Tag: Israel

  • Trump says Israel has agreed to 60-day ceasefire

    Trump says Israel has agreed to 60-day ceasefire

    Israel has agreed to the necessary conditions for a 60-day ceasefire in the Gaza war and it is now up to Hamas to accept the deal, U.S. President Donald Trump said on Tuesday.

    During the two-month period, the United States will work with all parties to end the conflict, Trump wrote on his platform, Truth Social.

    Representatives from Qatar and Egypt, who have been heavily involved in peace efforts, will deliver this latest proposal to the Palestinian extremist organisation, Hamas.

    “I hope, for the good of the Middle East, that Hamas takes this Deal, because it will not get better – IT WILL ONLY GET WORSE,” Trump said in his post.

    The president said U.S. representatives held a long and productive meeting with Israeli officials on Tuesday to discuss Gaza.

    However, there was no immediate comment from the Israeli side.

    Trump had already hinted at a possible ceasefire in the Gaza war a few days ago.

    He is set to host Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Washington next week, with the Gaza war at the top of the agenda.

    Trump reiterated on Tuesday that he expects an agreement to be reached next week.

    The U.S. has been working for weeks to gain support for a plan involving an initial 60-day ceasefire.

    (dpa/NAN)

  • Iran holds state funeral for military leaders killed in Israel conflict

    Iran holds state funeral for military leaders killed in Israel conflict

    A state funeral is taking place in Iran for about 60 people, including military commanders and nuclear scientists, killed during the 12-day conflict with Israel.

    Coffins draped in the Iranian flag, bearing portraits of deceased commanders, were flanked by crowds near Tehran’s Enghelab Square.

    The conflict ended with a ceasefire earlier this week, after the US became directly involved by bombing key nuclear sites in Iran.

    Huge crowds of mourners dressed in black chanted slogans, waved Iranian flags and held portraits of those killed.

    Ahead of the event, a media campaign urged people to participate, with authorities providing free bus and metro rides. Government offices were shut for the day.

    Among those being laid to rest is Mohammad Bagheri, the highest-ranking military officer in Iran who was chief of staff of Iran’s armed forces.

    Bagheri will be buried with his wife and daughter, who were killed in an Israeli strike. In total, Iranian authorities said 627 people were killed in Iran. Israeli officials said 28 people were killed in Israel following missile attacks by Iran.

    Saturday’s funeral also includes Hossein Salami, commander-in-chief of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards, as well as a number of nuclear scientists such as Mohammad Mehdi Tehranchi, who was head of Azad University in Tehran.

    It comes after US President Donald Trump said he would “absolutely” consider bombing Iran again.

    Responding to a question from the BBC’s Nomia Iqbal at a White House press briefing on Friday, he said he would “without question” attack the country if intelligence concluded Iran could enrich uranium to concerning levels.

    Trump has also repeated his assertions that Iran was “decimated”, writing: “Why would the so-called ‘Supreme Leader’ Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, of the war-torn country of Iran, say so blatantly and foolishly that he won the war with Israel, when he knows his statement is a lie.”

    Trump also claimed to have known “exactly where he [Khamenei] was sheltered”, saying he “would not let Israel, or the US Armed Forces… terminate his life”.

    “I saved him from a very ugly and ignominious death, and he does not have to say, ‘thank-you, president Trump!’”, Trump posted on his Truth Social platform.

    Iran’s foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, warned Trump against making “disrespectful” comments about Khamenei, who claimed US and Israeli strikes on Iranian nuclear sites had achieved “nothing significant”.

    “If President Trump is genuine about wanting a deal, he should put aside the disrespectful and unacceptable tone towards Iran’s Supreme Leader, Grand Ayatollah Khamenei,” Araghchi posted on X.

    “The Great and Powerful Iranian People, who showed the world that the Israeli regime had no choice but to run to ‘Daddy’ to avoid being flattened by our Missiles, do not take kindly to Threats and Insults.”

    Araghchi has admitted that “excessive and serious” damage was done to Iran’s nuclear sites by the recent bombings.

    Read Also: Iran vows to respond if U.S. strikes again

    The head of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has said it is still not known how much of Iran’s nuclear capabilities – including highly-enriched uranium and the centrifuges needed to purify the metal – have been destroyed or moved.

