Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Windsor Johnston.
Israel says it struck multiple sites throughout Iran overnight and this morning,
targeting infrastructure used by Iran's Revolutionary Guard.
Meanwhile, the Iranian president apologized for targeting Gulf countries with drones and missiles,
but stopped short of pledging future attacks on its neighbors.
NPR's Kerry Kahn reports from Tel Aviv.
Israel's military says more than 80 fighter jets struck targets across Iran and the capital Tehran,
including what it says was the Revolutionary Guard's main military university,
which it claims stores war assets.
In a televised address Saturday on state media,
President Masoud Pazishkian said Iran would only attack its neighbors if,
quote, an attack on Iran originates from those countries.
A Gulf official speaking to Empyon in condition of anonymity
because they were not authorized to speak publicly said,
quote, we will only believe it if we see it.
Saturday morning alerts went off in multiple countries in the Gulf.
Flights were delayed at the Dubai airport after the UAE said air defenses intercepted Iranian missiles and drones.
Carrie Khan, NPR News, Tel Aviv.
Seven big tech companies are pledging to keep energy costs down amid the AI data center boom,
but critics say the agreement with the Trump administration is non-binding.