April 9, 2024 - Israel-Hamas war | CNN

April 9, 2024 - Israel-Hamas war

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CNN finds new information contradicting IDF's account of night over 100 died in Gaza
04:56 - Source: CNN

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Our live coverage of Israel’s war on Hamas in Gaza has moved here.

US conducts humanitarian aid airdrop into Northern Gaza, CENTCOM says

On Tuesday, US forces “conducted an air drop of humanitarian assistance into Northern Gaza,” according to US Central Command.

The aircraft in the mission dropped more than 50,600 US meal equivalents, CENTCOM said.

To date, the US has dropped approximately 797 tons of humanitarian assistance supplies, CENTCOM said.

Remember: Humanitarian organizations have warned that airdrops are “good photo opportunities but a lousy way to deliver aid.”

“Far too many civilians have died," US senator says about CNN investigation

Sen. Chris Coons listens at a Senate Appropriations Committee Hearing in Washington, DC, on April 9.

US Democratic Sen. Chris Coons said “far too many civilians have died” in response to a CNN investigation into Israeli forces opening fire on a group of people as they waited for aid in Gaza on February 29.

CNN analyzed dozens of videos and testimonies from 22 eyewitnesses, casting doubt on Israel’s timeline of what happened that night when more than 100 people were killed and 700 others were injured.

The evidence, which was reviewed by forensic and ballistic experts, indicated that automatic gunfire began before the Israel Defense Forces said the convoy had started crossing through the checkpoint, and that shots were fired within close range of crowds that had gathered for food.

Coons said CNN’s investigation highlights the “chaos in Gaza” and how “difficult” delivering humanitarian aid in the strip has become, calling for change.

The senator added he had raised the urgency of addressing deconfliction amid a rising number of people being killed while attempting to deliver aid when he met Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in person six weeks ago.

“That deconfliction clearly did not get fixed,” he said.

Israeli airstrike kills 14 people ahead of Eid, Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital spokesperson says

An Israeli airstrike on a residential building in the Nuseirat refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip killed 14 people Tuesday evening, according to Dr. Khalil Al-Dikran, the spokesperson of the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital.

He told CNN most of those killed were women and children, and 30 others were seriously injured. The information was also confirmed by the Civil Defense in Gaza.

CNN has reached out to the Israel Defense Forces for comment.

In a video posted on social media, several children are seen being rushed into the hospital, where doctors inspect them on the floor — their bodies dusty and covered in blood. Another video shows the uncovered bodies of three dead children next to other bodies wrapped in blankets. 

The attack happened on the last night before Eid al-Fitr, one of the most important holidays of the Islamic calendar, marking the end of Ramadan.

Biden calls Netanyahu’s approach to war against Hamas "a mistake”

Joe Biden speaks in Union Station in Washington, DC on April 9.

US President Joe Biden described Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s approach to the war in Gaza as “a mistake” in one of his sharpest critiques of how the Israeli government is prosecuting the conflict against Hamas. 

Biden made the comments in an interview with Univision that was taped just days after Israeli military strikes killed seven World Central Kitchen aid workers, which sparked anger and frustration throughout the White House. 

The president added that he’s calling for Israel to agree to a ceasefire and that there is “no excuse” for not sending in humanitarian aid. 

The comments came in the lead up to CIA Director Burns delivering a new proposal over the weekend to negotiators in Cairo as they work to secure a ceasefire and hostage deal. 

Families of American hostages held by Hamas describe meeting with Harris as productive

The families of American hostages who are being held by Hamas in Gaza said they had a productive meeting Tuesday with Vice President Kamala Harris.

Goldberg-Polin, whose son Hersh is one of the eight Americans held in captivity, said that the families are thinking about all the hostages as she said they are demanding results – not progress.  

“We want results,” she said. “And we are so grateful and thankful to the American administration and Congress to all of the support, but we need results. We need our people home.”

Jonathan Dekel-Chen, father of hostage Sagui Dekel-Chen, said they are encouraging all parties involved to reach a deal as negotiations continue in Egypt.

The vice president’s office said Harris “expressed her continued support for these families” as she provided an update on US efforts. 

