Israel is in a "multi-arena war," defense minister says

December 26, 2023 Israel-Hamas war

By Chris Lau, Josh Berlinger, Laura Smith-Spark, Aditi Sangal, Maureen Chowdhury and Tori B. Powell, CNN

Updated 12:00 a.m. ET, December 27, 2023
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7:59 a.m. ET, December 26, 2023

Israel is in a "multi-arena war," defense minister says

From CNN's Amir Tal

Israel's Defence Minister Yoav Gallant speaks during a press conference in Tel Aviv on December 18.
Israel's Defence Minister Yoav Gallant speaks during a press conference in Tel Aviv on December 18. Alberto Pizzoli/AFP/Getty Images

Israel’s defense minister has said the country is in a “multi-arena war,” with Israel being attacked from seven arenas.

Yoav Gallant, while speaking to the Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee in the Israeli parliament, warned of a long fight ahead of the country.

"We are in a multi-arena war, we are being attacked from seven different sectors: Gaza, Lebanon, Syria, Judea and Samaria, Iraq, Yemen and Iran," said Gallant, using the biblical names — Judea and Samaria — for the West Bank.

"We have already responded and acted in six of these decrees, and I say here in the most explicit way: Anyone who acts against us is a potential target, there is no immunity for anyone," he added.

Gallant's comments follow Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's remarks Monday that the war is far from over, after the Israeli leader visited Gaza for the second time since October 7.

7:42 a.m. ET, December 26, 2023

Indian navy deploys warships to Arabian Sea after tanker attack 

From CNN's Abbas Al Lawati

The Indian navy has deployed three guided missile destroyers in the Arabian Sea as a deterrent after a chemical tanker was struck off the Indian coast on Saturday, India’s NDTV reported

The navy inspected the vessel, MV Chem Pluto, which docked in Mumbai on Monday, and analysis of the assault pointed to a drone attack, NDTV cited an Indian navy spokesperson as saying. The navy has also deployed long-range patrol aircraft for surveillance. 

The United States has blamed Iran for the attack. The Liberia-flagged, Japanese-owned, and Netherlands-operated tanker was struck by a one-way attack drone fired from Iran, a US Department of Defense official told CNN. 

Iran denied the accusation, with foreign ministry spokesperson Nasser Kanaani saying at a briefing on Monday that the claim was “baseless,” according to Reuters.  

On Tuesday, two explosions in the Red Sea were reported by a vessel sailing off the coast of Yemen shortly after two unmanned aircraft were sighted, Reuters reported, citing the United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations, a British maritime authority. 

The explosions occurred around 5 miles from the vessel in an area of the Red Sea 50 miles from the port of Hodeidah on Yemen's west coast, it said, adding that the vessel was in contact with coalition forces and that the ship and crew had been reported safe. 

5:19 a.m. ET, December 26, 2023

Officials from the World Health Organization visited hospitals treating scores of victims

From CNN's Sarah El Sirgany and Jennifer Hauser

A mass funeral is seen at the Al-Aqsa Hospital in central Gaza on Monday.
A mass funeral is seen at the Al-Aqsa Hospital in central Gaza on Monday. Mahmud Hams/AFP/Getty Images

Officials from the World Health Organization visited Al-Aqsa Hospital in central Gaza on Monday, where scores of people are being treated, including many from reported airstrikes on the Al-Maghazi refugee camp.

In response to a CNN inquiry Sunday, the IDF said it had received reports of an incident in the Al-Maghazi camp and was "reviewing the incident."

WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said on X on Monday that staff at Al-Aqsa had reported receiving around 100 casualties. He said the WHO team at the facility had heard "harrowing accounts shared by health workers and victims of the suffering caused by the explosions."

"One child had lost their whole family in the strike on the camp. A nurse at the hospital suffered the same loss, with his entire family killed," Tedros said.

Tedros emphasized that the hospital is above capacity and warned that "many will not survive the wait."

Sean Casey, a WHO emergency medical teams coordinator, described in a video posted by Tedros watching a 9-year-old boy die due to brain damage he suffered after being wounded by shrapnel in a building explosion. Casey said the only way Al-Aqsa hospital workers could help the child was to sedate him "to ease his suffering as he dies," because the facility didn't have the capacity to treat complex neurological cases. Casey said the operating theaters at Al-Aqsa were working 24 hours a day, yet people were still waiting hours and even days for treatment.

