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Israel News

Daily Alert

Lebanon Emerges as Weak Link in U.S.-Iran Deal

on June 20, 2026
(New York Times) Euan Ward - The inclusion of Lebanon in the U.S.-Iran deal was seen as a diplomatic victory for Iran, where its ally, Hizbullah, attacked Israel in March in solidarity with Tehran. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel, which has not been party to the negotiations, had staunchly objected to those terms and vowed to continue the military campaign against Hizbullah. On Friday, the Israeli ambassador to the U.S., Yechiel Leiter, said Israel had committed to an immediate ceasefire and had "halted all offensive operations" in Lebanon. But he said that Israeli forces were still operating in southern Lebanon "to rid the area of Hizbullah and dismantle its terror infrastructure," adding, "We will remain there until that mission is accomplished." The agreement between the U.S. and Iran purports to extend its commitments to Washington and Tehran's allies, but neither Israel nor Hizbullah signed the memorandum. Washington and Israel had sought to keep the two conflicts separate, while Tehran made Israel's campaign in Lebanon a pressure point in negotiations with Washington. Israel has signaled it does not feel bound by any Lebanon-related agreements in the U.S.-Iran talks, and Israeli leaders have said in recent days that they do not intend to withdraw from the country.

Israeli Ambassador to U.S.: Hizbullah Broke the Ceasefire, Not Israel

on June 20, 2026
(X) Israeli Ambassador to the U.S. Yechiel Leiter wrote Saturday on X: Hizbullah broke the ceasefire, not Israel. Terrorists lie. Hizbullah is a terrorist organization. Hizbullah lies. Iran is using its proxy to extract concessions. Israel has no territorial ambitions in Lebanon. Israel seeks to live side-by-side with its neighbors behind secure and recognized borders. Israel is honoring the ceasefire while defending itself against terrorist attacks, as any self-respecting country would.

Hizbullah Fired 147 Rockets, 20 UAVs, and 9 Anti-Tank Missiles in the Past 24 Hours at Israel and Israeli Forces

on June 20, 2026
(X) Israeli Ambassador to the U.S. Yechiel Leiter, writing Saturday on X, listed 13 villages in southern Lebanon from which Hizbullah fired 147 rockets, 20 UAVs, and 9 anti-tank missiles in the past 24 hours at Israeli forces in Lebanon and into Israel.

First Steps in Peace Deal Demand Far More from U.S. than Iran

on June 20, 2026
(Washington Post) Greg Miller - The memorandum of understanding to end the U.S.-Israel war with Iran puts the onus on the U.S. to deliver early concessions including lifting sanctions, freeing billions in frozen assets, and dismantling a U.S. naval blockade of Iran's ports. "The MoU is structured to bring Iran to the table," said Matthew Levitt, an Iran expert at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. "And it demonstrates that the United States wanted this deal even more than Iran did. It is front-loaded with more deliverables from the United States and its allies toward Iran than the other way around." Trump administration officials have emphasized that the memorandum was not intended to be a template for solving every point of friction with Tehran, but to end a war that disrupted the global economy and to secure a commitment from Tehran to negotiate the dismantling of its nuclear program. All but one of the document's provisions require the U.S. to deliver on Iranian demands: to "end the naval blockade" of Iran's ports "within 30 days," to require the U.S. Treasury Department to issue waivers enabling Iran to bypass long-standing sanctions on oil sales, and release "frozen or restricted funds and assets of the Islamic Republic." Combined, those measures could give Iran immediate access to billions of dollars, providing an economic lifeline to the regime.

Iran's Revolutionary Guards Set Up Covert Iraqi Cells to Attack Gulf Neighbors

on June 20, 2026
(Reuters) Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) has set up secretive cells in Iraq to carry out attacks on Gulf countries that host American forces, Iraqi sources told Reuters. Three or four cells, each comprising about 10 Iraqi Shi'ite Muslim fighters, launched at least seven drone attacks from desert locations near the southern cities of Basra and Samawa against sites in Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and the UAE between April 20 and May 17.

Four Soldiers, including Battalion Commander, Killed in Hizbullah Drone Strike

on June 20, 2026
(Ynet News) Elisha Ben Kimon - Four IDF soldiers were killed Thursday night when a Hizbullah attack drone struck troops in a tank in southern Lebanon. Among those killed was battalion commander Lt.-Col. Dor Gedalia Ben Simhon. Several hours later, five soldiers were wounded in the same sector by an explosive drone.

