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Israel Today: Ongoing War Report - Update from 2026-06-15 at 07:03
Published 1 month ago
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HEADLINES
Hormuz deal hopes end to Iran-US war
Ashkelon anti-draft riot indicts 17
Israeli booths blocked at Eurosatory defense expo
The time is now 7:03 AM in New York, I'm Noa Levi and this is the latest Israel Today: Ongoing War Report.
In Regional Impacts, shippers say confidence in resuming transit through the Strait of Hormuz could take weeks to rebuild, and navigation will only restart once safety is assured, after US and Iran officials said they had agreed on a framework deal to reopen the waterway. The US and Iran are expected to sign a memorandum of understanding to end their war, halt the US blockade of Iran, and reopen the Strait on Friday. Global oil prices fell about 4% on Monday in response. Shippers have welcomed the news but are waiting for more details, including mine clearance in the strait. Analysts at Sentosa Ship Brokers said the market is pricing in a return to business as usual, but shipowners and charterers are likely to remain cautious until ships move freely through Hormuz again. The Strait remains a critical chokepoint, handling roughly a fifth of the world’s oil and LNG supply, as well as other key cargo, with traffic restricted in the interim.
In Israeli Domestic Politics, prosecutors filed an indictment Monday against 17 ultra-Orthodox men, including four minors, over a violent anti-draft protest in which demonstrators allegedly broke through the locked gate of the chief military police officer’s home in Ashkelon while his family was inside. The indictment, filed with the Ashkelon Magistrate’s Court, charges rioting, trespassing to commit an offense, and malicious damage. The incident took place on the evening of April 28, when dozens of haredi protesters gathered outside Brigadier-General Yuval Yamin, the IDF’s chief military police officer, to protest the enlistment of yeshiva students. The protest came as Israel’s haredi draft crisis has moved from the Knesset and the High Court of Justice into the streets, with increasingly aggressive demonstrations against enforcement measures targeting draft evaders, intensified since the High Court ruled that the state no longer has sweeping exemptions for haredi yeshiva students. The indictment says protesters carried signs reading “War on the draft law, in actions and not words,” and shouted slogans including “We will die and not enlist” and “Yuval Yamin is a traitor.” A separate 2026 study from the Jewish People Policy Institute finds that 55% of Israelis view internal polarization and disagreement as the most dangerous threat to the country’s continued existence, a concern that eclipses the Iranian nuclear threat at 23% and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict at 18%. The report notes that about six in ten Israelis, 60%, fear real danger of bloodshed and civil violence at home, and about half of secular Jews say they are no longer convinced that Israel is the safest place for their children to grow up. Despite tensions, public support for drafting haredim remains high at 80%.
In Israeli Economy and Business, a French-Israeli businessperson has bought eight unbuilt Jerusalem apartments in the RAYK Borochov project in Kiryat Yovel for 24 million shekels. The average price per apartment was about 3 million shekels, and the average price per square meter was around 34,000 shekels. The purchases are for investment, including four three-room units about 74 square meters plus balconies and parking, and four four-room units about 96 square meters plus balconies and parking. The buyer is part of the Aspen Group unit Rayk Real Estate Group, and the project involves demolishing four existing buildings and replacing them with taller blocks totaling 190 units. Prices for foreign buyers have risen as the shekel strengthened about 20% against the dollar and 15% against the euro over three years. Separately, Eurosatory, Paris’s large defense expo, saw more than a dozen Israeli defense exhibitors blocked from displ
Hormuz deal hopes end to Iran-US war
Ashkelon anti-draft riot indicts 17
Israeli booths blocked at Eurosatory defense expo
The time is now 7:03 AM in New York, I'm Noa Levi and this is the latest Israel Today: Ongoing War Report.
In Regional Impacts, shippers say confidence in resuming transit through the Strait of Hormuz could take weeks to rebuild, and navigation will only restart once safety is assured, after US and Iran officials said they had agreed on a framework deal to reopen the waterway. The US and Iran are expected to sign a memorandum of understanding to end their war, halt the US blockade of Iran, and reopen the Strait on Friday. Global oil prices fell about 4% on Monday in response. Shippers have welcomed the news but are waiting for more details, including mine clearance in the strait. Analysts at Sentosa Ship Brokers said the market is pricing in a return to business as usual, but shipowners and charterers are likely to remain cautious until ships move freely through Hormuz again. The Strait remains a critical chokepoint, handling roughly a fifth of the world’s oil and LNG supply, as well as other key cargo, with traffic restricted in the interim.
In Israeli Domestic Politics, prosecutors filed an indictment Monday against 17 ultra-Orthodox men, including four minors, over a violent anti-draft protest in which demonstrators allegedly broke through the locked gate of the chief military police officer’s home in Ashkelon while his family was inside. The indictment, filed with the Ashkelon Magistrate’s Court, charges rioting, trespassing to commit an offense, and malicious damage. The incident took place on the evening of April 28, when dozens of haredi protesters gathered outside Brigadier-General Yuval Yamin, the IDF’s chief military police officer, to protest the enlistment of yeshiva students. The protest came as Israel’s haredi draft crisis has moved from the Knesset and the High Court of Justice into the streets, with increasingly aggressive demonstrations against enforcement measures targeting draft evaders, intensified since the High Court ruled that the state no longer has sweeping exemptions for haredi yeshiva students. The indictment says protesters carried signs reading “War on the draft law, in actions and not words,” and shouted slogans including “We will die and not enlist” and “Yuval Yamin is a traitor.” A separate 2026 study from the Jewish People Policy Institute finds that 55% of Israelis view internal polarization and disagreement as the most dangerous threat to the country’s continued existence, a concern that eclipses the Iranian nuclear threat at 23% and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict at 18%. The report notes that about six in ten Israelis, 60%, fear real danger of bloodshed and civil violence at home, and about half of secular Jews say they are no longer convinced that Israel is the safest place for their children to grow up. Despite tensions, public support for drafting haredim remains high at 80%.
In Israeli Economy and Business, a French-Israeli businessperson has bought eight unbuilt Jerusalem apartments in the RAYK Borochov project in Kiryat Yovel for 24 million shekels. The average price per apartment was about 3 million shekels, and the average price per square meter was around 34,000 shekels. The purchases are for investment, including four three-room units about 74 square meters plus balconies and parking, and four four-room units about 96 square meters plus balconies and parking. The buyer is part of the Aspen Group unit Rayk Real Estate Group, and the project involves demolishing four existing buildings and replacing them with taller blocks totaling 190 units. Prices for foreign buyers have risen as the shekel strengthened about 20% against the dollar and 15% against the euro over three years. Separately, Eurosatory, Paris’s large defense expo, saw more than a dozen Israeli defense exhibitors blocked from displ