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Israel Today: Ongoing War Report - Update from 2026-06-14 at 17:01
Published 1 month ago
Description
HEADLINES
Lion's Roar anniversary tests historic significance
Hezbollah commander killed as border tensions rise
Rail link Turkey-Saudi plan bypasses Israel
The time is now 5:01 PM in New York, I'm Noa Levi and this is the latest Israel Today: Ongoing War Report.
In Operation Lion's Roar, a year on, observers ask whether the 12‑day clash between Israel and Iran stands out as historic or simply signals a broader chapter to come. At the time the fighting began, Israelis woke to emergency alerts as war raged in the region, and reports soon emerged of Israeli strikes against Iran’s nuclear program. The episode, long discussed in strategic terms, has prompted historians to weigh its significance and whether Rising Lion was a pivotal moment or a step on a broader trajectory. Analysts say the event was framed as a curtain raiser to what might follow, with history likely to judge its lasting impact in the context of wider regional tensions and strategy.
In US Military Role, roughly half of the US refueling aircraft now stationed at Ben-Gurion Airport are expected to be relocated to Israel Air Force bases to curb the risk of flight disruptions during the busy summer travel season. Parking spaces at other airfields, including Megiddo, will be cleared for use by the Israel Air Force. The operation is being overseen by National Security Council Director Shmuel Ben-Ezra and is expected to be finalized in the coming days. The aircraft are planned to remain at Ben-Gurion through at least the end of 2027, but their presence and the associated US military personnel have already constrained airport operations; the Israel Airports Authority has said Ben-Gurion was operating at about one‑third capacity, with roughly 70 percent of activities restricted by space and resources tied to American operations.
In Regional Impacts, Turkey and Saudi Arabia say they aim to build a railway linking the two countries with Jordan and Syria within the next three to four years, with other Gulf states expected to join in a broader network. Turkish Transport Minister Abdulkadir Uraloglu told Al Jazeera that the project would eventually link Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Jordan, and Syria, with plans to expand to other Gulf states, and would help mitigate broader disruptions from Hormuz-related problems. The undertaking, outlined in a memorandum of understanding on logistics cooperation and railway cooperation, is described by Ankara as bypassing Israel and diminishing its regional influence. Supporters also argue the plan could de-link some routes from a long‑standing US‑Israeli proposal to connect India with the Middle East, Israel, and Europe, while initial phases would move goods, oil, natural gas, and people across the route.
In the Conflict with Iran and its Regional Proxies, the IDF announced the killing of senior Hezbollah commander Ali Musa Daqduq in a precision strike in southern Lebanon. Daqduq held multiple senior roles within Hezbollah, including as a bodyguard to then‑secretary‑general Hassan Nasrallah, head of Hezbollah’s infantry unit, and founding commander of the “Golan Terrorist Network,” the group behind Hezbollah’s activities along the Israel‑Lebanon border. The network, exposed in 2019, is linked to Hezbollah operations that included planning attacks on IDF soldiers and, in 2007, the murder of five US soldiers. Israel’s Ambassador to the United States, Yechiel Leiter, announced the assassination before the IDF issued its statement. In a separate incident, two IDF soldiers were wounded by Hezbollah rockets at their post in southern Lebanon; one was lightly wounded and the other moderately wounded. They received field medical treatment before being evacuated for further care. Both soldiers serve in the IDF’s 7th Armored Brigade’s 77th Battalion, part of the 36th Division, and this development is being monitored as a continuing flare in the border region.
In US Policy Concern
Lion's Roar anniversary tests historic significance
Hezbollah commander killed as border tensions rise
Rail link Turkey-Saudi plan bypasses Israel
The time is now 5:01 PM in New York, I'm Noa Levi and this is the latest Israel Today: Ongoing War Report.
In Operation Lion's Roar, a year on, observers ask whether the 12‑day clash between Israel and Iran stands out as historic or simply signals a broader chapter to come. At the time the fighting began, Israelis woke to emergency alerts as war raged in the region, and reports soon emerged of Israeli strikes against Iran’s nuclear program. The episode, long discussed in strategic terms, has prompted historians to weigh its significance and whether Rising Lion was a pivotal moment or a step on a broader trajectory. Analysts say the event was framed as a curtain raiser to what might follow, with history likely to judge its lasting impact in the context of wider regional tensions and strategy.
In US Military Role, roughly half of the US refueling aircraft now stationed at Ben-Gurion Airport are expected to be relocated to Israel Air Force bases to curb the risk of flight disruptions during the busy summer travel season. Parking spaces at other airfields, including Megiddo, will be cleared for use by the Israel Air Force. The operation is being overseen by National Security Council Director Shmuel Ben-Ezra and is expected to be finalized in the coming days. The aircraft are planned to remain at Ben-Gurion through at least the end of 2027, but their presence and the associated US military personnel have already constrained airport operations; the Israel Airports Authority has said Ben-Gurion was operating at about one‑third capacity, with roughly 70 percent of activities restricted by space and resources tied to American operations.
In Regional Impacts, Turkey and Saudi Arabia say they aim to build a railway linking the two countries with Jordan and Syria within the next three to four years, with other Gulf states expected to join in a broader network. Turkish Transport Minister Abdulkadir Uraloglu told Al Jazeera that the project would eventually link Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Jordan, and Syria, with plans to expand to other Gulf states, and would help mitigate broader disruptions from Hormuz-related problems. The undertaking, outlined in a memorandum of understanding on logistics cooperation and railway cooperation, is described by Ankara as bypassing Israel and diminishing its regional influence. Supporters also argue the plan could de-link some routes from a long‑standing US‑Israeli proposal to connect India with the Middle East, Israel, and Europe, while initial phases would move goods, oil, natural gas, and people across the route.
In the Conflict with Iran and its Regional Proxies, the IDF announced the killing of senior Hezbollah commander Ali Musa Daqduq in a precision strike in southern Lebanon. Daqduq held multiple senior roles within Hezbollah, including as a bodyguard to then‑secretary‑general Hassan Nasrallah, head of Hezbollah’s infantry unit, and founding commander of the “Golan Terrorist Network,” the group behind Hezbollah’s activities along the Israel‑Lebanon border. The network, exposed in 2019, is linked to Hezbollah operations that included planning attacks on IDF soldiers and, in 2007, the murder of five US soldiers. Israel’s Ambassador to the United States, Yechiel Leiter, announced the assassination before the IDF issued its statement. In a separate incident, two IDF soldiers were wounded by Hezbollah rockets at their post in southern Lebanon; one was lightly wounded and the other moderately wounded. They received field medical treatment before being evacuated for further care. Both soldiers serve in the IDF’s 7th Armored Brigade’s 77th Battalion, part of the 36th Division, and this development is being monitored as a continuing flare in the border region.
In US Policy Concern