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Iran says its military reaction to Israel will be ‘immediate, widespread’

Hossein Amirabdollahian

“In case the Israeli regime embarks on adventurism again and takes action against the interests of Iran, the next response from us will be immediate and at a maximum level,” Amirabdollahian told CNN television news channel in an exclusive interview in New York on Thursday.

His remarks came after Iran’s Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) launched extensive missile and drone strikes late Saturday night on the Israeli-occupied territories. The series of retaliatory strikes, dubbed Operation True Promise, inflicted damage on Israeli military bases across the occupied lands.

It was in retaliation for the Israeli attack on April 1 against the Iranian consulate in Damascus, located next to the embassy building in Damascus’s Mezzeh district. The airstrike killed two senior Iranian military personnel who were on an advisory mission to Syria as well as five of their accompanying officers.

Speaking from the Iranian Permanent Mission to the United Nations, Amirabdollahian told CNN that Iran hopes Israel would not repeat “the previous egregious error.”

“If the Israeli regime commits the grave error once again our response will be decisive, definitive and regretful for them,” the minister continued, noting that this warning had been communicated to the White House via the Swiss Embassy in Tehran.

“We do not seek to create tension and crisis or increase such situations in the Middle East and we sincerely hope the Israeli regime does not repeat the previous egregious error,” he said.

He stressed that the details of a potential “maximum response” have been planned by Iran’s Armed Forces.

The Iranian foreign minister also said he expects the United States “not to give renewed permission for adventure-seeking Israel.”

“We believe that America will calculate according to messages that were exchanged between us over the past six months,” he pointed out.

The diplomat added the intent of the Iranian strike on Israel last weekend was “to warn” and to “have taken equal action” and “to let it (be) known we do have the means to respond”.

He said the more than 300 missiles and drones fired by Iran on Saturday “stayed within a minimum of frameworks” and the action was “legitimate defense” in response to the Israeli strike on the Iranian consulate.

“Our operations in response were carried out at a minimum because we were not seeking to hit multiple targets,” Amir-Abdollahian said.

Iran refutes claim air defense system in Isfahan partially damaged in face of flying objects

Iran Air Defense System

Playing down the reports as ‘propaganda’ by the Western media, the anonymous source told the Tehran-based news agency that the drones, claimed by the western media to be a part of an Israeli attack on the Iranian military positions, were shot down before getting close to the ‘sensitive areas.’

Tensions between Iran and Israel have escalated into a whole new level ever since April 1, when Israel launched a deadly strike on the Iranian diplomatic mission in the Syrian capital Damascus, and Iran retaliated by staging unprecedented drone and missile strikes inside the Israeli-occupied territories two weeks later.

The central Iranian city of Isfahan, home to nuclear facilities, experienced explosions in the early hours of Friday.

Following the developments, the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Rafael Grossi sprang up to confirm on Friday that the nuclear installations in Isfahan were not damaged and were safe.

EU and US sanction extremist Israeli settlers

Jewish settlers

The sanctions – announced within hours of each other by the EU and by the US Treasury – targeted a number of prominent individuals and organisations, most prominently Bentzi Gopstein, the leader of the Levaha group, who reports in the Israeli media suggest has acted as an adviser to the far-right national security minister, Itamar Ben Gvir.

While the EU placed sanctions on Lehava, a far-right group that campaigns against relationships between Jews and non-Jews, the US did so specifically against Gopstein, who was convicted of an Israeli court earlier this year for racist statements.

Also hit by EU sanctions were Meir Ettinger and Elisha Yered, two leading figures in the extremist Hilltop Youth, which was described by the EU as “a radical group consisting of members known for violent acts against Palestinians and their villages in the West Bank”.

The new round of sanctions against far-right figures in Israel marks the latest ramping up of the international campaign against settler and extremist violence which has exploded on the occupied West Bank in the six months since Hamas’s attack on Israel from Gaza on 7 October last year.

As well as Gopstein, the US imposed sanctions on two entities that it said helped raise tens of thousands of dollars for two violent extremists in the West Bank who had already been targeted with US sanctions, underlining its intention to pursue those it sees as attempting to bypass sanctions.

