The Guardian (USA)

World leaders urge calm after Israeli drone strike on Iran ratchets up tension

- Julian Borger in Washington and Peter Beaumont in Jerusalem

World leaders urged calm on Friday after Israel conducted a pre-dawn drone sortie over Iran following a cycle of tit-for-tat attacks that crossed an important red line that has for decades held the Middle East back from a major regional conflict.

There were tentative hopes late on Friday that the apparent strike attempt against an airbase near the city of Isfahan was sufficient­ly limited to fend off the threat of a bigger Iranian response and an uncontroll­ed spiral of violence between a nuclear power and a state with the capacity to develop nuclear weapons quickly.

According to Italy’s foreign minister, Antonio Tajani, speaking later on Friday, the US told the G7 foreign ministers meeting in Capri that it had received “last-minute” informatio­n from Israel about a drone action in Iran. Israel’s N12 news channel reported that Israel had also struck targets in Iraq and Syria, and explosions were reported in both those countries.

Iran’s foreign minister, Hossein Amirabdoll­ahian, said the sortie on Isfahan involved miniature drones and had caused no damage or casualties.

“The Zionist regime’s media supporters, in a desperate effort, tried to make victory out of their defeat, while the downed mini-drones have not caused any damage or casualties,” Amirabdoll­ahian

told envoys of Muslim nations during a visit to the UN in New York, according to Iranian media. Tehran has indicated that it had no “immediate” plan for retaliatio­n.

“We’re committed to Israel’s security,” the US secretary of state, Antony Blinken, said at the G7 meeting. “We’re also committed to de-escalating.”

Blinken added that despite the confrontat­ion, the US remained “intensely focused on Gaza”, where at least 34,000 Palestinia­ns have been killed in Israel’s war against Hamas and well over a million people have been forced to flee their homes.

The G7 and the European Commission both made calls for the simmering conflict to be defused. The UN secretary general, António Guterres, in his own interventi­on, said it was “high time to stop the dangerous cycle of retaliatio­n in the Middle East”.

US and European officials were concerned that the breaking of the taboo on direct attacks between the two powers had left the region in a far more precarious position in the coming months and years, as Israel plans to continue its relentless campaign in Gaza, deepening the humanitari­an disaster there, and openly weighing a war in Lebanon with Hezbollah, a close Iranian ally.

The Tehran government appeared to shrug off the Friday morning incident near an airbase near the city of Isfahan where it said air defences had brought down three drones, which had been launched inside Iran. A few hours earlier, the foreign ministry had warned that any new Israeli attack would be met with a “maximal” and “decisive” response, but the lengths state media went to minimise the incursion appeared designed to leave the option of not responding.

US officials confirmed that Israel had conducted military operations against Iran and had given Washington a few hours’ notice, but did not give any details of those operations. It remained unclear on Friday night whether only drones had been involved, whether any munitions had actually hit their targets, or had been intercepte­d, and where the sortie had been launched from.

Reuters quoted a source familiar with western intelligen­ce assessment­s as agreeing with the initial Iranian claim that the drones had taken off inside Iranian territory, suggesting either special forces or an Iranian faction allied to Israel was involved. Previous attacks inside Iran have been attributed to Israel, including a drone strike also on a weapons factory in Isfahan in January 2023.

Joe Biden’s administra­tion had sought to defuse a brewing conflict which had begun with the Israeli bombing of a Iranian consular building in Damascus, killing a top Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps (IRGC) general and six other officers, for which Iran retaliated on Sunday morning by launching

 ?? ?? An anti-Israel billboard with a picture of Iranian missiles is seen on a street in Tehran, Iran, on Friday. Photograph: Majid Asgaripour/ Reuters
An anti-Israel billboard with a picture of Iranian missiles is seen on a street in Tehran, Iran, on Friday. Photograph: Majid Asgaripour/ Reuters

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