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Israel Today: Ongoing War Report - Update from 2026-04-10 at 05:02
Published 1 week, 1 day ago
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Tenuous Iran ceasefire, no clear victory
Bennett's bloc gains, still behind Likud
21-year-old Jerusalem resident indicted for Iran spying
The time is now 5:02 AM in New York, I'm Noa Levi and this is the latest Israel Today: Ongoing War Report.
In Direct Israel-Iran Clashes, a mixed assessment of the conflict’s end is taking shape as a tenuous ceasefire holds. The war with Iran ended in a tenuous ceasefire on Wednesday, but it cannot yet be defined as a victory, even as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has sought to frame progress in favorable terms. It is not the colossal failure some opponents have portrayed. Israelis have had to adjust to a reality formed over more than two years of fighting. The public narrative of quick, decisive military success proved overstated: in Gaza, Hamas still controls about half the territory and has not been disarmed; in Lebanon, assertions that Hezbollah had been decisively defeated have not held, and Israel remains deeply engaged in the North. The episode of what the report calls a 12 Day War with Iran in June has left the country with heightened expectations and a shift in the public mood as the ceasefire settles into place without a formal victory.
In Regional Impacts, תרגיל "מולדת כחולה 2026": איתות לישראל - טורקיה מסמנת טריטוריה, a signal of regional posture and shifting dynamics. Reports from the region note a fall of ammunition in the western Galilee with a house in Misgav suffering heavy damage, and a broader sense that talks with Iran have begun—with one notable point hard to overlook: Hezbollah continues to direct fire at Israel, with sirens sounding in the center and the south. There are indications that France may enter talks with Lebanon, a development with significant international implications. A Maariv-Walla survey shows 63% of the public unhappy with the results of the war against Iran, underscoring ongoing domestic unease about the war’s outcomes and next steps.
In Israeli Domestic Politics, the State Prosecutor’s Office has filed an indictment against Moshe Lachovitz, a 21-year-old Jerusalem resident, for contacting a foreign agent and gathering intelligence for Iran. The prosecution is seeking to have Lachovitz held until the legal process concludes. The indictment says he continued to work with a person who identified as “Michael,” who claimed to be working for Iran, after Lachovitz realized the contact was on Iran’s behalf. Lachovitz was paid in cryptocurrency and earned thousands of dollars; the charges include contact with a foreign agent, providing information to the enemy, and related offenses. Separately, an opposition bloc poll shows Bennett’s party up two seats to 24, narrowing the gap with Likud at 25, while the opposition bloc holds 61 seats to the coalition’s 49. Overall satisfaction with the war’s outcome remains low, at 32%, with opinions split along political lines about whether Israel and the United States won the war with Iran. Among coalition voters, 47% say the two countries won, 21% say they did not, and 32% say it is too early to tell; among opposition voters, only 10% believe they won, 61% do not, and 29% say it is too early to tell.
In Israeli Economy and Business, Ex El Al CEO denies price gouging. Dina Ben Tal Ganancia, who led El Al through a period marked by two major crises and a sustained war with foreign airlines, notes that the airline achieved the highest annual profits in its history—about $950 million during the war—yet faced criticism and fines for pricing practices. The Israel Competition Authority has already imposed a NIS 121 million fine for excessive and unfair pricing during the war, with consideration of another potential fine of about NIS 110 million for alleged abuses of market position as the investigation continues. Ben Tal Ganancia reflects on the challenges of tenure, departure, and her plans for the future, speaking in her first interview since s
Tenuous Iran ceasefire, no clear victory
Bennett's bloc gains, still behind Likud
21-year-old Jerusalem resident indicted for Iran spying
The time is now 5:02 AM in New York, I'm Noa Levi and this is the latest Israel Today: Ongoing War Report.
In Direct Israel-Iran Clashes, a mixed assessment of the conflict’s end is taking shape as a tenuous ceasefire holds. The war with Iran ended in a tenuous ceasefire on Wednesday, but it cannot yet be defined as a victory, even as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has sought to frame progress in favorable terms. It is not the colossal failure some opponents have portrayed. Israelis have had to adjust to a reality formed over more than two years of fighting. The public narrative of quick, decisive military success proved overstated: in Gaza, Hamas still controls about half the territory and has not been disarmed; in Lebanon, assertions that Hezbollah had been decisively defeated have not held, and Israel remains deeply engaged in the North. The episode of what the report calls a 12 Day War with Iran in June has left the country with heightened expectations and a shift in the public mood as the ceasefire settles into place without a formal victory.
In Regional Impacts, תרגיל "מולדת כחולה 2026": איתות לישראל - טורקיה מסמנת טריטוריה, a signal of regional posture and shifting dynamics. Reports from the region note a fall of ammunition in the western Galilee with a house in Misgav suffering heavy damage, and a broader sense that talks with Iran have begun—with one notable point hard to overlook: Hezbollah continues to direct fire at Israel, with sirens sounding in the center and the south. There are indications that France may enter talks with Lebanon, a development with significant international implications. A Maariv-Walla survey shows 63% of the public unhappy with the results of the war against Iran, underscoring ongoing domestic unease about the war’s outcomes and next steps.
In Israeli Domestic Politics, the State Prosecutor’s Office has filed an indictment against Moshe Lachovitz, a 21-year-old Jerusalem resident, for contacting a foreign agent and gathering intelligence for Iran. The prosecution is seeking to have Lachovitz held until the legal process concludes. The indictment says he continued to work with a person who identified as “Michael,” who claimed to be working for Iran, after Lachovitz realized the contact was on Iran’s behalf. Lachovitz was paid in cryptocurrency and earned thousands of dollars; the charges include contact with a foreign agent, providing information to the enemy, and related offenses. Separately, an opposition bloc poll shows Bennett’s party up two seats to 24, narrowing the gap with Likud at 25, while the opposition bloc holds 61 seats to the coalition’s 49. Overall satisfaction with the war’s outcome remains low, at 32%, with opinions split along political lines about whether Israel and the United States won the war with Iran. Among coalition voters, 47% say the two countries won, 21% say they did not, and 32% say it is too early to tell; among opposition voters, only 10% believe they won, 61% do not, and 29% say it is too early to tell.
In Israeli Economy and Business, Ex El Al CEO denies price gouging. Dina Ben Tal Ganancia, who led El Al through a period marked by two major crises and a sustained war with foreign airlines, notes that the airline achieved the highest annual profits in its history—about $950 million during the war—yet faced criticism and fines for pricing practices. The Israel Competition Authority has already imposed a NIS 121 million fine for excessive and unfair pricing during the war, with consideration of another potential fine of about NIS 110 million for alleged abuses of market position as the investigation continues. Ben Tal Ganancia reflects on the challenges of tenure, departure, and her plans for the future, speaking in her first interview since s