US national security adviser Jake Sullivan will visit Israel on Thursday for “extremely serious conversations” about humanitarian aid and the next phase of Israel’s military campaign, a US official said.
It comes as the White House struggles to square President Joe Biden’s comments about “indiscriminate bombing” in Gaza with its insistence that Israel’s “intent” is to limit civilian casualties. Nearly half of the air-to-ground munitions Israel has used in Gaza have been unguided, according to a US intelligence assessment.
Israel has canceled a planned trip to Qatar by the head of its foreign intelligence service to restart talks on a possible second hostage release deal, a source confirmed to CNN. Hamas has been unresponsive to overtures in recent days to try to resume negotiations, a source said.
Israeli forces continue to fight in northern Gaza following the deaths of nine soldiers in a battle there, Israel’s defense minister said. More than 18,600 people have been killed in Israeli attacks on Gaza since October 7, according to the Hamas-controlled Health Ministry.
Biden administration staffers call for Gaza ceasefire at vigil outside White House
From CNN's Camila DeChalus
Biden administration staffers held a vigil in front of the White House on Wednesday to call on President Joe Biden to support a permanent ceasefire in Gaza.
More than three dozen people attended, including political appointees, administration staffers and civil service career staff, with participants wearing sunglasses and masks to conceal their identities.
Josh Paul, a former State Department official who resigned from his job in October over disagreement with the Biden administration’s approach to the Israel-Hamas war, delivered opening remarks.
A former administration staffer also read a statement given to him by a group of Palestinian administration officials who did not want to be identified.
The United States has repeatedly blocked ceasefire calls at the United Nations Security Council. Its stance is at odds with most countries, which voted Tuesday to demand an immediate humanitarian ceasefire at the UN General Assembly.
The group that organized the vigil Wednesday called the violence that has unfolded in Gaza over the last few weeks “unacceptable.”
Last month, more than 700 staffers and political appointees signed a letter calling on the president to support a ceasefire.
Israel visit: US national security adviser Jake Sullivan will visit Israel on Thursday for “extremely serious conversations” about humanitarian aid and the next phase of Israel’s military campaign, a US official said. It comes as the White House struggles to square Biden’s comments about “indiscriminate bombing” in Gaza with its insistence that Israel’s “intent” is to limit civilian casualties. Nearly half of the air-to-ground munitions Israel has used in Gaza have been unguided, according to a US intelligence assessment.
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"I got my life back," says Israeli man following family's release from Hamas captivity
From CNN's Mitchell McCluskey
An Israeli man whose wife and two daughters were freed from Hamas captivity last month on Wednesday described his joy at welcoming them home and returning to family life.
Asher’s wife, Doron, and their two young daughters were among around 240 people taken hostage during Hamas’ brutal attack on Israel on October 7. The trio remained together throughout their captivity before they were released on November 24, he said.
Asher said being able to embrace his family again is “the most amazing feeling in my entire life.”
“I was only a father and a husband for the last three weeks,” he said.
While dozens of hostages have been freed, many more remain missing, presumed to be held by Hamas and other groups in Gaza, following the breakdown of a temporary truce last month. Formal negotiations have not resumed and Israel has canceled a planned trip to Qatar by the head of its Mossad intelligence service to restart talks, a source familiar with the negotiations confirmed to CNN.
Asher said his children have not been able to say much to describe their experience in Gaza but that his older daughter “understands very well what they have been through.”
Doron only learned after her release that her brother was killed in the October 7 attacks, Asher said. “She’s just starting now to process this horrific news,” he said.
“I was — like I told you many times before — in hell. And I got back from hell to my family,” he said Wednesday.
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Israel cancels Mossad chief's Qatar trip to restart hostage talks
From CNN’s Alex Marquardt in Tel Aviv, Israel
David Barnea attends an honor guard ceremony for Israel's incoming military chief Herzi Halevi at Israel's Defence Ministry in Tel Aviv, Israel on January 16.
Amir Cohen/Reuters
Israel has canceled a planned trip to Qatar by the head of its foreign intelligence service to restart talks on a possible second hostage release deal, a source familiar with the negotiations confirmed to CNN.
Mossad director David Barnea will not travel to the Qatari capital Doha, where previous talks on the release of hostages held by Hamas militants in Gaza have taken place, the source said.
Israel’s Channel 13 first reported Wednesday that the Israeli war cabinet, led by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, had called off the trip and that senior Israeli officials would not go to Qatar to restart negotiations.
CNN has reached out to the Prime Minister’s Office about Barnea’s canceled trip. The Mossad answers directly to the Prime Minister.
Around 240 people, from infants to octogenarians, were taken hostage during Hamas’ attack on Israel on October 7. Dozens have been freed but many more remain missing, presumed to be held by the Palestinian militant organization and other groups in Gaza, following the breakdown of a temporary truce last month.
The Israeli prime minister’s office believes 135 hostages remain in Gaza, 116 of whom are alive.
Formal negotiations have not resumed since hostage talks that had been taking place in Doha broke down earlier this month.
But Israel, the United States and Qatar have continued to discuss ways to try to jump start the discussions, multiple sources said. “We never stopped,” one source familiar with the talks said.
Families of some of the Israeli hostages were outraged by the decision to cancel Barnea’s trip and demanded answers. “We are fed up with the indifference and deadlock,” they said in a statement.
Tamar Michaelis, Kaitlan Collins, and Katie Bo Lillis contributed to this report.
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US intelligence assessment finds nearly half of Israeli munitions dropped on Gaza are imprecise "dumb bombs"
Exclusive from CNN's Natasha Bertrand and Katie Bo Lillis
Nearly half of the air-to-ground munitions that Israel has used in Gaza in its war with Hamas since October 7 have been unguided, otherwise known as “dumb bombs,” according to a new US intelligence assessment.
The assessment, compiled by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence and described to CNN by three sources who have seen it, says that about 40-45% of the 29,000 air-to-ground munitions Israel has used have been unguided. The rest have been precision-guided munitions, the assessment says.
Unguided munitions are typically less precise and can pose a greater threat to civilians, especially in such a densely populated area like Gaza. The rate at which Israel is using the dumb bombs may be contributing to the soaring civilian death toll.
Maj. Keren Hajioff, an Israeli spokesperson, said on Wednesday that “as a military committed to international law and a moral code of conduct, we are devoting vast resources to minimizing harm to the civilians that Hamas has forced into the role of human shields. Our war is against Hamas, not against the people of Gaza.”
But experts told CNN that if Israel is using unguided munitions at the rate the US believes they are, that undercuts the Israeli claim that they are trying to minimize civilian casualties.
US official to address reducing harm to civilians during visit to Israel. Here's the latest
From CNN staff
US national security adviser Jake Sullivan will conduct “extremely serious conversations” with Israeli officials during his visit this week, the White House said, as the US looks to press Israel to conduct a more “surgical” campaign against Hamas.
Sullivan is expected to meet Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu along with the Israeli war cabinet during the trip, which begins Thursday. He also plans to meet Israeli President Isaac Herzog.
