,000 Israelis have been compelled to leave their homes across 43 northern communities due to Hezbollah's attacks.
Hundreds of pro-Hezbollah Shiites lived in the village where the tunnel was discovered, according to the Israeli military.
Brig.-Gen. Guy Levy, the commander of the IDF’s 98th Paratroopers Division, said, “Our main goal here is to find and locate each and every terrorist site in the village and in the underground site and destroy them and make sure we can bring our citizens back to a normal life in the north. We will do whatever it takes.”
Above ground, the late October night required a light jacket or sweater. However, after a short stay in the tunnel, the oppressive air there caused light sauna-like sweating. Unplugged fans and ammunition dotted the pathways of the tunnel.
As I departed, a member of the division’s 35th Paratroopers Brigade said the operation to root out Hezbollah and their infrastructure was being carried out “to ensure that an October 7 never happens again for future generations of Israelis.”
Hezbollah attacks on northern Israel since October 2023 have killed 30 civilians—28 Israelis, one Thai citizen and one Indian citizen. A total of 45 Israeli soldiers and reservists have died since the IDF entered southern Lebanon in late September. The IDF says it has killed more than 1,500 Hezbollah fighters and wounded more than 11,000 others in Operation Northern Arrows, the third Lebanon war.
IDF’s Maj. Doron Spielman remarked in the back of the military transport that the disadvantage for Israel is that “Lebanon has the advantage because it is higher [on the landscape] and anti-tank weapons can be fired.”
He said the Kibbutz—Misgav Am—and other small border communities that attract tourists, including his family, with Airbnb offers, were swiftly closed in October 2023. The Kibbutzim and towns in the Upper Galilee in northern Israel on the border were declared a closed military zone in late September as the IDF started its ground offensive into south Lebanon.
As the journalists waited for the heavily armed military transporters to take us back to the Israeli side, a full moon slightly covered by a sliver, gray cloud provided some light. An Israeli drone with a piercing green light hovered in the sky.
The journey back to Israel was rocky along the rough hilly terrain of south Lebanon. A kind of sandstorm reminiscent of a scene out of the English Patient engulfed the IDF military vehicles along the dusty dilapidated roadways.
Upon arrival in Kiryat Shmona, a taxi driver for the media said two sirens had sounded, prompting him and the soldiers at the meet up location for the press to flee into an underground garage for safety. The driver said the Iron Dome intercepted Hezbollah rockets.
"Israel’s elimination of top leaders from Hezbollah and Hamas has received significant praise from counter-terrorism experts and the Israeli public for advancing efforts to dismantle these Iran-backed militant groups."
In an interview with Iran International, Yigal Carmon, a former counter-terrorism advisor to two Israeli prime ministers, warned that “In the case of Islamist terrorist organizations that are self-indoctrinated by the worst brand of Islam, the loss of leadership does not necessarily imply a breakdown of the spiritual power to continue, particularly in that they have prepared themselves for a long-term fight. “
Carmon, who famously predicted the time frame of the Hamas invasion of Israel, added “Therefore we are not expecting to see a breakdown in Hezbollah’s overall power to continue as long as they have the capabilities, which we saw they have. Israel will have to for the foreseeable future eradicate Hezbollah politically, militarily and economically.”
Carmon highlighted Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah’s flawed military judgment before October 7, noting that if Nasrallah had attempted a Gaza-style assault rather than limited cross-border bombings, Israel could have faced an existential threat. He argued that Israel’s preparedness against Hezbollah was due to Nasrallah's miscalculation, which spared Israel from a greater crisis.
He continued, “Israel was virtually saved from an existential crisis. The existential threat would have forced Israel to use cataclysmic powers against Iran.”
"The air force attacked throughout Iran. We hit hard Iran's defense capabilities and its ability to produce missiles that are aimed at us," Netanyahu said in a speech on Sunday.
"The attack in Iran was precise and powerful, and it achieved all its objectives," he added. Emphasizing that Israel’s war is not against the Iranian people, but with the Islamic Republic.
Following Netanyahu’s announcement, Iranian media reported the official death toll from Israel's operation had risen to five, with Allahverdi Rahimpour, identified by state-run Mehr News as a civilian, confirmed as the latest casualty.
Contradicting this, Sabereen News, associated with the IRGC, reported Rahimpour worked as a security guard for a contracting company. Earlier casualties were all identified as members of Iran’s traditional military - as distinct from the IRGC - two of them working for missile production units. However, the Revolutionary Guard have been silent about their potential casualties.
The Israeli air force conducted the strikes across various Iranian sites early on Saturday, with Netanyahu explaining that the operation’s purpose was to prevent Iran from advancing missile technology aimed at Israel.
Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, who briefed US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin on the results of Israel's action, shared initial assessments of the operation’s success in targeting missile manufacturing facilities, aerial capabilities, and surface-to-air missile arrays.
"Minister Gallant also discussed the strategic opportunities that have risen as a result of operational achievements, in both the northern and southern arenas," added a statement by Gallant’s office on Sunday.
In response, Iran's President Masoud Pezeshkian said that Tehran would “defend the Iranian nation's rights and give an appropriate response to Israel's aggression.” Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi condemned Israel's actions in a letter to the United Nations Security Council, describing the strikes as a significant threat to international stability and calling for a Security Council meeting. Diplomats confirmed that the UNSC is expected to discuss the situation on Monday, according to Reuters.
At the UN, Israel’s Ambassador Danny Danon dismissed Iran’s complaint, calling it an attempt to divert attention from Israel’s right to self-defense. "As we have stated time and time again, we have the right and duty to defend ourselves and will use all the means at our disposal to protect the citizens of Israel," Danon said in a statement.
Israel's Ambassador Danny Danon attends the United Nations Security Council meeting, following a ballistic missile attack on Israel, at UN headquarters in New York City, US, October 2, 2024.
Israel's Saturday airstrikes on Iran dismantled air-defense systems protecting key infrastructure, including major oil and petrochemical refineries, a large gas field, and a significant southern port, according to reports from three Iranian and three senior Israeli defense officials cited by The New York Times on Sunday.
Targets included air defenses at the Bandar Imam Khomeini petrochemical complex in Khuzestan Province, the adjoining Bandar Imam Khomeini economic port, and the Abadan oil refinery. Additional systems were reportedly struck in Ilam Province, covering the Tange Bijar gas field refinery, the officials stated.
Before Netanyahu’s declaration of success, some Iranian politicians pledged retaliation and called for UN intervention. As both nations exchange diplomatic and military signals, the UN Security Council prepares for an emergency session to address the unfolding crisis. However Iran's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei in a speech on Sunday avoided calling for retaliation, saying the government will study the situation and do what is best for the country.