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Israelis under attack from Iran shift to full-scale war mode

Israelis under attack from Iran shift to full-scale war mode

Irish Times16-06-2025

''We survived Pharaoh, and we'll survive this, too' is a line from a popular Israeli song by Meir Ariel from the 1980s. It's used by
Israelis
during challenging times: it's been heard a lot since Friday's attack on
Iran
.
Four days on, the country has quickly shifted into full-scale war mode.
The Iranian ballistic missile attacks are pure Russian roulette – they can if not intercepted land anywhere, at any time, and no one is safe. The most noticeable change is the eerie quiet that has descended over the country. No one wants to stray too far from their safe room or bomb shelter (apartments built since 1992 are required to have a safe room, while older buildings have a communal bomb shelter).
Non-essential work places are closed, along with schools and universities. Most people are only leaving home to stock up on basic supplies. Joggers have stopped jogging and walkers have stopped walking: no one wants to be far from home when the sirens sound.
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The people who are out and about look exhausted. It's become normal to be woken once or twice at night by the alerts of incoming projectiles. Many people can't get back to sleep even after the 'All Clear' message is received.
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Iranians respond to Israel's strikes with anger and fear
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Was Iran developing nuclear weapons?
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Israel's air space has been closed since the opening salvo in the early hours of Friday morning. Many thousands of tourists are stuck. There are some 200,000 Israelis waiting to return home and the numbers are growing. Many have made their way to Athens and Larnaca in Cyprus hoping that emergency air lifts will be authorised, but as of Monday the military says it is still too dangerous for flights.
Some of those desperate to return home are flying to the Egyptian resort of Sharm El- Sheikh or the Jordanian capital Amman and returning overland, but the Israeli authorities stress that serious security warnings for Israelis are in place in both of these neighbouring Arab states.
No public gatherings are allowed. This week, Israel's basketball final was postponed, as was the wedding of Avner Netanyahu, the prime minister's youngest son. This is a popular period for weddings and bar mitzvahs, but no such gatherings will take place until this conflict is over.
The tourism industry has been devastated by the Gaza war, and those hotels that are still open rely on domestic Israeli tourism for their custom. No one has been in the mood for taking holidays since Friday. Ironically, the hotel industry may be saved by the growing number of families made homeless by the missile attacks – they are being sent by the government to hotels.
The only apparent positive change is that traffic jams have disappeared - for now at least.

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Surging Iranian nationalism is an unintended consequence of Israel's attacks
Surging Iranian nationalism is an unintended consequence of Israel's attacks

Irish Times

time3 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Surging Iranian nationalism is an unintended consequence of Israel's attacks

