Israel strikes Iran missile sites
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Israel repeatedly struck Iran’s largest enrichment site at Natanz and at its Isfahan nuclear complex. But the extent of the damage to the country’s nuclear program—or Iran’s ability to race secretly toward a nuclear weapon—isn’t clear.
Iran's nuclear program will be hard to dismantle, but Israel has increased its superiority in missile and air defence capabilities
The retaliatory strikes came on Saturday, a day after Israel killed top Iranian military leaders and scientists and destroyed an aboveground nuclear enrichment plant near Natanz.
Israel struck Iran's Isfahan nuclear facility, dismantling uranium conversion infrastructure as part of a wider campaign that targeted over 200 sites and eliminated nine scientists.
Israel unleashed airstrikes across Iran for a third day and threatened even greater force as some Iranian missiles evaded Israeli air defenses to strike buildings in the heart of the country.
Israel targeted Iran’s nuclear sites in an attack escalating the conflict between the two countries. An appeals court allows Trump’s authority over National Guard troops in L.A. to remain for now. And the sole survivor in an India plane crash that killed everyone else on board isn’t sure how he escaped,
The International Atomic Energy Agency decision comes as American and European officials say they believe that Israel is preparing to launch a military attack on Iran.