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Missiles Toward Israel, Aimed at Us All: The Iranian Regime’s War on Freedom

Smoke billows following missile attack from Iran on Israel, at Tel Aviv, Israel, June 13, 2025. Photo: REUTERS/Gideon Markowicz ISRAEL
As missiles rain down on Israel, they carry more than explosives — they carry a message to the free world: the Islamic Republic of Iran is no longer hiding its agenda. It is unleashing it.
The Iranian regime is not merely a regional menace. It is a global threat. For too long, the world has ignored or excused its open declarations to annihilate Israel, erase Jews, destroy the United States, and dismantle Western democracy from within.
This is not a sudden escalation. It is the culmination of more than four decades of methodical, well-funded aggression. Iran has invested not only in uranium enrichment and ballistic missile systems, but in a sprawling terror infrastructure that spans continents. Through its proxies — Hezbollah in Lebanon, Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad in Gaza, the Houthis in Yemen, Shiite militias in Iraq and Syria — Iran has exported death and destabilization far beyond its borders.
Its fingerprints are on bombings, kidnappings, cyberattacks, and assassinations. Its propaganda infiltrates social media, academic discourse, and policymaking spaces. And its operatives are embedded in communities and institutions across the globe.
But what makes this moment particularly dangerous is the world’s silence. Carefully worded condemnations. Equivocal statements. Prioritizing optics over moral clarity. Too many Western leaders still treat Iran as a misunderstood player, rather than what it plainly is: a tyrannical theocratic regime at war with freedom.
The media perpetuates this confusion, often blaming Israel for defending itself — as though a sovereign, democratic nation under sustained attack has no right to ensure the safety of its citizens. But Israel’s response is not retaliation. It is survival. It is a necessity. It is strategic, precise, and consistent with what any nation would –and must — do when facing an existential threat.
Since the Hamas-led atrocities of October 7, 2023, we’ve seen a disturbing pattern: Israel is vilified for doing what every other country does when its people are slaughtered and threatened. Leaders in Washington, London, Berlin, and Paris understand this privately. But publicly, they hedge, they placate, and they equivocate.
Even Arab governments, many of which have long regarded Iran as the greatest destabilizing force in the region, are complicit in this duplicity. Behind closed doors, they hope Israel will succeed where they have failed: in halting Iran’s nuclear ambitions and regional domination. But publicly, they condemn Israel — not out of principle, but out of fear: fear of Iranian retaliation and fear of unrest within their own populations, inflamed by Islamist propaganda.
The threat Iran poses to the Middle East cannot be overstated. It funds terror organizations that undermine moderate governments, destabilize fragile societies, and prolong conflict. Its influence extends from Lebanon to Syria, from Iraq to Yemen, from Gaza to the Persian Gulf. In each of these places, it empowers non-state actors that thrive on chaos and violence.
But the Islamic Republic doesn’t only terrorize others — it brutalizes its own people.
In Iran, women are forced into submission under the regime’s extremist interpretation of Islamic law. The so-called “morality police” enforce mandatory hijab laws with violence and imprisonment. Girls and women are denied basic rights, bodily autonomy, and even the ability to sing or dance in public.
LGBTQ+ Iranians face institutionalized persecution, torture, and execution. Simply existing as homosexual, queer, or trans in Iran is punishable by death. Activists, artists, students, and journalists who dare to speak out against the regime disappear into prison cells — or into shallow graves.
And the cruelty does not stop at Iran’s borders. Iranian intelligence services have a long history of targeting dissidents, former officials, and outspoken critics abroad — including in the US, Europe, and South America. Whether through assassination plots, cyber harassment, or coercion of family members back home, Iran has weaponized fear and violence globally. Those who impede its Islamist agenda or speak the truth about its crimes are marked.
This brings us to what we are now witnessing across cities in the West: the rise of Palestinianism — a radicalized movement that has become a central arm of the broader Islamist agenda.
