Tuesday, June 24, 2025

Five killed in Beersheba in Iranian missile strike: is this a one-sided ceasefire?

Cpl. Eitan Zacks


The grim toll of war has once again cast its shadow over Israel, as the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) confirmed the death of Corporal Eitan Zacks, an 18-year-old from Beersheba, among five Israelis killed by an Iranian missile strike on Tuesday morning. 

Zacks, a young man in the prime of his life, was undergoing combat training with the Multidimensional Unit (888), his medic course, cruelly ironic, conducted online due to the escalating security crisis. Such is the absurdity of our times: a soldier training to save lives, reduced to a virtual classroom, only to be obliterated by the very threat he was preparing to confront.

The attack on Beersheba was part of a broader Iranian onslaught, with three waves of about 20 ballistic missiles raining down on Israel between 4:45 a.m. and 7:10 a.m. Two missiles targeted Beersheba specifically. One was intercepted, a small mercy; the other slammed into a residential building, leaving devastation in its wake. The IDF is now scrambling to understand why its defenses failed to stop the second missile, a question that carries the weight of lives lost and a nation’s trust in its shield.

The five killed in Beersheba were not caught in the open, vulnerable to the whims of fate. No, they were in their safe rooms, those sanctuaries of last resort that Israelis have come to rely upon in times of existential peril. A direct hit on a wall obliterated these rooms, turning havens into tombs. 

Of the 28 Israelis killed by Iranian missiles in this conflict, only seven, including these five and two from Petah Tikva, perished in such spaces. The IDF estimates that without these rooms, the death toll could have swelled to dozens, perhaps hundreds. Pause for a moment to consider the arithmetic of survival: a nation forced to calculate its losses not in lives taken, but in lives spared by concrete and steel.

In Beersheba, 20 others were wounded, with injuries ranging from cuts and limb damage to the quieter, no less real wounds of anxiety, as reported by Magen David Adom (MDA). Two of the wounded were rushed to Soroka Hospital in moderate condition; six others were lightly injured. 

Three people, sheltering on the fourth floor of a seven-story apartment building, were pulled from the rubble; a small miracle amid the wreckage. Israel’s Fire and Rescue Authority noted that only one person remains missing, with search efforts ongoing. Their warning was stark: “We emphasize again—do not enter the scene! The arrival of civilians endangers public safety and makes it difficult for rescue forces to operate.” A plea for order in the chaos of war.

The assault was not confined to Beersheba. In the North, shrapnel from Iranian missiles wounded at least one person, a 15-year-old in the Hadera region, while debris fell ominously at Ben-Gurion Airport. 

MDA paramedics, those tireless sentinels of life, described the scene with chilling clarity: “We saw thick smoke rising from the crash site, and as we approached, we saw extensive destruction in several buildings,” said Shimrit Sela, a senior paramedic. “Outside one of the buildings, we saw a man lying unconscious at the entrance to one of the buildings. When we went inside to search the building, we saw a man and a woman unconscious. We have set up a point to treat the injured, and we are conducting medical examinations on residents who are leaving the buildings.”

Iran’s barrage continued past 7 a.m., flouting a one-sided ceasefire announced by President Trump. Only at 7:20 a.m., according to Iran’s state media SNN, did Tehran claim to observe the truce, after four waves of missiles had already scarred the morning. 

This is the reality Israel faces: a regime that speaks of peace while its rockets still fly, a regime that targets civilians and calls it strategy. The moral clarity here is inescapable. Iran’s actions are not those of a state seeking coexistence but of one intoxicated by destruction, indifferent to the human cost.

What does it say of our world that a young man like Eitan Zacks, training to heal, is cut down in his own city? That safe rooms, built to protect, become coffins? This is not merely a tragedy; it is a clarion call.

The civilized world must confront the barbarism of a regime that rains missiles on a sleeping nation. To ignore this is to invite more mornings like this one: mornings of smoke, rubble, and inconsolable loss.

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