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Israel Today: Ongoing War Report - Update from 2025-10-31 at 12:06

Israel Today: Ongoing War Report - Update from 2025-10-31 at 12:06



HEADLINES
Raslan killed as Lebanon border tensions rise
Poll shows opposition could win Knesset majority
Iran expands militias in Iraq, eyeing strikes

The time is now 8:00 AM in New York, I'm Noa Levi and this is the latest Israel Today: Ongoing War Report.

A busy morning as the region sits at a hinge between ongoing security operations, political contention at home, and broader regional pressures. In the border theater, the Israeli military confirms it killed a Hezbollah maintenance officer in southern Lebanon as the group continues attempts to rebuild infrastructure near the border. The army described Ibrahim Muhammad Raslan as someone involved in repairing Hezbollah facilities in the area, a development that underscores the continued contest over the Lebanon front as seen from Israeli defense planners.

Meanwhile, Israel’s military is facing questions about how it handled the Ein Habesor sector on October 7. An investigation into lapses there is underway, with the IDF noting that commanders were contending with a surge of infiltrations across multiple locations and damage to command and control systems at higher levels. The defense establishment also praised local emergency teams for their bravery in the same episode, stressing that accountability remains a core principle even as operations continue.

In domestic politics, a new public poll suggests that the opposition bloc would command a Knesset majority if elections were held today, though views on a coalition’s draft bill targeting ultra‑Orthodox service remain divided. About 43 percent oppose the proposed law, with roughly 27 percent supporting it, signaling that the draft question continues to be a flashpoint in a country facing security pressures and political recalibrations.

Across the region, the threat landscape is widening in another arena. Israeli officials, citing a slow but deliberate Iranian push, say Tehran is expanding its footprint with militias in Iraq and related infrastructure. The IDF and Mossad have been refining contingency plans for a potential long‑range strike capability and even a ground maneuver, reflecting a growing awareness that stability on one front does not guarantee it on another.

A separate security‑diplomatic thread involves Yemen’s Houthi movement, which claims that 43 local United Nations staff will face trial over alleged links to an Israeli strike that killed senior figures in Sanaa. The UN has repeatedly denied involvement by its personnel, and it has urged the immediate release of its staff and other detainees. The Houthis’ assertion comes as UN staff remain detained in Yemen and the organization works to retain access to aid operations amid a swelling humanitarian crisis.

On the home front, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu visited a military academy ceremony, praising the men and women in uniform across backgrounds and reiterating the national resolve. He spoke of a united Israel—Jews and non‑Jews, religious and secular alike—standing together to meet the demands of what he described as a defining period in the country’s defense. The remarks reflected a traditional emphasis on resilience and shared sacrifice in the face of ongoing conflict.

Israeli forces conducted strikes in the Gaza Strip overnight, in a further test of a fragile ceasefire. Palestinian authorities report two deaths from Israeli shelling and gunfire, with a third death attributed to injuries sustained in earlier bombardments. The Israeli military did not immediately offer a comment to Reuters, which cited WAFA’s casualty tally. The broader context remains a ceasefire that has held imperfectly, with both sides accusing the other of violations as the humanitarian situation remains dire in Gaza.

In a rare domestic‑military ethics pivot, the army’s top legal officer announced her resignation. Major General Yifat Tomer‑Yerushalmi acknowledged that she appr


Published on 2 days, 22 hours ago






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