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Israel Today: Ongoing War Report - Update from 2026-06-15 at 06:01

Israel Today: Ongoing War Report - Update from 2026-06-15 at 06:01

Published 1 month ago
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Oil Slumps as Hormuz Reopening Framework Emerges
Ultra Orthodox Anti-Draft Protesters Indicted
Paris Blocks Israeli Defense Booths Over Discrimination

The time is now 6:01 AM in New York, I'm Noa Levi and this is the latest Israel Today: Ongoing War Report.

In Regional Impacts, shippers remain cautious on Strait of Hormuz transit after US, Iran agree deal. Shippers welcomed the news of a framework to reopen the waterway but say they still require details, including mine clearance in the strait, before resuming navigation. Confidence in a return to normal traffic could take weeks, and ships are expected to move only when safety is assured. Officials say a memorandum of understanding to end the war, halt the US blockade, and reopen the Strait could be signed on Friday. Global oil prices fell about 4% on Monday in response to the news. The Strait of Hormuz remains a critical route, carrying roughly a fifth of the world’s oil and LNG supply and other vital products, even as traffic along the strait remains limited. In eastern Gaza City, northern Gaza, locals report that Israeli forces moved the so-called Yellow Line westward overnight near the Al-Sanafur junction in the Tuffah neighborhood. The repositioning of concrete barriers was accompanied by gunfire and tank fire, expanding the area under Israeli control and forcing many Gazans to relocate tents further west after encampments fell within the newly established boundary. Israel insists it will remain deployed in existing security zones in Lebanon, Syria, and the Gaza Strip, reiterating commitments to those areas while operations and border arrangements continue to evolve.

In Israeli Domestic Politics, seventeeni haredi anti-draft protestors indicted after breaking into chief of military police's home. State prosecutors filed an indictment against 17 ultra-Orthodox protesters, including four minors, over a violent anti-draft protest in which demonstrators allegedly breached the locked gate of Brigadier-General Yuval Yamin’s home in Ashkelon as his family was inside. The indictment, submitted to the Ashkelon Magistrate’s Court, charges the defendants with rioting, trespassing to commit an offense, and malicious damage. The incident occurred on the evening of April 28 amid a broader crisis over exemptions for haredi yeshiva students as the High Court ruled that the state no longer has legal authority to grant sweeping exemptions, with protests shifting from legislative spaces to the streets. Most Israelis believe internal conflicts, polarization are biggest threats to Israel, study reveals. An annual report by the Jewish People Policy Institute shows 55% of the public views polarization and internal conflict as the most dangerous threat to the state’s continued existence, ahead of Iran’s nuclear program at 23% and the Palestinian conflict at 18%. The report also notes that 60% fear there is a real danger of bloodshed and violence inside the country, and about half of secular Jews say they are no longer convinced that Israel is the right place for their children to live. There is broad support—about 80%—for drafting haredim, though sentiments among secular Israelis reflect concerns about the country’s future and the ongoing draft debates.

In Antisemitism and Anti-Jewish Hate, Israeli defense booths boarded up in Paris exhibition despite meeting discriminatory demands. France blocked select Israeli defense companies from presenting at Eurosatory in Paris after those firms agreed to a discriminatory policy that allowed Israelis to display defensive systems but not offensive ones. A video released by the Defense Ministry showed French workers boarding up Israeli defense industry pavilions overnight. The ministry denounced the move as cynical and discriminatory, while the Israel Ministry of Defense said it would continue promoting Israeli technology despite the setback.

In Israeli Economy and Business, Fre
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