Reza Kianian, a veteran award-winning Iranian actor, has long been a vocal domestic critic of the Islamic republic, using his popular Instagram page to question tenets of the regime's ideology. Yet when Israel launched its deadly assault on Iran this month, Kianian swiftly joined the ranks of regime critics rallying around the flag, part of the surge of patriotic fervour that has swept the country of 90 million since the 12-day war started. 'Iran has existed, exists still, and will endure,' Kianian said on Instagram after the war began. This newfound sense of unity in the otherwise polarised country surprised observers and politicians both at home and abroad. While Israel's Binyamin Netanyahu sought to tap disillusionment by calling on people to rise up against the Islamic republic, even hardened regime opponents temporarily set aside their criticisms and recoiled against what they saw as a war against not just their rulers but Iran itself. 'One person sitting outside Iran cannot tell a nation to rise up,' Kianian (74) told the Financial Times. 'Iran is my country. I will decide what to do, and won't wait for you to tell me what to do in my own country.' READ MORE This reawakening of Iranian nationalism – which politicians hope will persist even if anger towards the Islamic republic returns to the surface – comes after decades of deep polarisation. Iran's theocratic rulers have long attempted to suppress an increasingly secular nation's yearning for economic, political and social change, responding to unrest with brutal crackdowns. Amnesty International said more than 300 people were killed during protests in 2022 triggered by the death in custody of a 22-year-old woman, Mahsa Amini , for not properly wearing a hijab, for example, leaving deep scars on the nation's psyche. Though the Islamic republic has since relaxed its hijab rules, many Iranians are deeply unhappy with the state of the economy, struggling to cope with inflation and US sanctions, and angry at alleged corruption among those with regime links. Yet when Israel launched its offensive on June 13th, Iranians quickly decided this was not the moment of change they had hoped for. Many were shaken by the bombardment, which Israel said was aimed at regime targets but which Iranian officials said killed 627 people and destroyed 120 residential buildings in Tehran before ending in a fragile ceasefire on Tuesday. Israeli officials said Iran's missiles killed 28 people in Israel and hit residential areas. 'We felt stuck between forces who only sought their own ambitions, rather than our wellbeing,' said Maryam, a 39-year-old housewife and regime critic, who is still furious over the deaths in the 2022 protests. 'Netanyahu reminded us that we could even lose the little we have. 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Officials have sought to prolong this patriotic fervour by hailing the conflict as a 'victory', despite the devastating blows to the regime, military and Iran's nuclear programme. 'Let's not forget there were no anti-war protests in the streets and the government made sure there was sufficient supply of food and fuel everywhere,' one regime insider said. The war appears, for the time being at least, to have boosted some domestic support for Iran's ballistic missile programme, the government's crackdown on alleged Israeli collaborators and even enthusiasm for acquiring a nuclear bomb – something the Islamic republic says it is not pursuing. Yet maintaining this unity will not be easy, with critics of the regime – whose long list of grievances towards their rulers have not gone away – calling for a reckoning over the Islamic republic's role in setting Iran on a path to war. Iranian actor Reza Kianian in 2013. Photograph: Amin Mohammad Jamali/Kianian, the actor, said hardliners within the regime, including on state television, should be held accountable for the extent to which their policies contributed to the conflict. Hardliners in Iran, which aggressively expanded its nuclear programme and enriched uranium close to weapons grade, have repeatedly said Israel should be wiped off the map and that support for militant proxies such as Hizbullah in Lebanon should continue as a core of the republic's foreign policy. 'They keep saying on television that we are all together, from left to right,' he said. 'It took them too long to realise that we are united, and only when there was no other choice during wartime did they say it.' To many Iranians, the Islamic republic should not take this national solidarity for granted and double down on their most divisive policies, with all the issues that have enraged Iranians over the years continuing to fester. 'What has saved Iran is not a delusional ideology but its ancient history ... and the experience of surviving invasions by Alexander, the Mongols and the Arabs,' Fayyaz Zahed, a reformist political analyst, said. 'Perhaps only history teachers in the country could foresee this ... Once again, we realised that if there is ever going to be any change, it can only come from within.'- Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2025

Israeli military operations in Gaza ‘well over the top', ex CIA chief tells Dublin event
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Israeli military operations in Gaza ‘well over the top', ex CIA chief tells Dublin event

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'Nato has been evolving, its European members recognise they need to do more on their own and cannot continue to rely continually on the US, so I think it's a worthwhile question for the Irish people to ask.' Mr Brennan, whose father Owen Brennan emigrated to the US from Co Roscommon in 1948, was in Dublin to address the inaugural summer school of the Law Society's Centre for Justice and Law Reform, which explored the theme Defending Democracy: Legal Responses to Emerging Threats. Other speakers included EU Justice Commissioner Michael McGrath, Attorney General Rossa Fanning, Online Safety Commissioner Niamh Hodnett and UK commissioner for countering extremism Robin Simcox. Mr Brennan was a CIA officer for 25 years from 1980 before serving under president Barack Obama as his chief counterterrorism adviser. He was director of the CIA from 2013 to early 2017. Asked how Ireland might combat extremism, he said all governments have to set a 'delicate balance' in allowing free speech while not allowing hate speech and incitement to violence. This is something the Irish people need to look at and to 'weigh in on' with their politicians. The Law Society and other objective actors have important roles to help ensure that truthful, factual information is 'pushed out into the communications bloodstream'. During his career, he was mainly focused on countering terrorism by groups such as Islamic State and al-Qaeda but in more recent years, he is concerned about the growth of domestic extremism and violence in the US, epitomised by the assault on the US Capitol on January 6th, 2021, he said. He has been personally targeted by extremists, including with a pipe bomb, Mr Brennan said. 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It seemed, from press reports, there did not appear to be a change in the intelligence community's assessment that Iran has not restarted its nuclear weapons programme, he said. Now the issues include whether Iran will move, perhaps in a 'more clandestine' fashion, to try and reconstitute its programme and even move towards a nuclear weapon.

