JEWISH KING JESUS IS COMING AT THE RAPTURE FOR US IN THE CLOUDS-DON'T MISS IT FOR THE WORLD.THE BIBLE TAKEN LITERALLY- WHEN THE PLAIN SENSE MAKES GOOD SENSE-SEEK NO OTHER SENSE-LEST YOU END UP IN NONSENSE.GET SAVED NOW- CALL ON JESUS TODAY.THE ONLY SAVIOR OF THE WHOLE EARTH - NO OTHER. 1 COR 15:23-JESUS THE FIRST FRUITS-CHRISTIANS RAPTURED TO JESUS-FIRST FRUITS OF THE SPIRIT-23 But every man in his own order: Christ the firstfruits; afterward they that are Christ’s at his coming.ROMANS 8:23 And not only they, but ourselves also, which have the firstfruits of the Spirit, even we ourselves groan within ourselves, waiting for the adoption, to wit, the redemption of our body.(THE PRE-TRIB RAPTURE)
IRAN AT 5PM-7PM SHOOTS 25 MISSLES IN 2 SEPARATE BARRAGES. DAMAGE BUT NO INJURIES TO ISRAELIS.
ISAIAH 41:11
11
Behold, all they that were incensed against thee (ISRAEL) shall be
ashamed and confounded: they shall be as nothing;(DESTROYED) and they
that strive with thee shall perish.(ISRAEL HATERS WILL BE TOTALLY
DESTROYED)
Turban complications-The turban represents the Shi'ite
clergy that, ever since its creation in Iran almost four centuries ago,
has had an ambivalent attitude towards the exercise of political power.
Broadly speaking, turbans come in two contrasting colors. A white
turban means that the man who wears it is not a descendant of the
Prophet, and thus is of non-Arab origin. In contrast, the wearer of the
black turban is marked as a descendant of the Prophet through one of the
twelve imams of Twelver Shi'ism.The semiology of turbans is still more
complicated. Students of theology are allowed to wear very thin turbans,
denoting their position as novices. A hujjat al-Islam, or mid-ranking
mullah, can wear a slightly fatter turban. The very fat turbans that
require several yards of cloth are reserved for the grand ayatollahs.
Rafsanjani’s white turban marked him as someone of non-Arab origin.
Khatami and Khamenei both wear black turbans, as did Khomeini, denoting
their Arab descent on the paternal side.The experience of the past three
decades shows that many of the most senior clerics are not eager to
enter the realm of politics. Once in power, however, a man with a thin
turban could quickly thicken his headgear and grow a longer beard to
bolster the religious aspect of his image. When first elected president,
Ayatollah Khamenei was not a particularly senior cleric, but was
promoted so that he could succeed Ayatollah Khomeini.
THE CITIZENS OF IRAN (ELAM IN THE BIBLE) MIGRATE TO ALL NATIONS ON EARTH.
JEREMIAH 49:34-39
34
The word of the LORD that came to Jeremiah the prophet against Elam
(IRAN) in the beginning of the reign of Zedekiah king of Judah, saying,
35
Thus saith the LORD of hosts; Behold, I will break the bow of
Elam,(IRAN) the chief of their might.(IRAN SUPLIES ARABS WITH WEAPONS
AGAINST ISRAEL)
36 And upon Elam (IRAN) will I bring the four winds
from the four quarters of heaven, and will scatter them toward all those
winds; and there shall be no nation whither the outcasts of Elam (IRAN)
shall not come.(WORLD MIGRATION)
37 For I will cause Elam (IRAN) to
be dismayed before their enemies, and before them that seek their life:
and I will bring evil upon them, even my fierce anger,(REG BOMBS) saith
the LORD; and I will send the sword after them, till I have consumed
them:(GROUND TROOPS)
38 And I will set my throne in Elam,(IRAN) and
will destroy from thence the king (KHEMEINI )and the princes,(IRANIAN
GUARDS) saith the LORD.
39 But it shall come to pass in the latter days, that I will bring again the captivity of Elam,(IRAN) saith the LORD.
B61-13 gravity bomb reaches first production milestone ahead of projected timeline-by Clarence Oxford.
Los
Angeles CA (SPX) Jun 17, 2025-Sandia National Laboratories has
completed the first production unit (FPU) of the B61-13 gravity bomb
nearly a year ahead of schedule, marking a significant achievement in
U.S. nuclear modernization efforts. The unit was assembled in May at the
Pantex Plant, just over a year after Congress authorized program
funding.As the lead systems integrator and design agency for the bomb's
nonnuclear components, Sandia capitalized on the structural and design
similarities between the B61-13 and its predecessor, the B61-12. "The
reason it was possible to move so quickly is the similitude between the
two bombs," said Sandia manager Lysle Serna. "We were able to leverage a
lot of B61-12 qualification data as well as the Pantex assembly and
disassembly processes and procedures."Arthur Gariety, weapon systems
lead for the B61-13, echoed that sentiment, emphasizing that the reuse
of design and safety data from the B61-12 enabled rapid progress. "Had
those similarities not been there, we wouldn't have been able to achieve
the first production unit as quickly as we did," he said.The effort
drew on years of technical experience from staff who transitioned from
the B61-12 program, supported by early studies dating back to 2022 and
formal engineering efforts initiated under Phase 6.4 in 2024. Serna
praised the team's dedication: "This team has been working at double
speed since 2018 to solve technical challenges. They always find a way
to succeed."External contributions were also vital. Early component
deliveries from the Y-12 National Security Complex and Kansas City
National Security Campus ensured timely assembly. "It was a highly
collaborative process across the nuclear security enterprise," Gariety
said. "When everyone gets on the same page, we can do great things to
support the mission."In May, Secretary of Energy Chris Wright presided
over the diamond stamping ceremony for the first completed unit. "The
remarkable speed of the B61-13's production is a testament to the
ingenuity of our scientists and engineers and the urgency we face to
fortify deterrence in a volatile new age," Wright said.The B61-13 offers
a higher yield than the B61-12, while maintaining its predecessor's
enhanced safety, security, and precision features. It does not add to
the total stockpile size, as production plans for the B61-12 were scaled
back proportionally.Program efforts now transition to Design Review and
Acceptance Group evaluations and preparation for full-rate production.
Air raid sirens in northern Israel due to Iranian missiles: military.
Jerusalem,
June 17 (AFP) Jun 17, 2025-Air raid sirens were activated briefly
across a large swath of northern Israel on Tuesday warning of an
incoming barrage of Iranian missiles, the military said."A short while
ago, sirens sounded in several areas across Israel following the
identification of missiles launched from Iran toward the State of
Israel," the military said in the seventh such warning since midnight
(2100 GMT on Monday).Israeli authorities issued a statement around 15
minutes later saying residents could leave their shelters, with no
reports of strikes published by officials.Israeli media is subject to
strict restrictions from the military censor.The latest warning of the
day came hours after a previous barrage from Iran targeted the coastal
hub of Tel Aviv and the north.Israel's sophisticated air defence systems
have been largely successful in intercepting Iranian missiles and
drones.At least 24 people have been killed and 592 wounded in Iran's
attacks on Israel, according to the prime minister's office.As of
Sunday, Israeli attacks had killed at least 224 people and wounded more
than 1,200 in Iran, the health ministry there said.The deaths include
top military commanders and nuclear scientists.
Israel, Iran exchange more deadly airstrikes on fifth day of conflict-by Sheri Walsh.
