
Inside_Israel_Intel
@inside_IL_intel • 83,438 subscribers
Ex-IDF. Unfiltered strategic analysis on Israel security, the region & US policy. No spin, real experience. Author of Contested Land, Uncontested Truth.
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A former Hamas hostage just blew up one of the most dangerous illusions surrounding October 7. Segev Kalfon, kidnapped from the Nova festival and held for hundreds of days in Hamas tunnels, says senior Hamas officials told him this to his face: They would promise Netanyahu there would be no October 7 Then massacre Jews on October 8 and 9 Not peace. Not restraint. Deliberate deception. Kalfon describes Hamas leaders openly mocking Qatar and the broader Muslim world. Their objective was not leverage or concessions. It was annihilation. He recounts long conversations with the commander of Hamas’s Nuseirat Battalion, a senior figure tied directly to Ismail Haniyeh’s inner circle. According to them, October 7 was only considered a “mistake” for one reason: Iran, Hezbollah, and the Muslim world did not show up to help. Not because of civilians. Not because of the brutality. Because they were left alone. This is the reality from inside the tunnels. No slogans. No theorizing. Firsthand testimony. Anyone still talking about “arrangements,” “understandings,” or “day after” fantasies with Hamas should listen carefully. This video matters.
Inside_Israel_Intel409,580 次观看 • 5 个月前

🇺🇸🇮🇷⚡️- Visual confirmation shows the F/A‑18F Super Hornet fighter jet being struck on the tail by an air defense system earlier today over southeastern Iran, likely by a MANPAD. 25 MAR 2026 | 23:09 ET ET SOURCE: Rerum Novarum // Intel, Breaking News, and Alerts 🇺🇸 (@rnintel)
Inside_Israel_Intel160,829 次观看 • 3 个月前

Israel Has Hit Nearly Everything It Planned To. Now What?... 🚨 OPERATIONAL UPDATE: ISRAEL U.S. WAR WITH IRAN - Reporting Window: Last 24 Hours Israel has now largely completed its preplanned strategic strike package inside Iran, while Iran’s response continues to degrade in scale but not in intent. At the same time, the northern front is heating back up, and regional actors are positioning for what comes next rather than what comes now. ✈️ STRATEGIC AIR CAMPAIGN OVER IRAN Israel has effectively finished its target list. The IDF now confirms that nearly all “vital and strategic” targets have been struck. Over the past 24 hours, operations focused on depth and completeness rather than expansion. Strikes hit a wide geographic spread including Tehran, Shiraz, Kermanshah, and Ahvaz, with particular emphasis on military-industrial infrastructure. Key targets included: *⃣ Approximately 20 weapons production and R&D fa cilities in Tehran *⃣ Mehrabad Airport and adjacent regime-linked infrastructure *⃣ A chemical supply node tied to SPND, Iran’s weapons development apparatus At the same time, Israel continued its shift into economic warfare. The destruction of major components of Mobarakeh Steel, Iran’s largest industrial complex, is not tactical. It is strategic degradation of long-term national capacity. What changed here is straightforward. This is no longer a shaping campaign. This is a completion phase. Israel has moved from identifying targets to executing them, and now toward locking in the strategic outcome. 🚀 IRANIAN MISSILE ACTIVITY Iran is still responding, but the character of that response has changed. In the latest barrage, roughly 10 ballistic missiles were launched in the opening wave. That makes it one of the larger salvos in recent weeks, but still far below earlier peak volumes. Most were intercepted, and physical damage was limited, though civilian impact remains real, particularly through panic, injuries, and indirect casualties. The important distinction is this: Iran still has the stockpile, but not the operational tempo. Its retaliation doctrine remains intact. It continues to mirror categories of targets struck inside Iran, expanding at times to civilian and economic infrastructure in Israel and across the Gulf. But the scale is no longer overwhelming. It is calibrated. 🔥 NORTHERN FRONT: LEBANON ESCALATION While Iran slows, the northern front is doing the opposite. Hezbollah resumed intense rocket fire into northern Israel, including a direct hit in Kiryat Shmona that caused multiple injuries. In response, Israeli operations intensified significantly. In the last 24 hours: *⃣ Over 40 Hezbollah fighters were killed *⃣ A senior Hezbollah commander was eliminated in Beirut *⃣ The IDF began systematically destroying homes used for launch positions and surveillance This marks a clear doctrinal shift. Israel is no longer just responding to fire. It is shaping the battlefield, likely toward a buffer-zone model similar to early phases of Gaza operations. 🌍 REGIONAL AND GLOBAL DIPLOMATIC MOVEMENT Diplomatic activity is accelerating for one reason. The military phase is stabilizing. President Trump again stated that the war is nearing completion, though notably without offering a clear timeline or exit structure. That ambiguity is now a central feature of the conflict’s political layer. At the same time: *⃣ Pakistan has emerged as a potential mediator between the U.S. and Iran *⃣ Gulf and European states are pushing for de-escalation frameworks *⃣ Discussions are increasingly focused on maritime security and the Strait of Hormuz The UAE, in particular, has highlighted the scale of Iranian regional attacks, reporting hundreds of intercepted missiles and drones while framing Iran’s actions as violations of sovereignty and international law. This is no longer just about the battlefield. It is about shaping the post-war order. ⚠️ INTERNAL IRAN PRESSURE Inside Iran, pressure is building across multiple fronts. The economy is entering a wartime shock phase, with inflation rising sharply and essential goods becoming harder to access. At the same time, the regime continues internal crackdowns, including executions tied to earlier protests. There are also signs of instability at higher levels. The reported assassination attempt on former foreign minister Kamal Kharazi adds another layer of uncertainty, whether internal or externally driven. Public trust is eroding. Information control is weakening. The internal environment is becoming more volatile, not less. 🧭 THE BIG PICTURE What changed in the last 24 hours is not the scale of the war. It is the clarity of its trajectory. Israel has largely completed its strategic objectives inside Iran. Iran continues to respond, but at a reduced and more controlled pace. The center of gravity is shifting away from large-scale strikes and toward political positioning. At the same time, the Lebanon front is emerging as the most active and unpredictable theater. 🧠 MY ASSESSMENT This is the phase most observers misread. The war is not ending because Iran has collapsed or because stability has been achieved. It is moving toward an endpoint because the core objectives have been demonstrated. Israel and the United States have shown that they can penetrate Iran at will, dismantle critical infrastructure, and do so without being pulled into a prolonged ground conflict. That changes the strategic equation. Even if the regime remains in place, the message is now unmistakable. Military dominance does not require occupation. Deterrence no longer depends on long wars. And that lesson will not be lost on Iran, Hezbollah, the Houthis, or any actor watching how this conflict unfolded.
