Türkiye Says NATO Defenses Destroyed Iran Missile, Risking War Expansion

NATO defenses in the eastern Mediterranean intercepted a ballistic missile launched from Iran towards Turkish territory (Turkish media).
NATO defenses in the eastern Mediterranean intercepted a ballistic missile launched from Iran towards Turkish territory (Turkish media).
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Türkiye Says NATO Defenses Destroyed Iran Missile, Risking War Expansion

NATO defenses in the eastern Mediterranean intercepted a ballistic missile launched from Iran towards Turkish territory (Turkish media).
NATO defenses in the eastern Mediterranean intercepted a ballistic missile launched from Iran towards Turkish territory (Turkish media).

Türkiye said that NATO air defenses destroyed an Iranian ballistic missile headed into Turkish airspace on Wednesday, marking the first time the alliance member has been drawn into the Middle East conflict and raising the possibility of a major expansion involving its bloc allies. 

Turkey - Iran's neighbor that had sought to mediate US-Iran talks before the air war that began at the weekend - warned "all parties to refrain from actions that would lead to further escalation," suggesting it was not poised to call upon the trans-Atlantic defense bloc for support.  

But ‌Ankara could potentially ‌invoke NATO's Article 4 after the airspace breach if it deemed ‌the ⁠threat serious enough, ⁠a step that could lead to the alliance's Article 5, which would oblige members to come to its defense.  

It was unclear where the missile was headed. NATO condemned Iran's targeting of Türkiye, which has the bloc's second-largest military, and said it stood firmly with all allies. 

US BASE IN NEIGHBORING PROVINCE 

The US has air forces stationed at southern Türkiye’s Incirlik base, which is located in an area neighboring Hatay province, where authorities said debris from the intercepting NATO missile had fallen.  

Ankara says that ⁠Washington has not used Incirlik in its air assault, alongside Israel, ‌on Iran, which triggered Tehran's missile and drone attacks.  

Iran did ‌not immediately comment on the incident.  

In a separate call about Iranian missile attacks in Qatar, Iran's Araqchi told his Qatari counterpart that the missiles targeted only US ‌interests, and not Qatar. 

The Turkish defense ministry said the missile had passed over Iraq and Syria before it was downed by NATO air and missile defense systems stationed in the eastern Mediterranean Sea, adding there were no casualties in the incident. 

"All necessary steps to defend our territory and airspace will be taken... (and) ‌we reserve the right to respond to any hostile actions," the ministry said, adding: "We will continue to consult with NATO and our other ⁠allies." 

Statements by senior ⁠Turkish officials did not mention Article 4 and Ankara did not comment when asked by Reuters. 

The article states that NATO allies will "consult together whenever, in the opinion of any of them, the territorial integrity, political independence or security" of a member is threatened. 

US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said there was no sense that the incident would trigger Article 5, which has only been invoked once before, after the September 11, 2001 attacks, and which would mark a major escalation in the conflict. 

ANKARA PROTESTS TO TEHRAN  

Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan conveyed a protest to Iranian counterpart Abbas Araqchi in a call after the incident, a Turkish diplomatic source said.  

Several countries in the Gulf and elsewhere - including as far west as EU member Cyprus, where a British air base was hit by a drone - have been caught in the fallout. 

Ankara had sought to mediate between the sides in the weeks before the conflict erupted. 



UK Says Ties with Cyprus Strong as Iran Threat Grows

FILED - 22 May 2025, United Kingdom, London: UK Defense Secretary John Healey listens to questions  during a press conference at Strategic Command Headquarters, in Northwood, Greater London. Photo: Thomas Krych/PA Wire/dpa
FILED - 22 May 2025, United Kingdom, London: UK Defense Secretary John Healey listens to questions during a press conference at Strategic Command Headquarters, in Northwood, Greater London. Photo: Thomas Krych/PA Wire/dpa
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UK Says Ties with Cyprus Strong as Iran Threat Grows

FILED - 22 May 2025, United Kingdom, London: UK Defense Secretary John Healey listens to questions  during a press conference at Strategic Command Headquarters, in Northwood, Greater London. Photo: Thomas Krych/PA Wire/dpa
FILED - 22 May 2025, United Kingdom, London: UK Defense Secretary John Healey listens to questions during a press conference at Strategic Command Headquarters, in Northwood, Greater London. Photo: Thomas Krych/PA Wire/dpa

British defense minister John Healey said on Thursday that the friendship ‌between ‌his country and ‌Cyprus ⁠remained strong in the ⁠face of Iranian threats.

