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Israel Iran conflict

Dalvinder Singh Grewal

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Historian
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Jan 3, 2010
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Israel and Iran trade strikes as hostilities extend into fifth day​

Concerns grow that the conflict could spark a wider regional war. Smoke billows up from the site of an Iranian rocket strike in Herzliya, Israel [Menahem Kahana/AFP]
Published On 17 Jun 202517 Jun 2025 . Israel has carried out strikes across Iran while Tehran returned fire with missiles as the foes traded attacks for a fifth straight day.
The ongoing violence on Tuesday came after United States President Donald Trump struck an ominous note, calling for the immediate evacuation of Tehran. Concerns that the US could spark a wider regional war should it enter direct conflict with Iran continue to build.
The Israeli military reported early on Tuesday that it carried out “several extensive strikes” on what it said were missile sites and other military targets in western Iran, striking dozens of missile and drone facilities.
Iranian media reported that loud explosions were heard in the northwestern city of Tabriz, home to an air force base that Israel has repeatedly targeted since it launched a surprise assault on Iran’s military and nuclear facilities on Friday. Three people were killed and four injured in strikes on the central city of Kashan, Iran’s state-run Nour News reported. A residential building was struck in Tehran, and three people were rescued from the rubble, the reports added.
Police officers stand at a site, as smoke rises following a missile attack from Iran, in Herzliya, Israel, June 17, 2025
Smoke rises after a missile attack from Iran in Herzliya, Israel [Ronen Zvulun/Reuters]
Israel’s military said Iran had also fired more missiles, reporting that its forces were working to intercept them.
Explosions were heard over Tel Aviv and Jerusalem among other areas. Images showed plumes of dark smoke rising from the site of a strike in Herzliya as emergency services were deployed at the scene. Israel’s national emergency service said 10 people were injured while running to shelters after air raid sirens sounded in Tel Aviv.
Amid the strikes, the Israeli military claimed that it had assassinated another senior Iranian military official.
General Ali Shadmani was killed in a strike by the Israeli air force in central Tehran through the use of precise intelligence, the military said, describing him as Iran’s wartime chief of staff, “senior-most military official” and the closest military adviser to Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.
Shadmani was reportedly appointed to his new post after Israel assassinated the former commander of the Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters, Gholam Ali Rashid, on Friday. Iran did not immediately comment on the claim, which came days after Israel assassinated a number of Iran’s top generals as well as nuclear scientists.

The attacks unfolded in the face of growing calls internationally for the bitter foes to de-escalate.​

However, Trump, who left the Group of Seven summit in Canada on Monday, one day early, due to the situation in the Middle East, appears to be increasingly backing Israel, issuing ominous messages.
In a post on social media overnight, he warned that “everyone should evacuate Tehran immediately,” lamenting the “waste of human life” in the conflict and reiterating that Iran could not be allowed to develop a nuclear weapon.
He denied his exit from the G7 was to arrange a ceasefire.
“Publicity seeking President Emmanuel Macron, of France, mistakenly said that I left the G7 Summit, in Canada, to go back to D.C. to work on a ‘cease fire’ between Israel and Iran,” he wrote.
“Wrong! He has no idea why I am now on my way to Washington, but it certainly has nothing to do with a Cease Fire. Much bigger than that.”
Macron had said, in light of Trump’s early departure from the summit, that talks were under way and stated that an offer for a ceasefire had been made, but he did not specify by whom.
In a statement agreed at the summit before Trump’s departure, G7 leaders described Iran as “the principal source of regional instability and terror”, adding that Israel “has a right to defend itself”.
Israel said its attacks are necessary to prevent its longtime adversary from getting any closer to building a nuclear weapon. Iran has retaliated by launching hundreds of missiles and drones at Israel.
 

Dalvinder Singh Grewal

Writer
Historian
SPNer
Jan 3, 2010
1,300
424
80

Israel strikes Iran: Is the world close to a nuclear radiation incident?​

Israel’s attacks on Iran’s atomic facilities have increased fears of nuclear and chemical contamination, experts say, amid already heightened risks because of India-Pakistan tensions and the Russia-Ukraine war.

