The United Nations Security Council passed a resolution Friday that calls for pauses in fighting between Israel and Hamas to allow more aid into Gaza.The US and Russia abstained from the vote.
Israel indicated Friday that it is widening its military operation, ordering residents in the central part of Gaza to seek safety in shelters.On Thursday, the White House said Israel has assured the US of its plans to pivot to a lower-intensity operation as its objectives shift.
In the first month of its war in Gaza, Israel dropped hundreds of massive 2,000-pound bombs, many of them capable of killing or wounding people more than 1,000 feet away, a CNN analysis suggests. Read the report.
The death toll in Gaza has surpassed 20,000 since October 7, according to the Hamas-controlled health ministry.
Our live coverage of the Israel-Hamas war has moved here.
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Doctors Without Borders says UN resolution "falls painfully short" of addressing the needs in Gaza
From CNN’s Mariya Knight
The resolution approved by the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) “falls painfully short” of addressing the crisis in Gaza, the head of Doctors Without Borders US said in a statement Friday.
The way Israel is conducting war is “causing massive death and suffering among Palestinian civilians and is inconsistent with international norms and laws,” she said.
“Ensuring the rapid flow of humanitarian aid into Gaza, and safe, unhindered delivery of assistance within Gaza” is something that should have been established from the start of the crisis and shouldn’t have taken such a long time, she said.
Benoit called on the Security Council and the US government to “focus their attention on establishing a ceasefire and ensure that international humanitarian law does not become a mere afterthought in this conflict.”
Context: The UN Security Council passed a resolution Friday that calls for pauses in fighting between Israel and Hamas to allow more aid into Gaza. The resolution called for the “urgent and extended humanitarian pauses and corridors throughout the Gaza Strip for a sufficient number of days to enable full, rapid, safe, and unhindered humanitarian access,” although it stopped short of pleading for a ceasefire like a previous proposed resolution vetoed earlier this month. The United States, which has vetoed previous draft resolutions, abstained from voting this time. Russia also abstained.
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Israeli military says it demolished a tunnel network in southern Gaza City
From CNN's Abel Alvarado
The Israel Defense Forces has demolished a tunnel network in the Issa area of southern Gaza City, it claimed in a statement Friday.
The network served as an “underground post,” the IDF said, and “numerous buildings used as Hamas headquarters were destroyed” as part of its operations in recent days.
The statement claimed that “many Hamas terrorists were eliminated, along with many buildings used for terrorist activities and weapons that were destroyed.”
IDF spokesperson Daniel Hagari said the tunnel network was targeted using “13 tons of explosives, which simultaneously detonated 30 tunnel shafts in a secured manner.”
The network, according to the IDF, was also “used for storage, hideouts, command and control, and movement of operatives between different areas.”
The IDF said video footage captured by a canine unit revealed that the tunnel network was “hundreds of meters long.”
Some background: Colloquially referred to as the “Gaza metro,” a vast labyrinth of tunnels beneath Gaza is used to transport people and goods, to store rockets and ammunition caches, and house Hamas command and control centers — all away from the prying eyes of the IDF’s aircraft and surveillance drones.
During its offensive in the territory, the IDF claims it has exposed “hundreds of terror tunnel shafts throughout the Gaza Strip,” and says it is operating “to locate and destroy dozens of attack tunnel routes.”
CNN’s Joshua Berlinger contributed reporting to this post.
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UN Security Council passes Gaza resolution as Israel prepares to expand offensive. Here's what to know
From CNN staff
The United Nations Security Council on Friday approved a resolution that calls for humanitarian pauses between Israel and Hamas, increased humanitarian aid to Gaza and the creation of conditions that will allow for a sustainable end to the fighting.
The vote ended days of closed-door negotiations.
The United States and Russia abstained, deciding against using their vetoes as permanent members of the body that would have shot down the resolution.
Throughout what a senior US diplomat called “marathon negotiations,” the US was eager to not vote against the resolution after it suffered global blowback for vetoing the last Security Council motion, which called for an immediate ceasefire.
Instead, Friday’s resolution called for “urgent steps” to lay the groundwork “for a sustainable cessation of hostilities.”
Its passage comes as the Biden administration has grown more vocal in expressing concerns over the brutality of the war in Gaza.
Here’s what else you should know about the resolution:
Israel dismisses the decision: Israel called the resolution “unnecessary” and claimed it “proves the inability for the UN to play a positive role in the conflict,” though it thanked the US for its efforts to “address the most problematic elements.” Israel’s ambassador to the UN said the global body was too focused on aid to Gaza, instead of the crisis of hostages captured by Hamas.
Hamas also largely rejects the move: Hamas said the resolution was “an insufficient step,” given that it did not include an international resolution to stop the war. Hamas also slammed the US, saying it “worked hard to empty this resolution of its essence, and to issue it in this weak formula.”
Humanitarian organization says more help is needed: The International Rescue Committee welcomed calls for immediate humanitarian access but criticized the resolution for not including a call for a ceasefire. “With more than 20,000 Palestinians killed and latest food insecurity numbers showing unprecedented threat of starvation in Gaza, much more is clearly needed,” the IRC said in a statement.
And here are some of the other key developments in the war today:
Israel prepares to expand offensive: The Israel Defense Forces is preparing “to expand the operation into new areas” in the Gaza Strip, with an emphasis on southern Gaza, IDF spokesperson Daniel Hagari said Friday in a media briefing. His remarks follow comments from the Israeli defense minister that highlighted operations in southern Gaza and vowed to expand to other parts of Gaza “in the future.” And the IDF also ordered residents in several areas of central Gaza to move to shelters for safety, signaling a new focus of the ground offensive and a potentially widening military operation in the enclave.
