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Israel News

Daily Alert

Israel to Reopen Gaza Border Crossing as Last Hostage's Remains Are Found

on January 26, 2026
(Wall Street Journal) Anat Peled - Israel recovered the body of Ran Gvili, 24, an Israeli police sergeant who was killed on Oct. 7, 2023, and whose body was taken to Gaza during the Hamas-led attack. Israel announced on Sunday that it would reopen the Rafah border crossing between Gaza and Egypt, once Gvili's body was returned to Israel for burial. Israel said the border crossing would remain under Israeli oversight, with Palestinians undergoing security screenings to leave and enter. The return of Gvili's body and the opening of the Rafah crossing were crucial requirements of the first phase of the U.S-crafted peace plan. The plan can now move to its next phase, which requires the disarmament of Hamas. At times, Israeli officials thought Gvili's remains might never be found. They were moved several times by Palestinian Islamic Jihad, the group holding him, an Israeli official said. As part of the efforts to locate them, the Israel Security Agency said it captured an Islamic Jihad militant in a raid last month and interrogated him, leading to intelligence that prompted the discovery of Gvili's remains.

Hamas Taxing Gaza Street Vendors to Fund "Forever War"

on January 26, 2026
(Sunday Telegraph-UK) Henry Bodkin - In January, Hamas announced a tax on market traders as part of a wave of new levies and outright extortion by which the terror group is rapidly replenishing its coffers. Double taxes on imported goods, now flowing in under the ceasefire agreement, and a huge cut of the money-changing and tobacco trades, are just some of the measures reported by ordinary Gazans. Israeli intelligence officials believe Hamas has successfully preserved billions in cash in its tunnels, allowing it to continue paying thousands of fighters and rebuild its military infrastructure. One IDF officer said: "Hamas amassed these huge sums over the course of years in which it prepared for a rainy day, for prolonged years of siege, and that is one of the reasons that the Gaza public has not risen up against it." An Israeli official told the Telegraph, "As a result of their financial depth, Hamas is more than strong enough to stay on forever." 2/3 of the trucks allowed to enter Gaza are carrying private goods rather than aid deliveries. Hamas is now demanding upfront cash payments of 15-20% of the value of the contents; they then tax the sale of goods individually in the markets, which can be as high as 30%.

Iran Rushing Completion of New Fortified Facility

on January 26, 2026
(Institute for Science and International Security) David Albright - Recent satellite imagery shows that the construction of a concrete sarcophagus around the newly-built facility at Taleghan 2 at the Parchin military site has progressed over the last month. The main building houses a cylindrical chamber resembling a high explosive test chamber. The entire area around the new facility is enclosed by a high security wall. Since the 12-Day War, Iran has reactivated an anti-aircraft artillery site and constructed two new anti-aircraft positions.

Turkish President Erdogan: Iran's Principled Approach to Managing the Protests Is Commendable

on January 26, 2026
(WANA-Iran) Turkish President Erdogan told Iranian President Pezeshkian in a phone conversation on Jan. 22: "We reject interventionist scenarios against Iran. Iran's principled and structured approach to managing the protests is commendable."

Israel to Seek New U.S. Security Deal while Reducing Reliance on Aid

on January 26, 2026
(Financial Times-UK) Neri Zilber - Israel is readying for talks with the Trump administration over a new 10-year security deal as Israel's current 10-year "Memorandum of Understanding" with the U.S. is set to expire in 2028. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said he wants U.S. military aid to "taper off" in the coming decade. Brig.-Gen. Gil Pinchas, chief financial adviser to Israel's military and defense ministry, said Israel would seek to discuss current and future joint development projects for military systems that could continue on an ad hoc basis, and not necessarily as part of a new decade-long deal. "You put money and they put money and you both win," he said.

