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Israel News

Daily Alert

Trump Gives Iran 3-5 Days to End Power Struggle, Return to Peace Talks

on April 22, 2026
(Axios) Barak Ravid - President Trump is giving Iran's warring factions a short window to unify behind a coherent counter-offer - or the ceasefire he extended Tuesday ends, three U.S. officials tell Axios. "Trump is willing to give another three to five days of ceasefire to allow the Iranians to get their s--- together," one U.S. source briefed on the matter said. "It is not going to be open-ended." Trump's negotiators believe a deal to end the war and address what's left of Iran's nuclear program is still achievable. But they also worry they may not have anyone in Tehran empowered to say yes.

Iran Again Attacks Shipping in the Strait of Hormuz

on April 22, 2026
(New York Times) Peter Eavis - On Wednesday, Iran attacked two cargo vessels in the Strait of Hormuz, the MSC Francesca and the Greek-managed Epaminondas. MSC, based in Switzerland, is the world's largest container shipping company.

U.S. Blocks Iraq's Dollar Shipments to Squeeze Its Iran-Backed Militias

on April 22, 2026
(Wall Street Journal) David S. Cloud - The Trump administration has suspended U.S. dollar shipments to Iraq and frozen security cooperation programs with its military, escalating the pressure on Baghdad to dismantle powerful Iranian-backed militias, said Iraqi and U.S. officials. A cargo-plane delivery of $500 million in U.S. banknotes, the proceeds from Iraqi oil sales, was blocked recently by Treasury Department officials because of U.S. concerns about the militias, officials said. Iraqi militias have attempted hundreds of small-scale drone and rocket attacks on American facilities in Iraq and neighboring countries since the war began in a show of support for Tehran. The U.S. has informed Baghdad that it was also suspending funding for counterterrorism and armed forces training programs until the militia attacks stop and Iraqi officials take steps to dismantle the armed groups. "The Iraqi government's failure to prevent these attacks while some elements associated with the Iraqi government continue to actively provide political, financial and operational cover for the militias adversely impacts the U.S.-Iraq relationship," State Department spokesperson Tommy Pigott said. Iraq's most potent militias have enormous influence within Iraq's government and financial sectors. Some militia units have been incorporated formally into Iraq's armed forces, making it hard for any prime minister to challenge them.

Trump Plans Next Moves Against Iran after Ceasefire Ends

on April 22, 2026
(Israel Hayom) Ariel Kahana - A source told Israel Hayom that the next stages of the Trump administration's moves against Iran have already been set. The ceasefire that Trump extended will end within a few days. After that, an overwhelming military strike will be launched in an attack that will continue for several days, after which military operations against Iran will come to an end. The only scenario that could prevent these developments would be a very significant softening of Iran's position on the nuclear issue. However, all signs indicate that decision-makers in Iran have no intention of compromising. Officials in Israel and the U.S. understand that in order to finish the job militarily, the action now required is the destruction of the infrastructure that allows the Iranian regime to function.

IDF: Hizbullah Breached Truce with Rockets, Drone

on April 22, 2026
(Times of Israel) Emanuel Fabian - Hizbullah violated the ceasefire in Lebanon on Tuesday by firing several rockets at Israeli troops in the Israeli-held security zone, as well as launching a drone at Israel, the IDF said.

U.S. Tells Citizens: "Leave Lebanon while Flights Are Available"

on April 22, 2026
(Ynet News) The U.S. Embassy in Beirut urged American citizens to leave Lebanon while commercial flights are still available. Additionally, the embassy called on citizens who choose not to leave to prepare "contingency plans" for emergencies.

The Price Beijing Pays for Backing Tehran

on April 22, 2026
(Wall Street Journal) Tom Tugendhat - Shipping companies have been unable to buy "forward fuel" at a negotiated price for delivery next month. They have no choice but to pay today's high prices, raising cargo costs so dramatically that reliable routes for food and goods become unprofitable. China, according to multiple reports, has provided Iran with satellite imagery, components and intelligence needed to attack infrastructure and shipping as well as U.S. targets in Gulf countries, helping Iran destroy refineries and docks and even kill civilians. In 2024, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, Iran supplied 11% of China's oil. In the same year, Saudi Arabia supplied 14% of China's crude, Iraq 10%, Oman 7% and the UAE 6% - together accounting for 37% of China's oil imports. China's enabling of Iranian aggression endangers suppliers that collectively matter more than three times as much to the Chinese economy as Iran does. Energy bound for China runs directly through the neighborhood that Chinese-assisted Iranian drones and missiles have been targeting. Beijing's support for Iran secured for China discounted oil from the regime, which it helped to evade sanctions. China has now backed one state against others, hoping those that supply more than a third of its oil will forget the transgression. The writer, a member of the British Parliament, is a former Security Minister.

China Presses Iran in Secret Talks

on April 22, 2026
(Israel Hayom) Danny Zaken - Three diplomatic sources say China is involved in efforts to persuade commanders of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps to show greater flexibility. China warned that if the blockage of the Strait of Hormuz continues, it will expand its search for alternative sources of oil and gas and may even suspend the cooperation agreement it signed with Iran. President Trump's announcement of an extension of the ceasefire occurred after Pakistan's army chief, Gen. Asim Munir, assured him that he would persuade Revolutionary Guard commanders to accept the basic conditions the U.S. is demanding as a prerequisite for entering negotiations. According to diplomatic sources, the main obstacle to renewing the talks is the refusal of Revolutionary Guard commander Ahmad Vahidi to compromise on the issue of enriched uranium. Vahidi believes closing the Strait of Hormuz will eventually force the Americans to give ground on that issue.

U.S. Views Iran Naval Blockade as Effective as Airstrikes

on April 22, 2026
(Ynet News) Ron Ben-Yishai - The regime in Tehran created an international energy crisis by shutting the strategic Strait of Hormuz, believing that by doing this it would win the war. But the global energy market has so far managed to cope through American and international reserves of crude oil and gas, even though the strait has been closed for nearly a month and a half. According to a knowledgeable source, Pakistan's army chief and prime minister provided detailed and credible accounts to the Americans of deep divisions within Iran's leadership. At the same time, the U.S. now views the naval blockade - costing Iran more than $400 million a day - as a pressure tool at least as effective as airstrikes, perhaps even more so. Instead of deploying forces to Kharg Island or the Strait of Hormuz and risking casualties in a costly operation, U.S. forces can remain at a safe distance from Iranian missiles and drones, enforcing the blockade. The regime fears the blockade far more than threats to bomb power stations and bridges. From an Israeli perspective, the fact that Iran skipped the talks and Trump extended the ceasefire while maintaining the blockade is close to an optimal outcome. It underscores Trump's determination not to concede, particularly on the nuclear issue.

Iran's Ballistic Missiles Remain Potent Threat

on April 22, 2026
(Times of Israel) Stav Levaton - While the rate of Iranian missile launches dropped sharply as the war progressed - from 80 on the first day to 10-20 per day over the following weeks - the sustained attacks have raised questions about the extent of the damage inflicted in the most recent war. The IDF says over the six weeks of fighting, it managed to set back Iran's missile project only partially, owing in part to its difficult-to-reach underground facilities. Israel is concerned that the U.S. may come to an agreement that allows Iran to continue building up its missile program, Army Radio reported Monday, citing a senior Israeli source. Recent estimates by IDF intelligence officers indicated that Iran still possesses 1,000 ballistic missiles, down from 2,500 at the outset of the war, and will soon recover the ability to start building up its stockpile again. Of Iran's 470 ballistic missile launchers, 200 were destroyed in airstrikes, while another 80 were non-operational after the Israel Air Force struck tunnel entrances to subterranean facilities where they are stored. The IDF said that during the war it struck all of the key sites used to develop weapons that threaten Israel. But some facilities are believed to be buried as much as 500 meters beneath solid granite, well beyond the reach of bunker busters, which can penetrate 60 meters.

The Iranian Regime Is Running Out of Time

on April 22, 2026
(Washington Post) Marc A. Thiessen - Sometimes the best deal is no deal. Right now, the remnants of the Iranian regime are under the misimpression that Trump wants a deal more than they do. Iran's goal is clearly to drag out the negotiations as long as possible. They are betting that Trump does not want to restart the war. The truth is, Iran needs a deal more than Trump does. The country has been battered militarily by almost 40 days of unrelenting strikes, and now it is being battered economically by a naval blockade of its ports. The Iranian regime is on the ropes, but it is not yet defeated. While U.S. and Israeli strikes have taken out much of Iran's offensive military capabilities, the ceasefire took effect when CENTCOM commander Adm. Brad Cooper still needed about 14 days to finish striking the target list he was assigned. If Iran continues to refuse his terms, Trump should give Cooper those final 14 days and maintain the blockade, strangling Iran economically. And if Iran is still not willing to meet Trump's demands, he can declare victory without a deal. The writer is a fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and former chief speechwriter for President George W. Bush.

Tehran Is Betting Its "Resistance Economy" Can Outlast U.S. Pressure

on April 22, 2026
(Ha'aretz) Zvi Bar'el - Trump's decision to return to a "maximum pressure" policy on Iran by imposing a maritime blockade on Iranian oil exports has opened a new path of confrontation, in which the outcome will be determined by each side's capacity to absorb pressure. The working U.S. assumption is that a complete halt of Iranian oil exports - which account for 35-45% of its revenues - will push the regime to reconsider its priorities. In the Islamic Republic's view, Iran has created a balance of terror and military deterrence by turning Gulf states into targets of its attacks and by closing off the Strait of Hormuz. In its assessment, this has produced a symmetry of power and threat.

How the War Forced Gulf States to Dismantle Iran's Terrorist Cells

on April 22, 2026
(National Post-Canada) Mohamed Fahmy - One of the clearest dividends of the war with Iran has been the heightened vigilance of security services worldwide, which have moved decisively to dismantle Iranian-linked terror networks, most recently in the UAE. The UAE bore the brunt of Iran's attacks during the conflict, with more than 2,800 missiles and drones launched toward its territory, with over 90% of these strikes directed at civilian infrastructure and economic hubs. On a local UAE channel, scenes unfolded of 27 members of a clandestine network, dragged out and handcuffed by security forces in a coordinated crackdown. The camera lingered on stacks of confiscated cash and piles of books and propaganda materials, including posters emblazoned with the image of Iran's Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. The cover of one of the confiscated Arabic books caught on camera was The Shia Giant Has Emerged, evoking the enduring undercurrent of Persian expansionist ambition, extending its reach across the region and the six Gulf nations that are predominantly Sunni Muslims In recent weeks, similar arrests have unfolded in Kuwait, Bahrain and the UAE, where authorities have dismantled terror cells linked to Hizbullah.

Israel Cannot Settle for another Ceasefire with Lebanon

on April 22, 2026
(Media Line-Jerusalem Post) Gabriel Colodro - Maj. (res.) Sarit Zehavi, founder and president of the Alma Research and Education Center, said in an interview that between 2000 and 2023, "there was no Israeli presence in Lebanon and there was no buffer zone." The area south of the Litani River was supposed to be free of "any illegitimate weapon," but "it never happened, and nobody enforced that....We are going to do that. We are going to control there, and we are going to make sure that Hizbullah is not there and it's not capable of coming back there." "We have no interest in keeping lands of Lebanon. We want to make peace with Lebanon." But "we are not interested in just another ceasefire. It will not only fail to solve the problem but...will enable Hizbullah to rebuild and to threaten us again." She said developments in Iran and Lebanon are inseparable. If the Islamic Republic were to fall, Hizbullah would struggle to preserve both its political standing and its military power in Lebanon. "The boss of Hizbullah is Iran. Hizbullah gets from Iran the money, the weapons, the training, and the ideology." Hizbullah's power rests not only on arms but also on the parallel system of services it provides in southern Lebanon. Its infrastructure includes schools, ambulances, banks, supermarkets, pharmacies, gas stations, and hospitals.

How Lebanon Can Dismantle Hizbullah without Destroying Itself

on April 22, 2026
(Al Arabiya-Saudi Arabia) Makram Rabah - How does one dismantle Hizbullah? Not by sending the Lebanese army door to door in search of hidden weapons. That is a fantasy that guarantees civil war. Instead, Lebanon must learn how to eat the elephant. As the African proverb goes, you eat an elephant one bite at a time. Hizbullah is that elephant: too large, too entrenched, and too dangerous to confront head-on. But not immune to gradual, systematic erosion. Hizbullah's influence within state institutions is what allows it to operate with impunity. Cleaning these institutions is the foundation of any serious strategy. Officers loyal to Hizbullah, or to Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guards, must be removed. Hizbullah has benefited from political cover, most notably from Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri. Berri's role has been to normalize Hizbullah, to present it as just another political actor rather than an armed entity operating outside the state. This must end. Hizbullah thrives on the narrative that it represents and protects Lebanon's Shia community. The Lebanese state must reclaim its role as the sole guarantor of all citizens, including, and especially, Shias. This is about inclusion. When citizens feel protected by the state, they no longer need protection from militias. There is no single moment where Hizbullah "falls." What there can be is a gradual stripping away of its power, its legitimacy, its cover, its reach, until its weapons become politically irrelevant and, eventually, operationally unsustainable. Eating the elephant requires patience, discipline, and political courage. But it is the only path that avoids both surrender and self-destruction. The writer is an Assistant Professor of History at the American University of Beirut.