Deepening hunger crisis: Children in the Gaza Strip under the age of 5 — about 335,000 kids — are all at high risk of severe malnutrition and preventable death, according to a UNICEF statement Friday. That follows a warning from a UN-backed food security agency Thursday that the risk of famine is increasing every day that hostilities persist or worsen.
Aid enters Gaza under challenging conditions: The Palestine Red Crescent Society said it received 70 humanitarian aid trucks on Friday through the Rafah border crossing with Egypt. But the head of the UN said Israel’s military activity in Gaza is creating “massive obstacles” for aid distribution in the enclave. UN Secretary-General António Guterres says measuring the success of aid operations by the number of trucks entering Gaza is a mistake because distributing the goods amid “intense Israeli bombardment” and ground operations is highly dangerous.
Important stories from enclave: Palestinian Ambassador to the UN Riyad Mansour referenced CNN’s recent visit to a field hospital in Rafah where Clarissa Ward met an 8-year-old girl named Jinan who survived a strike on her family home that crushed her femur. In his remarks to the UN Security Council, Mansour said the “important report” highlights the “unbearable tragedy” of children killed and wounded by Israel’s assault.
Hostage dies in Gaza: Gadi Haggai, a 73-year-old Israeli-American dual national who was taken hostage by Hamas on October 7, has died while being held captive in Gaza, the Missing Persons Families Forum said in a statement. His body is still being held in Gaza, according to the organization.
This post was updated with the comments from the Palestinian representative to the United Nations.
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Biden says he is heartbroken by death of Israeli-American hostage in Gaza
From CNN's Samantha Waldenberg
US President Joe Biden says he is heartbroken by reports of the death of Israeli-American Gadi Haggai, who is said to have been killed by Hamas on October 7. The 73-year-old’s death was confirmed in a statement from the Missing Persons Families Forum on Friday.
Biden added that he is also praying for the Haggai family and reaffirmed that his administration will keep working to release other hostages in Gaza.
The Haggai family told CNN today that they are “filled with great sorrow” after learning of the death of Gadi Haggai. The family added that they hope his body will be returned.
“We mourn the loss of our father and grandfather, and we continue to hope and pray that his body will be returned to us and that Judi is still alive and we will be reunited soon,” the family said in a statement. Judi is Gadi Haggai’s wife.
Their daughter Iris Haggai Liniado, told CNN previously that her parents were on their morning walk about a mile and a half from their home in the Nir Oz kibbutz on October 7 when they heard rockets flying overhead. She said her parents “hit the dirt” and tried to call for help and that was the last Iris heard from them.
US pleased with UN resolution's approval after "marathon negotiation," US diplomat says
From CNN's Alex Marquardt
Members of the United Nations Security Council meet at the UN headquarters in New York on Friday.
David Dee Delgado/Reuters
The Biden administration s praising the passage of the United Nations Security Council resolution on Gaza, saying it was the result of a “marathon negotiation,” a senior US diplomat said Friday.
The resolution included compromise language “deploring” acts of terrorism. It also stopped short of calling for a ceasefire which was included in a resolution earlier this month in the Security Council that the United States vetoed. Israel has repeatedly rejected international pleas for a ceasefire, saying it needs to remove Hamas from power and recover the hostages, and the US has supported its position at the UN.
Instead, Friday’s resolution “calls for urgent steps” that would “create the conditions for a sustainable cessation of hostilities.”
Another significant sticking point was Egypt and the United Arab Emirates pushing for a new UN mechanism to monitor the aid going into Gaza. The US believed it would be too cumbersome and slow down an already strained process. Instead, the resolution creates a position for a senior UN coordinator for aid.
The resolution also called for all the hostages held in Gaza to be released immediately. That, in addition to the softer language on the cessation of the fighting and the compromise on the aid monitoring mechanism, got the US to a place where it could support the resolution and see it passed, while still not voting “yes.”
“We’re never looking to use our veto and, in fact, we have very strict principles on use of the veto. that should be very rare, very unusual circumstances,” the senior US diplomat said.
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70 humanitarian aid trucks crossed into Gaza on Friday, aid group says
From CNN's Abeer Salman
The Palestine Red Crescent Society said it received 70 humanitarian aid trucks on Friday from the Egyptian Red Crescent through the Rafah border crossing.
It followed 78 trucks on Thursday, it said.
Before the Hamas attacks in Israel on October 7, an average of around 500 trucks entered the Gaza Strip every working day.
That figure included commercial trucks along with aid trucks, according to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.
CNN’s Sugam Pokharel contributed reporting to this post.
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US intelligence suggests Iran is involved in planning attacks in Red Sea
From CNN's Natasha Bertrand
Newly declassified United States intelligence suggests that Iran has been “deeply involved in planning the operations against commercial vessels in the Red Sea,” National Security Council spokesperson Adrienne Watson told CNN.
The Iran-backed Houthi rebels have launched over 100 attacks against about a dozen commercial and merchant ships transiting the Red Sea over the past four weeks, CNN previously reported.
The newly declassified intelligence suggests that “Iranian support throughout the Gaza crisis has enabled the Houthis to launch attacks against Israel and maritime targets, though Iran has often deferred operational decision-making authority to the Houthis,” Watson said.
On Tuesday, a senior US military official said that the Iranians are operating in the Red Sea when asked whether Iran is helping the Houthis select targets, CNN reported. But that official said the Houthi attacks have been broadly indiscriminate.
“Iran has the choice to provide or withhold this support, without which the Houthis would struggle to effectively track and strike commercial vessels navigating shipping lanes through the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden,” Watson said.
