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Iran warns Israel against attacking nuclear sites


FILE - A Nov. 10, 2019, photo shows an Iranian flag at Iran's Bushehr nuclear power plant, during an official ceremony to kick-start works on a second reactor at the facility.
FILE - A Nov. 10, 2019, photo shows an Iranian flag at Iran's Bushehr nuclear power plant, during an official ceremony to kick-start works on a second reactor at the facility.

A senior Revolutionary Guards general threatened on Thursday to target Israel's "nuclear facilities" if it strikes Iran’s sites, state media reported, anticipating retaliation for Tehran's weekend attack.

Israel has vowed a response to the Iranian aerial attack, which was mostly intercepted. World leaders have urged de-escalation.

Violence involving Iran-aligned groups across the Middle East has soared since the start of the Israel-Hamas war with the Tehran-backed Palestinian militant group's October 7 attack.

Tehran's first direct attack on Israel, launched late Saturday, was in retaliation for an April 1 airstrike on the Iranian consulate in Damascus that killed seven members of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, including two generals.

Israeli officials have not said when or where the country would retaliate, but Ahmad Haghtalab, the Guards' head of nuclear protection and security, said Iran would reciprocate any attack on nuclear sites.

"If the Zionist regime [Israel wants to take action against our nuclear centers and facilities, it will definitely and surely face our reaction," the official news agency IRNA quoted Haghtalab as saying.

"For the counterattack, the nuclear facilities of the [Israeli] regime will be targeted and operated upon with advanced weaponry."

His warning came after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel reserves "the right to protect itself" following the Iranian attack with hundreds of drones and missiles.

Haghtalab said the threat of an Israeli attack on Iran's nuclear facilities could lead Tehran "to revise and deviate from the declared nuclear policies and considerations," without elaborating.

The Islamic republic, which has always insisted its nuclear program is peaceful and denies seeking an atomic bomb, has accused archenemy Israel of sabotage attacks on its facilities and assassinations of nuclear scientists in recent years.

Supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said in 2019 that Iran could have developed nuclear weapons but would not do so because Islam forbids their use.

U.S. and other Western officials have said that the continued expansion of Iran's nuclear program suggests military aims.

In 2018 the United States unilaterally withdrew from a landmark deal meant to curb Iran's nuclear activities while providing some relief from crippling Western sanctions.

Since then, Iran has gradually reduced its commitment to the terms imposed by the 2015 accord, and diplomatic efforts to revive it have long stalled as some sanctions have been re-imposed.

The majority of Iran's known nuclear sites, including the uranium enrichment plants at Natanz and Fordo, are located in the country's center.

Iran's only nuclear power plant is located in the southern port city of Bushehr.

According to Haghtalab, Iran has identified Israeli nuclear centers and holds "necessary information of all targets."

Israel is widely known to have nuclear weapons but has never admitted so.

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