Israel's Enduring Spirit after October 7

on April 22, 2026
(Ynet News) Hanoch Daum - I recently met soldiers from the Paratroopers Reconnaissance Unit during an educational program. At one point, I asked how many of them had lost a friend in the war. Every hand went up. I asked who had lost more than one friend. Still, all hands remained in the air, including those of the commanders. Only when I reached five or more did some begin to lower their hands. A generation is growing up here that has buried the best of its friends - a generation that has fought in Gaza, Syria and Lebanon in a war that has been very long. When you ask this generation what the war has done to them, they give a striking answer in its intensity: we have become more committed. The friends we lost made us want even more to win, to understand even more how important it is to fight for this country, to make it better, safer, more vibrant and more prosperous. Something terrible happened to us in the Oct. 7 massacre, but we will turn pain into strength, while our enemies will face destruction. We have a unique Jewish strength that cannot be denied: we know how to rise from the dust. Happy Independence Day.

UCLA Student Council Condemns Event Featuring Israeli Hostage

on April 22, 2026
(New York Post) Arielle Ravanshenas - Who would oppose a former Israeli hostage speaking to college students about his experience? On April 14, the UCLA Center for Israel Studies, together with the Hillel Jewish students' association, hosted an event featuring Omer Shem Tov, 23, who was abducted by terrorists from the Nova music festival on Oct. 7, 2023, and held captive by Hamas for 505 days. One week later, UCLA's Undergraduate Students Association Council released a statement condemning the event, claiming it "advance[d] incomplete and harmful representations of ongoing violence." The student council condemned an event featuring a young person, just like them, who had survived in the clutches of internationally recognized terrorists. During my four years at UCLA, as an Iranian American Jew, I know, painfully, how often Jewish students on that campus have been asked to justify their identities, swallow their grief, or prove that their belonging does not come at someone else's expense. As a freshman, I sat down at a communal table near the dorms and saw the words "Hitler did nothing wrong" etched into the surface. In the years that followed, swastikas appeared across UCLA and other UC campuses. I was told my solidarity was "not welcome" when I showed up for other marginalized communities. UCLA had an antisemitism problem when I enrolled, and it had only become worse by the time I graduated. The message being sent is chilling: Jewish pain is political. Jewish grief is suspect. Jewish survival is provocative. And Jewish students may participate in public life only if they accept that their trauma will be debated, minimized, or condemned. A campus that cannot make room for the testimony of a freed hostage is a campus in moral crisis. The writer is a former president of UCLA's Undergraduate Students Association Council (2017-2018).

Why Doesn't Everyone Love the Jews?

on April 22, 2026
(Jewish Chronicle-UK) Stephen Daisley - As the tide of antisemitism rises once more, a familiar question is posed: why do they hate the Jews? The answers are the same as before: ethnic and religious prejudice, political fanaticism, the conspiratorial mindset, each feeding and being fed by jealousy, ignorance and resentment. Antisemitism is not a philosophy arrived at by reason. In fact, it's a volcanic madness that is always there, waiting to erupt at the first rumblings of societal instability, economic precarity, or spiritual disorder. There might be more to gain from flipping the question on its head: why doesn't everyone love the Jews? It's a thought that has occurred to this gentile more than once because, truth be told, Jews are kind of awesome. The original scribes and scholars of the Bible, defiers of pharaohs, and humblers of empires. Source of modern law and ethics; composers of some of civilization's finest music, art and literature; bearers of an ancient covenant across two millennia of exile. Survivors of extermination; revivers of a nation and a language; and innovators in agriculture, medicine and technology. All this, plus Gal Gadot. There is surely sufficient truth to foster a culture of philosemitism, by which I mean a respect and admiration for Jewish civilization and its fruits; for institutions, practices and teachings whose benefits stretch far beyond Jews and Jewish communities. In practical terms, philosemitism means countering the ignorance of others, counseling your children in respect for Jewish people and revulsion for those who despise them, refusing to remain silent when Jews are targeted for harm or hatred. Former Chief Rabbi of Britain Jonathan Sacks said: "The way a culture treats its Jews is the best indicator of its humanity or lack of it." That culture must move beyond thinking of Jews as a minority to be accommodated and understand them as rightful co-authors of the culture. The writer is a columnist for Britain's Daily Mail.

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