Tehran on Saturday downplayed the attack the day before blamed on Israel in central Iran, saying there would be no retaliation, with both parties appearing to move away from an escalation at a time when the war in Gaza knows no respite.
In an interview with the American channel NBC, Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian put into perspective the attack which took place at dawn on Friday in the center of the country.
“What happened last night was not an attack. They were two or three quadcopter drones, like the ones children play with in Iran,” he quipped, adding that “until there is any new [offensive militaire] in the name of the Israeli regime against the interests of Iran, we will not respond.”
On Friday, Iranian state media reported that detonations were heard at dawn near a military base in the Isfahan area, after “several” small drones were “successfully shot down” by the ” air defense system” of the country.
Media in the United States, citing American officials, claimed that it was an Israeli operation carried out in response to an unprecedented Iranian drone and missile attack against Israel on April 13.
According to Washington Postciting an Israeli official who requested anonymity, the attack was intended to show Iran that Israel had the capacity to strike inside its territory.
A senior official in the US Congress who did not wish to be named confirmed to AFP an Israeli attack in Iran. Questioned by AFP, the Israeli army did not comment on these events in Iran.
This latest bout of fever comes as the war between Israel and Hamas, triggered by an unprecedented attack by the Palestinian Islamist movement on October 7, has not let up and has left 34,049 dead in Gaza, mainly civilians, according to the Hamas.
On Saturday, the Israeli army continued its strikes against “terrorist targets” in different sectors of the besieged Palestinian territory threatened with famine.
“Reduce escalation”
A sign of the explosive nature of the situation, the international community rushed, in the wake of the attack on Friday, to launch calls for calm.
The head of American diplomacy Antony Blinken stressed that the “objective” of his country and the other members of the G7, meeting in Capri, Italy, was “de-escalation”.
The head of Russian diplomacy Sergei Lavrov reported contacts with Iran and Israel. “We told the Israelis that Iran does not want escalation,” he said.
For Iranian political expert Hamid Gholamzadeh, “the Isfahan incident is a very insignificant act of sabotage.”
“Israel […] “needs another escalation and another war to distract the world’s attention from the Gaza Strip and involve the United States and others in a war to defend it,” he said.
In the first direct attack ever carried out by Iran against Israeli territory on April 13, Israel claimed to have intercepted with its allies, mainly the United States, almost all of the approximately 350 Iranian drones and missiles.
Iran said it acted in “self-defense” after the attack which destroyed its consulate in Damascus on April 1 and cost the lives of seven of its soldiers, including two high-ranking officers. Tehran accused Israel, which neither confirmed nor denied.
The leader of Hamas in Türkiye
Tensions between Israel and Iran come after six months of war in the Gaza Strip, where Hamas, considered a terrorist organization by the United States, the European Union and Israel in particular, took power in 2007.
Israel launched a vast offensive after an attack on its territory on October 7 by Hamas commandos, supported by Iran, which led to the death of 1,170 people, mainly civilians, according to an AFP report established from official data.
More than 250 people were kidnapped during the attack and 129 are being held in Gaza, 34 of whom died according to Israeli officials.
In addition to the heavy human toll and destruction, the approximately 2.4 million inhabitants are threatened with famine according to the UN, which is urging the entry of more humanitarian aid into this small territory.
The Israeli army said on Saturday that it had struck “dozens of terrorist targets” including a “launch base in Beit Hanoun”, in northern Gaza, “shortly after a missile was intercepted in the area of the city (Israeli) from Sderot.”
According to civil defense in Gaza, an Israeli strike killed nine members of the same family in Rafah, in the south of the territory, where more than a million and a half displaced Palestinians are massed according to the UN.
In this context, Hamas leader Ismaïl Haniyeh arrived in Turkey on Friday evening and is to be received by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan at a time when Qatar says it wants to “reassess” its role as mediator in the conflict in Gaza.
Qatar, which is stalling in negotiating a truce between Hamas and Israel, is threatening to withdraw under criticism from Israel and certain American Democrats. However, Turkey, which has relations with Israel and Hamas, could take advantage of this to try to resume mediation.