A fragment from an intercepted Iranian Ballistic missile struck approximately 400 metres from the Western Wall and the al-Aqsa Mosque compound on Friday, opening a crater near Dung Gate in Jerusalem's Old City. No injuries were reported. The strike came during the IRGC's announced 66th wave of attacks, which deployed what Tehran called 'super-heavy multi-warhead' Qadr missiles alongside Khorramshahr, Kheibar Shekan, and Zolfaqar systems.
This is the second time in a week that missile debris has reached Jerusalem's historic core. On 14 March, fragments fell near the Knesset and the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, with a large piece striking a home in East Jerusalem . The pattern is consistent: Israel's layered air defence system — Arrow, David's Sling, Iron Dome — destroys the incoming warhead, but the kinetic energy of a Ballistic missile travelling at several kilometres per second does not vanish on interception. Debris follows ballistic trajectories of its own.
The geography concentrates the risk. The Haram al-Sharif — known to Jews as the Temple Mount — occupies roughly 14 hectares in the southeast corner of the Old City. The Western Wall plaza sits immediately below its western retaining wall. Within the compact walled city — roughly 900 metres at its widest — 400 metres is proximity, not a margin of safety.
The compound is administered by the Jordanian-appointed Islamic Waqf under status quo arrangements dating to 1967 that have survived every subsequent conflict through deliberate restraint by all parties. Damage to al-Aqsa — the third holiest site in Islam — would register across the entire Muslim world in ways no diplomatic framework could absorb. Damage to the Western Wall would do the same within Judaism. Israel's air defences are performing their designed function. What they cannot guarantee is that the debris field from a successful interception avoids a site whose destruction would transform a bilateral war into something without modern precedent.