Body of Last Gaza Hostage Returned to Israel

on January 26, 2026
(Ynet News) The IDF announced Monday that the body of the last Gaza hostage, St.-Sgt.-Maj. Ran Gvili, 24, has been returned to Israel. He was killed in battle at Kibbutz Alumim on Oct. 7 and was brought by Hamas to Gaza. IDF Chief of Staff Lt.-Gen. Eyal Zamir told Ran's parents: "We kept our promise that no one is left behind. IDF soldiers, the fighters at the front, and the entire nation are deeply moved by Ran's return to a Jewish burial."

Who Was St.-Sgt.-Maj. Ran Gvili?

on January 26, 2026
(Jerusalem Post) Leo Feierberg Better - The remains of the final Gaza hostage, Staff-Sergeant-Major Ran Gvili, were returned to Israel on Monday. Gvili was killed in battle fighting infiltrating Hamas terrorists on Oct. 7, 2023, after saving the lives of partygoers fleeing the Nova music festival in Re'im and defending Kibbutz Alumim from dozens of Hamas terrorists who attempted to conquer the kibbutz. Wounded and surrounded, Gvili was overpowered by Hamas terrorists and was subsequently murdered.

IDF Commander: "We Saw Ran Gvili in Police Uniform"

on January 26, 2026
(Ynet News) Yoav Zitun - Major D., a commander in the Yahalom unit of the Combat Engineering Corps who participated in the operation to retrieve the body of hostage Ran Gvili, told Ynet: "We cleared the area from explosive devices and the many bodies. It reminded me of the multitude of bodies from October 7." "The bodies were buried in shrouds according to Muslim burial traditions. There was tremendous emotion at the moment of identification and leading up to it, some fighters were moved to tears and embraced each other. We saw Ran with the police uniform, and that helped initially confirm his identity." "We emphasized respecting the dead and returned all bodies for burial in their places. This is one of the differences between us and our enemies."

Israel to Oversee Rafah Crossing between Gaza and Egypt

on January 26, 2026
(Ynet News) Itamar Eichner - With the return of all the Israeli hostages, attention is now turning to the future of Gaza and the reopening of the Rafah Crossing to Egypt. A European monitoring force, EUBAM, is already stationed at Rafah, alongside local Palestinian staff. Outside the crossing complex, a screening corridor will be established where security checks will be carried out by Israeli security authorities. This will not involve physical inspections by IDF soldiers, but Israeli security personnel will oversee and supervise the process. Israel will receive daily lists from Egypt of those seeking to enter Gaza. They will be reviewed by the Israel Security Agency and those approved will be permitted to cross the following day.

U.S.: Disarming Hamas "Is the Condition for Gaza's Rehabilitation"

on January 26, 2026
(Israel Hayom) Danny Zaken - The main hurdle for Phase Two of President Trump's plan to end the Gaza war is Hamas's refusal to disarm and demilitarize Gaza. That refusal has been voiced repeatedly, and from Israel's perspective it means that all other points tied to Phase Two cannot be implemented. Disarming Hamas is a central pillar of the plan, which also includes the expulsion of senior figures, except for those who formally renounce terrorism. A senior American official told Israel Hayom: "Trump's plan is crystal clear. Hamas must hand over all its weapons, expose all tunnels and relinquish power. That is the condition for Gaza's rehabilitation. There are contacts on the matter, and we are working in coordination with Israel and the mediators to achieve these goals."

How Hamas Smuggles Items into Gaza

on January 26, 2026
(Ynet News) Yoav Zitun - Israeli security officials have recently acknowledged that thousands of items were smuggled into Gaza and, in some cases, directly to Hamas, primarily over the past year, despite Israel's military blockade. Items are smuggled inside aid trucks that Israel allows into Gaza or by drones from Israel and Egypt. The smuggled goods include tobacco and batteries.

Islamic State Terror Cell Arrested en route to Israeli Embassy in Baku, Azerbaijan

on January 26, 2026
(Ynet News) Itamar Eichner - Azerbaijan's State Security Service (SSS) has foiled a planned terrorist attack targeting the Israeli Embassy in Baku. Three Azerbaijani citizens were arrested as they approached the area of the embassy while preparing to carry out an attack motivated by religious hostility. The three maintained criminal ties with members of the Islamic State.

