State Department urges Americans to leave 13 Mideast countries immediately


The State Department on Monday issued an urgent security alert advising American citizens to depart immediately from a number of Middle Eastern countries amid escalating regional tensions and serious safety risks.
The advisory applies to Bahrain, Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Israel - including the West Bank and Gaza - Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Syria, the United Arab Emirates and Yemen.







President Donald Trump said on Monday his decision to withdraw from the 2015 Iran nuclear deal prevented Tehran from obtaining a nuclear weapon “three years ago,” calling the agreement “the most dangerous transaction” ever made.
"If I didn’t terminate Obama’s horrendous Iran Nuclear Deal (JCPOA), Iran would have had a Nuclear Weapon three years ago. That was the most dangerous transaction we have ever entered into, and had it been allowed to stand, the World would be an entirely different place right now. You can blame Barack Hussein Obama, and Sleepy Joe Biden," Trump said.
Israel spent years hacking Tehran’s traffic cameras and penetrating mobile phone networks to monitor the movements of Iran's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and his security detail ahead of his assassination, the Financial Times reported, citing multiple current and former Israeli intelligence officials and other people familiar with the operation.
Nearly all traffic cameras in Tehran had been hacked for years, with footage encrypted and transmitted to servers in Tel Aviv and southern Israel, according to two people familiar with the matter cited by the newspaper.
One camera angle proved particularly useful in determining where bodyguards parked their personal cars and provided insight into the routines inside the compound near Pasteur Street, one of the people said.
Complex algorithms were used to add details to dossiers on members of Khamenei’s security guards, including their addresses, duty hours, routes to work and which officials they were assigned to protect, building what intelligence officers call a “pattern of life,” according to the report.
The Financial Times said Israel also disrupted components of roughly a dozen mobile phone towers near Pasteur Street, making phones appear busy when called and preventing members of Khamenei’s protection detail from receiving possible warnings.
A current unnamed Israeli intelligence official told the newspaper that long before the strike, “we knew Tehran like we know Jerusalem,” describing a dense “intelligence picture” built through data collection involving Israel’s signals intelligence Unit 8200, human sources recruited by the Mossad and analysis by military intelligence.
Israel also used a mathematical method known as social network analysis to sift through billions of data points and identify decision-making centers and new targets, a person familiar with its use told the Financial Times.
According to two people familiar with the matter, Israeli intelligence relied on signals intelligence, including hacked traffic cameras and penetrated mobile phone networks, to confirm that Khamenei and senior officials were present at the compound on the morning of the strike.
The Americans had an additional human source providing confirmation, the sources said, according to the report.
The Israeli military issued an urgent evacuation warning for residents in Tehran’s Evin district, specifically highlighting the area around Iran’s state broadcaster, as it signaled planned operations against what it called regime military infrastructure in the coming hours.
In a statement, the Israeli army said it has carried out strikes in Tehran in recent days and would continue activity in the specified zone shortly. The warning referenced a map marking the targeted area in red and urged all individuals present to leave immediately.
“Remaining in this area puts your lives at risk,” the statement said, calling on civilians to evacuate for their safety.
A senior Revolutionary Guards commander warned Tehran would target shipping through the Strait of Hormuz and strike oil infrastructure in the Middle East to prevent exports.
“Any ship that seeks to pass through the Strait of Hormuz we will set on fire,” Brigadier General Ebrahim Jabbari said in remarks carried by Iranian media on Monday.
“We will also attack oil pipelines and will not allow a single drop of oil to leave the region,” he said, adding that “oil prices will reach $200 in the coming days.”
"Two days ago, the Iranian regime had 11 ships in the Gulf of Oman, today they have ZERO," US CENTCOM said in a post on X.
"The Iranian regime has harassed and attacked international shipping in the Gulf of Oman for decades. Those days are over. Freedom of maritime navigation has underpinned American and global economic prosperity for more than 80 years. US forces will continue to defend it," it added.