Israel and Iran Trade Strikes, Threatening to Drag Region Back to Full-Scale War

 Israeli security forces examine a fragment of an intercepted Iranian missile in northern Israel, early Monday, June 8, 2026. (AP)
Israeli security forces examine a fragment of an intercepted Iranian missile in northern Israel, early Monday, June 8, 2026. (AP)
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Israel and Iran Trade Strikes, Threatening to Drag Region Back to Full-Scale War

 Israeli security forces examine a fragment of an intercepted Iranian missile in northern Israel, early Monday, June 8, 2026. (AP)
Israeli security forces examine a fragment of an intercepted Iranian missile in northern Israel, early Monday, June 8, 2026. (AP)

Israel and Iran traded fire early Monday in retaliatory strikes that threatened to drag the wider Middle East back into a full-scale regional war, while Yemen’s Houthi militants also fired at Israel and warned they would target Israel-affiliated ships in the Red Sea, further escalating tension. 

Israel launched strikes on central and western Iran early Monday in response to missile fire from Tehran, in the most serious crossfire since an April 8 ceasefire was reached in the Iran war. Iran retaliated with waves of attacks, and explosions could be heard in central Israel as Israeli air defenses sought to intercept incoming Iranian fire. 

Iran's paramilitary Revolutionary Guard said it had targeted two military bases in Israel, describing the attack as being part of Operation Nasr, or “Victory.” The Guard said it launched the missiles after Israel targeted radar sites in three areas of Iran. 

Tehran warned of retaliation on Sunday after Israel struck Beirut’s southern suburbs without warning in defiance of Washington’s request days ago to stand down. 

Monday marked the 100th day of the Iran war, launched Feb. 28 when Israel and the United States killed Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and other senior Iranian leaders. The war raged until reaching a nominal ceasefire on April 8, but a permanent end to the hostilities have been challenged by Iran's chokehold on the Strait of Hormuz, through which a fifth of all traded oil and natural gas once passed in peacetime, as well as fighting between Israel and the Lebanese Iran-backed Hezbollah group. 

With global energy supplies threatened, Iran still holding a vast stockpile of highly enriched uranium and even the Houthis getting involved in the fighting Monday, the risks of the war fully erupting again appears to be rising. 

Houthis claim attack on Israel  

Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthis claimed an attack on Israel and said Israel-affiliated vessels would again be a target in the Red Sea, putting the Red Sea, the Gulf of Aden and the narrow Bab el-Mandeb Strait connecting them in danger. 

The statement from Brig. Gen. Yahya Saree was broadcast on the Houthis’ al-Masirah satellite news channel. During the Israel-Hamas war in the Gaza Strip, the Houthis killed at least nine mariners and sunk four ships in over 100 attacks, often targeting vessels with tangential or no ties at all to Israel. 

The assaults upended shipping in the Red Sea, through which about $1 trillion of goods passed each year before the war. 

They also greatly disrupted transits through Egypt’s Suez Canal, which links the Red Sea to the Mediterranean. The canal remains one of the top providers of hard currency for Egypt, providing it $10 billion in 2023 as its wider economy struggles. 

Israel strikes Iran  

Iranian state television reported the sound of explosions being heard in Isfahan, Karaj, Tabriz and Tehran, without immediately elaborating. A witness in Tehran described hearing at least one large blast somewhere to the west of the country’s capital city.  

Iran closed the airspace around Tehran’s Imam Khomeini International Airport, the country’s main airfield, after the Israeli attack. 

Officials offered no details on what had been struck, nor any damage information. The Revolutionary Guard said that Israel used air-launched ballistic missiles in its attack Monday morning, without elaborating. 

The semiofficial Fars and Mehr news agencies said Israeli strikes had hit a petrochemical factory in city of Mahshahr in Khuzestan province. It did not elaborate on damage. 

The Israeli military later confirmed the strike on the petrochemical plant. 

Earlier Monday, sirens sounded across Israel after its military said a missile launched from Yemen targeted the country, without elaborating. Israel’s rescue services said there were no reports of casualties or impacts from the launch from Yemen. 

Trump says ‘I call the shots,’ not Israel 

The White House did not respond to messages about the Israeli strikes and whether they were done in coordination with the US. 

A senior US official on Sunday said US President Donald Trump had called Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to urge him not to retaliate immediately for the Iranian missile attack. The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to describe a private phone call, said that Trump believed he had convinced Netanyahu to wait. 

Trump “got Bibi to hold off for the time being,” the official said. The official would not offer any other details of the call, and there was no immediate comment from Netanyahu’s office. 

For days, negotiations between Iran and the United States over the fragile ceasefire in the war had been stalled by the fighting between Israel and Hezbollah. Israel now occupies southern Lebanon and had moved into areas of the country it hadn't held in a quarter century, leading to fears about them further widening their campaign. 

On Sunday, Israel launched airstrikes in Beirut's southern suburbs. Iran retaliated with its own strike on Israel, which led to Monday morning's attack by Israel on Iran. 