    The agency’s director general Rafael Grossi also said that stopping Iran from being able to build nuclear weapons would not be achieved through military attacks.

    “You are not going to solve this in a definitive way militarily, you are going to have an agreement,” he told the BBC’s US partner CBS News.

    On social media, Trump claimed that in recent days he had been “working on the possible removal of sanctions, and other things, which would have given a much better chance to Iran at a full, fast, and complete recovery”.

    But he said Khamenei’s comments had deterred him, declaring: “Instead I get hit with a statement of anger, hatred, and disgust, and immediately dropped all work on sanction relief, and more.”

    BBC

  • Student arrested in Israel on suspicion of spying for Iran

    Student arrested in Israel on suspicion of spying for Iran

    A student has been arrested in Israel on suspicion of spying for Iran.

    The 22-year-old is alleged to have committed security offences and carried out tasks on behalf of Iranian agents, according to a joint statement issued Thursday by the Shin Bet domestic security service and the police.

    The young man, who studies information systems at Ben Gurion University in Beersheba, is from the Arab village of Deir al-Asad in northern Israel.

    He was arrested in June and will be formally charged, the statement said.

    It remains unclear whether the arrest occurred before or during the recent 12-day conflict with Iran.

    Authorities say the student had been in contact with an Iranian agent for several months. In exchange for payment, he allegedly carried out “security-related acts” under the agent’s instructions.

    These included an attempt to injure a person, scattering nails on a main road in Beersheba, and inciting divisive social discourse.

    He reportedly claimed his actions were motivated by solidarity with Palestinians in the Gaza Strip.

    In recent years, Israel has seen a number of arrests involving suspected espionage for Iran.

    (dpa/NAN)

  • Iran, Israel differ on resolving conflict with diplomacy at UN

    Iran, Israel differ on resolving conflict with diplomacy at UN

    Iran and Israel on Tuesday at the UN Security Council, sharply disagreed over employing diplomacy to resolve Iran’s nuclear programme that led to a 13-day violent conflict between them.

    Iran had said diplomacy could and must resolve differences between it and Israel on the one hand, and the world on the other hand, over its nuclear programme.

    However, Israel differed, warning that diplomacy with Iran had failed.

    Iran’s Ambassador to the UN, Amir Iravani, told the Security Council that his country “never initiated this war”.

    Saeid said “once the aggressors stopped their attacks, Iran stopped its lawful military response as well”.

    Saeid also expressed his country’s strong commitment to diplomacy as the path through which differences can and should be resolved.

    “Iran continues to believe that a diplomatic resolution to nuclear and sanction issues is possible,” Saeid said.

    He called on the Security Council to condemn Israel’s and the United States’ attacks on Iran and their International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)-protected nuclear facilities and work to ensure that they never happen again.

    Saeid added that Iran upheld Council Resolution 2231 and the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), and that remedial measures were “fully consistent” with these two instruments.

    Howevet, Israel warned that diplomacy with Iran over its nuclear programme had failed.

    Israeli Ambassador Danny Danon defended his country’s military operation against Iran, describing it as a necessary move to neutralise a “double existential threat” from Tehran’s nuclear and missile programmes.

    Read Also: Trump announces Iran-Israel ceasefire, Iran cautious

    He said Israel achieved complete air superiority and removed key regime targets, acting in coordination with the U.S.

    Danon accused Iran of deceiving the world for years, using diplomacy as cover to advance its nuclear weapons programme.

    “There is still time to take meaningful and decisive action to ensure that the threat of a nuclear Iran does not return stronger than before,” he said.

    “We are often told that diplomacy must be given a chance, it was given every chance, every round, every channel, every deadline.

    “But so far it has failed, the regime in Tehran never had any intention of complying,” he added.

    The United States, in its position, urged Iran to return to the negotiation table and renounce its nuclear programme.

    Acting U.S. Permanent Representative to the UN, Amb. Dorothea Shea, said Iran’s increase in nuclear activity lacked “any credible civilian justification.”

    The UK Ambassador Barbara Woodward welcomed the ceasefire brokered by U.S. President Donald Trump but warned that “the situation remains extremely fragile.”

