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Iran has fired missiles into Israel in response to the Israeli military’s campaign against Tehran’s ally Hezbollah.

Explosions could be heard in Jerusalem and the Jordan River valley after Israelis sought shelter in bomb shelters as scores of missiles rained down.

Sky News has correspondents reporting from Israel and the Lebanese capital Beirut during this significant escalation in the conflict.

Here’s what they witnessed.

People trying to ‘take some cover’

“We are talking probably in excess of 50, 60, 70 missiles,” said Middle East correspondent Alistair Bunkall as he gazed up at the sky from Tel Aviv.

He explained that there was a “huge amount of activity in the air above us” and it was hard to distinguish between an incoming missile and one launched by Israel to intercept.

Bunkall said the Iranian missiles were heading towards central Tel Aviv.

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‘Iran has sophisticated weapons’

Bunkall says tonight’s strikes appears to be part of a “far larger attack than April” – when Iran fired weapons at Israel after the Israeli military attacked the Iranian embassy in Syria.

Iran appears to have fired ballistic missiles this time, which take 10 to 12 minutes to reach Israel.

Back in April it was drones – much slower and easier to intercept.

“A lot of people” are out in the open air at the moment, Bunkall said tonight.

Some decided to try to continue their journeys home, he added, while others have tried to “get to the side of the road and take some cover, whether that’s under a bridge or in a lay-by somewhere”.

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Rocket lands on Israeli motorway

‘We saw them intercept’

Our security and defence editor Deborah Haynes described the moment she had to take cover from missiles being launched at the Israel-Lebanon border.

She said: “It was actually a rocket that was fired in our direction, because we’re very close to the Lebanese border – and you’ve obviously got simultaneously this Israeli ground offensive that is taking place.

“We’ve been hearing gunfire from one direction – missile fire from the other direction. We first realised that the attack was actually under way was when we saw these streaks of orange high up in the sky above us.

“Clearly the missiles we saw were intended to go much deeper into Israel.

“We then also witnessed intercepts taking place where you could see the glow of an orange ball moving up to impact the missile coming in the other direction.”

Read more:
Israel may chalk the Iranian strikes up as a victory
What is Iran’s ‘axis of resistance’?
Israel vows to retaliate after nearly 200 missiles are fired by Iran

Deborah Haynes near the Israeli border with Lebanon
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Deborah Haynes near the Israeli border with Lebanon

She says there was then an “explosion” when it eventually hit.

“But we did also see some missiles getting through and continuing their route further, deeper into Israel where you would imagine air defences would be deployed.”

“It’s an incredibly difficult operation to try to intercept ballistic missiles anyway, let alone some 200 of them,” she added.

‘An incredibly dangerous moment’

Sirens were going off in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem as our lead world presenter Yalda Hakim reported from Beirut in Lebanon.

She said “thuds and bangs were blaring across” Israel.

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Missiles rain down on Jerusalem

Hakim added that she had been speaking to some Israeli people who told her they had been “taking shelter in bunkers at the moment, that they are hearing some interceptions, but they are also unclear about what projectiles have managed to get through”.

“This is an incredibly dangerous moment for Israel, for this region,” she said. “An incredibly tense, frightening moment for the citizens of Israel as we wait and see what damage has actually been done.”

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Qatari PM says Israel ‘killed any hope’ of releasing hostages as criticism over Doha attack intensifies

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Qatari PM says Israel 'killed any hope' of releasing hostages as criticism over Doha attack intensifies

Qatar’s prime minister said Israel has “killed any hope” of seeing more hostages returned from Gaza after carrying out an attack targeting Hamas leadership in his country. 

Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani intensified his criticism of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu over Tuesday’s unprecedented strike on Qatar, which killed at least six people.

“I was meeting one of the hostage’s families the morning of the attack,” Sheikh Mohammed told CNN in an interview aired late Wednesday.

“They are counting on this [ceasefire] mediation, they have no other hope for that.”

Sheikh Mohammed added that he thought Netanyahu had “just killed any hope for those hostages”.