Donald Trump has discovered that Iran's supreme leader lies just as boldly as he does
Donald Trump has discovered that Iran's supreme leader lies just as boldly as he does

Irish Times

time5 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Donald Trump has discovered that Iran's supreme leader lies just as boldly as he does

Donald Trump has finally met his match. The Iranian supreme leader lies just as boldly, with just as much bombast, as the American supreme leader. On Thursday, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei put out a video hailing Iran's victory over Israel and the United States. Trump was shocked, shocked at this blatant lie. READ MORE 'As a man of great faith, he is not supposed to lie,' the president marvelled on Truth Social. Then Trump went on to his usual authoritarian etiquette lesson, complaining that the proper response by Khamenei to getting hit with 14 30,000-pound bombs should have been: 'THANK YOU, PRESIDENT TRUMP!' Trump said that he deserved gratitude because he knew where the ayatollah was hiding and stopped Israeli and US forces from killing him. He said that he made Israel recall a group of planes headed for Tehran that were, perhaps, looking for 'the final knockout!' 'I wish the leadership of Iran would realise,' he tut-tutted, 'that you often get more with HONEY than you do with VINEGAR. PEACE!!!' Half an hour later, Mr Honey put out a typically vinegary post abruptly cutting off 'ALL' trade talks with Canada. Before Trump did it, with an assist from the supreme court on Friday, it was Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld who worked to erode checks and balances and Hoover all the power into the executive branch. With the malleable George W Bush in the Oval Office, Cheney and Rumsfeld were able to create an alternate universe where they were never wrong – because they conjured up information to prove they were right. The two malevolent regents had a fever about getting rid of Saddam, so they hyped up intelligence, redirecting Americans' vengeful emotions about Osama bin Laden and 9/11 into that pet project. Tony Blair scaremongered that it would take only 45 minutes for Saddam to send his WMDs westward. But there were no WMDs. When it comes to the Middle East, presidents can't resist indulging in a gasconade. Unlike Iraq, Iran was actually making progress on its nuclear programme. Trump did not need to warp intelligence to justify his decision. But he did anyway, to satisfy his unquenchable ego. He bragged that the strikes had 'OBLITERATED' Iran's nuclear capabilities. 'I just don't think the president was telling the truth,' Connecticut Democratic senator Chris Murphy told reporters. He believes Iran still has 'significant remaining capability'. When CNN's Natasha Bertrand and her colleagues broke the story that a preliminary classified US report suggested that the strikes had set back Iran by only a few months, Trump, Pete Hegseth and Karoline Leavitt smeared her and the New York Times, which confirmed her scoop, as inaccurate, unpatriotic and disrespectful to our military. On Friday afternoon, CNN revealed that the military did not even use bunker-buster bombs on one of Iran's largest nuclear targets because it was too deep. Though Trump likes to hug the flag – and just raised two huge ones on the White House North and South Lawns – he ignores a basic tenet of patriotism: It is patriotic to tell the public the truth on life-or-death matters, and for the press to challenge power. It is unpatriotic to mislead the public in order to control it and suppress dissent, or as a way of puffing up your own ego. Although he was dubbed the 'Daddy' of Nato in The Hague on Wednesday, Trump clearly has daddy issues. (Pass the tissues!) He did not get the affirmation from his father that could have prevented this vainglorious vamping. For Trump, it was not enough for the strikes to damage Iran's nuclear capabilities; they had to 'obliterate' them. It could not simply be an impressive mission; it had to be, as Hegseth said, 'the most complex and secretive military operation in history.' (Move over, D-Day and crossing the Delaware.) The president was so eager to magnify the mission that he eerily compared it to Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Trump has always believed in 'truthful hyperbole,' as he called it in The Art of the Deal. But now it's untruthful hyperbole. He has falsely claimed that an election was stolen and falsely claimed that $1.7 trillion in cuts to the social safety net in his Big, Unpopular Bill 'won't affect anybody; it is just fraud, waste and abuse'. He's getting help on his alternate universe from all the new partisan reporters in the White House briefing room who are eager to shill for him. 'So many Americans still have questions about the 2020 election,' a reporter told Trump at the news conference on Friday, wondering if he would appoint someone at the Justice Department to investigate judges 'for the political persecution of you, your family and your supporters during the Biden administration?' Trump beamed. 'I love you,' he said to the young woman. 'Who are you?' She was, as it turned out, the reporter for Mike Lindell of MyPillow fame, who has his own 'news' network. Talk about fluffing your pillows. This article originally appeared in The New York Times .

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