March 13, 2024 Israel-Hamas war | CNN

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March 13, 2024 Israel-Hamas war

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See how civilians in Gaza are celebrating Ramadan in the shadow of war
03:34 - Source: CNN

What we covered here

  • More children were killed during four months of war in Gaza than in four years of conflict worldwide, the UN agency responsible for the enclave said Wednesday.
  • As fears of famine grow in northern Gaza, the first maritime humanitarian aid shipment is on its way to the enclave and a UN food convoy has reached Gaza City via a new route. But experts have warned these actions amount to just a fraction of the needed aid for Gazans.
  • Multiple Palestinians were killed hours apart in separate incidents near occupied east Jerusalem and the West Bank, according to health officials.
  • A high-profile Hamas operative was killed in an airstrike in southern Lebanon, the Israeli military said in a statement.
  • Here’s how to help humanitarian efforts in Gaza and Israel.
30 Posts

US destroys 4 drones and 1 surface-to-air missile in Houthi-controlled areas of Yemen, CENTCOM says

US forces destroyed four drones and one surface-to-air missile in Houthi-controlled areas of Yemen on Wednesday, according to US Central Command, the latest in a series of repeated attempts fend off attacks launched by the Iran-backed militant group against commercial vessels in the Red Sea.

The strike on the Houthi weapons came after the group fired an anti-ship ballistic missile from Yemen into the Gulf of Aden, CENTCOM said. The missile did not hit any ships and there were no injuries reported.

Gazans struggle to find places to pray during Ramadan after mosques are destroyed

Israel’s bombardment of Gaza has wiped out entire neighborhoods, crushed the medical system and razed hundreds of mosques – turning religious sanctuaries into relics of war. At least 1,000 of 1,200 mosques, including ancient sites, have been partially or completely destroyed as of February, the Ministry of Endowments and Religious Affairs in Gaza told CNN.

Israeli attacks on Gaza since October 7 have killed more than 100 preachers, including religious scholars, imams, muezzins (those who perform the call to prayer) and hafiz (Muslims who have memorized the Quran), according to the ministry.

Residents told CNN they cannot find enough space to attend nightly taraweeh prayers because places of worship have been destroyed. Taraweeh prayers are performed every night of Ramadan in a congregation. Limited access to water means others cannot make the obligatory ablution before prayer. Many are unable to share communal meals with relatives because forced displacement has separated families across the enclave.

Mohammed Hamouda, a displaced health worker in Rafah, told CNN he is struggling to explain to his young children why they will not be able to feast on traditional Palestinian dishes or receive gifts this Ramadan.

“Ramadan usually has a lot of dinner invitations for our extended families. Nowadays, everybody from the family is in a different place,” Aseel Mousa, 26, a journalist displaced in Rafah, told CNN. “When was the last time I heard the call to prayer without the sound of Israeli drones? I don’t remember.”

Read more about how Ramadan is anything but normal for Gazans this year.

This Ramadan, hunger in Gaza means Palestinians will break their fast with scraps

Palestinians told CNN the war in Gaza has crushed hopes of observing a peaceful month of fasting, festivities and worship during Ramadan this year. Some are grappling with the reality that they will not find enough sustenance to break their fast as Israel’s siege diminishes critical supplies, inflicting deadly hunger on Palestinians.

These days, Jihad Abu Watfa, 27, finds himself riding his bicycle along the dusty streets of Beit Lahia in northern Gaza. He watches as hungry children scavenge for food – but he cannot help them.

Children often search for food in the garbage, he said. “There are many people who (already) fast like it’s Ramadan,” he told CNN in late February, as the holy month approached.

Levels of critical hunger are compounded in the north of the enclave, where Israel concentrated its military offensive in the early days of the war. Palestinians told CNN they resort to eating water-based soup mixed with herbs, custard or finger-sized biscuits because they have no access to nutrient-rich foods.

Read more about how Palestinians are struggling during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

White House officials are expected to meet with Arab and Muslim leaders in Chicago Thursday, sources say

Senior White House officials are planning to meet with Arab, Muslim and Palestinian-American community leaders in Chicago on Thursday, multiple sources familiar with the meeting tell CNN, as President Joe Biden continues to grapple with anger and concern across the country about the Israel-Hamas war. 