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Ceasefire talks left in ‘tatters’

A total of 48 Israeli hostages captured during Hamas’ 7 October attacks on southern Israel have not been returned home.

With its attack in Qatar, Israel had sought to kill the political leaders of the Islamist group Hamas.

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Hamas has said its top leaders survived the airstrike, but five members were killed, including the son of its exiled Gaza chief and top negotiator Khalil al Hayya.

The Israeli military operation in Doha has been widely condemned internationally and was particularly sensitive as Qatar has been mediating negotiations to bring about a ceasefire in the war in Gaza.

US President Donald Trump reportedly held a heated phone call with Mr Netanyahu after the attack, telling him his decision to target Hamas leadership in Qatar was not wise, according to The Wall Street Journal.

There has been no immediate acknowledgement of the remarks from Mr Netanyahu, however, he’s continued to defend the strikes and threatened further action against Qatar.

“I say to Qatar and all nations who harbour terrorists, you either expel them or you bring them to justice,” Mr Netanyahu said. “Because if you don’t, we will.”

Read more:
Israel has crossed a huge diplomatic red line with Qatar strike
Trump has ‘heated call’ with Netanyahu over Qatar strike

A senior figure in the Qatari government, Dr Majed Al-Ansari, was the one to announce to the world on X that America’s call to alert them to the attack came 10 minutes after the first explosion sounded in Doha.

Dr Al-Ansari, who serves as Qatar’s foreign ministry spokesperson, recounted the moment of the attack to Sky News’ correspondent Sally Lockwood.

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“I was coming home to my family and the moment I stepped out of the car I started hearing the loud noises that can only be compared to bombs,” he said.

“Being a diplomat and working for the foreign ministry throughout the mediation that we have conducted, I immediately knew that that meant that something terrible has happened.

“I can’t tell you enough how as a father living here in Qatar, that moment was a moment of reckoning for me and for all my countrymen and people who reside here in Qatar, where our lives were at risk because of the narcissistic and personal ambitions of a political operator who wants to throw the whole region into chaos.”

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Trump has ‘heated phone call’ with Netanyahu over strike targeting Hamas in Qatar

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Trump has 'heated phone call' with Netanyahu over strike targeting Hamas in Qatar

Donald Trump had a heated phone call with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu after his military targeted Hamas inside Qatar, according to a report.

The American president told Mr Netanyahu on Tuesday that the decision to strike inside the US ally’s territory was not wise, The Wall Street Journal reported, citing senior administration officials.

The Israeli prime minister responded by saying he had a brief window to launch the airstrike and took the opportunity, according to the newspaper.

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Anger over Israeli strikes on Qatar

A second call between the two leaders later that day was cordial, with Mr Trump asking Mr Netanyahu if the attack had been successful, the publication added.

Israel attempted to kill the political leaders of the Islamist group Hamas with the attack in the Qatari capital Doha on Tuesday.

Hamas has said its top leaders survived the airstrike, but five members were killed, including the son of its exiled Gaza chief and top negotiator Khalil al Hayya.

The Israeli military operation in Doha has been widely condemned internationally and was particularly sensitive as Qatar has been hosting and mediating in negotiations which are trying to bring about a ceasefire in the war in Gaza.

On Wednesday, Mr Netanyahu warned Qatar to either expel Hamas officials or “bring them to justice. Because if you don’t, we will”.

Qatar has hit back at him, saying his comments about the Gulf nation hosting a Hamas office were “reckless”.

Donald Trump with Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House earlier this year. Pic: Reuters
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Donald Trump with Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House earlier this year. Pic: Reuters

Meanwhile, the Israeli ambassador to the US, Yechiel Leiter, has said that if Israel failed to kill Hamas leaders on Tuesday, it would succeed next time.

“We have put terrorists on notice, wherever they may be… we’re going to pursue them, and we’re going to destroy those who will destroy us,” he said.

The airstrike took place shortly after Hamas claimed responsibility for Monday’s shooting at a bus stop on the outskirts of Jerusalem that killed six people.

