Episode Details
Back to Episodes
Israel Today: Ongoing War Report - Update from 2026-06-15 at 04:02
Published 1 month ago
Description
HEADLINES
Israel stays in Lebanon despite deal
Beirut Dahiyeh strikes escalate amid deal
Ben-Gvir pushes back on Lebanon in deal
The time is now 4:02 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, Israel will not withdraw from southern Lebanon as part of the newly agreed to US-Iran deal despite Iranian demands, an Israeli source told The Jerusalem Post on Monday. An IDF source also confirmed that if Hezbollah respects the ceasefire, there will not be attacks anywhere in Lebanon. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has yet to address the US-Iran deal or the issue of Lebanon, which, according to Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif's announcement, is included in the deal. “Both sides have declared the immediate and permanent termination of military operations on all fronts, including in Lebanon,” Sharif stated. Hours before the US-Iran deal was finalized on Sunday, Netanyahu and Defense Minister Israel Katz instructed the IDF to target the Dahiyeh district of Beirut in response to Hezbollah fire toward Israeli territory. "Israel will not tolerate fire directed at its territory," the two said in a joint statement. According to Axios reporter Barak Ravid, the IDF notified CENTCOM shortly before conducting the strike. US President Donald Trump spoke to Netanyahu after the strikes, and publicly denounced them on social media. This morning's attacks should not have happened, he said.
In US Policy Concerning Israel, Iranians who oppose the regime are “shocked” by the emerging details of the agreement, an Iranian source told The Jerusalem Post on Monday. The source, in touch with Iranians inside the country, discussed how the emerging agreement is being received and said friends describe how events since the June 2025 war have fed perceptions that the deal was shaped to the regime’s advantage. Dissidents described concerns that hardliners within the IRGC could stage a military coup, noting numbers of hardliners within the leadership and signaling internal tensions as the deal moves forward. The source argued that opposition voices view the regime as facing a pivotal moment as the deal unfolds.
Analysts weigh what the US-Iran deal could mean for the region, noting that while a path forward toward a deal is being discussed, the exact terms remain unclear. Until the text of the US-Iran agreement is signed and released, there will be considerable spin on both sides. Dan Shapiro, a former US ambassador to Israel, cautioned that while many see the thrust of the engagement as a path to end the conflict, the precise points are still unknown and subject to change. He emphasized that the war was a strategic miscalculation and that the regime’s survival has altered regional dynamics, with several states pursuing de-escalation and rebuilding ties in the wake of the crisis. The analysis outlines many possible trajectories in the days ahead, with a focus on how shifting alliances and security calculations could shape the Middle East’s future.
Two Israeli strikes over the past year have influenced a rapid American push toward ceasefire agreements. In September 2025, during Operation Summit of Fire in Qatar, an Israeli strike targeting senior Hamas leaders in Doha contributed to a ceasefire in the Gaza war weeks later and the release of Israeli hostages. Less than a year later, another Israeli strike in Beirut’s Dahiyeh district targeted a Hezbollah headquarters, accelerating American pressure on Tehran to seal a deal. Tehran threatened retaliation against Israel, and the US president stepped up pressure to secure the agreement, with the broader aim of reopening strategic chokepoints and signaling a shift in regional security calculus amid ongoing tensions.
In Israeli Domestic Politics, “Trump's deal does not bind us”: Israeli leaders decry Lebanon’s inclusion in US-Iran deal, the
Israel stays in Lebanon despite deal
Beirut Dahiyeh strikes escalate amid deal
Ben-Gvir pushes back on Lebanon in deal
The time is now 4:02 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, Israel will not withdraw from southern Lebanon as part of the newly agreed to US-Iran deal despite Iranian demands, an Israeli source told The Jerusalem Post on Monday. An IDF source also confirmed that if Hezbollah respects the ceasefire, there will not be attacks anywhere in Lebanon. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has yet to address the US-Iran deal or the issue of Lebanon, which, according to Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif's announcement, is included in the deal. “Both sides have declared the immediate and permanent termination of military operations on all fronts, including in Lebanon,” Sharif stated. Hours before the US-Iran deal was finalized on Sunday, Netanyahu and Defense Minister Israel Katz instructed the IDF to target the Dahiyeh district of Beirut in response to Hezbollah fire toward Israeli territory. "Israel will not tolerate fire directed at its territory," the two said in a joint statement. According to Axios reporter Barak Ravid, the IDF notified CENTCOM shortly before conducting the strike. US President Donald Trump spoke to Netanyahu after the strikes, and publicly denounced them on social media. This morning's attacks should not have happened, he said.
In US Policy Concerning Israel, Iranians who oppose the regime are “shocked” by the emerging details of the agreement, an Iranian source told The Jerusalem Post on Monday. The source, in touch with Iranians inside the country, discussed how the emerging agreement is being received and said friends describe how events since the June 2025 war have fed perceptions that the deal was shaped to the regime’s advantage. Dissidents described concerns that hardliners within the IRGC could stage a military coup, noting numbers of hardliners within the leadership and signaling internal tensions as the deal moves forward. The source argued that opposition voices view the regime as facing a pivotal moment as the deal unfolds.
Analysts weigh what the US-Iran deal could mean for the region, noting that while a path forward toward a deal is being discussed, the exact terms remain unclear. Until the text of the US-Iran agreement is signed and released, there will be considerable spin on both sides. Dan Shapiro, a former US ambassador to Israel, cautioned that while many see the thrust of the engagement as a path to end the conflict, the precise points are still unknown and subject to change. He emphasized that the war was a strategic miscalculation and that the regime’s survival has altered regional dynamics, with several states pursuing de-escalation and rebuilding ties in the wake of the crisis. The analysis outlines many possible trajectories in the days ahead, with a focus on how shifting alliances and security calculations could shape the Middle East’s future.
Two Israeli strikes over the past year have influenced a rapid American push toward ceasefire agreements. In September 2025, during Operation Summit of Fire in Qatar, an Israeli strike targeting senior Hamas leaders in Doha contributed to a ceasefire in the Gaza war weeks later and the release of Israeli hostages. Less than a year later, another Israeli strike in Beirut’s Dahiyeh district targeted a Hezbollah headquarters, accelerating American pressure on Tehran to seal a deal. Tehran threatened retaliation against Israel, and the US president stepped up pressure to secure the agreement, with the broader aim of reopening strategic chokepoints and signaling a shift in regional security calculus amid ongoing tensions.
In Israeli Domestic Politics, “Trump's deal does not bind us”: Israeli leaders decry Lebanon’s inclusion in US-Iran deal, the