Israel News
Daily Alert
Trump Complains to Israel about Killing of Hamas Commander in Gaza
on December 17, 2025
(Wall Street Journal) Anat Peled -
President Trump's complaints about Israel's Dec. 13 killing of a top Hamas commander in Gaza without prior notice were conveyed by the White House to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, U.S. officials said. Trump fears the Israeli operation could disrupt a ceasefire in Gaza that he considers one of his major achievements. He separately told aides that Netanyahu was derailing "my deal."
Prime Minister Netanyahu's office responded that Israel was forced to strike because Hamas has shown no signs of disarming, which a future phase of the plan requires.
Speaking to reporters Monday at the White House, Trump denied he was frustrated with Netanyahu. On a possible Israeli violation of the ceasefire terms by killing Ra'ad Sa'ad, Trump said, "We're looking into that."
UK Police to Make Arrests over Intifada Chants
on December 17, 2025
(BBC News) The Metropolitan and Greater Manchester police forces have said they will arrest people holding placards and chanting the phrase "globalize the intifada" - an Arabic word for uprising. Following Sunday's mass shooting at Bondi Beach in Sydney, they said: "Violent acts have taken place, the context has changed - words have meaning and consequence. We will act decisively and make arrests....We will also use powers under the Public Order Act, including conditions around London synagogues during services."
The Board of Deputies of British Jews responded: "We strongly welcome this necessary intervention. We have long warned that people chanting slogans like 'globalize the intifada' are inciting violence, and we have been making the case for robust enforcement in relation to this slogan with government at all levels for some time."
U.S., Syrian Forces Work Together to Kill ISIS Terrorists, Destroy Weapons
on December 17, 2025
(U.S. Central Command) U.S. and partner forces in Syria have conducted nearly 80 operations since July to eliminate terrorist operatives, including ISIS remnants, that posed a direct threat to the U.S. and interests abroad. ISIS has inspired at least 11 plots or attacks against targets in the U.S. over the past year.
In response, U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) operations have resulted in 119 terrorists detained and 14 killed over the last six months. In November, U.S. military personnel partnered with Syrian forces in destroying over 130 mortars and rockets, multiple rifles, machine guns, anti-tank mines, and materials for building IEDs in ISIS weapons caches in southern Syria.
Two Sentenced to 25 Years for Failed Murder Plot Against Iranian Dissident in New York
on December 17, 2025
(ABC News) Aaron Katersky -
Two men hired by Iran in a failed plot to kill Masih Alinejad, an Iranian dissident, author and activist, at her New York City home in 2022 were sentenced to 25 years in prison on Wednesday. Rafat Amirov and Polad Omarov were convicted in March. Federal prosecutors said the two, part of an Eastern European criminal organization, partnered with the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps in an attempt to silence one of Iran's most vocal, internationally recognized and effective critics in exchange for $500,000.
Mossad Warns Iran Will Build Nuclear Weapons If Given the Chance
on December 17, 2025
(Ynet News) Itamar Eichner -
Mossad Director David Barnea warned Tuesday: "A country that has committed itself to the destruction of Israel, that has deceived the world in developing nuclear weapons, and enriched uranium to levels that have no explanation other than its desire for a military nuclear capability, is a country that will surge forward the moment it is able to. The idea of continuing to develop a nuclear bomb still lingers in their hearts." Barnea said Israel has a responsibility to ensure that Iran's nuclear program "will never be activated."
Six Countries Have Committed to Joining Trump's Gaza "Board of Peace"
on December 17, 2025
(Times of Israel) Jacob Magid -
The U.S. has secured commitments from Egypt, Qatar, UAE, UK, Italy and Germany to have their leaders join President Trump on the Board of Peace that will oversee the postwar management of Gaza, four officials familiar with the matter told the Times of Israel. Securing foreign troop commitments to the International Stabilization Force (ISF) has been a much more uphill battle than Board of Peace membership.
Israel Announces Major Gas Deal with Egypt
on December 17, 2025
(Jerusalem Post) Danielle Greyman-Kennard -
Israel has signed a $34.7 billion deal to export gas from Israel's offshore Leviathan reservoir to Egypt through 2040, Prime Minister Netanyahu announced on Wednesday. Netanyahu said, "This deal greatly strengthens Israel's position as a regional energy powerhouse, and it contributes to stability in our region."