Read more:
Analysis: Israel has crossed a huge diplomatic red line

In another development, Sir Keir Starmer has had talks with Israeli President Isaac Herzog in Downing Street, with Mr Herzog saying they argued during a “tough meeting”.

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PM meets Israeli president

PM condemns Israeli action

The prime minister has condemned the Israeli attack in Qatar, and raised the matter with the president, saying it was “completely unacceptable”.

“He said the strikes were a flagrant violation of a key partner’s sovereignty and do nothing to secure the peace we all desperately want to see,” a Downing Street spokesperson said.

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Israel has been angered by Britain’s plans to join several other Western countries, including France and Canada, in recognising a Palestinian state later this month – unless Israel meets conditions including a ceasefire in Gaza.

“Things were said that were tough and strong, and clearly we can argue, because when allies meet, they can argue. We are both democracies,” Mr Herzog said at an event at Chatham House.

He also proposed offering a “fact-finding mission” to Israel, “sitting with us and studying the situation in Gaza on the humanitarian level”.

“Because we have full answers, and we are fully transparent,” he said.

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Drones and salami: How Putin is testing the West with Poland airspace violation

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Drones and salami: How Putin is testing the West with Poland airspace violation

The unprecedented Russian drone attacks on Poland are both a test and a warning.  How Europe and NATO respond could be crucial to security on this continent.

The Russians are past masters at what’s called “salami slicing”. Tactics that use a series of smaller actions to produce a much bigger outcome that otherwise would have been far more provocative.

The Kremlin is probing the West with gradual but steady escalation. A British Council building and an EU installation are bombed in Kyiv; a senior EU official’s plane’s GPS is jammed.

On their own each provocation produces nothing more than rhetoric from the West – but new lines are crossed and Russia is emboldened.

Ukraine war latest: NATO chief sends message to Putin

Vladimir Putin has a history of testing the West. Pic: Sputnik/Alexei Druzhinin/Kremlin via Reuters
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Vladimir Putin has a history of testing the West. Pic: Sputnik/Alexei Druzhinin/Kremlin via Reuters

Putin is good at this.

He used salami slicing tactics masterfully in 2014 with his “little green men” invasion of Crimea, a range of ambiguous military and diplomatic tactics to take control. The West’s confused delay in responding sealed Crimea’s fate.

He has just taken a larger slice of salami with his drone attacks on Poland.

A drone found in a field in Mniszkow, eastern Poland
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A drone found in a field in Mniszkow, eastern Poland


They are of course a test of NATO’s readiness to deploy its Article 5 obligations. Russia has attacked a member state, allies believe deliberately.

Will NATO trigger the all for one, one for all mechanism in Poland’s defence and attack Russia? Not very likely.

But failing to respond projects weakness. Putin will see the results of his test and plot the next one.

Expect lots of talk of sanctions but remember they failed to avert this invasion and have failed to persuade Russia to reverse it. The only sanctions likely to bite are the ones the US president refuses to approve, on Russia’s oil trade.

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Russia’s Poland incursion represents ‘new chapter’ in Ukraine war, expert says

So how are the drones also a warning? Well, they pose a question.

Vladimir Putin is asking the West if it really wants to become more involved in this conflict with its own forces. Europeans are considering putting boots on the ground inside Ukraine after any potential ceasefire.

If this latest attack is awkward and complicated and hard to respond to now, what happens if Russia uses hybrid tactics then?

Deniable, ambiguous methods that the Russians excel in could make life very difficult for the alliance if it is embroiled in Ukraine.

Think twice before committing your troops there, Russia is warning the West.

Read more:
The pivotal question for NATO
Trump ready to move to second stage of Russia sanctions

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There is more Europe could do.

It could stop buying Russian energy, which it is still astonishingly importing – more than 20 billion euros a year at the last count.

It could use its massive economic advantage (20 times that of Russia’s, and that was before the war) to do more to fund Ukraine’s defence.

While it continues to do neither, expect more excruciating slices of the salami to come.

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