Health workers exhume nearly 400 bodies from Al-Shifa Hospital after IDF withdrawal. Here's the latest

A boy stands by the rubble of a collapsed building in Rafah, Gaza, on April 9.

Health workers in northern Gaza exhumed at least 381 bodies from mass graves in and around Al-Shifa Hospital Tuesday, after they said Israeli forces killed hundreds of Palestinians and left their bodies to decompose during their two-week siege of the complex.

The number of those exhumed today does not include people buried within the grounds of the hospital, according to Gaza Civil Defense spokesperson Mahmoud Basal.

Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the director-general of the World Health Organization, said several United Nations agencies are assisting in efforts to retrieve bodies to provide “dignified burials.”

Here are other headlines you should know:

  • Proposed deal: In a statement published early Tuesday, Hamas said the latest deal proposed by Israel does not meet their demands. The group said its leaders would review the proposal and inform mediators of their response. US President Joe Biden’s top national security aide said he asked interlocutors for Hamas to press for a quick response to the proposal.
  • Report on Israeli war crimes: Children in Gaza have been dying from “starvation-related complications” since Israel began using starvation as a weapon of war — which is a war crime — Human Rights Watch (HRW) said in a report Tuesday. Israel denies the accusation, despite widespread evidence of malnutrition in Gaza.
  • Germany’s response to Nicaragua: Germany has hit back at accusations from Nicaragua at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) that it has been “facilitating genocide” in Gaza through its support for Israel, insisting that Israeli security is at the “core” of German foreign policy.
  • US weapons and response to genocide claims: US Rep. Gregory Meeks — the top Democrat on the House Foreign Affairs Committee — says he is not yet ready to sign off on the sale of dozens of American-made F-15 fighter jets and related munitions to Israel as he seeks “assurances” on how the weapons would be used. Also, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin told lawmakers Tuesday that to his knowledge, the US does not have evidence of Israel committing genocide in its war in Gaza.
  • Humanitarian aid: Turkey announced new restrictions on exports to Israel on Tuesday after Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan accused Israel of denying a request to airdrop aid to Gaza. Israeli Foreign Minister Israel Katz responded, saying that Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan is “once again sacrificing the economic interests of the people of Turkey for his support of Hamas,” adding that Israel will “respond accordingly.” Elsewhere, French Foreign Minister Stephane Sejourne suggested that imposing EU sanctions could be a way to pressure Israel into opening Gaza border crossings for humanitarian aid. Also, Austin said the US military’s pier in Gaza, for delivering aid by sea, would “probably” be ready by April 21. Meanwhile, Tuesday saw the highest number of aid trucks to enter Gaza since October 7, according to Israel’s agency that controls access to Gaza.
  • Developments on the ground: The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) killed the mayor of the Al-Maghazi refugee camp in a strike in central Gaza on Monday, the IDF and Hamas both said. Hamas called it “a cowardly assassination.” Also, the IDF said for the first time, the maritime air defense system known as “C-Dome” has intercepted a drone. And, cross-border attacks between Israel and Hezbollah have forced tens of thousands of people from their homes along both sides of the Lebanon-Israel border.
  • Rafah updates: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Tuesday that “no force in the world” will stop Israeli troops from entering Rafah in southern Gaza to eliminate Hamas units said to be there. US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Israel still has not told the US the date of their announced invasion of Rafah, but that he expects the Biden administration will see “Israeli colleagues again next week” for discussions on the issue. And, Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant did not indicate to Austin on a phone call Monday that a date has been set for Israel’s incursion into Rafah, multiple people familiar with the call told CNN.
  • Hostage latest: Vice President Kamala Harris met with US families whose loved ones were taken hostage by Hamas where the families were updated on American efforts to secure the release of all hostages and a ceasefire. The families of American-Israeli hostages in Gaza also met with US National Security adviser Jake Sullivan Monday in Washington to press for their immediate release, according to the Hostages Families Forum Headquarters.

Egyptian leader reaffirms commitment to resolve Gaza conflict in call with Palestinian Authority leader

Egyptian leaders have reaffirmed to the Palestinian Authority their commitment and efforts to resolving the conflict in Gaza.

In a joint phone conversation on Tuesday, the two leaders discussed the need to speed up the introduction of a ceasefire and more humanitarian and medical aid. The leaders also talked about how to prevent further military escalation and displacement of civilians in Gaza and the West Bank.