Dozens reported dead: At least 70 were killed in Al-Maghazi, the Hamas-run health ministry in Gaza reported on Monday. At least 250 were killed and 500 injured in the past 24 hours in the central Gaza areas of Bureij, Nuseirat and Al Maghazi, the Hamas-run ministry added. CNN cannot independently verify the numbers released by the ministry in Gaza, as access to the enclave is limited and reliable numbers are hard to confirm amid the fighting. 

Responding to a CNN inquiry about the deaths, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said Monday: “In response to Hamas' barbaric attacks, the IDF is operating to dismantle Hamas military and administrative capabilities.” 

Visits across the strip: WHO and its humanitarian partners visited several hospitals across Gaza over the weekend. Among them was the Al-Shifa hospital in the north, which Tedros called Sunday "a microcosm of the nightmare playing out across Gaza, where drastic shortages of medicines, food, power, water and – above all – safety imperil the population."

Israel has focused a huge amount of attention on Gaza’s hospitals since it began its offensive in Gaza in October, claiming Hamas uses medical facilities for military purposes and showing what it says are underground Hamas tunnels below them, claims CNN cannot verify.

Al-Shifa, Gaza's largest hospital, has been heavily damaged during the fighting. Israel alleged that Hamas had built a large-scale command and control center under the facility, a charge the militant group has denied. CNN last month visited an exposed tunnel shaft in the Al-Shifa hospital compound under IDF media escort. The tunnel shaft extended down farther than CNN's reporter could see, especially in the meager light of headlamps.

3:00 a.m. ET, December 26, 2023

Netanyahu vows a "long fight" in Israel-Hamas war after he visits Gaza. Here's what you need to know

From CNN staff

Israel’s war in Gaza "will be a long fight" and is far from ending, the country’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Monday, after he returned from a trip to the enclave. 

It comes a day after Netanyahu reiterated Israel's commitment to the war effort, saying the military was “intensifying” operations inside the strip. 

At least 250 people were killed and 500 others injured over the past 24 hours in central Gaza, the strip's Hamas-controlled health ministry said Monday. More than 20,000 people have been killed since the conflict began in early October.

Here's what you need to know:

  • US talks: A close confidant of Netanyahu is expected to meet with Biden administration officials on Tuesday, according to a source familiar with the plans. Ron Dermer, a member of Israel's war cabinet who previously served as ambassador to the United States, is expected to meet with officials from the White House and the State Department to discuss the next phase of the war, the source told CNN. The White House has recently looked for Israel to move away from the high intensity war it has waged for nearly three months in Gaza.
  • Cairo peace proposal: Egypt on Sunday proposed a three-phase plan to end the ongoing war between Israel and Hamas, according to various media reports, but it is unclear how the warring parties will receive it. Egypt’s three-phase deal would “secure the release of hostages held by Hamas in Gaza,” CNN Political and Foreign Policy Analyst Barak Ravid reports, citing two Israeli sources. CNN has not independently obtained a copy of the plan.

  • Hostages' families disrupt speech: Families of hostages interrupted Netanyahu as he spoke during a special session of parliament Monday, vocalizing their dissent when he said the troops might need more time in Gaza. Signs the family members held up said, “We trust you to bring them home,” and “80 days, each minute is like hell.” The prime minister said: “We will shake every tree and turn every stone to bring back all the kidnapped. Each one of them is precious."
  • Pope's message: Pope Francis used his Christmas Day message to reiterate his call for a ceasefire and issue a plea for the end of the war between Israel and Hamas. “Let us pray for peace in Palestine and Israel,” said the 87-year-old pontiff, describing war as “an aimless voyage, a defeat without victors, an inexcusable folly” in his Christmas Day “Urbi et Orbi” message.
  • Iran vows revenge: Iran and several of its armed proxies on Monday vowed to retaliate against Israel following the alleged assassination of a senior Islamic Revolution Guards Corps commander in Syria. IRGC commander Seyyed Razi Mousavi was killed Monday in an Israeli airstrike that targeted him a Damascus suburb, Iran's state-run IRNA reported, citing a statement from IRGC public relations. The IDF declined to comment on the report when asked by CNN.
10:53 p.m. ET, December 25, 2023