Washington
DC (UPI) Jun 16, 2025-Israel and Iran intensified their deadly
airstrikes Monday on the fifth day after Israel launched its first
attack to dismantle Iran's nuclear capability.Hundreds of people have
been killed, including 224 in Iran and 24 in Israel, as Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu called the strikes a significant setback to Iran's
nuclear program."I estimate we are sending them back a very, very long
time," Netanyahu told reporters.Iranian missiles struck Tel Aviv late
Monday, the central Israeli city of Bat Yam and the Palestinian-Israeli
town of Tamra as Israel Defense Forces told residents to rush to bomb
shelters."Israel's defense systems are currently working to intercept
the threat," the IDF said in a statement, before allowing Northern
Israel residents to leave.Iran said its ninth wave of attacks will
continue through Tuesday morning, according to Iranian media.Israel said
three workers at the country's Bazan Group oil company were killed
earlier in the day. The power plant, which was significantly damaged, is
responsible for steam and electricity production.Iran also warned
Israel to evacuate two Israeli television headquarters after an Iranian
state television station in Tehran was struck and one of its workers was
killed.President Donald Trump announced Monday he would leave the Group
of Seven summit in Canada to monitor the situation in the Middle East,
as he warned Iranians to "immediately evacuate Tehran.""Iran should have
signed the 'deal' I told them to sign. What a shame, and waste of human
life," Trump wrote in a post on Truth Social before leaving the summit.
"Simply stated, Iran can not have a nuclear weapon. I said it over and
over again! Everyone should immediately evacuate Tehran!"As Trump
returned to Washington, D.C., U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth
ordered "the deployment of additional capabilities.""Protecting U.S.
forces is our top priority and these deployments are intended to enhance
our defensive posture in the region," Hegseth wrote in a post on X.The
USS Nimitz aircraft carrier group was moving toward the Middle East to
join the USS Carl Vinson. The Defense Department also announced it would
move aircraft to the European and Central Command theaters to support
U.S. bases in the region, according to the Navy Times.While attending
the G7 summit, Trump had been in contact throughout the day with
Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Vice President JD Vance. Trump and
Rubio returned to Washington, D.C., on Monday night, according to a
State Department spokesperson.Over the weekend, Israel's strikes killed
top Iranian military commanders and scientists and targeted nuclear
infrastructure. While Trump has rejected any plan to kill Iranian
Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Netanyahu was not ruling it out
Monday, according to ABC News.Thousands of Israel's residents have
evacuated in response to Iran's strikes, according to Israel's finance
minister, Bezalel Smotrich."Our teams have handled, as of Saturday,
14,583 claims for direct damage from the attacks from Iran," Smotrich
said Monday."We are assisting 2,775 residents who were evacuated from
their homes, most of whom were accommodated in hotels through local
authorities in a model we determined in advance," he added.So far, we
have identified 24 structures, buildings that are designated for
demolition."
Amid Israel-Iran war, Nimitz aircraft carrier to join Vinson in Middle East-by Allen Cone.
Washington
DC (UPI) Jun 16, 2025-The Nimitz aircraft carrier group was rerouted
from the Indo-Pacific to the Middle East, joining the USS Carl Vinson.
The move comes amid airstrikes between Israel and Iran.Also, the Defense
Department is moving aircraft to the European and Central Command
theaters if needed to support U.S. bases in the region, the Navy Times
reported.And other ships, including Navy destroyers, are also headed to
the region, a U.S. official told NBC News. Those ships, which are now
based in U.S. European Command, include ballistic missile defense, or
BMD, capabilities. Some destroyers are now stationed off Israel's coast
in the Mediterranean."Over the weekend, I directed the deployment of
additional capabilities to the United States Central Command Area of
Responsibility, U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth posted Monday on X.
"Protecting U.S. forces is our top priority and these deployments are
intended to enhance our defensive posture in the region."The Nimitz was
scheduled to go to the Middle East but officials canceled a stop in
Vietnam, NBC News reported. The George Washington carrier group is
operating in the Philippine Sea.The Nimitz strike group could reach the
Middle East later this week, an official told Politico. The exact
location hasn't been disclosed.The carrier was sailing in the South
China Sea and has made its way through the Strait of Malacca, which
connects the Andaman Sea and the South China Sea and is about 1,200
miles from Iran.The Vinson has sailed in the Arabian Sea, and it has
partnered with the USS Harry S. Truman carrier strike group to hit
Houthi targets in Yemen, as well. Its home port is San Diego.President
Donald Trump hasn't said whether the United States will join Israel
against Iran."We're not involved in it," Trump said during an interview
with ABC News. "It's possible we could get involved. But we are not at
this moment involved."Israel's aircraft have mainly been targeting
nuclear facilities, including the Fordow Fuel Enrichment Plant built
into a mountain and buried deep underground.The Nimitz carrier group has
about 5,000 sailors and Marines, including aircraft crews. Assigned
destroyers are Wilbur, Gridle, Meyer and HigbeeThe aircraft carrier was
commissioned in 1975 and the home port is in Bremerton, Wash.All but
three of the 11 active U.S. aircraft carriers are in homeports now.The
Vinson and Nimitz are among the 10 in an older carrier class. The USS
Gerald R. Ford carrier is only one commissioned in the new class.
How much damage has Israel inflicted on Iran's nuclear programme?
Vienna,
June 17 (AFP) Jun 17, 2025-Israel's strikes on Iran have targeted
several of its nuclear facilities as it claims the country is seeking to
develop nuclear weapons -- an accusation Tehran denies.Experts told AFP
that while the attacks had caused some damage to Iran's nuclear
programme, they are unlikely to have delivered a fatal blow.Here is an
update on Iran's nuclear sites as of Tuesday.- What is the extent of the
damage? -Israel's operation included strikes on Iran's underground
uranium enrichment sites at Natanz and Fordow, and on its Isfahan
nuclear site, the UN's International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said,
citing Iranian officials.A key, above-ground component of Iran's Natanz
nuclear site has been destroyed, including its power infrastructure, the
IAEA reported Monday.The UN watchdog added Tuesday that satellite
images indicated possible "direct impacts" on the underground section of
the plant, where thousands of centrifuges are operating to enrich
uranium.At the underground Fordow enrichment plant, Iran's second
uranium enrichment facility, the IAEA said it observed "no damage"
following the attacks.At the Isfahan nuclear site, however, "four
buildings were damaged" -- the central chemical laboratory, a uranium
conversion plant, the Tehran reactor fuel manufacturing plant, and a
metal processing facility under construction, the IAEA said.Significant
uranium stockpiles are believed to be stored around the Isfahan site.Ali
Vaez, the International Crisis Group's Iran project director, told AFP
that if Iran managed to transfer significant quantities to "secret
facilities," then "the game is lost for Israel".Iran's only nuclear
power plant, the Bushehr plant, was not targeted, nor was the Tehran
research reactor.- Can the programme be destroyed? -While "Israel can
damage Iran's nuclear programme... it is unlikely to be able to destroy
it," Vaez said, saying that Israel did not have the massively powerful
bombs needed "to destroy the fortified, bunkered facilities in Natanz
and Fordow".Destroying those would require US military assistance, added
Kelsey Davenport, an expert with the Arms Control Association.She also
noted that Israel's unprecedented attack would not erase the expertise
Iran had built up on nuclear weapons, despite killing nine Iranian
nuclear scientists.- What are the risks to the Iranian population? -The
IAEA has not detected any increase in radiation levels at the affected
sites."There is very little risk that attacks on Iran's uranium
enrichment facilities would result in a harmful radiation release,"
Davenport said.But an attack on the Bushehr plant could "have a serious
impact on health and the environment", she said.After Israel launched
its strikes, IAEA chief Rafael Grossi said that nuclear facilities "must
never be attacked" and that targeting Iranian sites could have "grave
consequences for the people of Iran, the region, and beyond".- Is Iran
close to developing a nuclear bomb? -After the United States under
President Donald Trump unilaterally withdrew in 2018 from a landmark
deal that sought to curb Tehran's nuclear activities, Iran has gradually
retreated from some of its obligations, particularly on uranium
enrichment.As of mid-May, the country had an estimated 408.6 kilogrammes
(900 pounds) enriched to up to 60 percent -- just a short step from the
90 percent needed for a nuclear warhead.Iran theoretically has enough
near-weapons-grade material, if further refined, for about 10 nuclear
bombs, according to the definition by the Vienna-based IAEA.Iran is the
only non-nuclear-armed state producing uranium to this level of
enrichment, according to the UN nuclear watchdog.- How much damage has
Israel inflicted on Iran's nuclear programme? -While the IAEA has been
critical of Iran's lack of cooperation with the UN body, it says there
are "no credible indications of an ongoing, undeclared structured
nuclear programme".Tehran has consistently denied ambitions to develop
nuclear warheads.But Davenport warned that the strikes could strengthen
factions in Iran advocating for an atomic arsenal."Israel's strikes set
Iran back technically, but politically the strikes are pushing Iran
closer to nuclear weapons," she said.