The visit comes as the White House struggles to square President Joe Biden’s comments about Israel’s “indiscriminate bombing” in Gaza with the administration’s insistence that Israel’s “intent” is to limit civilian casualties.
US imposes new sanctions on Hamas officials: The US government on Wednesday imposed sanctions on eight Hamas officials in its latest punitive measure following the October 7 attack on Israel. Wednesday’s sanctions were imposed in coordination with the United Kingdom. They are the fourth round of sanctions imposed by the US since October 7. The sanctions come amid Hamas being unresponsive to overtures made in recent days to try to restart hostage negotiations, a source familiar with the efforts told CNN, as the US and other mediators try to resurrect talks that would see more hostages who were abducted on October 7 be released from captivity.
Hezbollah and IDF exchange fire: Two people were killed and one injured in an attack involving “enemy aircraft targeting and destroying a house” in the town of Yater in southern Lebanon, the country’s National News Agency reported on Wednesday. Yater is about 8 kilometers (about 5 miles) from the border with Israel. It comes after further Israel-Hezbollah crossfire was reported between the border of Israel and Lebanon on Wednesday.
Casualties at Gaza hospitals: Several hospitals in Gaza have reported receiving a high number of civilian casualties on Wednesday. Al-Nasser hospital in southern Gaza issued a list of 45 people who had been killed, whose bodies had been brought to the hospital. Medical staff at Al-Kuwaiti hospital in Rafah — also in southern Gaza — said 19 bodies were recovered after two houses in the area were hit by airstrikes.
US State Department address Israel’s treatment of detainees: Israeli officials told the US that, going forward, they will give detainees their clothes back “immediately” if strip-searches are conducted, US State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller said Wednesday. The remark comes after images emerged last week of men in Gaza who were detained by Israeli forces, blindfolded and stripped down to their underwear.
Israeli hostage in Gaza pronounced dead: A hostage who was thought still to be alive in Gaza has now been pronounced dead, the Israeli prime minister’s office said. Tal Chimi, 41, was taken hostage on October 7, the office said.
More fuel allowed into Gaza: Additional inspections points for humanitarian aid bound for Gaza are helping accelerate shipments through the Rafah border crossing — with the amount of fuel being allowed in to rise by about one-third, Egypt said on Wednesday.
Biden hosts families of American hostages: The families of American hostages held by Hamas offered effusive praise for President Joe Biden’s administration after meeting at the White House with the president Wednesday. “It was a terrific, terrific meeting, conversation,” Jonathan Dekel-Chen, whose son, Sagui Dekel-Chen, was captured by Hamas on October 7.
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Doctor says Gaza hospital staff and patients subject to harsh treatment by IDF
From CNN’s Kareem Khadder and Eyad Kourdi
A doctor at Kamal Adwan Hospital in northern Gaza told CNN on Wednesday that he and dozens of staff were taken from the premises by Israeli soldiers to a military screening center nearby.
The doctor, who declined to be named out of fear for his safety, said in a telephone interview that men at the hospital had complied with an order from the Israel military on Tuesday to form a line outside the hospital.
They were then led about 500 meters away to a what he called a “filtration military camp” in Al-Birawi area on the outskirts of Beit Lahiya.
At that location, he told CNN, they were ordered to remove their clothes and were given blue overalls. They were handcuffed and sorted into groups based on their perceived threat level, the doctor claimed.
He claimed the detainees were physically and verbally abused while handcuffed. At one point, the doctor said, when clashes broke out, Israeli soldiers had taken cover behind the detainees.
The doctor’s claims cannot be verified. CNN has asked the Israel Defense Forces for comment on how staff, patients and others at Kamal Adwan were processed after leaving the hospital.
The doctor said that after several hours, the detainees — numbering about 1,000 people —were released and instructed to head toward specific areas in southern Gaza.
Gunfire injured several of the group, he said, as they walked south.
CNN received the same response from the IDF regarding several and separate instances about their operations in Gaza.
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"No one determines for us what to do.” Israel's defense minister vows to complete mission in Gaza
From Tamar Michaelis
Palestinians check the destruction following Israeli bombardment in Rafah, southern Gaza, on December 12.
Mohammed Abed/AFP/Getty Images
The Israeli military continues to fight in the Shejaiya neighborhood in northern Gaza following the deaths of nine soldiers in a battle on Tuesday, Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said.
Tuesday’s casualties in Shejaiya are among the largest loss of life in a single incident for Israeli forces since their ground offensive began in Gaza.
The war “also comes with prices, but we will win,” the defense minister said.
Gallant echoed the remarks of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who vowed earlier on Wednesday to continue the fight “until the end.”
“I say this also in view of the great pain but also in the face of international pressures. Nothing will stop us. We go to the end, to victory,” Netanyahu said.
Gallant also said he was convinced that the continuation of Israel’s military operation in Gaza will “pressure” Hamas to agree to another hostage release deal.
When asked by a reporter whether Israel had reduced the number of air strikes in Gaza recently due to growing international pressure, Gallant said:
In response to a question about rising tensions between Israel and the US over the war in Gaza, Gallant said that US government officials are “doing a lot, above and beyond” to help Israel.
“We will find the way to help the Americans support us, that’s the key. They want us to succeed,” he said.
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Gaza hospitals receive a high number of casualties Wednesday, medical staff say
From Kareem Khadder, Ibrahim Dahman, Sarah Diab, Tamar Michaelis and Tim Lister
People mourn as they collect the bodies of Palestinians killed in an airstrike on December 13 in Khan Younis, Gaza.
Ahmad Hasaballah/Getty Images
Several hospitals in Gaza have reported receiving a high number of civilian casualties on Wednesday.
Al-Nasser hospital in southern Gaza issued a list of 45 people who had been killed, whose bodies had been brought to the hospital. The hospital frequently receives casualties from the city of Khan Younis, where fighting and air strikes have been heavy.
Medical staff at Al-Kuwaiti hospital in Rafah — also in southern Gaza — said 19 bodies were recovered after two houses in the area were hit by airstrikes. Some were taken to another hospital — Abu Youssef Al-Najjah — in eastern Rafah, along with many injured.
Videos shot for CNN at Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in central Gaza on Wednesday showed many casualties being brought in after a reported strike in Deir al Balah.
The videos show ambulances bringing in men and women on stretchers, as well as body bags at the entrance of the hospital.
Inside the hospital, most of the injured are seen being treated on the floors amid chaotic scenes. Several of the injured have severe injuries to their limbs, while efforts are made by medical staff to resuscitate others.
The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said that it is trying to minimize civilian casualties in Gaza while it carries out ground and air operations against Hamas throughout Gaza.
“There is a clear intent by the Israelis, an intent that they have admitted to publicly, that they are doing everything they can to reduce civilian casualties. And we’re still seeing some civilian casualties. So we’re still going to talk to them about doing everything they can to reduce that,” US National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby told CNN Wednesday.
