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Israel Today: Ongoing War Report - Update from 2026-06-17 at 19:02

Israel Today: Ongoing War Report - Update from 2026-06-17 at 19:02

Published 1 month ago
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HEADLINES
UN CAAC 24,174 children harmed in 2025
US Iran memo reshapes regional battlefield
Trump MoU signs to end Iran war

The time is now 7:01 PM in New York, I'm Noa Levi and this is the latest Israel Today: Ongoing War Report.

In Regional Impacts, the United Nations warns Israeli settler groups could be added to a global blacklist for violations against children as the world body’s Children and Armed Conflict report documents a staggering tally: 38,558 grave violations worldwide in 2025 affecting 24,174 children, the latter a record since CAAC’s mandate began in 1996. The report notes 14,224 children were killed or maimed, a 34 percent rise in fatalities from 2024 to 6,266, and verifies the killings of 2,668 Palestinian children in Gaza and 57 in the West Bank. Countries with the highest levels of violations in 2025 include the Occupied Palestinian Territory and Israel, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Nigeria, Myanmar, and Somalia.

Nearly three years after Hamas’ attack on October 7, Israel finds itself at a strategic crossroads as a new US-Iran memorandum reshapes the regional battlefield. Israel remains largely isolated on the international stage, maintaining a military presence in Gaza, Lebanon, and Syria, and still far from achieving broad normalization with Saudi Arabia. The preliminary framework between Washington and Tehran is viewed as a turning point, even as Israel has projected its military might across the region— conducting operations in Gaza and southern Lebanon, and airstrikes in Syria, Iran, Yemen, and Qatar. A September 2025 strike in Qatar against Hamas leaders drew international condemnation over sovereignty concerns. Observers caution there is a widening gap between the military picture and the broader strategic objective, complicating Israel’s path ahead.

In the Conflict with Iran and its Regional Proxies, the signing of a memorandum of understanding aimed at ending the war with Iran saw President Donald Trump witness the digital signing, with Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian also signing, and US Vice President JD Vance and Iranian Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf signing digitally. Iran’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei stated that Iran’s nuclear materials would not be sent outside the country and that the regime would have the option of uranium dilution; he added that continued Israeli attacks in Lebanon would be considered a breach, and that Iran’s defensive capabilities would not be discussed in any process or with any party, noting that missiles are not to be negotiated and that discussions on an enforcement mechanism would proceed.

The Hind Rajab Foundation, a pro-Palestinian group with a founder affiliated with Hezbollah, filed a criminal complaint in the United States seeking the arrest of a dual Israeli-American IDF veteran who arrived in Los Angeles for World Cup matches. The foundation says he served in Company D of the 603rd Combat Engineering Battalion, a unit it accuses of involvement in the destruction of civilian infrastructure in Gaza; the group has previously filed complaints in May, and asserts that the veteran volunteered for service after October 7, 2023 and was deployed to Gaza.

In US Policy Concerning Israel, Democratic socialist Janeese Lewis George, who has sharply criticized Israel and pledged to defend Jews from antisemitism, leads the DC mayoral primary as votes are tallied. Early results show she has just over half of the 65 percent of counted votes, with Kenyan McDuffie in a distant second. The election uses ranked-choice voting, so final results may take time and could shift. Supporters applaud the momentum, while critics, including Jewish leaders, voice concerns. Lewis George has said she would not attend events focused on obfuscating the realities of occupation or promoting Zionism and apartheid, a stance she described in response to a questionnaire from th
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