Elbit Wins $228 Million Deal to Protect U.S. Army Bradley Fighting Vehicles

on January 26, 2026
(Ynet News) Israel's Elbit Systems has secured a $228 million contract to supply its Iron Fist active protection system for the U.S. Army's Bradley Fighting Vehicles, the company said Monday. Iron Fist is a hard-kill active protection system designed to detect and intercept incoming threats before they strike armored vehicles. It has been deployed as an active protection system by the IDF and has been selected by several NATO members and other armies worldwide.

The Last Hostage Returned: Israel's Refusal to Leave Anyone Behind

on January 26, 2026
(Jewish Chronicle-UK) Editorial - For Israel - and for Jews far beyond its borders, including here in Britain - the recovery of Ran Gvili, the last Israeli hostage, is the closing of a wound that had been open since Oct. 7. Israel's commitment to bringing every hostage home, living or dead, was never just a slogan. It was part of the national creed. Gvili's body was buried under a Muslim name in a Gaza cemetery. In Israel's determination to bring him home, soldiers were required to work through more than 350 bodies before identification was possible. No modern state goes to such lengths to retrieve its fallen. Israelis do not see one another merely as fellow citizens, but as members of an extended family, bound by shared fate and history. That bond is the source of Israel's resilience, sustaining commitment, sacrifice and endurance when they are most tested. Israel brought Ran Gvili home because leaving him behind was never an option. That instinct is not a weakness. It is civilizational clarity. And it is why his return was a reaffirmation of the values that distinguish Israel from those who fight it.

No One Left Behind, Israel Completes Hostage Recovery

on January 26, 2026
(Jerusalem Post) Herb Keinon - What many thought Israel would never be able to do - bring all the Gaza hostages home - has now been done. Many struggled to grasp why it was so important for the country to recover all the hostages, both dead and alive. Few countries would have gone to such great lengths or sacrificed so much - and so many - to ensure that every last hostage was returned, even at the price of releasing hundreds of convicted terrorist murderers. But therein lies the secret of Israel's solidarity: that we are a collective made up of individuals, and that the collective is only strong if each individual knows it will look out for them. And it does. This is a process that gives the individual a sense of security and, in doing so, strengthens the collective. What makes this even more remarkable is that it is taking place in a society riven by deep divisions. Yet all are part of the collective called Israel, and that collective will not allow the individual to be left to the enemy. That understanding gives the country strength. It ensures that soldiers will fight, knowing that no one will be abandoned. Ensuring the dead receive a dignified burial is something hardwired into Jewish DNA, beginning with Abraham, who insisted on purchasing a burial plot for his wife Sarah in Hebron, and continuing with Joseph, who made his brothers swear to carry his bones out of Egypt and return them to the Land of Israel.

Hamas's Actual Position on Disarmament, Trump's Board of Peace

on January 26, 2026
(Gatestone Institute) Khaled Abu Toameh - Hamas is clearly unfazed by President Trump's repeated demands that it must give up its weapons. It maintains that Israel is the one that needs to be disarmed. Hamas and many Palestinians also have significant reservations about Trump's Board of Peace. They view it as a "new round of colonization" in the Middle East by the U.S. and other Western powers. Hamas may put on a show by handing over some of its light weapons to impress Trump and his Board of Peace. However, it will never surrender all its weapons, especially the thousands of rockets it manufactured and stockpiled over the past two decades. Hamas knows that the moment it loses all its weapons, it will cease to exist both as a political and military entity. It needs the weapons to maintain control over the residents of Gaza and protect its future viability against its political rivals, such as Palestinian Islamic Jihad, as well as the Palestinian Authority. Hamas, meanwhile, appears satisfied with Trump's decision to allow Qatar, Turkey, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia to play a role in the future management of Gaza. The participation of Arab and Islamic countries "that have clear positions in support of the Palestinian cause can be viewed positively," said Hazem Qassem, a Hamas spokesman in Gaza.

