Russia Launches Drone Attack on Kyiv

This handout photograph taken and released by the Ukrainian Emergency Service on November 21, 2024 shows Ukrainian firefighters work on a spot following an air-attack, in Dnipro, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. (Photo by Handout / State Emergency Service of Ukraine / AFP)
This handout photograph taken and released by the Ukrainian Emergency Service on November 21, 2024 shows Ukrainian firefighters work on a spot following an air-attack, in Dnipro, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. (Photo by Handout / State Emergency Service of Ukraine / AFP)
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Russia Launches Drone Attack on Kyiv

This handout photograph taken and released by the Ukrainian Emergency Service on November 21, 2024 shows Ukrainian firefighters work on a spot following an air-attack, in Dnipro, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. (Photo by Handout / State Emergency Service of Ukraine / AFP)
This handout photograph taken and released by the Ukrainian Emergency Service on November 21, 2024 shows Ukrainian firefighters work on a spot following an air-attack, in Dnipro, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. (Photo by Handout / State Emergency Service of Ukraine / AFP)

Ukraine's air defense units destroyed more than 10 Russia drones that were targeting Kyiv in an overnight drone attack, Ukraine's military said on Sunday.
There were no immediate reports of damage or injuries as result of the attack, Kyiv's military administration posted on the Telegram messaging app. It said that the information on the full scale of the attack will be released later on Sunday.
"The UAVs (unmanned aerial vehicles) were flying in different directions towards Kyiv," said Serhiy Popko, the head of Kyiv's military administration. "The air raid alert in the city lasted for more than three hours."
Reuters witnesses heard explosions in Kyiv in what sounded like air defense units in operation.
There was no immediate comment from Russia about the attack.



Russian Military Transport Plane Crashes in Crimea, Killing 29

A Russian military transport plane, Antonov-26 (file photo)
A Russian military transport plane, Antonov-26 (file photo)
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Russian Military Transport Plane Crashes in Crimea, Killing 29

A Russian military transport plane, Antonov-26 (file photo)
A Russian military transport plane, Antonov-26 (file photo)

A Russian An-26 military transport plane crashed into a cliff in Crimea, killing 29 people on board, due to a possible technical malfunction, Russia's defense ministry said early on Wednesday, according to news agencies.

TASS news agency, quoting the ministry, said communication with the aircraft was lost at about 6 p.m. local time (1500 GMT) on Tuesday on a planned flight over Crimea. The peninsula, covered in sweeping mountains leading down to the coast of the Black Sea, was annexed by Russia from Ukraine in 2014.

"The defense ministry reported that a search team ⁠found the site of ⁠the catastrophe," TASS reported. "According to a report from the site, six crew members and 23 passengers on board were killed."

The ministry report did not say how many people were on board, but it made no mention of any survivors on the An-26, a light tactical military transport that has for ⁠decades been a mainstay that can carry cargo and up to 40 passengers over short and medium distances.

"There was no impact on the aircraft," TASS quoted the ministry as saying, implying that objects like missiles, drones and birds were not involved.

"The preliminary cause of the crash is a technical malfunction. A commission from the military is working at the site," it said.

Russia's defense ministry did not respond immediately to a Reuters request for comment outside normal business hours.

The An-26 has been in service since ⁠the late ⁠1960s and has also been used by airlines to carry freight, but the model has been involved in a number of deadly crashes over the last decade.

A Ukrainian An-26 crashed during a technical flight in Ukraine's southeastern Zaporizhzhia region in 2022, killing one person. Another aircraft crashed on a training flight in northeastern Ukraine in 2020, killing all but one of the 27 people on board.

Eight people, including five Russians, were killed when an An-26 crashed in South Sudan in 2020. Four of 10 people on board were killed when an An-26 crashed on landing in Ivory Coast in West Africa in 2017.


Israel Deploys AI Agents Across Multiple Fronts

Technologists with the Israeli military’s Matzpen operational data and applications unit work at their stations, at an Israeli Army base in Ramat Gan, Israel. (Reuters)
Technologists with the Israeli military’s Matzpen operational data and applications unit work at their stations, at an Israeli Army base in Ramat Gan, Israel. (Reuters)
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Israel Deploys AI Agents Across Multiple Fronts

Technologists with the Israeli military’s Matzpen operational data and applications unit work at their stations, at an Israeli Army base in Ramat Gan, Israel. (Reuters)
Technologists with the Israeli military’s Matzpen operational data and applications unit work at their stations, at an Israeli Army base in Ramat Gan, Israel. (Reuters)

The Israeli Army has begun deploying “AI agents” to detect missile launchers, generate real-time aerial intelligence and sharpen strike speed and precision across multiple fronts, officials told Haaretz and the Yedioth Ahronoth newspaper on Tuesday.

