Israel News
Daily Alert
Trump Considers Targeted Strike Against Iran
on February 23, 2026
(New York Times) Julian E. Barnes -
President Trump has told advisers that if diplomacy or any initial targeted U.S. attack does not lead Iran to give in to his demands that it give up its nuclear program, he will consider a much bigger attack in coming months, people briefed on internal administration deliberations said.
Trump has been leaning toward conducting an initial strike in coming days intended to demonstrate to Iran's leaders that they must be willing to agree to give up the ability to make a nuclear weapon. Should those steps fail to convince Tehran to meet his demands, Trump told advisers, he would leave open the possibility of a military assault later this year intended to help topple Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the supreme leader.
Witkoff Warns Iran Is "a Week Away" from "Bomb-Making Material"
on February 23, 2026
(Fox News) Taylor Penley -
U.S. Special Envoy for Peace Missions Steve Witkoff warned Saturday that Iran could be "a week away from having industrial-grade bomb-making material."
French Report Claims Failed Attempt to Remove Khamanei from Power
on February 23, 2026
(AzerNews-Azerbaijan) Akbar Novruz -
French daily Le Figaro has reported that an attempt to remove Iran's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei from power took place on Jan. 8-9, but ultimately failed. Former Iranian president Hassan Rouhani reportedly convened a late night meeting that included ex-foreign minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, clerics from the city of Qom, and figures close to Iran's Revolutionary Guards.
The plan collapsed after it failed to secure the backing of Ali Larijani, secretary of the Supreme National Security Council. Iran's current president, Masoud Pezeshkian, was not informed about the discussions. In the aftermath, Rouhani and Zarif were placed under house arrest for several days.
Britain's Green Party to Vote to Back Hamas Terror Attacks
on February 23, 2026
(Daily Mail-UK) Tom Kelly -
Britain's Green Party is to vote on a "Zionism is Racism" proposal that would back Hamas terror attacks. If approved, it would become Green policy to support Palestinian "resistance" against Israel "by all available means under international law." One of the motion's champions, barrister Franck Magennis, who has previously tried to get Hamas removed from the UK's terror group list, described this as a "euphemistic way of saying that the Palestinians have a right to armed struggle, and that we should support it."
John Mann, the government's independent adviser on antisemitism, said: "It's a support for terrorism and overt racism against Jews. There is no ambiguity. It's from the extreme margins of politics. This is well beyond anything that happened during Labour under Jeremy Corbyn. This makes Corbyn look like a moderate....Greens used to be about stopping fossil fuels and nuclear power and building wind farms. Now hate is bringing members surging into the Green party."
Israel's Deputy Foreign Minister Sharren Haskel told the Daily Mail: "This Green Party motion is one of the most hateful and racist documents I've ever read. It calls for the destruction of Israel and seeks to justify terrorism against Israel. Its intent is to justify the destruction of the Jewish homeland and deny the right of Jews to a national home. The double standards are extraordinary as they demand a national home for Palestinians but not Jews."
Is Trump Waiting for the Right Moment to Strike Iran?
on February 23, 2026
(Israel Hayom) Danny Zaken -
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi has said he may meet U.S. envoy Steve Witkoff in Geneva on Thursday. A senior U.S. official said America was demanding a serious and detailed proposal outlining Iran's position on the nuclear file, alongside a readiness to engage immediately on other issues. The decision to hold additional talks appears to be a final opportunity for Tehran to put forward an acceptable offer.
Assessments in both Israel and the U.S. are that even if Iran shows further flexibility on the nuclear issue, it is unlikely to meet Washington's declared minimum threshold. The senior U.S. official said Trump believes regime change can serve as a regional strategic tool and is waiting for the right timing and optimal conditions.
Within the administration, multiple teams are working on plans for steps that could lead to the regime's collapse following a strike, as well as on cultivating figures who could assume power in order to prevent chaos.
Trump Poised to Order Strike on Iran
on February 23, 2026
(Ynet News) Itamar Eichner -
Sources who have spoken in recent days with President Trump said they came away with the impression that he is inclined to order a military strike against Iran. Israel is preparing for a possible U.S. strike in the near term, which could occur at any moment or be delayed until the weekend or early next week. Israeli officials assess that Washington would provide advance notice to Israel and there is a significant possibility that the U.S. would ask Israel to join the attack.
Israeli Technology Powers 100 Satellites Worldwide
on February 23, 2026
(Ynet News) Rafael Kahan -
Israel's Rafael Advanced Defense Systems has developed technology that is powering more than 100 satellites worldwide. Once a satellite is launched and placed in orbit, any malfunction in its propulsion system can turn an investment of hundreds of millions of dollars into useless space debris. Rafael holds a rare record of 100% success in satellite propulsion, making it a preferred supplier for the European Space Agency and the French space agency.
