Israel shows CNN an underground tunnel between a school and hospital in Gaza
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What we covered here
Israeli forces raided Gaza’s biggest hospital in what the military said was a “precise and targeted operation.” Soldiers found “military equipment used by Hamas,” the military said in a statement but offered no evidence yet of a vast tunnel network it claimed was used by Hamas.
The operation comes amid Israel’s escalating ground offensive in Gaza, aimed at destroying Hamas. Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant claimed on Tuesday that Hamas had “lost control” in northern Gaza, including in Gaza City.
The UN’s humanitarian agency chief said “carnage in Gaza reaches new levels of horror every day” and called for a ceasefire. Meanwhile, the UN Security Council adopted a resolution calling for a series of humanitarian pauses in Gaza.
Israeli opposition leader Yair Lapid has called on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to resign, saying the Israeli leader has “lost the public’s trust.”
Top House Democrats evacuated as police clash with protesters calling for Gaza ceasefire
From CNN's Sam Fossum and Morgan Rimmer
Law enforcement clashed with protesters calling for a ceasefire in the Israel-Hamas war outside of the Washington headquarters of the Democratic National Committee Wednesday night after authorities said the demonstration turned violent and lawmakers were evacuated from the building.
Officers, according to Capitol Police, had worked “to keep back approximately 150 people who are illegally and violently protesting” in the area and escorted members of Congress from the area. Top House Democrats were among those evacuated.
According to a person familiar with the matter, the Democratic leaders — House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, House Minority Whip Katherine Clark and Pete Aguilar, the No. 3 Democrat — were inside as the clash between protesters and police erupted.
About 10 members were there, according to the source, including Suzan DelBene, the chairwoman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, and Michigan Rep. Debbie Dingell. The members had been meeting with House candidates who were in town for training sessions and to connect with fellow Democrats.
Biden accuses Hamas of “war crime” for operating what US and Israel claim is command node at Gaza hospital
From CNN's Betsy Klein and DJ Judd
US President Joe Biden speaks during a news conference after his meeting with China's President President Xi Jinping in Woodside, California, on Wednesday.
Doug Mills/The New York Times/Pool/AP
US President Joe Biden accused Hamas of committing a “war crime” for operating what the US and Israel have claimed is a command node under the Al-Shifa hospital in Gaza.
Biden said he discussed the dangerous situation at the hospital, Gaza’s largest, during his meeting with China’s leader Xi Jinping on Wednesday.
Some context: Israeli forces launched a raid early Wednesday morning on Al-Shifa, after accusing Hamas of operating from tunnels beneath the vast complex – a claim denied by the militant group and hospital officials.
CNN cannot verify either side’s claims.
Israel said its troops found “military equipment used by Hamas,” the military said in a statement but offered no evidence yet of a vast tunnel network it claimed was used by the militant group.
Israel said it will present more evidence to support their claims of a Hamas command center, an adviser to the prime minister told CNN Wednesday.
Conditions at Al-Shifa, which has run out of fuel and is no longer considered operational, have deteriorated rapidly in recent days amid intense fighting, with doctors warning of a “catastrophic” situation for patients, staff and displaced people still inside.
Wednesday’s raid has also sparked widespread international criticism.
Biden noted that the US has called on Israel to be “incredibly careful” as it targets Hamas in the area, but suggested that action was justified.
“We discussed the need for them to be incredibly careful. You have a circumstance where you know there is a fair number of Hamas terrorists. Hamas has already said publicly that they plan on attacking Israel again, like they did before.”
The president also noted the savagery of Hamas’ October 7 attacks in Israel. “And so, the idea that they’re going to just stop and not do anything is not realistic,” he added.
Israeli forces, he suggested, are “bringing in incubators” and “other means to help the people in the hospital,” adding that there have been efforts to get doctors, nurses, and other personnel out of harm’s way.
Evidence: In a follow up exchange with CNN, Biden told MJ Lee, “Yes,” he was absolutely confident based on intelligence he’d seen that Hamas was operating a command center under the Al-Shifa hospital, but declined to share details on the evidence.
“No, I can’t tell you—I won’t tell you,” he told CNN.
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Israel will present more evidence of Hamas operations under Al-Shifa Hospital, senior adviser says
From CNN's Mitchell McCluskey
Mark Regev, a senior adviser to the Israeli prime minister, speaks to CNN on Wednesday.
CNN
Israel said it will present more evidence to support their claims of a Hamas command center underneath Gaza’s Al-Shifa Hospital, an adviser to the prime minister said.
Earlier Wednesday, National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby said the United States had intelligence that Hamas was operating in Al-Shifa Hospital.
“I would say we are comfortable with our own intelligence assessment about the degree to which Hamas was and is using Al-Shifa Hospital as a command and control node and as a storage facility underneath. We’re very comfortable with our own intelligence assessment for that,” Kirby said.
