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Israel Today: Ongoing War Report - Update from 2026-07-03 at 21:01
Published 2 weeks ago
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Turkey's Somali spaceport boosts regional missile reach
France UK Oman secure safe Hormuz transit
NYPD hate crimes up 71% against Jews
The time is now 9:01 PM in New York, I'm Noa Levi and this is the latest Israel Today: Ongoing War Report.
In Regional Impacts, two developments shape the security picture: Turkey's spaceport project in Somalia and a Franco-British effort to secure safe transit through the Strait of Hormuz. Turkey is developing a space and ballistic missile launch site in central Somalia, integrating a satellite launch base with a testing facility for long-range missiles. Officially announced in December 2025 as a technological partnership between Somalia and Turkey, the site is described as the capstone of a 15-year push to turn Somalia into a forward operating base. Construction began in mid-October 2025 near Warsheikh, about 70 kilometers north of Mogadishu, after which Erdogan and Somali President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud signed a space cooperation treaty. The facility is designed to accommodate systems with a range of up to 2,000 kilometers, a reach that would place Israel outside its scope, while Somaliland—militarily backed by Israel—would lie within the projected range. Separately, France and the United Kingdom have agreed with Oman to restore safe transit through the Strait of Hormuz. Macron and Starmer described a joint effort to keep Oman’s sovereign waters safe for navigation and affirmed readiness to deploy the Multinational Military Mission to support freedom of navigation and international law. The partners underscored the Strait’s critical role for the global economy and pledged ongoing cooperation with regional partners to maintain stability, including discussions with Oman’s leadership in recent days.
In US Policy Concerning Israel, the piece presents a view that the United States, on its 250th anniversary, faces a paradox of immense power alongside growing domestic discontent. While America remains a central force globally, many citizens express pessimism about the country’s political future and democracy. A Reuters/Ipsos poll shows 38% of Americans doubt the United States will exist as a single country in 250 years, and Gallup finds fewer than half believe everyone has an equal shot at the American dream. The analysis argues that polarization is real but does not affect all Americans equally, and the deeper challenge lies in how the political system and public discourse shape views about national direction and Israel policy.
In Antisemitism and Anti-Jewish Hate, America at 250 and a separate report on NGOs frame a dual discussion of memory and accountability. The opinion piece on America’s 250th anniversary argues that fighting antisemitism starts with reclaiming the role Jews have played in building the nation, noting that antisemitic incidents rise in campuses, streets, and political discourse as the country marks its founding. In New York City, the NYPD reported antisemitic hate crimes rose by 71% in May compared with May of the prior year, with Jews targeted in about 60% of such crimes; synagogues increasingly rely on armed guards and Jewish students sometimes hide their identity. The author contends antisemitism flourishes where history is forgotten or distorted and emphasizes the need to remember the Jewish contribution to American history to counter prejudice. The second article reports on an EiGHT study alleging that several international humanitarian and human rights NGOs pushed Gaza suffering to drive fundraising and attempted to shape an anti-Israel narrative around the Gaza war. The 63-page report calls for greater transparency and accountability in the NGO sector, arguing that the sector wields influence but faces limited external oversight; proponents cited by EiGHT argue the findings align with calls for stronger governance and open discussion of concerns raised by staff and former staffers.
Thank you
Turkey's Somali spaceport boosts regional missile reach
France UK Oman secure safe Hormuz transit
NYPD hate crimes up 71% against Jews
The time is now 9:01 PM in New York, I'm Noa Levi and this is the latest Israel Today: Ongoing War Report.
In Regional Impacts, two developments shape the security picture: Turkey's spaceport project in Somalia and a Franco-British effort to secure safe transit through the Strait of Hormuz. Turkey is developing a space and ballistic missile launch site in central Somalia, integrating a satellite launch base with a testing facility for long-range missiles. Officially announced in December 2025 as a technological partnership between Somalia and Turkey, the site is described as the capstone of a 15-year push to turn Somalia into a forward operating base. Construction began in mid-October 2025 near Warsheikh, about 70 kilometers north of Mogadishu, after which Erdogan and Somali President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud signed a space cooperation treaty. The facility is designed to accommodate systems with a range of up to 2,000 kilometers, a reach that would place Israel outside its scope, while Somaliland—militarily backed by Israel—would lie within the projected range. Separately, France and the United Kingdom have agreed with Oman to restore safe transit through the Strait of Hormuz. Macron and Starmer described a joint effort to keep Oman’s sovereign waters safe for navigation and affirmed readiness to deploy the Multinational Military Mission to support freedom of navigation and international law. The partners underscored the Strait’s critical role for the global economy and pledged ongoing cooperation with regional partners to maintain stability, including discussions with Oman’s leadership in recent days.
In US Policy Concerning Israel, the piece presents a view that the United States, on its 250th anniversary, faces a paradox of immense power alongside growing domestic discontent. While America remains a central force globally, many citizens express pessimism about the country’s political future and democracy. A Reuters/Ipsos poll shows 38% of Americans doubt the United States will exist as a single country in 250 years, and Gallup finds fewer than half believe everyone has an equal shot at the American dream. The analysis argues that polarization is real but does not affect all Americans equally, and the deeper challenge lies in how the political system and public discourse shape views about national direction and Israel policy.
In Antisemitism and Anti-Jewish Hate, America at 250 and a separate report on NGOs frame a dual discussion of memory and accountability. The opinion piece on America’s 250th anniversary argues that fighting antisemitism starts with reclaiming the role Jews have played in building the nation, noting that antisemitic incidents rise in campuses, streets, and political discourse as the country marks its founding. In New York City, the NYPD reported antisemitic hate crimes rose by 71% in May compared with May of the prior year, with Jews targeted in about 60% of such crimes; synagogues increasingly rely on armed guards and Jewish students sometimes hide their identity. The author contends antisemitism flourishes where history is forgotten or distorted and emphasizes the need to remember the Jewish contribution to American history to counter prejudice. The second article reports on an EiGHT study alleging that several international humanitarian and human rights NGOs pushed Gaza suffering to drive fundraising and attempted to shape an anti-Israel narrative around the Gaza war. The 63-page report calls for greater transparency and accountability in the NGO sector, arguing that the sector wields influence but faces limited external oversight; proponents cited by EiGHT argue the findings align with calls for stronger governance and open discussion of concerns raised by staff and former staffers.
Thank you