The Houthis have said they will only relent when Israel allows the entry of food and medicine into Gaza. Its strikes could be intended to inflict economic pain on Israel’s allies in the hope they will pressure it to cease its bombardment of the enclave.
The intelligence also suggests that the Iranians have provided monitoring systems to the Houthis that allow them to operate in the maritime space, Watson said.
The US this week launched Operation Prosperity Guardian, a maritime coalition aimed at beefing up security in the southern Red Sea. More than 20 nations have signed on to the initiative so far, the Pentagon said Thursday.
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All children under age 5 in Gaza at high risk of preventable death due to food insecurity, UNICEF says
From CNN's Hande Atay Alam and Kareem Khadder
Palestinian children carry pots as they line up to receive food cooked by a charity kitchen in Rafah, Gaza, on December 14.
Saleh Salem/Reuters
Children in the Gaza Strip under the age of 5 — about 335,000 kids — are at high risk of severe malnutrition and preventable death, as the risk of famine conditions continues to increase, according to a UNICEF statement on Friday.
The UNICEF statement comes after the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) reported Thursday that approximately all of Gaza’s 2.2 million residents are now facing acute hunger. The entire population of the Gaza Strip is classified in a state of crisis, according to IPC.
That’s the highest share of people facing catastrophic levels of acute food insecurity that the IPC initiative has ever classified for any given area or country, the report stated.
“Many adults go hungry so children can eat,” according to IPC, calling for humanitarian access to be restored throughout the region to enable the rapid delivery of life-saving aid.
UNICEF also said it is particularly concerned about the nutrition of more than 155,000 pregnant women and breastfeeding mothers, as well as more than 135,000 children under the age of 2, given their specific nutrition needs.
CNN’s Eyad Kourdi and CNN’s Michael Rios contributed reporting to this post.
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Hamas calls UN resolution on Gaza an "insufficient step" to address catastrophic situation
From CNN's Kareem Khadder and Lauren Kent
Hamas said the United Nations Security Council resolution on Gaza is “an insufficient step,” given that it did not include an international resolution to stop the war.
In a statement released on its official website, Hamas said the UN resolution “does not meet the requirements of the catastrophic situation” created by Israel, “especially since it did not include an international resolution to stop the genocidal war waged by the terrorist occupation entity against our Palestinian people in the Gaza Strip.”
Hamas has repeatedly called for Israel to end its military operation in Gaza.
Hamas also slammed the position of the United States, which abstained from the UNSC vote.
“During the past five days, the American administration has worked hard to empty this resolution of its essence, and to issue it in this weak formula,” the statement said.
Friday’s adopted UNSC resolution comes after reports from the Hamas-run Palestinian health ministry, indicating that over 20,000 people have been killed in Gaza by the Israeli military since October 7.
Simultaneously, a new report from the World Food Programme and other UN agencies reveals that more than one in four households in Gaza currently face extreme hunger. The report warns of an impending famine if the conflict persists.
CNN’s Maija Ehlinger, Michael Bodenhurst and journalist Tamar Michaelis contributed reporting to this post.
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Israeli military says it plans to expand into new areas of Gaza — with an emphasis on the south
From Tamar Michaelis in Tel Aviv
Israeli soldiers operate at the Shajaiya district of Gaza city on December 8.
Yossi Zeliger/Reuters
The Israel Defense Forces is preparing “to expand the operation into new areas” in the Gaza Strip, with an emphasis on southern Gaza, IDF spokesperson Daniel Hagari said Friday in a media briefing.
Other signs of expansion Friday: Earlier today, Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant pointed toward Israeli military operations in Khan Younis and other parts of southern Gaza, outlining the military’s plans to operate in other places in Gaza “in the future.”
The IDF also ordered the residents of the Al-Bureij refugee camp in Deir al-Balah and several other areas in central Gaza to move to shelters for safety, signaling a new focus of the ground offensive and a potentially widening military operation in the enclave.
On targeting top Hamas officials: The Israeli defense minister also reiterated Israel’s promise to eliminate Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar in his remarks Friday.
In response to a question about targeted killings of Hamas senior officials, the spokesperson Hagari said, “Our job is to kill all of them. This takes intelligence.”
Hagari said the IDF is working with Israel’s domestic security agency, the Shin Bet, adding that “they have teams working on this all the time. Once there’s an opportunity, we perform.”
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UN Security Council resolution is a "step in the right direction," Palestinian envoy says
From CNN's Maija Ehlinger
The United Nations Security Council resolution on Gaza adopted Friday is a “step in the right direction” for Palestinians, according to the Palestinian ambassador to the UN, Riyad Mansour.
“We welcome the decision to establish a UN mechanism to accelerate the provisions of humanitarian relief,” he said.
The ambassador, however, said Friday’s resolution and another one previously passed by the council were not as ambitious as “more advanced” resolutions that have been adopted by the larger UN General Assembly.
Mansour told reporters this is “simply because there are those who have a veto power and they can do with it whatever they want,” referring to the United States, which has previously blocked ceasefire calls in the Security Council, while the larger General Assembly has adopted such calls.
The Security Council resolution passed Friday did not demand an immediate ceasefire. Instead, it called for “urgent and extended humanitarian pauses and corridors throughout the Gaza Strip for a sufficient number of days to enable full, rapid, safe, and unhindered humanitarian access.”
Mansour said the Palestinian mission to the UN would continue to pursue a ceasefire in the ravaged enclave.
This post has been updated with further comments from the Palestinian ambassador to the UN.
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UN chief criticizes Israel for creating "massive obstacles" for aid distribution in Gaza
From CNN's Niamh Kennedy
The head of the United Nations says Israel’s military activity in Gaza is creating “massive obstacles” for aid distribution in the enclave.