The US Treasury department said one entity, Mount Hebron Fund, had launched an online fundraising campaign that raised $140,000 (£113,000) for the settler Yinon Levi, after he was hit with sanctions on 1 February for allegedly leading a group of settlers that assaulted Palestinian and Bedouin civilians, burned their fields and destroyed their property. EU sanctions also apply to Levi, 32, who is accused of “multiple violent acts”.

The Treasury announced the second entity, Shlom Asiraich, raised $31,000 on a crowdfunding website for David Chai Chasdai, who the US says led a riot that included setting vehicles and buildings on fire and causing damage to property in Huwara, resulting in the death of a Palestinian civilian.

“Such acts by these organisations undermine the peace, security, and stability of the West Bank. We will continue to use our tools to hold those responsible accountable,” the deputy secretary of the Treasury, Wally Adeyemo, said in the statement.

The EU sanctions will include an asset freeze, a prohibition on provision of funds or economic resources to them or for their benefit and a travel ban to the EU for the individuals named.

Restrictive measures were agreed by the European Council of leaders in March in an official communique when they strongly condemned extremist settler violence, stating that perpetrators must be held to account.

According to the official journal, one of the four named individuals, Neria Ben Pazi, 31, “established four of the most violent outposts in the West Bank in 2019”.

He was “one of the main perpetrators of the forced displacement of a Bedouin community of Wadi as-Seeq near Ramalah. His actions “have been likened to torture”, according to the EU’s official journal.

It cited a vicious attack on 12 October in which Palestinians were “severely beaten, handcuffed and photographed in their underwear” as well as being “urinated on” and having cigarettes stubbed out on their bodies.

Ettinger, 33, is listed because he is considered a leading figure of the Hilltop Youth. According to the official journal “he was involved in a deadly arson attack in 2015” on a Palestinian West Bank home “that killed two parents and their 18-month-old baby”.

He is “responsible for serious human rights violations or abuses, including torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment as well as violations or abuses of the right to property and the right to private and family life of Palestinians in the West Bank and for supporting and encouraging such acts”, the journal says.

These alleged abuses are of “serious concern” with regard to EU foreign policy as set out in article 21 of the treaty of the European Union, the EU added.

Another member of the group now under EU sanctions is Elisha Yered, born in 2001, who was reported to have engaged in settler violence through “price tag attacks” including “physical and psychosocial harassment, beatings, murder and demolition of property, against Palestinians … of a systematic nature”.

The journal adds he was “part of a group of armed settlers” involved in an attack last year near Ramallah which led to the death of the 19-year-old Palestinian Qusai Jammal Mi’tan and wounded several other Palestinians.

The West Bank is the largest Palestinian territory in the Middle East but was captured in the 1967 war and the area has been under military occupation since, while Israeli settlements have consistently expanded. Palestinians envisage the West Bank as part of a future independent state also including Gaza and East Jerusalem.

Lehava is described as a “radical rightwing Jewist supremacist group” that “uses violence and incites violence against Palestinians, Christians and Messianic Jews”.

According to the journal, Lehava “organises violent protests against Jewish Muslim weddings and the LGBQTi community”.

Iranian political scientist, Zibakalam urges direct Tehran-Washington talks

Iran US Flags

Sadegh Zibakalam, who is a retired professor of political sciences at Tehran University, said, “Due to the differences of opinion between the US and Israel, Iran can directly enter into negotiations with the US once again, in order to use the tools of diplomacy instead of ideology and turn the tide in its own favor.”

The comments come as the world is on the edge, watching the confrontation between Iran and Israel after Tel Aviv launched a deadly strike on the Iranian consulate in the Syrian capital Damascus earlier this month, which provoked retaliation from Iran on Sunday.

Zibakalam also warned that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is seeking to keep the region in crisis to divert the public opinion from the Israeli regime’s poor performance – cited by polls – following the October 7 operation by the Palestinian resistance movements inside Israel.

The senior analyst noted, “However, the situation for US President Joe Biden is different. He does not want either the US or Israel to have a military confrontation with Iran.”

“The US knows that if Israel strikes Iran, the story will not end there. Iran will respond and the conflict will escalate, and the US military bases in the region will definitely be targeted by Iran, and the fire will be ignited that cannot be easily put out,” he added.