    Expressing that “now is the time for a return to diplomacy,” Woodward urged Iran to engage in talks without delay, warning that its nuclear programme had exceeded “any credible civilian justification.”

    She said all diplomatic levers would be deployed for a negotiated outcome and to “ensure Iran does not develop a nuclear weapon.”

    Echoing UN appeals for dialogue, the European Union stressed that “a lasting solution to the Iranian nuclear issue can only be through a negotiated deal, not military action.”

    Briefing the Council, Amb. Stavros Lambrinidis said, ”Ensuring that Iran does not acquire or develop a nuclear weapon remains a key security priority for the EU”.

    A fragile ceasefire brokered by the United States between Iran and Israel appears to be holding, marking a tentative halt to a dangerous regional escalation.

    UN political affairs chief Rosemary DiCarlo said the fragile ceasefire announced by U.S. President Donald Trump provided “an opportunity to avoid a catastrophic escalation and achieve a peaceful resolution of the Iran nuclear issue.”

    Amid the relative calm, the UN renewed its call for a diplomatic solution to the Iran nuclear issue, warning that the objectives of the Iran nuclear deal (JCPOA) and the resolution that endorsed it remained unmet.

    JCPOA is an agreement negotiated between Iran and the Permanent Members of the UN Security Council, with the EU.

    It aims to limit Iran’s nuclear programme to exclusively peaceful purpose in return for sanctions relief and other provisions.

    (NAN)

  • Trump announces Iran-Israel ceasefire, Iran cautious

    Trump announces Iran-Israel ceasefire, Iran cautious

    U.S. President Donald Trump has announced that Iran and Israel have agreed to a ceasefire after cloae to two weeks of violent conflict between the two countries.

    Trump took to his Truth Social on Monday evening to announce that both countries had agreed to a “complete and total ceasefire”.

    According to him, the ceasefire agreement is expected to take effect at 12 midnight local time but both Iran and Israel are yet to confirm any definite ceasefire agreement.

    However, Iran said its military operations “to punish Israel for its aggression continued until the very last minute, at 4am.”

    Trump wrote: “Congratulations to everyone! It has been fully agreed by and between Israel and Iran that there will be a complete and total ceasefire”.

    Trump said the ceasefire will begin “in approximately six hours from now” after each country has “wound down” their military operations and “the war will be considered ended”.

    Trump announced that “officially, Iran will start the ceasefire and, upon the 12th hour, Israel will start the ceasefire”.

    He added that “by the 24th hour, an official end to the 12 day war will be saluted by the world”.

    The U.S. leader congratulated both countries for the courage to end the disastrous conflict.

    “During each ceasefire, the other side will remain peaceful and respectful,” Trump wrote.

    “On the assumption that everything works as it should, which it will, I would like to congratulate both countries.

    “Israel and Iran, on having the Stamina, Courage, and Intelligence to end, what should be called, “the 12 day war”.”

    He stressed that the war could have destroyed the Middle East if allowed to persist.

    “This is a War that could have gone on for years, and destroyed the entire Middle East, but it didn’t, and never will!

    “God bless Israel, God bless Iran, God bless the Middle East, God bless the United States of America, and God bless the world!” Trump concluded.

    Iran’s Foreign Minister Seyed Araghchi, in his response, said, “As of now, there is NO “agreement” on any ceasefire or cessation of military operations.

    “However, provided that the Israeli regime stops its illegal aggression against the Iranian people no later than 4 am Tehran time, we have no intention to continue our response afterwards.”

    (NAN)

  • Israel again strikes Tehran, Fordow site

    Israel again strikes Tehran, Fordow site

    Israel launched a wave of airstrikes across Tehran early yesterday, hitting what it called “regime targets and government repression bodies” in the heart of the Iranian capital, including Evin Prison, notorious for jailing political opponents.

    The military also said it struck the Fordo nuclear facility, already damaged by U.S. strikes over the weekend, to obstruct access routes to the site.

    The Israeli military said its warplanes, guided by intelligence, hit command centres linked to Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), including the Basij headquarters and the Alborz Corps, which oversee internal security.