Thursday’s meeting is part of the Biden White House’s ongoing efforts to hear concerns about the Gaza situation directly from these communities, though that is hardly expected to be the only issue discussed. Officials are also expected to more broadly discuss concerns about Islamophobia in the US in the aftermath of October 7. 

Along with Vice President Kamala Harris, Biden and other top US officials have escalated calls for a ceasefire and for more humanitarian aid in recent weeks, urging Israel to do more to protect civilians. 

But negotiations remain stalled, even as the humanitarian toll of Israel’s war in Gaza rises. Biden is confronting mounting discontent within his own party over his handling of the conflict, including young and progressive voters and voters in battleground states like Michigan that will be critical to his 2024 coalition.

The White House declined to comment.

Read more.

Hezbollah leader vows to continue fighting against Israel as he claims Netanyahu has “lost the war”

Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah vowed to continue the fight against Israel, claiming the Israeli military has been secretive about its losses in the north.

“[Our southern front] continues to carry out its task of pressuring the enemy at the human, material, military and economic levels,” Nasrallah said in a televised statement Wednesday night local time.

The fighting has continued since October 7 on Lebanon’s southern border with Israel between the Iran-backed Lebanese armed group and the Israeli military. As a result, Israel has ordered the evacuation of communities along the Lebanese border.

Meanwhile, the Israeli military said it has killed numerous Hezbollah militants and commanders since October 7. On Monday, it said it struck two Hezbollah compounds in Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley, the farthest north Israel has struck in Lebanon since the latest Israel-Hamas conflict began. 

In his speech, Nasrallah claimed the Israeli prime minister has “lost the war” in Gaza, and that an Israeli invasion of Rafah would not change that.

“After five months of fighting, [Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu] was unable of presenting any spectacle of victory,” he said, adding that Hamas has not been defeated and is still able to impose its conditions on the negotiations.

The Hezbollah leader also decried the US stance on the Israel-Gaza conflict, labeling it as “hypocritical.”

“I don’t think anyone on earth believes that [US President Joe] Biden cannot stop the war on Gaza,” he said, adding that Biden can stop the fighting by ceasing military aid to Israel and not obstructing United Nations Security Council resolutions calling for ceasefire.

CNN’s Mitchell McCluskey, Charbel Mallo and Donald Judd contributed reporting.

Israel unleashes more deadly airstrikes. Here's what you should know

An Israeli strike killed five Palestinians and injured 22 others after it hit a United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) building in Rafah, the agency’s director said in a statement Wednesday.

At least one UNRWA staff member was among those killed, a UNRWA statement said.

UNRWA Commissioner-General Philippe Lazzarini called for an investigation into attacks against UN facilities, emphasizing “the need for accountability” following the strike.

Here are other headlines you should know:

  • Humanitarian crisis: Israel’s severe restrictions of aid entering Gaza have condemned Palestinians to deadly hunger, leaving at least 27 Palestinians in Gaza dead due to malnutrition and dehydration, the health ministry in Gaza said on Tuesday. Also, more children were killed during four months of war in Gaza than in four years of conflict worldwide, according to UNRWA. The situation on the enclave is so dire now that the “very survival” of the population in Gaza is at stake, European Union foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said as he met with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken at the State Department. 
  • Deaths in occupied Jerusalem and West Bank: A total of six Palestinians were killed in separate incidents, hours apart, around occupied east Jerusalem and the West Bank on Wednesday, health officials said. The number included a 12-year-old Palestinian boy who was fatally shot by an Israeli border police officer in Shuafat refugee camp, as well as a 15-year-old Palestinian boy accused of a stabbing attack were among those killed.
  • Humanitarian aid: The UK said it is “doing everything we can” to get more aid into Gaza, including pressing Israel to lift restrictions and open more border crossings. Meanwhile, Germany’s Minister of Defense Boris Pistorius has approved the country’s air force carrying out humanitarian airdrops over the Gaza Strip. Elsewhere, the US military conducted the ninth airdrop of humanitarian aid into northern Gaza on Wednesday. But the UN and aid agencies have questioned how effective airdrops will be at alleviating the unfolding humanitarian crisis there.
  • International talks: US officials held indirect talks with Iranian officials in Oman in January amid rising tensions in the Middle East, according to a US official familiar with the matter. The talks covered a range of issues, including Iran’s nuclear program and Houthi attacks on US ships in the Red Sea. Blinken spoke on Tuesday with the parents of Itay Chen — an Israeli-American hostage killed on October 7. Also, Qatar Foreign Ministry spokesperson Majed Al Ansari said Wednesday he hopes a truce agreement will be reached between Israel and Hamas before the end of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan on April 9. Additionally, the European Council President Charles Michel has called for a humanitarian pause to the fighting in Gaza and the release of hostages in a call with the Qatari Emir Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani.
  • High-profile killing: An Israeli airstrike killed Hamas operative Hadi Ali Mustafa in southern Lebanon, according to a statement published by the Israel Defense Forces on Wednesday.

