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Israel Today: Ongoing War Report - Update from 2026-07-05 at 15:02
Published 1 week, 5 days ago
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HEADLINES
Lebanese Christian Villages Seek Annexation by Israel
HaBashan Pioneers Detained Crossing Into Syria
Lidl Plan At Mauthausen Subcamp Sparks Outrage
The time is now 3:01 PM in New York, I'm Noa Levi and this is the latest Israel Today: Ongoing War Report.
In Regional Impacts, President Isaac Herzog criticized Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan’s Friday remarks that Israelis are a burden on the world. Herzog said, “Israel is here to stay, and it is a blessing to the world,” adding that Israel stands at the forefront against the terrorism threatening the globe and that Israeli innovations bless billions every day. He spoke at a Sunday event marking Theodor Herzl’s death and urged unity before Israeli elections.
Around 100 HaBashan Pioneers settlers were detained by the IDF after crossing from the Israel-Syria buffer zone into the Syrian side of Mount Hermon. The group said it intentionally placed itself in a mountainous area to complicate evacuation, stressing a desire to avoid violence while aiming to establish an Israeli settlement and arguing that active IDF control is needed in the area amid reported attacks on Israeli communities in the Golan Heights.
Israeli authorities released 9 Gazan prisoners of war to the Gaza Strip today and handed them over to the Red Cross.
Prime Minister Netanyahu revealed that Christian villages in Lebanon asked to be annexed to Israel.
Additionally, reports from the Hashmonaim checkpoint described a vehicle-ramming incident, and a 40-year-old man was seriously injured by a stabbing on Halutz Street in Haifa; MDA teams transported him to Rambam Hospital in Haifa.
In Israeli Domestic Politics, political rivals Yuli Edelstein and Yair Lapid, interviewed separately on Channel 12’s Meet the Press, unexpectedly aligned on national priorities. Both stressed that the October 7 shock has reshaped Israel’s political priorities, highlighting haredi conscription and a broader Zionist consensus, while signaling that Israeli society has shifted right and will require broader agreement on national questions.
An analysis asks whether some officials exaggerate Hamas threats to influence the upcoming elections and push for a new invasion. It notes a pattern since summer 2024 of leaks about Hamas rearming and planning major offensives—some of which were true and used to justify actions, while others appeared inflated to heat up the Gaza front or fit political aims. The discussion points to a mid-April claim that Hamas had risen to about 27,000 armed fighters, a figure contested by other assessments, suggesting motive beyond pure security assessment.
President Isaac Herzog also warned that the government’s refusal to comply with a Supreme Court injunction barring newly appointed Second Authority Council members from meeting constitutes a red line that cannot be crossed, a stance echoed by opposition leader Yair Lapid, who argued that the government has become unlawful and that the authority’s term and decisions remain valid and binding.
In Antisemitism and Anti-Jewish Hate, Austria’s Hirtenberg subcamp, part of the Mauthausen concentration camp network, is slated to be demolished and redeveloped as a Lidl supermarket and a refrigerated storage and logistics facility. The subcamp housed around 400 women during World War II, 194 of them Russian protective-custody prisoners. The site near Leobersdorf was sold by Leobersdorf’s mayor and real estate entrepreneur Andreas Ramharter to Thomas Rattensperger for more than €15 million, with Ramharter receiving an additional €1.34 million through rezoning. The plan to build a Lidl store on the site has drawn controversy; Barbara Glück, director of the Mauthausen Memorial, criticized the project as inappropriate and tied to the memory of those who suffered there.
In Israeli Economy and Business, the government approved rough
Lebanese Christian Villages Seek Annexation by Israel
HaBashan Pioneers Detained Crossing Into Syria
Lidl Plan At Mauthausen Subcamp Sparks Outrage
The time is now 3:01 PM in New York, I'm Noa Levi and this is the latest Israel Today: Ongoing War Report.
In Regional Impacts, President Isaac Herzog criticized Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan’s Friday remarks that Israelis are a burden on the world. Herzog said, “Israel is here to stay, and it is a blessing to the world,” adding that Israel stands at the forefront against the terrorism threatening the globe and that Israeli innovations bless billions every day. He spoke at a Sunday event marking Theodor Herzl’s death and urged unity before Israeli elections.
Around 100 HaBashan Pioneers settlers were detained by the IDF after crossing from the Israel-Syria buffer zone into the Syrian side of Mount Hermon. The group said it intentionally placed itself in a mountainous area to complicate evacuation, stressing a desire to avoid violence while aiming to establish an Israeli settlement and arguing that active IDF control is needed in the area amid reported attacks on Israeli communities in the Golan Heights.
Israeli authorities released 9 Gazan prisoners of war to the Gaza Strip today and handed them over to the Red Cross.
Prime Minister Netanyahu revealed that Christian villages in Lebanon asked to be annexed to Israel.
Additionally, reports from the Hashmonaim checkpoint described a vehicle-ramming incident, and a 40-year-old man was seriously injured by a stabbing on Halutz Street in Haifa; MDA teams transported him to Rambam Hospital in Haifa.
In Israeli Domestic Politics, political rivals Yuli Edelstein and Yair Lapid, interviewed separately on Channel 12’s Meet the Press, unexpectedly aligned on national priorities. Both stressed that the October 7 shock has reshaped Israel’s political priorities, highlighting haredi conscription and a broader Zionist consensus, while signaling that Israeli society has shifted right and will require broader agreement on national questions.
An analysis asks whether some officials exaggerate Hamas threats to influence the upcoming elections and push for a new invasion. It notes a pattern since summer 2024 of leaks about Hamas rearming and planning major offensives—some of which were true and used to justify actions, while others appeared inflated to heat up the Gaza front or fit political aims. The discussion points to a mid-April claim that Hamas had risen to about 27,000 armed fighters, a figure contested by other assessments, suggesting motive beyond pure security assessment.
President Isaac Herzog also warned that the government’s refusal to comply with a Supreme Court injunction barring newly appointed Second Authority Council members from meeting constitutes a red line that cannot be crossed, a stance echoed by opposition leader Yair Lapid, who argued that the government has become unlawful and that the authority’s term and decisions remain valid and binding.
In Antisemitism and Anti-Jewish Hate, Austria’s Hirtenberg subcamp, part of the Mauthausen concentration camp network, is slated to be demolished and redeveloped as a Lidl supermarket and a refrigerated storage and logistics facility. The subcamp housed around 400 women during World War II, 194 of them Russian protective-custody prisoners. The site near Leobersdorf was sold by Leobersdorf’s mayor and real estate entrepreneur Andreas Ramharter to Thomas Rattensperger for more than €15 million, with Ramharter receiving an additional €1.34 million through rezoning. The plan to build a Lidl store on the site has drawn controversy; Barbara Glück, director of the Mauthausen Memorial, criticized the project as inappropriate and tied to the memory of those who suffered there.
In Israeli Economy and Business, the government approved rough