The day in Israel unfolded with intense domestic and security developments. Early morning saw the escalation of "Disruption Day" protests in Jerusalem, marked by fires near the Prime Minister's residence, damaged vehicles, and occupation of the National Library roof, leading to the afternoon arrest of two elderly suspects for arson. Concurrently, a State Comptroller's report critically detailed the government's 17-year failure in home front preparedness, explicitly blaming top officials. Security concerns heightened with two separate missile launches from Yemen, both intercepted, triggering alarms in central Israel. Late afternoon, Prime Minister Netanyahu sharply condemned the demonstrators as "fascist phalanxes," drawing immediate challenge from hostage families. Amidst this, the IDF officially launched the second phase of Gaza operations, and Shin Bet foiled a Hamas plot to assassinate Minister Ben Gvir, reportedly directed from Turkey. The day concluded with Hamas's offer for a "comprehensive deal" to end the war, which Israel swiftly rejected as "spin."