Tel Aviv has been left reeling after a ferocious Iranian missile strike ripped through the night sky, leaving parts of Israel’s commercial capital porak poranda—in ruins—and residents gripped by a fear they have never felt before.

Just before midnight, sirens wailed across the Gush Dan region as Israeli radar detected a mixed salvo of ballistic and cruise missiles launched from western Iran. Iron Dome and David’s Sling batteries roared into action, interceptors streaking upward in white arcs, colliding with incoming warheads in chains of orange fireballs.
But the shield did not hold everywhere. At least several missiles—or large fragments—punched through the defensive umbrella, slamming into an industrial zone south of the city, a densely packed residential block on the eastern fringe, and a major junction on the Ayalon highway. Fireballs lit up the skyline as fuel tanks exploded, cars burned on overpᴀsses and apartment façades were ripped open.

Magen David Adom reports multiple ᴅᴇᴀᴅ and scores wounded, many hit by shrapnel as they ran for shelters, others cut by glᴀss in stairwells meant to be safe rooms. Underground bunkers quickly filled beyond capacity; videos posted online show terrified families huddled on concrete floors, children crying as fresh booms echo overhead.
In Tehran, the Revolutionary Guard is hailing the attack as “a decisive response” to US–Israeli strikes on Iranian soil. In Jerusalem, shaken officials admit to “serious damage” but insist most missiles were intercepted—while promising a mᴀssive retaliation on Iran’s missile infrastructure and command networks.
For Tel Aviv, long sold as a vibrant bubble above the region’s wars, the illusion has been shattered. Tonight, the city feels less like a tech hub and more like a front‑line fortress, its streets dark, its residents sleepless, and its future suddenly clouded by the threat of the next wave.