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Israel Today: Ongoing War Report - Update from 2026-07-10 at 08:02
Published 6 days, 21 hours ago
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HEADLINES
China Halts Helium Exports Tightening Chip Supply
Turkey Rising Israel Blocks F-35 Sale
Israel on Constitutional Brink as Courts Clash
The time is now 8:01 AM in New York, I'm Noa Levi and this is the latest Israel Today: Ongoing War Report.
In Regional Impacts, China announced a temporary export ban on helium effective immediately, saying the move aims to prevent domestic shortages as renewed fighting in the Middle East threatens supplies of the gas essential for heat management in semiconductor production. Helium is a critical cooling agent in chip manufacturing, and Beijing described the restriction as a short-term precaution while it seeks to boost domestic chip manufacturing and lessen dependence on Nvidia GPUs that fall under US export controls. China remains heavily reliant on overseas helium despite efforts to expand domestic production, and the ban could tighten global supply further because Chinese firms have increasingly acted as intermediaries, importing helium from abroad — including Russia — and re-exporting portions of those volumes to overseas markets. The development comes as the broader regional dynamics continue to influence global tech supply chains.
At the same time, Turkey is converging on a central role in Israel’s strategic calculations as Iran’s regional influence wanes. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has publicly pressed Washington to block the sale of F-35 jets to Ankara, reflecting a broader view in Jerusalem that Turkey is positioning itself as the region’s next dominant power. With Iran’s regional sway fading, Ankara has entrenched itself in Syria, is building an indigenous defense industry capable of producing drones and naval vessels, and is seeking a foothold in Gaza. Observers note Turkey’s growing capacity and its bid to fill the vacuum left by Iran, signaling a potential long-term challenge for Israel. As former national security adviser Giora Eiland warned, Iran’s attempt to surround Israel with a Shi’ite ring of fire is giving way to a Turkish push to shape the region’s balance of power.
In Israeli Domestic Politics, My Word: Courting constitutional disaster - opinion notes that a question about whether Israel is facing a constitutional crisis has dominated public discourse, echoing back to judicial reform debates and mass demonstrations in previous years. The upcoming election must be held by October 27, and many on the Left warn of democratic erosion, while those on the Right fear a juristocracy that blocks the elected government from governing. This week’s flare-up centers on the Second Authority for Television and Radio, which oversees the purchase of Channel 13. Resignations left the regulator without the quorum needed to authorize the deal, and the government contends that without that quorum the purchase cannot be legally approved. President Isaac Herzog, the embattled Attorney-General Gali Baharav-Miara, and opposition leaders voiced criticism of the government’s handling of the matter, fueling the broader crisis debate.
In Israeli Domestic Politics, Middle Israel: Why Netanyahu's political formula no longer works - opinion argues that two demographic groups historically central to Netanyahu’s coalition, the Moroccan and Russian communities, are shifting in ways that threaten the stability of his political formula. The piece contends that the alliances that propelled Netanyahu to power are evolving as social dynamics change, signaling a potential realignment that could complicate the prime minister’s ability to maintain broad support.
In Israeli Domestic Politics, Israel might be headed towards its own January 6 moment - opinion warns that the coalition’s actions since taking office in 2023 have undermined the legitimacy of the Supreme Court and the attorney-general. The government openly signaled it would not respect a High Court ruling, and Justice Minister Yariv Levin urged defying anot
China Halts Helium Exports Tightening Chip Supply
Turkey Rising Israel Blocks F-35 Sale
Israel on Constitutional Brink as Courts Clash
The time is now 8:01 AM in New York, I'm Noa Levi and this is the latest Israel Today: Ongoing War Report.
In Regional Impacts, China announced a temporary export ban on helium effective immediately, saying the move aims to prevent domestic shortages as renewed fighting in the Middle East threatens supplies of the gas essential for heat management in semiconductor production. Helium is a critical cooling agent in chip manufacturing, and Beijing described the restriction as a short-term precaution while it seeks to boost domestic chip manufacturing and lessen dependence on Nvidia GPUs that fall under US export controls. China remains heavily reliant on overseas helium despite efforts to expand domestic production, and the ban could tighten global supply further because Chinese firms have increasingly acted as intermediaries, importing helium from abroad — including Russia — and re-exporting portions of those volumes to overseas markets. The development comes as the broader regional dynamics continue to influence global tech supply chains.
At the same time, Turkey is converging on a central role in Israel’s strategic calculations as Iran’s regional influence wanes. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has publicly pressed Washington to block the sale of F-35 jets to Ankara, reflecting a broader view in Jerusalem that Turkey is positioning itself as the region’s next dominant power. With Iran’s regional sway fading, Ankara has entrenched itself in Syria, is building an indigenous defense industry capable of producing drones and naval vessels, and is seeking a foothold in Gaza. Observers note Turkey’s growing capacity and its bid to fill the vacuum left by Iran, signaling a potential long-term challenge for Israel. As former national security adviser Giora Eiland warned, Iran’s attempt to surround Israel with a Shi’ite ring of fire is giving way to a Turkish push to shape the region’s balance of power.
In Israeli Domestic Politics, My Word: Courting constitutional disaster - opinion notes that a question about whether Israel is facing a constitutional crisis has dominated public discourse, echoing back to judicial reform debates and mass demonstrations in previous years. The upcoming election must be held by October 27, and many on the Left warn of democratic erosion, while those on the Right fear a juristocracy that blocks the elected government from governing. This week’s flare-up centers on the Second Authority for Television and Radio, which oversees the purchase of Channel 13. Resignations left the regulator without the quorum needed to authorize the deal, and the government contends that without that quorum the purchase cannot be legally approved. President Isaac Herzog, the embattled Attorney-General Gali Baharav-Miara, and opposition leaders voiced criticism of the government’s handling of the matter, fueling the broader crisis debate.
In Israeli Domestic Politics, Middle Israel: Why Netanyahu's political formula no longer works - opinion argues that two demographic groups historically central to Netanyahu’s coalition, the Moroccan and Russian communities, are shifting in ways that threaten the stability of his political formula. The piece contends that the alliances that propelled Netanyahu to power are evolving as social dynamics change, signaling a potential realignment that could complicate the prime minister’s ability to maintain broad support.
In Israeli Domestic Politics, Israel might be headed towards its own January 6 moment - opinion warns that the coalition’s actions since taking office in 2023 have undermined the legitimacy of the Supreme Court and the attorney-general. The government openly signaled it would not respect a High Court ruling, and Justice Minister Yariv Levin urged defying anot