Healey said in ⁠a post ‌on X ‌that he ‌met ‌with his Cypriot counterpart, Vasilis Palmas, earlier ‌on Thursday and discussed how ⁠Britain ⁠was further reinforcing air defenses to support their shared security.

Healey has headed to Cyprus on Thursday after a drone strike on a UK air base on the Mediterranean island.

The visit comes after the runway of the Royal Air Force (RAF) base at Akrotiri came under attack by an Iranian-made unmanned drone on Monday.

Keir Starmer, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, said Tuesday the UK was sending "helicopters with counter drone capabilities" and a warship, HMS Dragon, to Cyprus as Britain continued "defensive operations" in the region.


Somali Parliament Approves Constitution Change to Extend President's Term, Delay Election

Somalia's President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud at the Munich Security Conference in Munich, Germany, on February 14, 2016. Thomas Kienzle, AFP
Somalia's President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud at the Munich Security Conference in Munich, Germany, on February 14, 2016. Thomas Kienzle, AFP
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Somali Parliament Approves Constitution Change to Extend President's Term, Delay Election

Somalia's President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud at the Munich Security Conference in Munich, Germany, on February 14, 2016. Thomas Kienzle, AFP
Somalia's President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud at the Munich Security Conference in Munich, Germany, on February 14, 2016. Thomas Kienzle, AFP

Somalia's parliament voted ‌to change its constitution and extend the term in office for lawmakers and the president, the president and the parliament's speaker said, pushing back planned elections by a year.

Somalia has endured conflict and clan battles with no strong central government since the fall of ruler Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991.

While ‌an African ‌Union peacekeeping mission has pushed ‌back the ⁠al Qaeda-linked al ⁠Shabaab group, it still controls vast areas of the countryside and has the ability to conduct regular strikes on major population centers.

President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud had reached a deal last August ⁠with some opposition leaders stipulating ‌that, while lawmakers would ‌be directly elected in 2026, the ‌president would still be chosen by parliament. ‌A 2024 law restored universal suffrage ahead of the vote.

On Wednesday, 222 lawmakers from the parliament and senate out of a total ‌of 329 voted by acclamation to change the law, extending their ⁠term ⁠and that of the president to five years, from four years previously.

"Today is a historic day for it is the official completion of the constitution which had dragged for a long period," the president told a press conference on Wednesday.

Opposition party leaders, including former presidents and former prime ministers, rejected the amendment and called for elections in May as planned.


Azerbaijan Says Two People Injured by Iranian Drones

Smoke from a drone launched from Lebanon toward targets in northern Israel and destroyed by Iron Dome interception pictured in the sky as seen from the upper Galilee on the Israel-Lebanon border, 04 March 2026  EPA/ATEF SAFADI
Smoke from a drone launched from Lebanon toward targets in northern Israel and destroyed by Iron Dome interception pictured in the sky as seen from the upper Galilee on the Israel-Lebanon border, 04 March 2026 EPA/ATEF SAFADI
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Azerbaijan Says Two People Injured by Iranian Drones

Smoke from a drone launched from Lebanon toward targets in northern Israel and destroyed by Iron Dome interception pictured in the sky as seen from the upper Galilee on the Israel-Lebanon border, 04 March 2026  EPA/ATEF SAFADI
Smoke from a drone launched from Lebanon toward targets in northern Israel and destroyed by Iron Dome interception pictured in the sky as seen from the upper Galilee on the Israel-Lebanon border, 04 March 2026 EPA/ATEF SAFADI

Azerbaijan's foreign ministry lodged an official protest with the Iranian embassy on Thursday after a pair of Iranian drones flew across the border into Azerbaijan and injured two people at an airport in the Nakhchivan exclave.

"This attack on the territory of Azerbaijan contradicts the norms and principles of international law and contributes to increased tensions ⁠in the region," ⁠the foreign ministry said in a statement.

"We demand that the Islamic Republic of Iran clarify the matter in the shortest possible time, provide an explanation and take the necessary urgent measures to prevent ⁠such incidents from recurring in the future."

The Iranian ambassador to Azerbaijan has been summoned to the foreign ministry to receive a formal note of protest, Reuters quoted Baku as saying.

The statement said Azerbaijan reserved the right to carry out "appropriate response measures" against Tehran.

Azerbaijan's ministry said one drone fell on the terminal building of the Nakhchivan International Airport, which is approximately ⁠10 ⁠km (6 miles) across the border from Iran, and another drone landed close to a school building in a nearby village.

A source close to the Azerbaijani government told Reuters a fire had started as a result of the incident.

Video footage shared by the source showed black smoke rising near the airport and damage to the skylight inside the terminal building.