Reporter's notebookNight in
the heart of Israel’s most densely populated region-Echoes of the Blitz
in Ramat Gan’s underground Bialik Station, an unlikely wartime
refuge-As Iranian missiles hit central Israel, many residents without
adequate bomb shelters have found safety in the Tel Aviv-adjacent city’s
well-maintained light rail station By Ariela Karmel-18 June 2025, 1:57
am
Lit by neon signs, pulsing with foot traffic, packed with
bars, falafel joints and cafés that spill out onto the sidewalk, Bialik
Street is usually one of the liveliest arteries in Ramat Gan. On a
normal weeknight, you’d hear music from open windows, laughter from
street corners, delivery scooters weaving through the crowd.But on the
fourth night in a row of Iranian missile strikes, the street is eerily
silent, following a Home Front Command alerting residents to remain
close to protected spaces.The restaurants are dark. The windows are
shuttered. There are no strollers, no couples walking home, no
late-night smokers leaning against the curb. Just empty pavement, and
the low hum of the light rail beneath your feet.Then, suddenly, signs of
life appear.At the entrance to the Bialik light rail station, a small
crowd has gathered. Some smoke quietly by the door. Others sit on
benches, scrolling through their phones or chatting in low voices.
Several signs mark the station not as a transit hub, but as a protected
space — a public shelter with a new, urgent purpose.Those descending the
escalator are greeted by a surreal scene: rows of mattresses line the
floors of the train platforms, each claimed by someone who has nowhere
safer to sleep. Families unpack meals, children burrow into sleeping
bags, friends chat quietly in corners.This is what night looks like now
in the heart of Israel’s most densely populated region — not in the bars
and boulevards, but 92 feet deep underground, where a subterranean
ecosystem has formed over the last four days.Since Friday, when Iran
began launching its missile salvos toward central Israel, some 1,000
people have taken shelter in Bialik Station each night. Most begin
arriving around 9 or 10 p.m., though a few come as early as 4 p.m.Many
return every evening, even when the Home Front Command says it’s no
longer necessary. For them, the risk above ground feels too great and
the alternative too uncertain.Tatiana, 27, stands beside a mattress on
the lower level, keeping watch while her partner Ilia, 26, searches
upstairs for a new spot; there was no more room below. It was their
first night at the station, after spending previous nights at public
shelters. Though their building has a shelter, she explained, it’s
small, overcrowded and poorly maintained — much like the other public
shelters they’ve tried.A former English teacher from Russia who is now
working at H&M, Tatiana looked calm but visibly frustrated.“We were
at a public shelter before,” she said. “It didn’t feel protected. It
doesn’t feel safe at home, either.”Around her, the station pulsed with
the quiet rhythm of people settling in for the night. It’s a strange and
sobering sight: families wrapped in blankets on thin mattresses,
workers eating dinner from plastic containers, children sprawled on
mattresses watching YouTube on a phone. A few played cards. Others lay
silently with earbuds in. All were waiting — for morning, for quiet, for
safety.The scene feels dystopian, evoking a different place and era:
Londoners huddled in the Underground during the Blitz; Ukrainians riding
out airstrikes in the Kyiv metro. And now, in the heart of central
Israel, a similar reality has taken hold.There’s a palpable heaviness
and frustration that hangs in the air. Many are here because their homes
lack adequate shelters — or any shelters at all.Complete with clean
bathrooms-Bialik Station is neat, organized and not overcrowded, in
contrast to many public shelters and other shelters in most residential
buildings. It boasts clean bathrooms, air conditioning, Wi-Fi and
coordinated management, offering a safer, more humane alternative for
many residents.Station employees patrol the space throughout the night,
not as train staff but as temporary wardens: distributing mattresses and
supplies, mediating disputes and ensuring the tightly packed floor
stays clean and usable. When one man set up a tent for privacy, they
gently asked him to take it down. Tents take up too much space — a
scarce and precious resource.The result is an underground space that
functions better than many of the public shelters purpose-built for
emergencies.On the upper level, Sura, 42, and Naveen, 39, sat side by
side on a pair of mattresses, sharing a pizza they brought with them.
The two friends, originally from India, came to Israel in the past two
years as foreign workers to send money back to their families.They work
together at a nearby supermarket and have come here every night since
the strikes began.“There’s no miklat in our building,” Sura said, using
the Hebrew term for shelter. “This place isn’t far. It’s clean and
there’s space.” They stay until 5 a.m., then head home to change and go
to work.A large number of those sleeping in the station each night are
foreign workers like Sura and Naveen, or immigrants from Russia and
Ukraine. Many have no family nearby, few community ties and limited
resources. For them, the station offers not just protection, but a rare
sense of stability.This is a miserable situation to be sure, but this
isn’t a miserable place. Even laughter can ring out. The normalcy of it
all is almost disarming.Photographer Avishai Finkelstein, who lives
nearby, came to document the light rail station turned bomb shelter.“We
never thought we’d have a functioning light rail here and it finally
happened. Then we didn’t expect it to work,” he said. “And it works.”He
said it with a kind of sad irony: The long-awaited, long-delayed Tel
Aviv-area light rail, whose first line was only opened in August 2023,
is now functioning as a bomb shelter.Yet, it has become one of the few
things in this moment that’s functioning. Not as it was intended, but as
it must.
