The operation follows weeks of heightened fighting tied to the broader regional war involving Israel, Iran, and Iranian-backed groups across the Middle East. According to the military, the goal of the advance is to remove immediate threats near the border and create what it called an “additional layer of security” for Israeli communities in the north. The IDF’s 91st Division launched a significant ground operation in southern Lebanon on Monday, pushing farther into Hezbollah-controlled territory in what officials described as a major escalation along the northern front.
PROPHECY HEADLINES.COM
The "BIBLE NEWSPAPER" that examines current events through the prophetic lens
Monday, March 16, 2026
GROUND WAR EXPANDS: Divison 91 Soldiers Are Now In Southern Lebanon to Shield Northern Galilee
The operation follows weeks of heightened fighting tied to the broader regional war involving Israel, Iran, and Iranian-backed groups across the Middle East. According to the military, the goal of the advance is to remove immediate threats near the border and create what it called an “additional layer of security” for Israeli communities in the north. The IDF’s 91st Division launched a significant ground operation in southern Lebanon on Monday, pushing farther into Hezbollah-controlled territory in what officials described as a major escalation along the northern front.
IDF has destroyed 85-90% of Hezbollah's pre-2023 rocket arsenal
Eighty-five percent to 90% of Hezbollah’s pre-2023 rocket arsenal has been destroyed, the IDF reported Sunday. Before the war, Hezbollah had more than 150,000 rockets, it said. By the November 2024 ceasefire, 70% to 80% of the rocket arsenal had been destroyed, the IDF said. Later in 2025, about 30,000 rockets remained, the IDF said. The IDF’s update on Sunday suggests that over the course of 2025, and more intensely since Hezbollahentered the war on March 2, the military has gradually reduced that total to between 10,000 and 23,000 rockets.
Seizing Iran’s uranium could take ‘largest special forces operation in history’ – WSJ
'Secret base’ on the Temple Mount sparks Palestinian anger
Right-wing activist Baruch Marzel sparked a viral stir on the social network X after posting a sarcastic message that drew more than 100,000 views. Marzel shared an AI-generated image depicting the Dome of the Rock with Israeli Air Force fighter jets parked beneath it, appearing as though a subterranean military base existed under the site. He added a tongue-in-cheek caption: “Note: Don’t share the photo of the secret Israeli Air Force base in Jerusalem, so it won’t be attacked."
Iranians weigh whether to flee country amid the war
Iranians try to contact loved ones abroad through border with Turkey - report
Amid nationwide internet disruptions and communications blocks in Iran, some Iranians have been traveling to the border with Turkey in an effort to get online and reach loved ones, BBC News reported on Sunday. According to the report, one man has been selling a service that helps Iranians outside Tehran stay in touch with relatives and friends inside the country. To make the system work, the man uses two phones, one connected to the Iranian network and another to the Turkish network, because international calls into Tehran are blocked, according to the BBC.
Customers outside Iran call the seller’s Turkish phone via WhatsApp, and he then connects them to people inside the country using the Iranian mobile network, the report added. Amid the war with Iran, marked by the Israeli and US operations Roaring Lion and Epic Fury, internet restrictions that began during earlier protests have made it extremely difficult for Iranians to contact people abroad through normal channels.
Even so, many Iranians have clung to any opportunity they can find to communicate. “I’m paying a huge amount of money to be able to connect to the internet to talk to him right now,” Ava, from Tehran, told the BBC. She had been due to marry her fiancĂ©, who lives in Canada, this week, but then the war began. Services designed to bypass internet and phone restrictions are often expensive and unreliable. Even when a connection is made, calls usually last only two or three minutes before cutting out, at a cost of about £28 ($38), according to BBC Persian. (Read More)
Iran said to arrest 20 people for allegedly cooperating with Israel
When the hospital became a battlefield, these women kept life moving forward
Dr. Ofira Azulay: "You put everything you’re feeling aside, and you just work.”
Sunday, March 15, 2026
IDF pummels terror sites as Hezbollah chief threatens long campaign
The Israeli military said it had eliminated key commanders of the Shi’ite terrorist organization, including Iranian officers operating in Lebanon.
