Israeli military warns Iranian representatives to leave Lebanon
The Israeli military on Tuesday warned representatives of the Islamic Republic in Lebanon to leave, saying there is no safe place left in the country for them.
The Israeli military on Tuesday warned representatives of the Islamic Republic in Lebanon to leave, saying there is no safe place left in the country for them.






The Israeli military confirmed on Tuesday that it killed the commander of Iran’s Quds Force in Lebanon, Davoud Alizadeh, in an airstrike in Tehran.
"Ali Zadeh, who was the equivalent of a brigadier general, was the highest-ranking Iranian commander responsible for Lebanon," the military said in a statement.
"Ali Zadeh had served in multiple roles, including as the Commander of the Strategic Weapons Corp in the Quds Force, where he supported proxy arming with strategic weapons. Zadeh functioned as an expert, guiding Hezbollah and other proxies’ firepower capabilities," the statement added.
The United Arab Emirates is considering taking military action against Iran to stop Iranian missile and drone attacks against the country, Israel's Channel 12 reported citing sources familiar with the matter.
“Although it (UAE) has not been involved in the war in any way, it has nevertheless absorbed 800 launches,” the report quoted a source familiar with decision-making discussions in the UAE as saying.
“The position in the UAE is that there is no country in the world that would not reexamine its policy under such circumstances,” the source added.
"I've done a lot of good things. So many people saying, Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. You see it in the streets of Los Angeles. They have 1000s of people," President Donald Trump told reporters on Tuesday.
"I saw it the other day, pictures of Donald Trump, and I'm looking, I'm on the phone, probably talking to you, and I'm looking, and I see my picture, I say, oh no, it's another, you know, protest. I see my and then I started saying, Boy, they were very friendly people."
"Then I saw a woman hugging the picture of me. I said, what's going on? And it turned out to be, these are Iranian people that live in the United States. So many 1000s and 1000s. You saw the rallies. And in New York too, they had a big rally by pictures all over the place. The fact is that people are happy with what we did," Trump added.
US President Donald Trump says American munitions stockpiles remain robust while Iran is running out of key weapons and missile launchers amid continued US-Israeli airstrikes and Tehran's retaliatory attacks targeting regional countries.
“The United States Munitions Stockpiles have, at the medium and upper medium grade, never been higher or better,” Trump wrote on Truth Social.
The US, he wrote, has “a virtually unlimited supply of these weapons” and that “Wars can be fought ‘forever,’ and very successfully, using just these supplies.”
His remarks came after CNN and The Wall Street Journal reported concerns about the pace at which key US munitions are being consumed in the escalating war with Iran.
Meanwhile, Washington sustains both offensive strikes and defensive intercept operations across the region. US systems, including Patriot and THAAD batteries deployed in Israel and neighboring states, have been heavily engaged in countering Iranian ballistic missile and drone attacks.
CNN reported on Monday that US reserves of certain missile systems – including Tomahawk land-attack missiles and SM-3 interceptors – are under strain amid sustained operations.
The Wall Street Journal also wrote Sunday that as the US planned operations against Iran, the military’s top general raised concerns about munitions stockpiles, particularly air defense interceptors needed to counter Iranian ballistic missiles and drones targeting regional sites hosting US forces.
Trump, in a separate post on Tuesday, called The Wall Street Journal report a “disgrace” on Truth Social, saying the United States has “unlimited mid to upper tier Weaponry – Brutal ‘stuff.’”
Iran’s arsenal under pressure
Trump told Politico on Tuesday that Iran was running out of crucial armaments.
“They’re running out and they’re running out of areas to shoot them, because they’re being decimated,” Trump said. “They’re running out of launchers.”
The New York Times reported Sunday, citing Israeli military officials, that Israeli airstrikes carried out since June last year have destroyed roughly 200 Iranian ballistic missile launchers and disabled dozens more – amounting to about half of Iran’s operational launcher fleet.
Israeli strikes, according to the report, during both the current offensive and last summer’s 12-day campaign also hit Iran’s primary explosives production facility. That complex provides key components for missile warheads and supports weapons programs including rockets, drones and cruise missiles.
Before last year’s assault, Israeli intelligence had assessed that Iran possessed approximately 3,000 ballistic missiles and was seeking to dramatically expand output, potentially reaching 8,000 missiles by 2027.
A Defense Express analysis on Tuesday said that as of Monday, Iran had launched at least 771 ballistic missiles at neighboring countries and Israel since the start of the conflict.
The figure is not definitive, as totals vary by reporting country and strikes remain ongoing. Defense Express noted that different states have published their own counts while Iran continues firing missiles, and Tehran has not released an official tally of launches.
Despite damage inflicted during the earlier campaign, The New York Times reported that Iran has attempted to rebuild its missile manufacturing capacity, with recent estimates suggesting output of dozens of missiles per month. The newspaper added that Iran has also sought components from abroad to restore its surface-to-surface missile arsenal.
A fuel tank at Oman’s Duqm commercial port was hit on Tuesday when the facility came under attack from several unmanned aircraft, the country's state news agency said, citing a security source.
The agency said the resulting damage was contained and no casualties were recorded.
Duqm was also targeted by two drones on Sunday, wounding one worker.