Live updates: Israel kills Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar, vows to continue war in Gaza | CNN

The latest on Hamas leader’s death and war in the Middle East

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See video of Netanyahu speaking after drones launched toward his residence
00:57 - Source: CNN

What we covered

US looking into intel leak: The US is investigating a leak of highly classified intelligence about Israel’s plans for retaliation against Iran, according to sources familiar with the matter.

Netanyahu remains defiant: Following the killing of Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar in Gaza this week, Israel’s forces will “continue forward until the end,” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said. Meanwhile, a drone was launched from Lebanon toward Netanyahu’s residence in central Israel on Saturday, his office said, which he called “a bitter mistake.”

Deadly strikes in Gaza: About a dozen people were killed Saturday in three separate strikes and shelling in different parts of Gaza, local and hospital authorities said. The Israeli military has confirmed ongoing operations in several parts of Gaza, with the most intense appearing to be in the north. The Indonesian Hospital in northern Gaza came under Israeli fire Saturday, the enclave’s health ministry said.

Israel and Hezbollah trade fire: The Israeli military said its soldiers have advanced the furthest into southern Lebanon since a ground incursion targeting Iran-backed Hezbollah began last month. According to Lebanese state media, at least two airstrikes hit the southern suburbs of Beirut Saturday, while Israeli emergency services said one person was killed in a series of barrages from southern Lebanon.

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Our live coverage of the conflict in the Middle East has move here.

Israeli military issues evacuation warnings for Beirut’s southern suburbs

The Israeli military issued evacuation warnings early on Sunday for areas in Beirut’s southern suburbs.

“Urgent warning to the residents of the southern suburb of al Dahiyeh,” the Israeli military’s Arabic spokesperson said on X, referring to attached maps of two buildings, one in Hraik neighborhood and the other in Hadath, both in Beirut.

Avichay Adraee called on residents to evacuate the buildings and the area around them in a radius of at least 500 meters, saying the Israeli military will operate there “in the near future” against what it says are “Hezbollah facilities and interests.”

According to the map posted by Adraee, one of the buildings is near a hospital and a mosque in Hraik neighborhood.

Israel accused of killing 73 people in strike on Beit Lahiya; Israel says toll exaggerated

Israel has been accused of killing at least 73 people in a strike on Beit Lahiya in northern Gaza, according to the Hamas-run Government Information Office in the strip.

The office said Israeli forces had bombed a densely populated residential area, calling the attack a “horrific massacre” and saying that most of the victims were women and children. Dozens of people were missing and wounded, it added.

CNN cannot independently verify these figures, which the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) dispute as exaggerated and inconsistent with its data.

The IDF said its operation targeted a Hamas terror site and insisted it was making efforts to avoid civilian casualties.

Catch up: Intel leak is "deeply concerning," sources say, as Israel strikes Gaza and advances in Lebanon

The US is investigating a leak of highly classified US intelligence about Israel’s plans for retaliation against Iran, according to three people familiar with the matter. One of the sources confirmed the documents’ authenticity.

The leak is “deeply concerning,” a US official told CNN.

Here’s what else you should know:

Strikes across the region:

  • In Gaza: About a dozen people were killed Saturday in three separate strikes and shelling in different parts of Gaza, local and hospital authorities said. The Israeli military has confirmed ongoing operations in several parts of Gaza, with the most intense appearing to be in the north. The Indonesian Hospital in northern Gaza came under Israeli fire Saturday, the enclave’s health ministry said.
  • In Lebanon: Airstrikes hit southern Beirut on Saturday soon after the Israel Defense Forces issued an urgent warning for residents of two buildings to evacuate. Lebanese state media confirmed that at least two airstrikes hit the southern suburbs of Beirut.
  • In Israel: One Israeli was killed and others injured in a series of barrages from southern Lebanon Saturday, Israeli emergency services said. The IDF said a total of 150 launches from southern Lebanon on Saturday had been detected.

Drone launched toward Netanyahu’s home: 

  • A drone was launched toward Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s residence in Caesarea in central Israel from Lebanon, his office said. Neither he nor his wife were at home at the time and nobody was injured.
  • Netanyahu said those who tried to “assassinate me and my wife today made a bitter mistake,” blaming “agents of Iran” for the attack. Iran has denied involvement, according to its permanent mission to the United Nations, saying it was “carried out by Hezbollah in Lebanon.” Hezbollah has not claimed responsibility.