    Read Also: How to improve sports infrastructure in Nigeria, by Ex-Julius Berger chair Sumonu

    Defence Minister Israel Katz said the strikes were a response to Iranian missile fire and vowed to continue hitting “regime targets.”

    The Iranian judiciary denied Israeli reports of unrest inside Evin Prison following the strikes, calling them “rumours from Mossad media,” referring to Israel’s spy agency, and said the situation was under control.

  • Israel, Iran: the changing face of warfare

    Israel, Iran: the changing face of warfare

    Days after Israel launched its air war against Iran on June 13, both United States president Donald Trump and Israel’s prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu disclosed that for now they had no intention of targeting the Iranian leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, despite knowing his whereabouts. Obviously, the two leaders view the Ayatollah as a legitimate target of war, but conceded that he would not be taken out. Their views on the matter of targeting the Ayatollah have, however, started to change, particularly on the Israeli side. Moments after Iran achieved a direct hit on the 1,000-bed Beersheba Soroka Medical Centre in the South of Israel, Israel’s Defence Minister Israel Katz asserted: “A man like [Khamenei] has always aimed at destroying Israel through his agents. This man, who is willing to attack us, must not stay alive. This matter, the matter of stopping this man, eliminating him, is part of the campaign, and we now understand his role because before, he was talking about the destruction of Israel.” During his visit to the damaged hospital, Mr Netanyahu confirmed that ‘all options are open’ on the subject of the Ayatollah’s assassination, declaring that ‘no one is immune’ and that his killing would not escalate but end the war.

    Here in Nigeria, former Foreign Affairs minister Bolaji Akinyemi argued on a television programme last week, saying: “It is against international law to threaten to assassinate a head of state. And incidentally, it is also against American law.” While the eminent professor may be partially right, it is not clear that in war any head of state is an illegitimate target. In any case, while assassinating a head of state by a powerful country may attract retaliation, it is unlikely it is also justiciable. Shortly after Israel launched its campaign against Iran, reports indicated that President Trump restrained Israel from assassinating the Ayatollah. Clearly, Israel had left that option on the table and had the Ayatollah in their crosshairs. That the assassination was not attempted when it was most feasible may actually be due to Mr Trump’s influence. From all indications, if the opportunity presents itself again, Israel may take it if the war becomes protracted or if more civilian targets are hit in Israel.

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    In the opening stages of the Russo-Ukrainian war in February 2022, Russia targeted Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky in order to capture or kill him. Analysts suggest that there are no laws preventing the targeting or killing of an opposing head of state during war. For tactical, strategic and even political reasons, a vulnerable head of state may be spared, but otherwise he might be taken out in order to demoralise the country and weaken the resolve of that country’s military. Mr Trump’s reluctance to countenance the elimination of the Ayatollah may be an indication that the US had learnt lessons from its experience in Libya and Iraq where they connived at the killing of Muammer Gaddafi and Saddam Hussein respectively only to be confronted by post-war chaos. While Israel seems sure that a post-Ayatollah Iran could not be worse than the present situation, the US appears unsure the aftermath would be as easy as some think.

    Thousands of years ago, the world was more realistic and less fussy about the law of war. Captured or brutally killed heads of state were often displayed as war trophies, sometimes their eyes gouged out and all sorts of physical atrocities inflicted on them. The victorious kings and emperors were unconcerned about any post-war chaos in defeated countries or kingdoms, many of which were left desolate. In fact, sometimes, the victorious powers engaged in wholesale depopulation of defeated kingdoms, committing genocide which no one queried, and perpetrating massive abuse against women and children. On the surface, wars have got more circumscribed by laws and regulations. But wars have nevertheless not got neater. Indeed, they have become deadlier and genocidal. Clearly, Prof. Akinyemi’s remonstrance was directed against assassinations in peace time, some of which the US perpetrated in the past few decades. Even the law of war relating to war crimes can only be applied to minion states and kingdoms. Those laws do not deter powerful countries like the US, China, or Russia from erasing whole communities or assassinating enemy heads of state. Often, no one is dominant enough to enforce compliance against the powerful.