The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) repeatedly asserted that Hamas had built an underground terror network beneath the hospital, using the medical facility above to provide cover for their operations.
The IDF claimed the facility was used as a command and control headquarters, even putting out imagery in late October labeling specific buildings as having Hamas complexes underneath and publishing a 3D illustration of tunnels it said existed below the facility. But the first pictures and videos published by the IDF on X (formerly known as Twitter) Thursday did not show the underground complex the Israeli government said is under the hospital.
Still, Regev insisted the hospital was a base for Hamas, saying it is “common knowledge that Hamas has built a subterranean military network of terror tunnels connecting them to rocket launchers, to arms depots and so forth” under the medical facility.
Israel confirmed on Wednesday that it launched a “targeted” operation inside the hospital and said its soldiers uncovered “military equipment used by Hamas” in the raid.
The senior adviser said additional information that justifies the IDF’s operation will be presented in the coming days.
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Qatar condemns Israeli raid at Gaza’s Al-Shifa hospital
From CNN's Hamdi Alkhshali
Qatar condemned the Israeli military for raiding Gaza’s Al-Shifa Hospital — an action it described as “a war crime and a blatant violation of international laws.”
A statement released by the Qatari Foreign Ministry on Wednesday called for an international investigation into Israeli raids on medical facilities in the Gaza Strip.
The statement also reiterated the Qatari government’s support for what it said was the “just Palestinian cause” and calls for the establishment of an independent Palestinian state on the 1967 borders with East Jerusalem as its capital.
Some background: Israel accused Hamas of using Al-Shifa Hospital, which is the largest in Gaza, as a command base – a claim denied by the militant group and hospital officials.
Hospitals are protected in times of war under international humanitarian law, but Israel said in a statement that Hamas’ “continued military use of the Shifa hospital jeopardizes its protected status.”
Why Qatar matters: Qatar has been playing a major role in global diplomacy during the Israel-Hamas conflict because of its ties to both parties. The gas-rich monarchy has maintained a relationship with Hamas while being one of the US’ closest allies in the region. Meanwhile, it has also kept back-channel contacts with Israel.
Most recently, Qatar has been working to mediate deals — in coordination with Egypt and the United States — to free hostages taken by Hamas during its October 7 attacks in Israel, as well as evacuate foreign nationals from Gaza.
CNN’s Nadeen Ebrahim contributed reporting to this post.
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7 staff members at Gaza’s Jordanian field hospital injured in shelling, Jordan foreign ministry says
From CNN's Hamdi Alkhshali
Seven staff members at the Jordanian field hospital in northern Gaza have been injured in what Jordan’s foreign ministry has alleged was an Israeli airstrike.
The staff were hit while providing aid to wounded Palestinians who had arrived at the entrance of the hospital’s emergency department, Jordan’s Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi said in an interview with CNN’s Isa Soares Wednesday.
CNN has reached out to the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) for a response to the allegation but has not received a reply.
Safadi said Jordan would demand an investigation into what happened.
“It is incomprehensible that people trying to offer the medical help to wounded people get hit as well,” he said.
A statement from the Jordanian foreign ministry said Amman “holds the Israeli occupation forces fully responsible for endangering the lives of Jordanian medical teams.”
In the interview, Safadi said “Israel has a legal obligation to makes sure that hospitals are safe, that the vicinity of hospitals are safe and that no military operations that could jeopardize hospitals are conducted.”
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Intense fighting continues in northern Gaza. Here's what you should know
From CNN staff
Intense fighting is still ongoing in northern Gaza, according to a CNN team at Israel’s border with the enclave.
It comes after Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant proclaimed Tuesday that Hamas had “lost control” of the northern Gaza Strip, including in Gaza City.
Here are headlines you should know:
Hospital raid: Intense fighting outside Gaza’s largest hospital, Al-Shifa, occurred Wednesday as Israel launched a raid, according to a reporter inside. Israel accused Hamas of using the medical center as a command base – a claim denied by the militant group and hospital officials. Israel confirmed that it launched a “targeted” operation inside the medical facility Wednesday and said its soldiers uncovered “military equipment used by Hamas” in the raid. The director general of Gaza hospitals said the Israeli military entered the ground floor and basement of the surgery building during the raid. According to Hamas, the hospital is now under Israeli control. Neonatal babies in Al-Shifa are in “severe danger” as conditions in the medical facility further deteriorate, the director general of Gaza hospitals told Al Jazeera. And people inside the hospital have lost contact with other buildings in the complex, the supervisor of the ER department Omar Zaqout told Al Jazeera in a phone interview Wednesday.
