Iran a greater threat than Daesh, says Netanyahu

Russian President Vladimir Putin (L) welcomes Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during a meeting at the Bocharov Ruchei state residence in Sochi on Wednesday. (AFP)
Updated 23 August 2017
Follow

Iran a greater threat than Daesh, says Netanyahu

SOCHI: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned Russian President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday that Israel was prepared to act unilaterally to prevent an expanded Iranian military presence in Syria as Moscow works to end the civil war there.
Russia intervened on behalf of Syrian President Bashar Assad in 2015, joining a de facto alliance with Iranian forces, Lebanese Hezbollah and other Shiite Muslim militias.
Israel worries that an eventual Assad victory could leave Iran with a permanent garrison in Syria, extending a threat already posed from neighboring Lebanon by the Iranian-backed Hezbollah.
Meeting Putin in the Black Sea resort of Sochi, Netanyahu said Israel’s arch-foe Iran was fighting to cement an arc of influence from the Gulf to the Mediterranean.
“Iran is already well on its way to controlling Iraq, Yemen and to a large extent is already in practice in control of Lebanon,” Netanyahu told Putin.
“We cannot forget for a single minute that Iran threatens every day to annihilate Israel,” Netanyahu said. “Israel opposes Iran’s continued entrenchment in Syria. We will be sure to defend ourselves with all means against this and any threat.”
Putin, in the part of the meeting to which reporters had access, did not address Netanyahu’s remarks about Iran’s role in Syria nor his veiled threat to take unilateral military action.
Netanyahu advisers have privately said that their focus is on keeping Iranian forces away from the Israeli-controlled Golan Heights, the Syrian side of which falls under a partial truce brokered by Russia and the US in recent weeks.
In parallel to lobbying Moscow, Israel has been trying to persuade Washington that Iran and its guerrilla partners, not Daesh, pose the greater common threat in the region.
“Bringing Shiites into the Sunni sphere will surely have many serious implications both in regard to refugees and to new terrorist acts,” Netanyahu told Israeli reporters after the three-hour meeting — his sixth with Putin since September 2015.
“We want to prevent a war and that’s why it’s better to raise the alarm early in order to stop deterioration.”
Russia has so far shown forbearance toward Israel, setting up a military hotline to prevent their warplanes or anti-aircraft units clashing accidentally over Syria. Israel’s air force said last week it had struck suspected Hezbollah arms shipments around 100 times in Syria during the civil war, rarely drawing retaliation and apparently without Russian interference.
Russian diplomats have argued that Moscow’s stake in Syria deters Iran or Hezbollah from opening a new front with Israel.
“We take the Israeli interests in Syria into account,” Alexander Petrovich Shein, Russia’s ambassador to Israel, told its Channel One television on Tuesday. “Were it up to Russia, the foreign forces would not stay.”
Zeev Elkin, an Israeli Cabinet minister who joined Netanyahu in Sochi, said in a radio interview after the talks with Putin that he had “no doubt that it (the meeting) will lead to practical steps.” Elkin did not elaborate on these.


Trump: US carrying out ‘major combat operations’ in Iran

Updated 5 min 41 sec ago
Follow

Trump: US carrying out ‘major combat operations’ in Iran

  • An Israeli defense official said the operation had been planned for months in coordination with Washington

WASHINGTON/DUBAI/CAIRO: US President Donald Trump said ​on Saturday that the United States had begun “major combat operations” in Iran, warning that there may be US casualties.

The strikes, which Trump said were aimed at destroying Iranian missiles and annihilating its navy, follow repeated US-Israeli warnings that ‌they would ‌strike Iran again ​if ‌it pressed ⁠ahead ​with its ⁠nuclear and ballistic missile programs.

“I do not make this statement lightly. The Iranian regime seeks to kill,” Trump said in a video shared on Truth Social.

“The lives of courageous American ⁠heroes may be lost and ‌we may have casualties ‌that often happens in ​war, but we’re ‌doing this, not for now. We’re ‌doing this for the future, and it is a noble mission.”

 

 

Trump told the members of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard, Iran’s armed forces, ‌to lay down their weapons, promising that they would be granted ⁠immunity.

The ⁠other option, according to Trump, is “certain death.”

Washington and Tehran held a series of talks in recent weeks about Iran’s nuclear ambition. The most recent one was held on Thursday with no deal.

