Iran’s military central command has announced a halt to its strikes against Israel, declaring it had delivered a "painful response" to Israel over strikes on Beirut's Dahiyeh district -- but warned that any continuation of Israeli aggression would bring "far more intense and crushing" retaliation.
The announcement on June 8 came shortly after US President Donald Trump posted on Truth Social that "both sides, Israel and Iran, are looking to do an immediate cease-fire," adding that final negotiations on a US-Iran peace deal were proceeding and that a US blockade of Iranian ports would remain in place until a final agreement is reached.
In its statement, the Khatam Al-Anbiya Central Headquarters didn't announce a cease-fire per se but a completed operation -- with conditions attached. It framed the pause not as de-escalation but as a message delivered, in an attempt to preserve the appearance of strength while taking the off-ramp Washington was signaling.
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Iran, Israel Exchange Fresh Strikes As Trump Pushes For Talks
That is precisely the operation analysts had described even as the strikes were underway. Iran had put a specific threat on the table: attack the Dahiyeh, where Iran’s Lebanese ally is based, and Iran hits northern Israel. When Israel struck Beirut's suburbs, Tehran had little choice but to follow through or lose the credibility of every future threat it makes.
"This was largely about preserving the credibility of a threat Iran had already made public," Mohammad Ghaedi, a lecturer at George Washington University, told RFE/RL’s Radio Farda. "The responses are limited, and none of the parties want this to lead to an all-out war."
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From Iran To Ukraine, Asymmetric Warfare Challenges Conventional Military PowerMehrdad Khansari, a London-based analyst and a former Iranian diplomat, framed it similarly.
Tehran's calculation, he argued, rested on a specific reading of Washington's constraints -- that the United States, facing the UN General Assembly, a closed Strait of Hormuz, and a rattled global economy, would pressure Israel to keep its response limited.
"Iran is demonstrating capability," Khansari said. "The message is: I am standing firm, I am defending my allies, and I will not allow you to exploit what you perceive as weakness."
The Iranian statement tracks that logic.
It is designed to look like restraint while simultaneously raising the stated ceiling for the next round -- the phrase "far more intense and crushing than before" ensuring that standing down today is not read as backing down.
What Iran achieved, if the pause holds, is a return to the status quo ante with its deterrence posture nominally intact. It honored a public commitment, absorbed whatever Israeli response follows, and exited before the exchange could spiral into something neither side can control.
Following the Iranian statement, Israel's Channel 12 quoted an unnamed senior official as saying that Israel would also pause its strikes on Iran, though there has been no official statement yet.
Trump's post suggested both sides were moving toward an immediate cease-fire, but Israeli officials have at times acted independently of Washington's requests throughout this conflict.
In an interview with the Financial Times, Trump said on June 7 that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu “won’t have any choice” but to accept whatever deal the United States reaches with Iran.
“I call the shots. I call all the shots. He doesn’t call the shots,” Trump said, despite Israel launching strikes on Iran early on June 8.