War with Iran is not over, Israeli prime minister says
An Israeli fighter pilot climbs a ladder to get in an F-15, at Tel Nof Airbase, Israel July 3, 2025.
In spite of declaring last month’s 12-day war with Iran a “great victory”, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Tehran remains a threat to the Jewish state and the West under the current leadership.
Five drones could strike a European city in the near future, a former senior Iranian official warned on Saturday, saying Western countries should no longer feel secure following Iran’s recent conflict with Israel.
“Europeans can no longer move about comfortably in their own countries,” Mohammad Javad Larijani, a former senior judiciary official who also served as a top adviser to the Supreme Leader, warned in comments broadcast on state television.
“It’s entirely possible that in the near future, five drones could strike a European city.”
The statement comes as the Islamic Republic faces renewed international pressure over its nuclear program. Britain, France and Germany, three signatories to the 2015 nuclear agreement, are considering the option of triggering a snapback of United Nations sanctions if Iran is deemed non-compliant.
Mohammad Javad Larijani,
This month, Iran expelled the International Atomic Energy Agency's inspectors, accusing them of being a political tool and having given intelligence to aid the attacks made by Israel and the US on Iran's nuclear facilities last month.
Last week, the UK Parliament’s Intelligence and Security Committee (ISC) released a report warning that Iran poses one of the most severe state-based threats to British national security, on par with adversaries like Russia and China.
And last year, the European Parliament also issued warnings about the threat posed by Iran. A statement said: "The Iranian regime’s use of criminal networks as terrorist proxies in Europe poses a grave threat to our internal security."
Larijani's warning to Europe comes just days after he suggested US President Donald Trump could be assassinated by a drone strike while vacationing in Florida.
“Trump has done something [in supporting Israel's war on Iran] so that he can no longer sunbathe in Mar-a-Lago,” he said. “As he lies there with his stomach to the sun, a small drone might hit him in the navel. It’s very simple.”
'Israel, US may attack Iran again'
Larijani said that it is possible that Israel and the United States will seek to launch another attack on Iran.
“The United States and Israel know that if they strike again, our response will be heavier and more unexpected. America is calculating carefully."
Speaking of last month's war with Israel, sparked by surprise attacks on Iran on June 13, Larijani said: “The war began with us being surprised. We did not expect such technologies to be used in the attack. They had inserted and stationed many operatives inside Iran," over 700 Iranians arrested in the wake of the war accused of supporting Israel.
“The enemy can no longer rely on its old methods. This time, we will not be surprised," he added.
Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian sustained a leg injury following an Israeli airstrike on a meeting of Iran's Supreme National Security Council in the lower floors of a building in western Tehran on June 16, an IRGC-affiliated outlet reported.
The Revolutionary Guards-linked Fars News Agency said the attacked was launched on the morning of Monday, June 16, while a session of the Supreme National Security Council was underway in the lower floors of the building in western Tehran.
President Pezeshkian, Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, Judiciary chief Mohseni Ejei and other senior officials were attending the meeting, the report said.
Six bombs or missiles targeted the building’s entry and exit points in order to block escape routes and disrupt airflow, Fars News said, adding that the attack was modeled after an operation designed to assassinate Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah in Beirut.
Following the explosions, power to the floor was cut, but the officials managed to escape through an emergency hatch that had been prepared in advance, the report said.
President Pezeshkian and some other officials sustained minor leg injuries while exiting, the outlet said.
Given the accuracy of the information used in the attack, the report said authorities are investigating the possibility of an infiltrator.
While the report did not specify the location of the meeting, the Israeli airstrike is believed to have targeted a building in Tehran’s Shahrak-e Bagheri district on June 16.
A few days ago, senior IRGC general Mohsen Rezaei told the state TV that Israel “struck six points at the location where the Supreme National Security Council was meeting, but not the slightest harm was done to any of its members.”
President Pezeshkian earlier accused Israel of trying to assassinate him. "They did try, yes," he told Tucker Carlson in an interview. "They acted accordingly, but they failed."
An advisor to Iran's parliament speaker has shared an image that seems to show a nuclear attack on Israel.
Mehdi Mohammadi, a strategic adviser to Mohammad-Bagher Ghalibaf, posted the image in an Instagram story on Saturday.
The image showed a map of Israel with two mushroom clouds positioned over its territory—an iconography widely recognized as symbolizing atomic blasts.
A few hours later, Mohammadi posted a second Instagram story seeking to clarify his position.
“Hello friends,” he wrote. “That story was posted by the admin of my page and was deleted a few minutes later. I personally do not believe that developing nuclear weapons would enhance Iran’s deterrence. At the very least, it’s an extremely complex issue."
"Just as possessing nuclear weapons hasn’t prevented Israel from receiving heavy blows, or enabled Ukraine to strike Russia decisively, the military utility of nuclear arms is far more limited than most people imagine,” he added.
Iran continues to deny any ambition to acquire nuclear weapons, dismissing international concerns as politically driven.
Last month, American airstrikes targeted major Iranian nuclear facilities at Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan. The attacks came after days of Israeli campaign against Iran where the Jewish State used cruise missiles and deep-penetration bombs to damage infrastructure and affiliated military units.
In October, a group of lawmakers called on Iran's Supreme National Security Council to review the country's defense doctrine and consider adopting nuclear weapons.
Fifteen human rights organizations issued a joint statement Saturday calling for international action to halt the looming executions of three Arab political prisoners from Ahvaz who were transferred to solitary confinement earlier this month.
Ali Majdam, Moein Khanfari, and Mohammadreza Moghadam were sentenced to death on charges of “armed rebellion,” and, according to reports from Ahvaz, were moved to solitary cells on June 26.
