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Israel Today: Ongoing War Report - Update from 2026-04-09 at 06:03
Published 1 week, 2 days ago
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HEADLINES
Iran Faces $145B War Toll, Nuclear Setback
Lebanese Soldiers Killed as Proxy Tensions Surge
Brooklyn Terror Plot Suspect Pleads Guilty
The time is now 6:02 AM in New York, I'm Noa Levi and this is the latest Israel Today: Ongoing War Report.
In Regional Impacts, Iran estimates war losses at up to $145 billion after six weeks of fighting with Israel and the United States. Open-source assessments place the economic toll at roughly $140 to $145 billion, with heavy military damage across Iran’s force structure, including hits to naval assets, the ballistic missile program, nuclear infrastructure, and personnel. Casualty figures are placed around 2,076 dead and about 26,500 injured, with thousands of military personnel among the wounded. The assessments also indicate substantial degradation of Iran’s capacity, reporting the destruction of more than 66% of missile and drone production facilities and shipbuilding infrastructure, and the elimination of between 160 and 190 ballistic missile launchers, with hundreds more rendered inoperable. Strikes on Iran’s nuclear program, including facilities at Natanz, Yazd, and Arak, are believed to have set back development by an estimated eight to 15 years. In the region, British Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper characterized Israel’s strikes on Lebanon as deeply damaging and urged that Lebanon be included in any ceasefire, while stressing the importance of protecting free shipping through the Strait of Hormuz and backing for the International Maritime Organization’s proposals for ships stuck in the corridor; Cooper also criticized remarks by US President Donald Trump that she described as escalatory.
In the Conflict with Iran and its Regional Proxies, four developments shape the outlook in the Levant and beyond. The Lebanese Army said four of its soldiers were killed in Israeli strikes yesterday in Lebanon. In separate online commentary, Hezbollah in Lebanon and Hamas in Gaza voiced anger at Iran for pulling back from a joint ceasefire commitment without a Israeli commitment, saying Lebanon and Gaza were sacrificed for Iran’s security. In Israel, a Haifa man, 22-year-old Ami Gaidrov, was arrested on suspicion of recruitment by Iranian intelligence to carry out an assassination attempt against a senior Israeli figure. Investigations show he had been in contact with an Iranian handler since August 2025, accepting about 70,000 shekels in cryptocurrency to conduct intelligence gathering at sites including the Haifa port and locations where missiles landed during Operation Roaring Lion; authorities say he prepared explosives for the planned attack, believed to target former prime minister Naftali Bennett, and rented a dedicated apartment in Haifa to use as a makeshift lab. Meanwhile, forces with the 162nd Brigade in southern Lebanon continued ground operations, uncovering a tunnel leading to subterranean facilities and a cache that included bombs, rockets, RPGs, and grenades; additional combat units located and destroyed Hezbollah positions and other weapons infrastructure as the fighting in the region persists, with sirens continuing to sound across northern areas.
In Israeli Domestic Politics, three developments are unfolding amid security and budget pressures. The High Court of Justice has been asked to compel the state to implement its earlier Ras Ein al-Auja ruling and to sanction delays after authorities missed a court-ordered deadline to report on enforcement steps in the Jordan Valley matter. The case centers on the Palestinian Bedouin herding community of Ras Ein al-Auja, whose residents say settlers’ pressure and violence drove them from the area; the court had ordered security cooperation to enable a return, and reporters say the reporting deadline expired without an update. Education Minister Yoav Kish announced plans to extend the “Summer School” program by three weeks and broaden it to include students up to grade nine
Iran Faces $145B War Toll, Nuclear Setback
Lebanese Soldiers Killed as Proxy Tensions Surge
Brooklyn Terror Plot Suspect Pleads Guilty
The time is now 6:02 AM in New York, I'm Noa Levi and this is the latest Israel Today: Ongoing War Report.
In Regional Impacts, Iran estimates war losses at up to $145 billion after six weeks of fighting with Israel and the United States. Open-source assessments place the economic toll at roughly $140 to $145 billion, with heavy military damage across Iran’s force structure, including hits to naval assets, the ballistic missile program, nuclear infrastructure, and personnel. Casualty figures are placed around 2,076 dead and about 26,500 injured, with thousands of military personnel among the wounded. The assessments also indicate substantial degradation of Iran’s capacity, reporting the destruction of more than 66% of missile and drone production facilities and shipbuilding infrastructure, and the elimination of between 160 and 190 ballistic missile launchers, with hundreds more rendered inoperable. Strikes on Iran’s nuclear program, including facilities at Natanz, Yazd, and Arak, are believed to have set back development by an estimated eight to 15 years. In the region, British Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper characterized Israel’s strikes on Lebanon as deeply damaging and urged that Lebanon be included in any ceasefire, while stressing the importance of protecting free shipping through the Strait of Hormuz and backing for the International Maritime Organization’s proposals for ships stuck in the corridor; Cooper also criticized remarks by US President Donald Trump that she described as escalatory.
In the Conflict with Iran and its Regional Proxies, four developments shape the outlook in the Levant and beyond. The Lebanese Army said four of its soldiers were killed in Israeli strikes yesterday in Lebanon. In separate online commentary, Hezbollah in Lebanon and Hamas in Gaza voiced anger at Iran for pulling back from a joint ceasefire commitment without a Israeli commitment, saying Lebanon and Gaza were sacrificed for Iran’s security. In Israel, a Haifa man, 22-year-old Ami Gaidrov, was arrested on suspicion of recruitment by Iranian intelligence to carry out an assassination attempt against a senior Israeli figure. Investigations show he had been in contact with an Iranian handler since August 2025, accepting about 70,000 shekels in cryptocurrency to conduct intelligence gathering at sites including the Haifa port and locations where missiles landed during Operation Roaring Lion; authorities say he prepared explosives for the planned attack, believed to target former prime minister Naftali Bennett, and rented a dedicated apartment in Haifa to use as a makeshift lab. Meanwhile, forces with the 162nd Brigade in southern Lebanon continued ground operations, uncovering a tunnel leading to subterranean facilities and a cache that included bombs, rockets, RPGs, and grenades; additional combat units located and destroyed Hezbollah positions and other weapons infrastructure as the fighting in the region persists, with sirens continuing to sound across northern areas.
In Israeli Domestic Politics, three developments are unfolding amid security and budget pressures. The High Court of Justice has been asked to compel the state to implement its earlier Ras Ein al-Auja ruling and to sanction delays after authorities missed a court-ordered deadline to report on enforcement steps in the Jordan Valley matter. The case centers on the Palestinian Bedouin herding community of Ras Ein al-Auja, whose residents say settlers’ pressure and violence drove them from the area; the court had ordered security cooperation to enable a return, and reporters say the reporting deadline expired without an update. Education Minister Yoav Kish announced plans to extend the “Summer School” program by three weeks and broaden it to include students up to grade nine