Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has cast the latest Israeli and US-linked strikes on Iranian targets as a direct challenge to the country’s sovereignty, vowing a forceful response while signaling that Tehran is preparing for a broader confrontation.
Speaking to students in Tehran, Khamenei declared that Iran’s adversaries “will definitely receive a tooth-breaking response” for actions taken against “Iran, the Iranian nation, and the resistance front.”
He accused both the United States and Israel, which he referred to as the “Zionist regime”, of coordinated aggression.
Khamenei’s remarks referenced the network of Iran-aligned armed groups operating across the Middle East, including Hezbollah in Lebanon, Hamas in Gaza and the Houthi movement in Yemen.
The alliance has played a growing role in regional hostilities since the outbreak of the Israel-Hamas war in October last year.
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That conflict has steadily widened, pulling in armed factions in Iraq and Syria and increasing direct friction between Israel and Iran.
Tensions spiked further following Israeli airstrikes on Iranian military sites on Saturday, February 28.
Israel said the operation was in response to Iran’s 1 October missile attack, itself launched after the killing of senior Iran-backed militant figures and a Revolutionary Guards commander.
Iran reported that at least four soldiers were killed in the Israeli strikes, along with one civilian. Officials described the damage as limited, saying only a few radar systems were affected.
In his address, Khamenei paid tribute to the fallen troops, saying their confrontation with Israel “will not be forgotten.”
He added that Iran was “certainly doing everything that should be done to prepare the Iranian nation, whether in terms of military, in terms of weapons, or in terms of political work,” though he offered no operational details.
His comments came hours after a wave of explosions shook Tehran early Saturday. Israel confirmed it had carried out coordinated strikes inside Iran, and U.S. officials acknowledged American participation in the operation.
Smoke was seen rising from a high-security district of the capital that includes key leadership compounds and offices associated with Khamenei, as well as presidential and national security facilities.
The strike signaled one of the most direct assaults on the Iranian capital in years.
A spokesperson for Iran’s Revolutionary Guards, Ali Mohammad Naini, reinforced the supreme leader’s warning, saying Iran would respond “decisively.”
“The enemy should learn that it cannot commit any evil (it wants); it will undoubtedly receive a crushing response to its evildoing,” he was quoted as saying by state-linked media.
With both sides exchanging direct strikes and rhetoric hardening in Tehran, the confrontation appears to be shifting from proxy engagements toward more overt state-to-state hostilities.
Whether Iran’s promised retaliation materializes immediately or unfolds through allied groups across the region remains unclear.
But Khamenei’s message was unequivocal: Tehran views the latest strikes not as isolated incidents, but as part of a larger battle that it believes is far from over.