UK is "doing everything" to get more aid into Gaza while pressing Israel to lift restrictions 

The United Kingdom said it is “doing everything we can” to get more aid into Gaza, including pressing Israel to lift restrictions and open more border crossings. 

The UK is providing planning support to the Jordanian Armed Forces for their humanitarian aid efforts and has provided around 500 parachutes to enable more airdrops. The UK is also working with Qatar to get more aid into Gaza. 

The UK has halted its own airdrops in Gaza but may review that decision as the situation on the ground changes, according to CNN reporting.

So far, the UK’s Royal Air Force has delivered 74 tonnes of aid for people in Gaza through Egypt, including tents, blankets and wound care packs. In January, the country also delivered 87 tonnes of British and Cypriot aid.

US conducts 9th aid drop of humanitarian aid into Gaza

The US military conducted the ninth airdrop of humanitarian aid into northern Gaza on Wednesday.

The forces airdropped “over 35,712 US meal equivalents and 28,800 bottles of water into Northern Gaza, an area of great need, allowing for civilian access to the critical aid,” CENTCOM said in a release. 

What the United Nations has said about airdrops: Aid delivered as airdrops will never match the volume necessary to meet the requirements of northern Gaza, according to the UN World Food Programme.

“Road access and the use of existing ports and crossings is the only way to get aid into Gaza at the scale that is now required,” said WFP Executive Director Cindy McCain, adding that 300 trucks of food are needed to enter every single day.

UN relief agency director calls for accountability after deadly Israeli strike on its building in Gaza

United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) Commissioner-General Philippe Lazzarini called for an investigation into attacks against UN facilities, emphasizing “the need for accountability.”

His call comes following an Israeli strike that killed five Palestinians and injured another 22 people at a UNRWA food distribution center in Rafah, according to a statement from the UNRWA.

At least one UNRWA staff was among those killed, the statement said.

“Today’s attack on one of the very few remaining UNRWA distribution centres in the Gaza Strip comes as food supplies are running out, hunger is widespread and, in some areas, turning into famine,” Lazzarini said.

He said the coordinates of all UNRWA facilities across the Gaza Strip are shared “with parties to the conflict.”

“The Israeli Army received the coordinates including of this facility yesterday,” Lazzarini said.

CNN has reached out to the IDF for comment.

Blinken speaks with parents of killed hostage and reiterates call for Hamas to accept ceasefire proposal

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken spoke on Tuesday with the parents of Itay Chen — an Israeli-American hostage killed on October 7.

“No one should have to go through what they’ve gone through and what the other hostage families continue to go through,” Blinken said. “It’s another reason why getting the ceasefire would be so crucial to enable us to bring the hostages home.”

Blinken reiterated that there is a “very strong proposal on the table right now,” but said the ball is in Hamas’ court to accept it.

 “The question – will Hamas take it? Does Hamas want to end the suffering that it’s provoked?” he asked. “The question is there but I can tell you that we’re intensely engaged every single day, almost every single hour with Qatar, with Egypt, to see if we can get a ceasefire agreement that will get the hostages out, get more aid in and create a pathway perhaps for a more lasting, secure solution.”