Where satellites once had to carry tons of fuel merely to maintain their position, Rafael's new ion electric engines offer efficiency 5 to 10 times greater than conventional engines. This enables satellites to be lighter, remain operational in space for more than 15 years, and carry more advanced imaging and communications equipment.
Israel's Economy Grew 3.1 Percent in 2025
on February 23, 2026
(Globes) Oren Dori -
Israel's GDP grew by 3.1% in 2025, the Central Bureau of Statistics reported, compared to 1% growth in 2024 during the height of the war. GDP per capita increased by 1.7%, after two consecutive years of decline.
The View from Israel on Iran: "If the U.S. Asks, We Will Answer"
on February 23, 2026
(The Times-UK) Gabrielle Weiniger -
Dan Diker, who has authored books on Iran's race for regional supremacy and who heads the Jerusalem Center for Security and Foreign Affairs, said: "Israel faces an existential threat by the Iranian regime's ballistic missile program, which is understood to include up to 2,000 missiles currently with a ramped-up production rate."
"The current Iranian ballistic missile threat can potentially overwhelm Israel's anti-missile defense systems. Therefore, if Israel senses that there is an imminent ballistic attack it's reasonable to assume [with] the way Israel acted in June 2025 that it will again neutralize the Iranian regime ballistic missile threat, whether it takes the lead or it follows the U.S. lead or works in tandem."
Diker said that Israel and the U.S., as well as its regional allies, had "substantially" upgraded their anti-missile defense systems since last year. "The Iranian regime retains a very substantial arsenal of short and medium-range missiles and killer drones that they have made no qualms of firing," Diker added.
Don't Be Fooled by Iran's Apparent Readiness to Find a Nuclear Deal
on February 23, 2026
(The Times-UK) Editorial -
Any deal on the nuclear program, even if unenforceable, would hand the Islamist government a diplomatic and moral victory and diminish to vanishing point the chances of regime change. It would also render the U.S. naval build-up in the Gulf superfluous. The threat of imminent bombardment may indeed have hastened Iranian flexibility, but the fleet's withdrawal, unused after a costly stay, would send the despairing Iranian opposition the message that help was indeed not on the way.
U.S. negotiators must be clear that time is running out and that Washington is ready to take a far tougher line. It is a message that must be delivered forcefully.
How Do Iranians Understand Negotiations and War?
on February 23, 2026
(JNS) Dr. Harold Rhode -
How do Iranians, as well as other Middle Eastern powers, understand negotiations and war? They ask themselves two questions. Do their adversaries have both the capability and the will to use their weapons against their enemies? If they conclude that the answer to both questions is yes, they usually determine that they must accede to their enemies' demands in order to survive.
In the present case, the Iranians seem to realize that we certainly have the military strength, but they seem also to have concluded that we don't have the will to use our force. Therefore, from the Iranian perspective, that means that we are weak. That is why the more we delay action in Iran, the more they raise the ante in the so-called "negotiations" between Washington and Tehran.
From the perspective of the Iranians and others throughout the Muslim world, the time to talk is only after one side wins. At these talks, the winner dictates the terms to the loser. From appearances, it looks like Trump and his foreign-policy team seem to believe that their Iranian counterparts are "negotiating" the way we Westerners do, which is a recipe for disaster.
If the goal is to create a new world order where Iran is no longer a threat to its neighbors, then the U.S. must take this regime down. Any negotiations before achieving this goal just prolongs the agony that the Iranian people and all others threatened by this regime must endure. There is good reason to believe that most of the Iranians want nothing more than to rejoin the international community of nations as the respected member Iran once was.
The writer, a fellow of the Jerusalem Center for Security and Foreign Affairs, served as an adviser on the Islamic world for the U.S. Department of Defense for 28 years.
For Iran's Rulers, Refusing U.S. Demands Is a Risk Worth Taking
on February 23, 2026
(New York Times) Erika Solomon -
The authoritarian clerics who rule Iran see conceding to President Trump's demands on its nuclear program and weapons as a greater threat to their survival than the risk of war. "For Iran, submitting to U.S. terms is more dangerous than suffering another U.S. strike," said Ali Vaez, the Iran director of the International Crisis Group. "They don't believe that once they capitulate, the U.S. will alleviate the pressure. They believe that would only encourage the U.S. to go for the jugular."
Danny Citronowicz, an expert at the Atlantic Council who previously headed the Iran branch of Israel's Defense Intelligence, said that if Iran's leaders concede to U.S. demands, "they will actually undermine the existence of the regime itself. I think they don't have any other choice than to take the bet on the military side."
