Iran launched first direct attack ever carried out by the Islamic Republic against the Hebrew State. Israeli army assured that Iran had launched more than 200 drones and missiles, the “vast majority” of which had been intercepted without serious consequences.

Jordan and Lebanon, Israel's neighbors, quickly closed their airspace, as did Iraq, which borders Iran. Israeli emergency services announced that teams had treated around thirty people suffering from anxiety or slightly injured. The next few hours will be crucial as Israeli military officials promise a “precedented and “uncedented” response to Iran’s attack on Tel Aviv. The battle is also being played out - and above all - around the Iranian nuclear program. In July 2015, Tehran concluded an agreement with major international powers to regulate it. But “Israel is not bound by this agreement (…) because Iran continues to want our destruction,” warned the then Prime Minister, a certain certain Benjamin Netanyahu. After this unprecedented attack on Iranian soil, will it target the infrastructure of the nuclear program?