Netanyahu refuses to rule out killing Iran’s Supreme Leader
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Iran, Netanyahu and Israel
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Israel and Iran intensified their deadly air strikes Monday on the fifth day after Israel launched its first attack to dismantle Iran's nuclear capability.
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The Manila Times on MSNNetanyahu suggests killing Iran's supreme leader would end conflictIsraeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday did not rule out plans to assassinate Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, saying it would "end the conflict" between the two arch-foes. In a 20-minute interview with US network ABC News,
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Legit.ng on MSNBreaking: Israel reveals plan to kill Iran Supreme LeaderIsraeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said that his country has not ruled out the option of assassinating Iran's Supreme Leader Ali KhameneiNetanyahu made the comment while responding to the report that US President Donald Trump rejected the move to kill Ali Khamenei in the ongoing warThe Israeli prime minister explained that killing Ali Khamenei would not escalate the war,
Trump issued a warning that "everyone should immediately evacuate Tehran," without offering any details on why.
Israel repeatedly struck Iran’s largest enrichment site at Natanz and at its Isfahan nuclear complex. But the extent of the damage to the country’s nuclear program—or Iran’s ability to race secretly toward a nuclear weapon—isn’t clear.
The stated intention of the attacks was to stop Iran from building a bomb. Some experts worry it may have the opposite effect.