Inside_Israel_Intel129,155 次观看 • 3 个月前

🚨 The last 24 hours didn’t change the war in Iran. They clarified where it’s heading. *⃣ Israel struck inside Tehran again, with the IDF confirming a wide wave targeting regime infrastructure in the capital. Open-source reporting points to repeated explosions in western Tehran’s Chitgar area, including sites linked to IRGC aerospace activity, with indications of deeper penetration into command and operational systems. *⃣ Iran launched multiple coordinated barrages into central Israel, triggering nationwide alerts across Tel Aviv, Jerusalem, and the coastal plain. A ballistic missile struck a residential area, while cluster munitions and interception debris caused localized damage and light injuries across multiple locations. *⃣ The U.S. paused energy-site strikes while preparing escalation options, extending the timeline for targeting Iran’s energy infrastructure while weighing deployment of up to 10,000 additional troops and potential expanded operations. Over the last 24 hours, the battlefield didn’t shift in a dramatic new direction. But the trajectory became clearer. Inside Iran, the campaign is now visibly centered on Tehran itself, not just peripheral military sites. Repeated strikes in western districts and areas associated with IRGC aerospace infrastructure point to a focused effort to degrade missile and operational command capabilities. Additional reporting suggests targeted eliminations remain part of the campaign, though confirmation remains mixed. On the Israeli side, Iran demonstrated it can still impose disruption at scale. The latest attacks included multiple waves in a single day, with at least one confirmed impact in a residential area and additional injuries caused by shrapnel and cluster dispersal. The operational effect is less about mass casualties and more about sustained pressure on Israel’s civilian core. The diplomatic picture also became clearer, not because of progress, but because of contradiction. Washington has paused strikes on Iran’s energy infrastructure for 10 days while pushing for a deal, even as Tehran denies requesting the pause and rejects key elements of the U.S. position. At the same time, Iran appears to be selectively modulating pressure in the Strait of Hormuz, allowing limited passage in what U.S. officials have framed as a gesture, even as broader threats to Gulf energy infrastructure remain in place. At the same time, the U.S. is preparing for the opposite outcome. Planning continues for additional troop deployments and potential escalation scenarios, including operations targeting Kharg Island, the terminal responsible for the majority of Iran’s oil exports. Control of that node would directly threaten the regime’s primary revenue stream, but would also carry significant risk of wider regional retaliation. Israel, for its part, appears to be acting on the assumption that its window is limited. Reporting indicates directives to accelerate strikes against Iran’s military-industrial base, including missile and drone production, before any diplomatic outcome can constrain operations. Put together, the signal is this: ➡️The war is not expanding dramatically right now. It is tightening. ➡️Israel is pushing deeper into the infrastructure that sustains Iran’s military capability, now centered on Tehran. ➡️Iran is relying on intermittent but still disruptive strikes that continue to reach Israel’s population centers. And the United States is positioning between negotiation and escalation at the same time, preparing options that could decisively shift the war if chosen. ➡️The gap between what Washington says is happening and what Tehran is willing to accept is now as important as the fighting itself. **Special thanks to Michael W for his continued contribution to the open-source intel picture behind these updates. If you aren't already, you need to give him a follow!
Inside_Israel_Intel128,925 次观看 • 3 个月前

— 🇮🇱/🇱🇧/🇮🇷 NEW: The IDF has begun issuing ‘SMASH’ attachments for rifles en-masse, to counter the threat of FPV drones in Lebanon The ‘SMASH Handheld’ or ‘Pigyon’ in Hebrew is an attachment for guns that tracks targets and calculates exactly when to pull the trigger to achieve a successful hit. It has already been used by the IDF in Gaza in limited quantities, where it was observed to increase hit rates by 4x, but it is allegedly even more effective against FPV drones. Middle_East_Spectator 08 MAY 2026 | 19:13 ET ET SOURCE: Middle East Spectator — MES
Inside_Israel_Intel73,355 次观看 • 1 个月前

🚨 While you were asleep, the war shifted. Here’s how... OPERATIONAL UPDATE: ISRAEL U.S. WAR WITH THE ISLAMIC REPUBLIC - 3/25 to 3/26 • Israel sustained a broad overnight strike campaign inside Iran, with Reuters reporting a wide new strike wave and your outbox capturing repeated explosions and reported air activity in Isfahan, Shiraz, Tehran, Bandar Abbas, Qeshm, Najafabad, Khomeini Shahr, and other locations. • Iran’s direct fire into Israel remained dangerous but uneven. A missile fell near Hadera in what appeared to be an attempted strike near the Orot Rabin power station, while additional Iranian missile waves hit central Israel on Thursday morning. • Hezbollah kept the northern and central threat picture active, with Israeli and Jerusalem Post reporting indicating rocket fire toward northern Israel and the Tel Aviv area while Israel continued strikes on Hezbollah infrastructure in Lebanon. • Diplomacy did not meaningfully advance. Reuters reported Tehran is reviewing a U.S. proposal while rejecting the idea of actual negotiations, demanding formal control of Hormuz, guarantees against renewed attacks, and Lebanon’s inclusion in any ceasefire framework. • The Gulf and wider regional fronts stayed central. Kuwait’s airport fuel tank was hit by a drone, Gulf states told the U.N. Iranian attacks pose an existential threat, and your transcript underscored Tehran’s messaging that it intends to tie any endgame to Hormuz and potentially wider maritime pressure. The defining narrative in this reporting window was not a single headline strike but the shape of the war itself. Israel kept pressing deeper and wider inside Iran, Iran remained defiant in public while signaling maximalist terms through intermediaries, Hezbollah stayed fully engaged, and the Gulf front continued to harden. Tehran’s messaging was not the language of de escalation. It was the language of a regime trying to preserve leverage through Hormuz, Hezbollah, and regional coercion even as the military pressure on its own infrastructure intensified. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ *⃣ IRANIAN MISSILE ATTACKS ON ISRAEL The clearest operational signal on the Israeli home front was the missile that fell near Hadera. Times of Israel reported that the impact was in an open area near the IEC’s major power station and that no infrastructure damage was caused. That matters because the targeting logic appears to have been strategic infrastructure, not just another general population area. Open source intel reporting strengthens that reading with reporting tying the strike area to the Orot Rabin facility, later messaging that Iran had publicized the plant’s coordinates and described the earlier impact as a warning shot, and repeated confirmation that no major infrastructure damage was reported. At the same time, Reuters reported that by Thursday Iran had launched multiple new missile waves at Israel, with sirens in Tel Aviv and other areas and at least five people injured. That suggests the broader pattern is not that Iran has lost the ability to strike, but that its direct fire is becoming more intermittent and less dominant than earlier in the conflict. Reuters also cited CENTCOM commander Brad Cooper saying Iranian drone and missile launch rates are down by more than 90 percent. That is the important distinction this morning. Iran can still generate painful and politically charged attacks, especially when it tries to threaten energy or symbolic infrastructure, but the cadence looks less like sustained strategic pressure and more like punctuated salvos inside a broader degradation trend. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ *⃣ STRATEGIC AIR CAMPAIGN OVER IRAN The main operational story overnight was the continued spread of strikes across Iranian territory. Reuters reported that strikes hit a residential zone in Bandar Abbas, a village outside Shiraz where Tasnim said two teenage brothers were killed, and a university building in Isfahan, while the Israeli military said it had completed a wide scale wave of strikes targeting infrastructure in Iran. Open source intel adds the operational texture mainstream coverage only partly captured. It logged eyewitness and opposition sourced reporting of explosions or low flying aircraft in Malard, Shiraz, Tehran, Isfahan, Najafabad, Khomeini Shahr, Qeshm, Talesh, Bandar Abbas, and Aligudarz. It also captured claims of a possible targeted assassination attempt against senior Iranian naval figures in Bandar Abbas and reporting of smoke over the port city after a reported U.S. attempt on a senior figure. Those Bandar Abbas details remain less firmly confirmed than the wider strike wave itself, but they fit the pattern of pressure on Iran’s southern maritime and naval infrastructure. This is the key point. The strike campaign continues to broaden into much more than a narrow nuclear file. It is hitting military infrastructure, industrial capacity, maritime assets, command nodes, and whatever leadership or specialist personnel Israel and the U.S. assess as essential to Iran’s ability to keep fighting and regenerate capability. Reuters’ reporting that Israel completed another large infrastructure wave is consistent with that larger pattern. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ *⃣ LEBANON / HEZBOLLAH FRONT Lebanon remained fully tied to the main war. Reuters reported that Iran told intermediaries Lebanon must be included in any ceasefire arrangement, which is one of the clearest strategic indicators yet that Tehran sees Hezbollah’s position as inseparable from the end state it wants. On the ground, Hezbollah remained active. Jerusalem Post’s live coverage led with two injured after Hezbollah rocket fire in the north and referenced a missile near Hadera as part of the same broad war picture. Reuters separately reported Hezbollah chief Naim Qassem rejecting talks with Israel under fire and vowing fighters would continue “without limits.” Open source intelligence adds the tactical layer: Hezbollah had launched about 120 rockets from populated neighborhoods in Tyre since the start of the operation, that the IDF struck Hezbollah targets including a command center in Dahieh, and that Israeli aircraft eliminated a Hezbollah cell after it launched rockets at IDF forces in southern Lebanon. The practical takeaway is that Hezbollah is not behaving like a secondary theater waiting for diplomacy. It is still an active front and, diplomatically, one of Tehran’s key red lines. That makes Lebanon both a battlefield and a central piece of the bargaining struggle now underway. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ *⃣ GULF / HORMUZ / ENERGY WAR The Gulf front remained one of the most consequential dimensions of the war. Reuters reported that a drone hit a fuel tank at Kuwait International Airport, causing a fire but no casualties. Reuters also reported Gulf Arab states told the U.N. Human Rights Council that Iranian strikes now pose an existential threat. Reuters also reported that Iran is demanding formal control of the Strait of Hormuz as part of its position on ending the war, while AP described Tehran’s counterproposal as including sovereignty over the Strait and continued insistence on its own conditions. Reuters further noted that the Strait remains effectively closed and cited ADNOC chief Sultan Al Jaber calling Iran’s restriction of passage “economic terrorism.” Iranian state messaging framed Hormuz sovereignty, reparations, and guarantees against resumed attacks as core ceasefire conditions, and also warned of broader maritime pressure, including possible escalation around Bab al Mandab, which is highly relevant as a reflection of the regime’s messaging line. This is why the Gulf theater matters so much this morning. Tehran’s leverage is no longer just missiles into Israel. It is also maritime chokehold, energy disruption, and the threat of widening economic pain across the region and beyond. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ *⃣ POLITICAL / DIPLOMATIC DEVELOPMENTS Diplomatically, the most important development was not progress but clarity. Reuters reported that Iran is reviewing a U.S. ceasefire proposal but says there are no negotiations, while Iranian officials publicly mocked Washington’s claims that talks are under way. Reuters also reported the U.S. proposal contains sweeping demands ranging from dismantling Iran’s nuclear program and curbing missiles to effectively handing over control of Hormuz, while Tehran is demanding guarantees, compensation, formal Strait control, and Lebanon’s inclusion. Iranian state television also carrying language that Tehran will end the war when it decides to do so and only on its own conditions showing the regime is posturing and why a quick off ramp still looks unlikely. On the Israeli side, the government approved a reserve call up ceiling of up to 400,000 reservists, according to Times of Israel. That does not mean all are being mobilized immediately, but it is a strong indicator that Jerusalem wants maximum flexibility for a conflict that still spans Iran and Lebanon simultaneously. In related news the Knesset committee move toward a special military tribunal for October 7 perpetrators and a separate death penalty push. Those are not central operational developments for the war front, but they do show the political system continuing to harden in parallel with the regional conflict. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ *⃣ WHAT MATTERS MOST RIGHT NOW What changed in the last 24 hours is that the war kept widening sideways even as Iran’s direct military pressure on Israel looked less overwhelming than earlier phases. ➡️Inside Iran, the strike campaign remained broad, geographically dispersed, and increasingly focused on infrastructure that matters to long term war capacity. ➡️Against Israel, Tehran still showed it can threaten high value targets and generate fresh missile waves, but the pattern looks more episodic than dominant. ➡️In Lebanon, Hezbollah remained active and politically central to any prospective endgame. In the Gulf, the war’s economic and maritime dimension kept hardening, which may now be one of Tehran’s most important remaining pressure tools. ➡️And politically Tehran is not signaling real compromise. It is signaling defiance, maximalist conditions, and an attempt to preserve leverage through Hormuz and Hezbollah while absorbing continued military punishment. That is the signal leading this morning. Not that the war is cooling. It is that Iran’s center of gravity is continuing to shift from sustained direct fire toward a more distributed strategy of intermittent strikes, regional proxy pressure, and maritime coercion while Israel keeps trying to cut deeper into the infrastructure that makes those options possible. **Special thanks to Michael W for your continued contribution to the open-source intel picture behind these updates. If you aren't already, give him a follow and stay informed.