The top US diplomat also reiterated that ensuring Israel can “effectively defend itself” is “an enduring commitment that’s not going to go away.” Blinken said the US remains focused on trying “to make sure that October 7 never happens again.”

He also reiterated that Israel must take steps to protect civilians and get humanitarian aid to those who need it.

This post has been updated with additional comments from Blinken.

Israeli strike kills 5 Palestinians after hitting UN relief agency building, hospital director says

Five Palestinians were killed after an Israeli strike hit a United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) building in Rafah, the director of Abu Youssef Al-Najjar Hospital told CNN on Wednesday.

“Since morning, 38 injuries have arrived at Abu Youssef Al-Najjar Hospital, including injuries from the bombing inside the UNRWA building in Rafah,” according to Dr. Marwan Al-Hams.

At least one UNRWA staff member was among the deaths, according to a statement sent to CNN by the agency on Wednesday.

The building serves as a food aid distribution center situated in the central part of Rafah, according to Adnan Abu Hasna, UNRWA’s media adviser in Gaza.

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

EU's top diplomat says Gaza population's survival is at stake in meeting with US secretary of state

European Union foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said that the “very survival” of the population in Gaza is at stake now, as he met with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken at the State Department. 

“We need to act. The very survival of the population in Gaza is at the stake today,” Borrell said.

Borrell thanked Blinken for his “personal efforts” to get humanitarian assistance into Gaza, but also pressed that routes into Gaza by land must be opened. 

“We need to clear the humanitarian nexus through sea, by air, that’s good. That’s not enough. You cannot replace hundreds of trucks by sending parachutes. The most important thing is to open the borders by land. And continue working, or start working on a two-state solution that both of us – US and EU – endorse. The only way for lasting peace,” Borrell said. 

For context: While airdrops evade the often rigorous and lengthy examinations carried out at land checkpoints, aid agencies say their drawbacks overwhelmingly outweigh their benefits. They are more expensive, have limited delivery capacity and may culminate in chaos.

The US is moving forward with a plan to establish a temporary pier off Gaza’s coast for aid delivery, but the Pentagon said it will take about 60 days for it to be completed and operational.  

Israel says it killed a high-profile Hamas operative in Lebanon

Hamas operative Hadi Ali Mustafa was killed in an Israeli airstrike in southern Lebanon, according to a statement published by the Israel Defense Forces on Wednesday.

According to the IDF, Mustafa was responsible for “Hamas’ international terrorist activities, directing terrorist cells and activities in the field, and advancing terror attacks against Israeli and Jewish targets in various countries around the world.”

Hamas’ military wing, Al-Qassam Brigades, confirmed Mustafa’s death, saying he was killed in southern Lebanon on Wednesday without disclosing further details.

The Lebanese National News Agency (NNA) reported on Wednesday a “hostile drone” strike in Sur Al-Hosh in southern Lebanon, resulting in the deaths of a Palestinian and a Syrian who happened to be riding a motorcycle nearby.

2 Palestinians killed in Israeli raid on Jenin in occupied West Bank, according to health officials

Two Palestinian men were killed and four others were injured in an Israeli military raid on the city of Jenin in the occupied West Bank on Wednesday, health officials said.

The men were killed after Israeli soldiers shot at a group of civilians standing in front of the Jenin Government Hospital’s emergency department, the hospital director said. Rabih Al-Noursi and Mahmoud Abu-Haija died after sustaining severe gunshot wounds, he said.

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

Seen in Jenin: Videos obtained by CNN show Israeli military vehicles and bulldozers storming Jenin in the early hours of Wednesday. Bulldozers can be seen destroying streets and sewage lines and downing electricity poles.

In a statement on the Jenin incursion, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said its “fighters uncovered and destroyed charges planted under routes with the aim of harming the troops,” adding that the military “arrested a wanted man.”