Zibakalam advised Iranian officials to use the rift created between the US and Israel in its own favor, and for once stop using foreign policy as a means of advancing “the ideology of anti-Westernism and revolutionism.”

Ex-Iranian FM Zarif: Time to stop Israeli aggressions

Javad Zarif

In a message posted on X, Zarif referred to the downing of some flying objects over the sky of the Iranian city of Isfahan on Friday.

Zarif said, in light of today’s reckless fireworks in Isfahan, all countries and leaders should focus on ending Israeli transgressions, particularly its war on Gaza.

Zarif slammed the US move to block a UN Security Council resolution aimed at Palestine’s full membership at the world body. He said
the US veto of the UNSC resolution on Palestine’s UN membership was clearly a step in the wrong direction.

Pointing to the Israeli killing and genocide campaign against Palestinians in the Gaza Strip, Zarif added genocide continues apace in Gaza. Nothing will divert international public opinion from Israel’s atrocities.

Around 34,000 Palestinians have been killed in Israel’s war on Gaza over the past six months.

The former Iranian foreign minister also referred to Israel’s deadly attack on Iran’s consulate in the Syrian capital on April 1, saying Israel’s recurring acts of aggression against Iran, especially its provocative attack on Iran’s diplomatic premises in Syria, went unpunished by the UN Security Council, compelling Iran to take a measured response in self-defense targeting only military facilities and—unlike Israel—intentionally avoiding civilians.

White House considering over $1bn in new arms for Israel

White House

The proposed transfers would be amongst the largest since Israel invaded Gaza, the newspaper said.

Quoting US officials, the WSJ added “the deals under consideration include transfers of $700 million in 120 mm tank ammunition, $500 million in tactical vehicles and less than $100 million in 120 mm mortar rounds”.

The sales require congressional leaders to sign off and could take months or years to be delivered.

These sales would be the first since Iran’s weekend barrage of drones and missiles on Israel in retaliation for the deadly strike on the Iranian consulate in Damascus, Syria.

Israel launched the devastating war on Gaza on October 7, 2023 after the territory’s Palestinian resistance groups carried out a surprise retaliatory attack, dubbed Operation Al-Aqsa Storm, against the occupying entity.

Since then, the United States has supplied the Tel Aviv with more than 10,000 tons of military equipment, and used its veto power against all United Nations Security Council resolutions that called for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza.

Since the start of the aggression, the Tel Aviv has killed more than 34,000 people in Gaza, mostly women and children, according to the health ministry in the territory. The campaign has devastated large swathes of Gaza, destroyed hospitals and displaced most of its population of 2.3 million.

CIA chief warns Ukraine could lose war without US boost

Russia Ukraine War

“With the boost that would come from military assistance‚ both practically and psychologically — Ukrainians are entirely capable of holding their own through 2024 and puncturing Putin’s arrogant view that time is on his side,” Burns said during an event at the George W. Bush Presidential Center, referring to Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Burns argued there is a “huge amount at stake” for not only Ukraine, but wider European security and that of U.S. allies in the Indo-Pacific.

“Without supplemental assistance, this picture is a lot more dire, and there is a very real risk that the Ukrainians could lose on the battlefield by the end of 2024. Or at least put Putin in a position where he could essentially dictate the terms of a political settlement,” he continued.

Burns has previously warned that without Congress passing any supplemental aid for Ukraine, the embattled nation would struggle against Russian forces. Other Joe Biden administration officials have also warned that Ukraine faces a grim future without more U.S. help, but have yet to place a specific timeline on a potential Ukrainian defeat.

Maj. Gen. Pat Ryder, press secretary for the Pentagon, stated Thursday that the U.S. was focused on getting Ukraine the assistance it needs, when asked about the CIA director’s comments.

“What we’re focused on right now is ensuring that we can get Ukraine the assistance that it needs,” Ryder told reporters.

“The Ukrainians have demonstrated their resilience and their courage under fire. We have no reason to think that’s going to change. But we also understand the dire situation there right now.”

Pressure has mounted on Congress in recent months to pass additional funding for Ukraine to fend off Russia’s invasion. Sharp divisions among lawmakers have stalled aid from passing for more than a year, with mostly far-right lawmakers expressing concern about continuing to fund Ukraine.

