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Israel Today: Ongoing War Report - Update from 2026-01-31 at 21:06

Israel Today: Ongoing War Report - Update from 2026-01-31 at 21:06

Published 1 month ago
Description
HEADLINES
Resurfaced Photo Ties Hamas Hospital Chief
Hamas Plans Decade-Long Hostage Leverage
Spain Probes Hamas Funds via Crypto

The time is now 9:05 PM in New York, I'm Noa Levi and this is the latest Israel Today: Ongoing War Report.

In the Disputed Territories (Gaza, Judea and Samaria, East Jerusalem), a decade‑old photograph resurfaced showing Hussam Abu Safiya, the director of Kamal Adwan Hospital in northern Gaza, wearing a Hamas uniform alongside senior officers. Abu Safiya, who is listed as a colonel in Hamas’s Military Medical Services, has been in Israeli custody since December 2024 when troops raided the hospital during the Gaza conflict. Separate reporting confirms that Abu Safiya authored two opinion pieces published by The New York Times criticizing Israel’s war in Gaza, with the Times not disclosing any Hamas affiliation. Archaeologists announced the opening of the Pilgrims’ Path in the City of David, Jerusalem, a stone‑paved route uncovered after nearly 2,000 years, revealing the main Second Temple‑era street that connected the Pool of Siloam to the Temple Mount during the pilgrimage festivals, when the area was lined with shops and crowded with worshippers. In another account, Brigadier-General (ret.) Gal Hirsch described Hamas’s plan to hold Israeli hostages for up to a decade as leverage, detailing a network of nearly 2,000 personnel tracking captives and saying restraint was exercised when outcomes were uncertain in order to protect human life. In a separate case tied to financing, Spain’s high court opened an investigation into a Chinese national who ran a hair salon near Barcelona, accused of moving about €600,000 in cryptocurrency to addresses linked to a Hamas‑related entity, documenting at least 31 transfers and detaining the suspect before release under restrictions as the probe continues.

In the conflict with Iran and its Regional Proxies, no full‑scale war had broken out by the end of January, even as investors on betting sites counted losses totaling more than $125 million. Current indicators suggest that preparations to reinforce air defenses across the Middle East remain likely about a week from completion, based on the scale of airlift activity seen before last year’s strikes on Iran, including more than 75 cargo flights by US C‑17A Globemaster III and C‑5M Super Galaxy aircraft carrying air‑defense systems. In Washington, Saudi Defense Minister Prince Khalid bin Salman told a private briefing that if President Trump does not follow through on threats against Iran, the regime could emerge stronger, noting a shift after the United States approved a potential $9 billion Foreign Military Sale to Saudi Arabia, including PAC‑3 MSE interceptors and related equipment. Axios cited the same briefing in reporting the Saudi view. In London, UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer signaled support for President Trump’s hardline stance on Iran, calling preventing Tehran’s nuclear ambitions a top priority while stopping short of endorsing US military strikes. President Trump told Fox News that the United States would not reveal its plans on Iran, even to Gulf allies, while saying Iran is in talks with the US and that a large fleet is heading to the region; officials have cautioned that options remain under consideration and that any decisive action would be contingent on negotiations, not promises. Tehran has signaled progress toward a framework for negotiations, but US officials have described the potential talks as uncertain and cautioned against premature conclusions as Washington weighs available options.

In Antisemitism and Anti‑Jewish Hate, a senior US Border Patrol official was reported by The New York Times to have disparaged the Jewish faith of Minnesota’s top federal prosecutor during a January call with Justice Department lawyers. Gregory Bovino, a Border Patrol field leader, allegedly mocked US Attorney Daniel N. Rosen, an Orthodox Jew who observe
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