Longest Lull in Iranian Missile Barrages Recorded

Israeli media sources report a 12-hour pause in Iranian missile launches, marking the longest break in retaliatory fire since the onset of the current regional war.

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Longest Lull in Iranian Missile Barrages Recorded

Amid the ongoing regional war triggered by the US and Israeli "Operation Lion's Roar" earlier this month, Israeli media sources are reporting a significant pause in the intense Iranian missile attacks targeting Israel. According to ZiratNews, a missile launch originating from Iran at 1:26 AM on March 16 marked the end of a 12-hour period without any launches. The channel noted that "this is the longest pause since the beginning of the war."

Prominent Israeli journalist Almog Boker—whose channel typically reflects a pro-Israel stance while occasionally featuring criticism of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu—corroborated these figures. Boker pointed out that the lull followed "long hours of non-stop firing" spanning from midnight until noon the previous day. Because of the extended break, Boker reported that the "statistics leveled out and the Iranians launched less than 20 missiles a day."

Media Framing Analysis

The provided Hebrew-language sources display a unified narrative focused on tracking the empirical intensity of the Iranian retaliation. Following the massive, unprecedented escalation earlier in March—which included severe strikes on the Israeli home front and the activation of emergency protocols—Israeli commentators are closely monitoring barrage frequencies to gauge the conflict's tempo. Both ZiratNews and Almog Boker utilize the exact same metric, highlighting the 12-hour gap culminating at 1:26 AM, to inform the Israeli public that the pace of attacks momentarily decelerated from its previous unceasing rhythm. Because no Arabic-language sources reported on this specific lull in the provided dataset, a comparative cross-narrative analysis is limited exclusively to the domestic Israeli framing of the event.

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Notes

The prompt requested cross-narrative analysis between Hebrew and Arabic sources, but only Hebrew sources were provided in the dataset. The analysis section was adapted to examine the unified Israeli media framing regarding the statistics and pacing of the attacks.