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Israel launches strikes on Iran, attacking nuclear sites and other targets

Israel launches strikes on Iran, attacking nuclear sites and other targets

Israel's military said it targeted Iranian nuclear facilities and research scientists in dozens of preemptive airstrikes early Friday morning local time — and said it would continue the attacks in the coming days.

In a video statement, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu described the strikes — dubbed "Operation Rising Lion" — as "a targeted military operation to roll back the Iranian threat to Israel's very survival."

Iranian state television said the head of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, Hossein Salami, was killed in the strikes.

Netanyahu said the strikes "will continue for as many days as it takes to remove this threat."

U.S. not involved in Israel's strikes, Rubio says

The United States was not part of the operation and was not involved in intelligence sharing, multiple U.S. sources told CBS News, and Secretary of State Marco Rubio confirmed this in a statement.

"Israel took unilateral action against Iran," he said. "We are not involved in strikes against Iran and our top priority is protecting American forces in the region. Israel advised us that they believe this action was necessary for its self-defense."

Rubio added, "Iran should not target U.S. interests or personnel."

President Trump is convening a National Security Council meeting in the Situation Room on Friday, the White House said.

The U.S. Embassy in Israel told government employees and their families to "shelter in place until further notice," amid the threat of a retaliatory strike by Iran.

IDF says it hit "dozens" of targets in "first stage"

Iranian state media reported loud explosions and some casualties in the capital city of Tehran. State television later reported another round of strikes in Natanz, a city south of Tehran that is home to one of the country's uranium enrichment facilities.

Map shows nuclear facilities in Iran
Nuclear facilities in Iran. Ufuk Celal Guzel/Anadolu via Getty Images

An Israel Defense Forces spokesperson said the military "launched a preemptive, precise, combined offensive based on high-quality intelligence to strike Iran's nuclear program, and in response to the Iranian regime's ongoing aggression against Israel."

The spokesperson said "dozens" of Israeli air force jets struck "dozens of military targets, including nuclear targets in different areas of Iran." The statement referred to it as "the first stage."

Strikes come amid U.S.-Iran nuclear talks

The strikes came as the Trump administration has been seeking to negotiate an agreement with Iran's government to limit the country's nuclear program. Mr. Trump has said Iran cannot be allowed to enrich uranium, but Iran is unwilling to accept those terms.

Steve Witkoff, the president's Mideast envoy, was planning to hold a sixth round of talks in Oman over the weekend, but it's not yet clear whether those meetings will take place.

Israel has long been skeptical of striking a deal with Iran, its top global foe, and has acknowledged carrying out various covert and overt actions over the years to set back Iran's nuclear ambitions.

Iran's nuclear program has existed for decades, though the country denies that it has any interest in building a nuclear weapon. International watchdogs say Iran has increased its stockpiles of highly enriched uranium in recent years, after Mr. Trump withdrew from a 2015 Obama-era nuclear agreement that he viewed as weak.

In a statement announcing the strikes, the IDF said Iran "is closer than ever to obtaining a nuclear weapon" and "has proclaimed that its objective is to destroy the State of Israel." Israel also cited Iran's support for militant groups in the region, including the terrorist group Hamas, and Iran's ballistic missile attacks on Israel last year.

CBS News reported Wednesday that Israel was ready to launch an operation on Iran. The U.S. anticipated Iranian retaliation on American sites in Iraq — leading the Trump administration to advise non-emergency U.S. government officials and military families to leave the entire region.

When asked about those precautionary measures for U.S. nationals in the Mideast, President Trump said only that the region "could be a dangerous place, and we'll see what happens."

If the U.S remains uninvolved in the strikes, it means Israel's operation will not include B-2 bombers, which carry heavy bombs that can penetrate Iran's deep underground fortified uranium enrichment facilities. As a result, a lack of U.S. participation could limit Israel's ability to fully eliminate Iran's nuclear program.

Iran Mideast Wars
Residents watch a damaged apartment in Tehran early Friday. Vahid Salemi / AP
Margaret Brennan

Margaret Brennan is moderator of "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan" on CBS. Based in Washington, D.C., Brennan is also the Network's chief foreign affairs correspondent and a contributing correspondent to 60 Minutes. Additionally, she appears regularly on the "CBS Evening News," leading coverage from Washington when news breaks on the political and foreign affairs fronts.

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