logo
Israel issues Tehran evacuation order as Iran threatens to leave nuclear weapons treaty

Israel issues Tehran evacuation order as Iran threatens to leave nuclear weapons treaty

Yahoo17-06-2025

Israeli forces have issued an evacuation order to residents of a large part of Tehran, warning them of the imminent bombing of 'military infrastructure' in the area in a social media post very similar to those regularly directed at Palestinians in Gaza over the past 20 months.
The post on Monday on X was from the account of the Israel Defense Forces' Arabic spokesperson, Col Avichay Adraee, and is a further sign of the evolving nature of the Israeli campaign against Iran, which began with attacks on air defences, nuclear sites and the military chain of command, but appears to have drifted towards a war of attrition focused on Iran's oil and gas industry and on the capital.
Related: Israel attack on Iranian state broadcaster shown live on TV
In another sign of the changing targets of the Israeli offensive, Iran's state TV announced on Monday evening during a live transmission that it was under attack.
The sound of an explosion could be heard, and the news presenter hurried off camera as dust and debris appeared in the studio. Cries of 'Allahu Akbar' or 'God is greatest' could be heard off-screen and the broadcast abruptly switched to pre-recorded programming. Live programming resumed some time later.
Adraee's online post included a map depicting a significant area of the third district in northern Tehran shaded in red in the same manner he has presented evacuation orders for Palestinians.
'Dear citizens, for your safety, please leave the described area in the 3rd district of Tehran immediately,' the message said in Farsi.
'In the coming hours, the Israeli army will attack the military infrastructure of the Iranian regime in this area, as it has done in recent days in Tehran. Your presence in this area endangers your life.'
Later on Monday, the US president, Donald Trump, urged everyone to immediately evacuate Tehran, and reiterated that Iran should have signed a nuclear deal with the US.
'IRAN CAN NOT HAVE A NUCLEAR WEAPON. I said it over and over again! Everyone should immediately evacuate Tehran!' he said in a post on Truth Social.
Speaking to personnel at Tel Nof air force base, the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, confirmed the evacuation orders.
'The Israeli air force controls the skies over Tehran. This changes the entire campaign,' he said.
'When we control the skies over Tehran, we strike regime targets, as opposed to the criminal Iranian regime which targets our civilians and comes to kill women and children. We tell the people of Tehran to evacuate, and we act.'
Netanyahu later said killing Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Hosseini Khamenei, would 'end the conflict' in what would be another ominous escalation.
After the surprise Israeli attack on Friday morning, Iran has carried out retaliatory missile strikes on Israeli cities, focusing on the most populated areas between Tel Aviv and the port of Haifa.
Both sides have targeted each other's oil and gas facilities, increasing the threat of environmental disaster, and explosions were reported on Monday near oil refineries in southern Tehran.
Earlier on Monday, Iran threatened to leave the nuclear non-proliferation treaty (NPT) as Israeli bombing raids entered a fourth day, underlining the conflict's potential to trigger a broader war and Tehran's race to construct a nuclear weapon.
The human cost of the war continued to escalate with both sides broadening their range of targets, as G7 leaders convened in the Canadian Rockies with no clear plan to end the conflict. There were reports on Monday that Trump was refusing to sign a joint statement calling for the conflict to be scaled down.
'They should talk, and they should talk immediately,' Trump said of Tehran during the summit. 'I'd say Iran is not winning this war.'
The Wall Street Journal reported on Monday that Iran was sending a message to Israel and the US through Arab intermediaries that it was seeking a cessation of hostilities and a resumption of talks on its nuclear programme.
The same report, however, said its stance was that it would only go back to the table if Israel halted its offensive. There was no sign on Monday of Israel contemplating a pause.
Iran's health ministry said 224 people in Iran had been killed by Israeli attacks, 90% of them civilian, and more than 1,400 had been injured. Israel's defence minister, meanwhile, threatened further bombing strikes on Tehran, where an exodus of residents has been reported, clogging roads out of the capital.
The Iranian Red Crescent said that three of its rescuers were killed in an Israeli airstrike in northwest Tehran, adding: 'This incident is not only a crime against international humanitarian law but also a blatant attack on humanity and morality.'
In Israel, at least 23 civilians have been killed in Iran's retaliatory missile strikes since Israel's initial surprise attack on Friday morning, and nearly 600 have been injured, according to official sources.
The Iranian foreign ministry spokesperson, Esmaeil Baghaei, announced on Monday that Iran's parliament, the Majlis, was preparing a bill that would withdraw the country from the 1968 NPT agreement, which obliges it to forego nuclear weapons and to undergo international inspections to verify compliance. Baghaei added that Tehran remained opposed to the development of weapons of mass destruction.
The country's president, Masoud Pezeshkian, also insisted that Iran did not intend to develop nuclear weapons but would pursue its right to nuclear energy and research. He pointed out that Ali Khamenei, had issued a religious edict against weapons of mass destruction.
Israel is the only Middle East state with nuclear weapons and did not sign the NPT, but has never formally acknowledged its arsenal.
It is seeking to maintain its monopoly with airstrikes against Iranian nuclear facilities, claiming that Tehran was close to building a bomb. Previous assessments by US intelligence and the UN nuclear watchdog found no evidence that Iran had begun work on assembling a nuclear weapon.
Israeli critics of the offensive say it cannot destroy Iran's reserve of nuclear knowhow – though Israel has targeted Iranian nuclear scientists, claiming to have killed 14 – and could push the leadership into ordering the assembly of nuclear warheads.
Rafael Grossi, the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, told the BBC it was very likely all the roughly 15,000 centrifuges at Iran's biggest uranium enrichment plant at Natanz had been badly damaged or destroyed because of a power cut caused by an Israeli strike.
But he said there had been very limited or no damage at the separate Fordow plant.
There were reports on Monday of Israeli strikes on the Tehran headquarters of the Revolutionary Guards al-Quds force, an expeditionary arm deployed in foreign wars.
Despite Israeli claims to have air superiority over much of Iran, Iranian forces have still been able to launch ballistic missiles from their territory and some continue to evade Israel's multi-layered air defences. Israel Defense Forces officials estimate that it is has been able to intercept 80-90% of Iran's missiles, with 5-10% hitting actual residential areas.
Eight more Israelis were killed overnight by Iranian missile strikes, including four in Petah Tikva where a missile hit an apartment block. Three people died from blasts in Haifa and an elderly man was killed when his home collapsed from the shockwave from an explosion in Bnei Brak, east of Tel Aviv.
Iran's Revolutionary Guards claimed to have begun 'more powerful and deadly' strikes and to have found a way of causing confusion in Israeli air defence systems. There was no immediate way of independently verifying the claim.
US forces have so far helped Israel intercept Iranian missiles, but have not taken part, at least overtly, in offensive bombing operations. On Monday, however, Reuters quoted two unnamed US officials as saying the movement of more than 30 military refuelling aircraft to Europe was intended to give Trump more options in the Middle East. Such tankers allow warplanes to refuel in mid-air and enable more sorties a day in wartime.
The US defence secretary, Pete Hegseth, said on Monday he had ordered the deployment of additional defensive capabilities to the Middle East, but did not disclose what military capabilities he sent to the region.
As Tehran residents evacuated the capital in increasing numbers, Israel's defence minister, Israel Katz, threatened to make Tehranis 'pay the price' for Ali Khamenei's decision to keep firing missiles at Israel in retaliation for the Israeli attack.
The Iranian state-backed news agency Fars reported that the authorities had executed a man found guilty of spying for Israel's intelligence agency, the Mossad. It was the third execution of an alleged spy in recent weeks.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Rap duo's anti-Israel chants prompt UK police to review Glastonbury acts
Rap duo's anti-Israel chants prompt UK police to review Glastonbury acts

