The Japan Times - Iran missile hits Israeli town home to nuclear site after Natanz strike

EUR -
AED 4.310347
AFN 73.9416
ALL 95.378956
AMD 432.006525
ANG 2.100496
AOA 1077.439046
ARS 1625.549388
AUD 1.621286
AWG 2.11556
AZN 1.990162
BAM 1.955369
BBD 2.364178
BDT 144.288165
BGN 1.955935
BHD 0.443002
BIF 3494.129079
BMD 1.173681
BND 1.49427
BOB 8.111245
BRL 5.764181
BSD 1.173841
BTN 112.192247
BWP 15.844504
BYN 3.281876
BYR 23004.148522
BZD 2.360779
CAD 1.607503
CDF 2611.439995
CHF 0.915935
CLF 0.027241
CLP 1072.110876
CNY 7.971761
CNH 7.969342
COP 4445.915543
CRC 535.681811
CUC 1.173681
CUP 31.102548
CVE 110.241147
CZK 24.338858
DJF 209.023882
DKK 7.47136
DOP 69.274716
DZD 155.389871
EGP 62.087964
ERN 17.605216
ETB 183.281862
FJD 2.565491
FKP 0.859811
GBP 0.867004
GEL 3.133946
GGP 0.859811
GHS 13.252133
GIP 0.859811
GMD 86.267542
GNF 10299.727538
GTQ 8.956062
GYD 245.576864
HKD 9.188338
HNL 31.213113
HRK 7.533848
HTG 153.356165
HUF 357.714274
IDR 20605.731302
ILS 3.420048
IMP 0.859811
INR 112.251445
IQD 1537.647643
IRR 1539869.533619
ISK 143.599265
JEP 0.859811
JMD 185.479077
JOD 0.83217
JPY 185.034927
KES 151.59245
KGS 102.638314
KHR 4708.961047
KMF 492.945358
KPW 1056.334357
KRW 1753.356269
KWD 0.361623
KYD 0.978176
KZT 544.445239
LAK 25732.103402
LBP 105114.312701
LKR 379.143118
LRD 214.812605
LSL 19.402554
LTL 3.465575
LVL 0.709948
LYD 7.426361
MAD 10.712782
MDL 20.089396
MGA 4904.917812
MKD 61.641379
MMK 2463.502229
MNT 4202.776117
MOP 9.465212
MRU 46.823669
MUR 54.805289
MVR 18.073251
MWK 2035.55089
MXN 20.219566
MYR 4.617232
MZN 75.009859
NAD 19.402554
NGN 1608.811319
NIO 43.200469
NOK 10.782643
NPR 179.507395
NZD 1.971268
OMR 0.451287
PAB 1.173846
PEN 4.023012
PGK 5.112872
PHP 72.210145
PKR 326.995754
PLN 4.25301
PYG 7165.419071
QAR 4.278774
RON 5.203278
RSD 117.378615
RUB 86.652585
RWF 1716.821212
SAR 4.405144
SBD 9.423496
SCR 16.562616
SDG 704.797057
SEK 10.907482
SGD 1.492799
SHP 0.876271
SLE 28.901914
SLL 24611.508992
SOS 670.851988
SRD 43.724896
STD 24292.828021
STN 24.494596
SVC 10.270646
SYP 129.726289
SZL 19.395721
THB 37.981501
TJS 10.975179
TMT 4.107884
TND 3.413761
TOP 2.825943
TRY 53.295921
TTD 7.966175
TWD 36.989266
TZS 3051.746463
UAH 51.591117
UGX 4412.045352
USD 1.173681
UYU 46.6799
UZS 14239.858215
VES 591.868057
VND 30913.585098
VUV 138.87399
WST 3.179848
XAF 655.812306
XAG 0.013442
XAU 0.000248
XCD 3.171932
XCG 2.115515
XDR 0.81562
XOF 655.812306
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.099047
ZAR 19.379706
ZMK 10564.54125
ZMW 22.097125
ZWL 377.924818
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    61

    0%

  • CMSD

    -0.0100

    23.6

    -0.04%

  • RYCEF

    -0.3900

    16.2

    -2.41%

  • NGG

    0.0800

    87.24

    +0.09%

  • BCE

    0.1900

    24.47

    +0.78%

  • RIO

    1.6000

    109.5

    +1.46%

  • BTI

    3.2000

    63.64

    +5.03%

  • RELX

    -0.5000

    32.77

    -1.53%

  • GSK

    1.0900

    50.9

    +2.14%

  • CMSC

    -0.0100

    23.11

    -0.04%

  • BCC

    -1.2700

    67.93

    -1.87%

  • JRI

    0.0100

    13.14

    +0.08%

  • AZN

    2.6800

    184.54

    +1.45%

  • VOD

    -1.2250

    15.095

    -8.12%

  • BP

    0.1800

    44.4

    +0.41%

Iran missile hits Israeli town home to nuclear site after Natanz strike
Iran missile hits Israeli town home to nuclear site after Natanz strike / Photo: STR - AFP

Iran missile hits Israeli town home to nuclear site after Natanz strike

An Iranian missile on Saturday hit the Israeli town of Dimona, home to a nuclear facility, in what the Islamic republic said was retaliation for strikes on its own nuclear site at Natanz.

