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Israel Today: Ongoing War Report - Update from 2026-01-13 at 21:08

Israel Today: Ongoing War Report - Update from 2026-01-13 at 21:08

Published 1 month, 1 week ago
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HEADLINES
US designates Muslim Brotherhood branches terrorists
Iran crackdown on protests fuels international alarm
Israel braces for possible Iran confrontation

The time is now 4:01 PM in New York, I'm Noa Levi and this is the latest Israel Today: Ongoing War Report.

This hour, a set of strategic developments and human stories across the Middle East and the Jewish world is shaping how governments will contest security threats, defend civilians, and balance diplomacy with hard choices about power and principle.

First, Washington moved to elevate a long-simmering dispute over political Islamist movements onto a new legal footing. The United States designated the Muslim Brotherhood’s branches in Egypt, Lebanon, and Jordan as global terrorist organizations, citing their support for Hamas and alleged involvement in violence against Israel and US partners. The Treasury announced these branches would be treated as specially designated global terrorists, a step that carries sanctions and constrains financial and diplomatic maneuvering. Cairo welcomed the move, calling it crucial and reflecting the group’s extremist ideology as a threat to regional and international stability. Beirut’s Jama’a Islamiya, the group’s Lebanese faction, dismissed the designation as political and legally ineffectual in Lebanon. The designation adds another layer to a fraught regional landscape in which formal acceptance of the Brotherhood varies widely and where several governments view the group as a potential proxy or political competitor. In Israel and Washington, officials emphasize that this move is about countering violent extremism and stabilizing the region, while acknowledging the complications it may pose for regional partners who have historically tolerated or engaged with Brotherhood-linked groups for political reasons.

Across the region and beyond, events in Iran are reverberating through policy debates and public sentiment. Iranian authorities report a brutal crackdown on protests that erupted in late 2023 into 2024, with high casualties and widespread arrests. Estimates of dead and detained vary widely, with rights groups and opposition outlets offering figures that range from the thousands to higher counts, and international bodies expressing horror at the violence. The UN and European capitals have urged restraint and accountability, while Tehran characterizes the protests as terrorism or foreign interference aimed at destabilizing the Islamic Republic. In Washington, President Trump amplified calls for Iranian protesters to persevere, posting a bold invitation to “KEEP PROTESTING – TAKE OVER YOUR INSTITUTIONS” and signaling that “HELP IS ON ITS WAY,” while simultaneously announcing new tariffs on imports from countries doing business with Iran. Tehran has signaled it will not welcome external interference, even as some European governments speculated about strategic options to pressure the regime and safeguard civilians. In an analysis of possible paths forward, observers note a spectrum from targeted strikes against security forces to cyber operations, with significant risk of escalation given Iran’s lethal security apparatus and its leverage over critical routes and energy markets. At the same time, Israel’s leadership has publicly warned against actions that could ignite a broader war, even as it remains deeply concerned about Iran’s capabilities and intentions. Israeli officials and analysts have stressed the fragility of any misstep that could provide the regime with a rallying point, while recognizing that a collapse of the regime is not a foregone conclusion and would bring its own cascading challenges for regional stability.

In a related thread, Israel’s security posture continues to balance offensive readiness with restraint. The Israeli government has mapped and trained for potential confrontations with Iran and its networks, including proxies, in ways meant to
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