More reaction to Sinwar’s death: 

  • Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei called Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar’s death a “painful” loss for the “Resistance Front” — referring to a network of Iran-backed regional proxies, including Hamas — but vowed that the movement would continue.
  • US Vice President Kamala Harris on Saturday emphasized that she believes the death of Sinwar “creates an opening” to end the Israel-Hamas war and reach a hostage deal.
  • UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer also told Netanyahu Saturday that Sinwar’s death is an opportunity to stop the fighting in Gaza and get the hostages out.
  • But Netanyahu has vowed that after the killing of Sinwar, Israeli forces will “continue forward until the end.”

More headlines:

  • The Israeli military has been dropping leaflets in the Khan Younis area of southern Gaza promising free passage to anyone who lays down their arms and helps return those still held in Gaza.
  • Huge crowds of protesters gathered in several cities across Israel Saturday, demanding Netanyahu and his government make the return of hostages in Gaza their top priority.
  • The United States would like Israel to “scale back on some of the strikes” in Beirut, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said Saturday. He also told reporters that he is “seeing things being done to get more aid in” to civilians in Gaza.

Iran denies involvement in drone launch toward Netanyahu's residence

Israeli security forces gather behind a barrier near Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's residence in Caesaria, Israel, on October 19.

Iran has denied involvement in Saturday’s drone launch toward Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s home in Caesaria, saying it was “carried out by Hezbollah in Lebanon.”

Netanyahu had earlier said that “agents of Iran” were behind the attack and would “pay a heavy price.”

But the Iranian permanent mission to the United Nations dismissed the claim, saying Iran had “already responded to the Israeli regime,” according to state news agency IRNA.

Responding to a question about the attack on Netanyahu’s residence, it said, “The action in question has been carried out by Hezbollah in Lebanon.”

Hezbollah, which is backed by Tehran, has not claimed responsibility.

UK prime minister tells Netanyahu that Sinwar's death is an opportunity to stop the fighting

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer speaks during a press conference on October 18 in Berlin.

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer spoke with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu Saturday, according to a Downing Street spokesperson.

Starmer said the death of Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar is an opportunity to stop the fighting in Gaza and get the hostages out. He added that Sinwar was “a brutal terrorist and that the world is a better place without him.”

Starmer also told the Israeli leader he was “alarmed” to hear about a drone launched at his home in Caesarea Saturday morning.

The two prime ministers discussed the “importance of making progress on a political solution” regarding the fighting between Israel and Hezbollah in Lebanon, according to Downing Street.

Anti-government protesters in Israel demand a deal to release hostages

Demonstrators block a major thoroughfare in Tel Aviv on October 19, to protest against the government and demand a ceasefire deal.

Huge crowds of protesters gathered in several cities across Israel Saturday, demanding Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his government make the return of hostages in Gaza their top priority.

In Tel Aviv, people protested outside the Israel Defense Forces’ headquarters, blocking traffic and chanting anti-government slogans.

Eran Nissan, a peace activist from the progressive Israeli group Mehazkim, has been attending anti-government rallies since January last year. On Saturday, he was handing out T-shirts and stickers with derogatory messages about Israel’s far-right security minister Itamar Ben Gvir.

Nissan said a ceasefire-for-hostages deal was the central demand of the protests. “The issue of hostages is the first, the second and the third priority,” he told CNN, adding that he believed the killing of Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar on Wednesday presented an opportunity to finally agree to a deal.

There are 101 hostages still held in Gaza, Israeli authorities say, but as many as one-third of them are thought to be dead.

He added that he believed the current government had an interest in prolonging the war.

The large-scale protests Saturday were among the first in Israel since the government banned large gatherings citing security concerns following the October 1 Iranian ballistic missile attack, which Iran said was a response to the killing of Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah.

Leaked documents show US intelligence on Israel's plans to attack Iran, sources say

Aerial view of the Pentagon in Washington, DC, on March 31.

The US is investigating a leak of highly classified US intelligence about Israel’s plans for retaliation against Iran, according to three people familiar with the matter. One of the people familiar confirmed the documents’ authenticity.

The leak is “deeply concerning,” a US official told CNN.

The documents, dated October 15 and 16, began circulating online on Friday after being posted on Telegram by an account called Middle East Spectator.