The Case for Striking Iran
on February 23, 2026
(New York Times) Bret Stephens -
Iran poses a threat to global order by way of its damaged but abiding nuclear ambitions, its deep strategic ties to Moscow and Beijing, its persistent threats to maritime commerce and its support for international terrorism. It poses a threat to regional stability, not just through its support for anti-Israel proxies like Hamas and Hizbullah, but also by its meddling in Lebanon, Iraq, and Yemen. And it's a mortal threat to the life and safety of its own people, many thousands of whom it slaughtered in January.
There is at least a reasonable chance that a sustained military operation that not only further degrades the regime's nuclear, missile and military capabilities but also targets its apparatus of domestic repression could embolden the type of sustained mass protests that could finally bring the regime down. Despite the risk that military strikes entail, the bigger risk, in the judgment of history, would be to fail to take it.
Any Deal with Tehran Would Serve as a Lifeline for the Regime
on February 23, 2026
(Israel Hayom) Meir Ben Shabbat -
Ultimately, Tehran's leadership cannot resolve Iran's fundamental problems. Conditions are likely to worsen as sanctions expand and intensify, and as Iran's allies grapple with their own crises. Under these circumstances, any deal with Tehran would serve as a lifeline for the regime. Ending the crisis without a deal, while tightening sanctions to hasten the regime's collapse, is preferable to an agreement that might temporarily curb its ambitions but ultimately ensure its survival.
The writer, head of the Misgav Institute for National Security and Zionist Strategy, served as Israel's National Security Council head during 2017-2021.
Trump's Churchill Moment on Iran
on February 23, 2026
(Ynet News) Rami Simani -
Churchill taught that when humanity is forced to fight evil, it must do so without compromise. You do not contain it or seek to understand it, you set out to destroy it. "You do not reason with a tiger when your head is in its mouth," Winston Churchill shouted at his Cabinet ministers and senior British military commanders who tried to persuade him why Britain had to reach an agreement with Nazi Germany.
By 1940, Germany had already conquered most of Europe. The isolationist U.S. still refused to join the war. The Nazi monster was poised to invade Britain, where the opposition and most Cabinet ministers supported opening negotiations with the Nazis. Hitler publicized in the world media that he did not want war. British military leaders urged Churchill to respond to Hitler's overtures and immediately sign a peace agreement without dismantling Germany's military capabilities.
Deterrence and Escalation Dynamics with Iran
on February 23, 2026
(Washington Institute for Near East Policy) Michael Eisenstadt -
For decades, Washington struggled to counter Tehran's asymmetric way of war, rooted in a failure to understand the Islamic Republic's military modus operandi and fears of another Middle East "forever war." The 12-day conflict in June 2025, however, confounded predictions that a U.S. attack on Iran would prompt massive retaliation, lead to thousands of American casualties, and spark an "all-out" regional war. In turn, it laid bare longstanding misconceptions regarding the ability of the U.S. and Israel to manage escalation with Iran.
This study reviews recent U.S. and Israeli conflicts with Iran and its proxies to better understand the Islamic Republic's past approach to deterrence and escalation management, which may inform its conduct in future conflicts.
The writer is a senior fellow and director of the Military and Security Studies Program at The Washington Institute.
Iran Finds an Ally in London
on February 23, 2026
(Ynet News) Ben-Dror Yemini -
Britain has informed the U.S. that it opposes the use of its military bases in the region for a strike on Iran. This refers to Diego Garcia, the largest island in the Chagos Archipelago, which under a May 2025 agreement is set to pass largely to the sovereignty of Mauritius.
The International Court of Justice ruled in 2019 that sovereignty over the entire archipelago should be transferred to Mauritius and that the military base on Diego Garcia should be dismantled and evacuated. For years Britain has not complied. But when it comes to saving the Iranian people from a murderous regime of terror, Britain suddenly expresses concern for international law.
Hamas's Disarmament Must Be a Red Line for Israel
on February 23, 2026
(Israel Hayom) Prof. Eyal Zisser -
On paper, billions of dollars in pledges have been secured for Gaza's reconstruction, and a multinational force is being assembled. Yet it remains doubtful whether any of this will materialize, as it depends on dismantling Hamas's military capabilities.
While various international actors speaking on Hamas's behalf say the group will lay down its arms and relinquish control of Gaza, no Hamas official has made such a declaration. In fact, its spokesmen have repeatedly stressed their determination to retain their weapons and their refusal to disarm.
Israel must define clear red lines from which it will not retreat, especially regarding the link between Hamas's disarmament and any progress on other issues in Gaza. Israel cannot afford to accept a situation in which Hamas retains its weapons and gradually reestablishes its presence.
The writer is a lecturer in the Middle East History Department at Tel Aviv University.
Hamas Will Become the Biggest Beneficiary of the Billions to Be Invested in Gaza
on February 23, 2026
(Gatestone Institute) Khaled Abu Toameh -
The Palestinian National Committee for the Administration of Gaza (NCAG), established in accordance with President Trump's plan to end the Israel-Hamas war, is expected to start operating in Gaza even though Hamas continues to control nearly half of it, with more than 90% of the population still under its jurisdiction. Although Hamas has expressed its willingness to hand over its government institutions to NCAG, there are indications that Hamas seeks to control the new committee.
