Iran reserves the right to close the Strait of Hormuz if the United States joins Israel in military action against the Islamic Republic, Tehran MP Ali Yazdikhah said Thursday.
“If America enters the war, closing the Strait of Hormuz is our legitimate right,” Yazdikhah said, referencing the narrow waterway critical to global oil shipments.

A wave of airstrikes were launched on western Iran, targeting ballistic missile infrastructure and Iranian soldiers, Israel’s military said Thursday.
The Israeli Air Force deployed around 20 fighter jets for the operation, the army said. Separately, an Israeli drone struck trucks carrying ballistic missiles as they arrived at a launch site.
Israel has struck about two-thirds of Iran’s ballistic missile launchers, an Israeli military official said Thursday.
Iran is still believed to possess more than 100 launchers, the official told Reuters, but emphasized that launch systems—rather than missile stockpiles—remain Israel’s top priority.
Missile launchers are the bottleneck for their ability to fire in volume, the officials said, indicating continued strikes aimed at limiting Iran’s offensive capacity.
Chinese leader Xi Jinping urged major powers to help defuse the Iran conflict in a call with Russian President Vladimir Putin, while blaming Israel for fueling the crisis and calling for an immediate ceasefire.
“The parties to the conflict, especially Israel, should cease fire as soon as possible to prevent the situation from escalating in turn and resolutely avoid the spillover of war,” Xi said, according to a Chinese Foreign Ministry readout.
Putin and Xi condemned Israel’s actions, the Kremlin said, with Putin again offering Russian mediation.

A strike on Iran’s Bushehr nuclear plant could trigger a “Chernobyl-style catastrophe,” Russia’s nuclear chief warned Thursday, after Israel walked back an earlier statement that it had targeted the site on the Persian Gulf coast.
“If there is a strike on the operational first power unit, it will be a catastrophe comparable to Chernobyl,” said Rosatom chief Alexei Likhachev, according to state media.
Earlier today, an Israeli military spokesperson said Israel had struck the site, but an Israeli military official later called this statement "a mistake" and said he could neither confirm nor deny that the Bushehr site on the cost of the Persian Gulf had been hit.
“It was a mistake,” a military official said, clarifying that Bushehr had not been among the confirmed targets.
Bushehr, Iran’s only functioning nuclear plant, was built by Russia and hosts Russian workers.
Israel accused Iran of crossing a red line after a strike hit Soroka Medical Center in Beer Sheva on Thursday, causing extensive damage.
“The dictatorship regime from Tehran has crossed the line and is acting as a barbaric terrorist organization,” Health Minister Uriel Busso said.
He condemned the attack as a “despicable war crime.”
Iran’s Revolutionary Guard said it targeted an Israeli intelligence site near a hospital. Israeli officials denied any military use of the hospital, calling the strike a deliberate attack on civilian infrastructure that demands international condemnation and potential legal scrutiny.