US President Joe Biden on Tuesday said that Israel was beginning to lose global support in its war against Hamas because of “indiscriminate bombing” in Gaza.
The war’s impact on Gaza: As tens of thousands more people converge in southern Gaza, the United Nations has said on X (formerly Twitter) that “amid overcrowded conditions, the spread of diseases is surging, and people’s immense needs are escalating. UNICEF (the UN Children’s Fund) says a humanitarian ceasefire is desperately needed to allow the delivery of life-saving support to children & families.”
United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) said nearly 1.3 million displaced people are now sheltering in 155 UNRWA installations. The average number of internally displaced persons in UNRWA shelters located in middle and southern areas in Gaza is 11,480 — more than four times their capacity.
UNRWA said that eight out of 22 UNRWA health centers are still operational in the middle and southern areas.
The agency added in its Wednesday update that “there are an estimated 50,000 pregnant women in Gaza, with more than 180 giving birth every day. A total of 188 post-natal and high-risk pregnancy cases were attended to at health centres.”
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White House struggles to square Biden's comments about Israel's "indiscriminate bombing" in Gaza war
From CNN's Nikki Carvajal, Samantha Waldenberg and MJ Lee
White House National Security Council Coordinator For Strategic Communications John Kirby talks to reporters in the Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House on December 13 in Washington, DC.
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
The White House on Wednesday struggled to square President Joe Biden’s comments to donors on Tuesday that Israel’s offensive in Gaza was “indiscriminate” with the administration’s continued insistence that Israel’s “intent” is to limit civilian casualties.
National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby was asked multiple times by reporters about the president’s blunt claim that Israel was beginning to lose global support in its war against Hamas because of the “indiscriminate bombing” in Gaza.
Kirby repeatedly emphasized that the Biden administration sees Israel’s “intent” to minimize civilian deaths, despite Biden himself saying Israel was not being deliberate and careful.
Asked by CNN’s MJ Lee why the White House insists on saying Israel has the “intent” to minimize civilian casualties, Kirby responded that “sometimes in war… the best-laid plans don’t get executed exactly the way you want.”
He added that there was “a clear intent by the Israelis — an intent that they have admitted to publicly — that they are doing everything they can to reduce civilian casualties.”
Pressed if the White House was trying to argue that Israel was both trying to be deliberate and careful but at the same time bombing indiscriminately in other situations, Kirby repeated his previous talking points.
“We know they have the intent. We know they’re acting on the intent. Civilian casualties continue to happen. And again, we’re going to keep urging them to reduce those,” Kirby said.
The spokesperson was also asked about Biden’s remarks that he believed Netanyahu had to “change… with this government.”
“The president realizes that Israel is a powerful, vibrant democracy and any change in the government is going to have to be determined by the Israeli people,” Kirby responded. He did not elaborate on what Biden meant by his comment.
About Biden’s comments: At a campaign reception on Tuesday, Biden said that Israel had most of the world supporting it, but it was “starting to lose that support by the indiscriminate bombing that takes place.” He also seemed to admit that Netanyahu acknowledged the bombings.
“It was pointed out to me – I’m being very blunt with you all – it was pointed out to me that – by Bibi – that ‘Well, you carpet-bombed Germany. You dropped the atom bomb. A lot of civilians died.’ I said, ‘Yeah, that’s why all these institutions were set up after World War Two to see to it that it didn’t happen again – it didn’t happen again,’” Biden said, according to the official White House transcript of the event.
He also called Netanyahu “a good friend” but said he “has to change and – with this government.”
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US national security adviser holds talks in Saudi Arabia ahead of Israel stop, official says
From CNN's Kevin Liptak
US national security adviser Jake Sullivan is in Saudi Arabia for talks on preventing the Israel-Hamas conflict from spreading, a US official said Wednesday.
He is visiting the kingdom ahead of his trip Thursday to Israel. While there he met the country’s powerful Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, a person familiar with the matter said.
In Saudi Arabia, he plans to discuss the broader diplomatic efforts undertaken by the Biden administration to maintain stability in the region, the official said, including efforts to deter Houthi attacks in the Red Sea.
He’ll also attempt to build on work that had been underway before the October 7 attacks on normalizing relations between Saudi Arabia and Israel, which had included steps toward building peace with the Palestinians.
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US official to discuss with Israel "efforts to be more surgical and more precise" in war with Hamas
From CNN's Kevin Liptak
A picture taken in southern Israel near the border with Gaza on December 12 shows Israeli artillery firing towards Gaza.
Jack Guez/AFP/Getty Images
US national security adviser Jake Sullivan will conduct “extremely serious conversations” with Israeli officials during his visit this week, the White House says, as the US looks to press Israel to conduct a more “surgical” campaign against Hamas.
Sullivan is expected to meet Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu along with the Israeli war cabinet during the trip, which begins Thursday. He also plans to meet Israeli President Isaac Herzog.
The national security adviser will address the issue of aid flowing into Gaza and the “next phase of the military campaign,” according to John Kirby, the Coordinator for Strategic Communications at the National Security Council.
Sullivan will discuss with the Israelis “efforts to be more surgical and more precise and to reduce harm to civilians.”
“That is an aim of ours. And the Israelis say it is an aim of theirs,” Kirby said. “But it’s the results that count.”
He said the US has concerns about Israel’s prosecution of its offensive against Hamas — as demonstrated by President Biden’s remarks to Democratic donors Tuesday — and has raised those with Israeli officials.
“I’m not going to get ahead of the conversations that Jake will be having,” Kirby went on. “But I would like to just say that these are extremely serious conversations and we hope there’ll be constructive as well.”
Sullivan is likely to make additional stops in the region, though Kirby declined to say where.
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Israeli hostage in Gaza pronounced dead, prime minister's office says
From CNN's Tamar Michaelis
A hostage who was thought still to be alive in Gaza has now been pronounced dead, the Israeli prime minister’s office said.
Tal Chimi, 41, was taken hostage on October 7, the office said.
Chimi was the grandson of the founders of kibbutz Nir Yitzhak, where he lived, according to a joint statement on behalf of the Chimi family, the kibbutz and the Hostages and Missing Families Forum headquarters.
“He was connected in every fiber of his soul to the kibbutz, and was one of the pillars of the community,” the statement said.
The kibbutz was one of several communities in southern Israel attacked in the early morning of October 7 by Hamas militants.
Chimi leaves behind his wife, three children — 9-year-old twins and a 6-year-old son — his father Zohar and his sister Or, the statement said.
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Detainees will be given clothes back "immediately" if strip-searched, State Department says Israel told US
From CNN's Jennifer Hansler
Israeli officials told the US that, going forward, they will give detainees their clothes back “immediately” if strip-searches are conducted, US State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller said Wednesday.
Images from Gaza circulating on social media showed a mass detention by the Israeli military of men who were made to strip to their underwear, kneel on the street, wear blindfolds and pack into the cargo bed of a military vehicle.
