Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

‘There will be more rounds with Iran’

Iran was badly humiliated by Israel’s 12-day operation in June and is therefore pouring vast resources into rebuilding its military, said Amir Baram.

The Israeli Air Force practicing aerial refueling of fighter jets in Israeli airspace. The exercise simulated long-range flight deep behind enemy lines, Aug. 18, 2024. Credit: IDF.
The Israeli Air Force practicing aerial refueling of fighter jets in Israeli airspace. The exercise simulated long-range flight deep behind enemy lines, Aug. 18, 2024. Credit: IDF.

“Operation Rising Lion” may have ended in a decisive Israeli victory, but there will be more rounds with Tehran, the director-general of Israel’s Defense Ministry warned on Monday.

Speaking at a Finance Ministry conference, Israel Defense Forces Maj. Gen. (res.) Amir Baram said that Iran was badly humiliated by Israel’s 12-day operation in June, which devastated the Islamic Republic’s nuclear and ballistic missile programs.

As a result, Iran is pouring vast resources into rebuilding its military. “They are accelerating force buildup,” Baram said, according to Ynet.

Baram highlighted the connection between security and economic strength at the conference hosted by the accountant general, who is responsible for managing the government’s funds and assets.

Global defense spending in 2024 reached $2.7 trillion—a 20% jump from 2023, “the biggest increase since 1988,” he said.

Israel’s war costs already exceed 205 billion shekels ($61 billion), yet economic indicators “convey strength,” Baram noted.

Baram announced the creation of a “Supreme Armaments Council” that will bring together the Defense Ministry, Finance Ministry, National Security Council, defense industries and other bodies to accelerate preparations against Iran and Yemen, Ynet reported.

“We have to invest right now in thinking about the next surprises, about the next beeper operations,” he said, referencing Israel’s Sept. 2024 intelligence operation involving exploding beepers and walkie-talkies used by Hezbollah, the Lebanon-based terror group.

Baram also underscored the high costs of defense. “An attack in Yemen costs about 50 million shekels [$15 million], an Arrow 3 interception 15-30 million [$4-9 million], but one miss can cause damage of 300 million shekels [$90 million]—as happened with the ballistic missile strike in Bat Yam,” he said.

The Defense Ministry prepares along three timeframes, he said. First, equipping for immediate needs, second, improving readiness for the next decade and three, developing transformative, game-changing weapons for the future.

Baram noted the worrying global delegitimization trend the Jewish state faces amid the war in Gaza, and how this obligates Israel to expand its domestic production base. Israel recently signed $2.5 billion in defense export deals, he noted.

A new joint fund with the accountant general will further boost exports and turn the defense sector into an economic growth engine, he added.

See more from JNS Staff
David Greenfield, CEO of Met Council, told JNS that the video “has strained relationships with a lot of us in the leadership, who have tried to work in good faith with the administration.”
U.S. President Donald Trump, who sought to unseat Cassidy, stated that “his disloyalty to the man who got him elected is now a part of legend, and it’s nice to see that his political career is over.”
A 31-year-old man of Moroccan descent ran over 7 people and stabbed another in a suspected terror attack near Milan.
“This is a strategic move designed to ensure Israel’s technological superiority, accelerate development in the field of AI, and maintain Israel’s position in the first line of world powers,” according to the Prime Minister’s Office.
“There are certainly many possibilities; we are prepared for any scenario,” the premier said.
The weekend statement from the Foreign Ministry comes six months after Jerusalem and the South American nation restored full diplomatic relations.