In the House, Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) unveiled a series of foreign aid bills this week that would include funding for Ukraine, Israel, allies in the Indo-Pacific and other national security priorities. Votes on separate portions of the package are expected by this weekend.

The bills follow months of delays after Johnson rejected the Senate’s $95 billion foreign aid bill, which would have provided about $60 billion in aid to Ukraine. Several Republicans have lambasted further aid for Ukraine, arguing U.S. funding should go toward domestic issues, including the country’s southern border.

Congress has not passed a Ukraine aid package since the end of 2022, and all available funds dried up around the end of 2023, leaving Kyiv in a perilous position with depleting air defenses and artillery, both crucial in the war.

Russia is now advancing on the battlefield across eastern Ukraine, taking the town of Avdiivka in February and threatening now to seize Chasiv Yar in the Donetsk region, which could provide Russian forces a path toward bigger cities.

The Institute for the Study of War also assessed this week that Russia is gaining the initiative on the battlefield because of the delayed U.S. aid and predicted that without any more assistance, the Ukrainians could lose significant ground this year and in 2025.

Burns has said how Congress chooses to act will send a larger message to the U.S.’s adversaries and allies.

“This is really a question of whether or not our adversaries understand our reliability and determination and whether our allies and partners [understand] that as well,” he continued, adding, “So the consequences are enormous right now for what the House of Representatives is considering.”

Iran calls on UNSC to stop any further Israeli aggression

Hossein Amirabdollahian

“Iran’s legitimate defense and countermeasures have been concluded. Therefore, the Israeli regime must be compelled to stop any further military adventurism against our centers, assets and interests,” he told the council in New York on Thursday.

“In case of any illegal use of force by the Israeli regime, the Islamic Republic of Iran will not hesitate a bit to assert its inherent right to give a decisive and proper response to it to make the regime regret its actions. This is an unchangeable decision,” he added.

Amirabdollahian stated the Israeli attack on April 1 on the Iranian diplomatic premises in Damascus showed yet again that the regime does not hesitate to violate the fundamental principle of the immunity of such places and people as well as the Vienna Conventions.

“As the majority of the members of the Security Council declared at the April 2 meeting here, the attack was a clear violation of the Charter of the United Nations, international law and the 1961 Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations, and thus is strongly condemned.”

At the meeting, the Iranian minister said, the council failed even to issue a mere statement containing a simple condemnation “due to the unfortunate and completely irresponsible behavior of the United States, the UK and France in response to this illegal attack”.

“No member state will remain silent in the face of such a brazen and serious military attack on its embassy, which is considered a symbol of its sovereignty as well as the killing of its legal, official and diplomat agents,” he added.

Iran, the top diplomat stated, had until recently “shown considerable restraint against other terrorist missile attacks bearing in mind the dire situation in the region and willing to give the role of the United Nations a chance to prevent the escalation of the conflict”.

But it “was faced with the continuation of the White House’s green light granted to the Israeli regime as well as the continued inaction of the Security Council in preventing these attacks”.

“Therefore it could no longer be patient against the attack on its embassy and the attack on its sovereignty,” he added.

Iran’s military attack, he stressed, “was first and foremost, necessary because Iran had no other option”.

“Secondly, it was carried out in response to a series of attacks and recurring aggressions by the Israeli regime on Iran’s interests, especially on our embassy in Syria.”

“Thirdly, it took place in the fulfillment of Iran’s right to legitimate defense under international law. “Fourthly, it was conducted by observing the criterion of non-aggression to civilian people and places,” he continued.

“And fifthly, it focused solely on the two military bases of the Israeli regime which had been used in the attack on our Embassy, and therefore it was completely limited and proportionate in terms of scope and military requirements,” Amirabdollahian summed up.

Moreover, the minister stated, “since it was clear that the supporters of the Israeli regime, who are unrelenting partners in its carnage in Gaza, would assist the regime in neutralizing the Iranian attack, a wide variety of weapons were used to ensure the achievement of the attack’s goal i.e. legitimate defense”.

“The attack by my country’s armed forces was limited and minimal, targeting only military bases and was in line with international law and the principle of non-aggression against civilian areas to ensure proportionality and accurate execution.”

Iran has always been a positive part of regional developments, treading the path of stabilizing peace and lasting security, including the fight against terrorism, he underlined.

