Israeli Missile Strike Interrupts Iranian State TV Live Broadcast
By Shyam Bhatia
London. It was a Shock and Awe situation when a live broadcast on Iranian state television was violently interrupted on Monday (June 16) as an Israeli missile struck the headquarters of the Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting (IRIB) in central Tehran.
The extraordinary moment—captured on air and broadcast live — has shocked viewers across Iran and raised the stakes in an already dangerous confrontation between the two regional powers.
The incident occurred at approximately 4:32 p.m. local time, during a news bulletin in which a female presenter, Sahar Emami, was condemning Israel’s military actions. Footage widely shared on global TV channels and online shows her mid-sentence when a deafening explosion shakes the studio. Smoke fills the frame, ceiling tiles collapse, and panicked voices are heard before the screen cuts to black. The anchor is seen rising from her seat and swiftly leaving the set as the broadcast ends abruptly.
Iranian authorities later confirmed that the IRIB compound in Tehran’s District 3 sustained serious damage. Emergency services were deployed within minutes, although no official casualty figures have been released. State media described the attack as a “targeted assault on national voice and sovereignty.”
Broadcasts were later resumed through backup systems, and significantly, Iran unsuccessfully fired a missile targeted at Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s residence.
Notably, foreign TV broadcasts are banned by the Islamic regime in Iran, and the IRIB is the main source of news, information, entertainment for the Iranian people.
The missile strike forms part of Operation Rising Lion, the Israeli military campaign launched last Friday, June 13.
Israeli sources say the campaign is focused on degrading Iran’s missile and nuclear infrastructure, as well as the command systems of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC). Iranian reports indicate that dozens of sites across the country have been hit, including IRGC command centres and air defence installations. Senior military figures, including Major General Mohammad Bagheri and IRGC commander Hossein Salami, are believed to have been killed in earlier strikes.
Monday’s strike on a civilian broadcast facility—especially during a live transmission — has been interpreted as both a tactical blow and a symbolic one. Israeli officials have not publicly acknowledged the targeting of IRIB, but military commentators in Tel Aviv have described the broader operation as one intended to “cripple Iran’s war narrative.”
Iran’s leadership responded swiftly. State media quoted a senior Revolutionary Guard official calling the attack a “strategic miscalculation” and warning that Tehran’s response would be “swift and devastating.” The IRIB resumed broadcasts later in the day using backup facilities, airing a segment denouncing “Zionist aggression” and vowing national resilience.
The Iranian barrage of ballistic missiles on Israel also continued.
Tehran residents have reacted with a mix of fear and defiance. Several districts reported shattered windows, traffic gridlock, and blackouts following the strike. “It felt like an earthquake,” said one local shopkeeper. “But when we saw the footage, we realized it was something much deeper.”
Social media users and exiled journalists echoed the sentiment. “This wasn’t just a bomb — it was a message,” wrote one Iranian commentator. “To strike live television is to strike the regime’s voice.” Others compared the moment to wartime broadcasts disrupted in earlier conflicts, noting the psychological dimension of the attack.
International response has been swift. UN Secretary-General António Guterres said he was “deeply alarmed” by the escalating violence and urged both Iran and Israel to “step back from the brink.” A spokesperson added that the Secretary-General had called on both parties to “exercise maximum restraint” and to protect civilian lives and infrastructure.
The European Union also issued a statement condemning attacks on non-military targets. “The situation is deeply alarming,” said a spokesperson for the EU’s foreign policy service. “Strikes on civilian infrastructure must cease. We urge all sides to de-escalate immediately and pursue diplomatic channels.”
In Israel, officials maintain that the strikes are defensive and proportionate. Defence Minister Ron Dermer stated that Iran’s retaliatory drone and missile launches, many of which were intercepted by Israel’s Iron Dome, left “no choice but to neutralize command structures and logistical networks inside Iran.”
US President Donald Trump has said that Iran should stop its nuclear programme and come to the negotiating table while it still can.
As both Israel and Iran dig in, and regional players watch nervously, the image of a lone newsreader interrupted by blast and flame is fast becoming the defining symbol of a wider crisis, one no longer confined to military targets, but now touching the realm of image, message, and identity.