International responses: The US continues to believe Israel should not target hospitals in Gaza from the air and that civilians should be protected from the crossfire, said John Kirby, National Security Council spokesperson. Mexico’s government expressed deep concern following the hospital attacks, according to a statement posted on X (formerly known as Twitter) on Wednesday. The Jordanian Ministry of Foreign Affairs also condemned Israel’s raid of the Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza, which he described as a “storming” and “a violation of international humanitarian law.” Meanwhile, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan called Israel a terrorist state during a speech to his ruling party Wednesday, the Republic of Turkey Directorate of Communications wrote on X. And Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu took to social media Wednesday to rebuke his Canadian counterpart, Justin Trudeau, after he urged Israel to show “maximum restraint” in its military operations in Gaza.
Humanitarian crisis: “Grave violations” against children are occurring in Gaza, the UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell said in a statement Wednesday, one day after her visit to the territory. And the main United Nations relief agency operating in Gaza warned Wednesday that its “entire operation is now on the verge of collapse.” The World Health Organization (WHO) has again “lost touch” with health personnel at Al-Shifa hospital in Gaza, the WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said on X. Also on Wednesday, the Red Cross described reports from Al-Shifa hospital as “very worrying.”
UN resolution: The UN Security Council has adopted a resolution calling for a series of humanitarian pauses in Gaza. Twelve states voted in favor of adopting the resolution during Wednesday’s session. Three countries — the US, Russia and the UK — abstained from the vote.
Rafah Crossing: Around 23,000 liters (6,078 gallons) of fuel from Egypt were delivered to the UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) to be used only for transporting aid from Rafah, the organization’s director in Gaza, Thomas White, said on X. Also, the first group of Irish nationals have arrived in Egypt after successfully leaving Gaza through the Rafah crossing Wednesday, the Irish Department of Foreign Affairs said. Eighty-eight Russian citizens also evacuated from the Gaza Strip through the Rafah crossing into Egypt Wednesday, according to Russian state media TASS, who cited the press service of the Russian Ministry of Emergency Situations.
Hostage situation: The families of US citizens believed to be held hostage by Hamas met with Roger Carstens, the special presidential envoy for hostage affairs, at the US State Department, according to a source familiar with their plans. Also, Israel’s first lady Sara Netanyahu wrote a letter to her American counterpart Jill Biden urging her to call for the release of all hostages taken by Hamas, according to the Israeli prime minister’s office.
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Israeli opposition leader calls on Netanyahu to resign
From CNN's Tamar Michaelis, Andrew Carey and Sugam Pokharel
Yair Lapid speaks to the media after meeting with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz in Berlin on September 12, 2022.
Sean Gallup/Getty Images
Israeli opposition leader Yair Lapid has called on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to resign, saying the Israeli leader has “lost the public’s trust.”
This is the first time Lapid has urged Netanyahu to quit since Hamas’ attack on Israel on October 7.
“The people who are running things right are the defense establishments. This government is dysfunctional,” he said. “We need to change the government.”
However, the former prime minister added that he doesn’t think now is the right time to hold elections.
Instead, he said the best course of action was for Netanyahu’s Likud party to oust the veteran leader and replace him with a party colleague.
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UN Security Council adopts resolution calling for series of humanitarian pauses in Gaza
From CNN's Mariya Knight, Caitlin Hu, and Richard Roth
The United Nations Security Council has adopted a resolution calling for a series of humanitarian pauses in Gaza.
Twelve states voted in favor of adopting the resolution during Wednesday’s session. Three countries — the US, Russia, and the UK — abstained from the vote.
The resolution calls “for urgent and extended humanitarian pauses and corridors throughout the Gaza Strip for a sufficient number of days to enable, consistent with international humanitarian law, the full, rapid, safe, and unhindered humanitarian access for United Nations humanitarian agencies and their implementing partners.”
The nongovernmental organization Human Rights Watch praised the resolution’s adoption.
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Turkish president calls Israel a "terrorist state." Netanyahu responds that Turkey backs Hamas "terror state"
From CNN's Hande Atay Alam and Scott McLean
Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan speaks at a meeting at the Turkish parliament in Ankara, Turkey, on October 25.
Murat Cetinmuhurdar/PPO/Handout/Reuters
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan called Israel a terrorist state during a speech to his ruling party Wednesday, the Republic of Turkey Directorate of Communications wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter.
Following Erdogan’s speech to the Justice and Development Party, Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu accused the Turkish president of being the one who “supports the terror state of Hamas” on X Wednesday.
Netanyahu said, “By contrast, there are forces that support the terrorists. One of them is President Erdogan of Turkey, who calls Israel a terrorist state, but supports the terror state of Hamas, and bombed Turkish villages inside Turkey itself. So, we’re not going to get any lectures from them.”
