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Devastation in Gaza as Israel wages war on Hamas

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Hear what White House official says Biden told Netanyahu
02:29 - Source: CNN

What we covered

  • US President Joe Biden told Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in a call Thursday that the humanitarian situation in Gaza and the deaths of aid workers due to Israeli strikes were “unacceptable.” Biden warned Israel to take steps to address the crisis or face consequences.
  • Hours after the call, Israel approved the reopening of the Erez crossing into Gaza, closed since the October 7 Hamas attacks, as well as the Port of Ashdod to allow more aid into the enclave, an Israeli official told CNN.
  • The White House defended a recent transfer of more than 2,000 bombs to Israel despite US concerns over the country’s conduct in Gaza. The transfer authorization occurred before the Israeli strike that killed the aid workers, a State Department spokesperson said.
  • Meanwhile, the Israeli military has been using artificial intelligence to help identify bombing targets in Gaza, an investigation has found.
  • Here’s how to help humanitarian efforts in Gaza and Israel.
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First lady privately expressed Gaza concerns to Biden, president tells meeting with Muslim leaders

President Joe Biden delivers remarks in Washington, on April 3.

When US President Joe Biden met with a group of Muslim community leaders this week, he recounted a recent conversation he had with First Lady Jill Biden relating to the conflict in Gaza, two participants have told CNN.

One of the attendees told the president that the decision to take part in the gathering had been a cause of concern for his wife, given the fierce backlash Joe Biden has drawn for his handling of the Israel-Hamas war, according to two people present at the meeting.

Those attendees tell CNN that Biden brought up his own wife and closest confidant.

“It’s got to stop,” he recounted the first lady had said to him recently, according to the recollection of Nahreen Ahmed, who was in the room.

Another participant, who declined to be named, told CNN they remembered the president saying that the first lady had used these words: “Stop it. Stop it now.”

While that attendee said they believed the suggestion was that the first lady was calling for the war to end, Ahmed said it was unclear to her whether the first lady’s comment was directed at the Israel-Hamas war at large, or the mounting civilian death toll in Gaza.

Asked about the president’s remarks, a White House official said there is “no daylight” between the couple on the issue, with both sharing outrage over civilian deaths. The official added that Jill Biden was not calling for Israel to end its efforts against Hamas.

The New York Times first reported on the president’s comments referencing the first lady.

Read more on this story here.

US House speaker rips Biden over warning to Israel

Speaker Mike Johnson is giving remarks in Washington DC, on March 21.

US House Speaker Mike Johnson criticized President Joe Biden following Biden’s warning to Israel to take steps to address the humanitarian crisis in Gaza or face consequences.

“The president’s ultimatums should be going to Hamas, not Israel,” Johnson said in a post on X.

“Hamas resisted a ceasefire, brought about needless bloodshed, and refuses to release Israeli and American hostages. Biden should not undercut our ally amidst an existential threat by conditioning our support,” he continued.

UN says Erez crossing reopening is positive news but that Gaza needs a "massive influx of aid"

Stephane Dujarric attends press conference at UN Headquarters in New York on March 4.

The United Nations on Thursday welcomed news that Israel had agreed to reopen the Erez crossing into Gaza to allow more aid to enter the besieged enclave. 

White House welcomes Israel's decision to open aid routes into Gaza

The White House welcomed Israel’s decision to open new entry points for aid to enter Gaza on Thursday, saying the move came “at the president’s request following his call with Prime Minister Netanyahu.”

The White House also reiterated that US policy in Gaza could change based on Israel’s “immediate” actions.

Watson reiterated that US policy “will be determined by our assessment of Israel’s immediate action on these and other steps, including steps to protect innocent civilians and the safety of aid workers.”

“We are prepared to work in full coordination with the Government of Israel, the Governments of Jordan and Egypt, the United Nations, and humanitarian organizations, to ensure that these important steps are implemented and result in a significant increase in humanitarian assistance reaching civilians in dire need throughout Gaza over the coming days and weeks,” she wrote.

