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Israel Today: Ongoing War Report - Update from 2026-04-06 at 11:02

Israel Today: Ongoing War Report - Update from 2026-04-06 at 11:02

Published 1 week, 6 days ago
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HEADLINES
Israel strikes Iran petrochemical hub and base
IRGC Quds Force chiefs killed in strikes
Britons detained in UAE over war photos

The time is now 11:01 AM in New York, I'm Noa Levi and this is the latest Israel Today: Ongoing War Report.

In Operation Lion's Roar, Israel says its forces struck Iran’s South Pars petrochemical facility near Asaluyeh, the country’s largest plant of its kind, rendering the site inoperable. Defense Minister Katz said the strikes on two major petrochemical facilities—together responsible for about 85% of Iran’s exports—have taken them out of use, and that Prime Minister Netanyahu and he have ordered the IDF to continue attacking Iran’s infrastructure. The petrochemical sector is a major source of funding for the IRGC and Iran’s military industry. The IDF previously hit the Mahshahr complex, one of two central facilities used to produce materials for explosives, ballistic missiles and other weaponry, a site described as a primary point for a key ballistic-missile component. Separately, Israeli forces also destroyed Iran’s largest naval base in Bushehr, in the southwest of the country.

In Direct Israel-Iran Clashes, a senior Israeli official told The Jerusalem Post that Jerusalem does not expect a ceasefire to take shape in the coming days, even as a framework to end hostilities between the United States and Iran circulated. The official said Israel and the United States are closely aligned but still pursuing distinct strategic goals, and noted a high level of coordination between the leaders. With a US deadline approaching, Washington and Tehran reportedly received a framework to end five weeks of fighting, exchanged with Pakistan, outlining a two-tier approach: an immediate ceasefire followed by a comprehensive agreement, while Tehran rejected any move to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. Separately, the IDF confirmed strikes that killed senior IRGC Quds Force officials in separate Sunday operations, including Kamil Melhem, artillery chief of the Imam Hussein Division, and Asghar Bagheri Yazdanmir, head of Unit 840, which conducts global operations against Israeli and Western targets.

In Iranian Retaliation, Iran’s response to Pakistan’s proposed path to end the war ran through IRNA, with Tehran reportedly outlining demands such as ending regional confrontations—including the war against its proxies like Hezbollah—and a safe-passage protocol through the Hormuz Strait with transit payments. The response also called for reconstruction and sanctions relief, and Iran rejected a temporary ceasefire, insisting on a permanent end to the conflict on its terms, according to IRNA’s reports of Iran’s replies.

In US Military Role, experts warn that US boots on Iranian soil could trigger a broader regional clash, potentially setting off a chain reaction across global shipping lanes, energy markets, and regional political fault lines. While no official plan for a full-scale invasion has been announced, scenarios including covert raids, special operations, and targeted seizures of strategic sites are discussed as possibilities, creating instability for neighboring states worried about escalation.

In Regional Impacts, close to 70 British citizens have been detained in the United Arab Emirates for photographing and publishing images of sites attacked by Iran within the UAE. One detainee is a British flight attendant who posted a photo of a drone strike at the airport to a private WhatsApp group and asked whether it was safe to pass through. Detainees could face prison terms of up to two years and fines approaching 50,000 euros. Overall, more than 160 people have been detained in the UAE for publishing documentation from impact sites.

In the Conflict with Iran and its Regional Proxies, Amal, the Lebanese Shi’a party, is described as competing with Hezbollah and coordinating with the group to gain influence within the resista
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