The sirens came first, then the screams.
In Tehran and Tel Aviv, families ran for shelter as missiles traced burning lines across the sky.
Hospitals overflowed, leaders scrambled, and the death toll climbed by the hour.
Former President Trump bolted from the G7. Netanyahu vowed to cripple Iranโs future.
As Israeli and Iranian missiles trade arcs of fire across the night sky for a fifth straight day, ordinary people are paying the highest price for decisions made far above them.
Parents cradle terrified children in darkened stairwells, unsure whether to flee or stay, as power cuts and shattered roads turn simple choices into life-or-death gambles.
Hospitals are improvising operating rooms in corridors; doctors triage by flashlight when generators fail.
Far from the blast zones, world leaders race to catch up with events they no longer fully control.
Trumpโs early departure from the G7, Macronโs guarded talk of a secret U.S. ceasefire proposal, and
urgent back-channel calls between anxious regional powers all underscore how quickly this confrontation could tip into something far worse.
Yet amid the rubble and rhetoric, a single truth cuts through: unless diplomacy moves faster than the missiles, the region may cross a line it cannot easily step back from.

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