Sources close to Khamenei warn of growing risk he could
miscalculate-One source describes the danger to Iran’s security and
internal stability as ‘extremely dangerous’; insiders say supreme leader
still has influential aides who haven’t been targeted.By Reuters and
ToI Staff 18 June 2025, 12:39 am
Iran’s 86-year-old Supreme
Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei cuts an increasingly lonely
figure.Khamenei has seen his main military and security advisers killed
by Israeli airstrikes, leaving major holes in his inner circle and
raising the risk of strategic errors, according to five people familiar
with his decision-making process.One of those sources, who regularly
attends meetings with Khamenei, described the risk of miscalculation to
Iran on issues of defense and internal stability as “extremely
dangerous.”Several senior military commanders have been killed since
Friday, including Khamenei’s main advisers from the Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps, Iran’s elite military force: the IRGC’s
overall commander Hossein Salami, its aerospace chief Amir Ali
Hajizadeh, who headed Iran’s ballistic missile program, and spymaster
Mohammad Kazemi.These men were part of the supreme leader’s inner circle
of roughly 15-20 advisers comprising IRGC commanders, clerics, and
politicians, according to the sources, who include three people who
attend or have attended meetings with the leader on major issues and two
close to officials who regularly attend.The loose group meets on an
ad-hoc basis, when Khamenei’s office reaches out to relevant advisers to
gather at his compound in Tehran to discuss an important decision, all
the people said. Members are characterized by unwavering loyalty to him
and the ideology of the Islamic Republic, they added.Khamenei, who was
imprisoned before the 1979 revolution and maimed by a bomb attack before
becoming leader in 1989, is profoundly committed to maintaining Iran’s
Islamic system of government, is deeply mistrustful of the West, and is
committed to the destruction of Israel.Under Iran’s system of
government, he has supreme command of the armed forces, the power to
declare war, and can appoint or dismiss senior figures, including
military commanders and judges.Khamenei makes the final decision on
important matters, though he values advice, listens attentively to
diverse viewpoints, and often seeks additional information from his
counsellors, according to one source who attends meetings.“Two things
you can say about Khamenei: he is extremely stubborn but also extremely
cautious. He is very cautious. That is why he has been in power for as
long as he has,” said Alex Vatanka, director of the Iran Program at the
Middle East Institute think-tank in Washington.“Khamenei is pretty well
placed to do the basic cost-benefit analysis, which really fundamentally
gets to one issue more important than anything else: regime
survival.”Khamenei’s son at the fore-The focus on survival has
repeatedly been put to the test. Khamenei has deployed the IRGC and its
affiliated Basij militia to quell national protests in 1999, 2009, and
2022.While the security forces have always been able to outlast
demonstrators and restore state rule, years of Western sanctions have
caused widespread economic misery that analysts say could ultimately
threaten internal unrest.The stakes could barely be higher for Khamenei,
who faces an escalating war with Israel, which has targeted nuclear and
military sites and personnel with air attacks, drawing retaliatory
Iranian missile fire.The five people familiar with Khamenei’s
decision-making process stressed that other insiders who have not been
targeted by Israel’s strikes remain important and influential, including
top advisers on political, economic, and diplomatic issues.Khamenei
designates such advisers to handle issues as they arise, extending his
reach directly into a wide array of institutions spanning military,
security, cultural, political, and economic domains, two of the sources
said.Operating this way, including in bodies nominally under the elected
president, means Khamenei’s office is often involved not only in the
biggest questions of state but in executing even minor initiatives,
according to the people with knowledge.His son Mojtaba has grown ever
more central to this process over the past 20 years, the sources said,
building a role that cuts between the personalities, factions, and
organizations involved to coordinate on specific issues, the sources
said.A mid-ranking cleric seen by some insiders as a potential successor
to his aging father, Mojtaba has built close ties with the IRGC, giving
him added leverage across Iran’s political and security apparatus, the
people added.Ali Asghar Hejazi, the deputy of political security affairs
at Khamenei’s office, has been involved in sensitive security decisions
and is often described as the most powerful intelligence official in
Iran, according to the sources.Meanwhile, the head of Khamenei’s office,
Mohammad Golpayegani, as well as former foreign ministers Ali Akbar
Velayati and Kamal Kharazi, and ex-parliament speaker Ali Larijani,
remain trusted confidants on diplomatic and domestic policy issues such
as the nuclear dispute, the people said.The loss of the IRGC commanders
nonetheless decimates the top ranks of a military organization that
Khamenei has put at the center of power since becoming supreme leader in
1989, relying on it for both internal security and regional
strategy.While the regular army chain of command runs through the
Iranian defense ministry under the elected president, the IRGC’s answer
personally to Khamenei, securing the best military equipment for their
land, air, and sea branches and giving their commanders a major state
role.As he faces one of the most dangerous moments in the Islamic
Republic’s history, Khamenei finds himself further isolated by the
recent losses of other key advisers in the region as Iran’s “Axis of
Resistance” coalition has been hammered by Israel, since the Hamas
terror group carried out its October 7, 2023, onslaught on southern
communities, murdering 1,200 people taking 251 hostages to
Gaza.Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah, who was personally close to the
Iranian leader, was killed by an airstrike in September last year, less
than a year after the terror group began launching cross-border attacks
on Israel, a day after Hamas’s massacre.Syrian president Bashar al-Assad
was overthrown by rebels in December, one month after a ceasefire was
reached with Hezbollah, which had been severely weakened in its war with
Israel.
IDF general says strikes to continue until threat
eliminated-Israel will achieve goals in Iran within a week or two,
including in Fordo, IDF says-Air force striking ballistic missiles
launchers and stores, air defense systems and radar sites; IDF believes
smaller salvos now being launched at Israel due to successful strikes By
Emanuel Fabian-17 June 2025, 10:23 pm
The Israeli military
estimates it will achieve its objectives against Iran’s nuclear program
within a week or two, Israel Defense Forces officials told reporters on
Tuesday.The estimation came as Israel continued to operate against the
Islamic Republic’s forces and nuclear program, with the Israeli Air
Force conducting a wave of airstrikes against Iranian ballistic missile
launchers in western Iran, the IDF said.The military said fighter jets
hit dozens of launchers and other facilities.IDF Spokesman Brig. Gen.
Effie Defrin said Tuesday evening that 60 Israeli Air Force jets set out
for an “extensive wave of strikes in the heart of Iran” several hours
earlier, targeting launchers aimed at Israel.He said that because of
Israel’s strikes in recent days, Iran’s forces have withdrawn to central
Iran. “Now, they are putting efforts into launching [missiles] from
Isfahan.”“They withdrew from western Iran, but we are coming after
them,” he said.Additionally, since Tuesday morning, the IDF said it
struck Iranian air defense systems and radar sites in western Iran,
publishing footage of some of the strikes.Since the beginning of the
operation, the IAF has destroyed 70 Iranian air defense batteries in
Iran, according to the military as of Tuesday.In the first 24 hours of
the operation, which started early Friday, over 40 Iranian air defense
systems were struck, according to the IDF, giving the IAF air supremacy
over western Iran and Tehran.But the IDF has said flying over Iran is
still not risk-free.Since then, another 30 systems have been targeted in
waves of strikes, opening up a path for IAF fighter jets and drones to
operate deeper within Iran, the military said.IAF Chief of Staff Maj.