UN Secretary-General António Guterres said that measuring the success of the aid operation to Gaza through the number of trucks entering the enclave is a mistake.
The UN chief said these actions show there has been “no significant change” in how Israel is operating in the enclave and that there is also “no effective protection of civilians.”
According to Guterres, who was speaking at his end-of-year address to journalists in New York on Friday, an effective aid operation in Gaza would require adequate security, staffing, logistical capacity and the resumption of commercial activity.
Honing in on the logistical challenges facing the aid operation, Guterres said the UN has an insufficient number of trucks in Gaza. He said Israel’s refusal to allow any additional trucks to operate there is “massively hampering the aid operation.”
He also called the resumption of commercial activity in Gaza an “essential” priority.
“Wallets are empty, stomachs are empty,” he said.
Guterres said he hoped the UN Security Council resolution passed Friday would help to alleviate the “ongoing nightmare” people in Gaza are experiencing but ultimately stressed that “much more is needed immediately,” calling once more for a humanitarian ceasefire.
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Hezbollah kills Israeli soldier in attack launched from Lebanon, IDF says
From Tamar Michaelis in Tel Aviv, Charbel Mallo in Abu Dhabi and Lauren Kent
Hezbollah killed an Israeli soldier in an attack launched from Lebanon on Friday, according to the Israel Defense Forces. Another IDF soldier was “severely injured” in the attack, which happened near the northern Israeli town of Shtula.
The soldier killed was 19-year-old Sgt. Amit Hod Ziv of the IDF’s 188th Armored Brigade, the military said.
The Lebanese militant group claimed responsibility in a Friday statement, saying it carried out the assault “with rocket weapons and artillery, causing direct hits.” Hezbollah said it launched the attack in support of the Palestinian people.
Hezbollah considers Shomera, Israel, which is near the town of Shtula, to be an “occupied Lebanese village” after the area was captured in 1948.
Israel’s military fired back at Hezbollah later Friday, it said in a statement, launching artillery at areas in Lebanon that it said it had identified as “the sources of fire” on Israel.
An IDF fighter jet also struck Hezbollah infrastructure and a military site belonging to the group, Israeli officials said.
Humanitarian organization welcomes demands for aid to Gaza but says immediate ceasefire is still needed
From CNN's Becky Anderson
Aid trucks enter from Egypt en route to Gaza, seen from the Kerem Shalom crossing in Israel on Friday.
Clodagh Kilcoyne/Reuters
The International Rescue Committee welcomed calls for immediate humanitarian access throughout Gaza but criticized the newly-passed United Nations Security Council resolution for not including a call for a ceasefire.
The IRC said that “from a humanitarian point of view, the failure of the UNSC to demand an immediate and sustained ceasefire is unjustifiable.”
The resolution calls for pauses in fighting between Israel and Hamas to allow more aid into Gaza. The vote had been delayed over the last several days as the council reworked the language of the text.
The IRC said “immediate, safe and unhindered humanitarian access through all available routes to Palestinians throughout Gaza” and the upholding of humanitarian law, among other things, are “prerequisites for relief of the humanitarian suffering.”
The organization reiterated its position that a ceasefire is the only way to “protect Palestinian lives, enable a sufficient humanitarian response, and offer the best chance of hostage release.”
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Israel calls UN resolution "unnecessary" and thanks US for its efforts
From CNN's Alex Marquardt
Israel is “grateful” to the United States for its efforts to “address the most problematic elements” in the United Nations Security Council resolution that was adopted Friday, an Israeli official told CNN.
“They really worked hard, and we really appreciate their efforts,” the official added.
The resolution that was passed calls for the “urgent and extended humanitarian pauses and corridors throughout the Gaza Strip for a sufficient number of days to enable full, rapid, safe, and unhindered humanitarian access.”
The US abstained from voting, allowing it to pass. Russia also abstained.
Israel’s Ambassador to the UN Gilad Erdan said the organization was too focused on aid to Gaza, instead of giving their attention to the crisis of hostages captured by Hamas.
“The UN’s focus only on the aid mechanisms for Gaza is unnecessary and disconnected from reality — Israel, in any case, allows the entry of aid on any necessary scale. The UN should have focused on the humanitarian crisis of the hostages held in Gaza,” Erdan said in a social media post following the adoption of the resolution.
The ambassador also called it “a disgrace” that “the Security Council as a body has not yet condemned the October 7 massacre” and blamed the UN policies for “allowing Hamas to dig terror tunnels and manufacture missiles and rockets.”
“It is clear that the UN cannot be trusted to monitor the incoming aid to the Gaza Strip,” he claimed.
Israeli Foreign Affairs Minister Eli Cohen also reiterated that Israel will “continue the war until the release of all the hostages and the eradication of Hamas in the Gaza Strip.”
“Israel will continue operating according to international law and will inspect — due to security concerns — all the humanitarian aid entering Gaza. The UNSC resolution is right calling to ensure that the UN becomes more efficient in transferring humanitarian aid, and make sure it’s reaching its destination and not Hamas,” the foreign affairs minister said.
More context: It comes as Israel’s relations with the UN have sunk to a historic low. Israel has long felt the UN is biased against it. Multiple Israeli officials have publicly called for the resignation of UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, who has repeatedly condemned Hamas’ October 7 attack, including in the letter in which he invoked Article 99 to raise the Security Council’s attention to the situation in Gaza.
This post has been updated with comments from Israel’s Ambassador to the United Nations.
Tamar Michaelis and CNN’s Mariya Knight contributed reporting to this post.