Multiple dead in east Jerusalem and West Bank: A total of six Palestinians were killed in separate incidents, hours apart, around occupied east Jerusalem and the West Bank on Wednesday, health officials said.

The number includes a 12-year-old Palestinian boy who was shot and killed by a border police officer in Shuafat refugee camp, who the IDF said “endangered the forces while firing aerial fireworks in their direction.”

Additionally, a 23-year-old and 16-year-old were shot in the town of Al Jib, north of Jerusalem. The IDF said the Palestinians “threw Molotov cocktails over a security barrier fence,” which runs along an Israeli settlement Givat Ze’ev.

The toll also includes a 15-year-old Palestinian boy who Israeli police say was suspected of a stabbing attack at a military checkpoint between Jerusalem and the occupied West Bank city of Bethlehem.

More children killed in 4 months of war in Gaza than in 4 years of conflicts worldwide, UN relief agency says

More children were killed during four months of war in Gaza than in four years of conflict worldwide, according to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA).

UNRWA Commissioner-General Philippe Lazzarini called the number “staggering” in a post Tuesday on X, formerly Twitter.

Lazzarini shared a graph comparing the number of children killed in conflicts around the world between the years of 2019 and 2022 to the number of those killed between October 2023 and February 2024 in Gaza, citing the UN and the Ministry of Health in Gaza.

According to the figures, a total of 12,193 children were killed between 2019 and 2022 globally, and a total of 12,300 children were killed in Gaza between October 2023 and February 2024. 

Death toll: According to numbers published by Palestinian health officials, the amount of children killed in Gaza since October 7 is greater than that shared by Lazzarini. The Ministry of Health in Ramallah in a report Wednesday said the number of children killed has reached 13,450. And the health ministry in Gaza said Wednesday that 72% of a total of 31,272 deaths are women and children.

CNN cannot independently confirm the numbers due to the lack of international media access to Gaza.

15-year-old suspect in West Bank checkpoint stabbing has died, Israeli police say

A 15-year-old suspected of stabbing security personnel at a checkpoint between Jerusalem and the West Bank on Wednesday has been confirmed dead, Israeli police told CNN.

In a statement released after the incident, the Israel Defense Forces says an Israeli soldier and security guard “neutralized the terrorist” following the stabbing incident. 

The two individuals wounded in the incident were security personnel, according to an update from police. 

The IDF said a “soldier at the scene was lightly injured” and taken to the hospital.

Police earlier said a 15-year-old arrived on his bicycle at the tunnel checkpoint around 8:15 a.m. local time and pulled out a knife while security forces at the crossing tried to check him. He began stabbing the forces operating there, police said. 

Relative of Palestinian boy facing starvation in northern Gaza says "there is no treatment" for him

Ayman Al-Zanat, 28, worries that his young nephew, Fadi, will not make it through the night. 

The Palestinian boy, age 6, clutches his chest while lying on a blue hospital bed in Kamal Adwan Hospital in northern Gaza. He is suffering from severe malnutrition and dehydration, according to the health ministry in Gaza. 

“The child’s health condition is very bad and is not improving,” Al-Zanat told CNN on Tuesday. “The doctors told us that there is no treatment for his condition.” 

Israel’s severe restrictions of aid entering Gaza have condemned Palestinians to deadly hunger. At least 27 Palestinians in Gaza have died of malnutrition and dehydration, the ministry said on Tuesday. 

Fadi, who has cystic fibrosis, has been in the hospital for 10 days, according to Al-Zanat.

The boy’s relatives say they are helpless. “The weakness and lack of energy in his body are increasing. … We don’t know what to do. Fadi does not sleep at night,” added Al-Zanat.

Israel’s siege: Israel insists there is “no limit” on the amount of aid that can enter Gaza, but its inspection regime on aid trucks means relief is barely trickling in. Humanitarian workers and government officials overseeing aid distribution in Gaza previously told CNN a clear pattern has emerged of Israeli obstruction. They say the Israeli agency that controls access to Gaza has imposed arbitrary and contradictory criteria. 

Germany will begin aid airdrops into Gaza

Germany’s Minister of Defense Boris Pistorius has approved the country’s air force carrying out humanitarian airdrops over the Gaza Strip.

