THE US and Israel have launched a fresh round of airstrikes on pro-Iranian targets as the allies prepare to reportedly bomb the Ayatollah’s nuke programme.
Donald Trump has imposed a deadline now just weeks away on cutting a new nuclear deal and is hammering Tehran’s allies to ratchet up the pressure.


US bombed Houthi sites in Yemen[/caption]

Houthi fighters gather to mark the annual al-Quds Day[/caption]
France warned on Wednesday that war is “inevitable” if Tehran doesn’t cut an atomic agreement with Washington.
The Houthis, a rebel Iranian proxy force, said six people were killed in the fresh strikes across the land they control, including a guard at a communications tower.
They also claimed the US struck a water project, killing four, in the Hodeida governorate’s Mansuriyah District.
Some 17 strikes also hit Saada, near the Saudi border, and another person was killed at Ras Isa port in Hodeida, the Houthis said.
Rebel-held areas of Yemen have seen near-daily strikes since Washington launched an air campaign against on March 15.
The US is shooting missiles from its destroyers and launching fighter jets from its aircraft carrier nearby – the USS Harry S Truman.
Some 67 people in total have been killed in America’s bombing campaign, the Houthis claim, which has included more than 200 strikes.
Meanwhile, Israel has launched a blitz on Syria as it continues to cripple the new regime’s fighting ability.
They’ve hit military airbases and infrastructure sites in the Syrian cities of Damascus, Hama and Homs on Wednesday.
The attack almost completely destroyed the Hama military airport and led to dozens of injuries among civilians and military personnel, the Syrian foreign ministry said in a statement.
Israel has also carried out an overnight raid into Syria killing several armed militants during the overnight raid in the Tasil region of southern Syria.
Israeli troops came under fire during the mission and responded with ground and aerial strikes, the IDF said.
The fresh strikes are just the beginning of the US and Israel’s pressure campaign against Tehran.
Israel has said it will not tolerate an Islamist militant presence in southern Syria after a new Islamist-led leadership was installed in Syria following Bashar al-Assad’s ouster from power.

The US has been bombing the Houthis with fighter jets launched from the USS Harry Truman[/caption]

Destroyers have been bombing the terror group with missiles[/caption]
Insiders have told The Sun they are planning a major coordinated strike against Iran if Tehran fails to make a new nuke deal.
Another carrier group, led by the USS Carl Vinson, is steaming towards the Persian Gulf and will double the pressure on Iran.
The Carl Vinson was the boat which received Osama Bin Laden’s body and then dumped it at sea.
Analysts believe the Carl Vinson is currently in the South China Sea and could be in the Persian Gulf as quickly as April 9.
America now also has a third of its B-2 stealth bombers stationed at Diego Garcia.
Satellite photos of the airbase tarmac shows six of America’s 20 B-2 Spirits are now pointed directly at Iran and ready to fly.

Six American B-2 bomber planes on the tarmac of Diego Garcia island[/caption]

Iran’s Supreme Leader has threatened to strike back if the US bombs them[/caption]
Six Stratotanker in-flight refuelling aircraft can also be seen on the tarmac at the Diego Garcia in satellite images taken Wednesday.
Tehran, in return, has warned it will blitz a US base with a top Iranian general threatening “they are in a glass house and should not throw stones”.
Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei vowed Monday: “The Zionist entity and the Americans will suffer a severe and powerful blow if they take any hostile action.”
Trump has told Iran that it needs to cut a new nuclear deal or he will carry out nuclear action.
He wants direct talks between top teams, but the Iranians have only agreed to talks mediated by Oman.
Some White House officials think a deal is possible, while others think dialogue is a waste of time, Axios reports.
Iran’s accelerates nuclear development
Exclusive by Katie Davis, Chief Foreign Reporter (Digital)
IRAN is believed to have accelerated its nuclear weapons development and is building terrifying nuclear warheads for solid-fuel missiles with a range exceeding 1,800 miles (3,000km).
A powerful blast from Iran could impact on several continents due to the chilling capability of the warheads.
Italy, Ukraine, Sudan, India and even large swaths of Russia would all potentially be in the firing line.
They are being developed at two sites in Shahrud and Semnan, which were previously pinned as rocket or space satellite launch sites.
A third site, Sorkheh Hesar, is also said to be carrying out projects, including research on nuclear power and underground explosions.
Nukes are being quickly created under the watchful eye of the regime’s nuclear weaponization entity, the Organization for Advanced Defense Research (SPND).
Bosses are developing nuclear warheads for the solid-fuel Ghaem-100 missiles, which are equipped with mobile launch platforms at the Shahrud site.
Iran’s rocket designers have used North Korea’s missiles as a guide to develop the Ghaem-100 missile.
When the missile was in a very early testing stage in 2011, dozens of missile experts were killed at the Modarres site in Tehran.
Personnel vehicles are banned from entering the Shahrud site and are forced to park at a checkpoint before people are transported in.
Meanwhile, they are using the liquid fuel missile Simorgh to develop nuclear warheads in Semnan.
Iran has staged three successful Ghaem-100 missile launches over the past two years, enhancing the regime’s capability to deploy nuclear weapons.