Israel ‘ready to do what is necessary’ after massive drone and missile strikes from Iran – Middle East crisis live | Iran

Emma Graham-Harrison

Emma Graham-Harrison

Israeli military spokesperson Rear Adm Daniel Hagari confirmed there was a direct hit on the Nevatim airbase by ballistic missiles but said it caused only “minor damage to infrastructure” and the base remains fully operational, adding that a young girl was injured in the attack.

All drones and cruise missiles launched by Iran were intercepted before entering Israeli airspace, and the majority of 120 ballistic missiles, he said.

“Ballistic missiles, only a small number … single digits … fell in the base and around,” he said in a morning briefing. “A direct hit with minor damage that doesn’t do anything to the operational of the base.”

One young girl was in intensive care in hospital due to shrapnel injuries after the attacks, Hagari said, adding that so far there are no other reports of major damage or injury.

Hagari described the use of ballistic missiles as an “escalatory factor”. Asked about Israel’s options for an offensive response, he said Israel has plans and was considering its options.

“We have plans, the situation is still ongoing. We are assessing the situation, we are showing the cabinet the plans, and we are ready to do what is necessary for the defence of Israel.”

“I want you to show me another country facing over 110 ballistic missiles, and the drones,” he said. “I think Iran meant to get results and didn’t get results. The ballistic missiles are an escalatory factor. And when they used these numbers they wanted more significant results than what happened.”

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Key events

Death toll in Gaza reaches 33,729, says health ministry

At least 33,729 Palestinians have been killed and 76,371 injured in Israeli strikes on Gaza since 7 October, the Gaza health ministry said in a statement on Sunday.

There have been 43 Palestinians killed and 62 injured in the past 24 hours, the ministry statement added.

Most of the casualties have been women and children, the health ministry has said, and thousands more bodies are likely to remain uncounted under rubble across Gaza.

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Israel’s war cabinet is due to meet at 3:30pm (1230 GMT) to discuss a response to the drone and missile attack launched by Iran overnight, an Israeli official has said.

Benjamin Netanyahu’s ministers voted in the middle of the night to delegate that decision to the tiny war cabinet, comprising Netanyahu, Israel’s prime minister, defence minister Yoav Gallant and Benny Gantz, a Netanyahu opponent who joined the government as minister without portfolio after the Hamas 7 October attack.

Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu (C), during a war cabinet meeting at the Kirya in Tel Aviv. Photograph: Israeli Prime Minister Office/AFP/Getty Images
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Most of the Iranian drones flying over Syria during Tehran’s strikes were downed by Israeli and US jets – sources

Most of the Iranian drones flying over Syria’s airspace during Tehran’s strikes overnight were downed by Israeli and US jets before reaching their targets in Israel, two western intelligence sources told Reuters.

They said the aerial interceptions shot down dozens of missiles and drones fired by Iran that flew above southern Syria in the Deraa province, the Syrian Golan Heights and several locations in eastern Syria along the border with Iraq.

US air defences operated from the American base in al-Tanf, as well as along the Jordanian border and in eastern Syria, where Washington maintains hundred of troops in several airbases, one source said.

The Pantsir air defence systems that Iran operates from several airbases inside Syria were ineffective in downing any Israeli aircraft, both sources added, without giving further details.

Defences sources told the Guardian that British RAF Typhoons are understood to have been involved in shooting down Iranian drones over Syria and Iraq overnight (see earlier post at 08.28 for more details).

The New York Times is quoting two Israeli officials who say that, in total, Iran launched 185 drones, 36 cruise missiles and 110 surface-to-surface missiles.

Iran launched its attack in response to a suspected Israeli airstrike on its embassy compound in Damascus on 1 April that killed officers of the elite Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corp. Israel has neither confirmed nor denied responsibility for the attack.

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The United Arab Emirates has called for restraint to avoid dangerous repercussions in the Middle East, the foreign ministry said in a statement on Sunday, following Tehran’s attack on Israel.

The UAE also called for resolving conflicts through dialogue and diplomatic channels.

Russia’s foreign ministry, meanwhile, has expressed “extreme concern over another dangerous escalation” in the Middle East and also called for restraint after Iranian strikes on Israel.

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France’s president, Emmanuel Macron, has condemned Iran’s drone and missile attack on Israel, which it says threatens to destabilise the region.

“France is working on de-escalation with its partners and calls for restraint,” he wrote on X.

I condemn in the strongest terms the unprecedented attack launched by Iran against Israel, which threatens to destabilize the region.

I express my solidarity with the Israeli people and France’s commitment to the security of Israel, our partners, and regional stability.…

— Emmanuel Macron (@EmmanuelMacron) April 14, 2024

The French foreign ministry on Friday advised French citizens against travelling to Iran, Lebanon, Israel, and the Palestinian territories.

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Here are some of the latest images coming out from the newswires:

A view shows drones or missiles vying for targets at undisclosed locations in northern Israel. Photograph: Atef Safadi/EPA
Explosions seen over Jerusalem during the Iranian attack on Israel. Photograph: AFPTV/AFP/Getty Images
Flares from explosions in the sky over Jerusalem as Israel’s Iron Dome anti-missile system intercepts missiles and drones from Iran. Photograph: Xinhua/REX/Shutterstock
Onlookers and security agents standing around the debris of a missile that the Jordanian forces intercepted over Amman amid an Iranian drone and missile attack on Israel in the early hours of 14 April 2024. Photograph: Ahmad Shoura/AFP/Getty Images
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Beirut airport reopened this morning and flights in and out of the Lebanese capital have resumed, BBC News has reported.

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In the UK, Victoria Atkins, the health secretary, told Sky News’ Trevor Phillips on Sunday that last night’s missiles and drone attack was “a significant attack by Iran on Israel”.

