October 17, 2023 - Israel-Hamas war | CNN

October 17, 2023 - Israel-Hamas war news

Gaza hospital blast
Video shows devastation from Gaza hospital blast
02:34 - Source: CNN

What we covered here

  • Hundreds of people are believed to be dead following a strike on a hospital in Gaza. Palestinian officials blamed ongoing Israeli airstrikes for the lethal incident, while a spokesperson for the Israel Defense Forces said a Palestinian Islamic Jihad group is responsible for a “failed rocket launch” that hit the hospital.
  • The blast resulted in Jordan canceling a planned Wednesday summit between US President Joe Biden and the leaders of Jordan, Egypt and the Palestinian Authority. A White House official said Biden will not travel to Jordan.
  • Biden is still en route to Israel as part of his planned visit, where he seeks to demonstrate staunch support for the country while also pressing for ways to ease humanitarian suffering in Gaza as water and food supplies dwindle for hundreds of thousands of displaced people.
  • Israel has vowed to wipe out Hamas, the Islamist group that controls Gaza, in response to the October 7 terrorist attacks that killed 1,400 people. At least 3,000 people have been killed in the Gaza Strip since last Saturday, according to the Palestinian health officials.
  • Here’s how to help humanitarian efforts in Israel and Gaza.
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Aftermath of Gaza hospital blast is "unparalleled and indescribable," Palestinian Ministry of Health says

People are assisted at Shifa Hospital after a blast at Al-Ahli hospital in Gaza on Tuesday.

The situation following a deadly blast at a hospital in Gaza is “unparalleled and indescribable,” said Dr. Ashraf Al-Qudra, a spokesperson for the Palestinian Ministry of Health.

Al-Qudra said in a statement on Wednesday (local time) that the blast killed hundreds of people “and ambulance crews are still removing body parts as most of the victims are children and women.”

He noted that the number of victims and their injuries “exceeded the capabilities of medical teams and ambulances.”

Al-Qudra added: “Doctors were performing surgeries on the ground and in the corridors, some of them without anesthesia and a large number of injured people are still waiting for operations, and the medical teams are trying to save their lives in intensive care.”

More context: Hundreds of people are believed to be dead following a strike on a hospital in Gaza. Palestinian officials blamed ongoing Israeli airstrikes for the lethal incident, while a spokesperson for the Israel Defense Forces said a Palestinian Islamic Jihad group is responsible for a “failed rocket launch” that hit the hospital.

Palestinian ambassador to UN accuses Israel of being behind Gaza hospital blast

Ambassador Riyad Mansour, the Palestinian Observer to the United Nations, accused Israel of carrying out the deadly blast at the Al-Ahli Hospital in Gaza on Tuesday.

He said Israeli officials were being dishonest in blaming Palestinian Islamic Jihad for the blast. 

The Israel Defense Forces said earlier on Tuesday that their intelligence shows a “failed rocket launch” by the Palestinian Islamic Jihad group was responsible for the explosion that left hundreds dead.

Church that funds Gaza hospital condemns blast, says Gaza deprived of safe havens  

The Episcopal Diocese of Jerusalem condemned the deadly explosion that took place at the Al-Ahli hospital in Gaza Tuesday, according to a statement.

The diocese oversees the board and administration for the hospital and exclusively funds the facility through the Anglican Church via international donations.

The diocese said they were observing a global day of fasting and prayers to end the conflict that “was marred by a brutal attack” on the hospital, the statement read. 

The diocese announced a day of mourning in all of its churches and institutions. 

“Gaza remains bereft of safe havens,” the diocese said, and called the blast a crime against humanity in their statement. 

The diocese also said “the devastation witnessed, coupled with the sacrilegious targeting of the church, strikes at the very core of human decency,” adding that “we assert unequivocally that this is deserving international condemnation and retribution.” 

This post has been updated with additional information.

US State Department warns Americans not to travel to Lebanon

The Palestinian flag and the flag of Hezbollah are seen as UN peacekeepers patrol the border area between Lebanon and Israel on October 13.

The US State Department issued a travel advisory Tuesday warning Americans not to travel to Lebanon.