Gen. Tomer Bar said Tuesday that the strikes on the Iranian air defense
systems are “a historic mission that could change the entire course of
the campaign.”The military also said IAF drones were continuing to hunt
down surface-to-air missile launchers and radars across the country.The
military published footage showing the identification of Iranian
preparations to launch ballistic missiles at Israel, and a subsequent
strike against them on Tuesday, while another video showed a strike on
an Iranian air defense system at one of the sites.The IDF has said that
some 40 percent of Iran’s ballistic missile launchers, or some 200, have
been destroyed or neutralized so far amid the operation. This has
apparently played a role in limiting Iran’s missile fire on Israel in
the past two days.Iran has been launching smaller salvos of missiles at
Israel over the past day because its capabilities have been degraded by
Israeli strikes, the IDF believes.According to IDF assessments, Iran is
not trying to conserve missiles for a longer war, but rather, is
struggling to coordinate larger attacks.On Tuesday evening, loud blasts
were heard across the Iranian capital, AFP journalists reported. The
blasts were heard in north, west and central Tehran, according to the
journalists. It was not immediately clear whether the blasts were the
result of incoming Israeli strikes or Iranian air defense fire.Israel
set out on the operation in Iran on Friday with the objective of
removing the “existential threat” of the Iranian nuclear program and
ballistic missile capabilities.The IDF has so far bombed two Iranian
nuclear enrichment facilities, Natanz and Isfahan, causing significant
damage to both. It has also killed at least nine key nuclear scientists
who were allegedly working on a bomb, and struck several other
facilities supporting Iran’s nuclear program, including offices and
command centers.The IDF said it has so far caused significant damage to
Tehran’s ability to build a bomb, but the efforts are not over yet. It
said it will detail the damage it has done to Iran’s nuclear program
when the operation is over.The military has so far denied striking the
underground Fordo nuclear facility, but said it is in its “bank of
targets.” Defense Minister Israel Katz said earlier that Fordo is “an
issue that will certainly be addressed.”In terms of Iran’s military, the
IDF said it has killed dozens of commanders, including the vast
majority of the top leadership of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps
and the Iranian Armed Forces. Military officials said Israeli forces had
killed three times more Iranian commanders than they had initially
anticipated when planning the operation.IDF Operations Directorate chief
Maj. Gen. Oded Basiuk asserted Tuesday that Israel’s operation against
Iran will not end until the IDF has removed the threat of its nuclear
program and ballistic missiles, but refused to provide a timeline.“We
continue to strike nuclear targets to deepen the achievement, according
to a plan and at a timing that suits us,” he said in a call with
reporters.“We are striking the terror regime, not the people, who
deserve a better future. Those who endanger us are the leadership in
Tehran, not the people walking the streets of Shiraz,” Basiuk said. “We
will remain prepared on defense. I assess that the Iranians will
continue to try to harm Israel.”Basiuk said the IDF “will not allow a
nuclear Iran to turn the Middle East into a graveyard.”Israel says its
sweeping assault is necessary to prevent its longtime adversary from
getting any closer to building an atomic weapon. At the beginning of the
campaign on Friday, it said the situation had become an immediate
existential threat to the Jewish state.Iran, which regularly calls for
Israel’s destruction, insists that its nuclear program is peaceful;
however, it has been enriching uranium to levels that have no peaceful
application, has obstructed international inspectors from checking its
nuclear facilities, and has greatly expanded its ballistic missile
capabilities.IDF chief: ‘Civilian resilience is critical for us’IDF
Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir on Tuesday visited the scene of an
Iranian ballistic missile impact in Bat Yam, saying, “Civilian
resilience is critical for us. It’s a central component of our ability
to continue functioning.”Nine people were killed in Sunday’s attack.“We
are fighting a war here that leaves us no choice, and it is being
conducted across all dimensions. We are determined to complete our
missions, and everything we were tasked with, we will achieve,” Zamir
told Home Front Command officers in a video published by the IDF.“We are
in an extraordinary moment. Right now, we are hunting ballistic
missiles, there are UAVs out there, our fighter jets are involved, it’s
something crazy: 1,500 kilometers from Israel, we’re tracking and
destroying those ballistic missiles,” he said.“Now your layer comes in,
and it’s a very significant layer in the sense that when something hits,
forces are on the ground, and people draw strength from seeing you,” he
told the Home Front Command officers. “You arrive quickly, rescue
people safely, treat the wounded, and sadly, there are also fatalities
in these events.”“Civilian resilience is critical for us. It’s a central
component of our ability to continue functioning. You said it
yourselves: We’re not stopping now. Why aren’t we stopping? Because the
home front’s resilience is strong. When the resilience of the home front
is strong, we have the confidence to keep operating,” Zamir said.So
far, 24 people have been killed and more than 500 wounded in Iran’s
ballistic missile attacks, launched in response to the surprise campaign
against the Islamic Republic.Israeli strikes on Iran have killed at
least 224 people, according to Iranian officials.Agencies contributed to
this report.
Israeli airlines set to launch repatriation flights
Wednesday to bring citizens home-El Al, Arkia and Israir scheduled to
operate a limited number of flights to pick up stranded Israelis from
nearby Cyprus and Greece, and some European destinations By Sharon
Wrobel-17 June 2025, 10:09 pm
Israeli airlines El Al, Arkia and
Israir have been given the green light to prepare for operating
repatriation flights on Wednesday to start bringing back the more than
100,000 Israelis stranded abroad.Following the approval of the
Transportation Ministry and aviation authorities, El Al will pick up
Israelis from Larnaca in Cyprus, Athens in Greece, Rome and Milan in
Italy, and Paris in France.Passengers for these flights have already
been assigned and were to receive notification Tuesday. Those who hold a
valid El Al or Sun Dor flight ticket to Israel, and whose flights were
canceled after the country’s airspace was closed early on Friday, are
eligible for an emergency flight at no additional cost, El Al said.The
airline emphasized that priority for flight assignment will be based on
the original flight cancellation date and urgent medical humanitarian
cases. On Monday, the flagship carrier opened registration for stranded
customers to map repatriation flights.“All our crews and aircraft are on
standby, awaiting further instructions from the authorities to operate
flights at maximum capacity and as soon as possible,” El Al said in a
statement. “Flights will be operated gradually, subject to government
approvals, and we recommend arranging accommodation as needed.”El Al
also recommended that customers keep receipts of expenses, adding that
“eligibility for reimbursement will be reviewed in accordance with legal
guidelines.”Israel’s airspace has been closed for departures and
arrivals since the Israel Defense Forces launched a surprise attack on
Iran early Friday, leaving those abroad with no way to get back and
those stranded in the country with few options to leave.Smaller carriers
Arkia and Israir have not yet announced ticket prices for repatriation
flights and are expected to inform passengers once they receive official
slot allocations and departure times.Arkia said that starting
Wednesday, it will launch flights to bring back Israelis from nearby
destinations Larnaca, Karpathos in Greece and Tivat in Montenegro, for
now. Wednesday’s flights will focus solely on bringing back organized
tour groups that were booked with Arkia, the airline said.All of
tomorrow’s flights are already full, and passengers have been assigned
in advance, Arkia said. The airline said it was also working on a
schedule of flights from other destinations, including Paris and New
York.Arkia emphasized that it is prepared to operate in any time window
that security officials approve — including Shabbat — and continues to
examine with the authorities the possibility of expanding the operation.
Flights are carried out only subject to approvals from security
officials and the Civil Aviation Authority.Local carrier Israir said it
is preparing to operate three repatriation flights on Wednesday to bring
back stranded Israelis from Larnaca, Athens and Varna in Bulgaria,
following the approval from relevant local authorities.Under the
proposed government-led repatriation plan, no more than two flights per
hour will be allowed and probably only during daylight hours, in light
of the repeated nighttime missile barrages directed at Israel by Iran.
Shmuel Zakai, the head of the Civil Aviation Authority, estimated that
it would take weeks before all Israelis stranded abroad could fly
home.For now, no passengers will be allowed on the planes that leave Tel
Aviv’s Ben Gurion Airport and are designated for the repatriation of
Israelis abroad to prevent crowding at the terminal and to reduce
risks.Meanwhile, the Tourism Ministry opened a digital registration
procedure to assist the 38,000 tourists currently stuck in Israel to
sign up for specially coordinated departure flights from Israel once
they are available.The ministry said the online registration form is
being distributed through various digital platforms to incoming tourism
organizers, hotels, tour guides and other industry stakeholders.The
ministry confirmed that it will consolidate and transfer the list, only
as needed, to the National Security Council and the Transportation
Ministry, so that coordination with airlines can be arranged to
facilitate tourists’ departure from the country.
AnalysisOnly US
bombers can take out underground site from the air-Iran’s nuclear
program has been hit hard, but won’t be knocked out if Fordo
remains-Trump is convening his national security team to decide whether
to take out key enrichment facility; but even if he opts against it,
Israel still has options By Lazar Berman 17 June 2025, 9:11 pm
Taking
the podium at his first press conference since deciding to strike
Iran’s nuclear program, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday read
out Israel’s achievements in Operation Rising Lion.The list is
impressive. Israeli forces have taken out Iran’s military leadership,
hit hundreds of ballistic missiles and dozens of launchers, wiped out
half of Iran’s UAVs, and established air superiority in western Iran.On
the nuclear front, Netanyahu also has much he can point to. Israel has
killed 10 senior nuclear scientists, and promises to reach more. It has
caused extensive damage to key nuclear sites as well.But – as Israel has
learned in Gaza – impressive tactical achievements do not automatically
amount to operational success, and damage to some core elements of
Iran’s nuclear program does not necessarily mean Israel has set it back
very far.“The blow is not yet critical,” said Raz Zimmt, director of the
Iran and the Shiite Axis research program at the Institute for National
Security Studies in Tel Aviv.By design, at the outset, the campaign had
to place a significant emphasis on targets not directly connected with
Iran’s nuclear program.What was in effect an aerial breaching operation
focused on taking out enemy air defenses in its first stage to allow the
air force to operate freely in much of Iran’s skies.“We dismantled the
air defense envelope very well, and now we are operating there almost
freely,” said Yaakov Amidror, former national security adviser to
Netanyahu.Another focus was on ballistic missile stores and launchers,
to curtail the damage Iran could inflict on Israel. As of Tuesday, the
IDF said, it had destroyed some 40 percent of Iran’s ballistic missile
launchers.“We probably haven’t done too badly there,” said Amidror.
