Iranian ballistic missiles struck the southern Israeli cities of Dimona and Arad overnight, wounding more than 117 people — 84 in Arad and 33 in Dimona, including a 12-year-old boy in serious condition. The strikes tore open residential buildings and carved craters into the ground. Israeli air defence systems failed to intercept at least two projectiles, a significant failure that has prompted an investigation ordered by Chief of Staff Eyal Zamir. Iranian state media explicitly claimed the strikes targeted the Dimona nuclear research facility — Israel's undeclared nuclear weapons site. Dimona's municipality evacuated 485 residents as a precaution. Iranian IRGC Aerospace Force commander declared "missile dominance" over Israeli territory and promised future attacks would "dumbfound" American and Israeli commanders.
This represents a qualitative shift. Previous Iranian barrages were largely intercepted; this one was not. Whether the failure reflects saturation of Israeli defences, technical malfunction, or Iranian improvements in missile design remains unclear, but the psychological and strategic impact is immediate: Israeli civilians now understand their skies are not impermeable. The proximity to Dimona — whether intentional targeting or symbolic messaging — raises the stakes dramatically. Any strike that actually damages the Dimona reactor would trigger consequences that dwarf everything seen so far.