The department will allow family members and some non-emergency US government personnel from the embassy in Beirut to voluntarily depart the country “due to the unpredictable security situation.”

The travel advisory level for Lebanon was raised to Level 4: Do Not Travel on Tuesday “due to the unpredictable security situation related to rocket, missile, and artillery exchanges between Israel and Hizballah or other armed militant factions,” according to an updated advisory.

The advisory made note of the fact that “large demonstrations have erupted in the wake of recent violence in Israel and Gaza.”

The advisory warned that “U.S. citizens who choose to travel to Lebanon should be aware that consular officers from the U.S. Embassy are not always able to travel to assist them.”

“The Department of State considers the threat to U.S. government personnel in Beirut sufficiently serious to require them to live and work under strict security. The internal security policies of the U.S. Embassy may be adjusted at any time and without advance notice,” the advisory read.

Last week, the State Department raised the travel advisory for Israel to Level 3: Reconsider Travel. The advisory for Gaza remains at the most severe – Level 4: Do Not Travel.

Read more on the State Department’s advisory.

White House says Israel feels "very strongly" they did not cause hospital explosion

Israel feels “very strongly” they did not cause the explosion at a hospital in Gaza, the White House said Tuesday.

He said US President Joe Biden spoke with “all the leaders involved” about his trip to the region Tuesday afternoon “so that all of them could make a collective decision about the value of continuing.”

Asked if the US was giving Israel the “benefit of the doubt,” Kirby declined to weigh in on where the administration thinks responsibility lies for the blast.

Biden has directed the national security team to gather as much information and context as possible “so that we can learn more about what happened,” Kirby said.

As for the cancellation of Biden’s trip to Amman, Jordan, Kirby said it was a “mutual decision” between Jordanian and US officials.

Biden was set to meet with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and others in Jordan, but Abbas canceled his meeting with Biden earlier Tuesday.

The White House said that was due to a three-day mourning period.

Asked why the president didn’t push his trip back until after the three-day mourning period, Kirby said there was still a “pretty robust agenda” for Biden on the ground in Israel.

“He wants to have these discussions directly with Prime Minister Netanyahu and the war cabinet,” Kirby said. “He’s looking forward to having an opportunity to thank the first responders, he obviously feels it’s important, as is his normal desire, to talk to family members who are suffering and anxious and worried and grieving.”

“Even though the Amman portion isn’t going to happen — again for perfectly understandable reasons — that doesn’t negate the reason for going,” Kirby said.

State Department: About 1,500 citizens and family members have departed Israel on US-chartered transportation

Around 1,500 US citizens and their family members have departed from Israel on US government-chartered transport, a State Department spokesperson told CNN Tuesday.

They added that “U.S. government-facilitated flights are scheduled to continue on a rolling basis from Ben Gurion International Airport through at least Sunday, October 22.”

“The departure options we have offered have generally departed at half capacity or less,” they said.

They said “thousands of U.S. citizens have reached out via our online form or via phone since October 7,” but “many have not sought to depart.”

“We are not in a position to share detailed breakdowns of the number of U.S. citizens seeking departure assistance, or the number of U.S. citizens whose departure we have facilitated, given this is an unfolding situation,” they added.

Countries condemn Gaza hospital blast

Several nations condemned the deadly blast that likely killed hundreds of people in Gaza City.

France said it “strongly condemns the strike against the Al-Ahli hospital in Gaza City, which caused a very high number of Palestinian civilian casualties,” according to statement from the country’s Foreign Ministry.

Pakistan called the deadly blast an “Israeli attack” and the Israeli military was “inhumane and indefensible” for “attacking a hospital, where civilians were seeking shelter and emergency treatment,” according to a statement from the country’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs. CNN has not independently confirmed the cause of the blast.

Pakistan called for “the international community to take urgent measures to bring an immediate end to the Israeli bombardment and siege of Gaza and the impunity with which Israeli authorities have operated in the last few days,” the statement read.

Israel and Hamas each blamed the other side for the blast.

Officials downplay expectations for deliverables for Biden's shortened trip

US President Joe Biden boards Air Force One at Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland, Tuesday, October 17, 2023.

When President Joe Biden touches down in Israel for a high-security wartime visit, his focus will be on managing a complicated situation and less on securing clear deliverables, according to two sources close to the matter. It’s a clear signal of the White House seeking to manage expectations after a major portion of the trip was scrapped at the last-minute. 

The presence of Biden, who places a premium on personal diplomacy, is meant to show solidarity with the United States’s closest allies and to deter rogue actors in the region from opening up a second front in the war. 

But the sudden cancelation Tuesday night of a major summit with Arab leaders in Jordan posed additional challenges for the president, who had hoped to return to the US after having firmly established a way for humanitarian aid to enter Gaza. 

The visit to Israel carries significant risks – both physical and political – with active conflict and asymmetric information.  

A blast at a Gaza hospital Tuesday that Palestinian officials say left hundreds dead led to a last-minute briefing by the president’s top national security advisers and a phone call with Secretary of State Antony Blinken, who is still traveling in the Middle East, to assess the intelligence available.

But no conclusion was drawn about who was behind the attack, CNN has learned, with the president instructing his team to continue evaluating the available information. 

The blast – which led to the cancellation of a summit between Biden and Arab leaders in Jordan – was always seen as a possible, and to some extent even probable, risk of such a visit, and the president’s team concluded that the merits of the trip outweighed those risks. 

Even as conflicting claims were coming in about who was responsible for the devastating hospital blast in Gaza and the second half of Biden’s trip was scrapped altogether, multiple sources told CNN that the president’s top advisers did not come close on Tuesday to canceling the Israel portion of the trip. 

The president will be meeting with Prime Minister Netanyahu and his War Cabinet to glean information about what security assistance the US can provide, and he will be assessing the humanitarian situation – with discussions continuing about sending aid into Gaza and allowing refugees to cross through the Rafah crossing into Egypt. 

Despite ongoing discussions with Israel and other partners, sources downplayed the expectation that the visit would result immediately in a refugee deal or the release of American hostages in Hamas custody. 

IDF to release more evidence to prove Israel was not responsible for Gaza hospital blast, spokesperson says

Israel will release additional evidence to prove they were not responsible for the hospital blast in Gaza that left hundreds dead, Lt. Col. Jonathan Conricus, Israel Defense Forces spokesperson, told CNN Tuesday evening. 

Israel has already released footage captured by a UAV to international media, Conricus said, and they plan to release additional intelligence of an intercepted conversation between Palestinian militants that they understand there was a rocket that had misfired. 

Conricus added that the IDF went through their own systems to confirm they did not fire at that location and that there was no misfire from Israel. 

Conricus said an investigation into the blast revealed that the Islamic Jihad had fired a barrage of rockets toward northern or central Israel, and at least one of them misfired, landed on the ground and exploded.

Conricus also refuted claims that the blast could have been the result of an iron dome interception that caused the rocket to explode and land, saying this “has also been categorically denied.” 

“That is not the case, and we do not intercept rockets over Gaza,” he stated. 

Israel has already briefed US military officials on this intelligence ahead of US President Joe Biden’s visit to Israel on Wednesday, Conricus said.

Biden plans to ask Israel tough questions "as a friend" during Tel Aviv visit, White House says

US President Joe Biden plans to ask “tough questions” as a “friend” to Israel when he spends his Wednesday in Tel Aviv — a trip meant as a forceful public show of support, but also a push for easing a growing humanitarian crisis. 

Biden will first meet with Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for a restricted bilateral meeting, National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby told reporters aboard Air Force One in a preview of Wednesday’s trip. That meeting will later broaden to include other US officials and the Israeli War Cabinet.  

In those meetings, Kirby said the president is “going to get a sense from the Israelis about the situation on the ground, and, more critically, their objectives, their plans, their intentions in the days and weeks ahead.”

Pressed later on what those tough questions would be, Kirby said it would not be “adversarial” but rather, “in the spirit of a true, deep friend of Israel.”

The president will “make it clear that we continue to want to see this conflict not widen, not expand, not deepen,” Kirby said, pointing to a “strong signal” from the US with additional military capability. Biden is also expected to discuss Israel’s needs and “make it clear that we will do everything we can to meet those needs,” Kirby said. 

