False Alarm in Central Israel: Iran Missile Alerts Sent by Mistake
Residents of Bnei Brak and other communities in central Israel reported receiving early warning alerts from the Home Front Command after a malfunction in the system’s detection of launches from Iran. An IDF spokesperson said, “Due to a technical malfunction, an early instruction was sent to mobile phones in central Israel.”
(Photo: Nati Shohat, Flash90)Residents of Bnei Brak and other communities across central Israel reported Sunday morning that they had received an emergency alert from the Home Front Command warning of potential incoming missile fire from Iran. The alert was subsequently investigated and determined to be the result of a technical malfunction — no missile launch from Iran toward Israel had taken place.
According to an initial assessment, the system appears to have misidentified launches fired from Iran toward Jordan as an incoming threat directed at Israel, triggering the erroneous alerts to residents in central Israel.
The IDF issued a clarification: "Due to a technical malfunction, an early warning notification was sent to mobile phones in central Israel. This was a malfunction. There is no security incident, and the event is under investigation."
Meanwhile, the Jordanian military announced that three missiles launched from Iran had landed within the kingdom's territory. The statement confirmed there were no casualties and that only minor property damage had been sustained. The Jordanian Armed Forces added: "Jordan's forces will not permit the kingdom's airspace or territory to be used as a theater of conflict, and will respond forcefully to any threat to the country's sovereignty, territorial integrity, and the security of its citizens."