    Should Israel decide to assassinate Ayatollah Khomenei, he would be a legitimate war target. But they must then determine whether managing post-war Iran would fit into or fulfill their regional and political expectations. Decades ago, Israel had chances to take out the late Palestinian Liberation Organisation (PLO) leader, Yasser Arafat, but they spurned the idea because they were unsure his successor would not be even more fanatical. The US acknowledges that while nothing precludes the assassination of enemy heads of state, regardless of what their parliament say about assassinating foreign leaders, the aftermath, they have learnt, has often been more volatile and unpredictable. They recall their experience in Cuba, are mystified by the emergence in Syria of Ahmed al-Sharaa (nom de guerre: Abu Mohammed al-Julani) who allied with al-Qaeda during the country’s long civil war, and saw first-hand the complications that accompanied the regime change in Iraq that birthed ISIS.

    As galling as it is, global reality scorns the law of war or creatively interprets its provisions. For a long time to come, no matter how vociferously critics rail against leadership excesses, might will continue to be right. Israel knows that. So, too, do the US, China, Russia and some hermit kingdoms whose leaders have no incentive whatsoever to travel to countries where they might be arrested should the International Criminal Court (ICC) feel seized by the urge to do something.

  • Iran, Israel, and the ghosts of a relationship gone bad

    Iran, Israel, and the ghosts of a relationship gone bad

    By Nishtha Gautam

    As Tehran and Tel Aviv continue to bomb each other, it is impossible to wrap one’s brain around the time, not so distant in the past, when Iran and Israel were each other’s trusted allies in the West Asia region. In a twisted way, however, Iran still seems to be helping Israel. In furthering Israel’s narrative of being the victim. Iran, in turn, stands as isolated today as its arch enemy Iraq once was.

    How was the road to Iran’s isolation, not just regional, paved? As opposed to the popular view of the American grandstanding on peace, which has been altering the geopolitical landscape of West Asia, Iran’s downfall has been largely of its own making, ably aided by Israel. While Iran didn’t recognise the nationhood of Israel, it saw the nascent Jewish state as an ally in the project of regional dominance. Israel needed non-Arab allies, too. It was a good deal for both. After a decade of covert collaboration, Israel became more upfront about its friendship with Iran post the Suez War of 1956. Both Israel and Iran viewed Gamal Abdel Nasser’s Pan-Arabism and Soviet communism with great apprehension.

    Through the 1960s, Tel Aviv and Tehran were instrumental in strengthening the Kurds fighting the regime in Iraq, a Shia-majority country ruled by the Sunni establishment. It’s difficult to believe today, but the Israeli Mossad worked closely with its Iranian counterpart SAVAK, to support the Kurdish resistance. Even the 1967 Arab-Israeli war was not a deal-breaker for this relationship based on common geopolitical interests. If anything, it bolstered Iran’s trust in Israel’s strength after the latter defeated Jordan, Egypt and Syria. The Shah regime held close ties with Israel and continued military, economic, and intelligence cooperation, and both worked against the Ba’athist Iraq.

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    In 1973, when the Arab world stood united against the United States and Europe for their support of Israel and stopped selling them oil, Iran firmly stood in the corner of Israel. It was an expedient move on the Shah’s part as Iran became the leading beneficiary with bourgeoning oil revenues. Iran’s oil was fuelling the West.

    When Israel Had Iran’s Back

    Israel seems to have forgotten today that the missiles landing on its cities are probably thanks to Project Flower, a 1977 joint Iranian-Israeli development programme of advanced missile systems. Even after the regime change in Iran after the 1979 revolution, the reliance on Israel continued unabated, despite the public stance of the Ayatollah against the Jewish state. When Iraq, boosted militarily by both the Americans and the Soviets, invaded Iran in 1980, the Islamic Republic needed Israel more than ever before. And Israel delivered!

    In violation of the sanction policy of its mentor, the US, the Israeli government supplied weapons and other military hardware to Iran in the early 1980s. Saddam Hussein’s war against Iran cemented the military and intelligence collaboration between Tehran and Tel Aviv. But something was about to change.

    The US sanctions against Iran in the aftermath of the 1979 hostage crisis, when 66 American citizens were held captive by an Iranian student group in Tehran to demand the extradition of the Shah, announced that the days of Iran-US bonhomie were over. The religious extremism of the Islamic Republic began to overshadow its pragmatism, and what could have been an inter-regime squabble soon turned into a full-blown geopolitical crisis in the next decade.

