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Updates: Iran launches missile attack on Israel

Iran Israel
Iran has launched a missile attack against Israel on Tuesday evening. (File)
  • Dozens of explosions boomed across Jerusalem on Tuesday night as air raid sirens rang out
  • Air traffic paused at Israel's Ben Gurion airport: spokesman

Washington/Tehran — Iran has launched a missile attack on Israel’s commercial hub Tel Aviv, state media reported Tuesday. The official IRNA news agency said Iran had launched “a missile attack on Tel Aviv”, without elaborating.

Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said a missile attack underway against Israel on Tuesday was in response to the killing of Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah last week as well as that of the Hamas leader. “In response to the martyrdom of (Hamas leader) Ismail Haniyeh, Hassan Nasrallah, and (Guards commander) Nilforoshan, we targeted the heart of the occupied territories (Israel),” the Guards said in a statement reported by the Fars news agency.
“If the Zionist regime reacts to Iranian operations, it will face crushing attacks,” the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps said in a statement carried by Iranian news agency Fars.
Israel closed its airspace on Tuesday and diverted flights, a spokesman from the airport authority said, as air raid sirens sounded across the country after Iran launched missiles targeting Israel. “Israel’s airspace is closed. Flights are diverted to alternative fields outside of Israel,” the spokesman said in a statement.
In Amman, Jordan’s aviation authority announced the suspension of air traffic as well.

Dozens of explosions boomed across Jerusalem on Tuesday night as air raid sirens rang out, AFP journalists reported. The explosions came shortly after the military said that Iran had launched a missile attack targeting Israel.
Earlier, the United States said on Tuesday that Iran was preparing an imminent ballistic missile attack against Israel, warning that any such assault would have “severe” consequences for Tehran.
The warning came as Israel said it had launched a ground offensive in Lebanon to target the Iran-backed militia Hezbollah, whose leader Hassan Nasrallah was killed in an Israeli air strike last week.
“The United States has indications that Iran is preparing to imminently launch a ballistic missile attack against Israel,” a senior White House official told AFP on condition of anonymity.
“We are actively supporting defensive preparations to defend Israel against this attack.”
In Jerusalem, the Israeli military said on Tuesday it had not detected an incoming aerial strike from Iran “for now”, after a US official said there were indications of an imminent missile attack.
“For now, we have not detected any aerial threat launched from Iran,” military spokesman Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari said, adding that the Israeli army was “prepared to defend and attack” Iran in the event of a strike launched from the Islamic republic.
The United States and other western allies stepped in to help defend Israel against a combined Iranian missile and drone attack in April, which Tehran launched in retaliation for an Israeli strike on the Iranian consulate in Damascus.
The US official added: “A direct military attack from Iran against Israel will carry severe consequences for Iran.”
In Beirut, Hezbollah said it targeted an air base in Tel Aviv in retaliation for attacks on civilians in Lebanon, in the second operation Tuesday it dedicated to its slain leader.
The Iran-backed group said its fighters launched “a salvo of Fadi-4 rockets at the Sde Dov air base in Tel Aviv”, adding the attack came in defence of Lebanon and “in response to the targeting of civilians and the massacres that the enemy carried out”.
The group dedicated the attack on the disused base to its leader Hassan Nasrallah, who was killed in an Israeli strike on Beirut’s southern suburbs on Friday.
Iran has said that Nasrallah’s killing would bring about Israel’s “destruction,” though the foreign ministry said Monday that Tehran would not deploy soldiers to confront Israel.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meanwhile issued a stark warning to Iran on Monday, saying there was “nowhere in the Middle East Israel cannot reach.”
Netanyahu also said that a future “when Iran is finally free” would “come a lot sooner than people think”.
An attack on Israel by Iran would gravely compound fears of a wider regional conflict that the United States and other world powers have said they want to avoid in the Middle East.
The United States has cautiously backed Israel’s move to dismantle Hezbollah’s ability to attack northern Israel, even as President Joe Biden has called for a ceasefire.
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said that Washington was “tracking events in the Middle East very closely.”
“The United States is committed to Israel’s defense,” Blinken said Tuesday morning while meeting his Moroccan counterpart Nasser Bourita at the State Department.
Washington said Monday that it was boosting its forces in the Middle East by a “few thousand” troops, by bringing in new units while extending others that are already there.
It was also deploying more fighter jets, the Pentagon said.
US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin late Monday offered support to his Israeli counterpart Yoav Gallant for “dismantling attack infrastructure” belonging to Hezbollah along the border with Lebanon.
Hezbollah began low intensity strikes on Israeli troops a day after its Palestinian ally Hamas, which is also backed by Iran, staged its unprecedented attack on Israel on October 7, which triggered Israel’s devastating assault on the Gaza Strip.
Cross-border fire from Israel and Hezbollah continued throughout Israel’s war in Gaza.