“The people in Gaza lack the most basic necessities,” Pistorius said in a statement Wednesday.

“We want to do our part to ensure that they have access to food and medicine. The German Armed Forces are providing two Hercules transport aircraft, each of which can carry up to 18 tons of cargo,” he said.

A statement published by the German defense ministry said Pistorius had signed a corresponding order to authorize the mission. It said aid drops could begin as early as the end of the week.

For context: While airdrops evade the often rigorous and lengthy examinations carried out at land checkpoints, aid agencies say their drawbacks overwhelmingly outweigh their benefits. They are more expensive, have limited delivery capacity and may culminate in chaos.

“Humanitarian workers always complain that airdrops are good photo opportunities but a lousy way to deliver aid,” according to Richard Gowan, the International Crisis Group’s United Nations director.

Mediator Qatar says it hopes for Israel-Hamas truce before April 9

Qatar Foreign Ministry spokesperson Majed Al Ansari said Wednesday that he hopes a truce agreement will be reached between Israel and Hamas before the end of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan on April 9.

Qatar, a mediator in the negotiations, “seeks to push the two parties to reach an agreement,” he said in a post on X.

His statement comes a day after he told CNN’s Becky Anderson that “we are nowhere near a deal at the moment.”

Two security personnel wounded in stabbing near Jerusalem

Two security personnel were wounded on Wednesday in a stabbing near a checkpoint between Jerusalem and the West Bank, according to police. 

Police said a 15-year-old arrived on his bicycle at the tunnel checkpoint at about 8:15 a.m. and pulled out a knife to attack security forces as they tried to check him.

An Israel Defense Forces member shot and killed the attacker, police said.

The wounded personnel, a 25-year-old man and a 19-year-old woman, were in mild to moderate condition, Israel’s emergency service Magen David Adom said in a statement. 

It's morning in the Middle East. Here's what you need to know

A ship carrying humanitarian aid to Gaza is en route from Cyprus, according to nonprofit World Central Kitchen, which said it was the first maritime shipment of humanitarian aid to the enclave.  

The departure comes after announcements that Cyprus, the European Union, the United States, the United Arab Emirates, and the United Kingdom were working to establish a maritime corridor to deliver aid to Gaza.

World Central Kitchen said it planned to distribute supplies for roughly 500,000 meals once the vessel reaches Gaza, including rice, flour, beans, lentils, and canned meats.

The UN welcomed the news of the shipment but stressed it was “not a substitute” for overland assistance to Gazans on the verge of famine. 

The UN World Food Programme said a food convoy reached Gaza City on Tuesday —the first to successfully access the northern part of the enclave since February 20.

Here’s what to know:

  • Status of negotiations: Qatar’s foreign ministry spokesperson Majed Al-Ansari told CNN that “we are nowhere near a deal at the moment.” He said some officials — including Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu — “have the keys to secure a deal right now,” urging them to consider negotiations. CIA Director Bill Burns said there is “still the possibility” of a deal, but it is “a very rough process.”
  • Death toll: The Gaza health ministry said Wednesday that 31,184 people had been killed since October 7, with over 72,000 wounded. CNN cannot independently confirm these numbers due to the lack of international media access to Gaza.
  • Dual citizen dead: Itay Chen, a dual American-Israeli citizen, was killed on October 7, the Israeli military said Tuesday. He was serving on the Gaza border that day, the Hostages and Missing Families Forum said. The Israel Defense Forces said his remains were taken into Gaza after he was killed.
  • Police kill boy: An Israeli border police officer fatally shot a 12-year-old Palestinian boy in Shuafat refugee camp in occupied east Jerusalem, according to hospital officials and Israeli police. In a video obtained by CNN, the boy is seen holding a lit firework above his head before the sound of a single gunshot.
  • Warning to Palestinians: Hamas-linked website Al Majd Security has warned Palestinians that working with Israel — including facilitating the delivery of aid and food — would be considered as collaborating with the enemy and an act of betrayal against the Palestinian people. Al Majd Security is Hamas’ intelligence body, founded in the 1980s by Yahya Sinwar, Hamas’ political leader in Gaza, to monitor Palestinian entities directly working with Israel.