“They promised to fire six times as much.”While those efforts continue,
the operation is, at its core, about Iran’s nuclear program, and Israel
has already made strides in its goal of seriously damaging it.It is very
likely that all the roughly 15,000 centrifuges operating at Iran’s
biggest uranium enrichment plant at Natanz, including those underground,
were badly damaged or destroyed, whether directly or indirectly, due to
a power cut caused by an Israeli strike, the IAEA has said.Israel
bombed Natanz early Friday during the first wave of major strikes that
started its shock campaign against Iranian military and nuclear sites,
in a move it says was needed to thwart an immediate existential nuclear
threat.It also targeted the Isfahan uranium conversion facility, which
turns raw mined uranium into uranium hexafluoride (UF6), a feed gas for
centrifuges.IAEA chief Rafael Grossi elaborated on the damage to four
buildings at Isfahan: “The central chemical laboratory, a uranium
conversion plant, the Tehran reactor fuel manufacturing plant and the
UF4 [uranium tetrafluoride] to EU [enriched uranium] metal processing
facility, which was under construction.”However, the job at Isfahan is
far from complete.“What is not as successful is that there just does not
appear to be any damage to any of the underground facilities,” Jeffrey
Lewis, a nonproliferation scholar at the Middlebury Institute of
International Studies, told The Times of Israel.And then there is the
Fordo plant, built into a mountain near the holy central city of
Qom.Initially describing it as an “emergency” facility built underground
to protect it from potential air attacks, Iran later indicated Fordo
was an enrichment plant capable of housing about 3,000
centrifuges.“There is very limited, if any, damage registered [there],”
said Grossi.An Israeli military official speaking on condition of
anonymity told Reuters that the Israeli Air Force has not targeted the
Fordo facility, but said that it still might happen.Israel’s ambassador
in Washington was more emphatic. “This entire operation… really has to
be completed with the elimination of Fordo,” Yechiel Leiter told Fox
News on Friday.“If you leave infrastructure like Fordo in place,” Lewis
cautioned, “there’s just really no point.”Delay-Israel’s goal, despite
what Netanyahu might say, is not the total, permanent annihilation of
Iran’s nuclear program.It’s actually much more modest, and attainable — a
tighter nuclear agreement between Iran and Western powers, an Israeli
official told The Times of Israel.Israel is aiming to “cause enough
damage [to the nuclear program] to revert to diplomacy and get a good
agreement,” the official said.If that is not possible, the hope is to
push back the program for several years.That has not yet been
accomplished, Zimmt cautioned.“For now, it’s half a year or a year, but
definitely not more than that,” he said.“It’s still concerning that you
have highly enriched uranium stock likely still present at Isfahan
underground, as well as the Fordo enrichment facility,” said Andrea
Stricker, deputy director of the Nonproliferation Program at the
Foundation for Defense of Democracies.“As long as Iran retains the
ability to make weapons from uranium, there is more work ahead,” she
said.The Trump factor-The most straightforward way to knock out a
nuclear facility is from the air. But Fordo sits up to 90 meters under a
mountain, rendering that task nearly impossible.Israel’s conventional
munitions can’t come even close. The BLU-109s it likely used to kill
Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah — who was hiding 20 meters underground
— can only penetrate 2-3 meters of reinforced concrete. It took dozens
of such bombs dropped in rapid succession to reach Nasrallah.The only
munition that can reach Fordo’s underground facility is the American
30,000-pound GBU-57 Massive Ordnance Penetrator. It is believed to be
able to penetrate about 200 feet (61 meters) below the surface before
exploding, and the bombs can be dropped one after another, effectively
drilling deeper and deeper with each successive blast.Israel doesn’t
have the option of buying it from Washington, as the only plane that can
carry it is the US B-2 bomber.So if Fordo is to be attacked from the
air, it will take a decision from US President Donald Trump to jump into
the fray.The president seems undecided, but increasingly open to the
possibility.Trump was slated to convene his national security team on
Tuesday to make a decision on US involvement, Axios reported, citing
three US officials.He is “seriously considering” launching a US strike,
according to the outlet.If Vice President J.D. Vance and the
isolationist wing of his coalition win the day, Israel still has
options.Israel could theoretically use a small nuclear weapon to destroy
Fordo. But the first battlefield use of a nuclear bomb since 1945 would
undermine Israel’s legitimacy in its campaign to prevent Iran from
attaining such a weapon.It could also carry out a commando raid, similar
to the special forces operation that destroyed Syria’s underground
missile production facility at Masyaf in September 2024.Leiter seemed to
tease that possibility in an interview with ABC News.“We have a number
of contingencies… which will enable us to deal with Fordo,” he said.
“Not everything is a matter of, you know, taking to the skies and
bombing from afar.”The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Germany’s
Merz threatens destruction of Iran’s nuclear program if it bucks
talks-Chancellor says Israel doing the ‘dirty work for all of us’ by
striking ‘mullah regime,’ which has brought death and destruction to
world and may never recover-By Agencies and ToI Staff 17 June 2025, 7:31
pm
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said on Tuesday that the
complete destruction of Iran’s nuclear weapons program could be on the
agenda if Tehran does not back down and return to the negotiating
table.“The Israeli army is obviously unable to accomplish that. It lacks
the necessary weapons. But the Americans have them,” said Merz in an
interview with broadcaster ZDF on the sidelines of the Group of Seven
(G7) summit in Canada.Israel may need the 30,000-pound GBU-57 Massive
Ordnance Penetrator, which uses its weight and sheer kinetic force to
reach deeply buried targets and then explode, to destroy Iran’s Fordo
uranium enrichment facility, which is deep underground. But Israel does
not have the munition or the bomber needed to deliver it — the
penetrator is currently delivered by the United States’ B-2 stealth
bomber.“This is the dirty work Israel is doing for all of us. We are
also victims of this regime. This mullah regime has brought death and
destruction to the world,” Merz said of the ongoing strikes.Speaking to
broadcaster Welt, Merz said the leadership in Tehran has been weakened
by Israel’s attacks in the past few days.“This regime is very weakened
and will probably not return to its former strength, making the future
of the country uncertain. We will have to wait and see,” he said.Merz
added that the Europeans’ offer of diplomatic assistance, should talks
resume, still stands as it did before the attacks.“If a new situation
were to arise, Germany, France and the United Kingdom would again be
prepared to provide diplomatic assistance, as they were until last
Thursday,” he said.Asked whether he thought the United States might get
involved in the military campaign against Iran, Merz said he believed
there was “no decision yet from the American government.”“It now depends
very much on how far the mullah regime is prepared to return to the
negotiating table,” he said. “If not, there could be further
developments of this kind.”While the leaders of Britain, France and
Germany have been sharply critical of Israel for its conduct of the war
with the Hamas terror group in the Gaza Strip, they have expressed
varying degrees of support for Israel since it launched its strikes on
Iran’s nuclear and weapons systems on Friday.Foreign policy experts
attributed the comity on Iran to Europe’s alarm at the recent report by
United Nations experts that Tehran is closer than ever to a nuclear
weapons breakout. Another factor is Iran’s alliance with Russia in its
war against Ukraine.Scheduled nuclear talks on Sunday between US Special
Envoy Steve Witkoff and Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi were
canceled when the enmity between Israel and Iran escalated into
unprecedented open conflict in the early hours of Friday morning, when
Israel launched a major offensive against Iran and its nuclear program,
hitting nuclear sites, missile bases and top military officials.Israel
says its sweeping assault is necessary to prevent its longtime adversary
from getting any closer to building an atomic weapon. At the beginning
of the campaign last Friday, it said the situation had become an
immediate existential threat to the Jewish state.So far, 24 people have
been killed and more than 500 wounded in Iran’s ballistic missile
attacks, launched in response to the surprise campaign against the
Islamic Republic.Israeli strikes on Iran have killed at least 224
people, according to Iranian officials.
