April 16, 2024 - Israel-Hamas war | CNN

April 16, 2024 - Israel-Hamas war

hezbollah strikes
Dramatic video shows outgoing Hezbollah rockets from Lebanon toward Israeli military
02:10 • Source: CNN
02:10

What we covered here

  • The United States plans to impose new sanctions targeting Iran after its unprecedented attack on Israel over the weekend, according to National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan.
  • This comes as Israel’s war cabinet met to discuss a potential response to Iran as sources told CNN that the US expects Israel’s reaction will be limited in scope. Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi warned that the “smallest action against Iran’s interests” would be met with a “severe, extensive and painful” response.
  • The Israel Defense Forces said it killed three Hezbollah fighters, including two commanders, in airstrikes in southern Lebanon Tuesday.
  • In Gaza, at least 13 people were killed, including seven children, and more than 25 people were wounded after a strike Tuesday targeted the Al-Maghazi refugee camp, according to hospital officials.
  • Here’s how to help humanitarian efforts in Gaza and Israel.
41 Posts

Our live coverage of Israel’s war on Hamas in Gaza has moved here.

Prime minister denies strikes on Israel launched from Iraqi territory

Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani listens as US President Joe Biden (not pictured) speaks in the Oval Office of the White House on April 15, in  Washington, DC.

Israel said some of Iran’s missiles on Saturday were launched from Iraq, but Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani denied it to CNN Tuesday.

Al-Sudani spoke with Amanpour from Washington, D.C., after he met with US President Joe Biden on Monday. Both leaders discussed the importance of de-escalating tensions in the Middle East.

US conducts another airdrop of food into northern Gaza, CENTCOM says

The US military conducted another aid drop into northern Gaza on Tuesday, dropping approximately 25,300 meal equivalents, US Central Command said in a post on X.

To date the US has dropped 891 tons of humanitarian assistance, CENTCOM said.

Remember: Humanitarian organizations have warned that airdrops are “good photo opportunities but a lousy way to deliver aid.”

US sanctions are planned for Iran after its attack on Israel. Here's what you should know

Objects are seen in the sky above Jerusalem after Iran launched drones and missiles towards Israel, in Jerusalem on April 14.

The United States is planning to impose new sanctions targeting Iran after it launched a large-scale attack on Israel in retaliation for a suspected Israeli strike on an Iranian diplomatic complex in Syria, according to National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan.

Earlier Tuesday, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen announced the Biden administration would use sanctions “to continue disrupting the Iranian regime’s malign and destabilizing activity.” 

“From this weekend’s attack to the Houthi attacks in the Red Sea, Iran’s actions threaten the region’s stability and could cause economic spillovers,” she said at a news conference.

Here are headlines you should know:

  • More from Iran: Israel’s war cabinet met again on Tuesday to discuss Israel’s response to Iran’s attack. After Iran closed its nuclear facilities on Sunday for “security considerations,” Rafael Grossi, International Atomic Energy Agency director general, told CNN that its inspectors are back in the facilities and the “situation seems to be business as usual.” Also, the US will restrict the movements of Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian and his delegation while they are in New York this week, a source familiar told CNN. 
  • Developments on the ground: At least 13 people were killed, including seven children, and more than 25 people were wounded after a strike targeted the Al-Maghazi refugee camp in central Gaza on Tuesday, according to Al-Aqsa Martyrs hospital officials. Elsewhere, the Israel Defense Forces said its airstrikes killed three Hezbollah fighters, including two commanders, in southern Lebanon on Tuesday. 
  • World Central Kitchen updates: The US is continuing to review the findings of the Israeli investigation into the deadly strike on a World Central Kitchen convoy, US State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller said on Tuesday. The United States is “not at this time” calling for an independent investigation, Miller said. He said he did not have a timetable for when its assessment will be completed.
  • Palestinian child’s death probe: The US will be going to Israel with new information from a Washington Post report that contradicts the results of an Israeli investigation into the death of 5-year-old Palestinian girl Hind Rajab, who was found dead in Gaza in February. The US called on Israel to investigate Rajab’s death earlier this year, and Miller now says the US “would still welcome a full investigation into this matter, and how it occurred in the first place.”
  • Probe problems: A United Nations Commission of Inquiry accused Israel of actively obstructing its efforts to collect evidence from victims and first-hand witnesses of Hamas’ attacks in southern Israel on October 7. The commissioner appealed to the Israeli government to cooperate and urged victims and witnesses to the events in southern Israel to contact the commission. 

