By Crispian Balmer, Parisa Hafezi and Hereward Holland
Friday June 13, 2025

[1/10] Firefighters work at the scene of a damaged building in the aftermath of Israeli strikes, in Tehran, Iran, June 13, 2025. Majid Asgaripour/WANA (West Asia News Agency) via REUTERS Purchase Licensing Rights
Israel launched widescale strikes against Iran on Friday, saying it 
targeted nuclear facilities, ballistic missile factories and military 
commanders and that this was start of a prolonged operation to prevent 
Tehran from building an atomic weapon.
Iranian media and witnesses
 reported explosions including at the country’s main uranium enrichment 
facility at Natanz, while Israel declared a state of emergency in 
anticipation of retaliatory missile and drone strikes.
Iran’s
 elite Revolutionary Guards corps said its top commander, Hossein 
Salami, was killed and state media reported the unit’s headquarters in 
Tehran had been hit. Several children had been killed in a strike on a 
residential area in the capital, it said.
“We are at a decisive moment in Israel’s history,” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a recorded video message.
“Moments
 ago Israel launched Operation Rising Lion, a targeted military 
operation to roll back the Iranian threat to Israel’s very survival. 
This operation will continue for as many days as it takes to remove this
 threat.”
Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said in a 
statement that Israel had “unleashed its wicked and bloody” hand in a 
crime against Iran and that it would receive “a bitter fate for itself”.
An
 Israeli military official said Israel was striking “dozens” of nuclear 
and military targets including the facility at Natanz in central Iran. 
The official said Iran had enough material to make 15 nuclear bombs 
within days.
The United States said it had no part in the 
operation, which raises the risk of a fresh escalation in tensions in 
the Middle East, a major oil producing region.
Alongside extensive
 air strikes, Israel’s Mossad spy agency led a series of covert sabotage
 operations inside Iran, Axios reported, citing a senior Israeli 
official. These operations were aimed at damaging Iran’s strategic 
missile sites and its air defence capabilities.
Iranian state 
media reported that at least two nuclear scientists, Fereydoun Abbasi 
and Mohammad Mehdi Tehranchi were killed in Israeli strikes in Tehran.
Tel
 Aviv’s Ben Gurion Airport was closed until further notice, and Israel’s
 air defence units stood at high alert for possible retaliatory strikes 
from Iran.
“Following the pre-emptive strike by the State of 
Israel against Iran, a missile and UAV (drone) attack against the State 
of Israel and its civilian population is expected in the immediate time 
frame,” Defence Minister Israel Katz said in a statement.
Israeli 
military Chief of Staff Eyal Zamir said tens of thousands of soldiers 
had been called up and “prepared across all borders”.
“We are 
amidst a historic campaign unlike any other. This is a critical 
operation to prevent an existential threat, by an enemy who is intent on
 destroying us,” he said.
Israeli Minister Gideon Saar was holding
 “marathon of calls” with counterparts around the world regarding 
Israel’s attack on Iran, the foreign ministry said in a statement.
U.S. “NOT INVOLVED”
U.S.
 President Donald Trump said that Iran cannot have a nuclear bomb and 
that the United States was hoping to get back to the negotiating table, 
in an interview with Fox News after the start of the Israeli air strikes
 on Iran.
“We will see,” Fox News reporter Jennifer Griffin quoted Trump as saying in a post on X.
Trump
 would convene a meeting of the National Security Council on Friday 
morning, the White House said. He had said on Thursday an Israeli strike
 on Iran “could very well happen” but reiterated his hopes for a 
peaceful resolution.
The U.S. military is planning for the full 
range of contingencies in the Middle East, including the possibility 
that it might have to help evacuate American civilians, a U.S. official 
told Reuters.
Iran’s armed forces spokesperson said Israel and its
 chief ally the United States would pay a “heavy price” for the attack, 
accusing Washington of providing support for the operation.
While 
the U.S. tried to distance itself from Israel’s military operation, an 
Israeli official told public broadcaster Kan that Israel had coordinated
 with Washington on Iran.
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said
 the United States was not involved in the strikes and Tel Aviv had 
acted unilaterally for self-defence.
“We are not involved in 
strikes against Iran and our top priority is protecting American forces 
in the region,” Rubio said in a statement.
“Let me be clear: Iran should not target U.S. interests or personnel,” he added.
The
 State Department issued an advisory saying that all U.S. government 
employees in Israel and their family members should “shelter in place 
until further notice”.
The attacks triggered sharp falls in stock 
prices in Asian trade on Friday, led by a selloff in U.S. futures, while
 oil prices jumped as investors scurried to safe havens such as gold and
 the Swiss franc.
U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres 
condemned any military escalation in the Middle East, said deputy U.N. 
spokesperson Farhan Haq.
“The Secretary-General asks both sides to
 show maximum restraint, avoiding at all costs a descent into deeper 
conflict, a situation that the region can hardly afford,” Haq said.
NUCLEAR TALKS
U.S.
 and Iranian officials were scheduled to hold a sixth round of talks on 
Tehran’s escalating uranium enrichment programme in Oman on Sunday, 
according to officials from both countries and their Omani mediators.
A U.S. official said those talks were still scheduled to proceed despite the Israeli attack.
The
 Israeli military said on Friday that it was forced to act based on new 
intelligence information showing that Iran was “approaching the point of
 no return” in the development of a nuclear weapon.
“In recent 
months, this program has accelerated significantly, bringing the regime 
significantly closer to obtaining a nuclear weapon,” it said in a 
statement, without disclosing the purported evidence.
A source familiar with U.S. intelligence reports said there had been no recent change in the U.S.
intelligence
 assessment that Iran was not building a nuclear weapon and that 
Khamenei had not authorised the restarting of the nuclear weapons 
programme that was shuttered in 2003.
Reporting by Reuters; Writing by Stephen Coates; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan
