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Israel News

Daily Alert

Iran Rejects U.S. Ceasefire Plan, Issues Its Own Demands

on March 25, 2026
(AP) Jon Gambrell - Iran on Wednesday dismissed an American plan to pause the war in the Middle East and launched more attacks on Israel and Gulf Arab countries. Iran's state-run Press TV quoted an official as saying Iran rejected America's ceasefire proposal and has its own demands for an end to the fighting. "Iran will end the war when it decides to do so and when its own conditions are met," he said. Press TV cited an Iranian five-point plan that included reparations for the war and Iran's "exercise of sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz." The strait is viewed as international waters.

Trump Tells Aides He Wants Speedy End to Iran War

on March 25, 2026
(Wall Street Journal) Annie Linskey - President Trump has told associates in recent days that he wants to avoid a protracted war in Iran and that he hopes to bring the conflict to an end in the coming weeks. The president has privately informed advisers he thinks the conflict is in its final stages, urging them to stick to the four-to-six-week timeline he has outlined publicly. Ending the war isn't up to Trump alone. Without a deal or a firm military victory, Trump is likely to face the continued blocking of the Strait of Hormuz.

IDF Accelerating Strikes as Possibility of U.S.-Iran Ceasefire Looms

on March 25, 2026
(New York Times) David M. Halbfinger - With the growing potential for talks between the U.S. and Iran, on Tuesday, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ordered that every effort be made over the next 48 hours to destroy as much of the Iranian arms industry as possible, senior Israeli officials said.

Gulf Countries Want Trump to End Iran War - but Not Yet

on March 25, 2026
(Washington Post) Susannah George - As the Trump administration makes initial peace overtures to Iran, U.S. allies in the Persian Gulf have become fearful of a hasty settlement that leaves the region less stable. Saudi Arabia and the UAE are lobbying for a decisive end to the war. If Tehran doesn't agree to severe restrictions on its missile, drone and nuclear programs, Saudi and Emirati leadership have indicated they would support an escalated military campaign, European and Arab officials said. Tehran, for its part, does not appear ready to give in. Qatar, Kuwait and Bahrain support the Saudi and Emirati positions. "They want a humble Iran," said a senior European official. "Iran believes they are winning," and agreeing to a ceasefire now would set a precedent that Tehran can launch attacks against its neighbors and shut the Strait of Hormuz for leverage in the future, one Arab official said. He said other regional officials are also concerned that Hizbullah in Lebanon would be empowered if the U.S. agreed to a ceasefire now. Iranian attacks in the Persian Gulf have jarred the region. Iranian drone attacks struck luxury hotels, airports and energy infrastructure, causing tens of billions of dollars in damage. U.S. allies in the Persian Gulf "want to reestablish some sort of balance of deterrence," attempting to identify ways to dissuade continued Iranian attacks without making themselves more vulnerable, said Andreas Krieg, a Middle East analyst and lecturer at Kings College London.

IDF Soldier Killed in Southern Lebanon

on March 25, 2026
(Ynet News) Elisha Ben Kimon - Staff Sgt. Ori Greenberg, 21, who served in the Golani Brigade's reconnaissance unit, was killed in combat in southern Lebanon overnight, the IDF said Thursday.

Iranian Missile Strike Wounds Five in Israeli Arab City

on March 25, 2026
(Ynet News) Elisha Ben Kimon - An Iranian cluster missile wounded five people in the Israeli Arab city of Kafr Qasem on Thursday morning.

Israel Dismantles Hamas Terror Cell in Samaria

on March 25, 2026
(Ynet News) Elisha Ben Kimon - Israeli security forces have dismantled a Hamas terror cell involving 10 Palestinians from the Nablus area who dug a tunnel to hold a kidnapped Israeli and carried out multiple attacks over the past two years, authorities said Wednesday. The cell carried out several roadside bombing attacks against IDF troops in March and April 2025, wounding three soldiers, two of them seriously, as well as shooting attacks.