Trump earlier told a Fox News Channel reporter that he wanted the Iranians to stop firing missiles and return to the negotiating table. He also said that Israel’s strikes in Lebanon earlier Sunday were not coordinated with the US and “I’m not happy about it.” 

Speaking to The Financial Times before the Israeli strikes on Iran, Trump insisted he dictated terms to Netanyahu on how the war should be prosecuted. 

“He won’t have any choice,” Trump told the newspaper in a telephone interview. “I call the shots. I call all the shots. He (Netanyahu) doesn’t call the shots.” 



Taiwan Says China Maritime Operation ‘Provocative’

A crew member on board a Taiwan Coast Guard ship monitors a Chinese Coast Guard vessel in waters east of Taiwan. (AFP file)
A crew member on board a Taiwan Coast Guard ship monitors a Chinese Coast Guard vessel in waters east of Taiwan. (AFP file)
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Taiwan Says China Maritime Operation ‘Provocative’

A crew member on board a Taiwan Coast Guard ship monitors a Chinese Coast Guard vessel in waters east of Taiwan. (AFP file)
A crew member on board a Taiwan Coast Guard ship monitors a Chinese Coast Guard vessel in waters east of Taiwan. (AFP file)

Taiwan said Monday that China's maritime operation in waters to the east of the island democracy was "provocative" and "expansionism in disguise".

Chinese ships are conducting a "law enforcement operation" in response to talks between Japan and the Philippines to draw a boundary in waters to the east of Taiwan, Chinese state media said Saturday.

China, which asserts Taiwan is part of its territory, called the talks "illegal" and has claimed exclusive control over the waters.

"It's nothing but expansionism in disguise that threatens regional peace & stability," Taiwan's National Security Council chief Joseph Wu wrote on X.

Defense Minister Wellington Koo said the Chinese actions were "provocative".

Koo told reporters that the move was a "cognitive warfare operation" designed to claim that the waters off Taiwan's east coast fell within China's "enforcement jurisdiction".

Taiwan's coast guard has deployed seven patrol vessels to monitor the Chinese ships.

The Taiwanese vessels expelled four Chinese ships from waters off the island's southernmost tip on Sunday.

The ships have since moved further east, Taiwan's coast guard said Monday, after an hours-long standoff.


Ukrainian Drone Kills One in Russia-Annexed Crimea, Moscow-Installed Governor Says

A drone crater at the site of a Russian strike on a residential area in Odesa, Ukraine, 01 June 2026, amid the Russian invasion. (EPA)
A drone crater at the site of a Russian strike on a residential area in Odesa, Ukraine, 01 June 2026, amid the Russian invasion. (EPA)
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Ukrainian Drone Kills One in Russia-Annexed Crimea, Moscow-Installed Governor Says

A drone crater at the site of a Russian strike on a residential area in Odesa, Ukraine, 01 June 2026, amid the Russian invasion. (EPA)
A drone crater at the site of a Russian strike on a residential area in Odesa, Ukraine, 01 June 2026, amid the Russian invasion. (EPA)

A Ukrainian drone struck a train in Crimea, killing its assistant driver and injuring the driver, the peninsula's Russian-installed governor Sergei Aksyonov said in a Telegram post early on Monday.

Passengers on the train, commuting between Moscow and Simferopol, the main city of the Russia-annexed Black Sea Crimea peninsula, were not harmed, Aksyonov added. The train connection in Crimea was ‌suspended, Interfax ‌news agency reported.

Russia seized and ‌annexed ⁠Crimea in 2014 - ⁠long before its 2022 full-scale invasion of Ukraine - after public protests in Kyiv prompted a Moscow-friendly president to flee Ukraine. Crimea is a popular destination for Russian tourists.

Drone raid sirens were sounded in the early hours of Monday in the Black ⁠Sea port of Novorossiysk, a ‌major export hub for oil ‌and grains in Russia's Krasnodar region about a ‌two-hour drive from the bridge Moscow built to ‌connect to Crimea, local authorities said on Telegram.

The most recent Ukrainian drone strikes, attacking fuel infrastructure, have forced the Russian-controlled Crimea to tighten its rationing of fuel ‌supplies.

In the Crimean port of Sevastopol, the peninsula's second-largest city where the Russian ⁠Black ⁠Sea fleet is stationed, the local Russian-installed governor, Mikhail Razvozhayev, said on Telegram that fuel rationing would continue.

"The number of (electronic) codes issued for (fuel refill at) the gas stations for tomorrow was bigger than yesterday. Those were gone in just a few dozen seconds," he said on Monday.

"Those who received a code today will not be able to get the new one for the next seven days."

Reuters could not independently verify all the reports.


Pentagon Sees Growing Espionage Threat from Israel

President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu last December. (The New York Times)
President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu last December. (The New York Times)
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Pentagon Sees Growing Espionage Threat from Israel

President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu last December. (The New York Times)
President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu last December. (The New York Times)

Washington: Julian E Barnes, Eric Schmitt

Recent US intelligence reports have raised concerns about Israeli spy agencies eavesdropping on American negotiators working on a peace deal with Iran, amid rising concern over a more general counterintelligence threat by Israel.

