More strikes aimed at Iran after supreme leader killed

March 1, 2026 by Reuters
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Israel says it has launched another wave of strikes on Iran, as Iranians faced uncertainty after the killing of their supreme leader in US and Israeli attacks that threatened to destabilise the wider Middle East.

Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei delivers an address on Oct. 19, 2022.                  Source: Channel 1 (Iran) via MEMRI.

Hours after the ‌US and Israel said an air strike had killed Ayatollah Ali Khamenei as part of the most ambitious series of attacks on Iran in decades, Iranian state media confirmed the 86-year-old leader’s death on Saturday.

US President Donald Trump ‌said the air strikes on Iranian targets were aimed at ending a decades-long threat from Iran and ensuring it could not develop a nuclear weapon as he sought to justify a risky gambit that seemed to go against his professed opposition ‌to American involvement in complex overseas conflicts.

US Central Command released photographs showing Tomahawk missiles, F-18 and F-35 fighter jets, alongside details of the strikes on Iran as ‌part of Operation Epic Fury.

Israel’s military said its strikes on Sunday morning targeted Iran’s ballistic missile and air defence systems.

On Saturday, Iran launched hundreds of missiles and drones in response to the initial attacks, targeting US troops in the region and cities in Israel and Arab countries allied with Washington and leading to widespread flight cancellations in the region.

A senior US intelligence official told Reuters that while the largest threat stemming from the attack was against US military personnel in the Middle East, cyber attacks could also ‌target critical US infrastructure.

Dubai’s international ‌airport and its landmark Burj Al ⁠Arab hotel sustained damage and four people were injured.

Abu Dhabi Airports said in a post on X that an incident at Zayed International Airport in ​the UAE’s capital resulted in one fatality involving an Asian national and seven injuries. It later deleted the post.

Tehran warned the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow passage through which around a fifth of global oil consumption passes, had been closed, raising expectations of a sharp jump in oil prices.

Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps said in a statement on Sunday, the country’s armed forces soon would retaliate again with their biggest offensive operation ever at US bases and Israel.

Iran’s ambassador to the UN, Amir Saeid Iravani, told an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council on Saturday that hundreds of civilians had been killed and injured in the US and Israeli strikes.

Iravani called Iran’s retaliatory attacks a matter of ⁠self-defence, saying the bases of hostile forces are legitimate military targets.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, who called for an immediate cessation ‌of hostilities, told the council ​he deeply regretted that an opportunity for diplomacy had been “squandered”.

Earlier, he condemned the strikes and the retaliation by Iran, saying it undermined international peace and security.

Witnesses said some Iranians took to the streets in Tehran, the nearby city of Karaj and the central city of Isfahan to celebrate after reports of ​Khamenei’s death emerged.

Videos posted ‌on social media, which Reuters was unable to immediately verify, also showed celebrations in other locations.

Israel and the US timed the attacks to coincide with a meeting of Khamenei and his top aides.

Khamenei was working in his office when the attack occurred, Iranian state media said. His daughter,  grandchild, daughter-in-law and son-in-law were also killed.

The Revolutionary Guards issued a statement mourning the loss of “a great leader”.

Trump, in a social media post, called him “one of the most evil people in History”.

Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ​called on ​Iranians to rise up and overthrow their government in the wake of the attacks, which took ​out at least seven senior military commanders, according to Israel’s military.

Experts said that while the deaths of Khamenei ‌and other Iranian leaders would deal a major blow to the country, it would not necessarily spell the end of Iran’s entrenched clerical rule or the Revolutionary Guards’ sway over the population.

Israeli military operations over the past two years had already killed some of Iran’s senior military officials and severely weakened several of Tehran’s once-feared proxy forces across the Middle East.

After Israel pounded Iran in a 12-day air war in June, joined by the United States, the US and Israel had warned they would strike again if Iran pressed ahead with its nuclear and ballistic missile programs.

Senior US officials said on Saturday ​the latest talks showed Iran was not willing to give ⁠up its ability to enrich uranium, which the Iranians argued they wanted for nuclear energy but US officials said would enable the country to build a nuclear ​bomb.

Reuters  with dpa

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