They are marked as top secret and have markings indicating that they are only meant to be seen by the US and its Five Eyes allies: Australia, Canada, New Zealand and the UK.

They describe preparations Israel appears to be making for a strike against Iran. One of the documents, which says it was compiled by the National Geospatial Intelligence Agency, says the plans involve Israel moving munitions around.

Another document says it is sourced to the National Security Agency and outlines Israeli Air Force exercises involving air-to-surface missiles, also believed to be in preparation for a strike on Iran. CNN is not quoting directly or showing the documents.

Investigation underway: A US official says the investigation is examining who had access to the alleged Pentagon document. Any such leak automatically would trigger an FBI investigation alongside the Pentagon and US intelligence agencies. The FBI declined to comment.

The National Security Council referred CNN to the Office of the Director of National Intelligence and Pentagon for comment. The Pentagon and National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency declined to comment. CNN has reached out to the National Security Agency for comment.

It is not clear how the documents became public, or whether they were hacked or deliberately leaked.

CNN’s Evan Perez contributed to this report.

IDF releases new video it says shows Hamas leader hours before October 7 massacre

Israel released new video footage it says shows Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar underground in Hamas tunnels “just hours” before the October 7 attacks last year.

Talking over the images of what the IDF says are Sinwar and his children, Israeli military spokesperson Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari said the Hamas leader was hiding alone with his family all night in tunnels below Khan Younis in central Gaza.

The Israel Defense Forces released similar video in February that appeared to show Sinwar walking in a tunnel with his family just after the October 7 attacks.

Hamas accuses IDF of “blatant lies”: The militant group rejected Hagari’s comments as “a desperate attempt to save face for their defeated army, which was humiliated by Commander Sinwar and his brothers.”

The group said Sinwar was killed while “engaging in the battlefield” after having spent the past year “moving across various combat fronts in the Gaza Strip, at the forefront of our brave people’s resistance.”

CNN’s Mia Alberti and Abeer Salman contributed reporting.

This post has been updated with Hamas’ response.

UNRWA deputy director describes what Palestinians are experiencing in Gaza right now

Displaced Palestinians queue to receive food rations at a refugee camp in Gaza on October 17.

With Israel’s war against Hamas in Gaza in its second year, “people are continuing to go through so much,” according to Sam Rose, the senior deputy director of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East.

Rose, who is currently in central Gaza, described the harrowing conditions there.

Since Israel began its military operation into Rafah in May, Rose said, regular supplies have “dried up.”

He said people in Gaza are continually facing hunger and that sanitary conditions are worsening. Rose noted that there are trucks containing aid that have not been let into the strip.

“They’re in absolutely desperate conditions. This is completely man-made; the ability to fix it is through food trucks coming in,” he said.

US defense secretary says he is seeing some progress with getting more aid into Gaza

US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin speaks during a press briefing in Washington, DC, on July 25.

US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin told reporters Saturday he is “seeing things being done to get more aid in” to civilians in Gaza.

When asked about a joint letter he wrote with Secretary of State Antony Blinken urging Israel to increase aid flows to Gaza within 30 days or risk losing US military aid, Austin said that he wouldn’t make “public comments” about it. But he said the death of Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar allows for a “window of opportunity” to increase the amount of aid reaching civilians in Gaza.

“The primary objective is to get the hostages released and get a ceasefire,” he added.

More context: Last week, the World Food Programme warned that no food had entered northern Gaza since the start of October, putting 1 million people at risk of starvation.

On Wednesday, Linda Thomas-Greenfield, the US ambassador to the United Nations, said that several dozen aid trucks entered northern Gaza for the first time in several weeks, but stressed that is not enough.

“Many, many more deliveries are needed, and we will continue to push for that,” she said.

Netanyahu calls drone launch toward his home a "bitter mistake"

Israeli security forces gather behind a barrier across a street leading to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's residence in Caesarea, Israel, on October 19.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said those who tried to “assassinate me and my wife today made a bitter mistake” after a drone was launched toward his home in Caesarea in central Israel Saturday.

The Israeli military confirmed earlier that the drone had been launched from Lebanon, and the prime minister’s spokesperson said that the attack had targeted Netanyahu’s home. Neither he nor his wife were at home at the time and nobody else was injured, according to his office.

Netanyahu said the “agents of Iran” — meaning Hezbollah — were behind the attack and would “pay a heavy price.” Hezbollah has not claimed responsibility.