Text size:

Dimona hosts a facility just outside the main town widely believed to possess the Middle East's sole nuclear arsenal, although Israel has never admitted to possessing nuclear weapons.

Iran's atomic energy organisation earlier accused the US and Israel of hitting the Natanz enrichment complex, but noted there was "no leakage of radioactive materials reported".

The Israeli army told AFP there had been a "direct missile hit on a building" in Dimona, with Magen David Adom first responders saying their teams treated 33 people injured at multiple sites, including a 10-year-old boy in serious condition with shrapnel wounds.

"There was extensive damage and chaos at the scene," paramedic Karmel Cohen said.

The Israeli military said that "interception attempts were carried out" after the missiles were detected.

Images shared by Israeli media showed an object hurtling out of the sky at high speed before crashing into the town.

Iranian state TV said the attack was a "response" to the earlier strike on Natanz.

Following that attack, UN nuclear watchdog chief, Rafael Grossi, had repeated a "call for military restraint to avoid any risk of a nuclear accident".

The Natanz facility hosts underground centrifuges to enrich uranium for Iran's disputed nuclear programme and was already damaged in last year's June war.

Asked about Natanz, the Israeli military said it was "not aware of a strike".

The Israeli military also said Saturday that it had struck a facility embedded within a Tehran university "utilised by the Iranian terror regime's military industries and ballistic missiles array to develop nuclear weapon components and weapons".

- Hormuz base -

Three weeks of heavy US-Israeli bombardment appear to have done little to blunt Iran's ability to retaliate with missile and drone attacks across the region.

The United Arab Emirates said Saturday it faced aerial attacks after Iran warned it against allowing attacks from its territory on disputed islands near the strategic Strait of Hormuz.

Iran has choked off the vital waterway, which is used for a fifth of global crude trade during peacetime.

Admiral Brad Cooper, head of US Central Command, said US warplanes had dropped 5,000-pound bombs on an underground facility on Iran's coast that was storing anti-ship cruise missiles, mobile launchers and other equipment, leaving Iran's ability to threaten the waterway "degraded".

"We not only took out the facility, but also destroyed intelligence support sites and missile radar relays that were used to monitor ship movements," Cooper said in a video statement, revealing details of a strike first announced on Tuesday.

A statement from the leaders of mainly European countries, including the UK, France, Italy and Germany, but also South Korea, Australia, the UAE and Bahrain, meanwhile condemned the "de facto closure of the Strait of Hormuz by Iranian forces".

"We express our readiness to contribute to appropriate efforts to ensure safe passage through the Strait," they said.

US President Donald Trump has slammed NATO allies as "cowards" and urged them to secure the strait.

Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said Tehran had only imposed restrictions on vessels from countries involved in attacks against Iran, and would offer assistance to others that stayed out of the conflict.

The standoff in the strait has sent crude oil prices soaring, with a barrel of North Sea Brent crude up more than 50 percent over the past month and now comfortably more than $105.

- Remarkable endurance? -

Analysts say Iran's Islamic government has survived the loss of its top leaders and that its strike capacity is proving more durable than expected.

"They're showing a lot of resilience that we didn't perhaps expect, that the US didn't expect, when it took this on," Neil Quilliam of Chatham House told the London-based think tank's podcast, adding the Islamic republic had deep roots.

Tehran, meanwhile, marked the end of Ramadan as the war was entering its fourth week.

Iran's supreme leader traditionally leads Eid al-Fitr prayers, but Mojtaba Khamenei, who came to power earlier this month after his father Ali Khamenei was killed, has remained out of the public eye.

Instead, the head of the judiciary, Gholam Hossein Mohseni Ejei, attended prayers at central Tehran's overflowing Imam Khomeini grand mosque.

"The atmosphere of the New Year was spreading through the city," said Farid, an advertising executive reached by AFP through an online message.

But "the thought that some people could be dying right at the New Year dinner table was painful", he added.

Shiva, a 31-year-old painter, told AFP that the "only common feeling these days is uncertainty".

"The only night we felt genuinely happy was the night Ali Khamenei was reportedly killed," she said.

- Diego Garcia -

Iran launched what a UK official told AFP was an "unsuccessful" ballistic-missile attack on the US-UK military base on Diego Garcia, an island in the Indian Ocean around 4,000 kilometres (2,500 miles) from Iran.

If the salvo had reached its target it would have been the longest-range Iranian strike yet. Before the war, according to the US Congressional Research Service, Washington was aware of Iranian missiles that could reach 3,000 kilometres.

Israel's military chief Eyal Zamir said Iran had used a "two-stage intercontinental ballistic missile with a range of 4,000 kilometers".

"These missiles are not intended to strike Israel," he added in a televised statement. "Their range reaches European capitals."

The attack "shows that they can still move these mobile launchers around, undetected, spin up and fire without being struck", former UK Royal Navy commander and defence expert Tom Sharpe told AFP.

On Friday, the UK government said it would allow Washington to use its bases in Diego Garcia and Fairford in England to launch strikes on Iranian sites targeting the Strait of Hormuz.

The UK official confirmed that the attempted missile strike took place before this announcement.

burs-dc/smw/rh

M.Sugiyama--JT