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Israel Today: Ongoing War Report - Update from 2026-04-14 at 09:02

Israel Today: Ongoing War Report - Update from 2026-04-14 at 09:02

Published 3 days, 7 hours ago
Description
HEADLINES
- Barnea breaks silence on Iran regime change
- Hormuz disruption hikes fertilizer prices globally
- NJAC urges SCOTUS in Shabbat home case

The time is now 9:01 AM in New York, I'm Noa Levi and this is the latest Israel Today: Ongoing War Report.

In Direct Israel-Iran Clashes, Mossad Director David Barnea said at a Holocaust ceremony that his spy agency will not rest until the fall of the Islamic regime of Iran in favor of a freer and less violent country. "Our mission is not yet complete. We did not think that our mission would be completed immediately with the fading of the battles, but rather we planned, and [really] we planned to continue, and this will be manifested even after the time of attacks on Tehran," Barnea said. This marked the first time the Mossad chief publicly addressed his role and views about regime change in Iran. After regime change in Iran had not transpired in the early weeks of the war, and even more since a ceasefire kicked in without regime change, various Israeli and American officials have sought to blame the Mossad and Barnea for the failure. However, The Jerusalem Post has reported that the Mossad told both top Israeli and American officials that any potential regime change would only come after an Iran war, not in the middle of it. Accordingly, the Mossad has rejected allegations that it has failed or that it tried to "sucker" the US into believing in delusions of regime change.

In Regional Impacts, a Venezuelan American journalist writing from Warsaw reflects on how the Iran war has underscored the value of historical context in reporting. Days before a planned media tour in Israel, Iranian rockets lit the sky and forced a sudden change of course, landing the writer in Auschwitz rather than Tel Aviv. The piece describes Poland's scars and the sense that destruction and renewal coexist, shaping coverage across regions from Caracas to Tehran to US campuses. The author notes signing on with Fuente Latina and being rerouted after air travel disruptions, and says they spoke with Irene Shashar, a Holocaust survivor. The essay emphasizes that the past informs present reporting and that historical context matters for understanding today’s events.

Separately, analysis on the Hormuz closure details how the Strait of Hormuz disruption sent fertilizer markets into upheaval. Fertilizer prices jumped about 20 to 30 percent in the first month of the conflict, while tanker traffic through Hormuz collapsed by more than 90 percent. War-risk insurance premiums near the strait surged tenfold in days, raising the cost of transits and delaying deliveries. The result is tighter fertilizer availability as farmers enter pre-planting windows, with knock-on effects for global food security.

A Hebrew-language post circulates under the title what remains of a vehicle attacked in Gaza, including a link to a Telegram channel, illustrating how social content accompanies reporting on the conflict.

In Antisemitism and Anti-Jewish Hate, the National Jewish Advocacy Center filed an amicus curiae brief with the US Supreme Court, urging it to hear the case of Daniel Grand, an Orthodox Jew in University Heights, Ohio. Grand was ordered in January 2021 to stop hosting a Shabbat minyan in his home because he could not travel to a synagogue on the Sabbath. He had built a 700-square-foot addition to his home to host the gatherings. After a neighbor complained, the city issued a cease-and-desist order prohibiting the use of the house for religious assembly, citing local zoning laws for single-family districts. The NJAC brief argues in support of Grand’s access to housing-neutral religious practice under the law.

Thank you for tuning in to this Israel Today: Ongoing War Report update.
I'm Noa Levi. Stay safe and informed.
Keep in mind that this AI-generated report may contain occasional inaccuracies, so consult multiple sources
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