Israel to attack Iran's underground missile sites in second phase of war, sources say
Smoke rises following an explosion, amid the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran, in Tehran, Iran, March 5, 2026. Majid Asgaripour/WANA (West Asia News Agency) via REUTERS
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Israel's war in Iran is entering a second phase
that will see its fighter jets attacking ballistic missile sites buried deep
underground, two sources familiar with Israel's military campaign said.
The joint air assault with the U.S. in Iran is nearing the
end of its first week after opening salvos killed the country's leaders and
set off a regional war with Iranian attacks in Israel, the Gulf and Iraq, and
Israeli attacks in Lebanon.
Israel's military says it has hit hundreds of Iranian
missile launchers above ground that could target Israeli cities. The second
phase will include bunkers storing ballistic missiles and equipment, said the
sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the
subject.
One said Israel aimed to neutralise Iran's ability to launch
aerial attacks at Israel by the end of the war, which
was also focused on taking out the Islamic Republic's leadership.
A military spokesperson did not immediately respond to a
request for comment on its attack plans. The military has previously asserted
that it and the U.S. military took control of much of Iran's airspace in the
opening days of the attacks.
In a statement on Thursday, the military said that,
overnight, the Air Force struck "an underground infrastructure site used
by the Iranian regime to store ballistic missiles and storage sites for
missiles intended for use against aircraft."
The military has not previously announced attacks on
underground missile facilities, according to a review of its public statements
since the start of the joint U.S.-Israeli attacks on Saturday.
Estimates of Iran's missile stockpile vary widely, from
roughly 2,500 before the war, according to Israel's military, to around 6,000
according to other analysts. The extent of what remains could prove critical to
how the war develops. Tehran has continued to
carry out missile attacks on Israel and across the region.
Douglas Barrie of the UK-based International Institute for
Strategic Studies said on Wednesday the think tank assesses Iran still
possesses some land-attack cruise missiles, precision-guided weapons that fly
low to evade radar detection.
SYSTEM MUST BE
'FURTHER AND FURTHER DEGRADED'
Israel's Air Force fighter jets have carried out
near-constant sorties since Saturday, accelerating further in pace after
Lebanon's Iran-backed Hezbollah militants fired rockets at Israel, drawing
heavy Israeli airstrikes as far north as Beirut.
In some
cases, the same Israeli warplanes have struck both Iran and Lebanon in a single
operation: bombing targets in Tehran or western Iran on the way out, and
striking Hezbollah sites on the way back, one
of the sources familiar with the plans and an Israeli security source said.
Israeli and U.S. officials say ballistic missile and drone launches from
Iran have declined since Saturday, a
decrease that they attribute in part to U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iranian
launch sites and related military infrastructure.
The Israeli military has said that the decrease could also
reflect an effort by Tehran to preserve its missile stocks as it prepares for a drawn-out war of attrition.
Eran Lerman, a former Israeli deputy national security
adviser, said the hope from the initial week of strikes was that Iran's ruling
system would "begin to disintegrate earlier, more quickly".
"But this has yet to happen and as long as it doesn't,
the system needs to be further and further degraded," Lerman said.


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