The sirens wailed. The sky lit up. And then came the silence. Not from the streets, but from the officials. While Israeli media trickled out reports of “a few dead,” the reality on the ground told a different story. Iran’s latest missile barrage didn’t just rattle windows. It cracked the narrative.
In Haifa, the power plant took a direct hit. Flames climbed into the night sky. Emergency crews fought to contain the blaze while neighborhoods nearby plunged into darkness. The government called it “minor damage.” Residents called it survival. The footage shows scorched transformers and twisted steel. The grid didn’t just flicker. It buckled.
I hope you enjoy watching this as much as I enjoyed editing it.
Please watch with sound ON pic.twitter.com/XWpNtUdeWR— Iran Military (@hehe_samir) June 15, 2025
The launchers that were supposed to fire missiles at 00:30 have been struck. Iran’s attack is being delayed due to an exceptional preemptive operation by the Israeli Air Force currently underway.
— Israel News Pulse (@israelnewspulse) June 15, 2025
🇮🇷Iran has published a video of a 3D model showing the city of Tel Aviv, including all the target banks with the smallest and most critical details that may be hit in the coming days. pic.twitter.com/djecTD00GZ
— Defense Intelligence (@DI313_) June 15, 2025
🇮🇱🇮🇱Israel is reporting a cyber attack against its air raid system‼️‼️‼️
— WW3 Monitor (@WW3_Monitor) June 15, 2025
🚨⚡️BREAKING AND UNUSUAL:
Iran calls on Israelis to leave the country immediately.
— RussiaNews 🇷🇺 (@mog_russEN) June 15, 2025
Is this real footage?
Where’s the iron foam!!!! pic.twitter.com/7y2GomLH4T
— Abier (@abierkhatib) June 15, 2025
Tel Aviv wasn’t spared. A missile struck near the U.S. Embassy branch. The blast shattered windows and sent embassy staff scrambling for shelter. The Israeli military confirmed the impact but buried the detail under layers of censorship. The real target remains classified. The damage, however, is visible.
Iran launched over 100 missiles in this latest wave. Israel’s Iron Dome intercepted many. But not all. The ones that slipped through left scars. In Petah Tikva, a residential building was torn open. A father of four described the moment the wall exploded. “We’re very scared, but everyone is ok,” he said. His voice shook. The building didn’t.
The official death toll in Israel stands at eight. But that number doesn’t include the wounded. Dozens are hospitalized. Some critical. Some missing. The Israeli emergency service Magen David Adom reported over 80 injuries. First responders pulled a four-day-old infant from the rubble. That didn’t make the press release.
This isn’t a skirmish. It’s a sustained exchange. Israel has struck deep into Tehran. Iran has responded with precision. The back-and-forth isn’t just military. It’s psychological. And the information war is running parallel to the missile trails.
Iran’s state media is broadcasting every explosion. Every crater. Every funeral. Israel’s media, under military censorship, is filtering the story. The goal is control. The result is confusion.
The truth is leaking through the cracks. Independent footage shows fires near the Haifa oil refinery. Smoke rising from Tel Aviv’s northern district. Families huddled in stairwells. The damage is real. The silence is strategic.
The public deserves the full picture. Not a sanitized version. Not a headline that says “a few dead.” The missiles didn’t land in theory. They landed in neighborhoods. On homes. Near embassies.
The war is no longer over there. It’s here. And it’s hitting harder than the press is allowed to say.
Sources