Netanyahu told Biden that deaths of World Central Kitchen workers were Israel's fault, US official says

Palestinians stand next to a vehicle in Deir Al-Balah, in central Gaza, on Tuesday, April 2, where employees from the World Central Kitchenwere killed in an Israeli airstrike.

In his phone call with President Joe Biden, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu admitted to his US counterpart that the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) were to blame for the deaths of the seven World Central Kitchen aid workers this week – and assured Biden that his government planned to announce measures to prevent such a mistake from happening again, according to a senior administration official.  

Netanyahu told Biden on Thursday that Israel was set on improving the tracking of non-profit workers inside Gaza and the US president affirmed that such steps were necessary, according to the official. 

The White House has previously said that the two leaders did not go into details of the investigation into the incident that killed the workers, including a dual American-Canadian citizen, which has drawn wide condemnation and angered the White House.

Biden avoided specifics on potential changes to US policy in call with Netanyahu, senior official says 

In a half-hour call with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, US President Joe Biden did not lay out the specifics of how he would consider shifting US policy if Israel doesn’t make changes in its handling of the war in Gaza, according to a senior administration official.

He instead spoke in the same broad strokes reflected in the White House readout of the call that concrete changes needed to be made, according to the official. 

Netanyahu pledged during the call that Israel will soon announce new openings of humanitarian crossings, as well as procedural changes to limit civilian harm, according to the official. 

Hours later, an Israeli official told CNN that the security cabinet has approved the reopening of the Erez crossing between Israel and the northern Gaza Strip.

While there were moments of disagreement between Biden and Netanyahu on the call — typical among the two leaders who have known each other for decades — there was no “sparring,” the official said, describing the conversation as “direct.” There is no follow-up call currently planned between the two leaders, the official says.

Israeli cabinet approves reopening of Erez crossing and use of Ashdod port for aid into Gaza, official says

The Israeli security cabinet on Thursday approved the reopening of the Erez crossing between Israel and the northern Gaza Strip for the first time since the October 7 Hamas attacks, an Israeli official told CNN.

The reopening is to allow more humanitarian aid into Gaza, the official said.

The cabinet also approved using the Israeli Port of Ashdod to help transfer more aid to the enclave. 

Land crossings into Gaza, through which the bulk of vital aid has traditionally entered the territory, remain heavily restricted by Israel. Aid agencies have accused Israel of throttling the entry of relief into the war-ravaged territory, though Israel has said it has “no limit” on the amount of relief that can enter.

Before the war started, Israel restricted all access to and from Gaza by sea and air, and kept land crossings under tight control. It had two functional crossings with the enclave: Erez, which was for the movement of people, and Kerem Shalom, for goods.

Gaza also has one crossing with Egypt, at Rafah, which is run by Egyptian authorities. While Israel has no direct control over this crossing, it monitors all activity in southern Gaza.

Reaction: The opening of the crossing would be “welcome news” and “certainly in keeping” with what Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told President Joe Biden on Thursday, White House national security adviser John Kirby told CNN’s Wolf Blitzer.

Kirby said he hadn’t seen the new reporting, “but if it’s true that certainly in keeping with what we heard from the prime minister today in terms of announcements they would be making in coming hours and days about opening up crossings, making it more accessible for humanitarian aid organizations to get food, water, medicine, and fuel into the people of Gaza.”

This post has been updated with comments from John Kirby.

Biden posts photo of call with Netanyahu

The photo was released by President Joe Biden on social media.

US President Joe Biden posted on social media about his call with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu Thursday, including a picture of him on the call.  

Biden wrote on X that Israel, “must implement steps to address civilian harm and the safety of workers – and work toward a ceasefire to bring hostages home.”

US military conducts another aid drop into northern Gaza, Central Command says 

The US military conducted an aid drop of more than 50,000 meal equivalents into northern Gaza on Thursday, US Central Command said in a post on X

Roughly 20 bundles landed in the sea near the shoreline, CENTCOM said, adding it did not assess any civilian harm or infrastructure damage as a result. 