NCAG is already under pressure to incorporate thousands of Hamas terrorists into a newly established Palestinian police force in Gaza. In addition, Hamas is seeking to ensure that its civil servants be placed on the NCAG payroll. Sources close to NCAG revealed that Hamas "continues to insist that its security personnel remain in service within the agencies that will operate under the committee's leadership," Asharq Al-Awsat reported. "There is a prevailing sense within the committee and other parties that Hamas is determined, by all means, to keep its members within the new administrative framework overseeing Gaza."
Such reports prove that Hamas is lying when it says that it is ready to hand over its governing power to NCAG. Hamas's actions on the ground are in violation of Trump's plan, which states: "Hamas and other factions agree to not have any role in the governance of Gaza, directly, indirectly, or in any form." We are currently witnessing direct and indirect efforts by Hamas to continue governing in Gaza. Anyone who believes that NCAG will be able to operate as an independent governing body is abysmally uninformed.
In Light of the Palestinian Authority's New Draft Constitution, So Much for the Two-State Solution
on February 23, 2026
(Times of Israel) Gary Rosenblatt -
80% of the nations in the world support a Palestinian state living in peace with Israel, side by side. But based on the draft of the Palestinian Authority's constitution released on Feb. 5, 2026, the 157 countries that recognize a Palestinian state will find that their perception of a future Palestinian democracy ready to accept the State of Israel next door is a fiction.
There is no talk of living alongside Israel. Instead, the draft asserts that Jerusalem will be the capital of Palestine and that Islamic and Christian holy sites will be maintained and protected. The document erases Israel and Jewish history. It proposes a state to be governed by Islamic Shariah law. It legalizes terror by promising to continue the PA's "pay-for-slay" policy.
The PA has consistently rejected Israeli and U.S. peace initiatives, often inciting violence against Israeli citizens, and teaching children from an early age to hate Jews. The draft constitution calls for more Islamic fundamentalism and refusal to coexist with or even recognize Israel. It reveals that the PA has no intention of living peacefully alongside Israel.
The writer is former editor and publisher of the New York Jewish Week.
Iranian Regime Is Brittle but Not Collapsing
on February 23, 2026
(Il Tempo-Italy) Interview with Oded Ailam -
President Trump likely believes that a limited, surgical strike could shock Tehran into accepting terms closer to American demands. Right now, we are in the assessment phase, waiting for Iran's formal response and weighing whether negotiations can be stretched further.
Operation "Rising Lion" in June 2025 inflicted real and measurable damage, but it did not erase Iran's strategic capabilities. The scientific knowledge, the engineering cadres, and the industrial DNA remain intact. With potential technical assistance from North Korea, the recovery curve could shorten. So while the program is wounded, it is not amputated.
On Iran's long-range ballistic missile arsenal, out of 584 launchers, 178 are currently assessed as operational. Iran is rebuilding them remarkably fast, with material and technological backing from China and Russia. Current projections suggest that by the end of 2026, Iran could field 2,000 missiles and 600 launchers. That is not a marginal threat. It is a strategic one that remains very real, not only to Israel but to the wider region.
Many assessments suggest that a very large majority of the population - 75-80% - rejects clerical rule. Even among traditional Shiite supporters there is growing recognition of where this path has led. Yet fragility does not equal imminent collapse. The brutal suppression of the protests was designed not only to crush dissent but to inject lasting fear. That reality weighs heavily on public willingness to re-mobilize. And the lack of alternative leadership is crucial.
If a military operation unfolds, it would begin with a coordinated cyber offensive designed to blind, disrupt, and delay Iran's ability to respond, striking key Iranian military networks, air defense systems, missile launch control systems, and nuclear command-and-control nodes. Conventional air and missile assets would then target nuclear sites, missile production and launch infrastructure, and IRGC command and control centers, including targeting key prominent figures.
If Iran retaliates by striking oil and gas infrastructure or attempting to close the Strait of Hormuz, the campaign could expand with strikes on the primary export hub at the Kharg Island oil terminal, the South Pars gas field, and the Abadan and Bandar Abbas oil refineries.
Regime change in Tehran, if it comes, will not be a consequence of a single strike. It would likely occur not because of street protests alone, but when the elite concludes that the current path is leading to disaster. At that point, the shift would come from within, perhaps led by elements of the security establishment or senior clerical figures. History shows that external pressure can accelerate internal fractures. When perception shifts inside the elite, events can move suddenly.
Oded Ailam, former head of the Counterterrorism Division in the Mossad, is a researcher at the Jerusalem Center for Security and Foreign Affairs.