Hostages held by Hamas will also be a key topic of discussion, Kirby said, as Biden seeks to find out more from his Israeli counterparts about “where they are, what condition they are in, if they are being moved.” 

And he will make the case for a “sustained” humanitarian situation in Gaza, Kirby added. 

“We want to see humanitarian assistance flow in — and it’s not just a one and done — we want to see it be able to be sustained: food, water, obviously electrical power, medicine, all the things that the people of Gaza are going to continue to need as this conflict continues to go on. So he’ll make that case very, very clearly,” he said, adding that Special Envoy David Satterfield is “now on the ground” working with Israeli and Egyptian counterparts. 

Later Wednesday, Biden will meet with some families impacted by the violence of the past week, including some who have lost loved ones in Israel, and some who “still don’t know the fate of their loved ones.” Some of those family members have loved ones who are being held hostage, though it was not immediately clear whether they are Americans. 

After that, Biden will make public remarks in Tel Aviv, which will be covered by traveling press. And he is also expected to “speak directly” with Israel President Isaac Herzog. 

Though Biden’s trip to Amman, Jordan, was canceled, Biden is expected to speak with leaders in the region on Wednesday night as he returns to Washington.

“The President intends to speak with both (Palestinian Authority) President Mahmoud Abbas and (Egypt) President (Abdel Fattah el-) Sisi on the flight home,” Kirby said. 

German Chancellor's plane evacuated after air raid alert in Israel, Reuters video shows

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz's plane was evacuated due to an air raid alert late Tuesday night, a Reuters correspondent traveling with the chancellor reported.  

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz was evacuated from his plane shortly before takeoff in Israel due to an air raid alert late Tuesday night, a Reuters correspondent traveling with the chancellor reported.  

Video recorded by Reuters shows Scholz and his staff quickly entering a vehicle on the tarmac of Ben Gurion Airport in Tel Aviv after disembarking the plane.  

Scholz arrived in Israel on Tuesday and met with Israeli President Isaac Herzog and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to express Germany’s solidarity with Israel. Scholz is set to travel to Egypt to meet with President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi on Wednesday. 

CNN has reached out to the Chancellor’s office for comment.  

Canadian officials: International negotiators seem to be closer to securing humanitarian corridor out of Gaza

Canadian officials say that while the Rafah crossing remains extremely dangerous, they are encouraged that they and international negotiators seem to be getting closer to establishing a humanitarian corridor out of Gaza and into Egypt.  

Lévêque declined to provide any details of the negotiations but said they involved Egypt, the United Nation, the US and other nations.

Canadian officials cautioned that the window to leave will likely be short and they confirmed that they are in touch with about 370 Canadians or “Canadian entitled” people needing to leave Gaza. 

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau reacted to the hospital blast in Gaza, again calling on all parties to respect international law.

“The news coming out of Gaza is horrific and absolutely unacceptable,” Trudeau told reporters, shortly after he received news of the hospital bombing Tuesday.

“International humanitarian and international law needs to be respected in this and in all cases,” he added. “There are rules around wars and it’s not acceptable.”

The US and Israel continue efforts to locate impacted Americans in the Middle East, FBI director says

US and Israeli officials continue to work together to “locate and identify all Americans who’ve been impacted in the region including those who remain unaccounted for,” FBI Director Christopher Wray told reporters Tuesday.

He said the FBI continues to partner with state and local law enforcement agencies to mitigate all threats they have identified within the US.

Asked what the FBI has been able to discern about the preparation and planning of Hamas’ attack in Israel, Wray said “those are absolutely topics that we’ve been discussing as partners in our private meetings.”

He didn’t elaborate further.

Over the weekend, Wray told reporters the FBI has seen an increase in reported threats in the US amid the Israel-Hamas war. Most threats have been deemed not credible by the agency, a senior FBI official said during the call, but Jewish and Muslim institutions have been targeted.

UN Human Rights chief says deaths from Gaza hospital blast are "unacceptable"

UN Human Rights chief Volker Tur said the Gaza hospital blast that left at least hundreds of people dead was “unacceptable,” according to a statement released on Tuesday from the Human Rights Office of the High Commissioner. 

Hospitals are sacrosanct and the killings and violence must stop, Turk said. He added those responsible for the hospital blast must be held accountable.

