WASHINGTON, US
United States President, Joe Biden, met his senior national security team on Monday as concerns of a possible Iranian retaliatory attack on Israel grew.
Mr Biden said he had been
briefed on preparations to support Israel should it be attacked, while
Secretary of State Antony Blinken said officials were working "around the
clock" to prevent an escalation.
Tensions have risen over the
last week following the assassination of Hamas' political leader Ismail
Haniyeh, for which Iran has blamed Israel and vowed “severe” retaliation.
Israel has not claimed responsibility for the assassination.
Numerous countries, including
the US and UK, have also told
their citizens to leave Lebanon, from where it is feared Hezbollah, an
Iran-backed militia and political movement, could play a role in any response.
During Monday's briefing, Mr
Biden was told the timing and nature of an Iranian attack remained unclear,
according to US news site Axios. A day earlier, Mr Blinken reportedly
told his G7 counterparts that Iran and Hezbollah could attack Israel within 24 to 48 hours.
In a statement released after
the briefing, Mr Biden said: "We received updates on threats posed by Iran
and its proxies, diplomatic efforts to de-escalate regional tensions, and
preparations to support Israel should it be attacked again."
He added that steps were being
taken to respond to attacks on US forces "in a manner and place of our
choosing". On Monday, several US
personnel were injured in a suspected rocket attack on a US military
base in Iraq.
Speaking to reporters earlier
in the day, Mr Blinken said officials were "engaged in intense diplomacy
pretty much around the clock with a very simple message: All parties must
refrain from escalation".
"Escalation is not in
anyone's interests. It will only lead to more conflict, more violence, more
insecurity," he said.
He added that a ceasefire
would "unlock possibilities for more enduring calm not only in Gaza
itself, but in other areas where the conflict can spread".
"It is urgent that all
parties make the right choices in the hours and days ahead," he said.
Earlier in the day, Mr Biden
spoke to King Abdullah II of Jordan about "efforts to de-escalate regional
tensions, including through an immediate ceasefire and hostage release
deal", a statement from the White House said.
A joint statement from the G7
also expressed "deep concern at the heightened level of tension in the
Middle East which threatens to ignite a broader conflict in the region".
"No country or nation
stands to gain from a further escalation in the Middle East," it said.
Talks that had brought renewed
hope of a ceasefire deal to end the conflict in Gaza have faltered following
the events of recent weeks.
On 27 July, 12
children and teenagers were killed in a strike on the Israeli-occupied
Golan Heights. Israel accused Hezbollah of carrying out the strike, though
Hezbollah denied any involvement.
Days later, Fuad Shukr, a
senior Hezbollah military commander, was killed in an Israeli airstrike on a
suburb of the Lebanese capital, Beirut. Four others, including two children,
were also killed.
Hours later, Haniyeh was
assassinated in Iran.
Iran's Revolutionary Guard
Corps (IRGC) said Haniyeh was killed
in a "strong blast" caused by a "short-range
projectile" fired from outside a house where he was staying while visiting
the capital, Tehran.
Palestinian President Mahmoud
Abbas said in an interview with Russian state news agency RIA Novosti that the
killing would have a "negative impact on the ongoing negotiations".
Israel has not commented on
the assassination, but Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said
afterwards that Israel had delivered “crushing blows” to Iran’s proxy groups in
recent days.
Following the killings in
Lebanon and Iran, the IRGC said Israel would receive a "severe punishment
at the appropriate time, place and manner", while Hezbollah leader Hassan
Nasrallah said the conflict had entered a "new phase".
It is the closest the conflict
has come to escalation since April, when Iran
fired some 300 drones and missiles at Israel in response to an Israeli
strike on an Iranian consulate in Syria that killed a number of senior military
commanders.
On Monday, Jordan asked all
airlines planning to land at its airports to carry an additional 45 minutes'
worth of fuel, a move thought to be a precaution in case Jordan has to close
its airspace in the event of a regional conflict.
German flag carrier Lufthansa
has suspended all flights to Tel Aviv, Tehran, and Beirut until and including
12 August.
US airline Delta has also
paused flights to Tel Aviv until at least 31 August "due to ongoing
conflict in the region".
The UK Foreign Office
currently advises against all travel to Lebanon and has urged British citizens
in the country to leave.
It also advises against all
travel to the northern area of Israel that shares a border with Lebanon.
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