Abbas thanked his Egyptian counterpart for his support in “mobilizing international consensus” toward an end to hostilities and the recognition of the Palestinian state. 

The call comes amid ongoing negotiations in Cairo between Israel and Hamas. The United States, Egypt and Qatar are mediating the talks aimed at accomplishing a prisoner exchange deal and a pause in fighting. 

Biden administration believes Netanyahu's claim of invasion date for Rafah is a bluster, senior officials say

 The Biden administration is dismissing Benjamin Netanyahu’s pronouncement that a date has been set for a ground offensive into Rafah as bluster that is in no small part fueled by the Israeli prime minister’s tenuous political standing at home, senior administration officials told CNN.

The prime minister has been struggling to balance his stated goal of eliminating Hamas with the tremendous pressure of reaching a ceasefire that would see Israeli hostages freed. Israeli officials argue that four Hamas battalions remain in Rafah that must be taken out.

The administration’s private view: Privately, multiple senior administration officials chalked up Netanyahu’s pronouncement to bravado.

The administration’s public statements: Top officials have been publicly questioning Netanyahu’s insistence that Israel has decided on a time to mount an offensive into the southern Gaza city. American officials have reiterated that the US has not seen anything resembling a comprehensive plan from the Israelis on how they would carry out such an operation, including first moving the majority of the estimated 1.4 million civilians out of Rafah. 

Here’s what top US officials have been saying:

  • Secretary of State: “We do not have a date for any Rafah operation, at least one that’s been communicated to us by the Israelis,” Antony Blinken said Tuesday. “I don’t see anything imminent.”
  • National Security Adviser: “If he has a date he hasn’t share it with us,” Jake Sullivan told reporters Tuesday. 
  • US Defense Secretary: Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant told Lloyd Austin that Israel is still putting together a plan and making necessary preparations for a potential invasion of Rafah, and did not indicate that a date has been set for the operation, multiple people familiar with the call told CNN.      

Tuesday saw the highest number of aid trucks to enter Gaza since October 7, Israel says

Tuesday saw the highest number of aid trucks to enter Gaza since October 7, according to Israel’s agency that controls access to Gaza.

After inspection, 468 trucks carrying humanitarian aid were transferred to Gaza on Tuesday, Israel’s Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT) said.

Additionally, 303 packages carrying “thousands” of meals were airdropped over Gaza on Tuesday, Israel’s military said. Humanitarian organizations have warned that airdrops are “good photo opportunities but a lousy way to deliver aid.”

Before the conflict, an average of 450 to 500 trucks would enter Gaza daily with supplies, according to UN figures. The previous highest number had been reached on Monday, with 419 trucks entering the Strip.

"Israel has not done enough" to avert famine in Gaza, top US official for humanitarian aid tells Senate

Israel has not done enough to get food into Gaza amid “famine-like conditions,” USAID Administrator Samantha Power said Tuesday.

Power said that there has been “a sea change” over the past few days in the amount of aid Israel is allowing into Gaza after “a series of restrictions over many, many months” from Israel.

“We have famine-like conditions in Gaza, and supermarkets filled with food within a few kilometers away. So it’s incredibly important that the food that is available get to the people,” Power said. “Especially in the case of very young children, we’re getting a growing number of reports of death by malnutrition or diseases induced by malnutrition.”

Israeli defense minister did not indicate date set for Rafah offensive in call with Austin, sources say

Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant did not indicate to US Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin on a phone call Monday that a date has been set for Israel’s incursion into Rafah, multiple people familiar with the call told CNN.

He told Austin that Israel is still putting together a plan for a potential assault on the southern Gaza city and making necessary preparations, including when it comes to the protection of civilians, the sources said.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken also said on Tuesday that Israel has not told the US any date for a Rafah incursion, but that he expected the Biden administration to see “Israeli colleagues again next week” for discussions on the issue.

US is pressing Qatar for quick answer from Hamas on hostage proposal, national security adviser says

US President Joe Biden’s top national security aide said he asked interlocutors for Hamas to press for a quick response to a proposal for Gaza ceasefire and hostage release.

