Footage showed babies being evacuated from a hospital in Bushehr, Iran after the facility was damaged amid US-Israeli strikes. Staff and Iranian Red Crescent workers could be seen wheeling the infants needing specialised care from the neonatal unit to waiting ambulances
Footage showed babies being evacuated from a hospital in Bushehr, Iran damaged by US-Israeli strikes.
www.aljazeera.com
The IDF on Tuesday targeted a building in which the 88-member
Assembly of Experts was reportedly meeting to choose Iran’s next supreme leader, Israeli sources told
The Jerusalem Post.
Iranian news agencies said the structure in Qom was “flattened.” Tasnim, affiliated with the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), confirmed that the Assembly’s compound in Qom had been struck, and that its building in Tehran, located at the former parliament site, was also hit overnight. A Telegram channel, Zed TV, claimed the strike targeted a formal session convened to select the Islamic Republic’s next leader, alleging members were killed or wounded.
If accurate, the strikes were aimed at the most sensitive institutional body of the Islamic Republic.
Targeting the Assembly is a strike that disrupts the succession process, and, more symbolically, it is a psychological strike at everything the Islamic Republic stands for.
www.jpost.com
Before a single bomb fell, the public mood was clear.
Seventy-six percent of Americans say Iran cannot be allowed to obtain a nuclear weapon. That’s not a partisan talking point. It’s a red line. And notably, that number is identical to the one in American Pulse research and the Harvard-Harris poll in February.
Seventy-one percent think Iran would use a nuclear weapon if it acquired one.
Those two numbers matter more than any snap poll taken in the fog of breaking news. They define the terrain on which this debate sits
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