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Iran launches missile attack against Israel

Iran fired a barrage of missiles at Israel on Tuesday evening, hours after Israeli forces launched a ground offensive against Hizbollah in southern Lebanon as the region slid closer towards all-out war.

The Israeli military said that approximately 180 missiles had been fired into Israel from Iran since the beginning of the attack at around 7:30pm local time, forcing millions of people to take refuge in shelters.

Sirens sounded across the country amid the boom of interceptor missiles being fired at the Iranian projectiles.

“This attack will have consequences,” said Daniel Hagari, the Israeli military spokesperson. “We have plans, and we will operate at the place and time we decide.”

“We have carried out a large number of interceptions,” Hagari added. “There were a few hits in the centre and other areas in the south of the country,” he said, adding that the military was not aware of any casualties.

Residents take shelter in central Israel as an air raid siren sounds © Ronen Zvulun/Reuters

A person briefed on the situation said the Iranian barrage had targeted military and intelligence facilities near Tel Aviv and other facilities elsewhere in the country. 

The attack, which came with little warning, marked a big escalation in tensions between Iran and Israel, which has recently stepped up attacks on Tehran’s proxies, notably Hizbollah in Lebanon.

Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said it had launched tens of ballistic missiles into Israeli airspace in retaliation for the assassinations last week of Hizbollah’s leader Hassan Nasrallah and a senior guards commander in Beirut.

The Guards said the assault was also in response to a suspected Israeli attack that killed Hamas’s political leader Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran in July.

“The Aerospace Forces of the Guards have targeted the heart of the occupied territories,” it said, noting that the decision to launch the missile attack had been approved by Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, chaired by President Masoud Pezeshkian.

“This comes after a period of restraint . . . following the escalation of the Zionist regime’s aggressive actions,” it added, warning that any Israeli response would result in “devastating” attacks on targets in the country.

The Guards added that 90 per cent of the launched missiles had hit their targets.

Iranian state media released videos that it claimed showed missile strikes had successfully hit their targets, including “the heart of Tel Aviv”, an air base and an civilian airport.

Iran later announced that all flights to and from Tehran’s international airport had been cancelled.

In Washington, US President Joe Biden convened an emergency meeting with vice-president Kamala Harris and their national security team to discuss the attack.

Biden has directed the US military “to aid Israel’s defence against Iranian attacks [and] shoot down missiles targeting Israel”, the White House said.

After the meeting, US national security adviser Jake Sullivan said: “Based on what we know at this point, this attack appears to have been defeated and ineffective.”

He added: “We have made clear that there will be consequences, severe consequences, for this attack, and we will work with Israel to make that the case.”

After the initial warnings of the attack were issued hours before the missile assault, Brent crude, the international benchmark oil price, rose 5.2 per cent to $75.39 a barrel after previously trading down on the day. Gold prices also rose.

The Iranian attack is likely to trigger a robust Israeli response and came with much less notice than a previous barrage in April when Tehran launched more than 300 missiles and drones at Israel in a telegraphed assault that caused limited damage.

Map showing ranges of Iran’s ballistic missiles

Then Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government retaliated with a calibrated missile attack on a base near the Iranian city of Isfahan.

But Netanyahu has stepped up his rhetoric against Tehran in recent weeks. On Monday, he warned Iran “there is nowhere in the Middle East Israel cannot reach”.

Tuesday’s missile assault came hours after Israel launched a ground offensive in Lebanon, intensifying its campaign against Iranian-backed Hizbollah after launching waves of devastating air strikes against the militant group.

In the past two weeks, Israel has assassinated Nasrallah, carried out a bombing campaign that has killed more than 1,000 people in Lebanon, and moved troops across the border.

Israel has characterised its incursion into Lebanon as “limited, localised, and targeted ground raids” against Hizbollah in the south of the country.

It says it is seeking to make northern Israel safe for about 60,000 people displaced by Hizbollah’s rocket fire to return.

The regional escalation has been accompanied by a ratcheting up of Israel’s rhetoric, with officials talking about “defeating” Hizbollah and Netanyahu pledging last week to “change the balance of power in the region for years”.

Iranian leaders have repeatedly said they do not want to be drawn into a broader Middle East war, adding that the Islamic republic would not fall into what they have described as Israel’s “trap”.

But after appearing weak at home and in the region with Hizbollah, its most important proxy, taking devastating blows from Israel, the Tehran regime decided to risk a direct attack on the Jewish state. 

Also on Tuesday six people were killed near a light-rail station in Jaffa, in the south of Tel Aviv, and several injured during a shooting attack that Israeli police blamed on “terrorists”.

The shooters were “neutralised”, the police said.

Additional reporting by Raya Jalabi in Beirut, Mehul Srivastava in Tel Aviv and Rafe Uddin in London


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