National Security adviser Jake Sullivan said he made the request in a phone call Tuesday morning with Qatar’s prime minister, who has acted as a mediator in the ongoing talks to free hostages in exchange for a pause in fighting.

Meanwhile, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has not shared his plans for an invasion of Rafah with the United States after saying Monday a date had been set for the operation. “If he has a date, he hasn’t shared it with us,” Sullivan said, repeating US concerns at over a massive ground invasion of the southern Gaza city. 

“There are better ways to go after Hamas,” he said, adding that the White House had presented those options to Israeli officials last week.

"The smell of the dead is all over the place": First bodies exhumed from mass graves at Al-Shifa Hospital

A United Nations team looks on as Gaza Civil Defense recover human remains the grounds of Al-Shifa hospital, in Gaza, on April 8, 2024.

Health workers in northern Gaza exhumed the first corpses from mass graves in and around Al-Shifa Hospital on Tuesday, after they said Israeli forces killed hundreds of Palestinians and left their bodies to decompose during their two-week siege of the complex.

At least 381 bodies were recovered from the vicinity of the complex since Israeli forces withdrew on April 1, Gaza Civil Defense spokesperson Mahmoud Basal said on Tuesday, adding that the total figure did not include people buried within the grounds of the hospital.

Witnesses and civilians who were trapped inside the hospital when it was raided say the vicinity “was full of bodies,” according to Basal. “The occupation forces have plowed these bodies and buried them in the ground,” he added. 

CNN has reached out to the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) for comment.

“The smell of the dead is all over the place,” Motasem Salah, an official from the Ministry of Health in Gaza leading recovery efforts, told CNN. “We try to identify the bodies of these civilians as their families are awaiting news about their loved ones – if they are alive or missing.”

Khadr Al-Za’anoun of Wafa, the official Palestinian news agency, contributed to this report.

Israel still has not told US date of Rafah operation, Blinken says

Secretary of State Antony Blinken speaks during a press conference at the State Department in Washington, DC, on April 9.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken said that Israel still has not told the US the date of their announced invasion of Rafah, but that he expects the Biden administration will see “Israeli colleagues again next week” for discussions on the issue.

When it comes to the timing of a possible Rafah operation Blinken said he does not expect “any actions being taken” before the US talks with Israel on Rafah next week, adding: “I don’t see anything imminent.”

Blinken said the US is talking to Israel about “alternatives” to an incursion into the southern Gaza city that would be more effective at “solving a problem that needs to be solved, but doing it in a way that does not endanger the innocent.”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced on Monday that a date for an invasion into Rafah had been set, but he did not disclose it.

On aid entering the enclave, Blinken said that 400 aid trucks were cleared to enter Gaza on Monday, the highest daily number since the war began on October 7. “But what matters is results and sustained results, and this is what we will be looking at very carefully in the days ahead,” Blinken added.

Ireland's new prime minister accuses Israel of starving and slaughtering Gazans in first speech 

People applaud as Simon Harris looks on after receiving a majority parliamentary vote to become the next Taoiseach of Ireland, in Dublin, Ireland, on April 9.

In his first remarks after being elected as the new prime minister of Ireland, Simon Harris condemned Israel for slaughtering and starving Palestinians in Gaza, vowing “not to be silent” on the war.

Ireland, he promised, will “play [its] part” in “helping bring about the ceasefire and the lasting peace” in the besieged enclave. 

This follows a speech last week which saw Harris make a scathing personal address to his Israeli counterpart, Benjamin Netanyahu. He said “the Irish people could not be clearer. We are repulsed by your actions.”

More background: Ireland has been one of the most vocal critics of Israel’s war in Gaza, with Harris’ predecessor Leo Varadkar previously describing its actions as “something approaching revenge.” 

Israel has not shied away from firing back at Ireland. Its heritage minister, Amihai Eliyahu, said in November that Palestinians in Gaza “can go to Ireland or deserts,” among other incendiary comments that Netanyahu has tried to distance himself from. In February, Israel’s ambassador to Ireland, Dana Erlich, said in an interview with radio station Newstalk that she only heard a “one-sided view, portraying Israel as the only villain.”

CNN’s Eoin McSweeney contributed reporting to this post.