A satellite image shows the Natanz nuclear facility in Iran on January 24, 2025 [Handout/Maxar Technologies via Reuters] Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s decision to launch strikes against Iran’s nuclear facilities has sparked concerns among sections of the global community, atomic energy regulators and experts on the risks of nuclear contamination.
On Monday, Rafael Grossi, the head of the United Nations nuclear watchdog, said there was a possibility of both radiological and chemical contamination from the damaged Natanz installation, Iran’s major nuclear hub.
Meanwhile, regional and global leaders warned that the Israeli strikes, which began on Friday, could further destabilise the region and increase the chances of a nuclear confrontation.
Kaja Kallas, the European Union’s foreign policy chief, on Saturday expressed “deepest concern” at the escalation. The EU opposes Iran’s possession of nuclear weapons but believes “diplomacy, not military action” is the way to achieve that, she said.
Netanyahu, who has been calling for attacks on Iran’s nuclear sites for years, launched the unprecedented strikes as nuclear talks were being conducted between Washington and Tehran.
United States President Donald Trump has said his country was not involved in the attacks but has promised that he won’t allow Tehran to acquire nuclear weapons. Iran has insisted its nuclear programme is for civilian purposes.
So do Israel’s attacks point to a growing risk of nuclear radiation after two nuclear-armed neighbours – India and Pakistan – also came to blows in May and with Russia and Ukraine tussling for control over the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant, Europe’s largest?
Addressing an urgent session of the Board of Governors of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in Vienna on Monday, Grossi said radiation levels appear normal outside both the Natanz nuclear installation and another facility in Isfahan also targeted in Israeli strikes.
However, the IAEA director general warned that military escalation “increases the chance of a radiological release”. Grossi had on Friday told the UN Security Council that Israel’s strike on Natanz destroyed the above-ground part of the facility. While the main centrifuge facility underground was not hit, it lost power because of the attack.
That in turn, he warned, might have damaged the underground centrifuges that enrich uranium. Spinning centrifuges contain a gas called uranium hexafluoride, and it is this gas that poses the greatest risk of chemical contamination at Natanz at the moment, Grossi said. The gas is made by combining uranium and fluorine and is highly volatile and corrosive. It can burn skin and can be deadly if inhaled. It is unclear whether any of this gas has escaped from the centrifuges because of the power loss.“Amid these challenging and complex circumstances, it is crucial that the IAEA receives timely and regular technical information about the facilities and their respective sites,” Grossi said. In the absence of that information, he said, the IAEA “cannot accurately assess the radiological conditions and potential impacts on the population and the environment and cannot provide the necessary assistance.”
Al Jazeera cannot find a record of an operational nuclear installation coming under attack, but power plants have often been attacked while under construction – mostly in the Middle East.
A week into the Iran-Iraq War in 1980, Iran’s Operation Scorch Sword damaged Iraq’s unfinished Osirak nuclear reactor in the world’s first attack on a nuclear power plant.
Israel conducted another air attack the following year, destroying the French-built reactor in Operation Opera. A decade later, US Operation Desert Storm attacked the Tuwaitha Nuclear Research Centre, of which Osirak was a part.
Iraq also attacked Iran’s incomplete nuclear reactor at Bushehr during the Iran-Iraq War, damaging it. The Soviet Union eventually completed the reactor in the early 2000s, and it went into operation in 2009.
Israel recently revealed that in 2007, it had bombed a Syrian reactor, apparently only just before it became operational, believing it to be part of a plan by President Bashar al-Assad’s regime to acquire nuclear weapons. Operation Outside the Box bombed the North Korean-built plutonium reactor at Deir Az Zor, destroying it.
Other reactors have come under attack for political rather than security reasons.
Spain’s Basque separatist group ETA bombed a nuclear power station under construction in Lemoiz on Spain’s northern coast. ETA detonated bombs inside the facility in 1978 and 1979, killing three workers. Twice it assassinated the project’s chief engineer. Spain eventually abandoned the plant in 1983 after the Francisco Franco dictatorship’s nuclear programme was cancelled.
Antinuclear activists caused damage to unfinished power plants in 1982. In France, they fired five rocket-propelled grenades into the Creys-Malville plant near Lyon, creating a hole in its outer concrete wall.
In December of that year, the African National Congress set off a series of four staggered bombs at the Koeberg Nuclear Power Station, which South Africa’s apartheid government was building near Cape Town. The first of two reactors at the plant was to have started operating that month. There were no injuries or radiation leakage.