US would like to see Israel "scale back on some of the strikes" in Beirut, defense secretary says

Smoke and flames rise in Beirut's southern suburbs in Lebanon after Israeli airstrikes, as seen from Sin el Fil, Lebanon, on October 6.

The United States would like Israel to “scale back on some of the strikes” in Beirut, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said Saturday while in Italy for a G7 defense ministers meeting.

The defense secretary added that he will “continue to make” that point during his conversations with Israel’s Defense Minister Yoav Gallant.

In a statement, the Pentagon said Austin and Gallant reviewed US troop presence in Israel in light of the recent deployment there of a THAAD missile defense system during their Saturday discussion.

Austin also told Gallant he was “relieved” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was safe after a drone from Lebanon was launched toward the Israeli leader’s home this morning.

Austin’s comments come as the Israeli military said it had advanced the furthest into southern Lebanon since a ground incursion began at the end of September, while Lebanese state media is reporting that at least two airstrikes hit the southern suburbs of Beirut on Saturday.

Israeli airstrike on western Beqaa kills 4, including mayor, Lebanese state media says

People and rescuers inspect the site of an Israeli strike in Baaloul, a town in the western Beqaa Valley in Lebanon, on October 19.

A local mayor is among four people killed by an Israeli airstrike in the town of Baaloul in the Beqaa valley of eastern Lebanon, according to the country’s National News Agency (NNA).

The Lebanese health ministry announced the death of four people following an “Israeli enemy raid on Baaloul in the Western Beqaa” on Saturday, without referencing the mayor specifically.

According to the report from NNA, the death toll following the “airstrike on a residential apartment” includes the mayor of the nearby town of Sohmor, Haidar Shahla.

Emergency services were working to identify body parts and remains found in the rubble, the health ministry said.

CNN has reached out to the Israeli military regarding the incident.

An image geolocated by CNN showed a large plume of smoke rising behind a mosque in Baaloul.

Israeli troops destroy Hezbollah complex inside school compound in Lebanon, IDF says

As Israeli operations in southern Lebanon are ongoing, troops have destroyed a combat complex used by Hezbollah in the area of a village school, according to the Israel Defense Forces.

In a statement Saturday, the IDF said, “In a school complex in southern Lebanon: the forces of the 7th Brigade combat team located weapons caches, shafts and warehouses with combat equipment.”

According to the IDF, troops have so far destroyed infrastructure, several tunnel shafts and over 20 weapons stockpiles that it says were used by Hezbollah, the IDF added.

The Israeli military said that in the school compound, several shafts and an accumulation of weapons were located and destroyed, including rocket-propelled grenade missiles, weapons and other combat equipment. It did not name the village.

Additional munitions warehouses that Hezbollah had left behind were destroyed, the IDF said.

Earlier Saturday, the Israeli military said it had advanced the furthest into southern Lebanon since a ground incursion began at the end of September.

Israeli military says troops have advanced deepest so far into south Lebanon

The Israeli military says its soldiers have advanced the furthest into southern Lebanon since a ground incursion began at the end of last month.

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said Saturday that the 98th Division had raided a Hezbollah headquarters “in the deepest area IDF forces have operated so far in ground operations in Lebanon. The fighters are raiding terrorist infrastructures and destroying them, eliminating terrorists and locating many weapons.”

It added that troops had raided a Hezbollah headquarters and an observation post that oversaw the settlements of the Galilee Panhandle, a narrow strip of land on the Israel-Lebanon border, and had located and “destroyed munitions, weapons and other enemy intelligence means.”

Remember: Israel has been mounting what it describes as a limited ground offensive against Hezbollah in southern Lebanon.

The incursion, which Israel’s National Security Cabinet has called the “next phase” of its war with Hezbollah, marked the fourth time that Israeli soldiers have publicly entered Lebanese soil in nearly 50 years.

CNN is unable to independently verify reports of fighting on the ground.

20,000 more Palestinians flee northern Gaza as Israeli military operation intensifies, UN says

A further 20,000 people were forced to flee Jabalya camp in northern Gaza on Friday amid intense fighting, the United Nations said, with many seeking refuge in the organization’s shelters.

Although a dozen trucks of flour were allowed into Gaza City this week, the amount was far from sufficient to meet the escalating needs, according to Lazzarini. Only a few bakeries in the city have been able to step up bread production for distribution to those in UNRWA shelters.

