HEADLINES
Hamas Locates Hostage Remains, ICRC Doubts
Rafah Clashes Test Fragile Gaza Ceasefire
UN Peacekeeping Drawdown Risks Regional Deterrence
The time is now 7:00 PM in New York, I'm Noa Levi and this is the latest Israel Today: Ongoing War Report.
Good evening. It is 7:00 PM, and here is the hour’s update on the Middle East security landscape, with emphasis on Israeli and Jewish perspectives for an international audience.
International aid groups condemned Hamas over what they described as the staging of a hostage‑remains discovery. The International Committee of the Red Cross said it was unaware of any staged event and urged that the return of remains to families not be politicized. In a separate development, Hamas announced it had located the remains of two hostages during Gaza search operations, naming the two individuals in the Tuesday release. Israel has acknowledged the recovery of some hostage remains in past operations, including the partial remains of a hostage whose body had already been recovered earlier, and Washington and Jerusalem have repeatedly pressed Hamas to provide the full set of remains and to allow families to grieve with dignity.
The ceasefire in Gaza remains fragile as fighting erupted in Rafah after Hamas opened fire on IDF troops, nine days after a prior attack in the same city. Israeli strikes followed, targeting what the army described as militant sites and infrastructure. Gaza’s civil defense ministry reported casualties in multiple locales, with at least two killed and four injured in the Sabra neighborhood south of Gaza City, and additional fatalities in Khan Younis. Israel contends the operations are meant to deter further violence and degrade Hamas’s operational capabilities, even as the broader ceasefire framework seeks to preserve conditional calm.
Hamas has, in its own communications, asserted that it has located and presented remains of hostages as part of its ongoing handling of the hostage issue. Israel contends that the group continues to draw out the process, at times signaling cooperation while choices and actions on the ground suggest otherwise. The result is a continuing dispute over the status and handling of remains, and a political dynamic that places pressure on both sides to demonstrate restraint while the humanitarian situation in Gaza worsens.
Across Washington and European capitals, officials emphasize the desire to maintain the ceasefire while pressing Hamas to honor its commitments and to return all captured individuals. The White House has signaled that restraint remains a priority as discussions continue about the conditions for moving toward what President Trump called the second phase of his Gaza plan. US officials have urged Israel not to take steps that could threaten the truce, while signaling that if Hamas fails to comply, allies could change the calculus and permit a tougher approach. Vice President JD Vance described the ceasefire as holding, while cautioning that small clashes are likely to occur and that the overarching agreement remains in place.
On the Israeli side, political leaders are weighing both security imperatives and domestic pressures as elections loom. A range of voices has outlined competing visions for Israel’s future, with security considerations and the country’s long‑term stability at the forefront of debate, alongside the fiscal and political strains that come with a protracted war. In southern Lebanon and Gaza, observers watch for signs of wider escalation that could stretch security resources and test political consensus.
The regional security picture also includes the dynamics around United Nations peacekeeping efforts. Analysts warn that a drawdown by UN peacekeepers in southern Lebanon could leave a deterrence gap, a development that would complicate Israel’s security calculus if the Lebanese Armed Forces are not equipped to fill t
            
Published on 6 days, 11 hours ago
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