Iran's top military commander stated that Iran had shown restraint following aggressive actions from ‘Israel’ in July but could no longer remain patient after the assassination of Hezbollah Leader Sayyed Hasan Nasrallah and a prominent Iranian general.
Major General Mohammad Baqeri made this announcement on Wednesday after Operation True Promise II The regime assassinated Ismail Haniyeh, former chief of the Political Bureau of the Palestinian resistance movement Hamas, during a targeted killing in the Iranian capital Tehran on July 31.
“After Martyr Haniyeh’s assassination, Iran went through a tough period of self-restraint amid repeated requests by the Americans and Europeans, who would ask us to exercise self-restraint so they would establish a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip (where the Israeli regime has been waging a genocidal war),” Bagheri said.
“However, after Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah’s and [Brigadier] General [Abbas] Nilforoushan’s martyrdom, the situation was no longer tolerable,” he added.
Hezbollah Leader Sayyed Nasrallah and the Iranian commander were assassinated during intense Israeli airstrikes on the southern suburb of Beirut on Friday.
On Tuesday, Iran responded to the triple assassinations as well as the regime’s ongoing deadly aggression against Gaza and Lebanon by launching hundreds of missiles toward the Zionist entity’s military and intelligence bases all over the occupied Palestinian territories.
Flares and missiles were seen in the Tel Aviv sky and explosions could be heard in the occupied al-Quds during the operation dubbed Operation True Promise II, while “direct hits” were reported in Negev, Sharon, and other locations.Iranian missiles successfully hit the Israeli regime's Tel Nof Airbase near Tel Aviv.
— Mehr News Agency (@MehrnewsCom) October 1, 2024
According to Bagheri, the targets of the “heroic” operation that “served as a response to many of the Zionists’ crimes,' included three of the Israeli regime’s main airbases.
He named the bases as the headquarters of the regime’s Mossad spy agency, which he identified as the “center for terrorism,” the regime’s Nevatim airbase that houses its F-35 warplanes, and the Hatzerim base that was used towards enabling Nasrallah’s assassination.
The targets also featured the regime’s strategic radars, the centers housing the regime’s tanks and personnel carriers, and the center accommodating those of the regime’s forces that partake in massacres against Palestinians in Gaza.
'All Israeli infrastructures to be targeted if it repeats its atrocities' The military chief asserted that the Islamic Republic’s Armed Forces were completely prepared to respond to the potential repetition of such atrocities on the part of the regime, describing the forces’ capabilities as “many times more than” what was displayed during True Promise II “If the Zionist regime, which has reached madness, was not controlled by the United States and Europe, and sought to either continue its atrocities or take action against our territorial integrity and sovereignty, tonight’s operation would be repeated with multiple magnitude and all of their infrastructures would be struck.” He, however, hoped that the US would reverse its approach and stop the regime so the region could move towards experiencing calm.
The General Staff of Iran’s Armed Forces also commented on the operation in a statement, saying it came in reaction to the regime’s disregard for the legitimate sovereign rights of the Islamic Republic.
It praised the response as an instance of the country’s “making any malicious aggressor, at any level, regret their actions.” The statement, meanwhile, warned the aggressive regime that “it should expect the widespread and comprehensive destruction of its infrastructure within the occupied Palestinian lands if it responds [to the operation] in kind.” It finally cautioned the regime’s supporters, including the United States, against taking part in direct intervention against the Islamic Republic, saying such interference would warrant “a powerful and regret-inducing response against their centers and interests across the region.”