“The pace, scope and precision of strikes — as well as their overall quality and volume — would not have been possible without human-machine integration and automated tools capable of synchronizing hundreds of actions simultaneously,” an Israeli official told Yedioth Ahronoth.

Such missions, he noted, would have been impossible for the Israeli army just a few years ago, or even months ago.

The senior military official said the army sees the technology as part of its future, with some such agents already in use in undisclosed systems.

According to Yedioth Ahronoth, Israel’s use of artificial intelligence in Operation Roaring Lion is unprecedented.

Integrated into command-and-control systems from the General Staff down, AI is helping the Air Force plan and coordinate strikes in Iran and Lebanon and assist with navigation
The newspaper said in recent weeks, AI has also helped generate real-time situational assessments across multiple theaters — a need underscored by lessons from the failures that led to the October 7 attacks.

One system, known as “Tashan,” is used by the Air Force to identify missile launchers in Iran, Lebanon and Yemen immediately after launches, allowing forces to quickly locate and destroy the source.

Meanwhile, another source told Haaretz on Tuesday that the Israeli military has for the first time confirmed an artificial intelligence infrastructure developed during the war in Gaza is now fully operational in current fighting in Iran and Lebanon.

The system, known internally as the Israeli army’s “Operational Data and AI Factory,” integrates sensor, video, text and audio data into a single real-time operational picture across the military.

A military official told Haaretz that the system is now in use throughout the army. It can process vast amounts of data, including inputs from sensors, as well as video, text and audio.

According to the official, the shift to this AI-based infrastructure creates a comprehensive operational picture of the military's forces, missions and threats – one that is accessible to all branches.

The system is designed to assist with attack planning, targeting and strikes. It also records and transcribes all wireless communications, and compiles real-time data on missile and drone launches and interceptions. This significantly improves both operational and defensive decision-making in a way that was previously unimaginable.

Haaretz has learned that the system is also involved in processing strike plans and targets – confirming for the first time that the infrastructure plays a role in offensive operations, not just defense.

In Lebanon, military sources say, similar capabilities are being used to analyze video feeds from cameras deployed across the sector, identifying people and objects and generating real-time alerts.

Another system, “Lohem” (Fighter), assists commanders – particularly in the Air Force – in planning and synchronizing strikes.

The Israeli army says several AI-based defensive systems are also operational. These include “Rom,” which detects drones and UAVs; “Spatial Control,” which alerts ground forces to rocket and anti-tank fire; and “Tashan,” which identifies launches and impact points and locates the source of fire.

AI has also been integrated into Israel's national alert system, enabling predictions of where interception debris may fall.

The newspaper said a central component of the system is “MapIt,” a platform that displays real-time, three-dimensional operational data to commanders. It has learned that over the past year, the military has developed an additional layer on top of “MapIt,” consolidating all data streams into a single operational map.


Iran’s Fractured Leadership is Struggling to Coordinate, Officials Say

A member of the Iranian security forces stands guard next to a banner honoring former Iranian supreme leader Ali Khamenei, in Tehran, Iran, 30 March 2026. EPA/ABEDIN TAHERKENAREH
A member of the Iranian security forces stands guard next to a banner honoring former Iranian supreme leader Ali Khamenei, in Tehran, Iran, 30 March 2026. EPA/ABEDIN TAHERKENAREH
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Iran’s Fractured Leadership is Struggling to Coordinate, Officials Say

A member of the Iranian security forces stands guard next to a banner honoring former Iranian supreme leader Ali Khamenei, in Tehran, Iran, 30 March 2026. EPA/ABEDIN TAHERKENAREH
A member of the Iranian security forces stands guard next to a banner honoring former Iranian supreme leader Ali Khamenei, in Tehran, Iran, 30 March 2026. EPA/ABEDIN TAHERKENAREH

Washington: Ronen Bergman, Adam Goldman, Julian Barnes

The US-Israeli war against Iran has fractured the Iranian government, complicating its ability to make decisions and coordinate larger retaliatory attacks, according to officials familiar with US and Western intelligence assessments.