Let me be clear: This is not a call for Palestinian statehood or peaceful coexistence. It is not rooted in humanitarian concern. Palestinianism, as we now see it in marches, riots, violence, desecration of public property, targeting Jewish communities, synagogues, businesses, schools, university occupations across the Western world, and vitriolic anti-Zionist and anti-Israel social media campaigns, is a politicized cult of grievance and destruction. It aligns itself with the Islamic Republic’s goal of eradicating Israel and undermining liberal democracies like the United States from within.
It merges anti-Zionism with antisemitism, cloaking hatred in the language of liberation. It draws in well-meaning activists and allies, weaponizing progressive values — inclusion, equality, anti-racism — only to subvert them from the inside. What begins as solidarity ends as surrender to theocratic fascism.
As someone who has spent my life advocating for Jewish and LGBTQ+ rights, I have seen how Iran, Qatar, Hamas, the Muslim Brotherhood, and ISIS have infiltrated social justice and civil rights movements in the West. Not with compassion — but with coercion. Not with shared values — but with a hijacking of language and platforms.
They use our freedoms to destroy our freedoms. They plant the seeds of division and weaponize identity to dismantle solidarity. Universities, media outlets, and political parties have become vulnerable conduits for their ideology.
I have been warning about this for years. And now, as Iranian missiles target Israel, as terror proxies destabilize the Middle East, and as radicals march in Western cities calling for “Intifada,” the world is finally — belatedly — seeing what we have allowed to fester.
This is not just Israel’s war. This is a global battle for the soul of our civilization.
Islamism — not Islam, but Islamism — is a radical, theocratic political movement cloaked in religious language. It is a modern totalitarianism that uses faith as a weapon. And it is here — on our streets, in our schools, in our governments. We see it in the storming of synagogues, the harassment of Jewish students, the silencing of Israeli speakers, the boycotts of businesses, the glorification of terrorist groups, and the threats against anyone — Jewish or not — who dares to dissent.
The Palestinianist and Islamist uprisings we are witnessing today are not peaceful protests. They are coordinated pressure campaigns –sometimes erupting into outright violence — meant to intimidate, destabilize, and force compliance with a genocidal agenda.
To remain silent is to be complicit.
To equivocate is to enable.
To excuse is to embolden.
To my fellow activists, journalists, human rights defenders, and leaders of conscience:
This is the moment.
To name the threat.
To defend what matters.
To speak truth without apology.
Because the missiles flying toward Israel tonight are not just aimed at Jews. They are aimed at all of us — our values, our freedoms, our future.
And we cannot afford to look away any longer.
Yuval David is an Emmy and Multi-Award-Winning Actor, Filmmaker, Journalist, and Jewish LGBTQ+ activist and advisor. A creative and compelling storyteller, on stage and screen, news and across social media, Yuval shares the narrative of Jewish activism and enduring hope. Follow him on Instagram, YouTube, and X.
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Trump Says He Wants ‘Real End’ to Nuclear Problem With Iran, Israel Warns Khamenei

Smoke rises following an Israeli attack on the IRIB building, the country’s state broadcaster, in Tehran, Iran, June 16, 2025. Photo: Majid Asgaripour/WANA (West Asia News Agency) via REUTERS
US President Donald Trump said he wanted a “real end” to the nuclear dispute with Iran and indicated he may send senior American officials to meet with the Islamic Republic as the Israel–Iran air war raged for a fifth day.
Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz said meanwhile that Iran‘s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei could face the same fate as Iraqi President Saddam Hussein, who was toppled in a US-led invasion and eventually hanged after a trial.
“I warn the Iranian dictator against continuing to commit war crimes and fire missiles at Israeli citizens,” Katz told top Israeli military officials. Shortly after, Iran‘s state media reported an explosion was heard in Tehran.
Several explosions were later heard in the east and north of the city of Isfahan in central Iran, the semi-official Mehr news agency reported.
Speaking to reporters after his early departure from Canada, where he attended the Group of Seven nations summit on Monday, Trump predicted that Israel would not be easing its attacks on Iran.
“You’re going to find out over the next two days. You’re going to find out. Nobody’s slowed up so far,” he said.