No, Trump's War in Iran Hasn't Been a Humiliating Defeat

on March 25, 2026
(Telegraph-UK) Allister Heath - Does the West's expert class really believe that the war against Iran is a disaster? It is far too soon to conclude how this war will end, regardless of what Iranian propagandists and other appeasers would have us believe. There are a number of principal errors clouding "expert" judgments in the West. The first is the European establishment's inability to accept the scale of Iran's defeats since the Oct. 7, 2023, pogroms against Israel. The regime's decades-long plan for regional domination lies in tatters. It has wasted tens of billions of dollars, its proxies have been defanged, its economy plunged into depression, its mainland ravaged with 20,000 targets bombed, its navy sunk, its air defenses crippled, its missile stock and launchers decimated, its military-industrial complex blown up, and its nuclear capacity curtailed. It is a strange kind of victory which has seen Iran fail to shoot down a single U.S. or Israeli manned plane or sink a single ship. The reality is that Iran has been downgraded from regional superpower to a pirate terror state, able only to shoot a few missiles and drones at civilian targets and to blackmail the shipping industry. It proved remarkably easy to kill Ali Khamenei. Iran failed to overwhelm U.S. and Israeli defense systems. The stockpiles of allied interceptors have not run out. The Gulf states turned out to be more resilient than anticipated. U.S. combat losses have been smaller than expected.

This War Requires a Conclusive Outcome that Addresses Tehran's Full Range of Threats

on March 25, 2026
(Wall Street Journal) Amb. Yousef Al Otaiba - The past weeks of war have confirmed what we have known for nearly 50 years - Iran's revolution is a threat to global security and economic stability. We can't let Iran hold the U.S., the UAE and the global economy hostage. A simple ceasefire isn't enough. We need a conclusive outcome that addresses Iran's full range of threats: nuclear capabilities, missiles, drones, terror proxies, and blockades of international sea lanes. Iran has launched more than 2,180 missiles and drones at the Emirates, far more than at any other country. We have hardened our infrastructure and built an oil pipeline to bypass the Strait of Hormuz. But the region needs a coordinated effort to reopen this vital passage and restore energy supplies to global consumers. We made clear to the Iranians that in the event of a war, UAE territory and airspace wouldn't be used for strikes on Iran. We knew we would be Iran's first choice of targets because we are so different. The UAE is a modern, progressive, prosperous Muslim society that delivers for its people. We empower women and welcome all faiths. The UAE is the argument Iran can't win, the idea it can't accept. We want Iran as a normal neighbor. It can be reclusive and even unwelcoming, but it can't attack its neighbors, blockade international waters, or export extremism. Wishing the problem goes away isn't the answer. It would simply defer the next crisis. The writer is the United Arab Emirates Ambassador to the U.S.

Build Alternative Pipelines to Make the Strait of Hormuz Irrelevant

on March 25, 2026
(Washington Post) Maj. (ret.) John Spencer - For decades, the world has accepted a dangerous reality: One of its most important energy arteries runs through the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow chokepoint repeatedly threatened by Iran. As long as the world depends on a narrow waterway, energy markets will remain vulnerable to coercion. The answer is to build infrastructure that makes the Strait of Hormuz strategically irrelevant. Some bypass routes already exist. Saudi Arabia operates the East-West Pipeline, which carries oil from the kingdom's Gulf oil fields to the Red Sea port of Yanbu. The UAE built the Habshan-Fujairah pipeline from Abu Dhabi directly to the Gulf of Oman. The Strait of Hormuz is a problem of infrastructure and strategy. The world has spent decades defending it. Now, the world needs to start investing in ways of bypassing it. The writer is chair of urban warfare studies at West Point's Modern War Institute.