    The Coming of Netanyahu

    The Islamic Republic not only started amplifying its anti-Jewish state rhetoric, but it also started painting Iran as a victim of the West-style modernity. Tehran-Tel Aviv cooperation continued covertly, as if on life support, till the mid-1990s. With Benjamin Netanyahu’s first Prime Ministerial stint starting 1996, the anti-Iran paranoia began to take root in Israel.

    Thanks to Iran’s support for Hezbollah and Hamas in a bid to emerge as a regional heavyweight, the Israelis pinned every regional conflict they faced on the Islamic Republic. This development had ramifications beyond West Asia. Post 9/11 attacks, Iran tried a rapprochement with a hostile US, citing an alignment of interests in terms of destroying the Taliban in Afghanistan. Washington rejected this “Grand Bargain” proposal, and George W Bush famously declared, “States like these and their terrorist allies constitute an axis of evil, arming to threaten the peace of the world,” referring to North Korea, Iran, and Saddam’s Iraq.

    A lonely existence

    Netanyahu has been consistently working towards painting Iran as the biggest threat not only to regional stability in West Asia but also to the interests of the US. The “axis of evil” clubbing has been detrimental to Iran’s economic and geopolitical standing, exacerbated by the Islamic Regime’s constant attack on the West-corrupted Iranians who do not adhere to religious diktats. Iranian dissenters have been the biggest allies of the Israeli overtures against the Islamic Regime.

    With the fall of the Assad regime in Syria and the continuing Russia-Ukraine war, one of the rare allies of Iran, Putin, too, is in no position to help. Beyond the usual rhetoric of opposition to Western hegemony, Moscow cannot provide any substantive assistance to Tehran. Not to forget Netanyahu’s persistent lobbying efforts, which have led to Putin not giving Syria the S-300 anti-aircraft system. Tehran cannot rely on Moscow’s support. It appears the same with China. Beijing is more heavily invested, despite the rivalry, in the US economically than in Russia or West Asia, and money trumps friendships almost every time in international affairs.

    Iran’s isolation, therefore, can be summarised in this couplet by Salik Lakhnavi, a Progressive Urdu poet:

    Khuda aazmaae sanam aazmaae

    Sanam jaante haiñ khuda jaanta hai

    (God tested me, my beloved tested me

    God knows, my beloved knows).

    *This article was first published in www.ndtv.com           

  • Iran-Israel war: ‘A fire no one can control’, UN warns

    Iran-Israel war: ‘A fire no one can control’, UN warns

    UN Secretary-General António Guterres has warned that the ongoing violent conflict between Iran and Israel is “a fire no one can control” and risks spiralling out of control.

    Guterres also warned that the world stood on the edge of catastrophe as Israel’s military campaign inside Iran intensified and strikes on nuclear facilities threatened to trigger a catastrophe.

    The regional fallout is expanding, with missiles from Yemen’s Houthi forces targeting Israel and occupied Palestinian territory, while armed groups in Iraq are reportedly mobilising.

    In an address to the UN Security Council on Friday, Guterres made an urgent plea for de-escalation, calling the spiralling confrontation a defining moment for the future of global security.

    “We are not drifting toward crisis, we are racing toward it,” he said adding ,“This is a moment that could shape the fate of nations”.

    “The expansion of this conflict could ignite a fire no one can control,” he stressed, warning of widespread panic and destruction.

    The Secretary-General’s remarks came amid a mounting civilian toll in both Israel and Iran, and as several nuclear sites in Iran have come under direct military assault.

    Over 100 targets have reportedly been struck across Iran, including military and nuclear infrastructure such as the Natanz and Isfahan nuclear facilities and the Khondab heavy water reactor.

    Iranian officials reported over 224 civilian deaths, with some estimates twice as high and more than 2,500 have been reportedly injured.

    Read Also: China accuses Trump of fuelling Iran-Israel conflict

    Major cities like Tehran have seen mass displacements, fuel shortages and widespread panic.