The signatories warned the men now face an imminent risk of execution.
“These individuals are at grave risk, despite credible reports of coerced confessions, prolonged solitary confinement, and grossly unfair trials,” the statement read.
Rights advocates said the renewed isolation, set against the backdrop of heightened internal repression following the 12-day war between Iran and Israel, signals a retaliatory acceleration in executions.
The statement condemned the sharp rise in executions in recent months, calling it a “tool of repression” in the hands of Iran’s security apparatus.
“We warn against retaliatory measures following the recent conflict and demand an immediate halt to these inhumane practices.”
'Not a tool of justice, but control'
The groups reminded Iran's global standing as one of the top executioners, often after trials lacking transparency, access to independent legal counsel, or protection from torture.
“The death penalty in Iran is not a tool of justice, but a mechanism for fear and control,” the statement said.
The coalition demanded that governments and rights institutions act swiftly to pressure the Islamic Republic to suspend the executions and abolish all death sentences against political, civil, and social activists.
Among the 15 signatories to the statement are Iran Human Rights Organization, Kurdistan Human Rights Association-Geneva, the Ahwazi Center for Human Rights, and Haalvsh.
Iran has arrested at least 21 Christian converts in recent weeks, with some facing charges under a new law targeting alleged collaboration with hostile states, a rights group said.
The arrests, carried out by the Ministry of Intelligence, took place in Tehran, Rasht, Urmia, Kermanshah, Varamin, and Kerman, including one just before the recent war with Israel, according to the advocacy group Article 18.
While full details of the cases remain unclear, some involve the alleged possession of Bibles. Others may fall under a law that allows harsher punishments—including the death penalty—for individuals accused of cooperating with countries such as the United States or Israel.
Some detainees “have been threatened with charges under a newly proposed law seeking to enforce harsher punishments for those alleged to have collaborated with hostile states such as the United States or Israel,” the group said.
The bill, titled the “Intensification of Punishment for Espionage and Cooperation with the Zionist Regime and Hostile States Against National Security and Interests,” was approved by Iran’s parliament late June but faced scrutiny from the Guardian Council, which is tasked with ensuring that legislation complies with Islamic law and the Constitution.
“Since criminal laws require precision, there were ambiguities and flaws that needed to be resolved,” he said.
Earlier this month, 57 Iranian academics, jurists, and lawyers issued a public letter condemning the legislation.
Pattern of religious persecution
The new wave of arrests comes amid broader crackdowns that have targeted activists, dissidents, and members of religious minorities—including Jews, Baha’is, and Christian converts. Though Christianity is officially recognized under Iran’s constitution, the state continues to treat conversion from Islam as a threat to national security.
The continued targeting of Christian converts stands in direct violation of Article 18 of both the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, both of which guarantee freedom of religion, including the right to change one’s belief and to practice it openly or in private.
“It’s not over, it’s never over,” he told Fox News on Saturday night. “We have to keep Iran in check … Nothing is guaranteed on this, you safeguard your success.”
Netanyahu said that while the current government remains in power in Tehran, the threat remains too. “I realize that the marriage of nuclear weapons with a militant Islamic regime is the greatest threat Israel faces and the world faces,” he said.
Israel invaded Iran in a series of surprise strikes on June 13, leading to a 12-day war which brought massive destruction on both sides.
In Iran, rights group HRANA says more than 1,100 Iranians died in the war, with thousands more injured. In Israel, the death toll was 28 with thousands more injured.
A week after Israel's surprise attacks, the US struck Iran’s three major nuclear sites, Fordow, Natanz and Isfahan, with President Donald Trump saying to have ‘obliterated’ Iran’s nuclear program.
Intelligence assessments suggest that Iran retains a hidden stockpile of enriched uranium and the technical capacity to rebuild, according to reports by Reuters.
However, as the US continues to pursue diplomatic channels with Iran to contain any continuation of its nuclear program, Netanyahu said the only way forward would be an Iran without enrichment, no ballistic missiles beyond 300 miles as stipulated under international treaties, and no ‘terror axis’, referring to Iran’s military allies across the Middle East.
“We went to war because we knew that if we didn’t, we’d end up dead. Iran was rushing to develop nuclear weapons and could have had one within a year."
“They have could had tens of thousands of ballistic missiles each weighing a ton … with unbelievable devastation …. And in a country the size of new jersey you have to act. … if you don’t act you’re not going to be around … I knew if we didn’t act now, we may never act again,” he said.
Since the founding of the Islamic Republic, Iran’s leaders have called for the end of the Jewish state. A clock in Palestine Square, in the capital, Tehran, counts down the days until Israel's destruction.
Tehran racing to build nuclear weapons, Netanyahu says
Following the damage done last year to Iran’s allies in the region, including the fall of Syria’s long-time president, Bashar al-Assad, and the weakening of Hezbollah in Lebanon and Hamas in Gaza, Netanyahu said Iran had turned its focus on its nuclear program in a bid to eliminate its archenemy, Israel.
“They understood they had one other way to kill us and that was to race for nuclear weapons. They had enriched uranium, but they needed to have the weapon, they didn’t have the bullet, the thing that detonates the bullet."
“They rushed to weaponize after the fall of Hezbollah and the fall of the axis and we could see that, that within a year they’d have an atomic bomb and they’d actually use it, and try to wipe us out,” Netanyahu said.
Iran has always denied allegations of building a nuclear weapon, saying its program is for peaceful purposes.
Since the ceasefire, Iran has expelled the United Nations’ nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, accusing the group of having provided information to the US and Israel.