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UN Security Council passes Gaza resolution after days of negotiations as US abstains from voting
From CNN's Maija Ehlinger and Michael Bodenhorst
Members of the United Nations Security Council vote on a resolution calling for pauses in fighting between Israel and Hamas in order to establish humanitarian corridors throughout Gaza during a meeting at UN headquarters in New York on Friday.
David Dee Delgado/Reuters
The United Nations passed a resolution Friday calling for the “urgent and extended humanitarian pauses and corridors throughout the Gaza Strip for a sufficient number of days to enable full, rapid, safe, and unhindered humanitarian access.”
The vote passed 13-0. It comes after being delayed over the last several days as the council reworked the language of the text.
Following the vote, US Amb. to the UN Linda Thomas-Greenfield called the council’s decision a “strong humanitarian resolution,” adding that the vote made it clear that “all parties must respect international humanitarian law.”
The representative from the Russian Federation, Vasily Nebenzy, had put an amendment before the Security Council just prior to the vote that focused on “immediate cessation of hostilities,” saying that the new language was “neutered” by the United States and that with “each new drafting, the text lost more and more important provisions.”
“By signing off on this, the council would essential be giving Israeli armed forces complete freedom of movement for further clearing of the Gaza Strip,” he added when speaking about the need for an amendment.
That amendment was rejected.
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UN Security Council convenes to discuss Gaza resolution
From CNN's Michael Bodenhorst
The UN Security Council has convened to address the ongoing situation in Gaza.
Friday’s proposed resolution on suspending fighting between Israel and Hamas and allowing more aid into Gaza has been softened, according to a source familiar with the text, as the United States says it’s ready to support it.
It comes after reports from the Hamas-run Palestinian health ministry, indicating that over 20,000 people have been killed in Gaza by the Israeli military since October 7.
Simultaneously, a new report from the World Food Programme and other UN agencies reveals that more than one in four households in Gaza currently face extreme hunger. The report warns of an impending famine if the conflict persists.
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Israel indicates it’s widening military operation in Gaza ahead of expected UN Security Council vote
From CNN's Abeer Salman, Sugam Pokharel and Lauren Izso
Smoke rises from an area hit during Israeli attacks in Deir al-Balah, Gaza, on December 20.
(Ashraf Amra/Anadolu/Getty Images)
Israel indicated Friday that it is widening its military operation in Gaza as the United States says it is ready to support a United Nations Security Council resolution calling for suspension of fighting and increase in aid to the besieged enclave.
The Israel Defense Forces on Friday ordered the residents of the Al-Bureij refugee camp in Deir al-Balah and several other areas in central Gaza to move to shelters for safety, signaling a new focus of the ground offensive.
The military operation had so far been largely focused on northern Gaza and parts of the southern side of the strip.
Israeli military officials have said they believe they are close to defeating Hamas militants in Jabalya and Gaza City’s Shejaiya neighborhood, Hamas’ last remaining strongholds in northern Gaza.
Shortly after the warning on Friday, an Israeli airstrike hit the Al-Bureij refugee camp, a hospital spokesperson said.
At least three people were killed, and 10 others injured after the airstrike hit the camp, Dr. Khalil Al Daqran, a spokesperson at the Al Aqsa Martyrs Hospital, told CNN.
UN resolution: Meanwhile, the much-delayed vote on Gaza in the UN Security Council is expected Friday after US ambassador to the UN Linda Thomas-Greenfield said she was ready to support a resolution calling for an increase in aid to the strip.
Language calling for “urgent steps” to lay the groundwork “for a sustainable cessation of hostilities” was instrumental in the United States’ decision to support the resolution, a source told CNN. Negotiations have dragged on throughout the week as diplomats worked behind closed doors on the language.
The language of the now reads “urgent steps to immediately allow safe and unhindered humanitarian access, and also for creating the conditions for a sustainable cessation of hostilities,” according to the source.
The risk of famine in the Palestinian enclave is increasing every day that hostilities persist, a UN-backed food security agency has warned, as the World Health Organization said no hospitals are functioning in northern Gaza and the strip’s entire health care system is “on its knees.”
CNN’s Michael Rios, Priscilla Alvarez, Donald Judd and Alex Marquardt contributed previous reporting to this post.
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UN Security Council resolution for more aid into Gaza softened as US says it will support it
From CNN's Priscilla Alvarez, Donald Judd and Alex Marquardt
Members of the United Nations Security Council hold sideline meetings as they take a break at the UN headquarters in New York on December 19.
(Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)
A United Nations Security Council resolution on suspending fighting between Israel and Hamas and allowing more aid into Gaza has been softened, according to a source familiar with the text, as the United States says it’s ready to support it.
The UN is poised to vote Friday on the resolution, with a Security Council meeting on the situation in the Middle East scheduled for 11:30 a.m. ET.
Language calling for “urgent steps” to lay the ground “for a sustainable cessation of hostilities” was instrumental in the United States’ decision to support a resolution from the United Nations Security Council, increasing the flow of humanitarian aid to Gaza while calling for a halt in hostilities.
The language of the text has been replaced with “urgent steps to immediately allow safe and unhindered humanitarian access, and also for creating the conditions for a sustainable cessation of hostilities,” according to the source.
A diplomatic source previously told CNN that key issues with the negotiations over the draft included language on the “cessation of hostilities” and a call for the UN to “establish a monitoring mechanism in the Gaza Strip with the necessary personnel and equipment, under the authority of the United Nations Secretary-General.”
Diplomats had been working behind closed doors to finalize a resolution drafted by the United Arab Emirates. A US official familiar with the discussions said the draft had started with calling for an “urgent cessation” of hostilities. Neither the United States nor Israel currently supports a ceasefire, so the US countered with “a more passive formulation,” the official said, describing the language that ended up in the resolution.
