
Monday, June 8, at 7:05 a.m., sirens once again tore the sky over Jerusalem. Early morning pedestrians ran towards shelters, before a first explosion rang out. The day before, a familiar pre-alert had already vibrated on the phones in Israel. Two months after the ceasefire concluded with Tehran under pressure from Donald Trump, the IDF announced that it had detected missile fire towards the north of the country. “The enemy has chosen the path of aggression rather than that of negotiation,” justified the spokesperson for the Iranian Parliament, after strikes against the suburbs of Beirut, despite threats of reprisals from Tehran.
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