WSJ What’s News - Israel Launches Major Strike on Iran’s Nuclear Sites
Episode Date: June 13, 2025A.M. Edition for June 13. Israel launches a wide-ranging attack on Iran’s nuclear program and military leadership, killing the head of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. WSJ Middle East bureau c...hief Andrew Dowell analyzes the scope of the military operation and the dynamics to watch going forward. Plus, a judge orders President Trump to return control of California’s National Guard to the state’s governor. And a possible loss of engine thrust emerges as an early focus in the probe into yesterday’s deadly Air India crash. Luke Vargas hosts. Sign up for the WSJ’s free What’s News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Israel attacks Iran in a bid to cripple its nuclear program.
Moments ago, Israel launched Operation Rising Lion, a targeted military operation to roll
back the Iranian threat
to Israel's very survival.
We'll get the latest as Tehran strikes back.
Plus, a judge orders President Trump to return control of California's National Guard to the
state's governor, and a possible loss of engine thrust emerges as an early focus in the probe into
yesterday's deadly Air India crash.
It's Friday, June 13th.
I'm Luke Vargas for the Wall Street Journal and here is the AM edition of What's News,
the top headlines and business stories moving your world today.
Israel launched a wide-ranging attack on Iran's nuclear program and military leadership overnight, striking
dozens of targets and killing the head of the country's Islamic Revolutionary Guard
Corps.
Israel said that some 200 jet fighters participated in a first wave of attacks, part of what Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said was an operation aimed at taking out Iran's nuclear enrichment
program and which could last for
days.
Israel will never allow those who call for our annihilation to develop the means to achieve
that goal.
Tonight, Israel backs those words with action.
We struck at the heart of Iran's nuclear enrichment program.
Iran's supreme leader said that Israel should expect severe punishment for the attacks,
with Israel already intercepting some of the roughly 100 drones that were launched by Iran
this morning.
With more on this rapidly evolving situation, I'm joined by Wall Street Journal Middle
East editor Andrew Dowell.
Andrew, these attacks began under the cover of darkness, though it is now midday in the
region.
What can we say about the scope and the scale of what's occurred here?
There are a couple of important things here. One is that far from being a set of pinpoint
attacks on Iran's nuclear program, it's actually quite extensive campaign that targets not
just nuclear facilities, but also air defenses, military leadership, most importantly, and
also nuclear scientists.
Israel sent hundreds of warplanes in five different waves and struck many targets in
its campaign.
Nat. Including the head of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, I imagine that has provoked quite
a lot of anger in Iran.
Yeah, the dead include three very senior members of the military, the head of the Islamic Revolutionary
Guard Corps, as you mentioned, the head of the Iranian military chief of staff, and one
more senior general.
And yeah, it's not only something that sparked a lot of outrage, but it's also left a significant
hole at the top of Iran's military leadership.
Soterios Johnson In terms of their response, we mentioned drones being intercepted by Israel
already coming from Iran.
Do we understand the retaliation is ongoing and tell us a little bit about what we've
seen and maybe could see going forward?
So far, we haven't seen anything on the scale that we saw last year when Iran and Israel
exchanged direct fire and Iran responded with hundreds of ballistic and cruise missiles
and drones.
There's been a wave of drones launched at Israel by Iran,
perhaps 100, many of which have been intercepted over Jordan. But Iran does have a number of assets.
Israel has degraded their capabilities, but they have large stockpile of missiles.
They have allies around the region, the Houthis, in a very diminished capacity, Hezbollah in Lebanon,
Houthis in Yemen, and other militias in Iraq, all of whom have the capacity to fire
missiles at Israel or US assets in the region.
Iran had also warned before the strike that any military attack on Iran could lead to
Iran attacking US forces in the region as well.
So there's the chance not only of greater scale of response against Israel, but also
widening of the response to include the United States.
And this is coming in spite of Tehran being engaged in recent weeks with nuclear talks
with Washington.
It also comes basically just a day after Iran said it was going to open up a secret new
uranium enrichment site.
How should we understand the timing of all of this?
Just given the scale that we've seen, this is obviously something that's been planned
and considered in the works for a long time.
It's a major operation with a lot of different components.
Israel is doing airstrikes.
We've also reported that Mossad is doing operations on the ground, Israel's spy agency.
It's a complex, widespread operation that I don't think is something that would have
been put together as a response to developments of the moment.
The nuclear talks that have been going on are at an impasse. Iran refuses to give up nuclear
enrichment, which is what the West, what the United States, and what Israel expect them to do.
And Israel alleges that Iran has been making other forms of progress on its nuclear program.
And while those are developments that have probably contributed to the concern, it seems
like this is something that's been in the works for a while.
On that point, what if anything do we know about the role of the US in all of this?
President Trump has has lately been warning Israel quite publicly about not striking Iran
lest that derail the nuclear diplomacy he'd been pursuing.
Yeah, I think it's a situation that the US was aware of.
We've reported that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu let Trump know Monday on
a phone call that Israel was considering a strike on Iran.
The US in the middle of the week pulled non-essentials in its embassies in Iraq and military personnel
in the Gulf out of the Middle East or ordered
them out of the Middle East.
So you know, there was clearly some awareness on the US part.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio has said that the US wasn't involved in the attack and
there's no indication that it was.