“Israel is aware and can live with it,” the official added, while arguing it was not the language on the cessation of hostilities that caused the delays but rather the disagreements over the monitoring mechanism.
US ambassador to the UN Linda Thomas-Greenfield announced late Thursday that the US would support the measure after previously voting four times to delay a vote on the resolution.
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Israeli-American hostage has died while being held captive in Gaza
From CNN's Lauren Izso
Gadi Haggai.
(Florian Poitout/Abaca/Sipa)
73-year-old Gadi Haggai, an Israeli-American dual national and hostage who was kidnapped by Hamas from Kibbutz Nir Oz on October 7, has died while being held captive in Gaza, the Missing Persons Families Forum said in a statement released Friday.
His body is still being held in Gaza, according to the Forum.
Haggai had been out on a walk on the morning of October 7 with his wife, Judi, when he was shot at and “critically Injured,” the statement added.
His wife is still being held captive by Hamas.
“We share in the profound grief of the Haggai family,” the statement added.
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Palestinian head of key Israel-Gaza border crossing killed in Israeli strike, Gaza official says
From CNN's Abeer Salman, Jeremy Diamond, Elizabeth Joseph and Sugam Pokharel
Trucks carrying humanitarian aid arrive from Egypt at the Israeli side of the Kerem Shalom border crossing with southern Gaza on December 22.
(Alberto Pizzoli/AFP/Getty Images)
The director of the Gaza side of the Kerem Shalom crossing, a key border crossing between Israel and Gaza that was recently reopened for the entry of aid into the Palestinian enclave, was killed in an Israeli strike on Thursday, a Gazan border official told CNN.
Bassam Ghaben and three other employees were killed after being hit by an Israeli drone strike, the official said.
The Israeli military said on Friday that it “struck armed terrorists near” the crossing and that the incident is under review.
“The IDF attacked Hamas militants with weapons that came and approached to our border and to this crossing, period,” Col. Moshe Tetro, a senior Israeli defense ministry official with responsibilities for Gaza, told CNN Friday.
He declined to answer, when pressed by CNN, on whether the reported militants presented an imminent threat. “I think that I gave a very clear answer. We attacked militants with weapons,” he said.
Stéphane Dujarric, a spokesperson for the UN Secretary-General, said on Thursday that delivery operations at the crossing were temporarily suspended after the reported strike and that the UN believes the aid deliveries have now resumed. A CNN team on the ground on the Israeli side of the crossing witnessed aid trucks heading into Israel from Egypt and getting checked at Kerem Shalom — and appeared to be heading into Gaza.
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Israel struck some areas it directed civilians to in Gaza, CNN analysis shows
From CNN's Jake Tacchi
Israel has struck at least three locations in Gaza to which it had ordered civilians to evacuate since the breakdown of a fragile truce between Israel and Hamas earlier this month, CNN analysis has found.
On December 1, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) released a map of Gaza – divided into 623 numbered blocks – indicating areas the military would imminently strike, and areas to which civilians should flee. It was madeaccessible online via a QR code printed on leaflets dropped over the strip.
The map, a vestige of the short-lived plan from the 1970s to rebuild Gaza in the early years of Israel’s occupation of the coastal strip, was described by the IDF as “a safe way to preserve your security, your lives, and the lives of your families.”
Residents of Gaza are told to “please pay attention and check this map,” while following “instructions of the IDF through various media outlets.”
However, CNN analysis shows that IDF instructions have – at times – been imprecise and confusing. Regular IDF updates highlight numbered blocks in orange, urging citizens to evacuate these locations, and move to other areas labeled on the map. But some of the messaging has been contradictory and concerns have also been raised over Palestinians’ capacity to access the information due to power and telecommunication outages.
Israel dropped hundreds of 2,000-pound bombs on Gaza, analysis shows
From CNN's Tamara Qiblawi, Allegra Goodwin, Gianluca Mezzofiore and Nima Elbagir
In the first month of its war in Gaza, Israel dropped hundreds of massive bombs, many of them capable of killing or wounding people more than 1,000 feet away, analysis by CNN and artificial intelligence company Synthetaic suggests.
Satellite imagery from those early days of the war reveals more than 500 impact craters over 12 meters (40 feet) in diameter, consistent with those left behind by 2,000-pound bombs. Those are four times heavier than the largest bombs the United States dropped on ISIS in Mosul, Iraq, during the war against the extremist group there.
Weapons and warfare experts blame the extensive use of heavy munitions such as the 2,000-pound bomb for the soaring death toll. The population of Gaza is packed together much more tightly than almost anywhere else on earth, so the use of such heavy munitions has a profound effect.
Israel has come under pressure internationally over the scale of the devastation in Gaza, with even staunch ally US President Joe Biden accusing Israel of “indiscriminate bombing” of the coastal strip.
Israeli officials have argued that its heavy munitions are necessary to eliminating Hamas, whose fighters killed more than 1,200 people and took more than 240 hostages on October 7. They also claim that Israel is doing all it can to minimize civilian casualties.
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US ready to vote at UN as Gaza death toll rises and report warns of famine risk. Here's the latest
From CNN staff
A much-delayed vote on Gaza is expected Friday at the UN Security Council after US ambassador to the UN Linda Thomas-Greenfield said she was ready to support a resolution calling for an increase in aid to the strip.
The resolution will bring humanitarian assistance and support “the priority that Egypt has in ensuring that we put a mechanism on the ground that will support humanitarian assistance,” she said Thursday.