Inside_Israel_Intel105,623 次观看 • 3 个月前

🚨🇮🇱🇮🇷 Iran's IRGC is officially running out of all ballistic missiles! After weeks of desperate barrages and massive losses to launchers/stockpiles from precise US-Israeli strikes, Iran is now forced to launch "Sejjil", its most strategic, highest-value missiles today in a last-ditch effort. 15 MAR 2026 | 08:27 ET ET SOURCE: Terror Alarm (terroralarm)
Inside_Israel_Intel75,870 次观看 • 3 个月前

🚨 OPERATIONAL UPDATE: ISRAEL U.S. WAR WITH THE ISLAMIC REPUBLIC - Reporting Window: Last 24 Hours ✳️The war is entering its final phase, but the battlefield is becoming more dangerous, not less. For the first time since the conflict began, the United States has signaled that its objectives against Iran have largely been achieved and that military operations could conclude within 2 to 3 weeks. At the same time, the operational picture tells a more complex story. Strikes inside Iran are intensifying, not slowing. Iran’s responses are becoming less concentrated but more geographically expansive. And across the region, the risk of broader escalation remains very real. This is no longer an open-ended war. It is a race between final military objectives and the risk of wider regional destabilization. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 🏁 POLITICAL ENDGAME SIGNAL EMERGES President Donald Trump stated that the war could end within weeks, indicating that core objectives have been achieved, including the degradation of Iran’s strategic capabilities and the disruption of its leadership structure. He also signaled that the United States does not intend to remain indefinitely engaged, suggesting that responsibility for securing critical global nfrastructure, particularly the Strait of Hormuz, may shift to regional and international stakeholders. At the same time, tensions with NATO allies are surfacing. Frustration over limited allied participation in the war has raised the possibility of a broader fracture within the Western alliance structure. Parallel reporting indicates that elements within Iran are signaling openness to a ceasefire framework, particularly if maritime access through Hormuz is restored. Taken together, this marks a clear transition: the war now has a defined political end state, even as military operations continue. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ ✈️ FINAL PHASE STRIKE CAMPAIGN INSIDE IRAN The intensity of strikes over the past 24 hours reflects what appears to be end-stage shaping operations. Israeli and US-aligned strikes targeted a wide range of sites across Iran, including weapons production facilities, research and development centers, and critical infrastructure nodes tied to the regime’s military capabilities. Tehran remains a central focus. Approximately twenty military-industrial sites were struck, along with infrastructure at Mehrabad Airport and locations linked to Basij coordination. A senior Quds Force engineering figure, Mahdi Vafaei, was eliminated in a precision strike. His role in developing underground weapons infrastructure across Lebanon and Syria made him a key long-term asset for Iran’s regional military network. Additional strikes hit industrial targets, including steel production facilities and a site identified as supporting materials linked to Iran’s chemical weapons development pipeline. This is not a campaign aimed at symbolic damage. It is a systematic effort to dismantle Iran’s ability to produce, coordinate, and sustain war over time. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 🎯 IRANIAN RESPONSE AND CIVILIAN IMPACT Iran continues to launch missiles toward Israel, but at a reduced scale compared to earlier phases of the war. Limited salvos were recorded over the past 24 hours, causing injuries and localized damage. One of the most significant developments was the reported use of cluster munitions in central Israel, critically injuring a child and causing multiple casualties. At the same time, Iran appears to be adapting operationally. Rather than attempting large-scale saturation attacks, it is increasingly relying on smaller strikes, drones, and diversified targeting strategies. This does not indicate de-escalation. It reflects an effort to remain operational under sustained pressure. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 🌍 REGIONAL EXPANSION: THE WAR SPREADS While direct attacks on Israel have become more limited in scale, Iran is expanding the conflict across the region. In the Gulf, infrastructure in Kuwait and Bahrain was struck, including fuel storage facilities at Kuwait International Airport. Fires and damage were reported, adding to a growing pattern of attacks on energy and logistical nodes. A commercial tanker was also struck near Qatar, further extending the conflict into maritime space. These developments mark a continued shift where Iran is targeting not just Israel, but the broader economic and energy architecture of the region. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 🚢 THE STRAIT OF HORMUZ The strategic center of gravity in this war is now unmistakable. The Strait of Hormuz remains contested, with ongoing disruption to global shipping and energy flows. The United States is actively evaluating options to reopen and secure the waterway, including potential direct military action against Iranian coastal capabilities. At the same time, Gulf states, particularly the UAE, are pushing for a coordinated military effort to ensure the strait is reopened. However, regional positioning remains complex, with some actors balancing public caution and private pressure. Notably, the United States has signaled that it may not take long-term responsibility for securing Hormuz, instead shifting that burden to global stakeholders. The implication is clear: control of Hormuz will determine not only the outcome of the war, but its aftermath. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 🔥 NORTHERN AND PROXY FRONTS Iran’s proxy network remains active, but increasingly strained. In Lebanon, Israeli strikes continue to target Hezbollah leadership and infrastructure, including the reported elimination of a senior commander in Beirut. Rocket fire persists, but Israeli operations are steadily degrading launch capabilities. In Yemen, the Houthis have formally entered the fight against Israel and are likely contributing to the expanding pattern of regional attacks, including those affecting Gulf infrastructure. Across Iraq and Syria, Iranian-aligned militias remain engaged, while underlying instability continues to create openings for additional actors. This is now a multi-front conflict, but one in which Iran’s network is under pressure across every axis. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 🧠 WARFARE EVOLUTION A critical and often overlooked development is the role of advanced targeting systems. Israel is employing AI-assisted capabilities to identify threats, prioritize targets, and synchronize strikes across multiple theaters in near real time. This has significantly compressed the operational cycle, allowing for rapid follow-up strikes and reduced recovery time for Iranian forces. The result is a battlefield environment where Iran has less time to act, less time to adapt, and fewer opportunities to rebuild degraded capabilities. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 📊 THE BIG PICTURE The trajectory of the war is now coming into focus. The United States and Israel are executing a campaign designed to dismantle Iran’s ability to function as a coherent military actor. Iran, in response, is expanding the conflict geographically in an attempt to impose broader costs. At the same time, political signals indicate that the war is approaching a defined end state. Markets are already reacting to this expectation, with oil prices declining and global indices rising on the assumption that the conflict may soon conclude. However, the final phase carries its own risks. As Iran’s conventional capabilities degrade, its reliance on asymmetric and regional tactics is increasing. The decisive question is no longer how the war is fought day to day. It is whether the final objectives can be secured before broader escalation overtakes them. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 📘 BOOK RECOMMENDATION If you want a deeper understanding of the history, narratives, and strategic realities behind this conflict: Contested Land, Uncontested Truth This book breaks down the ideological, geopolitical, and historical forces that led directly to moments like this, with clarity and evidence. 👉 If you found this report valuable, share it. Follow for daily operational updates.