US to impose new sanctions on Iran in the coming days, national security adviser says

 The United States is planning to impose new sanctions targeting Iran after its attack on Israel over the weekend, according to National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan.

Earlier Tuesday, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen announced the Biden administration would use sanctions “to continue disrupting the Iranian regime’s malign and destabilizing activity.” 

In addition to new sanctions, Sullivan wrote Tuesday the administration will “continue to work through the Department of Defense and U.S. Central Command to further strengthen and expand the successful integration of air and missile defense and early warning systems across the Middle East to further erode the effectiveness of Iran’s missile and UAV capabilities.”

Analysis: Netanyahu is betting Israeli blood on Iran’s read of his rift with America

Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu delivers a speech on July 5, 2023.

Israel, aided by its allies, dodged a bullet Sunday.

To be more precise, 60 tons of explosives aboard more than 350 Iranian projectiles, some bigger than a family car, failed to dodge Israel’s defenses.

Yet Israel, in defiance of US President Joe Biden’s warnings to “take the win” and Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi’s threat of a “severe, extensive and painful” response to any retaliation, is contemplating just that.

Deterrence, shorthand for “meanest S.O.B. in the room,” Israel believes, is the cornerstone of its survival. Iran is stealing that brick.

When faced with existential threats in the past, Israel has executed the most audacious raids the region has ever witnessed. The point being, Israel won’t telegraph its attack plans as Iran did at the weekend.

Aside from the core members of Israel’s war cabinet, more than a dozen other people have sat at the table deep inside the Kirya, Israel’s maximum security defense headquarters in Tel Aviv, thrashing out their next move.

Netanyahu’s next move will likely try to lock in sanctions, and strike before negative Gaza headlines dump the international good will filling his sails.

The clock is ticking. He needs two things, time to prepare a significant surprise strike, and time to coalesce international diplomacy. As both march to different beats, his legendary political acumen faces one of its stiffest tests yet.

Netanyahu is famed as a political survivor. But now he faces the biggest gamble of his career. He is betting the blood of his nation over Iran’s read of his rift with America.

Read more.

Israel's sense of reason has been replaced by revenge, new Irish prime minister says

Taoiseach Simon Harris appears on CNN on Tuesday, April 16.

Ireland’s newly appointed prime minister told CNN that Israel’s sense of reason has been “replaced by revenge” as he addressed recent tensions between the Israeli and Irish governments.  

In his first television interview since being appointed last week, Taoiseach Simon Harris hit back at recent criticisms from the Israeli foreign ministry and the Israeli Ambassador to Ireland Dana Erlich, accusing the country of being “on the wrong side of history” when it comes to the war in Gaza. 

The prime minister doubled down on his call for “an immediate cessation of hostilities” in Gaza alongside his plan to convince fellow European Union leaders to formally recognize the state of Palestine. Harris laid out his belief that a peaceful solution to the war in Gaza “involves a number of countries that are like-minded coming together to recognize the state of Palestine.” 

He reiterated that “Ireland stands ready to recognize the state of Palestine” and is very keen to do so alongside other EU member states to increase the “potential positive momentum.”  

The Israeli foreign ministry has condemned Ireland’s intention to recognize Palestinian statehood, maintaining in a press release last week that doing so would be awarding Hamas a “prize for terrorism.”