WATCH: IDF's Lebanon raids kill Hezbollah terrorists, seizing weapons, dismantling infrastructure
The IDF's 7th Armored Brigade, operating under the 36th Division, conducted targeted raids against Hezbollah terrorists and terror infrastructure over the past week, the military announced on Saturday. As part of the raids, the brigade's combat team killed dozens of terrorists and dismantled dozens of terror infrastructure sites, including a weapons depot, command center, and observation posts belonging to Hezbollah terrorists, according to the military. The IDF's Northern Command is also continuing with preparations to deploy additional soldiers to the Israel-Lebanon border in the coming week, following a directive by IDF Chief of Staff Lt.-Gen. Eyal Zamir, who ordered forces to intensify a targeted campaign against members of Hezbollah’s Radwan Force following increased militant movement toward the border over the past week.
Soldiers from the Golani Brigade have also been deployed to the border, awaiting operational orders following a situational assessment, the military stated. The IDF's deployment aims to provide "an additional layer of protection for the residents of northern Israel," the military said. The military shared a recording of 7th Brigade chief Col. "S", saying that "We will strike the enemy with determination in order to push the threat away from our communities and to ensure the future of Israel. The residents are relying on us."
"Once again, we have been called up. After months of continuous combat in Gaza, we have been called to advance and operate against the enemy seeking to harm the residents of the North," he stated. The IDF on Saturday expanded its ground operations against Hezbollah in southern Lebanon, as well as launching artillery fire into the area, according to military officials. Military officials said the artillery barrage was intended to support expanded ground activity against Hezbollah units operating in southern Lebanon. Additional Israeli ground forces have been deployed in the area as part of the effort. Also on Saturday, the IDF completed an additional wave of strikes on Hezbollah infrastructure across Lebanon. (Read More)
Strait of Hormuz open to everyone but US, Israel, Iranian FM Araghchi says
The Strait of Hormuz is only closed to US and Israeli ships, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said in an interview with MS NOW on Saturday. Other ships are free to pass, although many prefer not to due to “security concerns,” which Araghchi claimed have nothing to do with Iran. He added that currently there are “many tankers and ships that are passing through the Strait of Hormuz.”
US may hit Iran's Kharg Island again, Trump tells NBC News
US President Donald Trump said on Saturday that the United States may carry out more strikes on Iran's Kharg Island oil export hub, saying that while Tehran appears ready to make a deal to end the conflict, "the terms aren’t good enough yet." He said the US strikes had "totally demolished" most of Kharg Island, telling NBC News that "we may hit it a few more times just for fun." Trump also questioned whether Iranian Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei is still alive.
Trump: CENTCOM ‘totally obliterated’ military targets on Kharg Island
Trump vows to open Strait of Hormuz ‘one way or the other’ as Iran threatens area’s ports
US leader says other countries must participate in effort to prevent attacks on shipping; US embassy in Iraq and UAE oil facility targeted by Iran and allies.
Saturday, March 14, 2026
Israel is preparing for largest-scale ground offensive in Lebanon since 2006 war - Axios
According to the report, Israel plans to seize the entire area south of the Litani River and dismantle Hezbollah's military infrastructure, in what officials say would "be like Gaza."
Lebanon Proposes Ceasefire as Israel-Hezbollah War Displaces Hundreds of Thousands
Israel Air Force drops leaflets with QR codes over Beirut
Trump threatens Iran’s oil infrastructure after US bombs military sites on key fuel island
Trump says US ‘obliterated’ military targets in strike on key Iranian oil hub: 'Powerful bombing raids'
President Donald Trump said Friday that the U.S. had carried out a bombing raid on Iran’s Kharg Island, a strategically vital island in the Persian Gulf that serves as the country’s largest oil terminal and a crucial hub for its crude exports. "Moments ago, at my direction, the United States Central Command executed one of the most powerful bombing raids in the history of the Middle East, and totally obliterated every MILITARY target in Iran’s crown jewel, Kharg Island," Trump wrote on Truth Social.
Friday, March 13, 2026
Katz threatens to take territory in Lebanon if attacks persist; evacuation warnings expand
The Defense Minister's dire warning to Lebanese leaders
Defense Minister in situational assessment: "The destruction of the bridge over the Litani is just the beginning. Lebanon failed to dismantle Hezbollah and will pay an increasing price."
