Iran has launched hundreds of aerial drones and missiles at Israel, marking a widely anticipated reprisal attack.
It is the first such direct clash between the two enemies, who have been engaged in a years-long shadow war, with Iran using proxy forces.
The Israeli military said Israel and other countries had intercepted more than 300 cruise missiles and drones, mostly outside Israeli airspace. Israel said very little damage had been done but warned people to remain alert.
United States (US) president Joe Biden said, “we helped Israel take down nearly all” missiles and drones, as he expressed strong condemnation for the attack.
“Iran and its proxies operating out of Yemen, Syria, and Iraq launched an unprecedented air attack against military facilities in Israel,” he said.
Iran’s Islamic Revolution Guard Corps (IRGC) said the attack was aimed at “specific targets”.
Iran had vowed to retaliate for a strike on its consulate in Syria on 1 April which killed seven IRGC officers, including a top commander. It accused
Israel of carrying out that attack, but Israel neither confirmed nor denied it.
Following the attack, Israel’s prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed “together we will win” but it is unclear what Israel’s response will be.
President Biden said he had reaffirmed “America’s ironclad commitment to the security of Israel”.
Israel Defence Forces (IDF) spokesman rear admiral Daniel Hagari said some Iranian missiles had hit inside Israel, causing minor damage to a military base but no casualties.
Israel’s ambulance service said a seven-year-old Bedouin girl had been injured by shrapnel from falling debris in the southern Arad region.
Hagari said the wide scale attack was a “major escalation” and said Israel and allies had operated at full force to defend Israel.
In a separate briefing, he said Iran had fired more than 300 projectiles at Israel overnight, 99% of which were shot down. He added that some of the launches came from Iraq and Yemen.
Israel’s defence minister Yoav Gallant said “very little damage was caused” but warned the “campaign is not over yet” and said Israel must “remain alert”.
The UK Ministry of Defence said Royal Air Force jets had been deployed in Iraq and Syria to intercept “any airborne attacks within range of our existing missions”.
Sirens sounded across Israel and loud explosions were heard over Jerusalem, with air defence systems shooting down objects over the city.
Iran’s IRGC – the most powerful branch of its armed forces – said it had launched the attack “in retaliation against the Zionist regime’s [Israel] repeated crimes, including the attack on the Iranian embassy’s consulate in Damascus”.
President Biden cut short a trip to Delaware to return to the White House as tensions mounted on Saturday.
After speaking to Netanyahu later he said he would convene “my fellow G7 leaders to co-ordinate a united diplomatic response to Iran’s brazen attack”
UK prime minister Rishi Sunak condemned Iran’s “reckless” attack, vowing that the United Kingdom would “continue to stand up for Israel’s security and that of all our regional partners”.
UN secretary general António Guterres issued a statement saying he “strongly condemn[ed] the serious escalation represented by the large-scale attack launched on Israel” by Iran.
He said he was calling for “an immediate cessation of these hostilities” and for all sides to exercise maximum restraint.
“Neither the region nor the world can afford another war,” he warned.
The UN Security Council will convene later for an emergency meeting over Iran’s attack on Israel, its president Vanessa Frazier said.
Earlier this week, Israel’s defence and foreign ministers warned that if Iran attacked Israel, Israel would strike back inside Iran.
Iranian armed forces chief of staff major general Mohammad Bagheri told state television that Iran’s response would be “much larger than tonight’s military action if Israel retaliates against Iran”, Reuters reported.
He added that the US had been warned not to back an Israeli response. – BBC
Additional reporting by Laurence Peter, Emily Atkinson and Doug Faulkner
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