IDF says its airstrikes in Lebanon killed 3 Hezbollah fighters

The Israel Defense Forces said its airstrikes killed three Hezbollah fighters, including two commanders, in southern Lebanon on Tuesday. 

Muhammad Hussein Shahouri, “the Commander of the Rockets and Missiles Unit of Radwan Forces’ Western Region,” was killed in an airstrike in Kfar Dounine in south Lebanon, an IDF statement said. “As part of his role, Muhammad planned and promoted rocket and missile launches toward Israeli territory from the areas of Lebanon’s central and western regions.” 

Mahmoud Ibrahim Fadlallah, “an operative of Hezbollah’s Rockets and Missiles Unit,” was also killed in the same airstrike, the IDF added.

Earlier, the IDF said in a separate statement that its airstrike killed Ismail Youssef Bazz, “the commander of Hezbollah’s coastal sector, in the area of Ain Ebel in Lebanon,” in southern Lebanon.

Hezbollah confirmed the deaths of its three fighters without providing details on the circumstances of their deaths or ranks. 

At least 13 people killed, including 7 children, after strike on central Gaza's Al-Maghazi refugee camp

At least 13 people were killed, including seven children, and more than 25 people were wounded after a strike targeted the Al-Maghazi refugee camp in central Gaza on Tuesday, according to Al-Aqsa Martyrs hospital officials.

Graphic video obtained exclusively by CNN from eyewitness Nihad Owdetallah shows several casualties scattered on the floor, including children, with blood streaming around the area. Dozens of people appear to be running around in panic, screaming and trying to count and carry the dead bodies. A foosball table covered in dust is seen among the dead bodies. 

Owdetallah, who lives in the camp, told CNN he heard an explosion at around 3:40 p.m. local time on Tuesday. 

Footage shot for CNN from inside Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital shows a continuous flow of causalities and injured people being ushered in, as the emergency room is crowded with patients, including several wounded children, crying out on the floor.

Video from inside a morgue at the hospital shows families trying to identify their loved ones among the deceased. Fatmeh Issa points to a white body bag with a young boy’s bloodied face exposed, telling CNN, “This is my son.”

Video shows him handing a young girl’s dead body to another man, both men crying out Quranic verses and sobbing. The man who receives her body is seen placing her on the ground, and covers her body with a jacket, telling CNN she is his daughter.

UN commission accuses Israel of obstructing its probe into October 7 attacks

A United Nations Commission of Inquiry accused Israel of actively obstructing its efforts to collect evidence from victims and first-hand witnesses of Hamas’ attacks in southern Israel on October 7.

The UN Commission of Inquiry has been collecting evidence of war crimes committed by all sides in Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories since October 7, 2023.

The commissioner appealed to the Israeli government to cooperate and urged victims and witnesses to the events in southern Israel to contact the commission. “We have contact with many, but we would like to have contact with more,” Sidoti said.

CNN has reached out to Israel’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs for comment.

US will go back to Israel with evidence from report on Palestinian child's death, State Department says

The United States will be going to Israel with new information from a Washington Post report that contradicts the results of an Israeli investigation into the death of 5-year-old Palestinian girl Hind Rajab, who was found dead in Gaza in February.

“What we’re going to do is take the information that is contained in that Washington Post story, we’re going to go back to the government of Israel and ask them for further information,” Matthew Miller, State Department spokesperson, said at a briefing on Tuesday.

Miller said the report contradicts what Israel told the US, that “there were no IDF units in the area at the time of her death.”

The US called on Israel to investigate Rajab’s death in February, and Miller now says the US “would still welcome a full investigation into this matter, and how it occurred in the first place.”

More: Rajab was found dead after being trapped in a car with members of her family who were reportedly shot to death by Israeli forces weeks prior. Rescue workers dispatched to find her were also reportedly shot and killed.

US continuing to review findings of Israeli probe into World Central Kitchen strike, State Department says

The United States is continuing to review the findings of the Israeli investigation into the deadly strike on a World Central Kitchen convoy, US State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller said on Tuesday. 

