Israel's security cabinet has concluded its meeting, the Prime Minister's Office reports. No further details on decisions or discussions have been released.
The security cabinet meeting ended at an undisclosed time, the Prime Minister's Office reported just before midnight. The session was convened earlier in the evening in a fortified underground bunker — a move first reported by The Zioneer at 19:01, reflecting elevated readiness for potential Iranian retaliation after the IDF strike in Beirut's Dahiyeh. No official statement on decisions or discussions has been released, and it is unclear whether the forum will reconvene.
By 19:01, initial sources indicated the meeting would be relocated to the bunker. The cabinet's agenda, as reported by The Zioneer at that time, included discussions of U.S.-Iran understandings, American refueling aircraft stationed at Ben Gurion Airport, and a billion-shekel budget allocation for communities in Judea and Samaria. The location itself underscored the heightened threat environment, with sources describing high readiness for possible missile fire from Iran.
The meeting was called amid ongoing security developments on multiple fronts, including the aftermath of the IDF strike in Beirut's Dahiyeh and broader regional tensions with Iran, as The Zioneer reported on earlier in the evening. The presence of U.S. refueling aircraft at Ben Gurion Airport, noted on the agenda, signals ongoing coordination with Washington.
It remains unconfirmed whether any decisions were adopted during the session or whether the cabinet will convene again. No further details on the discussion or its outcomes have been released by the Prime Minister's Office.
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- Internal intake
