Episode Details

Back to Episodes
Israel Today: Ongoing War Report - Update from 2026-04-17 at 04:02

Israel Today: Ongoing War Report - Update from 2026-04-17 at 04:02

Published 3 hours ago
Description
HEADLINES
- Ro'em Howitzer makes historic combat debut
- Tyre bridge reopened by Lebanese army
- Aviation crisis prep criticized by state comptroller

The time is now 4:01 AM in New York, I'm Noa Levi and this is the latest Israel Today: Ongoing War Report.

In the Conflict with Iran and its Regional Proxies, the IDF conducted the first combat use of its domestically produced Ro'em self-propelled howitzer in an operation in southern Lebanon, firing on Hezbollah anti-tank targets that threatened troops. The military called the firing an operational success and said the maneuver would inform the development of new artillery fire responses while fighting. Lieutenant Colonel B., head of the Ro'em branch, called the event historic, noting it means more firepower in less time, with reduced exposure and risk to ground forces. The Ro'em system features a fully automated turret that handles ammunition selection, loading, gun laying and firing without manual intervention, enabling a higher rate of fire, longer reach and the ability to strike a target from multiple trajectories so several shells hit together. Officials say the automation provides mobility and deep maneuver capability.

The Israeli forces also reported that the bridge the IDF destroyed yesterday to prevent Hezbollah fighters from crossing toward the Israeli border was rebuilt by the Lebanese army. A specialized unit is working to fully reopen the Qasmiyeh Sea Bridge in Tyre, in cooperation with municipalities and civil associations, with one military unit deployed nearby. Several other bridges the IDF struck on the Litani River were repaired within hours, and Lebanese residents began crossing southward by car and on foot.

In Israeli Domestic Politics, four Border Police soldiers were disciplined for lighting a barbecue at the Beit Horon base after Passover, and four were sentenced to military prison. Protesters gathered outside Prison 10 to voice opposition to what they described as an disproportionate punishment and to raise questions about religious coercion and military discipline. Relatives, including a father speaking for a combat medic with no prior disciplinary record, criticized the decision, saying the punishment was excessive and that the act did not warrant a prison sentence. The four soldiers were initially handed 21 days in military prison, but an appeals court reduced that to 14 days. The original ruling described the act as harming religion and decorum within the base.

State Comptroller Matanyahu Englman released a report sharply criticizing the Transportation Ministry’s preparedness for the aviation crisis that followed the outbreak of war on October 7, calling on Transportation Minister Miri Regev to correct the failures and prepare emergency plans without delay. The report found that at the start of the Israel-Hamas war, there was no procedure for prioritizing the return of Israelis stranded abroad based on their economic or national importance. It noted that soldiers and reservists who received emergency call-up orders faced the challenge of finding flights and paying high prices to return quickly. Englman praised the Civil Aviation Authority and Israel’s airlines for continuing to operate and for preserving regular air services under wartime conditions, while also indicating other authorities failed to act effectively.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s coalition remains at 49 seats, with the opposition bloc holding 61 seats in a Maariv poll published on Friday. There was little movement between blocs, though the opposition Yashar! party lost one seat to the Democrats. Since the onset of the Iran war on February 28, Likud has fallen from 27 to 25 seats, Bennett 2026 has held at 24, and the public remains split on prime ministerial suitability. In direct comparisons, 43% said Netanyahu is more suited to lead, while 41% chose Bennett; against Eisenkot, Netanyahu leads 45% to 3
Listen Now

Love PodBriefly?

If you like Podbriefly.com, please consider donating to support the ongoing development.

Support Us