Security Concerns Had Delayed Israel's Gas Deal with Egypt
on December 17, 2025
(Israel Hayom) Ariel Kahana -
One of the main reasons for Israel's delay in signing the massive gas deal with Egypt was Egypt's problematic conduct toward Israel on political and security issues. There was no Egyptian commitment to withdraw prohibited forces from the Sinai Peninsula, although the U.S. has promised to promote handling of the issue.
In recent years, Egypt has introduced forces into Sinai far beyond what is permitted under the security annex of the peace treaty. It has also built tunnels deep inside Sinai for storing weapons and has suspiciously extended runways at airfields.
Egypt uses Israeli gas both for domestic needs and for liquefaction and export to Europe, a vital source of foreign currency.
Israel Braces for Renewed Clash with Weakened but Well-Armed Hizbullah
on December 17, 2025
(Ynet News) Yoav Zitun -
According to the IDF, Hizbullah's standing as a political and civil movement has significantly weakened over the past year, with the group struggling to pay rent for tens of thousands of internally displaced Lebanese who remain homeless following Israeli ground operations in southern Lebanon.
"We are seeing more and more Shiite supporters shift their allegiance to Amal," a rival Shiite movement, intelligence officials said. "Hizbullah is failing to support thousands of bereaved families and many wounded. Still, from a military standpoint, Hizbullah remains stronger than the Lebanese army. When that changes, we'll know the tide has turned."
Until then, "We will have to continue confronting it at all costs," said one official. "As talk of disarming Hizbullah becomes more tangible and any disarmament effort moves toward force, the group is likely to become more aggressive. Hizbullah is not volunteering to disarm."
IDF Strikes Hizbullah Rocket Launch Sites, Weapons Storage Facilities
on December 17, 2025
(Jerusalem Post) Corinne Baum -
The IDF struck Hizbullah infrastructure across Lebanon, the military announced on Thursday, including artillery launch sites, weapons storage facilities, and a military training camp. The terror infrastructure it struck had been recently used by Hizbullah, which is in direct violation of the ceasefire. Because the Lebanese government is failing to disarm Hizbullah, the IDF has been escalating attacks within the parameters of the ceasefire.
Over the course of the ceasefire since November 2024, the IDF has killed 370 Hizbullah terrorists and carried out 1,200 operations to prevent Hizbullah from redeploying its forces to southern Lebanon and restoring its prewar arsenal of rockets.
600-800 Aid Trucks Have Entered Gaza Daily since Ceasefire
on December 17, 2025
(Jerusalem Post) Between 600 and 800 trucks carrying humanitarian aid have entered Gaza daily since the start of the ceasefire, Israel's Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT) said Wednesday. Despite continued UN complaints about the supply of aid into Gaza, COGAT stated the UN only provided 20% of the aid reaching Palestinians. Foreign nations and international NGOs provide the majority of aid.
Completing the Mission to Disarm Hizbullah and Hamas
on December 17, 2025
(Israel Hayom) Brig.-Gen. (res.) Yossi Kuperwasser -
Israel has achieved significant gains following the blow it suffered on Oct. 7. It has struck its enemies hard and, with American assistance, succeeded in forcing Hamas and Hizbullah into moves they had refused to take - releasing hostages while the IDF maintains its presence in Gaza, and ceasing fire from Lebanon as an expression of solidarity with Hamas.
However, these achievements do not guarantee sustained and strategically meaningful, long-term change in the regional landscape. To achieve this goal - which means victory in the war - Hamas must be fully disarmed, and Hizbullah must either be disarmed or at minimum prevented from strengthening and returning to southern Lebanon.
Such a move for Hamas would amount to admitting that the Oct. 7 attack was a mistake and accepting that, in Palestinian national memory, the attack that galvanized the Palestinian public will be recorded as a disaster and grave error.
The American administration has not yet decided whether to back powerful Israeli force moves that would enable completing the collapse of Hamas. Israel must make every effort to convince Trump that backing Israel to complete the mission is also in his interest.
The writer, former head of the research division of IDF Military Intelligence, heads the Jerusalem Institute for Strategy and Security.