Inside_Israel_Intel60,835 次观看 • 3 个月前

🚨 OPERATIONAL UPDATE: ISRAEL U.S. WAR WITH IRAN - Reporting Window: Last 24 Hours The last 24 hours reinforce the structure that has been developing across the war. Activity remained steady across Iran, Israel, Lebanon, and the Gulf, with no single breakthrough moment but continued pressure applied across every layer of the conflict. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ ✈️ STRIKES INSIDE IRAN Strikes continued across multiple areas inside Iran, including Tehran, Shiraz, Kermanshah, and Ahvaz. The targeting profile remains consistent with recent days, focused on systems tied to weapons development and military sustainment. In Tehran, reporting points to continued strikes on military-industrial infrastructure, including: *⃣ Weapons production and research facilities *⃣ Infrastructure around Mehrabad Airport *⃣ Sites linked to Iran’s advanced weapons programs, including SPND-related supply nodes There are also indications that some of these locations had secondary roles, including use by Basij-linked personnel. That aligns with the broader pattern of targeting not just hardware, but the networks that support it. The key point in this 24 hour window is continuity. The same categories of targets are being hit repeatedly, suggesting an effort to ensure these systems are not just damaged, but unable to recover quickly. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 🚀 IRANIAN RESPONSE Iran continues to respond. Current intelligence assessments indicate that roughly half of Iran’s missile launchers remain intact, along with a large drone inventory. At the same time, the operational pattern remains limited. Iran is still launching missiles and conducting attacks, but still not at the scale seen earlier in the war. The response appears to rely on: *⃣ Smaller salvos rather than sustained barrages *⃣ Continued willingness to strike civilian-adjacent targets *⃣ Expansion of pressure beyond Israel itself This reflects pressure on launch systems and coordination, not a lack of overall capability. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 🔥 LEBANON FRONT The Lebanon front remained active during this window, with both ground and air components continuing. Israeli forces carried out a targeted ground operation in southern Lebanon, resulting in direct engagement with Hezbollah fighters. Reporting indicates: *⃣ Israeli troops pushed deeper into southern لبنان *⃣ Hezbollah operatives were killed in close-quarters combat *⃣ Additional strikes were carried out against infrastructure using air, naval, and ground assets This is consistent with ongoing efforts to shape the immediate border area and reduce launch capability from southern Lebanon. At the same time, the front remains contained geographically, but active in terms of daily engagement. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 🌍 GULF AND REGIONAL ACTIVITY Regional expansion continues to be one of the most consistent elements of the war. Over the last 24 hours, Iranian attacks again targeted Gulf infrastructure, including: *⃣ A Kuwaiti oil refinery and desalination facility *⃣ Additional aerial threats across UAE airspace, including ballistic missiles, cruise missiles, and drones *⃣ Civilian injuries linked to interception and debris in the UAE These are functional targets tied to energy and water systems, reinforcing the broader strategy of applying pressure beyond Israel. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ ⚓ STRAIT OF HORMUZ Hormuz remains central to the strategic picture. Developments in this window include: *⃣ Ongoing discussions among multiple countries regarding how to reopen and secure the strait *⃣ Continued Iranian signaling around its ability to influence maritime traffic *⃣ Early indications of mediation channels involving Oman There is no resolution here yet, but the focus on Hormuz is becoming more operational and less theoretical. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ ⚠️ IRAQ Iraq emerged more clearly in this window the last 24 hours as a continued potential point of escalation. The U.S. embassy issued a warning that Iran-aligned militias could conduct attacks in Baghdad within 24 to 48 hours, with potential targets including: *⃣ Diplomatic facilities *⃣ Commercial and infrastructure sites *⃣ Areas frequented by U.S. personnel This aligns with the broader pattern of pressure expanding through proxy channels when direct options are constrained. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 📌 WHAT MATTERS MOST RIGHT NOW The structure of the war remains stable, but fully active: *⃣ Inside Iran, strikes continue to focus on production and sustainment systems *⃣ Iran retains significant capability, but is operating under constraints *⃣ Lebanon remains an active front with ongoing ground and air operations *⃣ The Gulf is consistently targeted, particularly energy and infrastructure systems *⃣ Iraq is showing early signs of becoming more active through proxy activity ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 🧠 MY ASSESSMENT This 24-hour window of time does not introduce a new dynamic. It confirms the current one. Israel is continuing to apply pressure across the systems that allow Iran to produce and coordinate military activity. Iran is continuing to respond within its constraints while expanding pressure across the region where it can. The result is a conflict that is not concentrated in one place, but distributed across multiple active fronts at once. That remains the defining characteristic of the war right now.
Inside_Israel_Intel49,879 次观看 • 3 个月前

🚨 DEARBORN EXPOSED - This should make you stop scrolling. The FBI just prevented a Halloween massacre in Michigan, planned by homegrown terrorists in Dearborn. And NO ONE wants to talk about what that really means for America. I just recorded the most important monologue I’ve ever done. Watch it. Share it. Brace yourself.