Several dozen Iranian leaders and their deputies have been killed since the war began four weeks ago. Those who survive have had difficulty communicating and are unable to meet in person, for fear of having their calls intercepted by the United States or Israel and being targeted in an airstrike.

While Iran’s security and military agencies continue to function, the government’s ability to plan new strategies or policies has been weakened.

The Trump administration has said a new government is in charge in Iran and has pressed it to make a quick deal. But the more degraded Iranian government decision making becomes, the more difficult it will be for it to negotiate with American envoys or make significant concessions.

With different leaders in place, Iranian negotiators may have little knowledge about what their government is willing to concede, or even whom precisely to ask.

What is more, American officials say hard-liners within the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps have become more influential in Iran, exerting more power than the religious leadership nominally in charge.

But whether someone emerges to make a deal, and whether that person can persuade other officials to agree to it, is far from clear.

Former American officials say Iran will make a deal when it suffers enough economic pain from the war. While the damage has been severe, Iran may not yet feel as though it is losing, according to current and former officials.

On Monday, US President Donald Trump threatened to expand the war if a deal was not quickly reached, suggesting that US forces might try to take Kharg Island, Iran’s main hub for oil exports.

Iran’s compromised communications have caused confusion and paranoia among the surviving government leaders, who fear that their calls and messages are being intercepted by Israeli intelligence, officials say.

As a result, they have been reluctant to make calls, according to officials briefed on Western intelligence assessments.

Israel began the war with a strike on the leadership compound that killed Iran’s supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, and much of the national security leadership.

A number of lower-level officials seen by the United States as more pragmatic were also killed in the strike, US officials said.

Trump himself made reference in interviews that potential candidates to lead Iran had been killed.

The attack severed many connections between security, military and civilian policymakers, according to Western officials and others briefed on government assessments.

It is unclear how much control the new supreme leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, is exerting over the government. He has not been seen in public, and US and Israeli intelligence agencies believe he was wounded during the war.

Some intelligence officials believe that Khamenei may be more of a figurehead, and that the surviving leadership of the Revolutionary Guards is making the decisions.

A senior US military official said Iranian command and control has been badly degraded by American and Israeli strikes.

Still, the official and a senior intelligence official said, before the war Iran built a decentralized control system that allows local commanders in different regions of the country to make their own strike decisions, even in the absence of direct day-to-day orders from Tehran.

The United States is targeting those local commanders, the senior military official said.

Nevertheless, Iran has proved it can still launch substantial offensive strikes.

But the retaliatory attacks have not been as large, or as effective, as they might have been because of the problems in the Iranian government. Given the decimation of its leadership, former US officials say, Iran has been unable to launch larger barrages of missiles that could more easily overwhelm defenses. Instead, regional commands have had to muster counterattacks without coordinating with one another.

Trump has expressed frustration with what he has portrayed as mixed messaging from the Iranian leadership.

“The Iranian negotiators are very different and ‘strange,’” Trump wrote on social media on Thursday. “They are ‘begging’ us to make a deal, which they should be doing since they have been militarily obliterated, with zero chance of a comeback, and yet they publicly state that they are only ‘looking at our proposal.’”

Over the weekend, Trump said the campaign of airstrikes had resulted in new leadership in Iran and again claimed progress in talks.

“It’s a whole different group of people,” Trump said on Sunday. “So I would consider that regime change, and frankly, they’ve been very reasonable.”

In a social media post on Monday, Trump offered optimistic assessments of the current government but also threatened to expand the war by targeting energy and civilian infrastructure. He said that if a deal was not reached shortly, and if the Strait of Hormuz remained closed, he would attack Iran’s electrical generation plants, oil wells and desalination plants.

People briefed on intelligence assessments said Trump’s frustration reflected the inability of the current Iranian government to coordinate a response and make a decision about the American peace proposals.

Israeli officials have said the communication problems in Iran are not dissimilar to the problems with hostage negotiations during the Gaza war. In Gaza, offers from the United States and Israel went to Hamas leaders in Qatar, and then were conveyed in written notes to leaders in Gaza, a time-consuming process that introduced confusion.

The New York Times