Middle East crisis live: Iran says Israeli airstrikes on military targets caused ‘limited damage’
Key events
Meanwhile in Gaza, many believe Israel’s new offensive in the north – along with a tightening of its siege – is following a blueprint for removing the remaining population.
As Bethan McKernan reports:
Hospitals shelled, shelters set alight, men and boys separated from their families and taken away in military vehicles. A year into Israel-Hamas war, civilians clinging on in northern Gaza say the situation is worse than it has ever been.
About 400,000 people have remained in Gaza City and surrounding towns since Israel cut the area off from the rest of the territory and issued evacuation orders. Some are unwilling to leave home, afraid they will never be allowed to return; others decided to stay put for the sake of elderly or disabled family members.
Civilians have reported that the routes to the relative safety of the south are unsafe, citing sniper fire and detention by Israeli forces.
Now, many believe Israel is trying to finish the job with a new aerial and ground offensive on the area that has killed at least 800 people since it began on 6 October.
See the full story here:
In London, the UK government said it was “monitoring this situation closely” after the Israeli strikes on Iran.
A Downing Street spokesman said:
We support Israel’s right to self-defence and to protect itself in line with international humanitarian law. Further escalation is in no one’s interest.
Strikes were ‘extensive’ and ‘precise’, says senior US official
Jonathan Yerushalmy
The US did not participate in the strikes across Iran, but worked with the Israeli government to encourage a low-risk attack with no civilian harm, a senior US administration official said late on Friday, adding that it appears that is what was achieved.
The official described the strikes as “extensive”, “precise” and against military targets across Iran.
“The effect was a proportionate self-defence response. The effect is to deter future attacks and to degrade Iran’s abilities to launch future attacks.”
The officials stressed that the US considered the operation to be an “end to the exchange of fire between Israel and Iran”.
“This should be the end of the direct military exchange between Israel and Iran – we had a direct exchange in April and that was closed off and now we’ve had this direct exchange again.”
Iran says ‘limited damage’ after Israeli strikes
Iran says its air defence system successfully tracked and countered Israel’s “aggression” but limited damage was caused to some locations, Reuters reports.
Iranian air defences said Israel attacked military centres in the provinces of Tehran, Khuzestan and Ilam.
The Israeli military said on Saturday it had completed its air attack on Iran, and that it hit missile manufacturing facilities, surface-to-air missile arrays and other aerial capabilities across several areas of the country.
The military said in a statement:
Based on intelligence, IAF [air force] aircraft struck missile manufacturing facilities used to produce the missiles that Iran fired at the state of Israel over the last year.
Reuters has quoted the Israeli military as saying that if the Iranian regime were to make the mistake of beginning a new round of escalation, “we will be obligated to respond”.
Israel says strikes in Iran completed
The Israeli military said on Saturday it had completed its “targeted” attacks against military targets in Iran.
It added that its planes had safely returned home, Reuters reports.
Iran suspends all flights
Iran has suspended all flights until further notice, the aviation authority announced on Saturday, after Israel said it was conducting strikes in the country.
“Flights on all routes have been cancelled until further notice,” a spokesperson of the Civil Aviation Organisation said, according to the official IRNA news agency, reports Agence France-Presse.
Benjamin Netanyahu and other top officials were assessing the security situation, the Israeli prime minister’s office said, as the Israeli military carried out airstrikes on Iran early on Saturday.
Netanyahu was conducting the assessment at the air force base in the defence ministry with the defence minister, the army chief, the head of the Mossad and the head of the Shin Bet, Agence France-Presse reported the statement from his office as saying.
Opening summary
Welcome to our continuing live coverage of the crisis in the Middle East. Here’s a snapshot of the latest news.
Israel has launched direct airstrikes against Iran in a high-stakes retaliatory attack that could bring the Middle East closer to a regional war, drawing in the US.
At least seven explosions were reported over the capital, Tehran, and nearby Karaj just after 2.30am local time on Saturday, as Israeli jets struck what were described as “military targets” in the country, Andrew Roth and Bethan McKernan report.
It was not immediately clear if that marked the end of the attack – fresh blasts were reportedly heard around Tehran on Saturday shortly after the earlier ones. Continuous explosions and light trails were visible across the sky in central Tehran, Agence France-Presse said.