Obtained by CNN
Miller also said that Israeli officials told the US that the photos should not have been taken or released, “and they made it clear going forward that that will not be their practice.”
“Those are obviously the appropriate steps to take,” Miller said at a press briefing.
“They have informed us is that they conduct searches on detained individuals in Gaza to ensure that they are not wearing suicide vests, that they don’t have other weapons, and that they pose no danger to (Israel Defense Forces) forces,” he said.
Asked if the US is OK with the continued strip-searching of detainees, Miller said:
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Fuel allowed into Gaza will rise by about one-third, Egypt says
From CNN's Hosam Ahmed
Additional inspections points for humanitarian aid bound for Gaza are helping accelerate shipments through the Rafah border crossing – with the amount of fuel being allowed in to rise by about one-third, Egypt said.
On Tuesday, Israeli authorities began inspecting humanitarian aid trucks at two crossings between Israel and Gaza, but the trucks must still cross from Egypt through Rafah into Gaza.
The additional inspections should allow 60 to 80 more trucks to enter Gaza every day, said Diaa Rashwan, chair of Egypt’s State Information Service. He added that there was also agreement on increasing the amount of fuel entering the strip daily from 129,000 liters (about 34,000 gallons) to 189,000 liters (about 49,900 gallons), in addition to two domestic cooking gas trucks.
The amounts are still far lower than what international aid agencies say is required amid a growing humanitarian crisis exacerbated by overcrowding in makeshift encampments and cold, wet weather.
Since aid began crossing into Gaza, 3,866 tonnes of medical help had been sent in, as well as 22,799 tonnes of food; 13,936 tonnes of water; 48 ambulances; and 2,678 tonnes of fuel, Rashwan said.
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Families of US hostages held by Hamas praise Biden administration after meeting
From CNN's Donald Judd
Family members of Americans who were taken hostage by Hamas during the attacks in Israel on October 7, including (L-R) Orna Neutra, Adi Alexander, Liz Naftali, Jonathan Dekel-Chen, Ruby Chen, Ronen Neutra, and Yael Alexander, talk to reporters outside the West Wing of the White House on December 13 in Washington, DC. The families were invited to a private meeting with U.S. President Joe Biden and Secretary of State Antony Blinken.
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
The families of American hostages held by Hamas offered effusive praise for President Joe Biden’s administration after meeting at the White House with the president Wednesday.
“It was a terrific, terrific meeting, conversation,” Jonathan Dekel-Chen, whose son, Sagui Dekel-Chen, was captured by Hamas on October 7. “I think we all came away feeling that, as families of hostages of American Israeli hostages, which are eight out of a total of 138 hostages, we felt — we felt before, and we were only reinforced, seeing and believing, that we could have no better friend in Washington or in the White House than the president himself.”
Liz Naftali, the great-aunt of Abigail Edan, the 4-year-old Israeli American hostage released by Hamaslast month, called her great-niece “a miracle, a light in this very dark time,” adding Biden and his administration “have been bringing out light in this dark time.”
She also thanked Pope Francis for calling for the safe release of all hostages in Gaza.
Dekel-Chen said the administration has been in “frequent, very transparent contact” with the families of hostages being held by Hamas in Gaza, but told reporters the families are “going to keep the content of the conversation private.”
While he declined to weigh in on calls for a ceasefire, Dekel-Chen said the meeting with the president “only reinforced that they are willing and ready to do all that they possibly can, by any number of means, to get the hostages out.”
Naftali, for her part, thanked members of the administration for centering the humanity of those still being held hostage.
“And that is what the president and (US Secretary of State Antony) Blinken understand — is that they are just not numbers and they’re just not faces, they are sons,” she said. “They are sons. They are grandparents, they are mothers, and that is what the president and his team understand.”
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US State Department spokesperson: Stopping Israel campaign now not in best "long-term security interests"
From CNN's Jennifer Hansler
US State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller said that the overwhelming vote at the UN General Assembly in favor of a ceasefire in Gaza makes clear “that the world wants this conflict to end, which is a goal that we share.”
“We don’t want to see it go on a day longer than is necessary,” Miller said at a press briefing Wednesday, but added that the US does not believe stopping Israel’s military campaign now “is in the long-term security interests of anyone in the region.”
Miller also said that while Hamas can be defeated, “you can’t defeat an idea on the battlefield.”
“It is incumbent upon Israel, it is incumbent upon other countries in the region, it is incumbent upon the United States and other every country around the world who wants to be the responsible player to present a better idea” than Hamas, Miller added.
The US believes that the Palestinian Authority “is the representative of the Palestinian people, and a revitalized, reformed, revamped Palestinian Authority is the proper path forward for governance of a reunited West Bank and Gaza,” Miller re-iterated with the caveat that “obviously, the Palestinian Authority is not in position to step in tomorrow and begin to administer Gaza.”
This post has been updated with additional remarks from the US State Department spokesperson.
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Hezbollah and IDF exchange fire across the Israel-Lebanon border
From CNN's Charbel Mallo, Eyad Kourdi, Eve Brennan and Tamar Michaelis
An Israeli artillery unit fires from a position in Upper Galilee in northern Israel towards southern Lebanon on December 11.
Jalaa Marey/AFP/Getty Images
Two people have been killed and one injured in an attack involving “enemy aircraft targeting and destroying a house” in the town of Yater in southern Lebanon, the country’s National News Agency reported on Wednesday.
Yater is about 8 kilometers (about 5 miles) from the border with Israel.
It comes after further Israel-Hezbollah crossfire was reported between the border of Israel and Lebanon on Wednesday.
Several launches from Lebanon toward the area of Yiftah in northern Israel were identified, the Israel Defense Forces said. The rockets fell in open areas, and the IDF was targeting the sources of the fire in Lebanon.
A Hezbollah cell had been hit in Lebanon, and a fighter jet had struck a Hezbollah military compound, the IDF added.
Earlier Wednesday, the IDF said sirens sounded in kibbutz Rosh HaNikra in northwestern Israel, which is a few hundred meters away from the Blue Line — the border between Israel and Lebanon. The IDF said it detected several launches from Lebanon toward Israel, but those launches landed within Lebanon.
Hezbollah on social media said it had targeted a location near the border area on the Mediterranean Sea.
Meanwhile, NNA said an Israeli shell had landed in Muhaybeb, Lebanon.
This post has been updated to include the number of deaths and injuries as reported by NNA.
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Some US businesses, employees and consumers participated in global strike to demand a ceasefire in Gaza
From CNN's Alaa Elassar
Haraz Coffee House in Dearborn, Michigan, is usually teeming with customers eager for a taste of its delicious Yemeni coffee – but on Monday there wasn’t a single person in sight.
The popular café on Michigan Avenue was closed, as its owner and employees participated in a global strike calling for a ceasefire in the devastating war in Gaza.
“Today is the day to put everything that matters in our lives aside to focus on the lives of those in Gaza and to call for an immediate ceasefire,” owner Hamzah Nasser told CNN. He closed all 12 locations of his cafés in Michigan, Kentucky, Texas, Illinois and California.
