Showing posts with label IDF. Show all posts
Showing posts with label IDF. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 15, 2026

New documentary 'Operation Arnon' brings Israel’s daring hostage rescue story to the screen. All Israel News

Jo Elizabeth

Published: July 15, 2026 
Israeli soldiers involved in Operation Arnon (Photo: IDF)

A new documentary, written and directed by Hannah Puder, highlights the dramatic Israeli rescue of hostages Noa Argamani, Shlomi Ziv, Almog Meir Jan, and Andrey Kozlov from Gaza, packing many lesser-known details about the operation into 16 short minutes to share with the world. 

There have been a number of film-worthy hostage rescues that made it to the big screen, including “Raid on Entebbe” about the 1976 Israeli operation in Uganda rescuing a planeload of people from Palestinian terrorists, and the Tom Hanks film “Captain Philips” which portrayed the Somali pirate hijacking of a cargo ship in 2009. 

Now Puder questions why the extraordinary recovery of four Israeli hostages from the hands of Hamas has received such public criticism rather than adulation as one of the greatest military rescues in history.

Named after Chief Inspector Arnon Zmora, who was killed during the high-stakes operation, “Operation Arnon” was planned and executed with extreme precision. On June 8, 2024, the IDF raided two houses in the Nuseirat refugee camp in the heart of Gaza after it became known that the four hostages were being held above ground – Noa Argamani in one house and the three male hostages in the other.

"Israel, throughout the war, knew the location of many of the hostages,” retired IDF Brigadier Gen. Amir Avivi states in the film, a fact that may come as a surprise to many. “Knowing the location doesn’t mean you have the operational capability to release them militarily."

The documentary presents the challenges the IDF faced in planning not only how to approach the houses undetected, but also how to overcome the captors before they executed the hostages, and crucially, how to exit safely.

As Avivi says, “You need to be 99% sure you can go in and get the hostage out alive." 

More than that, meticulous planning was required to make sure the soldiers could also return safely together with the hostages. The documentary provides insight into the levels of intelligence collected for the complex operation, which required simultaneous assaults on multiple locations and a high-risk infiltration into a densely populated, unfamiliar urban battlefield. It also portrays the intense live fire that the operation triggered, and the circumstances in which Arnon lost his life.

“They stirred up a hornet's nest," said former IDF spokesman Jonathan Conricus. "Every Hamas and Islamic Jihad fighter with a weapon, and every civilian lookalike, was out on the streets. And more Hamas reinforcements quickly responded."

The documentary presents firsthand accounts from the Israeli commanders and intelligence officials involved, and also from the family of Chief Inspector Arnon as they relay what happened in the last moments of their son’s life. 

In the wake of international criticism of the raid, which focused on the high casualty reports from Gaza and sidelined the extreme challenges the IDF had to deal with, the film also looks at the broader issues surrounding the war and its portrayal in the media.

Monday, July 6, 2026

PM Netanyahu: Some Christian villages in southern Lebanon asked to be annexed by Israel. All Israel News

All Israel News Staff | Published: July 6, 2026 

 
 
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Village mountain - in south Lebanon, 15 August, 2024. (Photo: Shutterstock)

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday claimed that some Christian villages in southern Lebanon had asked Israel for protection from Hezbollah, and that some had even sought annexation by Israel.

Speaking in an interview with Fox News, Netanyahu said Israel was protecting Christian communities in southern Lebanon from “Hezbollah fanatics,” though he did not identify the villages or say when such requests were made.

“Among the Christian villages in Lebanon, some have even asked to be annexed to Israel, because we protect them from Hezbollah fanatics who want to kill them.” 

He continued, “It’s not only the Christians in Lebanon who asked for our protection. It’s the Druze, it’s Muslims, the Sunni Muslims and quite a few of the Shiite Muslims too… they’d like to free Lebanon. I hope we can get more peace deals.”

Hanna Al-Amil, mayor of Rmeish, a Christian Lebanese village just two kilometers (1.2 miles) from the Israeli border, later "categorically" denied Netanyahu's claim.

The prime minister's remarks come as Israel continues to hold parts of southern Lebanon, where the Israel Defense Forces says they are operating against Hezbollah forces and working to protect local communities from the Iranian proxy.

Christian villages in majority-Shia populated southern Lebanon have frequently found themselves in the crosshairs between the IDF and Hezbollah. 

Citizens of Rmeish have reportedly prevented Hezbollah from entrenching itself in the vicinity of the village, and therefore, Rmeish and a few other villages in the area were allowed not to evacuate during the fighting, unlike most other Shiite villages. But as Hezbollah activity has spread, Israeli forces have also operated in or near Christian communities.

Despite Israel's official policy of friendly relations with the southern Lebanese Christians, two incidents where IDF soldiers desecrated a church and a Jesus statue in the area have drawn widespread condemnation.

In a recorded call earlier this year, an Israeli military officer told residents of one southern Lebanese village that Israel viewed them as “friends and family” and did not want them to evacuate, but warned, "If Hezbollah elements are among you, we will strike, and you will have to leave. The responsibility is yours.”

The warning reflected the difficult position of some Christian communities in southern Lebanon, which have sought to avoid being caught between Hezbollah and IDF military operations. In at least one recent case, residents appeared to appeal directly to Israeli forces.

Last month, a group of Israeli soldiers operating in southern Lebanon discovered a personal letter left for them by local Christian residents who had evacuated the area after receiving warnings of potential IDF strikes in the area. 

In the letter, written in broken English, they thanked the IDF for removing Hezbollah from the area and appealed to them to protect their homes and let them return, saying they had children and little money.

Christians are estimated to make up between 30% and 40% of Lebanon’s population.