It “will have no reservations nor compromise at all with any party over our national security and interests as well as the collective security in the sensitive region of West Asia”, he underscored.

The Security Council, the minister added, “must compel the rogue and rebel regime of Israel to immediately stop the war and genocide in Gaza”.

IAEA: Iran’s nuclear sites safe following explosions

IAEA

The UN nuclear watchdog’s chief Rafael Grossi took to X to write, “IAEA can confirm that there is no damage to #Iran’s nuclear sites.”

The assurance came amid speculations that the explosions were caused by Israeli attacks in the city, which triggered air defense batteries.

Iranian news agencies reported the explosions were heard near Isfahan airport and the 8th Shekari army airbase, but also added that the nuclear facilities in Isfahan were “completely secure.”

Days earlier, Iran launched a barrage of missiles and drones over Israeli-occupied territory in response to a deadly attack on its diplomatic site in the Syrian capital, that left seven Iranian military personnel dead.

“DG @rafaelmgrossi continues to call for extreme restraint from everybody and reiterates that nuclear facilities should never be a target in military conflicts. IAEA is monitoring the situation very closely,” the message by Grossi further read.

The IAEA chief said Monday that Iran had shut down its nuclear facilities for security reasons.

US vetoes Palestinian push for full UN membership

US vetoes Palestinian push for full UN membership

Twelve countries voted in favour of the resolution, which was brought for a vote during an hours-long Security Council session in New York on Thursday, while two others – Britain and Switzerland – abstained.

After vetoing the measure, the US deputy envoy to the UN, Robert Wood, said Washington believes there is no other path to Palestinian statehood than through negotiations between Israelis and Palestinians.

“We also have long been clear that premature actions here in New York, even with the best intentions, will not achieve statehood for the Palestinian people,” Wood added.

The resolution was widely expected to fail, as the US – Israel’s staunchest ally – holds veto power at the Security Council and had opposed its passage.

The vote comes more than six months into Israel’s bombardment of the Gaza Strip, which has killed almost 34,000 Palestinians and plunged the coastal enclave into a humanitarian catastrophe.

The state of Palestine currently is a non-member observer at the UN. But an application to become a full UN member needs to be approved by the Security Council and then at least two-thirds of the General Assembly.

Before the vote on Thursday afternoon, Ziad Abu Amr, the UN special representative for the state of Palestine, had appealed for support.

“We are still longing to practice our right to self-determination, to live in freedom, security and peace in an independent state similar to other countries around the world,” Abu Amr told the council.

Palestinians, he added, “made and continue to make great sacrifices to achieve this goal”.

Abu Amr also dismissed claims that the resolution would imperil political negotiations and prospects for peace.

“To those who say that recognising the Palestinian state must happen through negotiations and not through a UN resolution, we say: ‘How was the State of Israel established? Wasn’t that through a UN resolution, which was Resolution 181?’” Abu Amr said.

“This resolution will not be an alternative to negotiations and to resolving pending issues. It will grant hope to Palestinians for an independent state after this hope dissipated,” he continued.

“We hope you will give us the opportunity to become an integral part of the international community that is working to achieve international peace and security.”

Israeli ambassador to the UN, Gilad Erdan, used his address to the Security Council to accuse the body of being politicised. He also described the resolution as a “prize to [the] terrorists” involved in the October 7 attack by the Palestinian group Hamas, which governs Gaza.

“If this resolution passes – God forbid – this should no longer be known as the Security Council but as the ‘terror’ council,” he said.

“The only thing that a forced unilateral recognition of a Palestinian state will do is to make any future negotiation almost impossible.”

In addition, Erdan called the Palestinian Authority (PA) a “genocide-loving entity that doesn’t deserve any status” in the UN, which requires new applicants to be “peace-loving” nations.

He further argued that the PA has no authority over Gaza and some parts of the West Bank.

“So who is the UN going to recognise? Who is going to be in charge?” he asked.

“The UN is not committed to multilateralism. Sadly, it is now committed to multi-terrorism,” he continued, adding, “Today the mask has finally fallen. The UNSC has exposed itself.”

Erdan slammed the UN for voting on a “destructive and immoral” resolution at a time when confrontations between Israel and Iran were at risk of escalating.