"Writing History in Real Time": Slain IDF Battalion Commander's Last Interview

on June 20, 2026
(Ynet News) Elisha Ben Kimon - Less than a month before his death, battalion commander Lt.-Col. Dor Gedalia Ben Simhon, 32, spoke to Ynet about the fight against Hizbullah. He said at the time: "I can say with confidence that we are carrying out very significant operations here to improve the defense of the citizens of Israel....The soldiers here are writing history in real time." Ben Simhon's wife, Maj. A., is a deputy battalion commander in the Combat Intelligence Collection Corps. The couple has two daughters, aged 3 and 1.

More Fallen Soldiers in Lebanon Named

on June 20, 2026
(Ynet News) Sgt. First Class Nir Ben Ari, 21, a Commando Brigade fighter, was killed Saturday night in southern Lebanon by Hizbullah rocket and explosive drone fire and 13 other soldiers were wounded. In the tank incident Thursday night, Staff Sgt. Yoav Klein, 21, Staff Sgt. Liav Kababia, 20, and Staff Sgt. Nave Habshoosh, 20, were killed.

IDF Strikes Lebanon after Repeated Hizbullah Attacks

on June 20, 2026
(Times of Israel) Emanuel Fabian - Israel carried out a wave of strikes in southern and eastern Lebanon Friday night and Saturday, targeting Hizbullah after it attacked IDF troops in violation of a day-old ceasefire. "In response to Hizbullah's attacks over the past two days, the IDF struck 300 terror targets and eliminated approximately 100 terrorists. If Hizbullah attacks us again, we will strike it forcefully once more," the Prime Minister's Office said. "The IDF will not accept harm to Israeli civilians and its forces, and will respond forcefully to any use of force against them," the military said, adding that the Hizbullah targets struck Saturday included rocket launchers, weapon depots and command centers.

Dozens of Hizbullah Terrorists Trapped as IDF Controls Key Fortified Compound

on June 20, 2026
(Ynet News) Yossi Yehoshua - The IDF has operational control over the fortified underground Ali Taher Ridge compound near the city of Nabatieh, considered one of Hizbullah's nerve centers in southern Lebanon. According to security officials, the fighting in the southern sector is directed from the site, fire arrays are operated from there, and large quantities of weapons are stored there. Dozens of Hizbullah terrorists are trapped inside the compound with no ability to leave. Heavy exchanges of fire between the IDF and Hizbullah continued Saturday.

Israel Tells U.S. It Is Committed to Lebanon Ceasefire and Responding Only to Hizbullah Violations

on June 20, 2026
(Israel Hayom) Danny Zaken - Israel told the U.S. over the weekend that IDF forces in southern Lebanon are committed to the ceasefire. All fire from Israel is in response to Hizbullah violations, operational fire intended to evacuate casualties, and preemptive fire against rocket launchers. After each incident since Thursday night, contacts were held with the Americans at all levels, including between the Prime Minister's Office and the White House. Diplomatic sources say Iran was behind all the weekend attacks in which five IDF soldiers were killed. Israel had warned the Americans in advance that linking the memorandum of understanding to the situation in Lebanon would lead to an escalation of the confrontation with Hizbullah, and that Iran would initiate attacks to create the crisis and deepen the rift between Jerusalem and Washington. Former Israeli ambassador to the U.S. Ron Dermer warned that the sensitivity of relations with the U.S. at this time, after the memorandum of understanding, requires Israel not to be seen by the administration as the party destroying American efforts to end the war. He warned against direct attacks on the president.

Choking Hizbullah in Lebanon

on June 20, 2026
(Ynet News) Elisha Ben Kimon - The ceasefire agreement in Lebanon, announced Friday, does not mark the end of the IDF campaign. The IDF has been seizing key positions meant to deny Hizbullah the vast strategic assets it has built over decades in southern Lebanon. While the advance of its forces has been halted, the IDF is firmly established inside the "forward defense area," a dominant strategic strip from which it does not intend to move backward. The territory it holds gives the IDF fire control around two Hizbullah centers of gravity: Nabatieh in the eastern sector and the Tyre Valley in the western sector.