Palestinian groups announced the global strike on Saturday, one day after the United States vetoed a UN Security Council resolution calling for an immediate humanitarian ceasefire. The strike on Monday and Tuesday saw businesses temporarily close, employees call out of work, consumers refrain from shopping and students skip classes.
Alex Tarzikhan, a legal adviser at a human rights organization in Washington, DC, says she called out of work in solidarity with Palestinians and other people of conscience.
Tarzikhan says she regularly checks on Bisan Owda, and other Palestinian journalists, and is often left feeling helpless by the graphic and heart-wrenching images they post on social media.
CNN’s Natasha Bertrand contributed to this report.
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US imposes new sanctions on Hamas officials
From CNN's Jennifer Hansler
The US government on Wednesday imposed sanctions on eight Hamas officials in its latest punitive measure following the October 7 attack on Israel.
The new round of US Treasury Department sanctions target key officials. This includes:
Ismail Barhum, a member of Hamas’ Political Bureau, who “has functioned as a regional finance department head”
Haroun Nasser Al-Din, the head of Hamas’ Jerusalem office, who “has been one of Hamas’s key financial operatives in Türkiye”
Ali Baraka, the Lebanon-based head of Hamas’ National Relations Abroad
Jihad Yaghmour, Hamas’ official representative to Turkey
Wednesday’s sanctions were imposed in coordination with the United Kingdom. They are the fourth round of sanctions imposed by the US since October 7.
British Foreign Secretary David Cameron emphasized that this latest batch of sanctions “will continue to cut off their access to funding and isolate them further.”
As part of this effort to clamp down on individuals who have “financed Hamas,” Algerian national, Aiman Ahmad Al Duwaik, who the UK says “helped run the organisation’s overseas investment portfolio” was also included in the list.
Palestinian Islamic Jihad, an Islamist militant group was also targeted in the list through the inclusion of Akram al-Ajouri who is the group’s Syria-based Deputy Secretary General and the leader of its military wing, the Al-Quds Brigades.
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Hamas unresponsive to attempts to get hostage negotiations back on track
From CNN's MJ Lee, Alex Marquardt and Jeremy Diamond
Families of hostages being held in Gaza join with members of the public in an evening march and protest around the Knesset to demand the government work to secure their return, on December 12, in Jerusalem.
Spencer Platt/Getty Images
Hamas has been unresponsive to overtures made in recent days to try to restart hostage negotiations, a source familiar with the efforts told CNN, as the US and other mediators try to resurrect talks that would see more hostages who were abducted on October 7 be released from captivity.
Qatar — which continues to play the role of interlocutor — has relayed to Hamas new ideas to try to get more hostages out of Gaza, including a potential deal that would include the release of not just the remaining women hostages, but men as well, according to one source familiar with the efforts and a senior US official.
But Hamas has not been responsive to the outreach, the source familiar said.
Qatar speaks with Hamas political officials in Gaza who then relay messages to the group’s leadership inside the strip who are actively trying to avoid detection by Israel. US officials had said getting answers from Hamas was an incredibly cumbersome process during the first round of negotiations that led to a series of hostages being released. It may now be even harder for Hamas leaders to engage in talks now given the Israeli focus on hunting them down.
At the same time, Israel, which resumed its military operation against Hamas after a seven-day truce, believes that its offensive targeting southern Gaza – and particularly Khan Younis – should exert additional pressure on Hamas that could prove to be helpful in the release of more hostages, sources said. Some US officials agree the military pressure may have the effect of eventually driving Hamas back to the negotiating table.
It “may be a moment for Hamas to reconsider coming back to the table in a real way,” the senior US official said.
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US-Israel rifts spill into public view as Biden warns Netanyahu of waning global support. Here's the latest
From CNN staff
US President Joe Biden and Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Getty Images
In a sign of the growing differences between two staunch allies, US President Joe Biden has warned that Israel is starting to lose global support for its war on Hamas due to the “indiscriminate bombing that takes place,” in his sharpest words yet for Israel.
Meanwhile, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has publicly rejected American plans for post-war Gaza.
Elsewhere, at least nine Israeli soldiers have died in a single incident in northern Gaza, marking one of the deadliest for Israeli forces since the conflict began.
Below are the other updates you need to know:
UNGA vote: The United Nations General Assembly voted overwhelmingly on Tuesday to demand an immediate humanitarian ceasefire in Gaza, in a rebuke to the United States which has repeatedly blocked ceasefire calls in the UN’s Security Council. A majority of 153 nations voted for the ceasefire resolution, while 10 voted against and 23 abstained.
Winter sets in: As winds, heavy rains and cooler temperatures descend on Gaza from November to February, aid workers and civilians have told CNN they face harsh living conditions, insufficient access to warm clothing, and outbreaks of disease in overcrowded makeshift shelters. Food, fuel and water are ever scarcer during the winter months, and the price of what little remains is spiraling.
WHO calls: The World Health Organization (WHO) has called for the protection of humanitarian and healthcare workers in Gaza after saying medical workers were detained and beaten at a checkpoint, and one was stripped, during a “high-risk” mission to a hospital in Gaza City on Saturday.
Flooding tunnels: Israel has told the US it has begun “carefully testing out” flooding some of Gaza’s tunnels with seawater “on a limited basis” to test the ability to degrade Hamas’s underground network on a larger scale, a US official told CNN Tuesday. Separately, Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said troops inside Gaza are operating deep underground.
Gaza death toll: The death toll from Israeli attacks on Gaza since October 7 has reached 18,608, Hamas-controlled health ministry spokesperson Dr. Ashraf Al-Qidra said Wednesday. The spokesperson also said the total number of injured individuals has increased to 50,594. CNN has not independently verified these numbers.
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Israeli forces continue operation into Jenin for second day, according to Palestinian news agency
From CNN’s Kareem Khadder in Jerusalem, Tamar Michaelis and Celine Alkhaldi
Israel continued its operation on the occupied West Bank city of Jenin for the second consecutive day, and clashes between residents of the city and Israeli forces were reported in the eastern part of the city, according to Palestinian news agency WAFA.
As of Wednesday, eight people have been killed, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health in Ramallah.
Three residential houses were struck by Israeli forces in the eastern part of Jenin, 12 people were detained and released, and several raids on houses were conducted by Israeli forces, WAFA added.
Schools across the city were closed Wednesday because of the incursion, WAFA reported.
The Israel Defense Forces says it is continuing its operation in Jenin, which has included searching “hundreds of compounds,” questioning “hundreds of suspects,” and destroying “six explosives labs, underground tunnel shafts, four observation command centers as well as explosive devices.” The IDF also said it has confiscated ammunition, weapons, military equipment and weapons parts.
Meanwhile, the Palestine Red Crescent Society said there is a “deteriorating situation” in the Jenin refugee camp, and it is receiving scores of emergency calls while access by medical teams is hindered. It said there were shortages of baby formula and bread for people whose homes are occupied by Israeli soldiers and who are unable to leave.
