Israel has acknowledged need to transition to "lower-intensity" military campaign in Gaza, White House says

December 22, 2023 Israel-Hamas war

By Tara Subramaniam, Aditi Sangal, Jack Guy, Adrienne Vogt, Elise Hammond, Matt Meyer and Chris Lau, CNN

Updated 0507 GMT (1307 HKT) December 23, 2023
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11:44 p.m. ET, December 21, 2023

Israel has acknowledged need to transition to "lower-intensity" military campaign in Gaza, White House says

From CNN's Donald Judd

Smoke rising from Israeli air strikes on the city of Khan Yunis on December 20, in Khan Yunis, Gaza.
Smoke rising from Israeli air strikes on the city of Khan Yunis on December 20, in Khan Yunis, Gaza. Ahmad Hasaballah/Getty Images

Israel has assured the United States of its plans “to transition from a higher intensity level of operations ... to something a bit lower-intensity,” as its objectives shift in Gaza, the White House said Thursday.

“The Israelis say they recognize the need to transition to a different phase of fighting — I mean, in any military campaign, wherever you’re going to transition to a different set of objectives, you're going to achieve those different set of objectives through different tactics and operations, and that's just standard for the conduct of military operations,” White House National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby told reporters.

Kirby declined to offer a timeline on when exactly Israel would transition to that new phase, adding the Israelis “will decide when (and) they will decide what lower intensity looks like and what that means.” 

"We are not dictating terms and timelines to the Israelis," he said, adding the US has "talked about the importance of moving to lower intensity operations, and obviously we don't want them to do it sooner than they think they can do it safely and effectively, but we do believe that a transition, you know, in the near future is the best possible outcome."

Kirby pointed to a series of high-level trips to the region, noting Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, Secretary of State Antony Blinken, and national security adviser Jake Sullivan have all traveled to Israel recently, where officials “talked to them about our lessons learned in doing those kinds of transitions … as well as asking them some tough questions.”

11:45 p.m. ET, December 21, 2023

No functional hospitals left in northern Gaza, WHO says

From CNN's Niamh Kennedy

Northern Gaza no longer has a functioning hospital, the World Health Organization (WHO) said Thursday, detailing "unbearable" scenes teams observed during a recent mission. 

"There are actually no functional hospitals left in the north," Richard Peeperkorn, WHO representative in the Occupied Palestinian Territories, told a press briefing. 

According to Peeperkorn, the last functioning hospital in northern Gaza was Al-Ahli Hospital but fuel, power, medical supply and staffing shortages have rendered it "minimally functional." 

"Now Al-Ahli is a shell of a hospital... It completely stopped functioning and is only operating as hospice currently with no to very little care."

Of 36 hospitals in Gaza, only nine located in the south are functioning, Peeperkorn said.

The WHO representative spoke to journalists in the wake of WHO missions carried out in recent days to Al-Ahli and Al-Shifa Hospital, located in Gaza City. 

Sean Casey, who led the missions, recounted the "unbearable" scenes WHO workers witnessed at a church in the Al-Ahli compound that had been converted into a makeshift ward.

"A church with 30 or so patients, almost none of them ambulatory. So bedridden patients, some of them with serious trauma wounds... We saw many patients who had said they hadn't bathed or changed their clothes in weeks," Casey said.

"Patients were crying out in pain but they were also crying out for us to give them water. It's pretty unbearable to see somebody with you know, casts on multiple limbs, external fixators on multiple limbs who are just asking for drinking water."

Casey said describing Al-Ahli as a hospice implied a "level of care" that the five doctors and five nurses working there are "simply unable to provide" in light of the virtually non-existent resources.

He said Al-Ahli is rather now a "place where people are waiting to die" unless they can be moved to a "safer location" capable of providing care.