The website quoted an unnamed security source as saying that Israeli forces have not yet been able to control all of the flotilla's boats, while some boats remain in the Mediterranean Sea.
The flotilla, comprising 54 boats, set sail on Thursday from the city of Marmaris in a renewed attempt to break the Israeli blockade imposed on the Gaza Strip since 2007.
On Monday, the occupation forces began seizing boats from the flotilla and arresting activists participating in it, sparking widespread international condemnation, including from Amnesty International, which described the move as "shameful and inhumane".
This comes after a previous Israeli attack that targeted flotilla boats in international waters off the island of Crete in late April, when Israel seized 21 boats and detained dozens of activists before releasing most of them later.
The "Global Resilience Flotilla" aims to break the blockade of Gaza, where some 2.4 million Palestinians are living in catastrophic humanitarian conditions, exacerbated by the two-year-long Israeli war.
Despite the ceasefire agreement announced on October 10, 2025, Israel continues its operations by restricting the entry of humanitarian aid and carrying out daily bombings, resulting in the death of 877 Palestinians and the injury of 2,602 others, according to local data.
