Israeli strikes expanded into central Tehran on Saturday, hitting near police headquarters and state television facilities. The IDF confirmed "large-scale strikes" were ongoing. The initial US-Israeli operation — designated Epic Fury by the Pentagon and Roaring Lion by the IDF (ID:469) — struck military infrastructure, nuclear sites, and command facilities across Tehran, Isfahan, Qom, Karaj, and Kermanshah . The expansion to Tehran's administrative core is a different category of target.
Police headquarters is a domestic security institution. State television — IRIB — is the government's primary channel for communicating with 88 million citizens. Striking both during a leadership transition, as the newly formed interim council attempts to project authority, degrades the new government's capacity to govern and coordinate. Whether this is a deliberate broadening of war aims or the operational momentum of a campaign that has not defined its own limits, the IDF has not said.
The pattern has precedent. The 2003 coalition campaign against Baghdad targeted government ministries, communications infrastructure, and state broadcasting alongside military sites, with the stated aim of collapsing the Iraqi government's ability to coordinate. Israel's publicly stated objective remains the degradation of Iran's military capability. But the target set has expanded from enrichment centrifuges and IRGC barracks to buildings in a city where nine million people live.
The Iranian Red Crescent had already reported 201 dead and over 700 injured from the conflict's opening hours (ID:70). Central Tehran is among the most densely populated urban areas in the Middle East. Air strikes there carry a fundamentally different risk to civilian life than strikes on dispersed military installations, regardless of the precision of the munitions used.