Why Turkey and Qatar Should Be at the Table

on January 26, 2026
(Jewish News-UK) Lt.-Col. (res.) Peter Lerner - The inclusion of Turkey and Qatar in President Trump's "Board of Peace" has triggered unease across Israel's political spectrum. Both countries have been among Israel's most vocal critics during the war, and their regional roles are viewed as outright hostile. Yet the presence of Turkey and Qatar should not be understood as a concession, but as a test. When hostages were released, it was not only through appeals to international law or public pressure, but through mediation and leverage exercised by actors who could reach those Israel could not. This is not trust. It is conditional engagement. If Qatar and Turkey have influence, the question is not whether to acknowledge it, but whether to shape how it is used. Even partial alignment on issues can alter the strategic environment in meaningful ways. For Israelis, particularly after the profound trauma of the war, the idea of engaging with governments supportive and sympathetic to Hamas is deeply uncomfortable. But diplomacy is not an exercise in moral clarity alone; it is an exercise in altering behavior. The "Board of Peace" is not a gesture of reconciliation. It is a mechanism of leverage. The writer is a former IDF foreign media spokesman.

Iraq: Iran's Last Financial Lifeline

on January 26, 2026
(Jerusalem Center for Security and Foreign Affairs) Aviram Bellaishe - Iraq constitutes a primary revenue generation center for Iran - the source of $8-12 billion annually. The militias in Iraq are not merely Iranian proxies - they are autonomous organizations with their own economic, political, and criminal interests. The Popular Mobilization Forces' (PMF) $3.4 billion budget comes from the Iraqi treasury. American and Israeli interests are aligned about strangling Iran's economic lung in Iraq indefinitely. The U.S. possesses significant yet underutilized financial leverage over Iraq. Iraqi government holdings exceed $100 billion in American financial institutions, and Iraq's dollar-dependent economy cannot function without access to the Federal Reserve's foreign currency auction. Budgetary transparency in the PMF, sanctions on smuggling infrastructure, and support for alternative energy corridors - all serve American and Iraqi interests regardless of the regime's fate in Tehran. Strengthening the Iraqi state at the expense of the militias is a worthy objective in its own right. The assumption that Iraqi public opinion uniformly supports Iranian influence contradicts available evidence. A Gallup survey found that 86% of Iraqis, including 83% of Iraqi Shia, view Iranian influence negatively. The writer, Senior Director for Security, Diplomacy, and Communications at the Jerusalem Center, has served in senior government positions for over 25 years.

Why Western Streets Go Silent for Iran

on January 26, 2026
(Substack) Nadav Eyal - Can you hear those thousands of voices, shouting in the streets and on campuses, "from the Gulf to the sea: Persia will be free"? I hear nothing. Actually, I did hear something. On Jan. 8, as Iranians fought for their lives and their freedom, demonstrators outside a synagogue in Queens shouted: "Say it loud, say it clear: we support Hamas here!" Those who preach uprising, resistance, and universalism are quiet when it comes to Iran. It is deeply connected to an outlook that has treated regimes like Iran and the Islamic Revolution as forms of resistance to capitalism and Western domination. Within that tradition, such regimes are often granted a moral waiver. The premise is simple: the West is presumed to be the source of all evil, and those who oppose it are therefore excused or celebrated. After Oct. 7, when Hamas carried out a coordinated attack of mass murder and abductions, parts of the same ideological ecosystem responded with quick justification or outright celebration. It was framed as "resistance." This is the moral failure George Orwell warned against: "Actions are held to be good or bad, not on their own merits, but according to who does them." The failure of the Islamic Republic to enable a good life for its citizens, or its well-documented role in exporting violence and terror across the region, should have rendered the regime a pariah for anyone who claims to care about human dignity.