“Iran refused, just as it has for decades and decades. They rejected every opportunity to renounce their ​nuclear ambitions, and we ​can’t take it anymore,” Trump said.Israel launched a pre-emptive attack against Iran on Saturday, and ​a United States attack is underway, plunging the Middle East into a renewed military confrontation and further dimming hopes for a diplomatic solution to Tehran’s nuclear dispute with the West.

The latest updates:

• Israeli military reports missiles have been launched from Iran toward Israel, authorities call on people to head to shelters

• Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian is “safe and sound”, state media reported.

• The Jerusalem municipality ordered schools and workplaces to close on Saturday after Israel launched strikes on arch-foe Iran

• US embassies in Qatar, Bahrain issue shelter-in-place orders for personnel

• Tasnim reports Iran is preparing for strong response to Israel

• Israeli media: We are awaiting confirmation of the assassination of a number of prominent Iranian leaders

• Iranian television has declared a state of alert in all hospitals across the country

• Israeli media said that Israel was targeting rocket launch sites to prevent Iran from responding

• The head of Iran’s National Security Committee said that Israel has embarked on a path whose outcome is not in its hands

• Explosions heard in the cities of Qom, Karaj and Kermanshah

• Explosions heard in Isfahan, central Iran

• Israeli Army Radio said air force launches second wave of strikes on Iran

The scope of the air and sea operations was not immediately clear. Iran was preparing a crushing retaliation, an Iranian official said.

An apparent strike in Iran’s capital Saturday happened near the offices of Khamenei. State television acknowledged an explosion in the area of the offices.

Israeli media reported attempts to assassinate Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian during the attacks, and have not ruled out Khamenei being targeted.

Several missiles have struck University Street and the Jomhouri area in Tehran, while explosion likely occurred in the northern Seyyed Khandan area of Tehran, state media reported. Thick smoke was also rising from the vicinity of Pasteur Street in downtown Tehran, ISNA said.

The attack, coming after Israel and Iran engaged in a 12-day air war in June, follows repeated US-Israeli warnings that they would strike again if ‌Iran pressed ‌ahead with its nuclear and ballistic missile programs.

“The State ​of ‌Israel ⁠launched ​a pre-emptive ⁠attack against Iran to remove threats to the State of Israel,” Defense Minister Israel Katz said.

People watch as smoke rises on the skyline after an explosion in Tehran on Feb. 28, 2026. (AP)

An Israeli defense official said the operation had been planned for months in coordination with Washington, and that the launch date was decided weeks ago.

The US military declined to immediately comment on the attack.

Explosions were heard in Tehran on Saturday, Iranian media reported, and sirens sounded across Israel around 08:15 local time in what the military said was a proactive ⁠alert to prepare the public for the possibility of an ‌incoming missile strike.

The Israeli military announced ‌the closure of schools and workplaces, with exceptions for ​essential sectors, and a ban on public ‌airspace.

Israel closed its airspace to civilian flights, and the airports authority ‌asked the public not to go to any of the country’s airports.

The country’s airspace will reopen and flights to and from Israel to resume ‘as soon as the security situation allows,’ the airport authority said.

Iran’s airspace has been closed, Tasnim news agency reported.

People run for cover following an explosion in Tehran on Feb. 28, 2026. (WANA via Reuters)

The US and Iran renewed negotiations in February in a bid to resolve the decades-long dispute through diplomacy and avert the threat of a military confrontation that could destabilize the region.

Israel, however, ‌insisted that any US deal with Iran must include the dismantling of Tehran’s nuclear infrastructure, not just stopping the ⁠enrichment process, and ⁠lobbied Washington to include restrictions on Iran’s missile program in the talks.

Iran said it was prepared to discuss curbs on its nuclear program in exchange for lifting sanctions but ruled out linking the issue to missiles.

Tehran also said it would defend itself against any attack.

It warned neighboring countries hosting US troops that it would retaliate against American bases if Washington struck Iran.

In June, the US joined an Israeli military campaign against Iranian nuclear installations, in the most direct American military action ever against the Islamic Republic.

Tehran retaliated then by launching missiles toward the US Al Udeid air base in Qatar, ​the largest in the Middle ​East.

Western powers have warned that Iran’s ballistic missile project threatens regional stability and could deliver nuclear weapons if developed. Tehran denies seeking atomic bombs.