Houthis fire close-range ballistic missile at US warship but miss, CENTCOM says

The Houthis fired a close-range ballistic missile from Yemen toward the USS Laboon in the Red Sea on Tuesday, US Central Command said.

The missile did not hit the guided-missile destroyer, which is homeported in Norfolk, Virginia, CENTCOM said. There were no injuries or damage reported.

US forces and a coalition ship also destroyed two drones launched from Houthi-controlled areas of Yemen, CENTCOM said.

The Iranian-backed Houthis have been targeting ships in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden since shortly after Israel’s war with Hamas began, with the group trying to pressure Israel and its allies to stop its offensive in Gaza.

IDF says UN aid convoy entered northern Gaza via new route

Six humanitarian trucks containing aid from the United Nations’ World Food Programme entered the northern Gaza Strip using a new route, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said.

The IDF tried out a pilot program by bringing in aid trucks to Gaza through the “96th” gate on the security fence Tuesday.

“This was done as part of a pilot in order to prevent the Hamas terrorist organization from taking over the aid,” the IDF said in a statement, adding that Israeli security officials carried out a security check on the trucks at the Kerem Shalom Crossing first.

Government officials will assess the pilot’s results.

Israeli border police officer kills 12-year-old Palestinian at refugee camp in Jerusalem

An Israeli border police officer fatally shot a 12-year-old Palestinian boy in Shuafat refugee camp located in occupied east Jerusalem, according to hospital officials and an Israeli police spokesperson.

In a video obtained by CNN, the boy – Rami Al Halhouli – can be seen holding a lit firework above his head before the crackling sound of a single gunshot is heard. The boy falls to the ground just as the firework launches from his hand into the sky.

Rami arrived at Hadassah Mount Scopus hospital’s trauma unit in critical condition and was pronounced dead soon after, hospital officials told CNN.

No security forces are visible in the video of Rami holding the firework, but the boy appears to be standing in front of the West Bank separation barrier.

The Israeli police spokesperson said police forces responded to a “violent disturbance” at the refugee camp and a border police officer fired “towards a suspect who endangered the forces while firing aerial fireworks in their direction.”

The police spokesperson also claimed individuals on Tuesday night threw Molotov cocktails and fired fireworks directly at security forces. Israeli police said it was the second night in a row that Palestinians in Shuafat aimed Molotov cocktails and fireworks at police forces.

In a Telegram post, Israel’s National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir applauded the soldier who fatally shot the boy.

The shooting came on the third night of the holy Muslim month of Ramadan, which has been a flashpoint in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict in previous years.

Also on Tuesday, Israeli troops fatally shot two other Palestinians at Al-Jib checkpoint in the northern outskirts of Jerusalem, the Palestinian Ministry of Health reported.

Aid pier that will be used to deliver aid in Gaza is expected to open in 60 days, Pentagon says

A pier that will help deliver 2 million meals a day to Gaza is expected “to be fully operational in approximately 60 days,” Maj. Gen. Pat Ryder, Pentagon press secretary, said at a press briefing Tuesday.

Ryder did not provide the location of the planned pier. Currently, there is no existing port in Gaza that could handle that level of aid, requiring the construction of a floating pier. The US plans to send more ships to the Middle East to help build the pier, the Pentagon said.

Four US Army vessels left Tuesday with equipment and supplies needed to construct a floating pier and causeway capable of offloading goods and meals into Gaza, Ryder said. The US ships include US Army Vessel SP4 James A. Loux, US Army Vessel Monterey, US Army Vessel Matamoros, and US Army Vessel Wilson Wharf.

Over the weekend, the US announced that the Army’s Gen. Frank S. Benson support vessel, a logistics and cargo ship, would be deploying to the Mediterranean Sea.

The US is also preparing to send the US naval ship Roy P. Benavidez — a cargo ship operated by Military Sealift Command — to assist with construction of the pier, according to a Navy spokesman.  