After a Series of Deadly Attacks on the Global Jewish Community, Jews Have Good Reason to Be Angry
on December 17, 2025
(Guardian-UK) Dave Rich -
Heaton Park, Boulder, Washington, D.C. - and now Bondi Beach. The 7 October 2023 attack by Hamas unleashed a wave of antisemitism around the world. The footage of two gunmen calmly taking aim at families enjoying a Hanukkah party is utterly chilling. Places that used to feel safe are now suddenly on the frontline.
If you are Jewish, wherever you are, the decision about whether to celebrate Jewish festivals anywhere other than in your own home may be a matter of life and death. Nobody should have to live like this. Our societies cannot continue to function if this becomes the norm. The whole basis of Western liberal democracy, the belief in shared values within a diverse society, is endangered by these attacks.
Some people react as if this terrorism is akin to a natural disaster or unforeseen tragedy. But terrorism does not emerge from a vacuum. It is merely the most violent, lethal expression of a set of attitudes and beliefs that are much more widely held.
The ideas that some take as justification for murder are popularized and normalized through the language of much of the anti-Israel movement that has marched up and down our city streets and through our university campuses these past two years. Violent words lead to violent actions, especially when left unchallenged and unchecked by the law.
Lots of people involved in pro-Palestinian activism do not support antisemitic violence against Jews. But like it or not, it seems this movement has generated and sustained a political culture in which violence is both conceivable and enacted. Shooting Jews celebrating Hanukkah is the most extreme manifestation of this hatred.
This is now a global emergency of antisemitism, and it is the consequence of two years of turning a blind eye, taking the easy path and ignoring the warnings. Alongside the grief and the defiance, Jews are angry. And they have every right to be.
The writer is director of policy at Britain's Community Security Trust.
Where Are Mass Protests in Defense of Jews under Attack?
on December 17, 2025
(Washington Post) Alon Meltzer -
On Tuesday and Wednesday, I spent two hours guarding the bodies of murdered Jews. That came after hours of hiding and sheltering, after being separated from our children during lockdowns, after learning of friends who had been killed and classmates who had been wounded. All of this for the crime of being Jewish.
For the past two years, our community has lived with a rising torrent of antisemitism. For months, communal leaders warned governments and authorities that words would one day turn into violence, and violence into bloodshed. On Sunday, that warning was realized. Fifteen of our brothers and sisters were murdered at Bondi Beach.
But what of our country and every other country that claims to value pluralism, tolerance and the safety of minorities? In August, an estimated 100,000 people marched across the Sydney Harbor Bridge to protest a conflict thousands of miles away. Many marched out of genuine concern for human suffering. Others marched because of their hatred toward Jews and Israel. Now, 15 Australians have been murdered in our own backyard. Is Jewish blood not worth marching for?
Thoughts and prayers are not enough. Action is needed, with a collective demand that antisemitism - in all its forms - is wrong and must stop now. This needs to occur in every country claiming to live by Western democratic values. I fear that such a vision exists only in my imagination.
The writer is the associate rabbi of Bondi Mizrachi Synagogue in Sydney, Australia.
Why Won't the West Defend Jews?
on December 17, 2025
(Spectator-UK) Jonathan Sacerdoti -
Bondi Beach is not occupied territory. It is not contested land. Still, on a day marked for celebration, Jews were once again slaughtered, picked off by a Muslim father and son who were motivated to kill as if it were their God-given right.
The war has not ended. It has migrated. It is a war that spreads through ideology, through grievance networks, through digital propaganda and imported narratives, recruiting from mosques and message boards, from fringe collectives and activist mobs. The enemies of the West no longer require battalions; they need only a few men with weapons.
Our political leaders urge Jews to stay calm, as if a lack of calm is the issue. Many Jews are drawing the only logical conclusion: their governments may not ever properly protect them. They are making plans - not out of hysteria, but realism. It is not cowardice to prepare for an exit when one's position has been abandoned from above. It is memory at work.
There is an unholy alliance of Islamists and anarchists whose shared aim is to destabilize the West from within. Their targets are not only Jews but the norms that sustain Western civilization: public safety, legal equality, freedom of expression, civic trust. This time they came for Hanukkah. Next time they'll come for Christmas.