It comes as the death toll in Gaza topped 20,000 since October 7, according to the Hamas-controlled Health Ministry in the strip.
The risk of famine in the Palestinian enclave is increasing every day that hostilities persist, a UN-backed food security agency has warned, as the World Health Organization said no hospitals are functioning in northern Gaza and the strip’s entire health care system is “on its knees.”
Here’s what you need to know:
Famine risk: The UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization expressed “deep concerns” over the rapidly worsening food security situation in Gaza. Nearly all of the enclave’s 2.2 million residents are now facing acute hunger, according to a report by the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification released Thursday, which warned of the risk of famine if hostilities persist.
“Unbearable” scenes: Northern Gaza no longer has a functioning hospital, the World Health Organization said Thursday, detailing “unbearable” scenes teams observed during a recent mission. “Patients were crying out in pain but they were also crying out for us to give them water,” said Sean Casey, who led the missions. “It’s pretty unbearable to see somebody with you know, casts on multiple limbs, external fixators on multiple limbs who are just asking for drinking water.”
Hostages latest: Israel’s most recent proposal to Hamas is a one-week pause in the war for the return of around 35 hostages, including the remaining women, elderly, wounded and sick men held in Gaza, a senior US official told CNN. Hamas said Thursday that Palestinian factions will not agree to any talks about prisoner swaps until after Israel ends its military campaign.
On the ground: Israeli forces have established “operational control” over Shejaiya after days of intense fighting in the Gaza City neighborhood, the Israel Defense Forces claimed. IDF troops will maintain control and continue operating there based on operational needs, the military said. Meanwhile, IDF spokesperson Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari claimed Israeli forces have killed “over 2,000 terrorists” in ground operations this month. Hagari also said the IDF destroyed a “strategic terror tunnel network” in Gaza City. CNN cannot independently verify the claims.
Next phase: Without providing a timeline, the White House said Israel has assured the US of its plans to pivot to a lower-intensity operation in Gaza as its objectives shift. “The Israelis say they recognize the need to transition to a different phase of fighting,” National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby told reporters.
Border fire: There were fresh exchanges of fire between the Israeli military and Iran-backed Hezbollah militants across the Lebanon-Israel border on Thursday. An elderly woman was killed in her home as a result of an Israeli strike on Maroun al-Ras in southern Lebanon, the country’s National News Agency reported.
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Gaza death toll surpasses 20,000, Hamas-controlled health ministry says
From CNN’s Kareem El Damanhoury
Smoke rises over northern Gaza, as seen from Israel on December 21.
Maja Hitij/Getty Images
The number of people killed in Gaza since October 7 has risen to 20,057, according to a statement from the Hamas-controlled Ministry of Health in the strip on Friday.
A total of 53,320 people have also been wounded in the conflict, it said.
CNN cannot independently verify the numbers.
The ministry said 390 people died in the past 48 hours while communication networks had been offline across much of the territory.
On Thursday night, telecom provider Paltel said in a statement that services in central and southern Gaza were gradually coming back online after being disrupted due to Israeli bombardment.
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Gaza faces increasing risk of famine, report by food security agency finds
From CNN’s Michael Rios
Palestinians receive food and humanitarian aid in Rafah, Gaza on December 19.
Abed Zagout/Anadolu/Getty Images
The risk of famine in Gaza is increasing every day that hostilities persist or worsen, according to a report released Thursday by a United Nations-backed food security agency.
In its report on the ravaged enclave, the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) said though acute malnutrition and non-trauma-related mortality have not crossed famine thresholds yet, “these are typically the outcomes of prolonged and extreme food consumption gaps.”
It added that hostilities — including bombardment, military ground operations and the besiegement of Gaza’s entire 2.2 million population — have already caused catastrophic levels of acute food insecurity across the territory.
The report said virtually all households in Gaza are skipping meals, with four in five northern households and about half the displaced households in the south going entire days without eating.
According to the report, the entire population of Gaza is classified in a state of crisis (IPC Phase 3).
“This is the highest share of people facing high levels of acute food insecurity that the IPC initiative has ever classified for any given area or country,” the report states.
At least 79% of Gaza’s population is classified as being in a state of emergency (IPC Phase 4) or catastrophe (IPC Phase 5), according to the report.
The classification indicates that more than half a million people are experiencing catastrophic acute food insecurity conditions, marked by extreme food shortages, alarming rates of acute malnutrition in children under 5, and a significant rise in mortality rates.
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After multiple delays, Gaza resolution is ready for a vote, US ambassador to UN says
From CNN’s Michael Rios
Linda Thomas-Greenfield speaks during a General Assembly meeting at UN headquarters in New York on December 12.
Angela Weiss/AFP/Getty Images
The United States is ready to vote on a United Nations Security Council resolution on Gaza after several delays, the US ambassador to the UN Linda Thomas-Greenfield said Thursday night.
Thomas-Greenfield spoke after a closed-door meeting in which the Security Council again delayed a vote on the resolution, which calls for a suspension of fighting between Israel and Hamas and an increase in humanitarian aid to the Gaza.
The vote is now expected to take place on Friday.
Thomas-Greenfield didn’t share how she will vote on the measure, but said “it will be a resolution — if the resolution is put forward as is — that we can support.”
The resolution will bring humanitarian assistance and support “the priority that Egypt has in ensuring that we put a mechanism on the ground that will support humanitarian assistance,” she added.
Some context: The US has previously voted against a call for a ceasefire in the larger UN General Assembly and earlier this month, vetoed a resolution in the 15-member Security Council that included the word “ceasefire” in the text. Deputy Ambassador to the UN Robert Wood told the Security Council at the time it was because there was no mention of the October 7 Hamas attacks in the draft.