IDF Publishes Map of Southern Lebanon Deployment

on June 20, 2026
(Ynet News) Elisha Ben Kimon - The IDF on Thursday published a map showing where its forces are currently operating in southern Lebanon. The working assumption in Israel is that the U.S. memorandum of understanding with Iran will not lead to a final agreement. A second working assumption is that Israel must preserve its hold in Lebanon at least until after the U.S. midterm elections in November. IDF forces are deployed in some areas as far as 10 km. inside Lebanese territory, and in other areas about 6 km. deep. For now, local residents are not expected to return to the villages where the IDF maintains control. The military is also preserving its freedom of action against threats beyond the security line.

Israel Stunned by Trump's Iran Deal

on June 20, 2026
(New York Times) David M. Halbfinger - Israel awoke to a new reality on Thursday as it absorbed the terms of President Trump's preliminary agreement to end the war with Iran. It accomplishes none of Israel's war aims. The deal's requirement that American forces retreat from the "proximity" of Iran within 30 days means that Iran can boast that it has chased the U.S. military out of the region. The agreement does nothing to address Iran's missile arsenal or its support of Iran's proxy militias, like Hizbullah in Lebanon and the Houthis in Yemen. By requiring that Israel withdraw its forces from Lebanon, the agreement seeks to handcuff Israel in a way that it was not before the war. The hundreds of billions of dollars that Iran may receive in sanctions relief, unfrozen assets, or reconstruction aid could wind up funding more missiles in Iran and aiding Tehran's militia allies around the Middle East. "It's a bad agreement in which the Americans are paying with cash, and got, at the maximum, a letter of intent," said Maj.-Gen. (res.) Yaakov Amidror, a former national security adviser to the Israeli prime minister and chairman of Israel's National Security Council. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Thursday that "additional challenges lie ahead of us," requiring "calmness, a firm stance on our security interests, and at the same time, maintaining the important connection with our American friends." He added that Israel "requires maintaining the security zone in southern Lebanon, and it requires that we not withdraw from it as long as Israel's security needs demand it."

Trump Achieved a Historic Victory in Iran but Gives the Regime an Opening to Recover

on June 20, 2026
(Washington Post) Marc A. Thiessen - President Trump buried Iran's nuclear material so deep that, senior officials tell me, Iran has indicated the U.S. will have to dig it up because it can't reach it to hand over. He also took out over 85% of Iran's defense industrial base; sank its navy; grounded its air force; damaged its centrifuges; and decimated its ballistic missile capabilities, conventional military forces, and infrastructure of repression. Today, Iran's top leadership has been annihilated, the regime can no longer project power in the Middle East, and it possesses only a "nuisance" capability, according to Adm. Brad Cooper, head of U.S. Central Command. We need to keep Iran in that weakened state. The deal Trump signed helps Iran get up off the mat - without having to do virtually anything in return. After weeks of bombing, Iran is debilitated, but it is not chastened. The regime is determined to rebuild. It knows that Trump is only president for another 2 1/2 years. In paragraph 7, the U.S. agrees that as part of a final deal it will "terminate all types of sanctions against the Islamic Republic of Iran...and all unilateral U.S. sanctions." This includes sanctions related to Iran's support for terror, ballistic missiles and human rights violations - none of which Iran will have agreed to give up. Many U.S. sanctions can be removed only by Congress.

Israel Knew the Americans Wanted an Agreement with Iran at Almost Any Cost

on June 20, 2026
(Israel Hayom) Amit Segal - There is no need to be too impressed by the attacks on Israel and on Netanyahu that accompanied the Iran agreement. This is just the rhetorical justification for the main move, which is wrapping up the affair while continuously bombing rhetorically anyone perceived as interfering. The most recent conversation between President Trump and Prime Minister Netanyahu was surprisingly friendly. The assessment voiced by Netanyahu himself in discussions was that the Americans want an agreement at almost any cost. For many weeks, Israel has known that the agreement would not include stopping the funding of terrorism and shutting down the ballistic missile array. Hizbullah is in a desperate situation. Linking the two fronts will not only save it but make it easier for it to resume harassing the residents of northern Israel. There is a national consensus in Israel on the war with Hizbullah.