Turk urged all states with influence to do everything in their power to stop the current situation. 

“Civilians must be protected, and humanitarian aid must be allowed to reach those in need as a matter of urgency. Those found responsible must be held to account,” he said.

Airstrikes near northern Gaza heard by CNN crew

Multiple airstrikes in the direction of northern Gaza were heard in Sderot, Israel, by CNN international diplomatic editor Nic Robertson in the early hours of Wednesday morning local time. 

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) have not yet commented on strikes. 

The US is analyzing Israeli intelligence about Gaza hospital blast

A fire burns in the vicinity of where the hospital blast took place.

The US is analyzing intelligence provided by Israel on the explosion at the Al-Ahli Baptist Hospital in Gaza, according to an Israeli official and another source familiar with the matter.

US intelligence officials are working to understand the explosion at the hospital in Gaza that left hundreds of people dead. Palestinian officials have accused Israel of the attack while Israel has blamed Palestinian Islamic Jihad for a failed rocket launch.

The Israeli official said Israel provided the US with signals intelligence, which includes intercepted communications and other forms of data collected through various means.

The National Security Agency, which handles signals intelligence in the US, declined to comment. The Office of the Director of National Intelligence did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

FBI Director Christopher Wray said in a news conference Tuesday afternoon that international intelligence officials are closely monitoring the ongoing situation in Middle East “and we remain laser focused on protecting the citizens of all our countries.” 

Gaza hospital blast leaves hundreds dead as Israeli blockade cripples medical response. Here's the latest 

Children sit in the back of an ambulance at Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City following a blast at Al-Alhi Baptist Hospital on October 17.

Palestinian officials said hundreds were killed by a massive blast at a Gaza hospital on Tuesday, as humanitarian concerns mount over Israel’s deprivation of food, fuel and electricity to the enclave’s population.

Here are key things to know about today’s developments:

The blast: Al-Ahli Baptist Hospital was sheltering thousands of displaced people when it was bombed Tuesday, the Palestinian Health Ministry said in a statement. Many victims are still under the rubble, it added.

Hamas, which controls the enclave, said more than 500 people were killed by the bombing. The Palestinian Health Ministry earlier said preliminary estimates indicate that between 200 to 300 people died in the attack.

Palestinian officials blamed ongoing Israeli airstrikes for the lethal incident. But the Israel Defense Forces has “categorically” denied any involvement in the hospital attack, blaming instead a “failed rocket launch” by the Palestinian Islamic Jihad group, a rival Islamist militant group in Gaza.

Impacted hospitals: Gaza has been under siege by Israel for more than a week, in response to the deadly incursion by Hamas, the Islamist militant group that controls the coastal enclave, home to 2.2 million people. Hospitals meanwhile are struggling to tend to the wounded across the territory, operating with shortages of electricity and water.

Israeli bombardment has killed at least 3,000 people, including 1,032 girls and 940 boys, and wounded 12,500 in Gaza, the Palestinian Ministry of Health said Tuesday. Casualties in Gaza over the past 10 days have now surpassed the number of those killed during the 51-day Gaza-Israel conflict in 2014.

While the IDF has said it does not target hospitals, the UN and Doctors Without Borders say Israeli airstrikes have struck medical facilities, including hospitals and ambulances. 

Health services within Gaza are on the brink and food and water supplies are running low. Twenty out of 23 hospitals were offering partial services because fuel reserves are “almost totally depleted,” the UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) warned on Tuesday.

Closed crossing: Urgent calls for help are growing on both sides of a closed crossing as aid amasses on the Egyptian side of the border. US Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Tuesday said the the United States and Israel “have agreed to develop a plan that will enable humanitarian aid from donor nations and multilateral organizations to reach civilians in Gaza.” 

But on the Egyptian side of the Rafah crossing, a miles long convoy of humanitarian assistance awaiting entry into Gaza, Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry told CNN that “until now, there is no safe passage that has been granted” as they do not “have any authorization or clear, secure routes for those convoys to be able to enter safely and without any possibility of their being targeted.”

Read more about the conflict.

Protests break out around Middle East and North Africa after Gaza hospital blast

Jordanian security forces fire tear gas against demonstrators attempting to storm the Israeli embassy in the capital Amman, on Tuesday, October 17, 2023.

