City
Epaper

"US eliminated greatest existential threat to humanity": Israel's envoy to UN on strikes against Iran

By ANI | Updated: June 23, 2025 07:23 IST

New York [US], June 23 : Israel's Permanent Representative to the United Nations, Danny Danon, hailed the recent US ...

Open in App

New York [US], June 23 : Israel's Permanent Representative to the United Nations, Danny Danon, hailed the recent US strikes on Iran's nuclear sites as a critical move to eliminate what he called the "greatest existential threat to humanity," during an emergency special session of the UN the Security Council held at Headquarters in New York on Sunday (local time).

Addressing the session, convened under the agenda item "threats to international peace and security," Danon staunchly defended the US-led Operation Midnight Hammer, stating, "The United States has eliminated the greatest existential threat to humanityand yet, some nations still dare to condemn it. I asked members of the Security Council: Where were you when Iran enriched uranium beyond civilian use? Where were you when Iran openly plotted our destruction? You were silent, you were afraid, you were bystanders."

Danon accused Iran of using its negotiations with the US on a nuclear peace deal as a "camouflage" and "delay tactic" to advance its missile and uranium enrichment programmes. "Iran used the negotiating table as camouflage, a delay tactic, a way to buy time while building missiles and enriching uranium... We gave it every possible off-ramp; Iran would not move, so it had to be moved," he said.

Warning of the global consequences of inaction, the envoy added, "A nuclear Iran would have been a death sentence, just as much for you as it would have been for us." The remarks came amid the escalating conflict in the region following the US-led Operation Midnight Hammer, which targeted Iran's three key nuclear sites in Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan.

Earlier on Sunday, the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) stated that approximately 20 Israeli Air Force (IAF) fighter jets conducted intelligence-based strikes using over 30 munitions on sites across Hamedan and Tehran in Iran.

In a post on X, the IDF stated that the targets included missile storage and launch infrastructure, radar and satellite systems used for aerial intelligence, and a surface-to-air missile launcher near Tehran.

It noted that the strikes were part of an ongoing effort to "degrade the Iranian regime's military capabilities and secure aerial superiority to protect Israeli civilians."

"Approx. 20 IAF fighter jets conducted intelligence-based strikes using over 30 munitions on sites across Kermanshah, Hamedan and Tehran. Targets included: Missile storage & launch infrastructure. Radar and satellite systems used for aerial intel. A surface-to-air missile launcher near Tehran. These strikes are part of our ongoing effort to degrade the Iranian regimes military capabilities and secure aerial superiority to protect Israeli civilians," the IDF stated.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

TechnologyRural roads built under PM scheme to link India’s villages cross 7.87 lakh km mark

Other SportsThere was more pressure last year than this year, says Rashid ahead of SA20 opener

BusinessRural roads built under PM scheme to link India’s villages cross 7.87 lakh km mark

NationalRural roads built under PM scheme to link India’s villages cross 7.87 lakh km mark

Entertainment"One of the realest": Channing Tatum pays tribute to late actor James Ransone

International Realted Stories

InternationalAnti-Taliban leaders worry about their safety after killing of former Afghan General in Tehran

International"Gratitude to everyone": BNP leader Rahman after his grand reception after he landed in Bangladesh

InternationalTanzania Helicopter Crash: 5 Killed After Medical Chopper Crashes on Mount Kilimanjaro

InternationalPakistan: Nearly 4,800 killed in road accidents in Punjab province in 2025, motorcyclists most at risk

InternationalBangladesh needs a lot of divine help, good sense, open-mindedness for democracy to return: Ex-diplomat Vidya Bhushan Soni