Europe Is Deluded for Not Backing U.S. in Iran

on March 25, 2026
(Telegraph-UK) Editorial - The view from Europe's capitals appears to be that the war in Iran has nothing to do with them. But the notion that an end to this conflict without a clear U.S. victory would be positive for Europe is deluded. The Americans and Israelis appear to have achieved many of their objectives, including defanging the missile, drone and nuclear programs that have given Tehran such disproportionate influence in world affairs. But if Donald Trump decides to walk away now, after Tehran's campaign of blackmail in the Strait of Hormuz, the ayatollahs will still be perceived by many to have bested the U.S. Iran's neighbors no doubt also fear the consequences of a premature end to the conflict and a perceived victory for the ayatollahs.

Israel Has Been Preparing for War with Iran for Four Decades

on March 25, 2026
(Ha'aretz) Anshel Pfeffer - A war between Iran and Israel, or Iran and America, was in the cards for decades. Israel's F-15 and F-16 fighter-jets were purchased and upgraded specifically with extra fuel tanks and electronic warfare systems for long-range strikes, which were being rehearsed under previous Israeli prime ministers before Netanyahu returned to office in 2009. The same is true of the Arrow missile defense system, developed and ordered by Israeli governments before Netanyahu's first term in 1996. Every Israeli prime minister in the past four decades has been preparing and laying the groundwork for this war.

Iran's Strategic Doctrine of "Survive and Exhaust"

on March 25, 2026
(Foreign Affairs) Narges Bajoghli - Iran's strategic doctrine is "survive and exhaust." The goal is not to defeat the U.S. or Israel in any conventional sense. It is to show them both that the cost of confronting Iran is militarily, economically, and politically unsustainable. Tehran's job is to survive punishment long enough, and to inflict enough damage in return, that U.S. and Israeli will for continued conflict collapses. This strategy is working for now. Iran is absorbing strikes and continuing to function. Its military command has decentralized, and a new generation of commanders is even more willing than the old one to fight. If the Islamic Republic survives this war, it will be led by younger, combat-hardened commanders who believe they defeated the U.S. and Israel, despite the enormous cost. If these trends continue, the war could end with the Islamic Republic battered but intact. Iran would emerge weakened in its conventional capabilities but stronger in the one currency that has always mattered most to Tehran: the demonstrated ability to defend its sovereignty against the most powerful militaries in the world. Iran has had 35 years of preparation and a strategy calibrated to outlast rather than outgun. The writer is Associate Professor of Middle East Studies at the Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies.

Iran Is Fighting a War of Exhaustion

on March 25, 2026
(National Interest) Mark Kimmitt - Weeks into the war against Iran, the offensive capabilities of the Iranian regime have been degraded to a fraction of their prewar strength, and its defensive capabilities are nonexistent. The U.S. and Israel are fighting a war of attrition. Yet, the Iranians are fighting a different war - a war of exhaustion. Their objective is to absorb U.S. and Israeli attacks, hold on, hold out, and wait for the impatient Americans to tire. It is a war of will and defiance, not capacity, and it worked in Vietnam, in Afghanistan, and repeatedly in Southern Lebanon. For the Iranians, they win by not losing. After the seemingly interminable wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the American people are not looking for another long "war of choice" in the Middle East. Add in the upcoming congressional elections, and the Iranians see the obvious wisdom in patience. U.S. Army Brig.-Gen. (ret.) Mark Kimmitt served as assistant secretary of state for political-military affairs and as deputy assistant secretary of defense for the Middle East.