“Our message across the region and with our partners is that we must not escalate this. We must contain this and just take time to look at what has happened over the last 12 hours,” she said.

“All of our efforts at the moment are on de-escalating this, we do not want this to go any further because we can all see the human cost to this, and we do not want a miscalculation or an escalation in events because we know that that will take its toll.”

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The US embassy in Jerusalem says the “threat of drone and/or missile barrages has diminished” and that the shelter in place order for US government employees and their family members has been lifted.

“However, the previous travel restrictions on US government employees and their family members remain in place. Personal travel is limited to travel within and between Tel Aviv (including Herzliya, Netanya, and Even Yehuda), Jerusalem, and Be’er Sheva,” a statement read.

“The US embassy will continue to closely monitor the security environment. Schools across Israel remain closed today, 14 April. Many flights have been canceled or delayed, and travelers are encouraged to check with the airline on the status of their flight. Land border crossings, including Allenby Bridge crossing, are open.”

You can read the full statement here.

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The UN security council is set to meet at 4pm ET (2000 GMT) on Sunday after Israel requested it condemn Iran’s attack and designate the Revolutionary Guards a terrorist organisation, Reuters reports.

US President Joe Biden has said he will convene a meeting of G7 leaders to “coordinate a united diplomatic response” to Iran’s attack.

Italy, which now holds the rotating G7 presidency, has reportedly called for a virtual meeting to discuss the attack.

Iran’s Fars news agency quoted a source as saying Tehran was closely watching Jordan, which might become the next target in case of any moves in support of Israel.

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Here is some more reaction from world leaders to Iran’s attack on Israel last night:

  • Spain’s prime minister, Pedro Sánchez, has called for restraint, saying on X: “We are following with the greatest concern the evolution of the situation in the Middle East. One must at all cost avoid a regional escalation.”

  • The office of Argentina’s president, Javier Milei, expressed its “solidarity and unwavering commitment” to Israel in the face of the attacks. It added that Argentina “emphatically supports the state of Israel in the defence of its sovereignty, especially against regimes that promote terror”, noting an Argentine court recently held Iran responsible for bomb attacks on the Israeli embassy and a Jewish community centre in Buenos Aires in the 1990s.

  • Ukraine’s foreign ministry said Kyiv “strongly condemns Iran’s massive air attack” saying it could lead to “further grave acceleration in the Middle East”. “The attack also demonstrates why it is critical that all of the free world’s forces are consolidated to defend the global borders of democracy.”

  • The EU’s foreign affairs chief, Josep Borrell, said the strikes were “an unprecedented escalation and a grave threat to regional security” in a message on X.

Other countries, including the US, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and China, have called for restraint amid fears of a regional escalation of conflict across the Middle East.

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Hamas, the Palestinian militant group, which is an ally of Iran, has defended Iran’s drone and missile attack on Israel that began on Saturday.

“We in Hamas regard the military operation conducted by the Islamic Republic of Iran a natural right and a deserved response on the crime of targeting the Iranian consulate in Damascus and the assassination of several leaders of the Revolutionary Guards,” Hamas said in a statement.

Israel and Hamas have been at war since early October when Hamas attacked Israel and killed about 1,200 people and abducted another 250.

More than 33,000 Palestinians have been killed and over 76,000 injured in retaliatory Israeli strikes on Gaza since 7 October, according to Gaza’s health ministry.

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As we reported earlier, Israel reopened its airspace as of 7:30am local time on Sunday morning.

Flag carrier El Al said it had resumed operations and was “working to stabilise the flight schedule as soon as possible”.

“El Al will continue to operate as much as possible to preserve the air bridge to and from Israel,” it said.

The airline had cancelled 15 flights to Europe, Dubai and Moscow scheduled for Sunday while flights that had taken off from Bangkok and Phuket were forced to return, Reuters reported.

Smaller Israeli carrier Arkia said it was in the process of making adjustments to its flight schedule after initially postponing flights to Athens, Milan and Geneva.

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Emirates Airlines announced the cancellation of some of its flights and the re-routing of others, the airline’s spokesperson has said.

Airlines have been cancelling flights and changing routes after Iran launched dozens of drones and missiles at Israel on Saturday evening.

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British RAF typhoons ‘involved in shooting down’ Iranian drones over Syria and Iraq overnight – sources

Dan Sabbagh

Dan Sabbagh

British RAF Typhoons are understood to have been involved in shooting down Iranian drones over Syria and Iraq overnight, defence sources have indicated, with confirmation expected in a statement from the Ministry of Defence later.

The UK operation was billed as an extension of the longstanding anti Islamic State bombing and surveillance missions in Iraq and Syria, called Operation Shader.

The RAF also backfilled for US air force on anti Isis operations, so the Americans had a freer hand in helping Israel shoot down the 300 drones and missiles that Israel’s military said were fired overnight.

It was “Shader-plus” said one insider, and given the location of British jets, sources said it was very likely they encountered Iranian drones and missiles in their work.

More information is expected to be released by the UK about the legal basis for British military involvement. There were no references in initial statements to self-defence or helping an ally, but there was a broader call for stability from prime minister Rishi Suank overnight.

“The UK will continue to stand up for Israel’s security and that of all our regional partners, including Jordan and Iraq. Alongside our allies, we are urgently working to stabilise the situation and prevent further escalation. No one wants to see more bloodshed,” he said.

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Jordan intercepted some flying objects that entered its airspace last night to ensure safety of citizens, a cabinet statement said on Sunday.

“Some shrapnel fell in multiple places during that time without causing any significant damage or any injuries to citizens,” it added.

Israel, with the help of key western allies including the US, UK and Jordan, claimed to have intercepted about 99% of the launches during the mass Iranian strike.

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