Several countries in the Middle East saw protesters march after hundreds of people died in an explosion at a hospital in Gaza. Israel and Hamas each blamed the other side for the blast.

Preliminary estimates indicate hundreds of people have been killed in the explosion at the Gaza hospital, which was sheltering thousands of displaced people who were forcibly evacuated from their homes by the “occupation,” the Palestinian Health Ministry in Gaza said in a statement. 

Here’s a look at protests erupting across the Middle East:

In Jordan, hundreds of demonstrators took to the streets in the western part of the capital, Amman, Tuesday night as a group gathered near the Israeli embassy in the Rabieh area in an attempt to “reach it,” but security forces dealt with them and pushed them away, a security source told CNN on Tuesday. Jordan’s state-run Petra news agency also reported the protesters attempts to reach the embassy.

Jordanian security forces used tear gas to disperse crowds in Amman, two activists told CNN, a claim backed up by social media videos that also show security forces using tear gas to push protesters back from the embassy.

There have been almost daily protests near the Israeli embassy over the past week to protest Israeli strikes on Gaza.

Protesters clash with Lebanese security forces on early on Wednesday, October 18, 2023, outside the US Embassy in Awkar, Lebanon.

In Lebanon, hundreds of protesters gathered in the square that leads to the US embassy north of Beirut on Tuesday and tried to break through security barriers, according to a CNN team there.

Iraqis take part in a protest  in Baghdad, Iraq, on October 18, 2023.

In Iraq, hundreds of people took to the streets in Baghdad chanting anti-Israel slogans. Security officials in Baghdad told CNN that dozens of protesters attempted to cross a bridge that leads to Green Zone, but security forces prevented them from crossing it. Baghdad’s Green Zone houses Iraqi government offices and several embassies, including US embassy. 

People light candles during a gathering in support of Palestinians, in Tehran, Iran, October 17, 2023.

In Iran, protests also took place outside the French and British embassies in Tehran, the country’s cemoapital. Demonstrators could be heard chanting “death to France, England, America, and the Zionists,” according to a video published by Iran state-run RNA news on Wednesday morning.

Rallies also took place in other cities, including Esfahan and Qom.

In Tunisia, hundreds of people rallied in several areas in Tunis, the capital, following the hospital blast, according to the state-run TAP news agency on Tuesday. TAP said “mass protests were held on Tuesday night,” in several areas “in solidarity with the Palestinian people” and against the Israeli aggression on Gaza.

In photos: The aftermath of a bombing of a hospital in Gaza

Editor’s Note: This post contains graphic images.

Hundreds of people were killed by a massive blast at a Gaza hospital on Tuesday, according to Palestinian officials. Al-Ahli Baptist Hospital was sheltering thousands of displaced people when it was bombed, the Palestinian Health Ministry said in a statement. 

Palestinian officials blamed ongoing Israeli airstrikes, but the Israel Defense Forces has denied any involvement, instead saying the bombing was caused by a “failed rocket launch” from a Palestinian Islamic Jihad group.

Meanwhile, health services within Gaza are on the brink and food and water supplies are running low. 

Here’s what the situation looks like in photos:

Wounded Palestinians sit on the floor at the Al-Shifa Hospital after being transported from the Al-Ahli Baptist Hospital where hundreds were killed in a blast on Tuesday, October 17, 2023.
An injured person is assisted by medical personnel at the Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City.
A young boy carries a child injured in the blast to the Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City.
Bodies of Palestinians killed in the blast lie in front of the Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City.
Women and children huddle together on the floor of the Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City following the blast.

READ MORE

Clashes at Lebanon-Israel border raise fears of wider war
Diplomatic aid efforts ramp up for ‘strangled’ Gaza as regional conflict fears grow
A mother shielding her son, a 26-year-old attending a music festival and two brothers are among the Americans killed in Israel

READ MORE

Clashes at Lebanon-Israel border raise fears of wider war
Diplomatic aid efforts ramp up for ‘strangled’ Gaza as regional conflict fears grow
A mother shielding her son, a 26-year-old attending a music festival and two brothers are among the Americans killed in Israel