Jenin has seen several large-scale incursions by the Israeli military this year.
The Palestinian Prisoners’ Society previously said Tuesday that the Israeli military made more than 100 arrests in an operation in Jenin and adjacent refugee camps.
Four Palestinians were killed in an apparent Israeli drone strike on Jenin, WAFA said Tuesday.
The IDF said Tuesday it is carrying out “counterterrorism activities” in Jenin and has detained dozens of suspects.
More background: The Israeli-Gaza war has increasingly spilled over into the West Bank, with settler attacks and clashes leaving hundreds of Palestinians dead.
The number of Palestinians killed in the occupied West Bank between October 7 and December 9 has risen to 275, the Palestinian Ministry of Health in Ramallah said on Sunday.
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Starvation, disease, and winter chill threaten the survival of displaced civilians in Gaza
From CNN's Sana Noor Haq and Rosa Rahimi
Palestinian boys stand in their makeshift tent at a camp set up on a schoolyard in Rafah, Gaza, on December 13.
Mohammed Abed/AFP/Getty Images
Salwa Tibi recalls how she covered several miles on foot in southern Gaza, in a desperate search for blankets and sheets that might help keep her four children and other young relatives warm at night.
The aid worker, 53, told CNN she and her husband were “full of fear” as they ventured out to buy supplies for the approaching winter season in Rafah, risking exposure to potential Israeli airstrikes.
She is staying in a rented house with at least 20 relatives including eight children and babies – the youngest of whom is three months old.
As winds, heavy rains and cooler temperatures descend on Gaza from November to February, aid workers and civilians trying to survive persistent bombardment told CNN they face harsh living conditions, insufficient access to warm clothing, and outbreaks of disease in overcrowded makeshift shelters.
Food, fuel and water are ever scarcer, and the price of what little remains is spiraling.
Families of all 8 Americans believed to be held by Hamas will meet with Biden
From CNN's MJ Lee
US President Joe Biden addresses the nation on the conflict between Israel and Gaza from the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, on October 19.
Jonathan Ernst/AFP/Getty Images
The families of all of the eight unaccounted for Americans believed to have been abducted by Hamas on October 7 are expected to join a meeting with President Joe Biden on Wednesday, according to a senior administration official, with some joining in-person at the White House and others virtually.
In an interview with CNN, White House official John Kirby said Biden will tell the families the administration is “not going to lose sight of their loved ones.”
Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Deputy National Security Adviser Jon Finer will also be joining the meeting, the senior official said. Wednesday marks Biden’s first in-person meeting with the families of American hostages — he previously met with them over Zoom in October.
National security adviser Jake Sullivan is traveling to Israel this week, and plans to discuss the hostages issues during his trip.
Eight Americans — one woman and seven men — are still unaccounted for following Hamas’ attack on Israel, per the White House. Four Americans have been released so far, following intensive negotiations.
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WHO calls for protection of humanitarian workers in Gaza after medical workers detained at checkpoint
From CNN’s Niamh Kennedy
The World Health Organization (WHO) has called for the protection of humanitarian and healthcare workers in Gaza after saying medical workers were detained and beaten at a checkpoint, and one was stripped, during a “high-risk” mission to a hospital in Gaza City on Saturday.
A WHO team in conjunction with the Palestine Red Crescent Society (PRCS) and the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) carried out the mission to “deliver medical supplies, assess the situation in the hospital, and transfer critically-injured patients to a hospital in the south,” WHO said in a statement Tuesday.
As the convoy traveled north on Saturday, it underwent inspection at the Wadi Gaza checkpoint, during which ambulance crew members were asked to leave their vehicles for identification, according to the statement.
WHO said two PRCS staff were detained for over an hour after exiting their vehicles. According to WHO staff, one of the PRCS staff was made to kneel at gunpoint before being taken out of sight “where he was reportedly harassed, beaten, stripped and searched,” according to the statement.
Checkpoints at Wadi Gaza are maintained by the Israel Defense Forces. The IDF acknowledged a CNN question about the incident but did not respond.
WHO said that after its convoy passed the checkpoint, it came under fire.
It did not say who fired at them.
After successfully carrying out its mission at the Al-Ahli Hospital, the convoy was stopped at the same Wadi Gaza checkpoint upon its return. One of the same two PRCS staff was taken in to be interrogated once again, according to WHO.
“The mission made numerous attempts to coordinate his release, but eventually—after more than two and a half hours—had to make the difficult decision to leave the highly dangerous area and proceed, for the safety and well-being of the patients and humanitarian workers,” the statement said.
WHO said its staff managed to meet with the PRCS worker on Sunday after he was released.
The man claimed that he was “harassed, beaten, threatened, stripped of his clothes and blindfolded” during the detention.
“His hands were tied behind his back and he was treated in a degrading and humiliating manner. Once released, he was left to walk towards the south with his hands still tied behind his back, and without clothes or shoes,” WHO alleged.
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"Extremist settlers" in West Bank should be sanctioned, EU Chief says
From CNN's Simon Cullen
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen speaks during a debate at the European Parliament in Strasbourg, France, on December 13.
Ronald Wittek/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock
EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen says she is in favor of sanctioning “extremist settlers” involved in attacks in the West Bank.
Von der Leyen made the comments during a plenary session in Strasbourg on Wednesday.
Some background: UN data has shown a sharp increase in attacks by settlers against Palestinians since the October 7 attacks, though European and US diplomats working in the region have been expressing concern for years about such violence, and the sense that it frequently goes unpunished by Israel.
Approximately 500,000 Israeli Jewish settlers live in the West Bank, according to Peace Now, an Israeli group that advocates for peace and monitors settlements. Many of these settlements are heavily guarded, fenced-off areas that are completely off limits to Palestinians.
Most of the world considers these settlements illegal under international law and Israel has been criticized for allowing their expansion – and, in some cases, supporting them with tax breaks and state-funded security.
Israel views the West Bank as “disputed territory,” and contends its settlement policy is legal.
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No plans to place conditions on military aid to Israel, Biden administration says
From CNN's Natasha Bertrand, Katie Bo Lillis and MJ Lee
A U.S. C-17 sits at the Nevatim Air Base in the desert in Israel, on October 13. The aircraft arrived with crates of American munitions for Israel.
Lolita Baldor/AP
The Biden administration currently has no plans to place conditions on the military aid it is providing to Israel, officials told CNN, despite growing calls by Democratic lawmakers and human rights organizations for the US to stop providing weapons unless Israel does more to protect civilians in Gaza.
Speaking to Democratic donors in Washington this week, President Joe Biden acknowledged that he has had tough conversations with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu about Israel’s military campaign, how Israel is losing international support, and the need for a two-state solution led by the Palestinian Authority.
Echoing that sentiment, US officials told CNN that the US has no plans to shift its position and draw any red lines around the transfer of weapons and munitions to Israel.