Have there been other times the world’s been close to a nuclear incident?​

In an interview with Al Jazeera, Dan Smith, the head of the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, said the world has rarely been in much danger from accidental nuclear weapons use.
Previously, risks have primarily arisen from the threat of miscalculations.
“The last time that there was open information to show we were so close to disaster is the Petrov incident in September 1983 – a false alarm in the Soviet early warning system that he [an engineer] refused to report,” Smith said.
Stanislav Petrov, who worked at Moscow’s early warning command centre, received satellite information that a US ballistic missile had been launched against Russia, followed by four more.
It was a time of great tension between the superpowers as the US objected to the deployment of Russian SS20 missiles with multiple warheads and Moscow objected to forward-deployed Pershing II nuclear missiles being stationed in Western Europe.
Petrov may have averted a nuclear war by waiting for corroborating evidence before alerting his superiors. No missiles hit Russian soil, and the Soviet satellite information turned out to have been faulty.
More recently, during the four-day military conflict between India and Pakistan, India fired its homegrown BrahMos missiles at its neighbour. While the missiles carried conventional payloads in this case, some experts believe they could be modified to carry nuclear warheads too.
And as Khurram Dastgir Khan, former Pakistan defence minister, told Al Jazeera in May: “Once the missile is in the air, you cannot know what payload it carries until it hits the target.”
Such scenarios increase the risk of a nuclear war in instances in which both sides – such as in the case of Russia and NATO in Europe – are nuclear armed, Smith said.
He said that more than any planned nuclear attack, he worries about “somebody somewhere, in a chain of command under extreme pressure of time, with hostility in the atmosphere, with violent rhetoric in the background,” reacting mistakenly.
“Somebody sees something and they say, ‘That’s it. This is the big one. This is the attack coming. It’s 75 missiles and their warheads, just like we predicted in our exercise six months ago, and we have to destroy the remainder of their force so that they cannot escalate.’”

Has the Russia-Ukraine war added to the risks too?​

A more recent nuclear contamination scare came early in Russia’s invasion of Ukraine when it seized the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant (ZNPP) on March 4, 2022. The ZNPP has six reactors, and it stands on the left bank of the Dnipro River, which forms part of the front line between Ukrainian and Russian forces.
Ukraine said Russia had placed 500 soldiers with military equipment, tanks and ammunition in the engine room of the first reactor unit, impeding access for firefighting equipment.
This Russian garrison also fired into Nikopol, across the Dnipro, apparently to provoke retaliatory fire.
On August 1, 2022, then-US Secretary of State Antony Blinken told the UN General Assembly: “Russia is now using the plant as a military base to fire at Ukrainians, knowing that they can’t and won’t shoot back because they might accidentally strike a nuclear – a reactor or highly radioactive waste in storage. That brings the notion of having a human shield to an entirely different and horrific level.”
Two days later, Ukraine’s state nuclear power agency, Energoatom, said Russian forces fired rockets and artillery into the power plant, damaging its nitrogen-oxygen station. “There are risks of hydrogen leakage and sputtering of radioactive substances. Fire danger is high,” Energoatom said.
The IAEA eventually intervened to ensure all six reactors were powered down and hostilities around the plant ceased, but the plant still needs a steady supply of water and electricity to cool spent fuel rods and reactors.
 

Dalvinder Singh Grewal

Writer
Historian
SPNer
Jan 3, 2010
1,300
424
80

Iran has prepared missiles and other equipment to strike US bases in the Middle East should the United States join Israel's war against Tehran​

Iran has prepared missiles and other equipment to strike US bases in the Middle East should the United States join Israel's war4 against Tehran , The New York Times reported on Tuesday, citing officials who have reviewed intelligence reports. This comes after President Donald Trump called for Iran's ‘complete surrender’, citing the possibility of killing Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.
“We know exactly where the so-called “Supreme Leader” is hiding. He is an easy target, but is safe there - We are not going to take him out (kill!), at least not for now. But we don’t want missiles shot at civilians, or American soldiers. Our patience is wearing thin. Thank you for your attention to this matter!” Trump wrote on Truth Social on Tuesday.