Boston Globe

time39 minutes ago

  • Boston Globe

Rap duo's anti-Israel chants prompt UK police to review Glastonbury acts

Irish-language rap group Kneecap also performed Saturday despite a terror charge for one of its members over allegedly supporting Hezbollah, leading a huge crowd in chants of 'Free Palestine.' The Israeli Embassy to the UK said on social media that it was 'deeply disturbed by the inflammatory and hateful rhetoric expressed on stage at the Glastonbury Festival.' Health Secretary Wes Streeting on Sunday condemned Bob Vylan's actions as 'appalling.' He told Sky News that the BBC and festival organizers had to answer questions about how the comments were broadcast live to millions. Advertisement However, he also urged Israel to 'take the violence of their own citizens towards Palestinians more seriously' when asked about the Israeli embassy's condemnation of the band's actions. The minister referred to the ongoing humanitarian crisis in Gaza and 'the fact that Israeli settler terrorists attacked a Christian village this week, setting it on fire,' and urged Israel to 'get your own house in order.' The government said its culture secretary has spoken to the BBC director general about Bob Vylan's performance. Advertisement The BBC said it issued a warning on screen about 'very strong and discriminatory language' during the livestream. Glastonbury is Britain's biggest summer music festival and draws some 200,000 music fans each year to Worthy Farm in southwest England. Almost 4,000 acts perform on 120 stages. Festival organizers said on Instagram that Vylan's chants 'very much crossed a line.' 'We are urgently reminding everyone involved in the production of the Festival that there is no place at Glastonbury for antisemitism, hate speech or incitement to violence.' 'With almost 4,000 performances at Glastonbury 2025, there will inevitably be artists and speakers appearing on our stages whose views we do not share, and a performer's presence here should never be seen as a tacit endorsement of their opinions and beliefs,' it said. Bob Vylan's two members both keep their real names secret for privacy reasons. Founded in 2017, the band has released four albums. Kneecap, which has drawn criticism over its comments on Middle East politics, also gave an impassioned performance for tens of thousands of fans. Liam Óg Ó hAnnaidh, who performs under the stage name Mo Chara, has been charged under the Terrorism Act with supporting a proscribed organization for allegedly waving a Hezbollah flag at a concert in London in November. The rapper, who was charged under the anglicized version of his name, Liam O'Hanna, is on unconditional bail before a further court hearing in August. The group has been under scrutiny since videos emerged allegedly showing the band shouting 'up Hamas, up Hezbollah' and calling on people to kill lawmakers. On Saturday band members led the audience in chants of 'Free Palestine' and 'Free Mo Chara.' They also aimed an expletive-laden chant at UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer, who has said he didn't think it was 'appropriate' for Kneecap to play Glastonbury. Advertisement Rod Stewart, Olivia Rodrigo, and the Prodigy were among acts playing Sunday for Glastonbury's final day.

