Iran, Israel and Tehran
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Israel warns "Tehran will burn" if Iran continues firing missiles, while state media say 60 people have been killed in a strike on Iran's capital.
2hon MSN
Israel’s defense minister has warned that “Tehran will burn” if Iran continues firing missiles. The two countries traded blows on Saturday, a day after Israel launched a blistering surprise attack on Iranian nuclear and military sites,
Under the Islamic Republic that took power in 1979, enmity toward Israel has been a core ideological tenet of Iranian foreign policy and a key driver in its regional policy. Over decades, their rivalry played out mainly through indirect actions by Iran and by covert operations from Israel.
Israel targeted a major airport in the capital used for both military and civilian purposes, while Iran attacked Israel with waves of ballistic missiles.
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Israel’s attack on Iran was long in the making – the result of years of meticulous planning by Israel and days of high-stakes talks between Tel Aviv and Washington, officials told CNN.
President Emmanuel Macron of France said the exchange of strikes between Israel and Iran had made it impossible.
As buildings burn in Tehran and Tel Aviv, the UK government is facing another crisis, writes Laura Kuenssberg.