They noted that the administration already expects allies and partners to use US-made equipment in accordance with international humanitarian law and pointed to Israel’s practice of embedding military lawyers with Israel Defense Force units who determine beforehand whether a strike will be proportional and legal.
Israeli troop death toll rises to 9 in northern Gaza incident, military says
From CNN's Amir Tal in Jerusalem
Nine Israeli soldiers were killed in a single incident in northern Gaza Tuesday, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said Wednesday, raising the death toll from the previously reported seven. It is among the largest loss of life in a single incident for Israeli forces since their ground offensive began in Gaza.
The IDF identified two of the fatalities as Col. Yitzhak Ben Bassat, 44, and Sgt. Eran Aloni, 19.
The Golani Brigade, an infantry unit, had been operating within the Shejaiya neighborhood, and had been targeting Hamas fighters in a compact area. Those Hamas fighters, the IDF says, were operating within civilian buildings and tunnel networks, calling this part of the battle “an advanced stage” of the push to clear that area of Hamas.
According to a CNN count, the total number of Israeli troops killed in Gaza combat now stands at 115.
At least 18,412 people have been killed in Gaza during Israeli attacks since October 7, the Hamas-run Health Ministry in the enclave said Tuesday.
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Israel "starting to lose" international support for its campaign in Gaza, Biden warns
From CNN's Kevin Liptak and Jeremy Diamond
US President Joe Biden warned Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
Getty Images
Rifts between the United States and Israel spilled into public view Tuesday as President Joe Biden warned that Israel was losing international support for its campaign against Hamas and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu publicly rejected American plans for post-war Gaza.
The divides, which until now had mostly been contained behind the scenes, reflected growing differences between the two staunch allies as the civilian death toll in Gaza mounts.
Speaking to Democratic donors in Washington, Biden voiced criticism of Israel’s hardline government and said Netanyahu needed to alter his approach.
Meanwhile, Netanyahu admitted Tuesday that he and the US president disagree on what should happen to Gaza after the war.
The pair of remarks amounted to some of the most candid to date when it comes to the persistent differences between Israel and the United States, its top international ally.
A majority of 153 nations voted for the resolution during the emergency special session, while 10 voted against and 23 abstained.
While a General Assembly vote is politically significant and seen as wielding moral weight, it is nonbinding, unlike a Security Council resolution.
The vote, hailed as “historic” by Palestinian Ambassador to the UN Riyad Mansour, comes as the war between Israel and Hamas enters its third month, and as medics and aid groups sound alarm bells on the humanitarian situation in besieged Gaza.
Here are other headlines you should know:
Humanitarian crisis: Diseases including chicken pox, meningitis and upper respiratory tract infections are spreading in Gaza, Palestinian and international medical authorities said. One emergency aid coordinator told CNN there are barely “living conditions” for the people. And an intense downpour Tuesday displaced families who are struggling to keep water and mud out of their makeshift tents in southern Gaza. More than 18,000 people have been killed in the enclave since fighting broke out, the Hamas-controlled health ministry said Monday.
Aid movement: There is currently no plan to allow aid to enter Gaza directly from Israel, an official at Israel’s Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT) told CNN. But the US is pressuring Israel to open the Kerem Shalom border crossing to allow trucks to go directly into Gaza on an emergency basis, US officials told CNN. On Tuesday, 197 humanitarian aid trucks were screened and transferred to Gaza via the Rafah crossing with Egypt, Israeli officials said.
Israeli losses: Seven Israeli soldiers, including a battalion commander, have been killed in a single incident in northern Gaza, Israel’s military said Tuesday. Details of the incident, which marks one of the biggest losses of life for Israeli forces during their ongoing offensive, were not immediately made public. A total of 113 Israeli soldiers have been killed in Gaza combat, according to the military.
Flooding tunnels: Israel has told the US it has begun “carefully testing out” flooding some of Gaza’s tunnels with seawater “on a limited basis” to test the ability to degrade Hamas’s underground network on a larger scale, a US official told CNN Tuesday. Separately, Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said troops inside Gaza are operating deep underground.
Medics detained: Dozens of medical staff at a northern Gaza hospital were taken to an undisclosed location by the Israeli military, a senior doctor said, as the enclave’s wider health care system teeters on the edge of collapse. More than 70 staff including the hospital’s director were “arrested and taken to an unknown area,” according to Abu-Safia head of pediatrics at Kamal Adwan Hospital. His claim was echoed in a statement by Gaza’s Hamas-controlled Health Ministry.
International relations: Rifts between the US and Israel spilled into public view as Biden warned that Israel was losing international support for its campaign against Hamas and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu publicly rejected American plans for post-war Gaza. The divides, which until now had mostly been contained behind the scenes, reflected growing differences between the two staunch allies as the civilian death toll in Gaza mounts. A pair of top US officials will travel to Israel this week for key meetings during this critical moment for the war.
Wider conflict: Israeli forces struck targets in Syria and Lebanon over the past 24 hours, the military said Tuesday, the latest in cross-border exchanges that have raised fears Israel’s war with Hamas could spark a wider regional conflict. Meanwhile, an IDF spokesperson claimed that more than 100,000 people had recently fled their homes in southern Lebanon and moved north inside the country.
This post has been updated to reflect the number of Israeli soldiers killed in Gaza combat.
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7 Israeli soldiers killed in single incident in northern Gaza, military says
From journalist Tamar Michaelis in Tel Aviv
Seven Israeli soldiers, including a battalion commander, have been killed in a single incident in northern Gaza, Israel’s military said on Tuesday.
Lt. Col. Tomer Grinberg, commander of the 13th battalion of the Golani Brigade, was among those killed, it said.
Details of the incident, which marks one of the biggest losses of life for Israeli forces during their ongoing offensive in the enclave, were not immediately made public.
Another soldier was killed in a separate incident Tuesday, bringing the number of Israeli troops killed in Gaza combat to 113, the military said.
At least 18,412 people have been killed in Gaza during Israeli attacks since October 7, the Hamas-run Health Ministry in the enclave said Tuesday.
This post has been updated to reflect the number of Israeli soldiers killed in Gaza combat.
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Israel strikes targets in Syria and Lebanon amid cross-border exchanges
From CNN's Andrew Carey
An Israeli Air Force Apache helicopter flies over the border area with Lebanon in northern Israel on December 12.
Jalaa Marey/AFP/Getty Images
Israeli forces struck targets in Syria and Lebanon over the past 24 hours, the military said Tuesday, the latest in cross-border exchanges that have raised fears Israel’s war with Hamas could spark a wider regional conflict.
In Syria, Israeli warplanes and tanks struck several Syrian army posts and other military infrastructure in response to three launches from Syrian territory, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said in a statement.
Only one launch from Syria landed inside open ground in Israel, the IDF added.
It marks the first time in five days that Israel has reported incoming fire from Syrian territory.
By contrast, cross-border exchanges between Israel and Iran-backed Hezbollah militants based in southern Lebanon having been taking place daily for weeks.
