Tehran (KAAB TV) – The Israel-Iran War, intensifying throughout 2025, has reached a dangerous new phase marked by direct attacks on each other’s political, military, and media infrastructure.
One of the most significant provocations occurred when Israel launched a targeted airstrike on the Iranian National Television headquarters (IRIB) in Tehran’s Third District during a live news broadcast.
The strike caused a massive explosion and panic on air, with news anchor Sahar Emami fleeing the studio.
This attack followed a public threat by Israel’s Defense Minister, Israel Katz, who labeled IRIB a source of “hatred and propaganda.”
In response, Iran condemned the assault as a war crime and accused Israel of deliberately targeting journalists—a charge supported by the Committee to Protect Journalists, which reported that 178 journalists have been killed in Gaza since October 2023.
Iran’s Foreign Ministry called on the United Nations to intervene, accusing Israel of escalating aggression and media suppression.
This airstrike is only one part of a broader conflict that has grown increasingly violent in recent months.
Israel continues its campaign of bombing Iranian-linked military and intelligence sites, including attacks on the IRGC (Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps), killing senior officers and over 200 civilians.
Iran, in retaliation, has launched a series of missile and drone strikes, some of which have inflicted significant damage within Israeli territory, though Israel has kept its official casualty count limited to 20 deaths.
The Iranian media, however, claims that Israel’s actual losses are far greater.
The root causes of this war are long-standing and complex. Israel views Iran as a regional threat due to its support for militant groups such as Hezbollah and Hamas.
Tehran, in turn, sees Israel as an aggressor seeking to destabilize the region and maintain military dominance.
These tensions are now spilling over into open warfare. Israeli attempts to assassinate top Iranian figures, including an alleged rejected plan to target Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, further signal the war’s dangerous trajectory.
Both nations accuse each other of violating international law and risking broader regional destabilization.
Security analysts now warn that the conflict, if unchecked, could ignite a larger Middle East war, dragging in other nations and worsening the already fragile geopolitical balance.