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Israel Today: Ongoing War Report - Update from 2025-10-20 at 08:08

Israel Today: Ongoing War Report - Update from 2025-10-20 at 08:08



HEADLINES
- Ceasefire at risk as Hamas collects arms
- Rafah attack kills two Israeli soldiers
- Zuqar Island airstrip reshapes Red Sea security

The time is now 4:00 AM in New York, I'm Noa Levi and this is the latest Israel Today: Ongoing War Report.

This is the four o’clock morning international briefing. Tensions remain tense around Gaza as a fragile ceasefire holds while questions about compliance and the violence threshold keep growing. Officials in Gaza say Hamas has ordered a broad effort to collect ammunition, fallen ordnance, and other gear in the territory, even as Israeli forces conduct their own clearance operations and monitor for additional arms dumps. The arrangement underscores the challenge of turning a pause into a durable cessation and the risk that weapon stockpiles could be reactivated if the spirit of the agreement is not upheld on all sides.

In southern Gaza, a new confrontation tested the ceasefire’s durability. Hamas fired anti-tank missiles and attacked Israeli forces in the Rafah area, resulting in the deaths of two Israeli soldiers. Israeli airstrikes and artillery followed, a reminder that a threat along the ceasefire line can escalate quickly and invite a renewed round of retaliation. The United States has called for restraint and urged both sides to avoid steps that could derail the pause, while stressing the importance of preserving humanitarian access and civilian protections in the Strip.

On the diplomatic front, the ceasefire process continues to be guided by mediators in Washington and regional capitals. US officials describe ongoing discussions aimed at verifying information about hostages and missing persons, pressuring both sides to honor commitments, and aligning security steps with a broader regional approach. In Washington, Jared Kushner and Steve Witkoff have portrayed a path toward integration of Israel with the broader Middle East as contingent on improved Palestinian living conditions and economic opportunity, alongside security assurances. Their remarks come as the first phase of the ceasefire remains in effect and as mediators work to complete the next steps that would distance Hamas from holdover power centers in Gaza and reduce the risk of renewed conflict.

A key element of the ceasefire has been the return of hostages and the handling of missing or deceased individuals. Officials say Hamas has yet to return 16 of the 28 deceased hostages who were in Gaza when the first phase took effect on October 10. Israel has pressed the mediators to secure the return of all hostages and the bodies of the deceased, warning that delays can undermine confidence in the process. The situation remains fluid, with both sides accusing the other of breaches and with the mediation triangle of Egypt, Qatar, and Turkey playing prominent roles in managing deadlock points and logistics.

New developments in the region’s security environment also carry implications for Gaza and Israel’s broader strategic posture. Satellite imagery and reporting describe a newly built airstrip on Zuqar Island off Yemen’s Red Sea coast, a project linked to anti-Houthi forces and potentially supported by the United Arab Emirates. The site could enable enhanced surveillance or rapid deployment in the Red Sea and Bab el-Mandeb corridor, a chokepoint of international shipping. Analysts caution that the exact purpose of the runway remains debated, but its existence signals a widening network of off‑shore bases that could influence operations against the Houthis and, by extension, regional security dynamics surrounding the Gaza conflict.

In related regional dynamics, sanctions and economic constraints continue to affect Iran’s shipping and aviation sectors, with the World Bank noting that Iran ranks near the bottom in regional logistics performance. The combination of sanctions and reduced investment is limiting Tehran’s ability to project


Published on 2 weeks, 2 days ago






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