Secretary of Defense Austin: US doesn't have evidence Israel is committing genocide in its war in Gaza

Michael McCord, comptroller of the Pentagon, from left, Lloyd Austin, US secretary of defense, center, and Charles Q. Brown Jr., chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, attend a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing in Washington, D.C., on April 9.

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin told lawmakers Tuesday that to his knowledge, the United States does not have evidence of Israel committing genocide in its war in Gaza.

“We don’t have any evidence of genocide being created” by Israel, Austin said at a Senate Armed Services hearing on Capitol Hill.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren, a Democrat from Massachusetts, last week said that she believes international courts could interpret Israel’s actions in Gaza as a genocide, according to a video posted by a GBH News reporter, after noting she thinks “what Israel is doing is wrong.”

“If you want to do it as an application of law, I believe that they’ll find that it is genocide, and they have ample evidence to do so,” Warren said at the Islamic Center of Boston in response to a question from an audience member on whether she thinks “Israel is committing a genocide.”

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken has previously called charges of genocide against Israel “meritless.”

CNN’s Morgan Rimmer contributed reporting to this post.

Humanitarian pier in Gaza will probably be ready by April 21, US secretary of defense says

Lloyd Austin, US secretary of defense, during a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing in Washington, D.C., on April 9.

US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said the US military’s pier in Gaza, for delivering aid by sea, would “probably” be ready “by the third weekend of this month,” which would be by Sunday, April 21.

Austin also said that the protection of the US forces involved with the pier project is the Defense Department’s “number one priority.”

“We’re using a capability that we have, joint logistics over the shore, and certainly our troops search are trained to be able to put this into place,” said Austin.

Top US Democrat on key panel says he wants some "assurances" before approving F-15 fighter jet sale to Israel 

An F15 jet of the US Air Force flies during the 'Dynamic Front 22', the US Army led NATO and Partner integrated annual artillery exercise in Europe, in Grafenwoehr, Germany, on July 20, 2022.

The top US Democrat on the House Foreign Affairs Committee says he is not yet ready to sign off on the sale of dozens of American-made F-15 fighter jets and related munitions to Israel as he seeks “assurances” on how the weapons would be used.

Rep. Gregory Meeks, a Democrat from New York, told CNN on Tuesday he would seek answers on the proposed sale during classified briefings in Washington, DC, this week. As one of the leading lawmakers on a key weapons-approving committee, Meeks holds an effective veto on any proposed weapons sales, making his comments to CNN notable.

“I want to make sure I know the types of weapons and what the weapons would be utilized for,” he told CNN’s Kate Bolduan on “CNN News Center.” He didn’t answer directly when asked if he would support efforts to block the sale.

Key context: Since Hamas’ attack on Israel in October, which killed over 1,200 Israelis, the US has made more than 100 foreign military sales to Israel. Most of those have fallen under the specific dollar amount that requires a notification to Congress, an official familiar with the matter previously told CNN.

But an $18 billion F-15 sale is large enough that it requires congressional notification, and the administration informally notified the House Foreign Affairs and Senate Foreign Relations committees of the F-15 sale in late January, according to people familiar with the matter.

Netanyahu is running war in Gaza on basis of "personal interest," former Israeli prime minister says

Former Israeli prime minister Ehud Olmert attends a demonstration against the Israeli government's controversial justice reform bill, in Tel Aviv, Israel, on March 1, 2023.

Former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert believes his successor Benjamin Netanyahu is running his governing coalition — and the war in Gaza — on the “basis of personal interest,” and in order to remain in power, Olmert told CNN Monday.

On Monday, Netanyahu said a date for the assault on Rafah had been set. His announcement came after Ben Gvir posted on X that if Netanyahu abandoned plans for a ground offensive in Rafah, he may lose the support of the coalition that has kept him in power.

Facing growing protests against the government, Netanyahu and his coalition have closed ranks and continue to hold on. But the former Israeli leader thinks his successor’s defiant posture — in the face of mounting international pressure, including from the United States — will be his demise. 

“The effect that he faces the pressures from America, in a way I think that he likes to appear, is the opponent of President Biden. It plays into his interest in Israeli politics. Netanyahu has this need to show that he’s the only guy that can face the world leaders and prevail,” he explained.