IAEA says Israeli strike
directly hit Iran’s Natanz underground enrichment plant-UN nuclear
watchdog adjusts earlier assessment after initially reporting that the
site had only been hit indirectly; says no changes to report at Isfahan
and Fordo facilities-By Agencies and ToI Staff 17 June 2025, 6:57 pm
An
Israeli military strike on Iran’s nuclear complex at Natanz directly
hit the underground uranium enrichment plant there, the United Nations
nuclear watchdog said on Tuesday, revising its assessment after
initially reporting it had been hit only indirectly.Israel bombed the
site on Friday during the first wave of major strikes to start its shock
campaign against Iranian military and nuclear sites, in a move it says
was needed to thwart an immediate existential nuclear threat.The
International Atomic Energy Agency had previously said an above-ground
pilot enrichment plant at Natanz was destroyed, but assessed that the
larger underground plant was not directly hit, although IAEA chief
Rafael Grossi said on Monday its roughly 15,000 centrifuges had very
likely been badly damaged by a strike on the plant’s power
supply.However, on Tuesday, the IAEA said on X: “Based on continued
analysis of high-resolution satellite imagery collected after Friday’s
attacks, the IAEA has identified additional elements that indicate
direct impacts on the underground enrichment halls at Natanz.”Located
135 miles (220 kilometers) southeast of Tehran, the Natanz facility was
protected by anti-aircraft batteries, fencing and Iran’s paramilitary
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.The underground part of the facility
is buried to protect it from airstrikes and contains the bulk of the
enrichment facilities at Natanz, with 10,000 centrifuges that enrich
uranium up to five percent, experts assess.Although Israel has struck
Natanz repeatedly and claims to have inflicted significant damage on its
underground facilities, Tuesday’s IAEA statement marked the first time
the agency has acknowledged impacts there.At the same time, the IAEA
said there was “no change to report” at Iran’s two other major nuclear
sites, Isfahan and Fordo.Grossi had said on Monday there was little or
no apparent damage at Fordo, where Iran has enriched uranium up to 60%,
close to the 90% weapons grade, at a plant dug deep into a mountain.At
the Isfahan nuclear complex, several facilities were destroyed,
including Iran’s plant that converted uranium into a form that could be
fed into centrifuges for enrichment, the IAEA has reported.Iran
maintains that its nuclear program is peaceful, but it has enriched
uranium to levels far beyond any civilian application. The IAEA has
repeatedly warned that the country has enough highly enriched uranium to
make several nuclear bombs, should it choose to do so.Years of
hostility between Israel and Iran exploded into open conflict early
Friday morning when Israel launched a major offensive against Iran and
its nuclear program, hitting nuclear sites, missile bases and top
military officials.Israel said it had no choice but to attack Iran, and
that it had gathered intelligence showing Tehran was approaching “the
point of no return” in its pursuit of nuclear weapons.Iran has launched
some 350 ballistic missiles at Israel since Friday, the vast majority of
which were intercepted, according to IDF statistics released Monday.In
all, 24 people have been killed in Iran’s ballistic missile attacks, and
hundreds more have been wounded.
Four heavy US bombers stationed at key Indian Ocean base: image analysis.
Paris,
June 17 (AFP) Jun 17, 2025-Four US Stratofortress bombers are currently
stationed at the Diego Garcia base in the Indian Ocean, according to an
AFP analysis of satellite imagery, as the conflict between Israel and
Iran extended to its fifth straight day.The base, leased to the United
States by Britain, is one of its key military facilities in the
Asia-Pacific region, and was used as a hub for long-range bombers and
ships during the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.The four B52H
Stratofortresses, which can carry nuclear weapons or other
precision-guided munitions, were spotted on a southern tarmac at Diego
Garcia on Monday at 0922 GMT.Images provided by Planet Labs indicate
they arrived in mid-May.A C-17 Globemaster III troop and cargo transport
plane is also at the base, according to the AFP analysis, as well as
six jets likely to be KC-135 airborne refuelling tanker.The Pentagon
said Monday that it was sending "additional capabilities" to the Middle
East amid an escalation of the Iran-Israel conflict, while the aircraft
carrier USS Nimitz cancelled a Vietnam visit to head toward the Indian
Ocean according to Marine Traffic, a ship-tracking site.Washington has
also redeployed around 30 refuelling planes toward bases in Europe.
BlackSky plans new satellite network for large-scale AI-driven Earth observation-by Clarence Oxford.
Los
Angeles CA (SPX) Jun 17, 2025-BlackSky Technology Inc. (NYSE: BKSY) has
announced a major expansion of its satellite constellation with the
addition of a new class of multispectral, wide-area imaging satellites.
The forthcoming system, known as AROS, will complement the company's
existing Gen-3 constellation by enabling rapid digital mapping,
navigation, maritime surveillance, and 3D digital twin applications at
scale.The AROS satellites are being engineered to meet increasing demand
for high-frequency, country and region-scale data collection,
particularly in support of AI-powered geospatial analytics. Designed to
bridge the capability gap left by aging legacy satellites with declining
collection capacity, AROS will deliver faster, more affordable imaging
services optimized for AI and dynamic analytics."As legacy satellites
approach end-of-life, we see a critical opportunity to address market
needs-not just in performance and agility-but also in affordability and
AI-readiness. As confirmed through active customer and partner
engagement, BlackSky is meeting the modern demands of governments and
commercial users who need persistent visibility over very large areas,
fast," said Brian O'Toole, BlackSky CEO.The new AROS constellation will
integrate with BlackSky's Spectra AI platform, delivering near-real-time
tasking and analytics. This hybrid system will combine wide-area search
with targeted site monitoring, enabling advanced maritime tracking and
other high-priority missions such as Golden Dome operations. Optical
inter-satellite links will support low-latency data transfer and
tasking.Key innovations in AROS build on Gen-3 technologies and include
high-resolution multispectral imaging, a proprietary data pipeline for
real-time and retrospective analysis, and superior cost efficiency that
enables routine broad-area imaging without sacrificing quality or
revisit frequency.AROS has been in development for two years and played a
key role in BlackSky's acquisition of satellite manufacturer LeoStella.
The vertically integrated production capability strengthens BlackSky's
ability to rapidly deploy new space assets, continuing a track record
proven by the recent rapid launch and commissioning of two Gen-3
satellites.BlackSky expects the first AROS satellites to launch as early
as 2027, expanding its capabilities to deliver fast, flexible, and
scalable space-based intelligence across a wide range of sectors.
China accuses Trump of 'pouring oil' on Iran, Israel conflict.
