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War in the Middle East: latest developments Paris, France, April 6 (AFP) Apr 06, 2026 The latest developments in the Middle East war:
"Eery power plant in Iran will be out of business, burning, exploding and never to be used again," he said, threatening the same for the country's bridges. "I mean complete demolition by 12 o'clock (0400 GMT Wednesday), and it'll happen over a period of four hours -- if we wanted to."
"It's a significant step. It's not good enough, but it's a very significant step," Trump told reporters in Washington before his news conference. Iranian state media said the proposal contained 10 undisclosed points, but Tehran "has rejected a ceasefire and insists on the need for a definitive end to the conflict".
"Any war fought without limits is incompatible with the law," she said, without singling out any country or leader. The US president, asked earlier about potentially committing war crimes by attacking civilian infrastructure, said "I'm not worried about it". He argued an Iran with "a nuclear weapon" would be worse.
It said the strikes were part of efforts aimed at "degrading the Iranian Air Force and the IRGC air force at airports in Tehran".
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the facility had been "destroyed" and his country was "systematically eliminating the Revolutionary Guards' money machine". Strikes also hit another petrochemical complex near the Iranian city of Shiraz, local authorities said.
IAEA director general Rafael Grossi said one recent strike had hit just 75 metres (245 feet) from the Bushehr perimeter.
Some hours earlier, air defence systems downed four missiles headed towards the US consulate in Erbil, a security source told AFP.
The Guards threatened "a major retaliatory strike" in response.
South Korea will send five ships to the Saudi Red Sea port of Yanbu to help establish alternative oil supply routes avoiding the Strait of Hormuz, a ruling MP said. Taiwan said it would also redirect ships to bring crude oil from Saudi Red Sea ports. burs/rmb/sbk |
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