The United States is “not at this time” calling for an independent investigation, Miller said. He said he did not have a timetable for when its assessment will be completed.

US will restrict Iranian foreign minister's movements while in New York, source says

Iran's Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian speaks at a press conference at his headquarters in Tehran, Iran, on Sunday, April 14.

The US will restrict the movements of Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian and his delegation while they are in New York this week, a source familiar told CNN.

State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller had earlier indicated that the US would place additional travel restrictions on the minister, who will be in New York for a meeting at the United Nations.

According to the source familiar, Amir-Abdollahian and the Iranian delegation’s travel is restricted to the seven blocks north-south and one block west surrounding the UN headquarters in Manhattan, the Iranian Mission to the UN, the residence of their permanent representative to the UN, the six blocks surrounding Queensboro Plaza in Long Island City, and access to John F. Kennedy International Airport using a specific driving route.

Iran’s response: Iran has not been notified of any additional restrictions on the movements of Amir-Abdollahian and the country’s delegation while they are in New York, Iran’s Permanent Mission to the UN told CNN.

The spokesperson explained that the movements of Amir-Abdollahian and the delegation, including diplomats from the Iranian Mission to the UN, have always been restricted to a 25-mile radius surrounding UN headquarters in Manhattan.

The post was updated with a response from the Iranian mission.

Iran "seems to be business as usual" after closing nuclear facilities on Sunday, IAEA chief says

Rafael Grossi, International Atomic Energy Agency director general, appears on CNN on Tuesday, April 16.

After Iran closed its nuclear facilities on Sunday for “security considerations,” Rafael Grossi, International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) director general, told CNN that its inspectors are back in the facilities and the “situation seems to be business as usual.”

He also noted that the situation was “extremely tense” over the weekend.

Israel’s war cabinet met again on Tuesday to discuss Israel’s response to Iran’s drone and missile attack.

Grossi said the IAEA believes that in times of conflict, the targeting of nuclear facilities “could be perhaps tempting for a military decision-maker — It will be a terrible mistake with potentially very serious consequences.”

He added that he does not have “any information or any indication that there is planning on the part of Israel or any other state to be targeting nuclear facilities.” Grossi said the agency is still on alert and that “there should be extreme restraint on everybody’s side.” 

Iran has long held that its nuclear program is intended for peaceful purposes, despite skepticism from the international community.

US treasury secretary warns US will strengthen Iran sanctions

US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen speaks during a press conference today amid the IMF-World Bank Group spring meetings, at the Treasury Department in Washington, DC.

US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said the Treasury would use its sanctions authority and work with allies to “continue disrupting the Iranian regime’s malign and destabilizing activity.”

 Speaking in a news conference in Washington, DC, Yellen said:

Her comments Tuesday come as global finance ministers and central bank governors gather in Washington for the International Monetary Fund and World Bank spring meetings.

US urges restraint as Israel plans response to Iranian missile attack. Here's what you need to know

An anti-missile system operates after Iran launched drones and missiles towards Israel, as seen from Ashkelon, Israel on April 14.

Sources in Washington told CNN they expect Israel’s response to Iran’s retaliatory strikes on Sunday to be limited in scope, as US officials seek to minimize the threat of a wider regional war.

In Gaza, Israeli attacks have killed at least 46 Palestinians over the past 24 hours, the Ministry of Health there reported on Tuesday, raising the total death toll to 33,843 people.