Beijing,
June 17 (AFP) Jun 17, 2025-China on Tuesday accused President Donald
Trump of "pouring oil" on the mounting conflict between Iran and Israel,
after the US leader warned Tehran residents to "immediately
evacuate".Following decades of enmity and a prolonged shadow war, Israel
launched a surprise aerial campaign last week against targets across
Iran, saying it aimed to prevent its arch-foe from acquiring atomic
weapons -- an ambition Tehran denies.The sudden flare-up in hostilities
has sparked fears of a wider conflict, with Trump urging Iran back to
the negotiating table after Israel's attacks derailed ongoing nuclear
talks.Trump also issued an extraordinary warning on his Truth Social
platform: "Everyone should immediately evacuate Tehran!"Asked about
Trump's remarks, Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Guo Jiakun said:
"Fanning the flames, pouring oil, making threats and mounting pressure
will not help to promote the de-escalation of the situation, but will
only intensify and widen the conflict."The Chinese side calls on all
relevant parties, especially countries with special influence on Israel,
to shoulder their responsibilities, take immediate measures to
de-escalate tensions, and prevent the conflict from expanding and
spreading."China's embassies in Iran and Israel also urged Chinese
citizens to leave the countries "as soon as possible", after Israel and
Iran traded heavy strikes."The Chinese Embassy in Iran has coordinated
with the Iranian side to facilitate outbound travel and reminds Chinese
citizens currently in Iran to leave the country... as soon as possible",
the embassy in Tehran said in an online statement.It suggested border
crossings with Turkey, Armenia, and Turkmenistan as possible routes
out.China's embassy in Israel urged citizens to depart "in the direction
of Jordan" as it warned that the conflict was "continuing to
escalate"."Much civilian infrastructure has been damaged, civilian
casualties are on the rise, and the security situation is becoming more
serious," it said in a post on WeChat.
China's Xi in Kazakhstan to cement 'eternal' Central Asia ties.
Astana,
Kazakhstan, June 17 (AFP) Jun 17, 2025-Xi Jinping celebrated China's
"eternal friendship" with Central Asia at a summit in Kazakhstan on
Tuesday, as the Chinese leader blasted tariffs and sought to assert
Beijing's influence in a region historically dominated by Russia.The
summit in Astana brought together Xi with the leaders of Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan and Turkmenistan.Under Russia's orbit
until the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991, the five Central Asian
states have courted interest from major powers including China, the
European Union and the United States since becoming independent.At the
summit, the group signed a pact of "eternal" friendship as Xi called for
closer ties with the resource-rich region."We should... strengthen
cooperation with a more enterprising attitude and more practical
measures," said Xi in comments carried by state news agency
Xinhua.Central Asia is also seen as a key logistics hub, given its
strategic location between China, Russia, the Middle East and Europe.-
'No winners' -Speaking as Western leaders gathered on the other side of
the world for the G7 in Canada, Xi refreshed his criticism of US
President Donald Trump's trade policies."Tariff wars and trade wars have
no winners," Xinhua quoted him as saying.While Central Asian leaders
continue to view Russia as a strategic partner, ties with Moscow have
loosened since the war in Ukraine.China has also shown willingness to
invest in massive infrastructure projects in the region, part of its
Belt and Road initiative that uses such financing as a political and
diplomatic lever.In a meeting with Kyrgyzstan's president, Xi called for
moves to "advance high-quality construction of the
China-Kyrgyzstan-Uzbekistan railway and foster new drivers of growth in
clean energy, green minerals and artificial intelligence".The five
Central Asian nations are trying to take advantage of the growing
interest in their region and are coordinating their foreign policies
accordingly.They regularly hold summits with China and Russia to present
the region as a unified bloc and attract investment.High-level "5+1"
format talks have also been organised with the European Union, the
United States, Turkey and other Western countries."The countries of the
region are balancing between different centres of power, wanting to
protect themselves from excessive dependence on one partner," Kyrgyz
political scientist Nargiza Muratalieva told AFP.- Biggest trade partner
-Russia says China's growing influence in the region does not pose a
threat."There is no reason for such fears. China is our privileged
strategic partner, and the countries of Central Asia, naturally, are our
natural historical partners," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told
reporters on Monday.But China has now established itself as Central
Asia's leading trading partner, far outstripping the EU and
Russia.Construction of the Uzbekistan-Kyrgyzstan-China railway and the
China-Tajikistan highway, which runs through the Pamir Mountains to
Afghanistan, are among its planned investments.New border crossings and
"dry ports" have already been built to process trade, such as Khorgos in
Kazakhstan, one of the largest logistics hubs in the world."Neither
Russia nor Western institutions are capable of allocating financial
resources for infrastructure so quickly and on such a large scale,
sometimes bypassing transparent procedures," said Muratalieva.Kazakhstan
said last week that Russia would lead the construction of its first
nuclear power plant but that it wanted China to build the
second."Central Asia is rich in natural resources such as oil, gas,
uranium, gold and other minerals that the rapidly developing Chinese
economy needs," Muratalieva said."Ensuring uninterrupted supplies of
these resources, bypassing unstable sea routes, is an important goal of
Beijing," the analyst added.- Human rights -China also positions itself
as a supporter of the predominantly authoritarian Central Asian
leaderships.At the last Central Asia-China summit, Xi called for
"resisting external interference" that might provoke "colour
revolutions" that could overthrow the current leaders in the
region."Beijing sees the stability of the Central Asian states as a
guarantee of the security of its western borders," Muratalieva
said.Central Asia border's China's northwestern Xinjiang region, where
Beijing is accused of having detained more than a million Uyghurs and
other Muslims, part of a campaign the UN has said could constitute
crimes against humanity.burs/bk-mmp/jc/rlp
France urged to apologise for Polynesia nuclear tests.
Paris,
June 17 (AFP) Jun 17, 2025-Paris should apologise to French Polynesia
for the fallout of nuclear tests there over three decades, which led to
harmful radiation exposure, a French parliamentary report released on
Tuesday said.France conducted 193 nuclear tests in French Polynesia from
1966, especially at the Pacific archipelago's Moruroa and Fangataufa
atolls, to help build up its atomic weapon arsenal. These included
atmospheric and underground tests which had severe health impacts.Tens
of thousands of people in the French overseas territory are estimated to
have been exposed to harmful levels of radiation, leading to a
significant public health crisis that has been largely ignored.The tests
remain a source of deep resentment in French Polynesia, where they are
seen as evidence of racist colonial attitudes that disregarded the lives
of islanders."The inquiry has strengthened the committee's conviction
that a request for forgiveness from France to French Polynesia is
necessary," the report said."This request is not merely a symbol, nor a
request for repentance. It must be a... fundamental step in the process
of reconciliation between French Polynesia and the State," the authors
said.The report said the apology must be added to a 2004 law on French
Polynesia's semi-autonomous status.Residents in the south Pacific Ocean
islands are hoping for compensation for radiation victims.The
investigative website Disclose, citing declassified French military
documents on the nearly 200 tests, reported in March that the impact
from the fallout was far more extensive than authorities let on.Only a
few dozen civilians have been compensated for radiation exposure since
the tests ended in 1996, Disclose said.
Canada announces new Ukraine military aid, Russia sanctions.
Kananaskis,
Canada, June 17 (AFP) Jun 17, 2025-Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney
on Tuesday announced Can$2 billion ($1.47bn) of military support
including drones and helicopters for Ukraine as he hosted President
Volodymyr Zelensky at a G7 summit.Carney vowed "total solidarity with
Ukraine" as he also unveiled further sanctions on Russia in an effort to
impose "maximum pressure" on President Vladimir Putin over the war.The
new sanctions target 77 individuals and 39 entities, including three
financial entities, a major oil and gas company and quantum computing
researchers, as well as more than 200 vessels in Russia's so-called
shadow fleet.Security analysts say the fleet of aging vessels is used by
Russia to circumvent international sanctions that ban it from selling
oil.Quantum technologies, according to Ottawa, "can have various
dual-use military applications and be leveraged by the Kremlin to
bolster its military."Canada's foreign ministry called this its
"biggest-ever package of vessel- and trade-related sanctions" imposed on
Russia.The measures bring the total number of Russian nationals and
entities sanctioned by Canada to more than 2,400.
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