Netanyahu confidant expected to meet US officials for talks on war

From CNN's Oren Liebermann

Ron Dermer attends an event in Las Vegas, Nevada, on November 6, 2021.
Ron Dermer attends an event in Las Vegas, Nevada, on November 6, 2021. Bridget Bennett/Bloomberg/Getty Images/File

A close confidant of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is expected to meet with Biden administration officials on Tuesday, according to a source familiar with the plans, after the Israeli leader vowed a “long fight” ahead in the war in Gaza.

Ron Dermer, considered one of Netanyahu’s closest allies, is expected to meet with officials from the White House and the State Department to discuss the next phase of the war in Gaza, the source told CNN.

Dermer is a member of Israel's war cabinet who previously served as ambassador to the United States.

He is expected to meet with National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan, Secretary of State Antony Blinken and members of Congress, according to Axios, which first reported the meetings.

The National Security Council told CNN they do not have any meetings to announce “at this time.”

The expected meetings come as the White House has looked for Israel to move away from the high intensity war it has waged for nearly three months in Gaza that has resulted in approximately 20,000 people killed, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Healthy in Ramallah, which draws its data from the Hamas-controlled Ministry of Health in Gaza.

Last week, the White House told reporters that Israel has assured the United States that it would transition to operations of lower intensity, though the administration would not put a specific timeline on the transition. US officials previously told CNN they expect Israel could shift its tactics to more localized operations by January.

Netanyahu vowed Monday that the war in Gaza was still a “long fight and it is not close to ending.” After his second visit to Gaza since the war began on October 7, Netanyahu said in a statement that Israel would “deepen the fighting.”

10:54 p.m. ET, December 25, 2023

Iran accuses Israel of killing senior commander in Syria airstrike

From CNN’s Hamdi Alkhshali

An undated photograph showing Seyyed Razi Mousavi. 
An undated photograph showing Seyyed Razi Mousavi.  IRNA

Iran and several of its armed proxies on Monday vowed to retaliate against Israel following the alleged assassination of a senior Islamic Revolution Guards Corps commander in Syria. 

IRGC commander Seyyed Razi Mousavi was killed Monday in an Israeli airstrike that targeted him a Damascus suburb, Iran's state-run IRNA reported, citing a statement from IRGC public relations.

The IDF declined to comment on the report when asked by CNN.

The IRGC vowed to avenge his killing, saying "the Israeli regime would undoubtedly pay the price for this crime."

Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian also warned Israel of repercussions, saying: "Tel Aviv should expect a tough countdown.”

In a separate statement, Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Nasser Kanaani said Iran "reserves the right to take necessary measures and respond to his killing at the right time and in the right place.”

Israel has for years targeted what it calls Iran-linked positions in Syria, where the IRGC, an elite wing of the Iranian military, has a significant presence.

According to IRNA, Mousavi was serving as a military adviser in Syria. His alleged assassination comes at a time of heightened regional tensions over Israel's ongoing war against Hamas in Gaza, which has led to fears of a wider conflict.

Iran's warnings of retaliation were echoed Monday by Iran-backed Lebanese militant group Hezbollah and the Iran-linked al-Nujaba Resistance Movement in Iraq.

In a statement Monday, Palestinian Islamic Jihad condemned Mousavi's killing and said he “had a fundamental and pivotal role in supporting the resistance forces in the region, and supporting the Palestinian people, their resistance and their cause.”

10:55 p.m. ET, December 25, 2023

Egypt proposes 3-phase plan to end war between Israel and Hamas, media sources say 

From CNN's Elizabeth Joseph

Smoke billows over Khan Younis during an Israeli bombardment on December 25.
Smoke billows over Khan Younis during an Israeli bombardment on December 25. Said Khatib/AFP/Getty Images

Egypt on Sunday proposed a three-phase plan to end the ongoing war between Israel and Hamas, according to various media reports, but it is unclear how the warring parties will receive it.