Inside_Israel_Intel80,519 次观看 • 7 个月前

Here's what you missed over the weekend in the ongoing conflict in Iran. Get caught up below👇 🚨 OPERATIONAL UPDATE: ISRAEL U.S. WAR WITH THE ISLAMIC REPUBLIC - Reporting Window: 3/27 - 3/30 *⃣ Israel sustained a wide strike campaign inside Tehran, targeting missile production, air defense systems, and core regime infrastructure in the capital. *⃣ The IAEA confirmed Iran’s Khondab heavy water facility at Arak is no longer operational after Israeli strikes, marking one of the clearest verified hits to nuclear-linked infrastructure. *⃣ Iran continued missile attacks into Israel, including impacts near the Neot Hovav industrial zone that caused fires and industrial disruption without mass casualties. *⃣ The Houthis in Yemen officially entered the war, launching ballistic missiles and drones toward Israel and signaling continued attacks. *⃣ The Gulf front intensified, with damage to infrastructure in Kuwait and sustained pressure tied to the Strait of Hormuz and regional energy systems. *⃣ The United States is now weighing escalation options tied to Iran’s enriched uranium stockpile while maintaining a public posture of diplomacy. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ ✈️ STRATEGIC AIR CAMPAIGN OVER IRAN Israel’s campaign seems to have shifted from targeting regime objectives and symbols, like Basij headquarters, to industrial and military complex infrastructure. This is likely due to a prioritization to degrade the long term capabilities of the regime should the conflict end before regime change objectives can be achieved. Sustained strikes across Tehran, combined with the confirmed disabling of the Arak heavy water facility, show a shift toward dismantling Iran’s military and nuclear backbone. This is now a campaign against production, command, and regeneration capacity. Power disruptions and secondary infrastructure damage across Tehran reinforce that this is expanding beyond military sites into the broader ecosystem that sustains the regime’s ability to fight. This is not a temporary degradation effort. It is structural. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 🚀 IRANIAN ATTACKS ON ISRAEL Iran is still firing. But the pattern has changed. Missile attacks continue across Israel, including impacts in the south and repeated alerts across multiple regions. The strike near Neot Hovav fits the current model: disruption, not mass casualties. Launch tempo is down significantly from earlier phases, but the capability remains intact. What matters now is not volume. It’s persistence. Iran can still impose pressure. It just can’t dominate the battlefield in any meaningful way. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 🟥 YEMEN FRONT: HOUTHIS ENTER THE WAR The Houthis officially joined the war on March 28, launching ballistic missiles toward Israel for the first time in this conflict and signaling continued operations going forward. Since then additional drone launches toward Israel have been reported and intercepted. The group has framed its attacks as part of a unified “resistance front” alongside Iran, Hezbollah, and Iraqi militias. This matters for three reasons: 1. Range and geography - Yemen is over 2,000 km away. These are long-range strikes that stretch Israel’s defensive envelope. 2. Multi-front pressure - Israel is now dealing with Iran (direct), Hezbollah (north), Houthis (south / long-range). That is a true multi-front war. 3. Escalation pathway - The Houthis are not limited to Israel. They sit on the Bab al-Mandeb Strait, one of the most critical shipping chokepoints in the world. If they escalate there, it links directly with Hormuz. This could even further choke critical shipping lanes in the global economy. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 🌍 GULF / HORMUZ / ENERGY WAR Iran is now fully leaning into economic warfare. Confirmed damage to infrastructure in Kuwait, combined with continued disruption around Hormuz, shows a deliberate strategy: expand the cost of the war beyond Israel. This is not incidental escalation. It is strategic leverage. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 🇺🇸 POLITICAL / STRATEGIC DEVELOPMENTS The United States is now the pivot. The public posture is diplomacy and de-escalation messaging. The operational reality is that troop deployments are increasing, escalation planning is underway, and uranium-targeting scenarios are under consideration. At the same time, Iran is not signaling compromise. It is mobilizing, expanding proxy activity, and behaving like a regime preparing for a longer war and signaling it can outwait it's adversaries. That gap is now one of the most important dynamics in the conflict. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 📌 WHAT MATTERS MOST RIGHT NOW ➡️ Israel is systematically dismantling Iran’s military and nuclear-supporting infrastructure, with Tehran now a primary focus. ➡️ Iran still has strike capability, but its attacks are increasingly intermittent but now beginning to be supplemented by proxy fronts in Lebanon and Yemen. ➡️ The Gulf and global energy system are a growing target for the IRGC's war trajectory. ➡️ The United States is positioned between diplomacy and escalation, with the ability to decisively shift the war if it acts. Bottom line, this is no longer just Israel vs Iran. It is now: Iran, Hezbollah, Houthis VS the US, Israel, Gulf States, and the global economy.
Inside_Israel_Intel39,012 次观看 • 3 个月前

Everyone has their eye on the talks with Iran. They’re missing Lebanon. Fighting is ongoing. Hezbollah is taking losses. And for the first time in decades, Israel and Lebanon are sitting down directly… without Hezbollah at the table. Full breakdown in today’s update. And if you’ve been following these, hit “notify” so you actually see them when they go up. Engagement is down across the board and it’s the only way to stay ahead of these in real time.
Inside_Israel_Intel32,157 次观看 • 2 个月前

🚨 OPERATIONAL UPDATE: ISRAEL U.S. WAR WITH THE ISLAMIC REPUBLIC - Reporting Window: LAST 24 HOURS • Iranian missiles struck Tel Aviv and northern Israel, causing injuries and structural damage • Israel expanded strikes across Iran, including Tehran, Tabriz, Isfahan, Bandar Abbas, and missile infrastructure sites • U.S.–Israel strikes hit senior PMF infrastructure in Iraq, killing key commanders • Reported strikes on Iranian gas infrastructure in Isfahan and Khorramshahr signal a potential shift toward energy targeting • Lebanon intensified with evacuations, Rashidiya strikes, and continued Hezbollah fire • Trump abruptly pivoted to negotiations with Iran and extended the Hormuz deadline, delaying a major escalation The past 24 hours were not defined by a single headline event, but by a combination of very real battlefield activity and a sudden political shift at the top level. On the ground, the war remained active across every front: Israel, Iran, Lebanon, Iraq, and the Gulf. At the same time, the expected U.S. escalation tied to Hormuz did not happen. Instead, Washington pivoted toward negotiations, with Trump claiming talks are close to agreement while Iran publicly denies that anything meaningful is underway. That combination, ongoing war with a simultaneous negotiation track, is new. And it matters. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 🚀 IRANIAN MISSILE ATTACKS ON ISRAEL Iran continued missile launches into Israel, with a clear pattern of split targeting between central and northern sectors. A missile hit in Tel Aviv injured several civilians and damaged nearby residential structures. Later waves triggered wide alert zones across northern Israel, including the Galilee, Golan, and confrontation line communities. Your outbox tracked these alerts across dozens of locations in real time. There were also additional impacts from fragments and debris, including a schoolyard hit and damage to homes in the north without mass casualties. This continues a trend seen over the last several days: • lower salvo size • wider disruption footprint • sustained daily pressure Iran is no longer relying on large coordinated barrages. It is maintaining pressure through frequency, geography, and effect per missile. At the same time, Israeli officials continue to investigate interception gaps, including earlier failures tied to THAAD systems, reinforcing that even a degraded Iranian launcher network can still produce meaningful results. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ ✈️ STRATEGIC AIR CAMPAIGN OVER IRAN The Israeli and U.S. strike campaign inside Iran remained broad, multi-layered, and geographically extensive. Mainstream reporting confirmed strikes on: • missile storage and production facilities • regime and intelligence headquarters in Tehran • additional infrastructure in Isfahan and surrounding regions Open source intel shows how wide this really was. Strikes or explosions were reported across: • Tehran (multiple districts including eastern sectors and Parchin-adjacent areas) • Tabriz • Khuzestan and Dezful • Bandar Abbas and coastal nodes • Yazd and missile infrastructure There were also multiple reports of targeted assassination strikes, destruction of missile-related infrastructure, and pressure on internal security nodes This matters because the campaign is not narrowing. It is hitting production, command, logistics, and leadership. This is a system-wide degradation effort, not a tactical suppression campaign. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ ⚡ ENERGY INFRASTRUCTURE: THE WAR IS GETTING CLOSER TO THE GRID One of the most important developments in this window was the reported targeting of Iranian gas infrastructure. Reuters reported a gas company office and pressure reduction station hit in Isfahan and a pipeline feeding a power station in Khorramshahr struck At the same time, oil prices rose again as markets reacted to continued Hormuz disruption, uncertainty around negotiations, and risk of escalation into full infrastructure targeting Open source intel strongly corroborates these reports, with repeated references to the same targets and follow-on rhetoric about retaliatory strikes on regional power systems. This is the key shift. The war is moving from military systems toward civilian energy systems. Not fully yet, but clearly closer. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 🇮🇶 IRAQ: PROXY COMMAND STRUCTURE HIT The Iraq front escalated meaningfully. Reuters reported that strikes hit: • PMF headquarters in Anbar • a residence tied to PMF leadership Casualties included at least 15 fighters killed, dozens wounded, and the confirmed death of operations commander Saad al-Baiji. Open source intel confirmed this in real time, including militant messaging and follow-on threats against U.S. positions. This was not a minor militia strike. It was a hit on central PMF command infrastructure. That keeps Iraq as an active and important front, not just a background theater. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 🇱🇧 LEBANON: PRESSURE CONTINUES AND DEEPENS The Lebanon front remained highly active. Key developments included evacuation warnings north of the Zahrani River, Israeli strikes near Rashidiya and southern Lebanon infrastructure, and continued Hezbollah rocket fire into northern Israel. Open source intel tracked: • strike activity near Rashidiya refugee camp • additional targeted strikes in Bchamoun • repeated northern Israeli alerts Israel continues shifting toward targeting infrastructure, limiting movement, and shaping the battlefield. Hezbollah remains active, but increasingly constrained. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 🌍 WASHINGTON, TEHRAN, AND THE NEGOTIATION TRACK In a sharp pivot, Trump announced that the U.S. is now holding talks with Iran, the Hormuz deadline was extended, and discussions are “close to agreement”. From there markets reacted immediately with oil prices dropping and then global markets rallying. But the reality is far less clear. Iranian leadership denied meaningful negotiations, and then demanded compensation and guarantees as new conditions for an any agreement, including limiting U.S. presence in the Gulf There is also uncertainty about who the U.S. is even talking to. Reports suggest contact with Mohammad Ghalibaf rather than Mojtaba Khamenei, who has not been seen publicly. At the same time, there is a deeper shift: The U.S. may now be willing to end the war without full regime change. That is a major departure from earlier expectations. Meanwhile, Israel is trying to ensure any deal reflects its interests, with Netanyahu reportedly engaging directly with the administration. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 📌 WHAT MATTERS MOST RIGHT NOW Three developments define the war right now. 1️⃣ The battlefield remains fully active across all fronts. Missiles, strikes, Lebanon operations, and Gulf pressure all continued in this window. 2️⃣ The war is moving closer to energy infrastructure targeting. Isfahan and Khorramshahr are early signals of a potentially much more dangerous phase. 3️⃣ Negotiations have entered the picture, but nothing is settled. The war is still being fought at full intensity even as diplomacy begins. Bottom line, this was not just another day of escalation. It was the first clear moment where war and negotiations are happening at the same time. That creates a new dynamic: • escalation is still real • pressure is still increasing • but the outcome is now less predictable than it was 24 hours ago Quick note... big thanks to Michael W for contributing to the open-source intel picture behind these updates. If you’re serious about following this war and the broader geopolitical landscape, he’s worth having in your feed. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ END OF REPORT
Inside_Israel_Intel37,207 次观看 • 3 个月前

⚡️A majority of Senate Democrats just voted to block weapons sales to Israel… in the middle of a war against Iran and its terror proxies. Not fringe. Not symbolic. This is where the party is now. I broke down the votes and responded directly to what they said. Watch this ⬇️
Inside_Israel_Intel26,084 次观看 • 2 个月前

🚨 OPERATIONAL UPDATE: ISRAEL U.S. WAR WITH THE ISLAMIC REPUBLIC - Reporting Window: 3/19 to 3/20 • Israel widened the strike set inside Iran again, hitting regime infrastructure in Tehran and other cities, while Iranian and Israeli reporting indicated strikes tied to Parchin, Arak, Kerman, Isfahan, Bandar e Lengeh, and northern maritime infrastructure. Iranian state media also said IRGC spokesman Ali Mohammad Naini was killed. • Iran kept up repeated missile pressure on Israel with at least eight attack waves during the day, including fresh central and northern barrages, a hit on the Haifa refinery, and cluster impacts in Rehovot. • The Gulf energy war moved from shock to quantified long term damage after Reuters reported that strikes have knocked out 17% of Qatar’s LNG export capacity for an estimated three to five years. • Washington is pushing harder to reopen Hormuz, with Jerusalem Post reporting that A-10s and Apache helicopters are now actively hunting Iranian fast attack craft and one way attack drones on the southern flank. • Lebanon remained fully active, with Israel pressing Hezbollah farther north, striking bridges and financial infrastructure, while Hezbollah kept up rocket fire into the Galilee and confrontation line communities. The past 24 hours were defined by three concrete changes. First, Israel kept pushing the regime-targeting campaign inside Iran, while Netanyahu publicly argued Tehran can no longer enrich uranium or build missiles. Second, Iran maintained a high-frequency missile rhythm into Israel, especially the center and north, even if the salvo sizes remain smaller than the early-war pattern. Third, the Hormuz front became more operationally explicit, with U.S. airpower now openly being described as hunting maritime and drone threats rather than simply deterring them from range. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 🔥 IRAN: ISRAEL KEPT PUSHING UP THE REGIME LADDER The clearest military development was the continued broad strike pattern inside Iran. Israeli reporting indicated another wide strike wave across Tehran and multiple provincial targets, while Iranian media said IRGC spokesman Ali Mohammad Naini was killed. Times of Israel’s live coverage also tied that to the larger Israeli claim that Iran can no longer enrich uranium or manufacture ballistic missiles at meaningful scale, a claim Netanyahu repeated publicly on Thursday. Open source intelligence reporting tracked the same pattern in real time, with repeated references to strikes across Tehran, central Iran, and Bandar e Lengeh, plus reporting around Caspian-facing assets and internal security targets. The exact damage at every site remains uneven in open reporting, but the broader point is clear: this was another multi-city infrastructure wave, not a single symbolic hit. Why this matters: Israel still does not appear to be in a wind-down phase. It is continuing to widen target categories inside Iran, including command, propaganda, maritime, and military-support infrastructure. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 🚀 ISRAEL: EIGHT ATTACK WAVES, REHOVOT HITS, AND THE NORTH UNDER PRESSURE The missile story today is not just that Iran kept firing. It is that it kept repeating the pattern across the day. Ynet reported an eighth Iranian attack wave since morning, with missiles targeting central and northern Israel and a home in Rehovot catching fire. Times of Israel’s live coverage separately reported two lightly wounded in a cluster impact in Rehovot, while Reuters reported a hit at the Haifa refinery that caused localized damage and a brief power disruption. Open source intelligence mirror that picture strongly. It tracked a very broad northern alert footprint overnight, including Haifa Bay, the Galilee, the Golan, Kiryat Shmona, and other confrontation line communities. It also showed concurrent Hezbollah fire into the north during part of the same window. Why this matters: Iran is still not restoring early-war barrage size. But it is maintaining tactical pressure through repetition, cluster effects, and geographic spread. The center and north were both under meaningful stress in this window. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 🇱🇧 LEBANON: ISRAEL IS PUSHING HEZBOLLAH NORTH, BUT THE FRONT IS STILL ACTIVE The Lebanon front remains deeply relevant to the daily operational picture. The Jerusalem Post reported that Israel is pushing Hezbollah farther north in Lebanon, buying time but not yet real security. Reuters also described continued strikes on Litani River crossings and Hezbollah-linked infrastructure. Open reporting from the IDF side continued to emphasize strikes on launchers, logistics buildings, and al-Qard al-Hasan financial nodes, which Israel regards as part of Hezbollah’s operational backbone. At the same time, Times of Israel’s live coverage reported Hezbollah rocket fire into the Galilee, and your files showed continued sirens around Kiryat Shmona and surrounding communities. That means this is not a one-way Israeli shaping campaign. Hezbollah still retains enough firepower to keep the northern home front active even as Israel pushes the line northward. Why this matters: The northern front is still not stabilizing. Israel may be improving the tactical geometry, but the home-front pressure problem has not disappeared. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 🛢 GULF ENERGY WAR: THE DAMAGE IS NOW MEASURABLE, AND THE THREATS ARE CONTINUING Reuters reported that the strikes on Qatar’s Ras Laffan complex have knocked out 17% of Qatar’s LNG export capacity for three to five years. That is not a temporary disruption story anymore. It is now a medium-term supply loss story with major implications for Asia and Europe. At the same time, Al Jazeera’s live coverage and other regional reporting indicate Tehran is still explicitly warning that strikes will intensify if more energy infrastructure is targeted. Open source intelligence sources also continued to track fire and damage reporting around Qatari gas infrastructure and broader Gulf-site alerts. Newly released satellite-image reporting also supports the scale argument. The visible damage footprint now spans multiple countries and sectors, reinforcing that this is no longer just a shipping or tanker story but a regional infrastructure war. Why this matters: The energy front is no longer just a lever of pressure. It is now a source of lasting physical damage with global supply implications. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 🇺🇸 HORMUZ: THE U.S. IS NOW FIGHTING THE MARITIME BATTLE MORE OPENLY This is one of the most important additions from today’s news cycle. The Jerusalem Post reported that A-10 Thunderbolt II aircraft are now hunting Iranian fast-attack craft in the Strait of Hormuz, while AH-64 Apaches and allied helicopters are handling one-way attack drones along the southern flank. CENTCOM video also showed direct strikes on Iranian naval assets threatening shipping. That matters because it moves the Hormuz story out of the realm of diplomatic coalition talk alone. The U.S. is now describing an active, tactical maritime fight against Iranian disruption capabilities. Why this matters: The Hormuz front is no longer just about deterrence. It is now about active suppression of Iranian naval and drone threats in and around the strait. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 🏛️ POLITICAL AND DIPLOMATIC SHIFTS: ENDGAME GAPS ARE GETTING CLEARER Times of Israel reported that Netanyahu said Iran can no longer enrich uranium or build missiles and that Israel is holding off further energy-site strikes at Trump’s request. Reuters reporting already pointed to growing daylight between U.S. and Israeli endgame preferences, and today’s coverage makes that divergence easier to see. The diplomatic picture also hardened in Israel’s favor in one important respect. The Jerusalem Post reported that six additional countries designated the IRGC as a terrorist organization after discussions with Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar. That does not change the battlefield directly, but it does matter politically, especially if the war stretches on and sanctions or legal pressure become more important. Why this matters: The battlefield may still be aligned between Washington and Jerusalem, but the political end state is being defined differently, and Israel is still trying to widen the diplomatic cost for the IRGC internationally. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 🏠 ISRAELI HOME FRONT: CIVILIAN AND INTERNAL SECURITY PRESSURE REMAINS REAL Two domestic stories are worth noting briefly. First, Ynet reported that from Tuesday, holiday school will operate only in “yellow” areas that choose to open. That is a reminder that the civilian normalization story remains partial and geographically uneven. Second, Times of Israel reported that an Iron Dome reservist was indicted for spying for Iran and allegedly passed details about Iron Dome, Israeli air bases, and battery locations to Iranian intelligence. That is not a battlefield event, but it is an important internal-security story in the middle of an active missile war. Why this matters: The war is still being fought on the home front not only through sirens and impacts, but also through educational disruption and espionage risk. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 📌 WHAT MATTERS MOST RIGHT NOW 1️⃣ Israel kept widening the regime target set inside Iran. This was another broad infrastructure and command-layer strike wave, not a limited aftershock. 2️⃣ Iran maintained high-frequency missile pressure on Israel. Eight waves in a day, cluster impacts in Rehovot, and a Haifa refinery hit show that lower volume still does not mean low danger. 3️⃣ The Hormuz fight is now more openly operational. A-10s and Apaches are not diplomatic signaling. They are evidence that the U.S. is directly suppressing Iranian maritime disruption assets. 4️⃣ The Gulf energy war is now a lasting damage story. Ras Laffan is not just disrupted. It is materially degraded for years. Bottom line: The last 24 hours were not just another round of attrition. Israel kept pressing deeper into regime infrastructure, Iran sustained repeated pressure on the Israeli home front, the U.S. made the Hormuz battle more overt, and the Gulf energy war became more durable and harder to contain.
Inside_Israel_Intel32,033 次观看 • 3 个月前