Rocket fragments and missiles struck multiple locations in East Jerusalem and Safed, with Arabic-language media heavily focusing on Israeli reports of a hazardous aviation fuel leak at a targeted depot in northern Israel.
Amid the massive ongoing regional conflict and heavy retaliatory missile bombardments by Iran and its allied "Axis of Resistance," new rocket impacts and fragment falls have been reported in northern Israel and East Jerusalem.
Qatar-based Al Jazeera reported, citing Israeli media, that rocket fragments fell in more than one location in East Jerusalem.
In northern Israel, multiple Arabic-language networks highlighted strikes in the Safed area, specifically focusing on alarms regarding hazardous material leaks. The Beirut-based Al Mayadeen, a network heavily aligned with the Axis of Resistance, briefly relayed Israeli media reports of a rocket impact in the Safed region.
More detailed claims emerged from channels known for their strong anti-Israel editorial stances. The Iraqi channel NAYA cited the Israeli newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth, stating that a "solid fuel and aviation fuel depot" was targeted, which resulted in a gas leak in Safed. NAYA emphasized that there are "great fears in Israel" regarding a jet fuel leak following the fall of interceptor missile fragments in the area.
Similarly, the pro-Hamas Lebanese channel Rasd al-Ado quoted Hebrew Channel 12, reporting that "dedicated forces are on their way to the site of falling rocket fragments in the city of Safed, where there is concern of a jet fuel leak."
These strikes occur against the backdrop of an unprecedented regional escalation. Earlier in the month, a joint U.S.-Israeli military campaign against Iran prompted widespread retaliatory missile and drone attacks by Axis of Resistance militias on Israeli cities and strategic infrastructure across the Middle East.
The system prompt contained a contradictory instruction under TRANSLATION FIDELITY asking to translate to Hebrew, but explicit primary instructions demanded English output. The digest was written in English while preserving the original tone and sentiment of the Arabic sources.