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Israel hits Iran with new strikes despite Trump admonition


Mon 08 Jun 2026 | 08:23 AM
File Photo
File Photo
Basant Ahmed

Israel said it struck military targets in western and central Iran on Monday, even after U.S. President Donald Trump reportedly told Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to refrain ​from further attacks, Reuters reported.

Hours earlier, Trump said new strikes by Israel and Iran would not affect his administration's peace talks with Tehran, adding that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu "doesn’t call the shots."

Trump has leaned ‌on Israel to stop its attacks in Lebanon to allow room for a deal to end the wider war with Iran, including rebuking Netanyahu with obscenities in a phone call last week.

However, earlier on Sunday Israel launched strikes in the Beirut area for the first time since the U.S. announced a truce plan for Lebanon last week.

Iran fired a salvo of missiles at Israeli targets in retaliation, putting U.S.-Iran peace talks at risk. But Trump insisted that an agreement to end the wider war remained well within reach.

It’s not going to have any impact on ​the deal," Trump told the Financial Times. "I call the shots. I call all the shots. He (Netanyahu) doesn’t call the shots."

A few hours later, Israel's defence forces said they had struck Iranian military targets. Iran's Revolutionary Guards ​said Israel used air-launched ballistic missiles in its attacks.

"Everyone has had enough of this maniacal Iranian regime," Israel's ambassador to the United States, Yechiel Leiter, said on X, adding that ⁠Iran had fired 11 ballistic missiles at Israel.

"No self-respecting country in the world would tolerate such an attack, and neither will Israel," he said, adding that Israel was targeting Iran's surface-to-surface missile launch sites, and infrastructure facilities unrelated to ​the energy sector.

The latest hostilities drove oil prices up more than 3% in early trading on Monday, with benchmark Brent futures back above $96 a barrel.

Iran's Revolutionary Guards said they had targeted Ramat David air base, near Nazareth. The Israeli military said ​it identified missiles launched from Iran and its defence systems had intercepted them.

As air raid sirens sounded in Tel Aviv, according to a Reuters witness, the Israeli military added it had identified the launch of a missile from Yemen toward its territory with aerial defence systems activated to intercept the threat.

The attack is also the first from Yemen on Israel since the April 8 truce.