Iran foreign minister downplays Israeli attack and says drones used 'like children's toys'

20 April 2024, 04:03 | Updated: 20 April 2024, 08:14

Iran has said Israeli involvement in Friday's attack is still to be established and dismissed the drones used as like children's toys.

Foreign minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian claimed they took off from within Iran and only flew a few hundred metres before being shot down.

Israel hasn't commented but is widely believed to be behind the strike targeting an airbase and nuclear site near Isfahan.

Middle East latest: Worshippers in Tehran chant 'death to Israel'

The US told a G7 meeting that Israel had told it about the attack "at the last minute".

Israel had been weighing up how to respond to Iran's unprecedented drone and missile attack on Israel last weekend - with Western powers urging restraint.

"It has not been proved to us that there is a connection between these and Israel," Mr Amir-Abdollahian told Sky's US partner NBC News.

Iran said its air defences destroyed three drones and reported no damage or casualties.

The foreign minister said they were "more like toys that our children play with" than a serious threat, as he sought to play down the threat.

Authorities and media in Iran have described it as an attack by unknown "infiltrators", dismissing the notion it was an Israeli offensive that bypassed its border defences.

Experts have said the modest, targeted strike appeared designed to avoid further escalation and it appears - for now - to have dampened fears of direct war.

'If not, then we are done'

Mr Amir-Abdollahian said Iran was still investigating the attack and reiterated Israeli retaliation would mean an immediate and severe response - "but if not, then we are done. We are concluded".

Meanwhile, the former head of Israel's national security council said he didn't believe there would be "real escalation" after Friday's limited attack.

Major General Giora Eiland told Sky's Yalda Hakim the strike showed Israel can reach "even sensitive places", but it had tried to "do it in a way that both sides can be satisfied".

He said both nations would try to emphasise their own success and minimise that of the other side.

Read more:
Targeted strike is a message - and Iran's response is telling
Rules of the game have now shifted

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