Trump Speaks After U.S. Bombs Key Iran Nuclear Sites
The U.S. has entered Israelās war against Iran, attacking three nuclear sites. In an address from the White House, President Trump said the objective of the attacks āwas the destruction of Iranās nuclear enrichment capacityā and warned of more strikes āif peace does not come quickly.ā
Pentagon officials said on Sunday that three of Iranās nuclear sites sustained āsevere damageā from the U.S. strikes overnight that have prompted a furious response from Tehran and spurred fears ofĀ more dangerous escalationsĀ across the Middle East.
President Trump said the U.S. military joined Israelās war against Iran to destroy Iranās nuclear enrichment capacity and claimed success,Ā sayingĀ that three nuclear facilities had been ācompletely and totally obliterated.ā The full extent of the damage to the sites was not immediately clear, and top Pentagon officials later said that it was too soon to say whether Iran still retains some nuclear ability.
āIran, the bully of the Middle East, must now make peace,ā Mr. Trump saidĀ in a brief, televised address from the White House. āIf they do not, future attacks will be far greater and a lot easier.ā
Iranian officials said they were working to assess the scale of the damage to facilities at Fordo, Natanz and Isfahan from the strikes that hit early Sunday local time. In a news conference on Sunday morning, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Dan Caine, said that the initial battle damage assessment indicated that all three sites had sustained āsevere damage and destructionā and that a final assessment would take time. A senior U.S. officialĀ acknowledgedĀ that the attack on the Fordo site did not destroy the heavily fortified facility, but severely damaged it.
Mr. Trumpās decision to attack Iran was likely toĀ dim hopes for a negotiated solutionĀ to end the fighting, just days after the president had indicated he would wait for as long as two weeks to give diplomacy a chance. After the U.S. strikes, Iranās foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, lashed out at the United States for undercuttingĀ recent diplomatic effortsĀ ā and rejected calls by European leaders to return to the negotiating table.
He told a news conference in Istanbul that Iran āreserves all options to defend its security interests and people,ā but declined to be more specific ā including about whether Iran would retaliate against U.S. military bases in the Middle East.
āWe have to respond based on our legitimate right of self-defense,āĀ he told reporters, adding that āthere are a variety of options available to us.ā
The U.S. strikesĀ ushered in a period of high alertĀ in the region, whereĀ more than 40,000 American troopsĀ are on bases and warships, as the Pentagon braced for retaliation. While U.S. officials say that Iran hasĀ depleted its stockpile of medium-rangeĀ missiles, the country still has an ample supply of other weapons, including rockets and drones.
Hours after the American attack, which included cruise missiles and more than a dozen 30,000-pound bombs, IranĀ launched a new round of missilesĀ toward Israel. The Israeli authorities said that at least 16 people were wounded in the barrage, one of many exchanges of fire between the two sides since Israelās military launched a surprise assault on Iran on June 13.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said early Sunday that the U.S. strikes had been carried out āin full coordinationā between the American and Israeli militaries.