Iran's UN Ambassador: Iran's nuclear enrichment will ‘never stop'
Iran's UN Ambassador: Iran's nuclear enrichment will ‘never stop'

The Hill

time42 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Iran's UN Ambassador: Iran's nuclear enrichment will ‘never stop'

The Iranian ambassador to the United Nations, Amir Saeid Iravani, said his country will 'never stop' nuclear enrichment, saying it's an 'inalienable right' that Iran plans on exercising. In an interview on CBS News's 'Face the Nation,' moderator Margaret Brennan pressed the Iranian ambassador on whether Iran intends to 'reconstitute a nuclear enrichment program on its soil.' Iravani cited a provision of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) that says non-nuclear-weapon states have a right to peaceful nuclear technology, including uranium enrichment, as long as it remains within certain limits. 'So the enrichment is our right, and an inalienable right, and we want to implement this right,' Iravani said. 'So you do plan to restart enrichment, that sounds like?' Brennan responded. 'I think that enrichment will not- never stop,' he said. Trump ordered U.S. strikes on three Iranian nuclear sites last weekend, as another round of talks were set to begin as the Trump administration sought to broker a nuclear deal with Iran. Many Democrats have said that questions remain about the success of the strikes, which the administration has touted as a resounding success. CIA Director John Ratcliffe and other top intelligence officials briefed lawmakers this past week for the first time about the June 21 strike. The meeting was held as Trump administration officials have worked overtime to push their argument that the attacks left Iran's nuclear facilities 'obliterated.' Reports emerged Tuesday about a preliminary assessment that said the U.S. strikes may have set the Iranian nuclear program back by 'a few months.' The administration has pushed back forcefully at those reports, including at a Pentagon briefing earlier Thursday.

Trump celebrates Tillis's decision to retire
Trump celebrates Tillis's decision to retire

The Hill

time2 hours ago

  • The Hill

Trump celebrates Tillis's decision to retire

President Trump on Sunday celebrated Sen. Thom Tillis's (R-N.C.) announcement that he wouldn't seek reelection next year. 'Great News!' Trump wrote on TruthSocial on Sunday evening. The North Carolina senator abruptly announced his plans earlier in the day amid a days-long spat with the president over Tillis's opposition to the GOP's massive tax and spending bill. He was one of two Republicans to vote against advancing the measure on Saturday night. He has cried foul over Medicaid cuts that he says will cost the Tar Heel State more than $30 billion, preferring the Medicaid language in the House-passed bill. This drew the ire of Trump, who responded by threatening to support a primary challenger against the two-term Senate Republican. 'Numerous people have come forward wanting to run in the Primary against 'Senator Thom' Tillis,' Trump wrote. 'I will be meeting with them over the coming weeks, looking for someone who will properly represent the Great People of North Carolina and, so importantly, the United States of America.' He also railed against Tillis on Sunday ahead of the reelection decision, labeling him a 'talker and complainer, not a doer.' Tillis said in a statement announcing his retirement that he hadn't been excited about the prospect of seeking a third term, and indicated that he is looking forward to having new-found political freedom. 'As many of my colleagues have noticed over the last year, and at times even joked about, I haven't exactly been excited about running for another term,' he said. 'That is true since the choice is between spending another six years navigating the political theatre and partisan gridlock in Washington or spending that time with the love of my life Susan, our two children, three beautiful grandchildren, and the rest of our extended family back home.' 'It's not a hard choice, and I will not be seeking re-election,' he said. 'I look forward to having the pure freedom to call the balls and strikes as I see fit and representing the great people of North Carolina to the best of my ability.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store