Why Iran’s vital Kharg Island oil hub is still untouched by US-Israel bombers
While some argue for destroying the terminal through which 90% of Iran’s oil exports flow, others caution of a global market ‘tailspin’
Kharg Island: Iran’s ‘Achilles' heel’
Donald Trump accused Tehran of “making us look a bunch of fools” and said he would “go in and take” an island from Iran. But this threat wasn’t made in 2026. Trump said it in 1988. In an interview with The Guardian’s Polly Toynbee nearly 40 years ago, the now US president raged against the Iranians, saying: “One bullet shot at one of our men or ships and I’d do a number on Kharg Island.” Situated northwest of the Strait of Hormuz, the strategically important shipping route in the Gulf, Kharg Island has long been seen as Tehran’s Achilles’ heel. Grabbing it today could “let Trump beat Iran without sending a single soldier”, said The Telegraph.
What is Kharg Island?
Why is it important?
‘Take the Oil’: Seizing the Kharg Island Terminal is the Ultimate Checkmate to Iran
Should Trump Take Kharg, Rather than Destroy It, He Can Ensure the Regime Can Never Again Pay the Salaries of Its Bureaucrats and Soldiers
America Should Seize the Kharg Oil Terminal—Not Bomb Iran
When protests erupted in Tehran’s bazaar, President Donald Trump warned Iran on TruthSocial, “If Iran shots [sic] and violently kills peaceful protesters, which is their custom, the United States of America will come to their rescue. We are locked and loaded and ready to go.” Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei has now called Trump’s bluff. Reports filtering out of Iran suggest Iranian security forces have conducted a massacre of protestors far larger than what the Chinese Communists did at Tiananmen Square. Either Trump stands down, at which point he essentially mirrors President Barack Obama, voiding his own red lines in the wake of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s chemical weapons use, or he attacks Iran.
The Kharg Island Play
Fortunately, Trump has a way out if he only looks at past plans. In 1979, after radical students loyal to Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini took 52 American diplomats hostage, President Jimmy Carter tasked Adm. James “Ace” Lyons to come up with a plan to compel their release. Lyons proposed blockading Iranian ports and seizing Kharg Island. His logic was simple: The Revolutionary regime could not afford a cessation of its oil exports.
Thursday, March 12, 2026
Hezbollah fires 200 rockets at north, Iran launches missiles in ‘integrated operation’
Lebanese terror group Hezbollah blasted some 200 rockets and 20 drones at northern Israel for hours on Wednesday evening, repeatedly sending hundreds of thousands of Israelis to shelters. Two people were lightly injured in northern Israel. A house was destroyed by a direct missile hit in Moshav Haniel, in central Israel. An elderly woman and her Filipino caregiver were in the safe room of the home, and emerged unscathed.
Taking the Ground: The New Order to Expand IDF Operations in the North
In a major escalation of rhetoric and military planning, Defense Minister Israel Katz announced on Thursday that the IDF has been officially instructed to prepare for a significant expansion of its operations within Lebanon. Following a high level situational assessment with the military's top brass, including the Deputy Chief of Staff and the Commander of the Air Force, Katz revealed that he had issued a direct and severe warning to the President of Lebanon. The Minister made it clear that the Israeli government will no longer tolerate the inability of the Lebanese state to restrain Hezbollah. If the national government in Beirut cannot prevent the terrorist group from launching rockets at northern Israeli communities, Israel intends to enter the territory and establish security through direct military control.
Hezbollah launches over 100 rockets at Israel’s North in joint attack with Iran, five injured
IDF Chief Zamir orders reinforcements to the North for potential broader invasion against Hezbollah
Danon to UNSC: 'Either Lebanon restrains Hezbollah or Israel uses full force'
North Korea Elbows into Iran Conflict, Pledging Support for ‘Supreme Leader’
North Korea on Wednesday announced its support for Iran’s new Supreme Leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, and denounced what it called “illegal” attacks on Iran by the United States and Israel.
IDF strikes Iranian explosives experiments nuclear facility at Parchin-Taleghan 2
The IDF on Thursday said it had struck Iran's advanced explosives experiments nuclear facility at Parchin-Taleghan 2. On February 2, multiple satellite photo providers put out pictures of the latest Iranian efforts to conceal the status of their nuclear program rebuilding efforts at Natanz, Isfahan, and Parchin-Taleghan 2. Parchin-Taleghan 2 had previously served as an AMAD-era nuclear weapons group site relating to explosives testing and is just south of Tehran.































