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Israel faces new reality after US strikes on Iran's nuclear sites

Israel faces new reality after US strikes on Iran's nuclear sites

Israelis woke up to a new reality on Sunday after President Donald Trump confirmed that the
US bombed Iran's three main nuclear sites , diminishing a threat they have considered existential for decades.
The US attack was embraced across the Israeli political spectrum, lauded on hastily assembled TV panels as a historic symbol of unprecedented US-Israeli cooperation at a time when the mainly Jewish state has been shunned by others for its war in Gaza.
But commentators and officials were quick to acknowledge that what comes next is far from clear, including Iran's potential responses. They expressed concern that Iran might attack US bases in the region or Israel's own nuclear research centre near the desert town of Dimona, or escalate its own nuclear programme.
Iran's atomic energy agency described the US strikes as a 'savage assault' but pledged not to abandon its nuclear industry. The agency did not confirm whether the sites of Fordow, Natanz and Isfahan had been 'completely and totally obliterated', as Trump said they were in a speech.
Iranian lawmaker Mannan Raisi was cited by the semi-official Tasnim News Agency as saying that any material at Fordow that could pose a potential risk to the public 'had already been removed'.
The Israeli home command returned the country to a state of emergency, telling citizens to stay close to bomb shelters and safe rooms; banning gatherings; and keeping schools, workplaces and the airport shut. It had eased some of those restrictions in recent days.
Still, a sense of victory was palpable. The US strike is something Israelis have been seeking for years and it grants them the sense of being under US protection. It is also a personal victory for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, whose political fortunes have fallen since the October 2023 assault on Israel by Hamas that triggered the Gaza war.

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