The Israel Defense Forces confirmed it had begun to launch “precise strikes on military targets in Iran” in response to “months of continuous attacks” from Iran against Israel.
Iranian state TV reported several strong explosions heard around Tehran. There were no casualties, the state news agency IRNA said.
In other developments:
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A US official confirmed that Israel notified Washington before carrying out the strikes, and that the US had no involvement in Israel’s military operation. The White House said it understood Israel was conducting the strikes “as an exercise of self-defence”.
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There was no immediate official Iranian comment about the source of explosions, which Iranian news outlets said were under investigation.
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Some of the blasts reportedly occurred near Imam Khomeni international airport. Iran’s Tasnim news agency said civilian flights were operating normally as of Saturday morning. Iraq suspended flights in all its airports until further notice.
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In Gaza, Israeli military strikes across the territory have killed at least 72 Palestinians since Thursday night, including strikes on residential areas in southern Gaza that killed 38 people, including 13 children from the same extended family, Palestinian health officials said. Gaza’s health ministry saids dozens of people were wounded as Israeli airstrikes and shelling pounded the southern city of Khan Younis. Israeli strikes on three houses in Beit Lahiya killed 25 people and wounded dozens more, medics said. Later on Friday, an Israeli airstrike killed nine people in Shati camp in Gaza City, medics said.
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Israeli forces stormed Kamal Adwan hospital, one of the few medical facilities still functioning in north Gaza, on Thursday night, according to reports. “Israeli forces have stormed and are present inside Kamal Adwan hospital” in the city of Jabalia, Gaza’s health ministry said. The World Health Organisation said on Friday it lost touch with staff at the hospital, where some had been the night before to deliver supplies and help transfer patients to Shifa hospital in Gaza City. The hospital’s director, Abu Safiya, could not be reached on Friday.
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The UN rights chief, Volker Türk, described Israel’s renewed assault on northern Gaza as the “darkest moment” of the year-long war on the territory so far. “We are facing what could amount to atrocity crimes, including potentially extending to crimes against humanity,” Türk said in a statement on Friday.
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Three journalists from the Hezbollah-affiliated TV stations Al Mayadeen and Al-Manar were killed and several others wounded in an Israeli airstrike on their press station in Hasbaya, southern Lebanon, early on Friday. The strikes hit a group of small chalets that 18 journalists from at least seven different media outlets – including Al Jazeera, Sky News Arabia and TRT – were staying in while covering the Israel-Hezbollah war in south Lebanon. Several cars with “Press” signs on them were parked in front of the site. Lebanon’s prime minister, Najib Mikati, said the attack was “deliberate” and “aims to terrorise the media to cover up crimes and destruction”.
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UN peacekeepers withdrew from a observation post in Zahajra town in south Lebanon on Tuesday after Israeli forces fired at it, the force said on Friday. Unifil added that the Israeli military has repeatedly demanded that its peacekeepers vacate its positions along the Blue Line and deliberately damaged camera, lighting and communications equipment at some of these positions.
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Two people were killed in a strike on Majd al-Krum in northern Israel, Israeli media said on Friday, following a statement from Hezbollah saying it targeted the northern Israeli town of Karmiel with a large missile salvo.
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Lebanon’s transport minister, Ali Hamieh, said Israeli bombing put a second border crossing between the country and Syria out of service, leaving one official passage between the two nations operational. The UN refugee agency (Unhcr) said Israel’s overnight airstrike on the Jousieh crossing in Lebanon’s northern Bekaa area jeopardised the main escape route for people fleeing the conflict in Lebanon in search of refuge in Syria. More than half a million people, mostly Syrians, had crossed into Syrian territory since Israel began heavily striking Lebanon late last month, according to figures by the Lebanese authorities on Friday.
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Jordan’s foreign minister, Ayman Safadi, called for pressure on Israel to end what he called the “ethnic cleansing” in Gaza, as he met the US secretary of state, Antony Blinken, in London. Blinken stopped over in the UK to brief leaders from Lebanon, the United Arab Emirates and Jordan after he had been unable to meet them on his recent tour of the Middle East. Blinken also met with Lebanon’s prime minister, Najib Mikati, in London on Friday, with the US top diplomat saying Israel “must take the necessary steps to avoid civilian casualties and not endanger UN peacekeepers or the Lebanese armed forces”.