“The joint operation included four C-130 US Air Force aircraft, and US Army soldiers specialized in aerial delivery of US humanitarian assistance supplies,” CENTCOM said. “The US C-130s dropped over 50, 680 US meal equivalents into Northern Gaza, an area of great need, allowing for civilian access to the critical aid.”

More: The United States has joined several other countries in airdropping aid into Gaza, which is grappling with a humanitarian crisis.

With aid deliveries on land falling far short of the numbers needed to ward off famine, it is hoped the airdrops will provide a lifeline to people in Gaza.

But the UN and aid agencies have questioned how effective they will be at alleviating the situation, and their risks have been stark as when civilians were killed during an airdrop.

US demands more effort by Israel to protect civilians in Gaza. Here's the latest on the war

US President Joe Biden told Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in a call Thursday that the overall humanitarian situation in Gaza and deaths of aid workers due to Israeli strikes are “unacceptable.”

Biden warned Israel to take steps to address the crisis or face consequences. It marked the first call between the two leaders since an Israeli airstrike killed seven aid workers with World Central Kitchen. Secretary of State Antony Blinken also warned Israel that if more is not done to protect civilians and humanitarian workers in Gaza, then the US could implement its own policy changes.

Here are the latest headlines:

  • Israeli military investigation: The Israel Defense Forces has concluded its initial investigation into the strikes on the WCK convoy, an Israeli official said, and the IDF has begun briefing relevant parties ahead of its release on Friday.
  • US weapon sales to Israel: Biden is set to green-light an $18 billion sale of fighter jets from the United States and Israel and the administration recently authorized the transfer to Israel of over 1,000 500-pound bombs and over 1,000 small-diameter bombs, according to three people familiar with the matter. A White House official defended the arms sale and transfers as the product of yearslong processes.
  • More Israeli strikes in Gaza: An Israeli airstrike hit a residential block in the Al Maghazi refugee camp in central Gaza on Thursday, killing at least two people and injuring 14 others, according to hospital officials. In a separate airstrike, a heavily pregnant woman and her two young daughters were killed in the Al-Janina neighborhood in Rafah, according to the woman’s father. And in Beit Hanoun, at least four Palestinians were killed after Israeli artillery fire targeted an area near a school sheltering displaced civilians, according to Kamal Adwan Hospital paramedics.
  • Future of aid work in Gaza: Humanitarian aid organizations continue attempts to get aid to Gaza but acknowledge that they are often forced to suspend day-to-day missions because of the security situation. The question of staff safety has been paramount as many aid workers have been killed since the war began. But the Israeli airstrikes that killed aid workers this week have heightened the focus on the dangers faced by nonprofits.

A journalist's report alleged that Israel is using AI tools in its war in Gaza: "It’s completely dehumanizing"

Journalist Yuval Abraham is interviewed by CNN on Thursday, April .

Journalist Yuval Abraham produced an investigation by +972 Magazine into the Israeli military’s alleged use of artificial intelligence to help identify bombing targets in Gaza.

The AI-based tool called “Lavender” collects information on “almost everybody” in the Gaza Strip, Abraham said, adding that one source told him it’s nearly 90%. The machine is then meant to identify how probable it is that the targeted individuals are connected to Hamas or Islamic Jihad military wings.

“This AI-based warfare, I think it’s completely dehumanizing. I think it allows militaries to bomb and maintain this aesthetics of international law, when in fact it’s not abiding by international law,” he said Thursday.

In the first few weeks of the war, his sources said they were not forced to apply “any thorough supervision over the results,” Abraham told CNN. “One source told me he would spend roughly 20 seconds before authorizing each target, and the only supervision he needed to do was check if the targets the machine marked was a male or a female.”

Abraham noted that the machine would sometimes mark individuals with either a loose connection to Hamas or none at all. The forces received “sweeping predetermined authorization” to kill between 15 and 20 Palestinian civilians per junior Hamas targets, he added. 

The Israel Defense Forces has repeatedly said it does not use AI for “designating persons as targets.” When asked about the +972 Magazine’s report, the IDF did not dispute the existence of the tool but denied AI was being used to identify suspected terrorists.

