HEADLINES
Four Hezbollah operatives killed in border exchanges
Yosef Ein Eli spied for Iran
Hostage Kalfon recounts Hamas brutality
The time is now 4:01 AM in New York, I'm Noa Levi and this is the latest Israel Today: Ongoing War Report.
This is a four o’clock update on security and political developments affecting Israel, its neighbors, and regional dynamics, with context for an international audience.
Israel’s defense leadership urged the Lebanese government to fulfill its obligation to disarm Hezbollah and remove the group from southern Lebanon, as cross-border attacks and intermittent Israeli strikes continue along the border. In a weekend statement, the defense minister emphasized the need for Hezbollah to be dismantled as a condition of lasting stability in the area, even as the US-brokered ceasefire that ended the last major flare‑up remains in place but with tensions persisting along the frontier. Israeli forces said they killed four Hezbollah operatives in the latest cross-border exchanges, underscoring the ongoing fragility of the ceasefire and the risk of renewed fighting along the Lebanon-Israel line.
In Israel’s domestic security arena, a 23-year-old resident of Tiberias, Yosef Ein Eli, has been charged with spying for Iran. The indictment alleges that Ein Eli established contact with Iranian intelligence elements since late 2024 and carried out a range of security-related tasks under direction for payment. Prosecutors say he provided information and photographs related to hotels along the Dead Sea and other strategic sites in southern Israel, and was asked to collect additional intelligence, including information about senior Israeli officials and potential targets. The case is one of several high‑profile espionage episodes involving Israelis accused of working for Iran since the Gaza war began, highlighting persistent intelligence pressures on Israel from across the region.
Separately, new testimonies from freed hostages continue to shape the public record of the Gaza war. Segev Kalfon, a former hostage who was released after two years in Hamas captivity, described brutal beatings, starvation, and psychological torment at the hands of Hamas captors. He said his captors intensified abuse in response to inflammatory remarks attributed to Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir, though Israeli officials have dismissed such accounts as part of a broader campaign. In detailed interviews, Kalfon and other freed hostages recounted punishments that extended for lengthy periods and included threats of execution, underscoring the toll of the war on civilians and the ongoing sensitivity surrounding political rhetoric within Israel about Hamas and hostages.
The fighting on Israel’s northern front also drew attention as Israel reported continued, targeted operations against Hezbollah assets in Lebanon. The Israeli military said it struck several Hezbollah locations, including a vehicle and associated infrastructure, amid cross-border exchanges that have punctuated the past weeks. The Lebanese group and its supporters have framed recent actions as part of a broader regional confrontation, while Israeli officials insist that security measures are essential to prevent escalation and protect Israeli civilians.
Turning to policy and legal questions inside Israel, a government bill seeks to expand the powers of rabbinical courts to initiate investigations into an individual’s Jewish status, with such determinations potentially binding on civil authorities, including the population registry and marriage authorities. The proposal would allow court decisions on Jewish status to reverberate through state institutions, a move critics say could blur the boundary between religion and state and threaten personal privacy. Supporters argue the change would promote consistency across records and prevent contradictions between civil and rel
Published on 19 hours ago
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