While Washington is yet to confirm if it will join the war against Iran, with Israel, Tehran's alleged plans have been revealed. The New York Times reported that Iran is prepared to strike US bases in the Middle East. The United States has sent about three dozen refueling aircraft to Europe that could be used to assist fighter jets protecting American bases or to strike Iranian targets.
An official told NYT that should the US join Israel and strike the Iranian nuclear facility Frodo, the Houthi militia ‘will almost certainly resume striking ships in the Red Sea’. The US has, according to the report, placed all its troops at military bases on high alert. These include troops in the United Arab Emirates, Jordan and Saudi Arabia. The United States has more than 40,000 troops deployed in the Middle East.

“Our enemies should know that they cannot reach a solution with military attacks on us and will not be able to force their will on the Iranian people,” Iran’s foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, said in a statement on Monday.
 

Dalvinder Singh Grewal

Writer
Historian
SPNer
Jan 3, 2010
1,300
424
80
Iran-Israel conflict and Russia-Ukraine war are showing no signs of having peaceful conclusion. Given that both middle east nations have strong allies, fears of catastrophic consequence remain unabated. President Donald Trump has called for Tehran to surrender but Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has rejected the proposal and warned the US against joining Israeli strikes. Russia on Wednesday also asked the Washington not to get involved in the directly. The latest Israeli strikes hit a facility used to make uranium centrifuges and another that made missile components in Iran, the Israeli military said. In a first, Iran appears to have successfully downed an Israeli drone over the Isfahan area in the Islamic Republic on Tuesday, according to the state media, The Times of Israel reported. Tehran also launched a small barrage of missiles at Israel with no reports of casualties

Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei responded on Wednesday to U.S President Donald Trump's call for the country to surrender, warning that any U.S. strike will have "serious irreparable consequences". Iran’s supreme leader on Wednesday rejected U.S. calls for surrender
Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov warned on Wednesday that direct U.S. military assistance to Israel could radically destabilise the situation in the Middle East, where an air war between Iran and Israel has raged for six days. Ryabkov warned the U.S. against direct military assistance to Israel or even considering such "speculative options," according to Russia's Interfax news agency.
In separate comments, the head of Russia's SVR foreign intelligence service, Sergei Naryshkin, was quoted as saying that the situation between Iran and Israel was now critical.

Israel launched air strikes last Friday against Iran's nuclear sites, scientists and top military leaders in a surprise attack that Russia condemned as unprovoked and illegal. Iran has responded with missile and drone attacks on Israeli cities.
Russian President Vladimir Putin, who in January signed a strategic partnership treaty with Iran, has called for a cessation of hostilities between the two sides.

Turkey Backs Iran

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Wednesday Iran had the "legitimate" right to defend itself in the face of Israel's ongoing bombing campaign, now in its sixth day.

On Monday, Erdogan said he had ordered the defence industry to increase production of medium and long-range missiles to "increase its level of deterrence" in light of the air war between Israel and Iran
 

Dalvinder Singh Grewal

Writer
Historian
SPNer
Jan 3, 2010
1,300
424
80
Iran-Israel War on the path of World War after US Bombing

Col Dr Dalvinder Singh Grewal

Prof Emeritus Desh Bhagat University

The U.S. has directly entered the war against Iran, striking three nuclear facilities, President Donald Trump announced via social media. The attack came on the ninth day of the Israel-Iran war starting from 13 June 2025 in which Israeli forces have been attacking Iranian nuclear weapons facilities among other targets, including ballistic missile launchers, air defence systems, military leaders and nuclear scientists.

US and Israeli officials said that American stealth bombers and the 30,000-pound (13,500-kilogram) bunker buster bomb offered the best chance of destroying heavily fortified sites connected to the Iranian nuclear program buried deep underground.

Trump has vowed that he would not allow Iran to obtain a nuclear weapon, and he had initially hoped that the threat of force would bring the country’s leaders to give up their nuclear program peacefully.

There were also reports that Bandar Abbas, Iran’s main naval facility on the Persian Gulf and the epicentre for IRGC naval assets that would be used to close the strait, was struck.

After this announcement, the following questions emerge which are answered gradually.

1‘Wherefrom these aircrafts took off before striking? “What was the timings and process of striking?”

Two separate groups of B-2 Spirit stealth bombers headed westward across the Pacific Ocean. The destination was unclear and it is possible other B-2s were sent clandestinely to hit the targets. Other aircraft could also have been involved. However, B-2s carrying 30,000-pound GBU-57/B Massive Ordnance Penetrator (MOP) bunker buster bombs are widely seen as the only readily available conventional option for targeting the deeply-buried enrichment facility at Fordo, in particular, short of a ground raid. Fordo nuclear site of Iran is in the depth of a huge mountain.