Israeli airstrike hits a refugee camp in central Gaza, killing at least 2, Palestinian health officials say

Video of the aftermath shot for CNN shows heavy destruction, with debris and rubble from destroyed buildings strewn along the road.

An Israeli airstrike hit a residential block in Al Maghazi refugee camp in central Gaza on Thursday, killing at least two people and injuring 14 others, according to Al-Aqsa Martyrs hospital.

Video of the aftermath shot for CNN shows heavy destruction, with debris and rubble from destroyed buildings strewn along the road. At least one building has been entirely flattened, and four others have had their facades torn clean off. Smashed parts of the buildings, such as wooden doors and metal window frames have been ripped apart and can be seen strewn among the rubble.

Residents including dozens of children are shown in the footage sifting through the debris of the destroyed buildings. One Palestinian man can be heard questioning why Israeli forces struck the area, saying everyone who lived there were civilians, not militants. 

Inside one of the destroyed homes, blankets, clothes and toys are laid out in front of three children, two boys and one little girl who are looking for their belongings.

Israel’s response: The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) provided CNN with a generic statement they have often used throughout the war in Gaza without directly addressing the reason for Thursday’s attack. “In response to Hamas’ barbaric attacks, the IDF is operating to dismantle Hamas military and administrative capabilities,” it said. “In stark contrast to Hamas’ intentional attacks on Israeli men, women and children, the IDF follows international law and takes feasible precautions to mitigate civilian harm.”

Israeli military jams GPS services in Israel to neutralize security threats, spokesperson says

Israeli army spokesman Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari speaks to the press from The Kirya, which houses the Israeli Ministry of Defence, in Tel Aviv on October 18, 2023. 

The Israeli military proactively activated GPS jamming inside Israel on Thursday “to neutralize threats,” an Israel Defense Forces (IDF) spokesperson said.

Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari said the disruption to GPS services had already helped “neutralize some of the threats,” but urged people to remain “vigilant and responsible.”

Israel entered a state of high alert on Thursday, braced for a potential retaliatory attack after its suspected killing of Iranian generals in Damascus earlier in the week.

The IDF signaled it had stiffened its military preparedness by temporarily suspending leave for its combat units. Israel said it would respond forcefully to any Iranian attack over the coming days.

White House defends arms transfer to Israel

The White House defended a recent transfer of more than 2,000 bombs to Israel despite US concerns over its conduct in the war in Gaza.

Kirby said that it’s important to remember that Israel still faces a lot of threats. “I mean, we’re all focused on Hamas, and I understand that, but they still face active threats throughout the region, including from Iran, and the United States still has an ironclad commitment to help Israel with its self-defense.”

He added that much of the recently reported sales were “not tied to this conflict.”

As CNN previously reported, the transfer authorization for the MK82 bombs and small-diameter bombs occurred before an Israeli strike on a humanitarian convoy in Gaza on Monday that killed seven employees of the aid organization World Central Kitchen, a State Department spokesperson said. 

But news of the approval comes as Israel is facing fresh international condemnation over the strike. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu acknowledged on Tuesday that the aid workers had been “unintentionally” targeted.

Kirby’s defense came after a call between Biden and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu where the White House implied US policy toward Israel could change depending on the humanitarian situation in Gaza.

Israeli airstrike in Rafah killed heavily pregnant woman and 2 young children, family member says

 An Israeli airstrike targeting the Al-Janina neighborhood in Rafah killed a heavily pregnant woman and her two young daughters, according to the woman’s father, Akram Al-Khairi.

The family was sleeping when a missile fell on their home, Al-Kahiri told CNN. Here’s what he said happened:

  • His daughter, who was 8 months pregnant, was killed.
  • His two granddaughters — aged 1 and 2 — were killed
  • His son-in-law and his 4-year-old granddaughter survived with minor injuries

There was a fourth person killed, who was a young man from the neighborhood, Al-Khairi added.

Video filmed by a CNN stringer on the ground shows the bodies at Abu Yousuf al-Najjar hospital, with members of the community standing around them. The father can be seen crying over the bodies of his wife and two young daughters, with a bandage covering his eye.

