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Israel Today: Ongoing War Report - Update from 2026-04-12 at 06:01

Israel Today: Ongoing War Report - Update from 2026-04-12 at 06:01

Published 6 days, 3 hours ago
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HEADLINES
Iran's Missile Arsenal Grows Despite Ceasefire
Diaspora Protests Worldwide Urge Pressure on Tehran
Hezbollah Plot Thwarted Targeting Rabbi Michael Khoury

The time is now 6:01 AM in New York, I'm Noa Levi and this is the latest Israel Today: Ongoing War Report.

In Iranian Retaliation, a ceasefire may have paused the immediate exchange of missiles or drones, but it will not halt the long-running processes behind Iran’s arsenal of ballistic missiles and drones. Tehran’s programs have grown through close to half a century of conflict and calm and remain central to its national security doctrine. The country’s aging air force, degraded by sanctions and war, has limited access to modern aircraft and parts, and even an Israeli F-35 downed an Iranian aircraft in past hostilities. As a result, Iran has invested heavily in missiles and drones as a potent substitute for conventional air power and a means to project power and deter adversaries, with procurement and development continuing even during periods of reduced kinetic activity. At the same time, hardliners in Iran’s leadership appear to have hardened their negotiating posture, as talks in Pakistan collapsed amid sharp accusations and blame aimed at US envoys, with Washington weighing a broader oil embargo and Tehran asserting its own terms, suggesting the hawkish wing of the IRGC dictated intransigent positions and that the diplomacy effort has stalled without a deal.

In Regional Impacts, hundreds of thousands of Iranians across the diaspora gathered outside US embassies and consulates in more than 20 countries, delivering a unified message to Washington to maintain pressure and not strike deals with Tehran. The demonstrations spanned at least 34 cities across Europe, Asia, and North America, with participants in cities such as London, Paris, Berlin, Rome, Stockholm, Seoul, Vienna, Toronto, Los Angeles, and Washington, DC, calling on policymakers to stay the course and warning that easing pressure could allow the regime to regroup and intensify internal repression. The protests’ timing followed reports that talks in Islamabad ended without an agreement, underscoring a broader push among opponents of Tehran to maintain international pressure.

In the Conflict with Iran and its Regional Proxies, Israeli and Syrian media reported that a Hezbollah plot in Syria targeted a rabbi, with Damascus authorities saying security forces thwarted the operation and five people were arrested. The individual named by outlets as the intended target was Rabbi Michael Khoury. Investigations said the cell received specialized military training abroad, though details on the training location were not specified. Hezbollah issued a statement denying any activity, affiliation, or presence in Syria, insisting it has no relationship with any party in the country and reaffirming its commitment to Syria’s security and stability.

In US Policy Concerning Israel, analysis of stalled diplomacy notes that Iran and the United States remain distant on concessions, complicating prospects for resolving a range of core issues. Iran was seen as seeking to end the Lebanon war before talks and to claim credit for doing so, while the United States pressed for Hormuz to be opened to ease negotiations’ focus on the nuclear issue. With a 14-day window cited for framework progress, many of the broader disputes—nuclear scope, ballistic missiles, sanctions, and the timetable for US forces’ withdrawal—are expected to take longer to resolve. Both sides are portrayed as feeling they have the upper hand, making durable compromise elusive in the near term.

In Israeli Domestic Politics, Bennett announces the first two members of his Bennett 2026 party list, naming former government director-generals Keren Terner and Liran Avisar Ben Horin. Terner previously directed the Communications Ministry, while Ben Horin led the Finance and Transportation Mi
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