It is not known if the B-2 group that appeared to be sent out over the Pacific could have made it to Iran on the timetable now established. It is very possible that this was a feint in order to provide cover for the real strike force. While the B-52s now located in Diego Garcia could drop GBU-57 MOPs, as they did in early testing, it is not a known operational capability for the type. Also using those assets would be much riskier than the B-2 due to their lack of stealth. Still, it may have been possible depending on the state of Iran’s air defences, especially in the east of country where Israeli operations have been far lower in volume, and what other assets would have assisted in the attacks. It seems most likely that another group of B-2s was sent east, using the already deployed tanker bridge, to clandestinely carry out the strikes. They could have also been moved in the days prior clandestinely to bases closer to Iran. Even the B-2 shelters in Diego Garcia could have hidden four B-2s. The UK is another established B-2 operating base, but they could have gone somewhere else, as well. The B-2 community has worked to hone its forward operations capabilities in recent years. The U.S. attack came a day after Trump mentioned that he was still deliberating what he would do, but that previous comments about giving Iran two weeks to end their nuclear ambitions were the maximum timeframe.

Were the air bases in Pakistan utilised for this operation. If so, then how? This is a question to be researched in depth.

3. “Was the damage to Iran nuclear sites surreal as claimed by Trump?” Trump announced on social media, “We have completed our very successful attack on the three Nuclear sites in Iran, including Fordow, Natanz, and Esfahan”. “All planes are now outside of Iran air space. A full payload of Bombs was dropped on the primary site, Fordow. All planes are safely on their way home. Congratulations to our great American Warriors. There is not another military in the World that could have done this. Now is the time for peace! Thank you for your attention to this matter.” Trump has retweeted the statement: Fordow Is Gone’. Donald Trump called the airstrikes a ‘Historic Moment’ for the USA, Israel, and ‘the world’. ‘Iran must now agree to end this war.’ Iran however, has negated this claim saying all the nuclear devices were shifted from these sites hence no damage could be done to the nuclear.

4. “Will Iran retaliate and in what manner?”

Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei have warned the United States earlier that strikes targeting the Islamic Republic will “result in irreparable damage for them.” And Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmail Baghaei declared “any American intervention would be a recipe for an all-out war in the region." However, it is not known how Iran’s command and control architecture is operating and if additional capabilities have been deployed by the U.S. to degrade it in order to make a massive response harder to execute. An attempt to close the Strait of Hormuz is also a possibility. Ships are still moving through the strait. This is simply an indicator of the current situation. It will likely take time for Iran to act, especially if its command and control is being further disrupted.

As a precaution, the U.S. has evacuated many of its personnel, aircraft and ships from Persian Gulf bases, but these are still potential targets, which could prompt a response from host countries if attacked. Important factor however, is that Israel has degraded Iran’s long-range ballistic missile capability over the last week — there has been no launches in the last 24 hours, which is a first and a potential indicator of the state of these forces — Iran’s short-range ballistic and cruise missile, as well as one-way attack drone capability is far more expansive and harder to target. These systems are a major threat to U.S. bases in the region. Israel too made immediate changes in its defensive set up and it was decided to shift all areas of the country from Partial and Limited Activity to Essential Activity. The instructions include: a prohibition on educational activities, gatherings, and workplaces, except for essential sectors. The public is required to follow the instructions published on the official Home Front Command channels. Full instructions will be updated on the National Emergency Portal and the Home Front Command app.

5. “Will Russia and China enter into the war in support of Iran?”

The ongoing conflict has revealed limitations of China's influence. This is significant, since Beijing has invested heavily in raising Iran's international stature, including by helping it become member of SCO in 2023 and BRICS in 2024. China has ignored US sanctions to become the biggest buyer of Iranian oil. Beijing sprang a surprise in 2023 when it brokered a peace deal between Saudi Arabia and Iran without involvement of any Western power. Conversely, it has been a major buyer of Israeli arms in the past, even as US intervention has resulted in cancellations and scaling back over the years.