Trump said he might send US Middle East Envoy Steve Witkoff or Vice President JD Vance to meet with Iranian officials.
Washington has said Trump is still aiming for a nuclear deal with Iran, even as the military confrontation unfolds.
Trump said his departure from the G7 summit had “nothing to do with” working on a deal between Israel and Iran, after French President Emmanuel Macron said the US had initiated a ceasefire proposal.
Something “much bigger” than that was expected, he said on his Truth Social platform late on Monday.
REGIONAL INFLUENCE WEAKENS
Khamenei has seen his main military and security advisers killed by Israeli air strikes, leaving major holes in his inner circle and raising the risk of strategic errors, according to five people familiar with his decision-making process.
Israel‘s military said Iran‘s military leadership is “on the run” and that it had killed Iran‘s wartime chief of staff Ali Shadmani overnight four days into his job after replacing another top commander killed in the strikes.
With Iranian leaders suffering their most dangerous security breach since the 1979 revolution that toppled a US-backed monarch and led to clerical rule, the country’s cyber security command banned officials from using communications devices and mobile phones, Fars news agency reported.
Ever since the Tehran-backed Hamas attacked Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, and triggered the Gaza war, Khamenei‘s regional influence has been weakening as Israel has pounded Iran‘s proxies – from Hamas in Gaza to Hezbollah in Lebanon, the Houthis in Yemen and militias in Iraq. And Iran‘s close ally, Syria’s autocratic president Bashar al-Assad, has been ousted.
Israel launched its air war, its largest ever on Iran, after saying it concluded Iran was on the verge of developing a nuclear weapon.
Iran denies seeking nuclear weapons and has pointed to its right to nuclear technology for peaceful purposes, including enrichment, as a party to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.
Israel, which is not a party to the NPT, is the only country in the Middle East widely believed to have nuclear weapons. Israel does not deny or confirm that.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has stressed that he will not back down until Iran‘s nuclear development is disabled, while Trump says the Israeli assault could end if Iran agrees to strict curbs on its nuclear program.
Before the attack began, the UN’s nuclear watchdog the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) declared Iran in breach of its non-proliferation obligations for the first time in almost 20 years.
The IAEA said on Tuesday there were indications of direct impacts on the underground enrichment halls at the Natanz facility, and that there was no change to report at the Fordow and Isfahan sites.
Katz said the Iranian nuclear facility at Fordow, where an enrichment site is dug into a mountain, was an issue that will “of course” be addressed.
SHIP COLLISION
Israel says it now has control of Iranian airspace and intends to escalate the campaign in the coming days.
Israel‘s advantage leaves few obstacles in the way of its expanding bombardment, though it will struggle to deal a knock-out blow to deeply buried nuclear sites without the US joining the attack, experts say.
Iran has so far fired nearly 400 ballistic missiles and hundreds of drones towards Israel, with about 35 missiles penetrating Israel‘s defensive shield and making impact, Israeli officials say.
Iran‘s Revolutionary Guards said they had hit Israel‘s Military Intelligence Directorate and spy agency Mossad’s operational center early on Tuesday. There was no Israeli confirmation of such attacks.
Iranian officials have reported 224 deaths, mostly civilians, while Israel said 24 civilians had been killed.
World oil markets are on high alert for any strikes on Iran‘s energy infrastructure or elsewhere in the region that could hit global supply.
Two oil tankers collided and caught fire on Tuesday near the Strait of Hormuz, where electronic interference has surged during conflict between Iran and Israel, but there were no injuries to crew or spillage reported. About a fifth of the world’s total oil consumption passes through the waterway.
Qatar’s foreign ministry spokesperson said Israel‘s “uncalculated” attack on Iran‘s South Pars gas field was worrying “everyone” but production was steady.
Iran shares the field, the world’s biggest, with Qatar.
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US Pulls Out of Two More Bases in Syria, Worrying Kurdish Forces

US military vehicles drive in Hasakah, Syria, Dec. 6, 2024. Photo: REUTERS/Orhan Qereman
US forces have pulled out of two more bases in northeastern Syria, visiting Reuters reporters found, accelerating a troop drawdown that the commander of US-backed Syrian Kurdish forces said was allowing a resurgence of Islamic State.
