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Israel Today: Ongoing War Report - Update from 2026-01-17 at 16:07

Israel Today: Ongoing War Report - Update from 2026-01-17 at 16:07

Published 1 month, 1 week ago
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HEADLINES
Gaza Board of Peace formed with Blair
Khamenei vows firm response to US meddling
Syrian forces seize Deir el-Zor oil fields

The time is now 11:00 AM in New York, I'm Noa Levi and this is the latest Israel Today: Ongoing War Report.

At 11:00 AM, the Middle East and related global conversations are framing a moment of high political tension, with diplomacy, security concerns, and ideological battles playing out across multiple theaters.

First, on Gaza and the wider quest for postwar governance, Washington has moved to shape a formal “Board of Peace” for Gaza. President Trump has named a slate of senior figures to steer the effort, including former British prime minister Tony Blair as a member of the executive board, Jared Kushner and Steve Witkoff as negotiators, and Senator Marco Rubio as Secretary of State for the board. The White House describes the board as charged with governance capacity-building, regional relations, reconstruction, investment attraction, and large-scale funding and capital mobilization. A parallel Palestinian technocrats’ committee, intended to govern Gaza in the postwar period, held its first meeting in Cairo, with Kushner present, signaling an attempt to fuse political oversight with practical administration. Additional members and a broader mandate are expected to be announced in coming days, as international mediators weigh how to translate battlefield ceasefires into sustainable civilian governance and economic revival.

Separately, Tony Blair was highlighted in regional commentary after his appointment to the Gaza Board of Peace, reflecting a return to the spotlight in the Middle East for a figure long associated with peace diplomacy. Blair emphasized his readiness to work within the framework laid out by the president’s vision to advance peace and prosperity, while critics note his role in past interventions remains a flashpoint in some Arab capitals. The broader question remains: can this new governance apparatus gain legitimacy with both Israeli security concerns and Palestinian political realities, and will it be able to attract the international funding and technical know-how Gaza would need to rebuild?

Across the region, Iran’s leadership has sharpened its public posture. In Tehran, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei addressed supporters in a public gathering in the capital, delivering a pointed exchange with Washington that Iranian state media characterized as direct and uncompromising. He denounced what he called Western meddling and the US role in domestic protests, warning that Iran would respond firmly to what he described as foreign interference. The remarks underscored a narrative that portrays Washington as enabling destabilization abroad, even as Tehran emphasizes its own resolve. The exchange comes amid broader regional tensions and ongoing concerns about American and allied military activity in nearby waters and airspace, as well as Tehran’s own regional assertiveness.

In Syria, the battlefield continues to shift along the eastern flank away from the major urban centers. Government forces reportedly seized oil fields at Sufyan and Thawrah in the Deir el-Zor region, an area long contested with Kurdish-led forces. Kurdish groups still control substantial portions of Syria’s oil infrastructure in Deir el-Zor, and the central authorities assert control of key resources as they press into areas around Tabka. The clashes have drawn attention to the risk of renewed confrontation between Syrian government forces and Kurdish militias, even as US-led coalition aircraft monitored the confrontations and issued warnings over the contested zones. In a related development, the Syrian president issued a decree granting citizenship to Kurdish Syrians and condemning discrimination on ethnic or linguistic grounds, signaling an attempt to address minority grievances within the state’s official framework amid ongoing instabili
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