China and Russia are ideologically opposed to the idea of regime change in Tehran, particularly if Western powers are instrumental for this. Arab leaders in Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Egypt, who were rattled by the Arab Spring movement in 2010, are also opposed to such attempts in the name of bringing democracy to Iran. But will they intervene if the US wants regime change?

f there is one legacy that Xi Jinping wishes to leave behind, it's 'reunification' of China and Taiwan. He would rather conserve China's energies to achieve this goal than allow friction with the US over another country like Iran. China's military brass is keenly watching US actions in West Asia for clues about what it would be willing - and capable of doing - to protect Taiwan in the case of a Chinese attack on it.

Since he came to power in 2013, Xi has been campaigning against the idea of a US-centric world. China has joined Russia and Turkiye in denouncing Israel's latest attacks on Iran. But these countries have done little more than express moral support, even as they could have done much more to help without direct involvement. For instance, Iran lacks an adequate air defence system, a key factor behind Israel's supremacy in the ongoing conflict. This is a gap that these 'morally supportive' countries could have narrowed.

China and Turkiye, which supplied fighter jets, missiles and drones to Pakistan during the recent post-Pahalgam conflict with India, have developed cold feet. They see Israel as an extension of US power and fear a harsh reaction from Washington if they assist Iran with military hardware. Beijing's efforts to create a strong anti-US front with the help of Russia, Iran and nuclear-armed North Korea are on unsteady ground, with Trump openly wooing Putin. The American president even spoke at the G7 summit on Tuesday about the removal of Russia from the grouping in 2014 to have been a 'mistake'.

Despite adding that he 'wouldn't mind' China joining G7, Trump appears determined to weaken the bond between China and Russia by dangling before Putin the possibility of ending the Ukraine war on the Russian president's terms, and softening economic sanctions at a later stage. That arrangement helps Putin - as long as Trump keeps US arms and financial support to Ukraine at suboptimal levels.

But if the US does enter the Israel-Iran conflict, how long can China stay away from defending a country/regime it has poured billions into as investment?

Russia had warned the US not to join Israel's attacks on Iran, amid speculation over whether Donald Trump would greenlight direct military action. Russia is one of Iran's most important allies, with the two deepening military cooperation and inking a strategic partnership agreement just months ago.

But the Kremlin has not provided military support so far, and President Vladimir Putin is pitching himself as a possible mediator even as he condemns Israel's aggression. "We would like to particularly warn Washington against military intervention in the situation," Russian foreign ministry's spokeswoman Maria Zakharova told reporters. However, Trump retaliated” settle Ukraine first.”

China voiced strong criticism of the US and Israel’s strikes on Iran. On June 13, Foreign Ministry spokesperson Lin Jian said Beijing “was deeply concerned” about the attacks, stating that China “opposes any infringement upon Iran’s sovereignty, security and territorial integrity” and called for de-escalation to preserve “regional peace and stability.” He also emphasised China's readiness to play a “constructive role”.

Subsequently, at the United Nations, China’s UN Ambassador Fu Cong condemned Israel’s actions, reiterated opposition to “violations of Iran’s sovereignty,” and urged Israel to “immediately stop all risky military actions,” citing concern for their potential impact on nuclear diplomacy.

In practical terms, China's embassy in both Iran and Israel issued travel advisories on June 17, urging its citizens to return home or leave via land crossings due to deteriorating security.

According to political analyst Chang, Iran has long served as a vehicle for China’s foreign policy goals in the Middle East. “The Chinese… they’re losing their proxy, Iran. Iran has been accomplishing China’s foreign policy goals for quite some time. And China’s Middle East policy is now in disarray,” he stated. Chang warned that China may not quietly accept the blow to its regional ambitions. “This is a point where China is suffering a terrible loss in the Middle East,” he said. “It is not going to take that lying down, and it’s probably going to get Iran or some other party to strike us.” China’s support for Iran has been extensive, particularly through oil and weapons trade. “China was supporting the attacks on Israel across the board with elevated commodity purchases,” Chang explained. “Remember, China has taken more than 90% of Iran’s crude oil exports, but also provided weapons support.”

He added that Chinese-made arms are widespread among Iran-backed militias. “Hamas, Houthi militia, Hezbollah, all of them have large quantities of Chinese weapons. Iran’s weapons are made with China’s computer chips,” he noted.

6. “Will it lead to a world war?”

If Iran retaliates as suggested by Khamenei, bombing US positions in West Asia, the chances of aggravation of war like situation exist. As subjugation of Iran is not in the interest of Russia and China they may like to respond as proxies and even directly,
 
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