close
TEL AVIV: Zionist emergency responders inspect a site hit by a missile fired from Iran on June 14, 2025. Iran struck Zionist entity early June 14, with barrages of missiles after a massive onslaught targeted the Islamic republic’s nuclear and military facilities, and killed several top generals. – AFP
TEL AVIV: Zionist emergency responders inspect a site hit by a missile fired from Iran on June 14, 2025. Iran struck Zionist entity early June 14, with barrages of missiles after a massive onslaught targeted the Islamic republic’s nuclear and military facilities, and killed several top generals. – AFP

Iran pounds Zionist entity

Tehran vows to bring Zionist entity ‘to ruin’; 78 killed

TEHRAN: Iran struck Zionist entity with barrages of missiles on Saturday, a day after a massive onslaught against its nuclear and military facilities killed top generals and nuclear scientists. Zionist emergency services said two people were killed when a rocket hit a residential area early Saturday, as the two sides traded fire for a second day despite international calls for de-escalation. Iran called on its citizens to unite in defense of the country as Zionist Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu urged them to rise up against their government.

Air raid sirens and explosions rang out across Zionist entity through the night, with many residents holed up in bomb shelters until home defense commanders stood down alerts. Zionist entity said dozens of missiles - some intercepted - had been fired in the latest salvos from Iran, with AFP images of the city of Ramat Gan near Tel Aviv showing blown-out buildings, destroyed vehicles and streets strewn with debris. Rescuers said two people were killed and 19 wounded on Saturday by rocket fire on a residential area in the coastal plain.

Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said they had attacked dozens of targets in Zionist entity. Zionist firefighters had worked for hours to free people trapped in a high-rise building in Tel Aviv on Friday. Resident Chen Gabizon told AFP he ran to an underground shelter after receiving an alert. “After a few minutes, we just heard a very big explosion, everything was shaking, smoke, dust, everything was all over the place,” he said. Rescuers said 34 people were wounded in the Gush Dan area, including a woman who later died of her injuries, according to media reports.

Speaking to CNN, Zionist ambassador to the United States, Yechiel Leiter, said Iran had fired three salvos of ballistic missiles on Friday, some 150 in total. “We expect that the Iranians, who have a considerable volume of ballistic missiles, somewhere in the neighborhood of 2,000, will continue to fire them,” Leiter said. In Tehran, fire and heavy smoke billowed over Mehrabad airport early Saturday, an AFP journalist said, as Iranian media reported an explosion.

Blasts were heard across the capital as Iran activated its air defenses against the incoming fire. The military said it had struck Iranian “defense arrays” in the Tehran area in the overnight strikes. Dozens of Iranians took to the streets to cheer their country’s military response, with some waving national flags and chanting anti-Zionist slogans. Iran’s ambassador to the United Nations said Friday that 78 people had been killed and 320 wounded in the first wave of strikes by Zionists. As fears mounted of wider conflict, UN chief Antonio Guterres called on both sides to cease fire. “Enough escalation. Time to stop. Peace and diplomacy must prevail,” he said on X late Friday.

NABLUS: Debris of missiles fired from Iran toward Zionist entity leave trails in the night sky over Nablus in the occupied West bank after being intercepted.- AFP
NABLUS: Debris of missiles fired from Iran toward Zionist entity leave trails in the night sky over Nablus in the occupied West bank after being intercepted.- AFP

‘Dialogue and diplomacy’

US officials said they were helping Zionists defend against the missile attacks, even as Washington insisted it had nothing to do with the strikes on Iran. US President Donald Trump agreed in a call with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer that “dialogue and diplomacy” were needed to calm the crisis, Starmer’s office said. Trump also spoke with the Zionist prime minister, US officials said without elaborating.

Iran’s missile barrages came in response to intense strikes on Friday that killed several top Iranian generals and most of the senior leadership of the Revolutionary Guards’ air arm. Iran’s Tasnim news agency said six nuclear scientists were also among the dead. In a televised address, Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei vowed to bring Zionist entity “to ruin”. Netanyahu urged Iranians to rise up against their leaders, warning more attacks were coming. “As we achieve our objective, we are also clearing the path for you to achieve your freedom,” he added.

Radiation levels ‘unchanged’

Zionists pounded Iranian nuclear sites, including its main underground uranium enrichment facility at Natanz in central Iran. Zionist entity said it had damaged the facility’s enrichment centrifuges but Iran said most of the damage was above ground and no casualties had been sustained. “Most of the damage is on the surface level,” said Iran’s Atomic Energy Organization spokesman Behrouz Kamalvandi. He said the damage to the Fordo and Isfahan nuclear sites was also only limited. The conflict threw into doubt plans for a fresh round of nuclear talks between the United States and Iran in Oman on Sunday.

After the first wave of strikes, Trump urged Iran to “make a deal”, adding that Washington was “hoping to get back to the negotiating table”. The United States and other Western governments have repeatedly accused Iran of seeking a nuclear weapon, an ambition it has consistently denied. Netanyahu said Zionist intelligence had concluded that Iran was approaching the “point of no return” on its nuclear program. Iran currently enriches uranium to 60 percent, far above the 3.67-percent limit set by a largely moribund 2015 agreement with major powers, but still short of the 90 percent threshold needed for a nuclear warhead.- Agencies

By Abbas Araghchi Foreign Minister of Iran In only five meetings over nine weeks, US special envoy Steve Witkoff and I achieved more than I did in four years of nuclear negotiations with the failed Biden administration. We were on the cusp of a hist...
KUWAIT: Kuwait’s recent enactment of Law 157/2024, alongside its executive regulations, has set the stage for a new era of corporate taxation. This legislation, which implements the BEPS Pillar Two initiative and the GloBE Model Rules, is built up...
MORE STORIES