Why Is Saudi Arabia Abandoning Peace?

on January 26, 2026
(National Interest) Hussain Abdul-Hussain - Saudi Arabia is abandoning the pursuit of an integrated Middle East and dusting off the kingdom's old rhetoric against Zionism and in favor of the Muslim Brotherhood. Saudi Arabia went as far as lobbying President Trump to spare the Iranian regime, Riyadh's archrival since 1979. Saudi Arabia said it would be funding Sudanese Gen. Abdul-Fattah al-Burhan's purchase of $1.5 billion worth of Pakistani weapons, in violation of a global embargo on exporting arms to Sudan. Burhan is a holdover from Omar al-Bashir's Muslim Brotherhood regime, is allied with the Sudanese Islamic Movement and its militias, and is under U.S. sanctions. Saudi columnists, all of whom print the government's views, started arguing that normalization between Muslims and Jews is impossible. An editorial in the daily Al-Riyadh stated: "Wherever Israel is present, there is ruin and destruction. [Israel] pursues policies that disregard international law, do not recognize human rights, and do not respect the sovereignty of states or the integrity of their territories." The writer is a research fellow at the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies.

Is U.S. Special Envoy to Syria Tom Barrack Kicking the Can Down the Road?

on January 26, 2026
(Jerusalem Center for Security and Foreign Affairs) Rawan Osman - Rebranding a jihadist does not neutralize jihadism; it normalizes it. Did Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa deliver order where chaos reigned? Order implies predictability, protection of civilians, restraint of armed actors, and a monopoly over violence. What has unfolded instead is selective coercion, sectarian intimidation, and the empowerment of militias operating under a thin veneer of statehood. Recent clashes with Kurdish forces and earlier massacres against Alawite and Druze communities all demonstrate the same reality: violence has not been curtailed. It has merely been relabeled as "internal security operations." Tom Barrack, the U.S. Special Envoy for Syria, made clear that Washington now views Kurdish forces as obsolete and an Islamist-led central authority as inevitable. The overthrow of Bashar al-Assad was necessary. One tyrant was removed while an Islamist was emboldened. The fact that this Islamist opposes ISIS does not mitigate the dangers of his ideology. Yet rather than containing, restraining, and pressuring Islamist forces at the moment of transition, the West legitimized them. Al-Sharaa's men were not disarmed or disciplined; they were unleashed. Tom Barrack is not solving Syria. He is kicking the can down the road. The writer is a JCFA researcher and Syrian-born activist.

Antisemitism Is Permeating Everyday Life

on January 26, 2026
(Washington Post) Or Moshe - For years, Jews have been warning that the threats we were told belonged to history were not gone, only dormant. Too often, those warnings were dismissed as anxiety or an inability to let go of the past. They were not. What has changed is the intensity of antisemitism, its visibility, and the speed at which it moves from words to violence. What once hid behind anonymity now plays out in public spaces, in democratic societies, in countries that pride themselves on tolerance. Jews are being attacked, targeted, and killed in acts of antisemitic violence around the world. During a Jewish Hanukkah gathering in Australia, armed attackers opened fire in daylight. When Jews can be shot for celebrating a holiday, the meaning is unmistakable. And it is escalating. Since Oct. 7, 2023, what once required masks and anonymity now often requires none. What once drew universal condemnation now frequently draws explanation. The distance between speech and violence has narrowed, and Jews feel it every day. Jewish schools operate behind gates and armed guards as a permanent reality. Jewish pain is qualified, contextualized, explained away. Violence against Jews is treated as a reaction rather than an atrocity. Fear is treated as an exaggeration. Mourning is treated as politics. At what point did being Jewish make grief negotiable? Political disagreement does not justify shooting at Jewish homes, attacking synagogues, or terrorizing Jewish children. Jews around the world do not command Israeli policy, nor do they serve as its proxies. Holding Jews collectively responsible for the actions of a government one disagrees with is not protest. It is antisemitism. Antisemitism today sometimes presents itself as moral clarity. It claims righteousness while denying Jews the right to safety, dignity, and self-defense. The most dangerous part of this moment is how quickly it is normalized. Violence against Jews should not be tolerated under any ideological cover. When Jews are not safe, something fundamental is breaking. The writer is a student at Reichman University in Israel.