Jews represent the freedoms and values of the West because many of those values are actually Jewish, embraced and adopted by Christianity and wider secular society. The attacks by the enemies of civilization on us are actually just one small part of their broader attacks on the entire West.
Security measures once reserved for foreign embassies are now required at primary schools. This is not normal. Yet this is the modern Jewish experience. The moral clarity required to confront this has been replaced by moral confusion. The state, instead of defending its citizens robustly, now negotiates with those who threaten them. It manages risk rather than removing it. That is how a festival becomes a crime scene.
A War on Christmas Was Never about Israel
on December 17, 2025
(National Review) Dan McLaughlin -
There's a habit or reflex in discussing antisemitic violence to explain or even excuse it as being a response to purported Israeli injustices. Yet it is hard to explain exactly how attacking Jews celebrating Hannukah in Australia has anything to do with Gaza. It is also thunderingly obvious that Islamist radicals are not principally acting out of grievance at Israeli foreign policy, as they are simultaneously waging war on open and public Christianity in Europe.
German authorities announced Saturday that five men have been arrested on suspicion of planning an attack on a Christmas market in the Dingolfing area of southern Bavaria. Authorities believe the plot was motivated by Islamist extremism. Bavaria is not exactly the center of IDF activity.
In 2024, a car drove into a crowded outdoor Christmas market in the eastern German city of Magdeburg, killing at least five people and injuring more than 200. In a 2018 attack on a Christmas market in Strasbourg, France, five people were killed and several more were injured. In 2016, an Islamist extremist drove a truck into a crowd at a Berlin Christmas market, killing 13 people and injuring dozens more.
In Paris, authorities canceled an annual New Year's celebration that drew half a million people last year, because their safety from Islamist radicals can no longer be secured. It starts with Jews, but it never ends there. These are enemies of our entire civilization, and their only actual demand is submission.
The Impotence of the West in the Face of Islamist Antisemitism
on December 17, 2025
(Israel Hayom) Amb. Freddy Eytan -
The massacre perpetrated in Sydney against hundreds of Jews celebrating Hanukkah proves once again that Islamists are waging a religious war against the people of Israel and against all non-believers in the West. They consistently choose a Jewish or Christian holiday to commit barbaric attacks.
Western nations have remained unable to eradicate the scourge of Islamist terror. Numerous attacks have been thwarted thanks to invaluable intelligence provided by Mossad to various intelligence services. Without these warnings, the list of Islamist attacks in Europe and Australia would have been longer.
There is no difference between the Palestinian Hamas terrorists and all the Shiite and Sunni terrorists who perpetrate attacks in Sydney, Washington, Manchester, or Paris. They all wish to create Islamic states in place of the Jewish state and Christian countries. Even today, Saladin remains a hero of Islam, the great victor over the Crusaders in 1187.
We have no choice but to continue our tireless fight against the cult of death. It is our collective destiny. For over a century, we have been fighting the scourge of Palestinian terrorism, and every day we thwart planned attacks. The Jewish state is acting in legitimate self-defense and has the absolute right to fight, without pity and without mercy, against all those who want to wipe us off the map.
The writer, a researcher at the Jerusalem Center for Security and Foreign Affairs, is a former Foreign Ministry senior adviser who was Israel's first ambassador to the Islamic Republic of Mauritania.
It's Time to End the Cowardly Appeasement of Radical Islamism
on December 17, 2025
(Telegraph-UK) Allison Pearson -
I'm sick of it, aren't you? Sick of those hateful marches fouling up our cities since the Oct. 7 massacre in Israel. Sick of the BBC and complicit politicians pretending there's a moral equivalence between the death cult Hamas and soldiers of the IDF. Sick of police doing next to nothing as vile antisemitic chants fill the air. Sick of Jews feeling scared in this country they used to feel safe in. How about arresting, jailing or deporting the evil men causing the fear?
I'm sick of the appeasement of Islamism in general. Sick of kid gloves treatment for a touchy minority who make people nervous. Sick of them relishing the power they hold over a political class which still clings to the myth of multiculturalism. Sick of Christmas markets being cancelled for reasons of "safety." Sick of those ugly, hulking bollards put up in public spaces to prevent a car or truck being driven at a crowd. (We never needed them before, did we? We all know what changed.)
