Iran vuurt raketten af op Israël na aanval op Beiroet

On the evening of June 8, 2026 local time, Iran launched a wave of rocket attacks targeting Israel, a direct retaliation for Israeli airstrikes on the southern suburbs of Beirut that came despite a recently brokered ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon. According to Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), the assault was issued as a formal warning to Israel over its ongoing military blockade and operations in Lebanon.

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) confirmed that multiple projectiles were fired into Israeli territory starting at approximately 10:00 PM local time, triggering air raid sirens across multiple regions of the country. Israeli military command stated that all incoming Iranian rockets had been intercepted successfully as of the latest updates. Roughly an hour after the initial alert, Israeli civil defense authorities issued an all-clear notice, allowing residents to exit bomb shelters.

The IRGC confirmed that one of its primary targets was Ramat David Airbase, located in northern Israel. The group justified the operation as retribution for “widespread killing and forced displacement of oppressed populations in the Tyre and Nabatiyeh regions of southern Lebanon.” In an official statement, the IRGC emphasized: “This operation is a warning. If Israeli aggression continues, our response will be expanded to include all American and Zionist targets across the region.”

Mohsen Rezaee, a senior military advisor to Iran’s Supreme Leader, reiterated the country’s stance via social media platform X, stressing that Iran will not tolerate any violations of the Lebanese ceasefire, and the rocket strike was a clear caution to Israeli leadership. “Any new hostile action will be met with a far heavier and more devastating response,” Rezaee added.

The strike comes in the wake of Israeli airstrikes carried out against Dahiyeh, the densely populated southern suburb of Beirut, earlier the same day. Those airstrikes left at least two people dead and 11 others injured in a residential neighborhood. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Israel Katz claimed the attack targeted a command center operated by Hezbollah, the Lebanese militant group backed by Iran.

The IRGC described the Israeli strikes on Dahiyeh as a crossing of “all red lines” that could not go unanswered. Iranian Parliament Speaker and lead nuclear negotiator Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf issued a further warning, stating that Iran will not only suspend ongoing negotiations with international parties but also enter into direct confrontation with Israel if it continues to violate the Lebanese ceasefire.

U.S. President Donald Trump has publicly come out against any Israeli retaliatory strike against Iran. He confirmed he will call Prime Minister Netanyahu to urge him against launching a counterattack, in a bid to prevent further regional escalation. Trump noted that a new agreement with Iran is close to being finalized, and further open conflict would put this progress at serious risk. However, anonymous sources familiar with the matter note it remains unclear whether the U.S. government would fully back Israel if it chooses to proceed with an attack on Iran.

Israeli officials had earlier stated on Sunday that the country was considering a “powerful response” to the Iranian rocket barrage. Tensions have been mounting for weeks as Iran issued repeated warnings demanding Israel end its military operations in southern Lebanon. Since March 2 of this year, more than 3,500 people have been killed in Israeli strikes across Lebanon, pushing the region’s fragile ceasefire and broader stability to the breaking point.