Israel’s war cabinet convened Monday, and among other topics, they were expected to discuss ongoing efforts to secure the release of hostages, an Israeli official told CNN. The source would not acknowledge the reported Egyptian proposal.

Egypt’s three-phase deal would “secure the release of hostages held by Hamas in Gaza,” CNN Political and Foreign Policy Analyst Barak Ravid reports, citing two Israeli sources. CNN has not independently obtained a copy of the plan.

  • In the first phase of the plan, Israel would be expected to pause its military operations for one to two weeks for Hamas to release 40 hostages, including women and the elderly, according to Ravid.
  • The second phase includes an agreement of the exchange of bodies of Hamas militants held by Israel for the bodies of Israeli hostages held by Hamas, he added.
  • The third phase of the plan “includes an ‘all-for-all’ deal,” Ravid reports, meaning Israel would return 6,000 Palestinian prisoners in its jails for the remaining Israeli hostages — including soldiers — Hamas is holding in captivity.

Last week, Hamas said Palestinian factions would not agree to any talks about prisoner swaps until after Israel ends its military operation in Gaza.

The third phase also includes the end of the war, with Israel pulling out from Gaza and “the establishment of a technocratic government in Gaza that will not be affiliated with Hamas and will get the support of the U.S., Egypt and Qatar,” Ravid reports.

The three-phase plan is also outlined by Israeli and other international news outlets, citing various officials and diplomatic sources.

CNN has reached out to Egyptian officials for comment on the reported plan.

Tamar Michaelis contributed to this report.

8:17 p.m. ET, December 25, 2023

Here's how you can help humanitarian efforts in Israel and Gaza

As deadly fighting between Israel and Hamas continues, so too does a dire humanitarian crisis in the area.

At least 1,200 people have been killed in Israel and, according to the Hamas-controlled Ministry of Health in Gaza, more than 20,000 people have been killed in Gaza after Hamas launched unprecedented attacks on Israel October 7. Subsequent airstrikes have overwhelmed local hospitals and internally displaced an estimated one million people in Gaza, one of the most densely populated areas on Earth.

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) is calling for the protection of aid workers, civilians, and critical infrastructure. Calling the situation “horrific,” Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is urging restraint after medical facilities have been destroyed in the fighting.

Impact Your World has gathered a list of vetted organizations that are on the ground responding. You can support their work by clicking HERE.

10:59 p.m. ET, December 25, 2023

Netanyahu interrupted by hostages' family members during special session of parliament

From CNN's Tamar Michaelis and Hagi Cohen-Boland

Benjamin Netanyahu receives a security briefing with commanders and soldiers in the northern Gaza Strip, on December 25.
Benjamin Netanyahu receives a security briefing with commanders and soldiers in the northern Gaza Strip, on December 25. Avi Ohayon/GPO/AP

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was interrupted by shouts from family members of hostages as he spoke during a special session of parliament Monday.

The families held posters and signs with the photos and names of their loved ones.

Netanyahu, who had just returned from a trip to Gaza, said a brigade commander on the ground told the prime minister that troops needed more time on location to complete their operation.

At this time, the families began vocalizing their dissent, saying “There is no time.”

As Netanyahu resumed his comments, families could be heard chanting loudly: “Now! Now! Now!”

Citing previous interactions with families of fallen Israeli soldiers, Netanyahu said he was told: “Our sons did not die in vain. We must not stop the war until we secure the complete victory over those who wish us dead.”

At this point, the family members in the gallery of the Knesset reiterated their chants, saying: “Everyone — now! Everyone — now!”

Signs the family members held up said, “We trust you to bring them home,” and “80 days, each minute is like hell.”

Another sign asked, “What if this were your daughter,” and rotated between “daughter,” “father,” and “brother.”

"We spare no effort," Netanyahu said. “We will shake every tree and turn every stone to bring back all the kidnapped. Each one of them is precious. Since the beginning of the war, I have met with the families of the abductees, and I hear your personal stories. What is said here unites the people and unites us in a holy mission.”

Key context: There are 129 hostages still in Gaza, according to the prime minister’s office. Of those, 22 are known to be dead.