Is Iran Really a "Normal Country"?

on June 20, 2026
(Wall Street Journal) Editorial - Vice President JD Vance said on CNN: "What the agreement [with Iran] does is fundamentally set up a structure whereby if the Iranians behave like a normal country, then we want to treat them like a normal country and welcome them to the world economy." But the regime in Iran has never shown over 47 years that it wants to build a normal country or "join the international community." At every turn it has banked U.S. relief and concessions and used them to promote terrorism and spread its Shiite revolution. Every U.S. President since 1979 has had the same wish, only to discover the regime had other plans. Mr. Vance insisted that Iran's regime is "a much different group of people" for whom "something has fundamentally transformed." But there's scant evidence for it. Iran's new Supreme Leader says the only place for Americans in the Persian Gulf is "at the bottom of its waters." The regime fired on its Gulf neighbors, U.S. forces and commercial ships throughout the ceasefire and even after the deal was announced. Like so many before it, the Trump Administration wants to believe this regime is other than what it has shown itself to be. No matter what was intimated in back-channel talks, the unwillingness of Iran's regime to put substantive nuclear commitments in the memorandum of understanding is a warning.

The War for the Sea Routes

on June 20, 2026
(Jerusalem Center for Security and Foreign Affairs) Sagiv Steinberg - For decades, the West has treated the world's oceans as an open domain governed by universal norms emphasizing freedom of navigation. Yet, actions by Iran and the Houthis in Yemen have fundamentally challenged this assumption. What used to be categorized as sporadic piracy has now emerged as a strategic tool of modern warfare. The major strategic straits represent critical chokepoints whose control or disruption can sway the course of global trade, energy security, and geopolitical power balances. Prominent among them are the Strait of Hormuz, Bab el-Mandeb, Suez Canal, Strait of Malacca, Panama Canal, Bosporus, Strait of Gibraltar, Bering Strait, and Danish Straits. Here, radical regimes and determined regional actors seek to override international maritime conventions with methods of political blackmail and extortion. Iran has effectively declared war on the open maritime system. Israel's prosperity relies heavily on secure maritime corridors linking the Mediterranean to the Red Sea. The writer is CEO and director of communications at the Jerusalem Center.

Gulf States Hesitant to Fund Iran Reconstruction

on June 20, 2026
(Jerusalem Post) Danielle Greyman-Kennard - Gulf states will likely be reluctant to contribute to Iran's reconstruction after months of unprovoked attacks, regional experts told the Jerusalem Post on Thursday. Vice President JD Vance told CBS that Iran could receive a $300 billion reconstruction fund backed by Gulf states. Bahraini analyst Dr. Ahmed Alkhuzaie said that while Gulf states were likely relieved by the "tactical pause," there is fear that the financial terms of the Iran agreement would allow it to further destabilize the region. The release of frozen Iranian funds and the lifting of sanctions could "empower Tehran's regional networks of militias and proxies, reinforcing the very threats the MoU was meant to contain," he explained. It would free resources for Iran to invest in its militias in Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, and Yemen "that directly threaten Gulf security." While Gulf leaders "welcome the ceasefire and reopening of Hormuz, they fear the agreement may empower Iran rather than restrain it." After suffering months of attacks from Iran, the American commitment raises "the uncomfortable question of whether Gulf states would indirectly contribute to rebuilding the very adversary that targeted their infrastructure." Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Bahrain all feel that the fund "risks rewarding aggression and undermining deterrence." Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan told Al Arabiya on Wednesday that trust in Iran would need to be rebuilt before financial investments could be addressed. Oman and Qatar would also "struggle to justify Gulf financial participation when public opinion remains raw from the damage inflicted on energy facilities, ports, and civilian infrastructure." "For Gulf states that have suffered direct attacks, the idea of channeling funds into Iran's reconstruction is not only politically implausible, but economically irrational, as it would expose investors to heightened risks while strengthening a state still perceived as a strategic adversary."

