Latest news with #JonathanConricus

Sky News AU
5 days ago
- Politics
- Sky News AU
Israel has ‘exposed' the Iranian Revolutionary Guard as ‘incapable'
Former IDF spokesperson Lieutenant Colonel Jonathan Conricus says Israel has 'exposed' the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps as being 'incapable' of defending their homeland. 'It [Israel] has shattered the Iranian image of military capability; it has exposed the Iranian regime and the vaunted revolutionary guard as incapable of defending the Iranian homeland,' Mr Conricus told Sky News Australia. 'I think that Israel will pursue an aggressive stance against the Iranian regime.'

Sky News AU
5 days ago
- Politics
- Sky News AU
Iran ‘completely obliterated' a civilian Israeli building just before ceasefire
Former IDF spokesperson Lieutenant Colonel Jonathan Conricus discusses Iran 'completely obliterating' a building in southern Israel just before the start of the ceasefire. 'Just before the ceasefire, they [Iran] fired a missile towards Beer Sheva, the largest city in southern Israel, which directly impacted a civilian building,' Mr Conricus told Sky News Australia. 'Completely obliterated it and sadly killed five Israeli civilians who had nothing to do with the war or with the fighting.'

Sky News AU
6 days ago
- Politics
- Sky News AU
‘Wouldn't make sense' for Russia to support Iran in escalating conflict with Israel
Former IDF spokesperson Lieutenant Colonel Jonathan Conricus discusses the meeting between Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi and Russian President Vladimir Putin. 'The interesting statement that apparently was released by the Kremlin is that Russia seeks to support the Iranian people, that's an interesting statement,' Mr Conricus told Sky News host Sharri Markson. 'It wouldn't make sense for the Russians to invest resources that they apparently don't have a lot of after one of their allies that is apparently not doing very well on the battlefield.'


Fox News
15-06-2025
- Politics
- Fox News
Israel's strikes damaged Iranian deterrence in the region, former IDF official says
Israel's preemptive attack on Iran not only marked a major milestone for the 77-year-old nation, but also a turning point for the Middle East. According to a former IDF spokesperson, as Jerusalem grapples with the ongoing war in Gaza, it's clear Israel has its eyes set on one major goal: ensuring that Tehran never obtains a nuclear weapon. Lt. Col. (Ret.) Jonathan Conricus, former IDF Spokesperson, senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD) and co-founder of "BottomLine Media," told Fox News Digital that Israel is working to eradicate what it sees as an existential threat. In the early hours of Friday morning local time, Israel carried out a series of airstrikes and covert operations to take out Iranian infrastructure and senior leadership. The IDF on Saturday said it had killed more than 20 Iranian commanders, including the head of the country's Intelligence Directorate and the commander of Iran's surface-to-surface missile array. "To be frank, a nuclear program like that means it's personnel before it is infrastructure. And if we're serious about it — to have a meaningful lasting impact on the Iranian nuclear weapons program means that Israel has to work quite long and quite hard and it means a lot of knowledge has to be deleted," Conricus said. While Iran's infrastructure and leadership have taken major hits in Israel's Operation Rising Lion, Tehran's influence over the Middle East, including its proxies, has been damaged. Conricus told Fox News Digital that the crumbling of what he calls "Iran's ring of fire around Israel" began with Hamas' Oct. 7 massacres. "It's not totally done yet, but Hamas and Hezbollah are very weak compared to what they were on October the 7th, and Iran itself is, I think, the weakest that I've ever seen it, militarily and politically," Conricus said. "So, I think that with the benefit of hindsight, Iranian strategic planners, when they were thinking about this multi-front assault on Israel from Gaza, from Lebanon, from Syria, maybe from other places, and they had these pipe dreams that that would somehow eradicate the State of Israel — with the benefits of hindsight — may not have been such a brilliant idea." Iran's nuclear program has been the subject of policy debates and a source of regional tension for decades, as many Arab nations quietly oppose the regime. Following Israel's attacks, several countries, including France and the U.K., reaffirmed their opposition to Tehran gaining a nuclear weapon, even while criticizing Jerusalem for its operation. "Many countries behind the scenes are very positive and cheering on Israel and even sending messages of support and wishing us the best of luck against the Iranians because it would suit their strategic goals, and they're happy that someone is standing up to the regional bully, which is Iran," Conricus said. The former IDF spokesperson told Fox News Digital that Israel dealt a significant blow to Iranian deterrence in the Middle East, which could change how other countries in the region respond to Tehran's demands. "Before you know, 48 hours ago, I think if the Iranians threatened people then the level of fear and deterrence would have been reasonably high. Today, after the very humiliating defeats that the Iranians have suffered at the hands of Mossad and Israeli Air Force and special forces, I'm quite confident that Iranian deterrence has taken quite a significant hit and that the countries who perhaps before were very much deterred by the Iranians probably are less so today," Conricus told Fox News Digital. However, he noted that those countries still have an opportunity to assert themselves. Conricus also believes that while "it's too early in the game" to predict what this could mean for Iran domestically, there is a chance that the Iranian regime could be at stake. The country was already dealing with internal unrest prior to Israel's attack as the population revolted against the regime's quashing of basic rights and freedoms.

Sky News AU
09-06-2025
- Politics
- Sky News AU
Greta Thunberg claiming IDF kidnapped her labelled ‘tone deaf'
Former IDF spokesperson Jonathan Conricus says it was 'tone deaf' for Greta Thunberg to claim the Israeli military kidnapped her. 'For an Israeli to hear Greta say that she has been kidnapped, In Israeli ears, that sounds very, very bad and tone deaf, Mr Conricus told Sky News Australia. 'We still have 55 Israelis that were really kidnapped or abducted by Hamas on October the 7th … I think it was a really poor choice of words.'