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Israel Today: Ongoing War Report - Update from 2026-01-30 at 13:02

Israel Today: Ongoing War Report - Update from 2026-01-30 at 13:02

Published 1 month ago
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HEADLINES
Tesla halts X and S, bets AI
Iran signals readiness to resume US talks
Rafah reopens for Gaza aid flows

The time is now 8:01 AM in New York, I'm Noa Levi and this is the latest Israel Today: Ongoing War Report.

This is the 8:00 AM update. We begin with a set of developments shaping the region and its wider resonance for security, diplomacy, and technology.

Tesla announces a strategic pivot toward the autonomous future, halting production of the Model X and Model S as part of the Q4 2025 shareholder update. The company says the two models will wind down next quarter, while doubling down on investments in self-driving systems, including a planned ramp of six new production lines across vehicles, robots, energy storage, and battery manufacturing in 2026. Tesla describes a broader transition from traditional automotive manufacturing toward artificial intelligence and robotics, with ambitions to mass produce its Optimus humanoid robot and to push ahead with a Robo-taxi service as a core growth pillar. In the latest quarterly results, Tesla reported an 11% year-over-year revenue decline to $17 billion in Q4 2025, driven by softness in automotive sales, even as energy generation and storage and other services posted gains and the company expanded its AI training infrastructure and manufacturing footprint. The release notes continued progress on FSD supervised capabilities and a broader energy and robotics ecosystem as it seeks regulatory approvals in China and Europe for its software and autonomous functions.

Iran signaled openness to resuming talks with the United States, stressing that negotiations must be fair and equitable. Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said Tehran is prepared to engage with regional partners to promote stability and peace while maintaining defense capabilities. His remarks followed discussions in Istanbul with Turkish counterpart Hakan Fidan, who said he would continue conversations with US officials on Iran and urged opportunities to avert conflict. Iran’s leadership also faces a broader regional dynamic, as Tehran has warned that its defense and missile programs will not be a subject of US-brokered concessions. Iranian officials in other circles have pressed a stance that any future diplomacy must respect Iran’s security interests. The developments occur as Washington weighs next steps in a complex regional environment and as European and regional actors monitor the potential for broader talks.

The Rafah border crossing between Gaza and Egypt is set to reopen on Sunday for cross-border traffic, with access limited to those who left Gaza during the war and only after prior security clearance by Israel, according to COGAT, the Israeli coordinator for civilian affairs in Gaza. Return movements will proceed in coordination with Egypt, and the crossing will function with Palestinian authorities supervising day-to-day operations. Officials say the crossing remains a critical conduit for movement and aid, and its reopening is tied to broader ceasefire dynamics and efforts to manage humanitarian flows. In related reporting, other accounts describe the crossing operating with limited, if any, direct Israeli oversight and with security screening through a layered process involving European Union and Palestinian Authority representatives, as discussions on broader security arrangements and disarmament negotiations with Hamas continue in the background.

South Africa’s foreign ministry declared Israel’s chargé d'affaires in Pretoria persona non grata and ordered him to leave within 72 hours, citing what it described as unacceptable violations of diplomatic norms. The move escalates already tense diplomatic exchanges between Pretoria and Jerusalem, reflecting broader international debates over Israel’s actions in Gaza and related security policies. Israeli diplomatic officials have not publicly commented in detail on the development
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