CNN has reached out to the IDF for comment.

Humanitarian organizations say they are forced to decide the future of aid to Gaza on a day-to-day basis

Humanitarian aid organizations continue attempts to get aid to Gaza but acknowledge that they are often forced to suspend day-to-day missions because of the security situation.

Oxfam: “Every day we are forced to decide whether to suspend an operation or to proceed with an operation. And often, the decision is to suspend because we don’t have the proper security conditions in place. This is not an all-or-nothing proposition,” said Scott Paul, associate director for peace and security.

The question of staff safety has been paramount as many aid workers have been killed since the war began. But the Israeli airstrikes that killed seven World Central Kitchen staffers this week have heightened the focus on the dangers faced by the nonprofits.

Médicines Sans Frontièrs: President Isabelle Defourny said the organization is confronted by the fact that it’s reached its limit in the current circumstances. “The conditions today to deliver humanitarian assistance and to do something meaningful … they are not there,” she told CNN during a briefing on Thursday.

While MSF, also known as Doctors Without Borders, will never stop working in Gaza, Defourny said the capacity to help is a “continuous question and discussion.”

Save the Children: Karyn Beattie, who is currently in Gaza, said the situation is ever-evolving.

Blinken: If US doesn't see changes to protect civilians in Gaza, "there'll be changes in our own policy"

United States Secretary of State Antony Blinken addresses the media during a meeting of NATO foreign ministers at NATO headquarters in Brussels on Wednesday, April 3.

If the United States does not see changes in Israel’s policies to protect civilians in Gaza, “there’ll be changes in our own policy,” Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Thursday.

“This week’s horrific attack on the World Central Kitchen was not the first such incident. It must be the last,” Blinken said at a news conference in Brussels.

The secretary of state said he was “outraged” by the deaths of the seven WCK staffers. “I strongly condemn it.”

He also described the repeated push on the Israeli government to do more to mitigate civilian harm.

The post was updated with Blinken’s condemnation of the attack on WCK staffers.

In Netanyahu call, Biden said humanitarian situation in Gaza and deaths of aid workers are "unacceptable" 

US President Joe Biden called the deaths of humanitarian workers caused by Israeli strikes and the overall humanitarian situation in Gaza “unacceptable” during his phone call with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Thursday, the White House said in a readout shortly after the conversation wrapped. 

“He made clear that US policy with respect to Gaza will be determined by our assessment of Israel’s immediate action on these steps,” the White House added.

White House national security spokesman John Kirby said the two leaders did not discuss Israel’s investigation into the strike in detail. Kirby said that Netanyahu expressed that “he would take appropriate actions to make sure something like that couldn’t happen again” once that investigation concluded.

Biden also “underscored that an immediate ceasefire is essential,” the readout said, adding that the president urgent Netanyahu to “empower his negotiators to conclude a deal without delay to bring the hostages home.”

The leaders also discussed Iran’s threats against Israel and Biden assured US support for Israel in the face of those threats, according to the White House.

This post has been updated with comments from John Kirby.

Civilians killed by Israeli artillery while scavenging for food in Beit Hanoun, paramedics say

At least four Palestinians, including one paramedic, were killed after Israeli artillery fire targeted an area near a school sheltering displaced civilians in the northeastern Gaza city of Beit Hanoun on Thursday, according to Kamal Adwan Hospital paramedics.

An ambulance driver for the hospital, Abdallah Hemaid, told CNN that some civilians were scavenging in a field for plants or vegetation they could eat when Israeli artillery fire targeted the area. Hemaid said when the initial attack took place, nearby civilians rushed over to try to help the injured. But then another round of artillery fire killed three people and injured several children, all from the same family, he said.

Two ambulances with four paramedics from the Kamal Adwan Hospital headed to the area when a third round of artillery fire erupted, killing one of the paramedics and critically injuring three others, he added.

Graphic video obtained by CNN showed the critically injured paramedics arriving at the hospital, blood splattered on their faces and body. Dead bodies can also be seen wrapped in white cloth on the floor, with civilians and paramedics hovering around them crying.

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