


In a series of massive precision strikes, the Israeli Air Force struck vital targets across Iran, hitting nuclear and missile facilities in response to Iran’s breakout time to a nuclear weapon approaching imminence.
The Israelis had given the process time to work, but no more results than had been the case for two decades. It had become abundantly clear that there was only one country willing to take action to stop Iran’s nuclear weapons program, and once again Israel stepped up, fusing conventional strikes with the kind of deep intelligence targeting that had enabled it to cripple Hezbollah.
The operation, dubbed ‘Rising Line’, reportedly struck 100 targets in the first wave, and more are coming.
Israeli’s targets included nuclear assets, ballistic missile development, nuclear scientists and top figures in Iran’s terrorist IRGC machine which arguably really runs Iran.
It’s a game changer that comes even as much of the world had accepted an Iranian bomb as inevitable.
Iran’s nuclear program isn’t gone, but if Israel did what it intended to, then it has been significantly delayed. The Islamic terror state had dispersed and buried as much of its program as it could, but Israel proved it could not only target facilities, but individuals, deep in enemy territory, not just one or two as before, but many on a larger scale.
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