IDF troops kill 2 Palestinians and wound 3 others north of Jerusalem, Palestinian Ministry of Health says

Israeli troops fatally shot two Palestinians and wounded three others at Al-Jib checkpoint in the northern outskirts of Jerusalem, the Palestinian Ministry of Health reported Tuesday.

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said they fired at the Palestinians after they threw Molotov cocktails over a security barrier fence onto Route 436, which runs from the Ramot neighborhood in occupied east Jerusalem to the Israeli settlement Givat Ze’ev.

The IDF said these actions were “endangering the lives of civilians and road users.”

After opening fire, the IDF said they apprehended the Palestinians and transferred them for medical treatment.

The two people who died were identified as Zaid Ward Shukri Khalifa, 23, and Abdullah Mamoun Hassan Assaf, 16, the Health Ministry said.

Children in Gaza are suffering "relentless mental harm," NGO warns

Children in Gaza are experiencing “relentless mental harm” after five months of war, hunger, displacement and years of blockade, according to Save the Children, an NGO that talked to mental health services and four parents in Gaza. 

In a report released on Tuesday, one parent told the organization:

“I wouldn’t even say that their mental health has deteriorated – it’s been obliterated. Complete psychological destruction.”

Another said:

“Children here have seen everything. They’ve seen the bombs, the deaths, the bodies – we can’t pretend to them any more. Now they understand and have seen everything. Now, my son can even tell what types of explosives are falling – he can hear the difference.” 

The collapse of health care and psychological services in Gaza limits the possibility that children will get the treatment they need to recover, according to the report.

Director of Save the Children for the Occupied Palestinian Territory Jason Lee said there is hope the psychological impacts of the war could be reversed with support, but that “none this is possible without an immediate, definitive ceasefire and safe, unfettered aid access so that humanitarians can provide the critical support needed.”

Dual US-Israeli citizen Itay Chen killed on October 7

Dual US-Israeli citizen Itay Chen was killed on October 7 during the Hamas attacks on Israel, the Israeli military announced Tuesday.

The Israel Defense Forces said Chen’s remains were taken into Gaza after he was killed.

Chen was serving on the Gaza border on October 7, the Hostages and Missing Families Forum said on Tuesday. He was the middle child of three siblings, a former Boy Scout, and a fierce basketball player, his father Ruby Chen told CNN in November.

According to his father, Chen had his 20th Jewish birthday in January – a date his family marked with a small ceremony at a synagogue in New York City as they desperately waited for good news. 

“Each week, we know someone is going to get a bad message. We just don’t know who it is,” Ruby Chen said. “Time is running out.” 

Chen was one of six US citizens thought to have been held alive in Gaza. He is at least the fourth dual US citizen whose body is being held in Gaza, along with those of Aviv Atzili and husband and wife Gad Haggai and Judih Weinstein Haggai.

Officials in US President Joe Biden’s administration said they were informed of Chen’s death by Israeli officials on Tuesday, according to a source.

Thirty-two of the 130 October 7 hostages are now believed to be dead, according to CNN records. Israel continues to consider people to be hostages even after their death until their remains are returned.

Lauren Izso and CNN’s Ivana Kottasova, MJ Lee and Priscilla Alvarez contributed reporting.

Israel turns away aid trucks for having scissors in medical kits, UN relief agency head says

The United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) Commissioner-General Philippe Lazzarini has said that a truck loaded with aid was turned back because it had scissors used in children’s medical kits.

“Medical scissors are now added to a long list of banned items the Israeli Authorities classify as ‘for dual use,’” Lazzarini said Monday on X.
“The list includes basic and lifesaving items: from anesthetics, solar lights, oxygen cylinders and ventilators, to water cleaning tablets, cancer medicines and maternity kits.”  

He said that the lives of 2 million people depend on the “clearance of humanitarian supplies + the delivery of basic & critical items,” adding there is “no time to waste.”

CNN has previously reported that humanitarian workers and government officials working to deliver urgently needed aid for Gaza say a clear pattern has emerged of Israeli obstruction, as disease and near-famine conditions grip parts of the besieged enclave.