My Journey Out of Anti-Zionism

on January 26, 2026
(Times of Israel) Kile Jones - I was once an anti-Zionist. During my time doing graduate work at Boston University, I had immersed myself in Marxist theory. Many of my professors taught from a Marxist or post-colonial perspective, which meant I became proficient in these ways of interpreting the world. With post-colonialism, it was oppressor vs. oppressed, colonizer vs. colonized, settler vs. native, and occupation vs. liberation. What I failed to see is how often these categories implode when applied to Jews and Israel. Not only can they transmit, and often create, antisemitism, but they usually render Jewish peoplehood and self-determination illegitimate. The gathering of exiled Jews to their homeland after facing persecution almost everywhere turns into "European colonization" and "settler colonialism" - translating their "return" to Israel into a foreign immigration. When you view Israel as a genocidal monolith, a bloodthirsty creation of Western interests, and not the formation of an indigenous people's right to political protection, you cannot view Jewish history, tradition, or statehood as natural or legitimate. I could no longer accept these tools, because they only lent themselves to seeing the Jewish relation to Israel as nefarious. Acting as if calling for the end of a country is normal "political critique" is absurd. Reading Jewish history made clear that Zionism was a necessary and reasonable project for the protection and flourishing of persecuted and stateless Jews spread throughout the world. The excusing of violence in the name of liberation and the repeated indictments and libels that were used against Jews was shocking to see overtly displayed by the "champions of minorities."

AI Is Distorting Historical Truths about the Holocaust

on January 26, 2026
(The Times-UK) Nicola Woolcock - As the last Holocaust survivors are dying and antisemitism is on the rise, new forms of attack include distorting historical truths about the Holocaust and trivializing the word by applying it to other causes such as animal rights. Adrian Packer, chief executive of the CORE Education Trust, said: "AI-generated content muddles fact and fiction with frightening ease....This is how memory dies. Not all at once, but by chipping away, bit by bit, until the whole edifice crumbles away."

Palestinians Must Accept Accountability for Oct. 7

on January 26, 2026
(Jerusalem Post) Yoni Michanie - No serious post-conflict framework treats representation as an automatic right detached from responsibility. Post-war governance is not a reward for suffering; it is a mechanism for preventing recurrence. That distinction matters. When a governing authority initiates war through mass violence against civilians - deliberately targeting noncombatants and engaging in systematic hostage-taking - it forfeits legitimacy over the political space it controlled. The institutions, narratives, and power structures that produced the violence cannot be entrusted with overseeing their own dismantling. But what happens when those power structures enjoy overwhelming popular support? In December 2023, polling by the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research revealed that 3/4 of Palestinians supported Hamas's attack on Oct. 7. Support was particularly high in the West Bank, where backing for the assault reached 82%. Subsequent polling showed sustained majorities backing the decision to launch the attack, with support remaining above 70% even months into the war. This presents a challenge. We are discussing a popular consensus endorsing an operation characterized by systematic atrocities against Israelis: mass civilian casualties, sexual violence, torture, and the abduction of 250 hostages including children and the elderly. When so much of the Palestinian population endorses an attack involving the deliberate massacre of civilians, this reveals that Oct. 7 was not merely tolerated or rationalized as a necessary evil but embraced as a defining moment of collective identity - something that made Palestinians feel proud. Calls for automatic Palestinian representation on governing bodies rest on the idea that populations should have agency in determining their political future. But what happens when Palestinian democratic sentiment produces an overwhelming mandate for violence against Israeli civilians? What happens when the "will of the people" is inseparable from the endorsement of atrocity? Defining the political framework to prevent another Oct. 7 requires demonstrated rejection of the violence that 75% of Palestinians endorsed. Agency for the Palestinians is not the right to immediate political control regardless of recent conduct. It is the capacity to make choices and bear responsibility for their consequences. Palestinians made choices on and around Oct. 7. Those choices included overwhelming support for an operation that systematically violated the most basic prohibitions of international humanitarian law. The road to Palestinian political autonomy runs through moral accountability, not around it.

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