White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt is due to begin her daily news conference shortly.
You can watch along in the live stream below. We'll also be providing text updates here in the blog.
Details about American strikes on Iran's nuclear facilities have been revealed in an extraordinary Pentagon news briefing - which saw Pete Hegseth row with journalists, and avoid giving a clear on answer on Iran's uranium stocks. Follow live and listen to Trump 100 below.
Thursday 26 June 2025 17:59, UK
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt is due to begin her daily news conference shortly.
You can watch along in the live stream below. We'll also be providing text updates here in the blog.
There's been no shortage of reporting and speculation on how much damage was done to Iran's underground Fordow nuclear facility by American strikes last week.
General Dan Caine, the highest-ranking officer in the US military, told a news conference at the Pentagon today that the strikes targeted Fordow's ventilation shafts.
"All six weapons at each vent at Fordow went exactly where they were intended to go," he said.
Watch below as he uses a simulation to demonstrate how the attack unfolded.
The World Health Organisation says it delivered its first medical shipment into Gaza in almost four months yesterday.
WHO chief Tedros Ghebreyesus said nine trucks carrying essential medical supplies entered the enclave from Kerem Shalom in southern Israel.
He said the trucks arrived "without any looting incident, despite the high-risk conditions along the route".
The aid arrival comes amid the near total collapse of Gaza's health system, caused by extensive damage to medical infrastructure and the disruption of pharmaceutical supplies.
Iran's supreme leader has warned Israel that its aggression against Tehran will "come at a heavy cost".
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei posted the message on his Hebrew language account on X.
Earlier, Khamenei said in a video address that Iran had "delivered a hand slap to America's face" and "crushed" Israel (see 11.47am post).
Here are the scenes in Tehran today, showing the impact of Israeli strikes.
The Iranian capital was one of the areas hit hardest during the 12-day conflict, with Israel's military claiming it had "complete aerial superiority" over the skies of Tehran during that time.
Iran's health ministry says at least 627 people were killed and almost 5,000 injured during the 12 days of attacks on the country.
Benjamin Netanyahu has reportedly requested a two-week break in his long-running corruption trial, due to resume in Jerusalem on Monday.
According to a filing made by the Israeli PM's lawyer Amit Hadad, as quoted in the , Netanyahu must devote his immediate time to "diplomatic, national and security issues" in light of "regional and global developments".
Those issues include "managing the war in Gaza and dealing with the issue of the hostages," Hadad writes to the Jerusalem District Court.
Netanyahu is being tried on charges of fraud and breach of trust, and accepting a bribe in the form of media coverage. He has denied any wrongdoing.
His request comes after an unprecedented call by Donald Trump for the cancellation of the charges (see 6.44am post), describing the case against Netanyahu as a "witch hunt".
Netanyahu thanked Trump for his intervention today, writing he was "deeply moved" by the US president's "heartfelt support for me" on X.
During his news briefing earlier, Pete Hegseth applauded what he described to be successful US strikes on nuclear sites in Iran and repeatedly rallied against media.
Alongside General Dan Caince, he packed a lot in across around 45 minutes - so to get you up to speed, here's a summary of what he said in seven bullet points:
US strikes on Iran have "broken the aura of invincibility that the Iranian regime has enjoyed" for decades, an expert has said.
Speaking to Sky's presenter Jayne Secker, research fellow at the Foundation for Defence of Democrats, Hussain Abdul-Hussain, said the US victory in Iran "has been decisive".
"I think this has forced Iran to step back," he said.
"This has also broken the aura of invincibility that the Iranian regime has enjoyed for the past two decades at least."
He said it was understood that the nuclear facilities had been "badly damaged".
"It seems that there is almost a consensus that the weaponisation programme of Iran is no more," he said.
He also said that the Iran's relations with its proxies, such as the Houthis and Hezbollah, had also been weakened in the attack.
The centrifuges at the Fordow nuclear site in Iran are "no longer operational" following the US strikes, Rafael Grossi, the director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), has said.
Grossi said his team could deduct on the basis of satellite images, the consequences of the bombing over the weekend.
"Given the power of these bombs and technical characteristics of the centrifuges, we do know that they are no longer operational, simply because of the vibration, which causes considerable, important physical damage," he told Radio France Internationale.
"I know the plant very well, it's a network of tunnels with different types of activity.
"What we saw on the pictures corresponds more or less to the enrichment hall, that's what’s been hit."
We reported earlier that Iran had approved a bill to suspend cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) (see post at 11.01am).
That came after Grossi said getting inspectors back to Iran's nuclear facilities to assess the impact of US and Israeli military strikes was his "top priority".
Donald Trump has shared some comments in the last few moments on the news briefing by Pete Hegseth, calling it "one of the greatest" news conferences he had ever seen.
This is what he had to say...
Separately, he also said nothing was taken out of the facility at the Iran nuclear site...