Here are the latest developments:

  • US officials warn against increased tensions: The Israeli military has not given the US an official warning about when or how it will respond to Iran’s barrage of missiles, a senior administration official said, adding that “any additional move now opens up a series of other possibilities, some of which are quite frightening.” A second source told CNN that US intelligence suggests Israel is considering a narrow and limited strike inside Iranian territory.
  • Leaders urge calm: German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock is traveling to Israel Tuesday in an attempt to de-escalate tensions between Israel and Iran. At the same time, Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry told CNN he discussed with his Israeli and Iranian counterparts upholding “tranquility and peace” in the region.
  • Gaza death toll: The health ministry in Gaza reported that as of April 13, 14,560 Palestinian children have been killed in Israeli attacks since October 7. Another 9,582 women and 485 medical staff have been killed, the ministry said. Of those killed, at least 72% were women and children.
  • Children orphaned by war: As Israel’s offensive in Gaza surpassed six months, the UN reported that at least 19,000 Palestinian children have been orphaned. One child is wounded or dies every 10 minutes, the UN said, adding that more than 1 million women and girls in the enclave are facing “catastrophic hunger.”
  • Israeli artist calls for ceasefire: Artist Ruth Patir, Israel’s representative at the Venice Biennale in Italy, has said she won’t open her exhibit until a hostage and ceasefire deal in Gaza has been reached. A petition signed by more than 23,000 people had recently called for Israel to be excluded from the international cultural exhibition, as calls for a truce and an independent Palestinian state have grown.

US Navy has spent $1 billion on munitions to thwart attacks in Middle East, US Navy Secretary says

U.S. Secretary of the Navy Carlos Del Toro at a U.S. Naval Academy graduation and commissioning ceremony in Annapolis, Maryland, in May 2022.

The US Navy has spent nearly $1 billion on munitions to thwart “over 130 direct attacks” on US military and merchant ships in the Middle East over the past six months, the US Navy Secretary said Tuesday.

US Navy Secretary Carlos Del Toro urged lawmakers on Tuesday to pass the supplemental national security package to replenish munitions.

“The munitions that are critical to these counterstrikes are extremely important to the Department of the Navy,” Del Toro said.

“We currently have approaching $1 billion in munitions that we need to replenish at some point in time. So therefore, the over $2 billion that’s provided for in the supplemental is direly critical to our Navy and Marine Corps to be able to replenish those munitions and continue to provide the types of defensive measures that we have this past six and a half months now.”

Putin and Iranian president discuss “aggravated situation” in the Middle East

Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks in Moscow, Russia on April 2, 2024.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has spoken with his Iranian counterpart President Ebrahim Raisi about regional tensions in the Middle East, after Tehran launched retaliatory strikes from its soil directly on Israel for the first time.

The Kremlin described an “aggravated situation,” after Israel and its allies intercepted missiles released by Iran over the weekend. Tehran said the attack was in response to a suspected Israeli strike on an Iranian diplomatic building in Damascus, Syria, earlier this month.

Putin “expressed the hope that all parties will show reasonable restraint and will not allow a new round of confrontation, fraught with catastrophic consequences for the entire region.”

“In turn, Ebrahim Raisi noted that Iran’s actions were forced and limited in nature. At the same time, he emphasized Tehran’s disinterest in further escalation of tensions,” the Kremlin added.

Israel finishes war cabinet meeting to discuss response to Iranian strikes 

A meeting between Israeli war cabinet officials over their response to Iran’s retaliatory strikes has concluded, an Israeli official told CNN. The source did not give any additional details about the talks.

The discussion, which began 12:30 p.m. local time (5:30 a.m. ET), was the fifth set of talks held by the war cabinet since the weekend, when Tehran launched a barrage of missiles in retaliation to a suspected Israeli strike on an Iranian diplomatic building in Damascus, in Syria.

Regional leaders and allies of Israel have called for restraint as Israel plans its response, in high-stakes efforts to minimize a wider escalation over Israel’s military offensive in Gaza.

IDF says it killed Hezbollah commander in southern Lebanon 

The Israeli military says it has killed a Hezbollah commander in southern Lebanon.

It added that “Ismail served as a senior and veteran official in several positions of Hezbollah’s military wing. His current rank is equivalent to a brigade commander.”

The Lebanese militant group Hezbollah confirmed in a statement that Ismail had been killed in southern Lebanon.