Iran launched new missile attacks on Israel overnight, targeting the Tel Aviv area, after confirming the deaths of Ali Larijani and Gholamrez Soleimani. Iran’s authorities announced the killings on Tuesday. Iran’s foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, told Al Jazeera the deaths would not destabilize Iran’s leadership, saying Iran has “a strong political structure with established political, economic and social institutions.”
Israel also struck central Beirut overnight, killing 10 people. Israel’s military said it was targeting Hezbollah militants and installations.
Health authorities report about 1,300 killed in Iran, 922 in Lebanon and 16 in Israel since the war began on Feb. 28. U.S. Central Command says 13 U.S. service members have been killed and roughly 200 troops wounded.
Iran hits back after the killing of two leaders in Tehran
Iran’s Revolutionary Guard said it targeted the Tel Aviv area Wednesday by firing multiple-warhead missiles, also known as cluster munitions. A man and woman were killed in their apartment in Ramat Gan, a suburb of Tel Aviv. The Iranian missile attack also caused damage in other parts of central Israel, including a train station in Tel Aviv.
Iran’s missile attacks across the region have been the most lethal in Israel, where at least 16 people have been killed since the war started. Iran said the strikes were “in revenge” for Israel’s killing of two top Iranian leaders, Ali Larijani and Gholamrez Soleimani, which were the highest-profile killings in Iran since Israel killed Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and other top leadership on the first day of the war.
Larijani had a long career in Iran’s political upper echelons, serving as parliament speaker and a top adviser to the assassinated supreme leader. Many believed that after the ayatollah was killed, Larijani would succeed him. He was also involved in talks with the Trump administration before the war.
“He seemed to be the one person who the international community could talk to and now with him having apparently been killed it’s difficult to see how one speaks to in the IRGC,” said Zeid Ra’ad Al-Hussein, a former Jordanian ambassador to the U.S. and president of the International Peace Institute. IRGC are the initials for Iran’s powerful paramilitary Revolutionary Guard.
Soleimani led the Basij forces for seven years. They’re a volunteer paramilitary militia, a branch of the Revolutionary Guard, which Israel says was responsible for violently suppressing street protests against the Iranian government earlier this year.
— Daniel Estrin
Iran’s foreign minister says killings won’t destabilize Iran’s political system
In the wake of the killings, Iranian foreign minister Abbas Araghchi said Iran’s government “does not rely on a single individual.” “The presence or absence of a single individual does not affect this structure,” Araghchi told Al Jazeera in an interview aired Wednesday. He added that while individuals are influential, “what matters is that the political system in Iran is a very solid structure.”
— Rebecca Rosman
NPR speaks to Iranians fleeing into Iraq amid fear and a tightening crackdown
Families fleeing Iran through the Haji Omeran border crossing into Iraq told NPR about widespread fear of speaking openly, even outside the country. One woman in her 60s, who asked not to be named for fear of reprisal, broke down in tears and said she wished recent airstrikes on her border city had killed her, describing life as unbearable amid the war and a recent security crackdown.
Multiple people NPR spoke to described an internet blackout, more checkpoints and Iranian security forces searching through people’s phones. A 40-year-old man, who asked not to be identified, said he had recently seen security forces move into a mosque and a sports stadium—signs, he said, of heightened security measures.
NPR cannot independently verify these accounts, but they echo numerous testimonies shared with NPR reporters and those documented by human rights groups with sources in Iran.
— Arezou Rezvani
Israel strikes central Beirut and issues new warning for southern Lebanon
Israel struck central Beirut Wednesday, saying it was targeting Hezbollah militants and installations as its offensive in Lebanon intensified. Lebanon’s health ministry said 10 people were killed in two attacks that morning.
The Israeli military destroyed a building in the Bachoura neighborhood, which it had previously targeted. Israel issued an evacuation order for the building on social media at about 4 a.m. local time, and the strikes followed at around 5:30 a.m. Bachoura is a residential and commercial district near the Lebanese prime minister’s office and several foreign embassies in Beirut.
The strikes came as Israel issued new evacuation orders for parts of southern Lebanon. Lebanon’s health ministry also condemned Israeli strikes that it said damaged three public hospitals in Nabatieh, a major city in the country’s south.
— Hadeel Al-Shalchi
Daniel Estrin contributed to this report from Tel Aviv; Hadeel Al-Shalchi from Beirut; Arezou Rezvani from Irbil in Iraq’s Kurdish region; and Rebecca Rosman from Paris.