Israel and the United States have long known, and tolerated, that each was spying on the other. But an intensified Israeli effort to learn about US positions in talks with Iran has crossed a line, according to some American officials.

The reports include concerns that Israel has stepped up its efforts to eavesdrop on senior American officials, including Steve Witkoff, President Trump’s top negotiator, Elbridge A Colby, the Pentagon’s top policy official, and one of his main deputies, Michael P DiMino IV.

Another report, written by the Defense Intelligence Agency and other military intelligence offices and focused on earlier events going back several years, said that the counterintelligence threat level posed by Israel had been increased in recent weeks to the top level, from high to critical.

The report, to which the Defense Counterintelligence and Security Agency contributed, outlines various efforts by Israel to spy on American military personnel and government officials.

The reports and the intensified concern about Israeli spying come at an especially sensitive time.

Israel and the US have been fighting the war against Iran together, and have never had such close military coordination as they do now, with Israeli military officers working side-by-side with their American counterparts at US Central Command.

The US military is sharing huge amounts of tactical and operational information with its Israeli counterparts. But senior American officials said that Israel is looking for insights into Trump’s strategy and shifting stances on the peace talks.

The new warning could potentially complicate efforts to further integrate military war planning between US Central Command and Israel, especially if the Pentagon makes a decision to place new restrictions on information shared with Israeli officers.

There has already been tension between the two nations as Trump pursues a peace deal even as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel seeks to further degrade Iran’s capabilities, weaken or topple its regime and assault Tehran’s proxy in Lebanon, Hezbollah.

The Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) report was drafted after incidents in which American defense personnel in Israel detected that software to tap their communications had been surreptitiously installed on their phones.

The existence of the Defense Intelligence Agency report and the increased threat level were reported earlier by NBC News.

The Defense Department declined to comment. A White House official, speaking on the condition their name not be used, said the account was false.

A spokesperson for the Israeli embassy in Washington also disputed claims that Israel poses a counterintelligence threat, saying that Israel does not spy on American officials or entities.

The developments were described by several current and former US officials, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive intelligence matters.

They said that in some respects the counterintelligence warning is no surprise. Israel has long engaged in aggressive intelligence collection operations against both its enemies and its allies, as does the United States.

Still, Israel’s counterintelligence threat level is now higher than any other ally and higher than some adversarial countries. Of American allies, only South Korea, which is rated at high in certain situations, approaches the concern with Israel’s espionage efforts, the officials said.

The aggressiveness of the Israeli intelligence collection on top US officials during the second Trump administration has been “unhinged,” one senior official said.

Two senior US military officials said that American personnel, particularly those serving in Israel or with Israeli counterparts, were well aware of the counterintelligence risks before the new report.

The officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal assessments, said US personnel employ a range of security procedures and protocols to help counter the threat and to protect their cellphones and other electronic devices, especially while traveling in Israel, but declined to describe those measures in detail for security reasons.

Cooperation between the two militaries is very close, but each side also needs to keep its most sensitive information secret.

At the US-led Civil-Military Coordination Center in Kiryat Gat, Israel, for instance, American and Israeli military and diplomatic personnel work side-by-side to enforce the Gaza cease-fire and facilitate humanitarian efforts. But the building also has a US-only floor and an Israeli-only floor where personnel from each country can discuss the most sensitive topics.

The report says counterintelligence incidents began increasing in late 2024, as the Biden administration pressed Israel to curb its attacks on Gaza, and continued into 2025, as the Trump administration weighed options to attack Iran.

The report, which incorporated contributions from a number of military intelligence agencies, also details several episodes in recent years. In 2021, Israeli military intelligence officers were caught planting listening devices at DIA headquarters. Last year, officers from Shin Bet, Israel’s domestic intelligence agency, were discovered to have tried to plant a listening device in a Secret Service vehicle.

While the DIA document does not explicitly discuss the peace negotiations, other recent intelligence reports have raised concern about Israelis’ listening to Witkoff and other top negotiators as they try to reach a long-term agreement for a peace deal between the US and Iran.

The tendency of some senior Trump administration officials to fly on private aircraft, to conduct national security business on their personal phones and to reject staffing from US embassies abroad made them especially vulnerable targets for the spy services of allies and adversaries alike, said a former senior US official who has dealt extensively with Israel.

Other current officials also acknowledged the use of personal cellphones by top American officials has made them easy targets for eavesdropping.

US and Israel were largely aligned at the beginning of the Iran war, with Trump endorsing Netanyahu’s long-sought goal to push the theocratic government from power.

But the war aims quickly diverged, as the United States focused more on trying to erode Iran’s military capabilities to force concessions at the bargaining table, while Israel hoped the Iranian hard-line government would lose its grip on power.

It is not entirely clear why Colby, who is in charge of Pentagon policy, would be a target. But he is one of the most prominent proponents inside the US government of a restrained foreign policy. DiMino is in charge of Pentagon policy for the Middle East, making him a person of natural interest to Israel.

The New York Times