Reuters reporters who visited the two bases in the past week found them mostly deserted, both guarded by small contingents of the Syrian Democratic Forces – the Kurdish-led military group that Washington has backed in the fight against Islamic State for a decade.
Cameras used on bases occupied by the US-led military coalition had been taken down, and razor wire on the outer perimeters had begun to sag.
A Kurdish politician who lives on one base said there were no longer US troops there. SDF guards at the second base said troops had left recently but declined to say when. The Pentagon declined to comment.
It is the first confirmation on the ground by reporters that the US has withdrawn from Al-Wazir and Tel Baydar bases in Hasaka province. It brings to at least four the number of bases in Syria US troops have left since President Donald Trump took office.
Trump’s administration said this month it will scale down its military presence in Syria to one base from eight in parts of northeastern Syria that the SDF controls. The New York Times reported in April that troops might be reduced from 2,000 to 500 in the drawdown.
The SDF did not respond to questions about the current number of troops and open US bases in northeastern Syria.
But SDF commander Mazloum Abdi, who spoke to Reuters at another US base, Al Shadadi, said the presence of a few hundred troops on one base would be “not enough” to contain the threat of Islamic State.
“The threat of Islamic State has significantly increased recently. But this is the US military’s plan. We’ve known about it for a long time … and we’re working with them to make sure there are no gaps and we can maintain pressure on Islamic State,” he said.
Abdi spoke to Reuters on Friday, hours after Israel launched its air war on Iran. He declined to comment on how the new Israel-Iran war would affect Syria, saying simply that he hoped it would not spill over there and that he felt safe on a US base.
Hours after the interview, three Iranian-made missiles targeted the Al Shadadi base and were shot down by US defense systems, two SDF security sources said.
ISIS ACTIVE IN SYRIAN CITIES
Islamic State, also known as ISIS and Daesh, ruled vast swathes of Iraq and Syria from 2014 to 2017 during Syria’s civil war, imposing a vision of Islamic rule under which it beheaded locals in city squares, sex-trafficked members of the Yazidi minority and executed foreign journalists and aid workers.
The group, from its strongholds in Raqqa in Syria and Mosul in Iraq, also launched deadly attacks in European and Middle Eastern countries.
A US-led military coalition of more than 80 countries waged a yearslong campaign to defeat the group and end its territorial control, supporting Iraqi forces and the SDF.
But Islamic State has been reinvigorated since the ouster of Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad in December at the hands of separate Islamist rebels.
Abdi said ISIS cells had become active in several Syrian cities, including Damascus, and that a group of foreign jihadists who once battled the Syrian regime had joined its ranks. He did not elaborate.
He said ISIS had seized weapons and ammunition from Syrian regime depots in the chaos after Assad’s fall.
Several Kurdish officials told Reuters that Islamic State had already begun moving more openly around US bases which had recently been shuttered, including near the cities of Deir Ezzor and Raqqa, once strongholds for the extremist group.
In areas the SDF controls east of the Euphrates River, ISIS has waged a series of attacks and killed at least 10 SDF fighters and security forces, Abdi said. Attacks included a roadside bomb targeting a convoy of oil tankers on a road near the US base where he gave the interview.
The post US Pulls Out of Two More Bases in Syria, Worrying Kurdish Forces first appeared on Algemeiner.com.
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Trump Says US Won’t Kill Iran’s Supreme Leader, ‘At Least Not for Now’

US President Donald Trump speaks in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, US, Feb. 11, 2025. Photo: REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
President Donald Trump said on Tuesday the US knew exactly where Iran‘s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, was “hiding,” that he was an easy target but would not be killed, at least for now.
“We know exactly where the so-called ‘Supreme Leader’ is hiding. He is an easy target, but is safe there – We are not going to take him out (kill!), at least not for now,” Trump said in a post on Truth Social.
“But we don’t want missiles shot at civilians, or American soldiers. Our patience is wearing thin,” Trump said.
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