Trump's U.S.-Iran Deal Hands Hizbullah a Lifeline

on June 20, 2026
(Jerusalem Center for Security and Foreign Affairs) Col. (ret.) Dr. Jacques Neriah - The memorandum of understanding between the U.S. and Iran explicitly incorporates Lebanon into the framework's halt to hostilities, fundamentally constraining Israeli national security. It freezes a conflict that Israel was working hard to keep separate from broader international diplomacy, leaving a battle-hardened Hizbullah firmly planted on its northern border and straining the foundations of the U.S.-Israel alliance. For months, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) have carried out a wide-ranging offensive in southern Lebanon to ensure the safe return of its displaced northern residents. Israel's military strategy depended on the freedom to continue operations until Hizbullah was decisively and permanently neutralized. The agreement dismantles this strategy. By placing strict limitations on Israeli military activity in Lebanon, Washington is in effect protecting Hizbullah's core military capabilities. Pushed into an unwanted and premature ceasefire, Israel's freedom of action has been curtailed by its closest ally, while its most immediate existential threat remains intact, actively rearming, and shielded by an international agreement. The writer, a special analyst for the Middle East at the Jerusalem Center, was formerly Deputy Head for Assessment of Israeli Military Intelligence.

IDF Commander on Capturing the Beaufort Fortress in Lebanon

on June 20, 2026
(Ynet News) Raanan Shaked - Lt.-Col. Bar Vackert, commander of the Golani Brigade reconnaissance battalion, led the IDF's return to the Beaufort fortress. He says, "As we were fighting in the villages of southern Lebanon, they fired anti-tank missiles and indirect fire at us from the direction of Beaufort....They are constantly shooting from there. So you want to get there." "We found an underground system there, a very large tunnel network, hundreds of meters long, with levels, ladders and rooms. From there, they fired and launched attacks on Israel, and that underground system alone justified getting there....The Beaufort ridge is a key terrain area with very great operational importance. It looks 360 degrees over the entire Nabatieh plateau on one side, and toward Metula and Israel on the other. You sit there and you control." Q: Were soldiers afraid? Vackert: "No. Every time I am surprised again that before these attacks, I have thoughts, concerns, and then I see the team commanders and the soldiers, and they have no concerns at all. They go out to attack, run, leap forward, shoot without fear. It is amazing to see. They have such a passion to complete the mission that they are completely locked in. Nothing else interests them." "In every village in southern Lebanon we reached, small or large, we always found weapons and explosives inside homes, inside children's rooms. It is unbelievable in an extreme way. There was not a single village where we did not find terror infrastructure and positions....The other side needs to understand that the price of firing at [Israeli] residents is very heavy, and that it will only keep losing more and more."

Fighting the Same War in Lebanon

on June 20, 2026
(Jerusalem Post) Tuvia Book - 37 years ago, I was serving in the Israeli security zone in southern Lebanon as a combat medic. Before we set out on our daily patrols and nightly anti-terrorist ambushes, our mission briefing ended with: "Our mission is to defend the northern Israeli communities (from Hizbullah terrorists)." Almost four decades later, I am in the same place, with the same mission statement. When I fought to reenlist in the IDF after the Oct. 7 massacre - becoming the oldest combat medic in the IDF - I would not have thought that I would still be serving on an emergency call-up almost three years later. Every week we are still losing our best. This is not even factoring in the many wounded soldiers who my unit treats on an almost daily basis, whose lives will never be the same again. We are still fighting Hizbullah, which is still entrenched in Lebanese society. Tens of thousands of Israelis are still unable, or do not want, to return home. Israel is the only country that is not allowed, by its "allies," to win a war.

Trump's Iran Deal Has Already Emboldened Hamas

on June 20, 2026
(Gatestone Institute) Khaled Abu Toameh - In response to the U.S. "Memorandum of Understanding" with Iran, Hamas is openly calling to escalate attacks against Israel and signaling its intention to shift the center of its jihad (holy war) from Gaza to the West Bank. To Hamas and the rest of Iran's "Axis of Resistance," the deal between Washington and Tehran is being interpreted as a sign of American weakness and a victory for the Iranian regime - and proof that the U.S. is eager to end conflicts at virtually any price. The U.S. has agreed in principle to Iran's terms. Hamas officials have therefore been intensifying their calls for Palestinians to increase "all forms of resistance" and confront Israelis throughout the West Bank. According to Palestinian media affiliated with Hamas, 243 acts of "resistance" were recorded during May alone, including shootings, car-ramming attacks, armed clashes, demonstrations, and confrontations with Israeli security forces. Israel reached several ceasefire agreements with Hamas in Gaza. Hamas repeatedly violated them. Israel reached understandings with Hizbullah in Lebanon. Hizbullah violated them. The U.S. reached ceasefires with Iran. Iran violated them. International agreements and diplomatic arrangements do not persuade terrorist organizations in the Middle East to abandon their jihadist ideology or their objective of destroying Israel. Does anyone seriously believe that Iran and its proxies will behave differently now? Those celebrating an agreement with Iran should pay close attention to what Hamas is saying. Iran and the terrorists clearly believe they are winning.

