Israel hits Iran in waves of attacks and says it killed senior Hezbollah commander
Israel unleashed two waves of attacks on Tehran and said it had killed a senior Hezbollah commander on Wednesday with little sign of the war easing up despite Donald Trump repeating a claim that Iran’s leadership was seeking a ceasefire. The US president, writing on social media, said that Iran’s president had “just asked” for a ceasefire, and that American troops would be “out of Iran pretty quickly” as he sought to extricate the US from the war. However, he confused the picture by incorrectly describing the president as a “new regime” leader. The country’s president, Masoud Pezeshkian, has been in post since 2024, well before the start of the month-long war. The country’s former supreme leader Ali Khamenei was killed in the first minutes of the attack and has been succeeded by his son, Mojtaba, who is widely considered more hardline than his father, especially after the killing of other members of his family in the same initial attack. Trump nonetheless persevered later on Wednesday with the assertion that there had been “full regime change” in Iran. He said his agreement to a ceasefire would depend on the Iranian blockade of the strait of Hormuz being lifted. But Iran’s foreign ministry spokesperson denied there had been a ceasefire request from Tehran and said the US president’s account was “false and baseless”. When asked when he would withdraw from the conflict, Trump said: “I can’t tell you exactly … we’re going to be out pretty quickly.” “I’m dealing with a very good chance that we’ll make a deal because they don’t want to be blasted any more,” Trump told Reuters. “I didn’t need regime change, but we got it because of the casualties of war.” After withdrawal, Trump suggested that the US would continue to carry out occasional airstrikes, referring to them as “spot hits”. Ebrahim Azizi, the chair of the Iranian parliament’s national security commission, mocked Trump for his boasts. “Trump has finally achieved his dream of ‘regime change’ – but in the region’s maritime regime!” Azizi said in a post on X. “The strait of Hormuz will certainly reopen, but not for you; it will be open for those who comply with the new laws of Iran.” Iran fired about 10 missiles into central Israel a couple of hours before the start of the annual Jewish Passover festival on a day when its allies, Lebanon’s Hezbollah and Yemen’s Houthis, also attacked with rockets and missiles. Qatar also reported in the morning that a fuel oil tanker used by its state-owned energy company was struck by an Iranian missile, though there were no casualties reported among its 21-strong crew or environmental damage. Israel’s military said it had struck approximately 400 Iranian regime targets over the past two days, including two waves on Wednesday, while Iranian media reported areas in northern, eastern and central Tehran had been under attack in the morning. At least 1,900 people have been killed and 20,000 injured in Iran since the start of the war, according to estimates from the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent societies, though precise figures are hard to come by. An Israeli navy strike on Beirut killed seven people including Youssef Hashem, the commander of Hezbollah’s southern front, the most senior leader of the Iranian proxy group to have been killed since the start of the war. Israel’s military said Hashem had more than 40 years’ experience and his death would be “a significant blow” to Hezbollah’s efforts to resist Israel’s plans to occupy southern Lebanon in a rapidly escalating ground campaign. Hezbollah officials acknowledged his death, describing him as a “beacon of the Islamic Resistance” and “a tier one commander”, one of the most high profile casualties in a conflict that has killed 1,260 people in Lebanon. Most of those who have died have been Lebanese civilians, but Hezbollah estimated about 400 had been its fighters. Israel said 10 of its soldiers had been killed since 2 March when fighting broke out on the Lebanese front. In Israel, an 11-year-old girl was in critical condition after being wounded by shrapnel to her limbs, the country’s emergency medical service reported, after a missile strike at Bnei Brak, east of Tel Aviv. It also said 13 others were less seriously wounded. Further waves of attacks – including an estimated 10 ballistic missiles – triggered alarms across the densely populated centre of Israel in the late afternoon, just before the start of Passover, which begins with the traditional family Seder meal. Brig Gen Effie Defrin, the IDF’s spokesperson, said “it was possible” that Iran and Hezbollah “will fire toward Israeli territory in an attempt to harm Israeli civilians during the holiday”, which runs from Wednesday evening for a week. Yemen’s Houthis said in the morning they had conducted a missile attack on southern Israel, their third since the group joined the war four days ago, in a coordinated attack with Iran and Hezbollah. Israel’s military said it had intercepted a ballistic missile that had been launched by the pro-Iran group; no casualties were reported. A total of 19 people have been killed and 515 injured by missile fire in Israel, according to reports by the Magen David Adom emergency medical service, since the war began. The strait of Hormuz has in effect been closed to oil and gas tankers and other merchant shipping since the beginning of the conflict, hiking oil prices and causing a growing range of critical shortages around the world. On Wednesday, 10 vessels transited the straits, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence, the fourth busiest day since the start of the war. However, shipping volumes remain sharply down by more than 90% from pre-conflict levels. Trump’s unfounded insistence that there has been regime change, which had been echoed by the defence secretary, Pete Hegseth, has added weight to speculation that Trump is anxious to declare victory and withdraw the US from the battlefield as the consequences of the war, in form of an oil price spike and shortages of fertiliser and medicines, send shockwaves through the global economy. In his remarks on Wednesday, Trump did not mention the thousands of marines and paratroopers that have massed in the region to give the US the option of mounting a land attack, possibly on one or several islands in the Gulf and the Hormuz strait. He did however, appear to rule out a military operation to extract Iran’s 440kg stockpile of highly enriched uranium, enough if enriched further to make about a dozen nuclear warheads. Since launching the attack on Iran, Trump has frequently cited the regime’s potential to make nuclear bombs, asserting without evidence that it was two to four weeks from making a warhead and using it against the US. Experts unanimously rejected those assertions as groundless. Trump declared himself unconcerned by Iran’s enriched uranium stockpile, believed to be buried in deep shafts under Iranian mountains. “That’s so far underground, I don’t care about that,” he told Reuters. “We’ll always be watching it by satellite.” The president also said: “They won’t have a nuclear weapon because they are incapable of that now, and then I’ll leave, and I’ll take everybody with me, and if we have to we’ll come back to do spot hits.” Reuters also reported on Wednesday that the US vice-president, JD Vance, had been in touch with Pakistani intermediaries with the message that the administration was open to a ceasefire as long as certain US demands were met, including reopening the strait of Hormuz.







