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Israel Today: Ongoing War Report - Update from 2026-04-16 at 19:02

Israel Today: Ongoing War Report - Update from 2026-04-16 at 19:02

Published 9 hours ago
Description
HEADLINES
Top three stories
- Hezbollah attacks in northern Israel as a ceasefire begins, with casualties and Israeli retaliation, while southern Lebanon sees intensified artillery fire.
- Lebanon pursues IMF talks amid an estimated $7 billion in war damage and a rapid World Bank damage assessment, seeking a staff-level deal before a full program.
- The United States pledges to lead efforts to disarm Hezbollah and bolster ceasefire terms, highlighting displacement and regional security challenges.
Headlines
- Hezbollah Attacks Galilee as Ceasefire Holds
- Lebanon Presses IMF Talks Amid $7B Damage
- US to Lead Effort to Disarm Hezbollah

The time is now 7:01 PM in New York, I'm Noa Levi and this is the latest Israel Today: Ongoing War Report.

In Regional Impacts, Lebanese Finance Minister Yassine Jaber said his government had good meetings this week with the IMF and remained committed to securing a lending program. He noted the process has faced delays from current events, including Israeli strikes on Lebanon, but officials plan to move forward on the steps needed to secure an agreement, starting with a staff-level deal before a full program. Jaber cited the war’s damage at about seven billion dollars and said Lebanon is working with the World Bank on a rapid damage assessment, though fighting must stop first. A 10-day ceasefire agreed earlier this week aims to halt the conflict, and reports indicated Israeli strikes, including the destruction of a major bridge.

In the Conflict with Iran and its Regional Proxies, hours after the ceasefire announcement Hezbollah fired on targets in northern Israel, wounding three people in the Upper Galilee area. A 25-year-old man on a motorcycle was severely wounded, a 40-year-old was moderately wounded, and a 17-year-old girl sustained a severe leg injury; eight others were treated for anxiety and evacuated to the Galilee Medical Center. Israeli police urged visitors to Mount Meron to leave the site amid fears of further rocket fire. In southern Lebanon, Israeli artillery intensified in Khiam, Dibbine, Bint Jbeil and other areas after the ceasefire began, with Hezbollah instructing fighters to open fire to signal a victory. Across Lebanon, Hezbollah supporters celebrated the ceasefire’s start in places like Dahieh, Beirut, and southern Lebanon as barriers around Beirut’s southern suburbs are removed and traffic delays mount as residents head home; the Israeli Defense Forces remain deployed in the area.

In US Policy Concerning Israel, a senior Israeli official told The Jerusalem Post that the United States intends to actively lead efforts to disarm Hezbollah and will marshal American resources to achieve that goal. The official described the current ceasefire terms as significantly better than those in November 2024, calling the situation much improved. Forces deployed from Naqoura to Syria will not withdraw, and Iran’s ability to support Hezbollah is weaker. The official noted that hundreds of thousands of displaced residents in southern Lebanon remain unable to return to their homes, underscoring pressure on Beirut and its government to advance negotiations. Israel is prepared to continue addressing threats as needed.

In Israeli Domestic Politics, MK Boaz Bismuth of Likud was attacked by a haredi mob in Bnei Brak but was removed from the scene by police without injury, and he reaffirmed his commitment to advancing the ultra-Orthodox draft law. He posted on X that the draft law will pass and lead to conscription of the Haredim, and he intends to press ahead despite the incident. The block also includes a Hebrew-language piece presenting a sharp monologue on Lebanon that critiques Iranian influence and calls for peace and Lebanese sovereignty, alongside a contrasting article arguing that Israel did not lose the war, noting that US support remains substantial even as American opinion toward Israel shift
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