What is needed now is zero tolerance of antisemitism and the immediate arrest of anyone calling to "globalize the Intifada" - an incitement to murder, nothing less. The hate marches must be banned on the grounds of national security - we cannot allow British tolerance to go on being weaponized against us by the least tolerant men on Earth. Police and counter-terrorism must focus their attention on the appalling jihadist threat that has been hidden from the public.
There must be a cast-iron understanding, inculcated in every single child at school, that anyone who moves to Britain must do as the Jews did. Adopt British values, become patriotic and show respect for our country. The UK must stop importing ideologies which are not only hostile to Jews and women, but which will eventually destroy us all. If it can happen at Hanukkah, don't think Christmas is safe.
Reuven Morrison jumped up the minute the shooting started at Bondi Beach. A video shows that middle-aged man doing his best, armed only with a brick, to ward off the devil and protect his people. Defiant, ridiculously brave. "If there was one way for him to go on this earth, it would be fighting a terrorist," his daughter Sheina said. Islamists do not see us as human. We must understand that and we must be united against them.
Normalization? The Mecca Sermon No One in the West Wants to Hear
on December 17, 2025
(Jerusalem Post) Dr. Edy Cohen -
On Dec. 12, the designated weekly preacher in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, Imam Sheikh Salih bin Abdullah bin Humaid, asked God to punish the Jews, describing Israel as a "cruel Zionist enemy." The sermon was broadcast on Saudi state television, spread on social media, and circulated via many Saudi-funded TV channels, reaching tens of millions of people.
The sermon is translated into dozens of languages and reaches Muslims who are not Arabs, including Turks, Indonesians, Pakistanis, and others. What are millions of Muslims supposed to think when they hear the imam in Mecca vilifying and cursing Jews?
There are those who will argue that the crown prince did not authorize it. But the Saudi crown prince knows about every ant that moves across Saudi Arabia, and certainly about the most important weekly sermon. Mohammed bin Salman wants to cement his standing among Arabs, and his entry ticket is the Palestinian issue. He wants to be seen as an Arab hero, as someone who succeeded in bringing the Palestinians a state.
The antisemitic sermons may stop, but only if the Americans, who in practice protect the Saudis in the Gulf against Iran, instruct the crown prince to stop. Anyone who thinks the Saudis are moderates is captive to a dangerous misconception.
The Lebanon-born writer, who served for 15 years in the Israeli intelligence community, is a researcher at the Israel Center for Grand Strategy (ICGS).
Israel's Enemies Have Only Been Weakened, Not Defeated
on December 17, 2025
(Washington Times) Clifford D. May -
The hostage release and ceasefire President Trump brokered in October has brought Israelis palpable relief and renewed optimism. However, they also recognize that peace is not yet at hand. "We're living with traumas and scars," an Israeli brigadier general told me. "But we're resilient. We need to be because our enemies have only been weakened, not defeated."
Iran's rulers and their main proxies (Hamas, Hizbullah and the Houthis) have no interest in a "two-state solution," except as a step toward a "final solution" in the sense the Nazis used that phrase. Their goal remains the extermination of the people of Israel. There's a word for that: genocide - one of the crimes Israel is relentlessly accused of.
A new Israeli defense posture is evolving. It will not depend on wishful thinking or deterrence. It will focus on early detection of threats, followed by kinetic operations to prevent those threats from metastasizing. This will not make Israelis more popular, but it's necessary if the people of Israel are to live.
The writer is founder and president of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies.
Hamas Has Two Godfathers - Iran and the Muslim Brotherhood: An Illustrated Analysis
on December 17, 2025
(Jerusalem Center for Security and Foreign Affairs) Lenny Ben-David -
One of Hamas's two godfathers is the royal family in Qatar. Actually, Doha is also the residence of Hamas's "Godmother," Sheikha Moza, the mother of Qatar's Emir. She sponsors and shelters the leaders of the Muslim Brotherhood.
Since Yasser Arafat's rush to Iran to embrace Ayatollah Khomeini in 1979, the revolutionary Iranian state has been the Palestinian terrorist organizations' strongest sponsor.