U.S. Policy to Israel: Affirm Security, Resist Outright Victory

on June 20, 2026
(RealClear World) Lenny Ben-David - President Trump's acceptance of the Iran regime's demands are unsettling. He has declared that Iran's leaders are reasonable and that Israel's actions in response to Iran and Hizbullah's attacks are irresponsible. For decades, U.S. policy toward Israel has followed a consistent pattern: affirm Israel's security and capacity to deter, while resisting efforts that would produce an outright, transformative Israeli military victory. This approach has recurred across administrations from Dwight Eisenhower through Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, Barack Obama, Donald Trump, and Joe Biden. Washington has often concluded that a managed military outcome better serves long-term American and regional interests than an unqualified victory on the battlefield. The writer, a former AIPAC official and Israeli diplomat, is a research fellow at the Jerusalem Center for Security and Foreign Affairs.

What Israel Achieved in Iran, and What Threats Remain

on June 20, 2026
(Ynet News) Ron Ben-Yishai - Setting back Iran's nuclear and missile programs by years was of strategic significance. But the memorandum of understanding that Trump was maneuvered into by the Iranians gave the ayatollahs a psychological victory that will strengthen their ability to survive and suppress their people, as well as an economic lifeline that will grow and enable them to rebuild capabilities and repair the destruction. Contrary to claims by opponents of the war in the U.S., Netanyahu did not drag the Americans into it. But in the U.S. media, the perception took hold that Israel had enticed Trump into a war that did not serve American interests and amounted to a glaring waste of resources. Israel launched its June 2025 attack on Iran because the Iranians had taken steps that could have given them, within a short time, the knowledge and physical capability to produce an initial nuclear explosive device. Such a capability, combined with the large quantity of uranium that had already been enriched to 60% - almost weapons-grade - created a real atomic weapons threat within months. Trump stopped Israel after 12 days, but only after it had achieved nearly 80% of its military objectives. Trump completed the mission with American bombers, putting the Fordow enrichment facility - which Israel could not neutralize on its own - out of action for a long time. Based on what is known, the nuclear program was set back by 3-5 years. Today, Iran cannot break out to a nuclear weapon, even if it has immediate secret access to some of the material and even if a hidden enrichment facility exists. Israel destroyed many launchers and missiles, as well as production facilities for missiles and the materials used to manufacture fuels and explosives. But the ballistic missile threat remains. The intelligence community had information by early 2026 showing that Iran had a plan to destroy Israel with conventional means. At its center was producing thousands of ballistic missiles and launching dozens or hundreds in each barrage, overwhelming the air defense systems of Israel and the U.S. together. On the eve of the operation in Feb. 2026, Iran had 2,500 long-range ballistic missiles and several hundred launchers, most of them hidden in tunnels and missile cities beneath rock layers more than 100 meters thick. Because Israel does not have bombs capable of directly penetrating to such depths, and the Americans had only a very limited number of bombs of the type used at Fordow, it was decided to seal the entrances to the tunnels and missile cities so the launchers could not emerge. But the Iranians prepared huge bulldozers in advance, cleared the rocks and dirt blocking the entrances, and resumed launches within days. More than 50% of Iran's launchers and missiles were put out of action, but it still has more than 1,000 missiles of all types and ranges. The main strategic achievement of the IDF and the U.S. military was the systematic and extensive destruction of defense industry plants and Iran's massive research and development infrastructure. This means Iran's ability to reproduce large quantities of missiles that would allow it to overwhelm Israel's defense systems has been neutralized for a long time, probably 2-3 years, even if the U.S. releases large financial resources to Iran.

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