
Ramat Gan
Israeli city in the Tel Aviv District, now a target in Iran's missile campaign.
Last refreshed: 30 March 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
Can Ramat Gan's Diamond Exchange survive within range of Iran's missiles?
Latest on Ramat Gan
- What is Ramat Gan?
- Ramat Gan is an Israeli city of roughly 160,000 people immediately east of Tel Aviv, founded in 1921. It is home to the Israeli Diamond Exchange, the world's largest diamond trading complex, and forms part of the dense Gush Dan metropolitan area.
- Was Ramat Gan attacked by Iran?
- Yes. Ramat Gan has been struck multiple times during Iran's missile campaign. Two residents in their 70s were killed in a single IRGC strike during the 61st wave of Operation True Promise 4; one victim could not reach shelter due to a disability.Source: IRGC/Israeli emergency services
- How far is Ramat Gan from Tel Aviv?
- Ramat Gan borders Tel Aviv directly to the east, with no gap between the two cities. It is part of the Gush Dan conurbation and is roughly 3-5 km from central Tel Aviv, well within the same metropolitan area.
- Is the Israeli Diamond Exchange in Ramat Gan safe during the Iran war?
- The Diamond Exchange district sits inside Ramat Gan, which has suffered repeated Iranian missile and cluster-munition strikes. While the Exchange itself has not been specifically targeted, its location within the strike zone has disrupted normal commercial operations.Source: Lowdown
- How does Ramat Gan compare to Tel Aviv as an Iranian target?
- Ramat Gan is a residential and commercial suburb rather than a military hub, yet it has been struck as frequently as central Tel Aviv during the IRGC campaign. Iran claims it targets military and security sites, but civilian casualties and residential damage in Ramat Gan contradict that framing.Source: Lowdown
Background
Ramat Gan is a city of roughly 160,000 people immediately east of Tel Aviv, forming part of the Gush Dan metropolitan area in Israel's Tel Aviv District. Founded in 1921, it is best known internationally for the Israeli Diamond Exchange, the world's largest diamond trading complex, and Ramat Gan National Park.
Ramat Gan has been struck repeatedly during Iran's ballistic-missile campaign against Israel. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) killed two elderly residents during the 61st wave of Operation True Promise 4 — one could not reach a shelter due to disability . A separate cluster-munition volley also wounded a resident when bomblets struck a residential building .
The city's civilian toll exposes a central tension: Iran targets dense suburbs to maximise psychological pressure, while Israel's layered air defences cannot fully intercept saturation volleys. The Diamond Exchange, a global economic node, sits within the strike zone, raising questions about whether commercial infrastructure will be deliberately targeted next.