NEWNow you can listen to Fox News articles!
Israel's ambassador to Danny Danon from the United Nations, criticized Iran's UN representative as “a wolf disguised as diplomat,” during a burning session of the Security Council on Saturday, hours before the United States put in three nuclear sites in Iran.
After the American strike in nuclear sites in Fordow, Natanz and Isfahan, that President Donald Trump said he had been “totally erased”, Iran's ambassador to the UN Amir Saeid Iravani, demanded another “emergency meeting” of the Security Council that requested the sentence “in the most solid terms” of the actions of the United States and that it was not going to go “promoted.”
“The Islamic Republic of Iran urgently requests the Security Council that calls an emergency meeting without delay to address this act of shameless and illegal aggression,” Iravani wrote in a letter to the UN Secretary General, António Guterres.
Trump addresses the nation on 'spectacular military success' of US attacks on Iranian nuclear facilities
Iravani called the American attacks “premeditated and not caused”, and said it was a “flagrant violation of international law.”
Previously, Danon, in response to similar accusations against Israel, highlighted the council of the Council, calling the Iranian representative as a “wolf disguised as diplomat.”
Danny Danon, Israel's ambassador to the United Nations, criticized Iran's UN representative as a “wolf disguised as diplomat.” (Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post)
“How dares a representative of a regime that finances, weapons and orchestra terrorism worldwide, request compassion on this Council?” Danon said during a board session on Saturday. “You are not a victim. You are not a diplomat. You are a wolf disguised as a diplomat, and we have finished pretending otherwise.”
After the American strike over Iran, which included between five and six bombs of Buster Bunker fell into the ForDow nuclear site and about 30 Tomahawk missiles shot at sites in Natanz and Isfahan, Danon told Fox News Digital that “after the decades of ignoring the international community, Iran is trying to play the victim and ask for sympathy of the Security Council.”
It smells American nuclear nuclear sites, Trump announces

Iran's ForDow Nuclear Site was one of the three attacked by the United States in its June 21 attacks. (Planet Labs PBC through AP, file)
“The generation of the SEC Guterres should thank President Trump for taking measures and making the world a safer place, instead of condemning the United States for promoting peace through force,” Danon told Fox News Digital.
“After years of the UN incompetence that allowed Iran to accelerate its dangerous nuclear weapons program, the United States has acted strongly to prevent a destructive nuclear Iran threatening Israel, the United States and the free world,” he said.
It's time for the international community to take measures against Iran: Danny Danon
“I am seriously alarmed by the use of force by the United States against Iran today. This is a dangerous escalation in a region that is already at the limit, and a direct threat to international peace and security,” Guterres said in a statement.
“There is a growing risk that this conflict can get out of control, with catastrophic consequences for civilians, the region and the world,” he added, asking the UN Member States to “decline and maintain their obligations under the UN letter and other rules of international law.”

Danon also sounded in the United Nations Secretary General, António Guterres, saying that “he should thank President Trump” for his actions. (Reuters/Eduardo Muñoz)
An Iranian missile attack against Israel on Sunday, hours after the United States attacked nuclear facilities in Iran, obtained direct successes in the cities of Tel Aviv, Haifa and Nes Ziona, causing generalized destruction but without immediate deaths, Israeli authorities said.
The images shared by the first responders of Israel showed several -story buildings with their impressed sides and the windows broke and the single -family houses in ruins, while the rescue teams were looking for surviving debris.
Israel's first aid agency, Magen David Adom, said there were no initial death reports, but that more than 16 people were injured and evacuated to the hospital.
The families of Israeli hostages make a desperate plea to Trump since “time is running out”
At a press conference, the mayor of Tel Aviv, Ron Huldai, said that the damage in his city was “very extensive but in terms of human life, we are fine.”
“The houses here were beaten very, very badly,” he said, adding that “fortunately, one of them was scheduled for demolition and reconstruction, so there were no residents inside. Those who were in the shelter are safe and well.”
In Nes Ziona, a city south of Tel Aviv, a house was directly beaten by a missile and the surrounding buildings, but, according to reports of the Israeli media, the families were in their shelter.
Click here to get the Fox News application
On Sunday of the front of Israel's home he put the country on emergency, days after some of the restrictions in shopping centers and larger meetings would have facilitated.