At least 13 people, including three minors, have been killed in Israel after days of conflict with Iran, the Israeli government said Sunday.
Ten people were killed in the attacks overnight and at least 385 people were injured, with seven in a serious condition, the government said.
Over 200 rocket launches were reported overnight, the government added, with 22 impact sites identified.
Three people died in attacks the previous night.
This post has been corrected to reflect that 13 people have died in Israel since the conflict began and not just overnight, as previously reported.
Iran does not want Israel conflict to expand “unless it’s imposed on us,” foreign minister says
Iran’s foreign minister says Tehran does not want the conflict with Israel to expand to a wider regional war “unless it’s imposed on us.”
Abbas Araghchi added that his country had been ready to continue nuclear negotiations with the US, but that Israel’s strikes on Friday had disrupted those talks and showed Israel’s “opposition to any form of negotiation.”
“It is absolutely clear that the Israeli regime does not want any agreement on the nuclear issue; it does not want negotiations, and it does not want diplomacy,” Araghchi said in a meeting with foreign ambassadors broadcast on state-run media. “The attack on Iran in the midst of nuclear talks clearly demonstrates the Israeli regime’s opposition to any form of negotiation.”
Araghchi said that Iran’s strikes on Israel have targeted both military and economic infrastructure and criticized Israel’s strikes on Iranian petrochemical refineries as risking a broader regional conflict.
US President Donald Trump wrote in a Truth Social post on Sunday morning that the US “had nothing to do with the attack on Iran, tonight.” He then warned: “If we are attacked in any way, shape or form by Iran, the full strength and might of the US Armed Forces will come down on you at levels never seen before.”
But Araghchi was skeptical. “From our perspective, (Israel’s) aggression against the Islamic Republic of Iran could not have occurred without the agreement and support of the United States,” he said, claiming Iran had “solid evidence” of US support behind the strikes – though he did not say what the evidence was.





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