    Iran has responded with its own barrage of missile strikes on Israel, hitting cities such as Tel Aviv, Haifa and Beersheba.

    Critical civilian sites, including the Soroka Medical Center and the Weizmann research institute, have been damaged.

    No fewer than 24 Israelis were confirmed dead, with more than 900 injured.

    Guterres urged both parties to give diplomacy a chance.

    He reiterated the need for full Iranian cooperation with the UN nuclear energy watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency.

    (NAN)

  • Iran’s courageous response to Israel’s attack

    Iran’s courageous response to Israel’s attack

    The Islamic Republic of Iran has finally hit back at the Jewish state with missiles and drones. This was inevitable and may just be the beginning.

    The attack on Iran by Israel was not only unprovoked, it is also a condemnable violation of international law. It is indeed a declaration of war.

    The Isrealis have not only targetted and bombed key Iranian infrastructures, they have also killed Iranian civilians, including women and children, and key Iranian military and civilian leaders and nuclear scientists.

    Israel has attacked Gaza, Palestine, Lebanon, Iraq, Syria, Yemen and now Iran in the last one year. The attack on Iran was carried out whilst the Iranians were still in negotiations with the Americans.

    Simply put, the Iranians were lured into a false sense of security by the Americans whilst Isreal was preparing for war. This makes Americans complicit in this attack despite their denials.

    The foregoing is confirmed by the fact that Netanyahu has said he told the Americans before the attack took place, and Trump has confirmed that he knew that the attack was coming.

    To those nations that say Israel felt sufficiently threatened by Iran and has a right to self defence, I ask the following question: does Iran not have the same right after being attacked?Are the Iranians not entitled to defend themselves too?

    The retaliatory attack Iran launched might just be the beginning. By the time this is over, there may be no Zionist state left. Worse still, the conflict could escalate beyond the Middle East.

    Those that are applauding Israel for this unprovoked attack should know that it is Iran today, it may well be their own country tomorrow.

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    Those who bend the knee to the Isreali bullies and who believe that might is always right are nothing but cowards who fail to appreciate the fact that the beast that they are applauding will eventually turn on them.

    Whether Christian or Muslim, we ALL have a duty to stand up to the carnage that Israel has unleashed on the Middle East, Iran and the world.

    In the name of God, humanity must RESIST this great evil.

    Permit me to add the following: I cannot understand how Nigeria can maintain diplomatic ties with an ethno-fascist, apartheid, racist, child-killing, mass-murdering, ethnic- cleansing, genocidal state like Isreal which has levelled every standing structure in Gaza and murdered over 200,000 innocent civilians, including women and children, in one year, slaughtered and incarcerated thousands in the West Bank, bombed and killed thousands in Lebanon, Syria, Iraq and Yemen in one month, committed genocide and ethnic cleansing, starved innocent civilian populations, bombed defenceless refugee camps, imposed a blockade and starved innocent Gazans and now initiated a brutal and unprovoked attack on Iran, killing military commanders, nuclear scientists and innocent civilians whilst that nation was still in peace negotiations with the America.

    Israel is a state which considers itself above the law, which has no respect for or fear of God, which places no value on human life, which seeks to conquer and occupy the whole of the Middle East in the name of establishing a Greater Israel, which is interested in plunging the entire world into WW3 and which believes in religious and racial supremacy and hegemony.

    Nigeria has no business maintaining diplomatic ties with such an evil state which sheds the blood of the innocent, the weak and the vulnerable, and which has now launched an unprovoked war against the Islamic Republic of Iran.

    The good news is that it appears that the Jewish state is getting far more than it bargained for from the Persians and has learnt the hard way that bombing and butchering helpless and defenceless women and children in places like Gaza and Lebanon is a far cry from taking on a powerful and sophisticated nation with a rich and noble history and a strong army that is capable of not only hitting back in equal measure but also inflicting maximum damage to those who test its will.

    Bullies or tyrants always learn the hard way. Kudos to Iran for showing courage and proving to the world that even monsters and genocidal maniacs can suffer losses, bleed and shed tears!

    (Chief Fani-Kayode is the Sadaukin Shinkafi, the Wakilin Doka Potiskum, a former Minister of Culture and Tourism and a former Minister of Aviation)