The Biden administration sent a letter to the Israeli government this week, demanding it act to improve the humanitarian situation in Gaza within the next 30 days or risk violating US laws governing foreign military assistance.

The situation has worsened due to widespread communication and internet disruptions across Gaza City and northern regions, along with critical shortages of fuel and medical supplies in the remaining operational hospitals, added Lazzarini. Fuel shortages have also affected access to water.

Paltel, Gaza’s primary internet service provider, confirmed a complete internet blackout in the northern Gaza Strip in a statement on Saturday, attributing it to the “ongoing military hostilities.”

Context: Jabalya has been subjected to sustained strikes throughout this month following the Israeli military’s order for mass evacuations from large parts of northern Gaza. Israeli airstrikes on Jabalya refugee camp killed at least 33 people on Friday night, including 21 women, according to Gaza’s Government Media Office.

Airstrikes hit southern Beirut soon after Israeli military warning

Smoke billows over Beirut's southern suburbs in Lebanon after an Israeli strike, as seen from Hadath, Lebanon, on October 19.

Airstrikes hit southern Beirut on Saturday soon after the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) issued an urgent warning for residents of two buildings to evacuate.

Lebanese state media confirmed that at least two airstrikes hit the southern suburbs of Beirut.

It is not clear if the strikes targeted the buildings identified in the earlier warning.

“For your safety and the safety of your family, you must evacuate these buildings and those nearby immediately and move at least 500 meters away from them,” an IDF spokesperson had warned on X prior to the strikes.

Soon after they were carried out, the Israel Defense Forces issued a second evacuation warning.

“You are located near Hezbollah facilities and interests, against which the IDF will operate in the near future,” said the IDF’s Arabic spokesman, specifying a building in the Choueifat Al-Umara neighborhood.

Israel’s operations in Lebanon: Yesterday, residents of 23 villages in southern Lebanon were issued an evacuation notice and urged to move north. On Tuesday, the Middle East director of the United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR) said that around a fifth of Lebanon’s population has fled their homes, and about a quarter of the country is under Israeli military evacuation orders.

About a dozen people killed in three strikes in Gaza, local authorities say

About a dozen people have been killed Saturday in three separate strikes and shelling in different parts of Gaza, Gaza’s Civil Defense and hospital authorities say.

The Civil Defense said that seven people had been killed in an Israeli airstrike on a school in Al Shati refugee camp, which is close to the coast in northern Gaza.

Al-Awda Hospital, central Gaza, said it had received four bodies and four injured people as a result of bombing west of the Nuseirat refugee camp.

Civil Defense spokesman Mahmoud Basal said that in a third attack, five people had been killed or wounded, including children, by Israeli shelling on a residential complex in the Jabalya Al-Balad area in northern Gaza.

Remember: The Israeli military has confirmed ongoing operations in several parts of Gaza, with the most intense appearing to be in the north.

CNN reported a week ago that the IDF had launched a wide-scale operation following intelligence that it said showed attempts by Hamas to “rebuild its operational capabilities in the area.”

Netanyahu says after Sinwar's death Israeli military will "continue forward until the end" 

An Israeli tank maneuvers near the Israel-Gaza border, as seen from Israel, on October 15.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says that after the killing of Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar, Israeli forces will “continue forward until the end.”

Netanyahu made brief remarks on camera to Israeli media Saturday. It’s not clear where he was speaking.

“We eliminated the master murderer Yahya Sinwar,” he said.

“I said we are in the war of resurrection and we continue forward until the end.”

Netanyahu said he was proud of Israel’s soldiers and all its citizens.

After being asked if anything would deter him, he replied: “No, nothing will deter us. We continue until victory.”

On Friday, White House national security communications adviser John Kirby suggested that Sinwar was the chief obstacle to securing a ceasefire in the Gaza conflict - and his killing had created an “inflection point” that could accelerate talks to wind down the war.

Remember: Israel succeeded Wednesday in its year-long mission to kill Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar, the man accused of being one of the masterminds of the October 7, 2023 attacks.

But while Sinwar’s death is a huge blow for Hamas, it does not signal the immediate demise of the group. Hamas has vowed to continue fighting, saying that the killing of leaders – including Sinwar – does not mean the end of the movement.