Recent history has demonstrated that centuries of violent religious strife between the Brotherhood's fundamentalist Sunni Muslim doctrine and Iran's Shiite brand of Islam fail to constitute any ideological barrier in the world of international terrorism when it comes to Israel.
The writer, former Deputy Chief of Mission at Israel's Embassy in Washington, is a Research and Diplomacy Fellow at the Jerusalem Center.
14-Year-Old Girl Saved Two Children during Bondi Attack
on December 17, 2025
(Jerusalem Post) Goldie Katz -
A 14-year-old girl saved the lives of two children during Sunday's terrorist attack in Bondi Beach, Australia, the United Hatzalah emergency services organization said Tuesday. When the shooting began, Chaya spotted two young children and shielded them with her body from the bullets. She was shot in the leg but remained on top of the children until help arrived. Hatzalah stated that the mother of the two children was killed during the attack.
Germany Approves Second $3 Billion Missile Defense Deal with Israel
on December 17, 2025
(Globes-Ynet News) Dean Shmuel Elmas -
Israel's Ministry of Defense has announced that Germany has approved the expansion of its Arrow 3 deal with Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) by an additional $3.1 billion, bringing the total to $6.7 billion. The first Arrow 3 system supplied by Israel to Germany became operational on Dec. 3. IAI CEO Boaz Levy said, "This strategic partnership will provide all of Europe with the most advanced air defense capability in the world."
Rising Israeli Exports Approach Pre-War Level
on December 17, 2025
(TPS-Jerusalem Post) Pesach Benson -
Two years after the start of the war, Israeli exports are on a strong recovery. The Economy and Industry Ministry forecasts total exports for 2025 at nearly $160 billion, close to the 2022 record of $165 billion. Growth is driven by high-tech services such as software, computing, and R&D.
Iran Rejected U.S. Diplomatic Offer during 12-Day War
on December 17, 2025
(Washington Post) Souad Mekhennet -
Israeli security officials knew that to do more than fleeting damage to Iran's sprawling nuclear program, they had to decimate the "brain trust," a generation of Iranian engineers and physicists who U.S. and Israeli intelligence officials believed were working on turning fissile nuclear material into an atomic bomb. On June 13, in the opening minutes of Israel's 12-day war with Iran, Operation Narnia, the campaign against Iran's top nuclear scientists, got underway.
Mohammad Mehdi Tehranchi, a theoretical physicist and explosives expert under U.S. sanctions for his nuclear weapons work, was killed in his Tehran apartment. Fereydoun Abbasi, a nuclear physicist who once led Iran's atomic energy organization and was under U.S. and UN sanctions, died in another strike in Tehran two hours later. In all, Israel said it assassinated 11 senior Iranian nuclear scientists. Iran's nuclear work probably has been set back years, officials from Israel, the U.S. and the UN's International Atomic Energy Agency said.
In mid-April, President Trump gave Iran 60 days to agree to a nuclear deal. The deadline expired on June 12. He and Netanyahu maneuvered to keep the Iranians unprepared for what would happen next. Trump told reporters on June 12 that he preferred a negotiated solution. Israeli officials leaked word that top Netanyahu adviser Ron Dermer and Mossad chief David Barnea would soon meet U.S. special envoy Steve Witkoff. A new round of U.S.-Iranian nuclear talks was scheduled for June 15.
Israel had decided to strike, as the U.S. well knew. The planned diplomacy was a ruse, and officials from both countries encouraged media reports of a U.S.-Israeli rift. "All the reports that were written about Bibi not being on the same page with Witkoff or Trump were not true," a person familiar with the matter said. "But it was good that this was the general perception."
Even after the Israeli bombing, the Trump administration made a final diplomatic push on June 15 and secretly transmitted a proposal to Iran to resolve the standoff over its nuclear program. The terms of the proposed deal included Tehran ending support for proxies such as Hizbullah and Hamas, as well as "replacing" the Fordow Fuel Enrichment Plant and "any other functioning facility" with alternative facilities that do not allow enrichment.
In return, the U.S. would lift "all sanctions placed on Iran." Shortly after the U.S. transmitted the proposal to Iran via Qatari diplomats, Tehran rejected it, and Trump authorized U.S. strikes.



