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Israel Today: Ongoing War Report - Update from 2026-06-16 at 18:02

Israel Today: Ongoing War Report - Update from 2026-06-16 at 18:02

Published 1 month ago
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HEADLINES
Lebanon withdrawal key to Iran US peace
New Jewish Arab party launches for coexistence
Philanthropist pledges 200M shekels for rehab hospital

The time is now 6:01 PM 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, Iran's foreign minister Abbas Araghchi said ending the war in Lebanon is the most important issue in the peace agreement with the United States, stressing that there are two sides to the understanding: one involves America and Israel and the other involves Iran and Hezbollah. He framed Lebanon’s stability as central to any deal. Separately, Iran’s top diplomat said the tentative agreement to end the war with the United States would require Israel to withdraw from Lebanon, a condition Israel has already rejected, a stipulation that could derail the deal and bring a resumption of all-out conflict.

In US Policy Concerning Israel, Western diplomats say the Iran-US framework, which includes a ceasefire in Lebanon, is expected to shape the negotiations between Israel and Lebanon. Next week, an Israeli delegation led by ambassador Yechiel Leiter will meet in Washington with Lebanon’s delegation led by Nada Hamadeh Mawad and former ambassador Simon Karam. The discussions will center on the possibility of normalization between the two countries and on continuing the implementation of the agreement reached earlier this month. The framework also touches on Hezbollah’s withdrawal from southern Lebanon and its disarmament, as well as a pilot program under which the Lebanese Armed Forces would enter designated areas and the IDF would withdraw from those same locations. In political notes, a former president candidate pledged to read the memorandum of understanding with Iran word-for-word to ensure fair media coverage, contrasting his plan with the prior administration’s approach. Separately, discussions around the reconstruction fund for Iran describe an investment fund of about $300 billion that would be established in Iran as part of a final agreement, not dependent on talks to lift sanctions and freeze assets.

In Israeli Domestic Politics, public sentiment on regional security and national leadership is shaping the discourse. A poll of Gaza border residents found broad support for enshrining the memory of October 7 in law and for formalizing remembrance and heroism, with more than 90% backing such a law. A majority, about 71%, support creating a permanent public participation mechanism as a binding legal requirement, and 79.2% say decisions about whether damaged buildings are preserved or demolished should be led by local residents or involve their active input. About 85.2% prefer commemoration efforts and educational tours in the Gaza envelope to be led by local residents or include them. Ahead of the elections, a new Jewish-Arab party called A Place for All of Us launched, led by Rula Daood and Alon-Lee Green, aiming for shared leadership, equality, and social change across Israeli society, with a platform focusing on daily-life issues and a vision for peace and coexistence. In other developments, public opinion on Trump in Israel has shifted. Statements from politicians include a vow that there will be no withdrawal from southern Lebanon by Friday, with timing noted; commentary from political observers has criticized Trump as offering a deal viewed by some as worse than Obama’s. In responses to recent events, reports indicate the prime minister raised concerns about a letter from the air force chief, suggesting the PM viewed the timing and messaging as a misstep, while the prime minister later rebuked the air force chief over disclosures of a canceled Iran strike, calling the disclosure a national mistake that caused embarrassment amid ongoing discussions as the United States and Iran move toward a formal agreement.

In Uplifting News, Daniel Jusidman, a Mexican
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