71 killed in Israeli attack on Iran prison, official says

The June 23 strike targeted the infamous Evin Prison in Tehran.

President Donald Trump told ABC News on Tuesday morning he is "not happy" with either Israel or Iran after the opening hours of a nascent ceasefire between the two combatants were marred by reported exchanges. Trump said Iran and Israel both "violated" the ceasefire that he announced late on Monday.

Through last week, the president and his administration continued to push back on an early intelligence report suggesting that the U.S. strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities may have only set Tehran's nuclear program back by months.

Jun 25, 2025, 11:26 AM EDT

Iran says nuclear installations were 'badly damaged'

Iran said its nuclear installations were "badly damaged" because it "has come under repeated attacks by Israeli and American aggressors," Esmail Baghaei, Iran’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson, said on Wednesday.

"There has been a draft bill by our parliament today. It has been adopted. And it talks about suspending our cooperation with the IAEA [International Atomic Energy Agency]. It talks about suspending. Not putting an end to the cooperation," he said.

"Based on the parliament bill, the IAEA staff are not entitled to enter Iran for inspections, unless security of the nuclear facilities and peaceful activity of Iran is guaranteed," Baghaei noted.

Iran criticized the IAEA, with Baghaei saying the least it "had to do was to explicitly condemn the acts by the U.S. and Israel."

"The international community has to understand that what was done by the United States against Iran was a horrible blow to international diplomacy, to international law and to international ethics," he said.

"After we launched an attack in our defense on the U.S. base in Qatar -- that is the al-Hudeid base -- we received a message from Oman regarding ceasefire. As a country that has never welcomed war, and never doubted in defending ourselves, we accepted this suggestion," Baghaei said.

Jun 25, 2025, 10:38 AM EDT

Trump says he doesn't envision Iran getting back into the 'nuclear business' anymore

President Donald Trump said he doesn't envision Iran getting back into the "nuclear business" anymore.

Despite reports that intelligence found that U.S. strikes on Iran did not completely destroy the country's nuclear program and only set back its the nuclear program by months, Trump has insisted otherwise on Wednesday.

President Donald Trump speaks during a press conference, at the NATO summit in The Hague, Netherlands, June 25, 2025.
Brian Snyder/Reuters

"The site was obliterated just like I said it was," Trump said during a press conference at the NATO Summit on Wednesday.

"Issue the report when you know what happened," Trump said. "The report was not a complete report."

Jun 25, 2025, 9:47 AM EDT

Trump points to Israeli statement to say Iran's nuclear program was destroyed

At the NATO Summit in The Hague Wednesday morning, President Donald Trump pointed to a reported statement from the Israel Atomic Energy Commission (IAEC) -- which was circulated by the White House -- to support his assertion that Iran’s nuclear facilities were obliterated in the U.S. strike.

"Great statements just came out from the Israeli Atomic Energy Commission and from Iran, as you know, that it was complete, total destruction," Trump told reporters during a bilateral meeting with Dutch Prime Minister Dick Schoof.

The statement, shared by the White House "on behalf of the Israel Atomic Energy Commission," contradicts early U.S. intel assessments that found Iran’s nuclear program was only set back a few months.

"The devastating U.S. strike on Fordo destroyed the site's critical infrastructure and rendered the enrichment facility inoperable. We assess that the American strikes on Iran's nuclear facilities, combined with Israeli strikes on other elements of Iran's military nuclear program, has set back Iran's ability to develop nuclear weapons by many years," the IAEA said in a statement.

-ABC News’ Fritz Farrow and Lalee Ibssa

Jun 25, 2025, 9:41 AM EDT

3 executed, 700 arrested in Iran over allegedly spying for Israel

The Iranian regime executed three more prisoners on Wednesday over allegedly spying for Israel, according to Mizan, the official news agency of the Islamic Republic judiciary.

Iran’s state-run Press TV claims that more than 700 people with alleged ties to Israel’s Mossad intelligence agency have been arrested in recent days.

-ABC News’ Somayeh Malekian

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