Just in terms of those comments from Secretary Rubio, the US not being involved, not wanting
to have its forces targeted by Iran.
I imagine though that is something to watch in the days ahead, whether the US sort of remains
on the sidelines here.
What else should we be watching for dynamics
to be monitoring in the coming hours days here?
I think there's several important things
to keep an eye out for.
One is like the continued scale of Israel's attack,
how much broader their target set gets
and how much more ambitious they get
in terms of the sorts of targets
and perhaps even personnel that they go after.
The second thing is to see Iran's response, whether it escalates significantly from what
we saw today in terms of this drone attack and whether it extends beyond Israel to maybe
American assets in the region or other more sensitive sites, economically sensitive or
militarily sensitive sites across the region.
And yeah, the final thing is to see whether the response and the disruption is significant enough that the United States, even though it seems to have sat out this round, ultimately gets pulled
into the conflict. Andrew Dowell is The Wall Street Journal's Middle East editor. Andrew,
thank you so much for the update. Thank you.
And the market reaction to Israel's attack on Iran
has been swift.
Oil prices jumped, while safe haven assets,
such as gold, government bonds, the Japanese yen,
and the Swiss franc strengthened as the attack spurred investors
to pare down risk.
Journal Finance editor Alex Frankos
says oil prices shot up to around $75 a barrel,
which would mark one of the biggest
moves in several years if prices hold for the day.
Even though Iran is sanctioned and isolated in a lot of ways, its oil finds its way to
markets through kind of clandestine means.
A lot of it gets sold to China.
And if someone's buying some Iranian oil, they're not buying other people's oil.
And so that keeps prices low.
The second order effect is what is Iran going to do to retaliate against possible oil producing countries around the Middle East?
If they retaliate against Saudi Arabia or choke off shipping lines in the Persian Gulf or in the Red Sea, that could cause disruption.
So oil traders are reflexively bidding up the price because they think there's any
number of possibilities that could happen.
And the timing anyways of this was a big surprise.
Coming up, we'll look at the rest of the day's news, including plans for mass
protests against the Trump administration's immigration crackdown this weekend.
We've got that story and more after the break.
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A federal judge has ruled that President Trump illegally took federal control of the California
National Guard when he deployed them in response to protests in Los Angeles over the objections
of the state's elected leaders.
The ruling found that the president exceeded his statutory authority and violated the Constitution's
10th Amendment, which reserves certain powers to the states and ordered that he return control of the guard to California Governor Gavin Newsom, a ruling that Newsom
applauded.
I hope it's the beginning of a new day in this country where we push back against overreach,
push back against these authoritarian tendencies of a president that has pushed the boundaries,
pushed the limit, but no longer
can push this state around any longer.
The implementation of yesterday's ruling is currently on hold through Tuesday, when
an immediate appeal by the Trump administration goes before the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals.
The White House and the Justice Department didn't immediately respond to requests for
comment. Meanwhile, protests are planned in over 2,000 cities nationwide tomorrow.
Dubbed No Kings Day, organizers are hoping to highlight what they say is President Trump's
overreach and are encouraging attendees to wave American flags to show grassroots patriotism.
One city without a scheduled rally is Washington, D.C., where President Trump has organized
a military parade to celebrate the Army's 250th birthday.
Trump had warned this week that protesters at his event would be met with a very big
force.
Investigators probing yesterday's Air India crash that killed over 240 people are focusing early
attention on a possible loss of engine thrust shortly after takeoff. The
London bound Boeing 787 issued a Mayday and vanished from radar just 50 seconds
into flight, crashing into a residential area in the Indian city of Ahmedabad.
Air safety reporter Andrew Tangle says the latest video footage of the plane
raises several questions.
They include the aircraft's configuration. Were the flaps on the rear of the wings extended
as they generally speaking should be during takeoff to help generate aerodynamic lift
to help the aircraft take off? Why was the landing gear down? Generally speaking would probably be up at
that point after takeoff. Did the engines lose thrust for some reason and why? These are some
of the early big questions around this accident. The investigation is expected to last for months
with people familiar with the probe saying that many questions remain unanswered. And in another legal challenge aimed at Washington, California and 10 other states have sued to stop
the rollback of electric vehicle rules that are meant to phase out the use of gasoline-powered
cars by 2035. The suit, filed against the Environmental Protection Agency and President
Trump, contends that Congress acted illegally
in revoking waivers that allowed California to set stricter emissions rules than the federal
government and did so after the federal government carried out a playbook of steps to limit debate
and judicial review that it claimed was also illegal.
President Trump has backed the repeal of California's EV rules, saying yesterday that Washington's
intervention would quote, rescue the U.S. auto industry from destruction.
An auto industry group representing GM, Toyota, VW, and others supported Trump's effort,
calling the EV rules harmful and wildly unrealistic.
And before we go, a quick correction.
A previous episode of What's News said that a further study of Gilead's HIV prevention
shot, which involved men, had yet to be completed, when in fact a Phase 3 trial involving a broader
population including men was concluded last year.
And that's it for What's News for this Friday morning.
Additional sound in this episode was from Reuters.
Today's show was produced by Kate Boulevint and Pierce Lynch.
Our supervising producer was Sandra Kilhoff.
And I'm Luke Vargas for The Wall Street Journal.
We will be back tonight with a new show.
Otherwise, have a great weekend.
Thanks for listening.