As one of the five permanent members of the Security Council, a resolution vetoed by the US will not pass.
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Israel proposes new deal that includes the release of some hostages, senior US official says
From CNN's MJ Lee and Alex Marquardt
Israel’s most recent proposal to Hamas is a one-week pause in the war for the return of around 35 hostages, including the remaining women, elderly, wounded and sick men held in Gaza, a senior US official told CNN.
This group would include the three elderly men abducted from Kibbutz Nir Oz near the Gaza border who were recently featured in a video released by the Qassam Brigades, Hamas’ military wing, in which they are pleading to be released.
CNN was unable to independently verify when or where the footage was shot or the condition of the captives.
And despite Hamas stating on its Telegram channel on Thursday that it would not agree to any discussions about prisoner swaps until after Israel ends its military operation, US officials continue to believe that there is a pathway to secure the release of more hostages, that official said.
The senior US official declined to say whether Hamas’ most senior leader in Gaza, Yayha Sinwar, had responded to Israel’s latest proposal on the hostages. Sinwar is Israel’s primary target in Gaza, the Israel Defense Forces has called him a “dead man walking.”
Both Israeli and American officials have indicated they believe Sinwar could be in the network of tunnels below his hometown of Khan Younis.
While Israel has returned to the negotiating table to get more of the hostages taken by Hamas during the October 7 attack, both Israeli and US officials have made clear that a deal does not appear imminent, CNN previously reported.
Eight Americans remain unaccounted for since the October 7 Hamas attack on Israel. Four Americans — three women and a toddler — have been successfully released since the start of the Israel-Hamas war.
The US and Qatar have continued to push Israel to get back to the negotiating table, ever since a seven-day truce ended three weeks ago and efforts to get hostages released stalled.
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Israeli forces destroy Gaza City tunnel network, military claims
From CNN staff
The Israel Defense Forces destroyed a “strategic terror tunnel network” in central Gaza City on Thursday, IDF spokesperson Daniel Hagari said in a media briefing.
On Wednesday, the IDF released several videos they said show a network of tunnels that connect to residences and offices of senior Hamas leadership.
CNN cannot independently verify the IDF’s claims.
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Acute hunger crisis affecting entire population of Gaza, UN report says
From CNN’s Eyad Kourdi
Palestinians receive food and humanitarian aid in Rafah, Gaza on December 19.
Abed Zagout/Anadolu/Getty Images
The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) has expressed “deep concerns” over the rapidly worsening food security situation in Gaza.
Nearly all of the enclave’s 2.2 million residents are now facing acute hunger, according to a report by the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) released Thursday.
According to the report, the entire population of Gaza is classified in a state of crisis (IPC Phase 3).
At least 79% of Gaza’s population is classified as being in a state of emergency (IPC Phase 4) or catastrophe (IPC Phase 5), according to the report.
The classification indicates that more than half a million people are experiencing catastrophic acute food insecurity conditions, marked by extreme food shortages, alarming rates of acute malnutrition in children under 5, and a significant rise in mortality rates.
In November, FAO Director-General Qu Dongyu reaffirmed the organization’s commitment to addressing the humanitarian needs and safeguarding agriculture-based livelihoods in Gaza and the occupied West Bank.
“An immediate ceasefire and peace are prerequisites for food security, and the Right to Food is a basic human right,” Dongyu said in a statement.
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Israel has acknowledged need to transition to "lower-intensity" military campaign in Gaza, White House says
From CNN's Donald Judd
Smoke rising from Israeli air strikes on the city of Khan Yunis on December 20, in Khan Yunis, Gaza.
Ahmad Hasaballah/Getty Images
Israel has assured the United States of its plans “to transition from a higher intensity level of operations … to something a bit lower-intensity,” as its objectives shift in Gaza, the White House said Thursday.
Kirby declined to offer a timeline on when exactly Israel would transition to that new phase, adding the Israelis “will decide when (and) they will decide what lower intensity looks like and what that means.”
Kirby pointed to a series of high-level trips to the region, noting Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, Secretary of State Antony Blinken, and national security adviser Jake Sullivan have all traveled to Israel recently, where officials “talked to them about our lessons learned in doing those kinds of transitions … as well as asking them some tough questions.”
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No functional hospitals left in northern Gaza, WHO says
From CNN's Niamh Kennedy
Northern Gaza no longer has a functioning hospital, the World Health Organization (WHO) said Thursday, detailing “unbearable” scenes teams observed during a recent mission.
“There are actually no functional hospitals left in the north,” Richard Peeperkorn, WHO representative in the Occupied Palestinian Territories, told a press briefing.
According to Peeperkorn, the last functioning hospital in northern Gaza was Al-Ahli Hospital but fuel, power, medical supply and staffing shortages have rendered it “minimally functional.”
Of 36 hospitals in Gaza, only nine located in the south are functioning, Peeperkorn said.
The WHO representative spoke to journalists in the wake of WHO missions carried out in recent days to Al-Ahli and Al-Shifa Hospital, located in Gaza City.
Sean Casey, who led the missions, recounted the “unbearable” scenes WHO workers witnessed at a church in the Al-Ahli compound that had been converted into a makeshift ward.
“A church with 30 or so patients, almost none of them ambulatory. So bedridden patients, some of them with serious trauma wounds… We saw many patients who had said they hadn’t bathed or changed their clothes in weeks,” Casey said.
Casey said describing Al-Ahli as a hospice implied a “level of care” that the five doctors and five nurses working there are “simply unable to provide” in light of the virtually non-existent resources.
He said Al-Ahli is rather now a “place where people are waiting to die” unless they can be moved to a “safer location” capable of providing care.