In a sharp departure from diplomatic calls for de-escalation, Israel’s military has signaled it is bracing for a prolonged conflict with Iran, despite President Donald Trump's demands for a ceasefire and Tehran's announcement that it has terminated its attacks. As reported by Maariv, the IDF insists that the Iranian missile barrage was a clear ceasefire violation that was anticipated, not a surprise. Consequently, Tel Aviv has activated pre-written contingency plans, launching retaliatory strikes against targets in both Iran and Lebanon while preparing its forces for what could be an extended period of fighting. The Israeli military explicitly frames the recent events not as a new round of hostilities but as a direct continuation of an ongoing campaign. This narrative shift suggests that Israel views the two-month ceasefire as a paused interlude rather than a concluded chapter. "We are preparing as an army for several days of fighting and even for an extended period,"...
Tehran announces a "suspension" of operations after the first direct exchange since the truce; Trump demands both sides "immediately stop shooting" Iran and Israel exchanged direct fire for the first time since their April truce on Monday, in a sharp escalation that has all but collapsed the US-brokered ceasefire and revived fears of a full regional war. The latest round began when Israeli warplanes struck the southern suburbs of Beirut — the heartland of the Iran-backed group Hezbollah — without warning and over explicit American requests to hold off. Israel said the strike was retaliation for Hezbollah fire on its northern towns. Iran answered with multiple waves of missiles aimed at northern Israel and Tel Aviv, its first direct attack on Israeli soil since the ceasefire took hold in April. Tehran cast the barrage as a "warning," insisting that any continued assault on Beirut's suburbs crossed a red line it would not abandon. Israel then struck back...