In Lebanon, Israel said one of its fighter jets hit what it called military infrastructure and a Hezbollah launch post on Tuesday, after identifying incoming anti-tank missile and mortar fire launched across its northern border.
Displacement claim: Hagari also claimed that more than 100,000 people had recently fled their homes in southern Lebanon and moved north inside the country amid the cross-border exchanges. It is the first time Israel’s chief military spokesman has made such a claim about people leaving the region.
Hagari appeared to suggest they were fleeing escalating tensions, though he offered no direct explanation for the move and was not asked about it when taking questions from reporters.
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Israel begins flooding Gaza tunnels with seawater "on a limited basis," US official says
From CNN's Natasha Bertrand
Israel has told the United States it has begun “carefully testing out” flooding some of Gaza’s tunnels with seawater “on a limited basis” to test the ability to degrade Hamas’ underground network on a larger scale, a US official told CNN on Tuesday.
The Israelis are still unsure of whether it will work, the official said, but they assured the US they are being careful to only test it in tunnels where they do not believe hostages are being held.
CNN has asked the IDF for comment.
The Israeli Prime Minister’s office said it believes 135 hostages are still being held by Hamas, some of whom are believed to be US citizens.
The Israeli military said earlier this month that it destroyed at least 500 tunnel shafts in Gaza and located more than 800 around the Palestinian enclave. The IDF said last week that many of the tunnel shafts “were located in civilian areas” and inside civilian structures.
In 2021, Hamas claimed to have built 500 kilometers (311 miles) of tunnels under Gaza, though it is unclear if that figure was accurate or posturing.
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UN General Assembly demands immediate ceasefire in Gaza
From CNN's Caitlin Hu
The United Nations General Assembly votes on Tuesday.
Fatih Aktas/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
The United Nations General Assembly has voted to demand an immediate humanitarian ceasefire in war-torn Gaza, in a rebuke to the United States which has repeatedly blocked ceasefire calls in the UN’s Security Council.
A majority of 153 nations voted for the ceasefire resolution in the General Assembly’s emergency special session Tuesday, while 10 voted against and 23 abstained.
While a General Assembly vote is politically significant and seen as wielding moral weight, it is nonbinding, unlike a Security Council resolution. The US last week vetoed a ceasefire resolution in the smaller Security Council, which had been approved by a majority of the powerful 15-member body.
Tuesday’s brief resolution calls for a ceasefire, for all parties to comply with international law, and for humanitarian access to hostages as well as their “immediate and unconditional” release. It notably contains stronger language than an October vote in the assembly that had called for a “sustained humanitarian truce.”
The vote, hailed as “historic” by Palestinian Ambassador to the UN Riyad Mansour, comes as the war between Israel and Hamas enters its third month, and as medics and aid groups sound alarm bells on the humanitarian situation in besieged Gaza. More than 18,000 people have been killed in Gaza since fighting broke out, the Hamas-controlled health ministry in the enclave said Monday.
Israel has said it will not stop its military campaign until it eradicates Palestinian group Hamas, which controls Gaza, following its October 7 attack on Israel that killed 1,200 people and saw around 240 kidnapped, according to Israeli authorities. Over 100 hostages are thought to remain in captivity in Gaza.
Israel has rejected previous calls for a ceasefire, though it agreed to a seven-day truce for the release of Israeli hostages held in Gaza.
Israel voted against Tuesday’s resolution along with the US, Papua New Guinea, Paraguay, Austria, the Czech Republic, Guatemala, Liberia, Micronesia and Nauru.
Aid worker on Gaza crisis: "It can barely be described as living conditions anymore"
From CNN’s Catherine Nicholls
There are barely “living conditions” for the people of the Gaza Strip, the emergency coordinator of operations for Doctors Without Borders, also known as Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), said Tuesday.
People sheltering in hospitals in Gaza are living in “horrendous conditions” without access to health care, she said.
While Gazans traveled to hospitals in search of safety, Perreaut said, they know “this is just not the case.”
She described a lack of food and water, cold temperatures, overcrowding, and widespread diseases in hospitals, saying the situation is “very, very tough.”
Many people are suffering from respiratory tract infections, diarrhea, and skin diseases such as scabies, she said.
“All of these are clear illustrations of the extremely tough and precarious living conditions,” Perreaut said, adding that, since health care centers were ordered to evacuate, people “just don’t have access to health care anymore.”
Half of the patients that MSF was treating were children under the age of 5, she said.
Several hospitals in northern Gaza have ceased operations in recent weeks, saying they received orders from the Israeli military to evacuate. The Israeli military disputes issuing such an order.
Fuel shortages have forced several hospitals in Gaza to close, while others have shut down due to airstrike damage, the World Health Organization has reported.
The Israeli military says it only carries out operations in and around hospitals where they are being used by Hamas and other armed groups.
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Israeli troops are operating deep underground to destroy Hamas infrastructure, defense minister says
From journalist Tamar Michaelis
Israel’s Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said Tuesday that troops inside Gaza are operating deep underground.
On a visit to a divisional headquarters in southern Israel, Gallant also said the IDF located the two brothers of Ahmed Randor, the commander of Hamas’ Northern Brigade in Gaza killed by Israeli forces.
“After the IDF eliminated Randor, the Northern Gaza Brigade commander, his brothers surrendered and now they are providing information to the IDF and ISA,” Gallant said.
Hamas’ infrastructure in Gaza City and northern Gaza was on the verge of collapsing, he said. IDF operations were being conducted above and below ground, he added.
Separately, IDF spokesperson, Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari, said the areas of Khan Younis in the south, as well as Jabalya and Shejaiya in the north, were the epicenters of the fighting.
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More than 70 medical staff at northern Gaza hospital arrested by Israeli military, doctor says
From CNN's Ibrahim Dahman and Tim Lister
The Israeli military arrested dozens of medical staff at the Kamal Adwan hospital in northern Gaza on Tuesday, a senior doctor told CNN.
Dr. Hossam Abu-Safia, head of pediatrics, said the hospital’s director was among those taken to an unknown destination. Separately, the Hamas-controlled Ministry of Health said the Israelis had detained the director, Dr. Ahmed Al-Kahlot.
The situation was “very dangerous” and the bombing became more intense Tuesday around the hospital, Abu-Safia told CNN in a phone interview. Then the Israeli military arrived and asked for all men between the ages of 16 and 65 to leave the building to be searched.
Abu-Safia and five other doctors were allowed to stay in the hospital to look after the intensive care unit and premature babies, he said.
“They asked us to gather in only one section or building [and] close all the doors and windows, and not to be near doors or windows,” he said.
Abu-Safia said the hospital was without water or power. “We are working with primitive flashlights to follow up on the patients left in the hospital,” he said.
He said displaced women, children and the elderly remained at the hospital.
Asked about the alleged arrests at the Kamal Adwan hospital, the Israeli military said it continues “to act against Hamas strongholds” in northern Gaza, among them the area of Beit Lahia.
The military was taking precautions “to mitigate harm to non-combatants,” it said.