Hizbullah's War for Survival

on March 25, 2026
(Institute for National Security Studies) Lt.-Col. (ret.) Orna Mizrahi - Hizbullah decided on March 2 to open a front against Israel, after refraining from doing so during the 15 months since the ceasefire with Israel in November 2024, despite knowing that this move would exact a heavy price. Hizbullah sought to fulfill its commitment to Iran by drawing Israel into investing efforts on the Lebanese front, and out of concern that an Iranian defeat would lead to a halt or significant reduction in Iranian support. It also sought to improve its position in response to Israel's ongoing military operations against it and efforts by the Lebanese leadership to disarm it. Hizbullah used its entire arsenal, launching dozens to hundreds of missiles and UAVs daily, mainly at northern Israeli communities but also reaching the outskirts of Haifa. A small number of ballistic missiles were also launched toward central Israel, with one even reaching the Israeli communities around Gaza. From Israel's perspective, a war with Hizbullah alongside a war with Iran is not an optimal scenario. However, Hizbullah's entry into the conflict has worked in Israel's favor. Israel was prepared for another round in the north and appears to view the situation as an opportunity to act against Hizbullah. Its objective in Lebanon is to disarm the organization and eliminate the threat it poses. It appears that military operations against Hizbullah will continue even after the war with Iran ends. The U.S., which shows only limited interest in the campaign against Hizbullah, has also granted it legitimacy. Accordingly, even if Hizbullah is not fully disarmed, the continuation of the campaign is expected to significantly degrade its capabilities, severely undermine its domestic standing, and reduce Iran's ability to support it. The writer, a senior researcher at INSS, served for 26 years in the IDF and 12 years in Israel's National Security Council.

IDF: Lebanese Army Lied about Demilitarizing Southern Lebanon

on March 25, 2026
(Jerusalem Post) Amir Bohbot - The Lebanese army lied to the IDF about its operations to disarm and dismantle Hizbullah in southern Lebanon, Israeli officers say, and now that the military is again operating in the area, it is discovering Hizbullah has reestablished itself and its infrastructure. One officer remarked, "Based on what we found, it's clear that nothing was done" by the Lebanese army. According to officers in the IDF Northern Command, a significant percentage of Shiites serving in the Lebanese army are affiliated with Hizbullah.

The "Failed War" Narrative on Iran Is Political Spin

on March 25, 2026
(JNS) Jonathan S. Tobin - The debate currently taking place about the Iran war is not about the desirability of stopping Iran's nuclear ambitions, its ballistic-missile program, or ending its status as the world's leading state sponsor of terror. It's an assertion that the U.S.-Israel military campaign is failing in its goals. And that is palpably false. No matter what follows, there is no question that the devastation of Iran's military capabilities, nuclear facilities, and missile program has, at the very least, set back the regime's ability to make mischief and inflict pain on the region for years to come. Should the campaign continue, that damage will be compounded. No longer is Iran the "strong horse" of the Middle East. It's true that the conflict with Iran will never end until the Islamists are out of power. If Trump accepts a truce at some point with the theocrats still in control, Tehran will declare itself victorious. Yet what Trump and the Israelis have done is give the regime's opponents a better chance of success. The U.S. and Israel have cut their oppressors down to size, killing their leaders and many of their operatives, and, perhaps most importantly, humiliating them with a resounding military defeat. Even if the Iran campaign ended immediately, the devastation that it wrought on the regime should still be counted as a success. Israel has suffered through weeks of missile attacks, including some that have caused casualties and significant property damage. The U.S. has also suffered military casualties. But a dispassionate analysis would have to acknowledge that a dangerous regime that considers itself at war with the West, and allied to China and Russia, has been rendered far weaker. Whatever chance the Iranians had of racing to a nuclear weapon or achieving their hopes to dominate the Middle East is gone. The war is not a personal project of Trump or Netanyahu. It is one started by the Islamists themselves. What Trump has done is to stop pretending that this existential struggle is something that can be solved by Western compromises. The effort to strip the mullahs of their military assets and make it much harder, if not impossible, to regain the strength they possessed before the current conflict was set in motion by the Oct. 7 atrocities. At worst, the current conflict is a limited victory over a dangerous foe that will make the next round of conflict less dangerous for the West and Iran's Middle Eastern neighbors. At best, it has started a process that will eventually end with the collapse of an evil regime and the removal of one of the greatest threats to peace on the planet.

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