Erdogan also accused Netanyahu of threatening the people in Gaza with nuclear bombs saying, “I am telling Netanyahu, you have atomic bombs, nuclear bombs and you are threatening with them. We know this. And your end is near. You can have as many nuclear bombs as you want. No matter what you have, you are on your way out.”
Erdogan canceled his planned visit to Israel last month, saying, “Turkey has no problem with the Israeli state, however, Ankara would never approve of Tel Aviv committing atrocities.”
He also said last month that the Western countries consider Hamas as a terrorist organization, adding:
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"Carnage in Gaza cannot be allowed to continue," UN humanitarian chief says
From CNN's Sharon Braithwaite and Holly Yan
People attempt to put out a fire after an Israeli airstrike in Khan Younis, Gaza, on Wednesday.
Mohammed Talatene/picture-alliance/dpa/AP
The horror suffered by civilians in Gaza has intensified each day and the “carnage” must stop, the United Nations’ humanitarian chief said after Israeli forces raided Al-Shifa hospital.
“As the carnage in Gaza reaches new levels of horror every day, the world continues to watch in shock as hospitals come under fire, premature babies die, and an entire population is deprived of the basic means of survival,” said Martin Griffiths, the UN’s under-secretary-general for humanitarian affairs and emergency relief coordinator. “This cannot be allowed to continue.”
Griffiths also released a “comprehensive” plan to rein in the carnage and urged the international community to support it. “The world must act before it is too late,” he said.
Israel has claimed that underground bunkers beneath Al-Shifa hospital – the largest hospital in Gaza – have been used by Hamas as a command center. But hospital officials and Hamas have denied those allegations. CNN cannot verify either side’s claims.
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Israel claims soldiers found Hamas "military equipment" at Al-Shifa, but no evidence yet of tunnel network
From CNN's Andrew Carey and Tamar Michaelis
Israel said its soldiers have uncovered what the army is calling “military equipment used by Hamas” during a raid at Al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City.
Israeli forces entered Al-Shifa in the early hours of Wednesday, after signaling for weeks their intention to move on the complex, which they claim is the site of an underground command and control center for Hamas.
Israel Defense Forces spokesperson Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari said the military operation at the hospital “is still underway and will take time.”
“It’s a complicated area, which still has many people. We need to conduct in the right pace,” he said.
Doctors and health officials in the Hamas-controlled enclave have consistently rejected accusations that the hospital was the site of a command center.
In a statement, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said soldiers located a room in the hospital where they found, “technological assets, along with military and combat equipment used by Hamas.”
The statement said the IDF was continuing to operate in the hospital complex.
CNN is trying to contact the hospital to speak to doctors there, but phone calls are not going through.
Earlier in the day, a senior Israeli defense official said troops had uncovered “concrete evidence that Hamas terrorists used the Shifa hospital as a terror headquarters,” promising to present the evidence later.
Israel is under significant international pressure to prove its claims about Hamas’s infiltration of the hospital, in order to justify some of its military decisions — which could otherwise constitute a possible serious violation of international humanitarian law.
There is certainly no indication yet that troops have uncovered a multi-level tunnel structure with underground chambers — of the kind illustrated in an animation presented by the army spokesman at a briefing almost three weeks ago.
Hamas responded to earlier comments from the Israeli army – that troops had found weapons inside the hospital – as a blatant lie and propaganda.
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Hamas body camera video shows early minutes of the October 7 attack in Israel
From CNN's Oren Liebermann
Footage provided to CNN by the IDF shows a tunnel in Gaza.
Hamas video provided by Israeli Defense Forces
On the eastern edge of Gaza, dawn is still a few minutes away on the morning of October 7. A group of Hamas militants wait, some packed into a white pickup truck, others on motorbikes. They run through a few final checks, making sure they are recording video and that their weapons are ready.
An explosion in the distance appears to be the signal to move.
As they race to the border, the men shout “Allahu Akbar,” a phrase that means “God is great” in Arabic.
After three minutes of driving, they cross the first border fence that separates Gaza from Israel. The fence is mangled, leaving a large opening through which they pass, though it is difficult to know if it is from the explosion heard moments earlier.
Video from the attack provided to CNN by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) offers a new window into a portion of the Hamas operation launched from Gaza’s eastern border. The video comes from the body camera of one of the terrorists who took part in the attack.
Video from the attack provided to CNN by the Israel Defense Forces offers a new window into a portion of the Hamas operation launched from Gaza’s eastern border.
Hamas video provided by Israeli Defense Forces
The IDF said it released the video to show the reality of what happened on October 7, a day that Israeli officials have compared to 9/11 when an estimated 1,200 people were killed and more than 200 others taken hostage in Hamas’ brutal assault inside Israel.
The video of the attack is an unbroken recording of 100 minutes, starting before the assault and continuing until the camera stops. CNN has geolocated the locations seen in the footage and confirmed they match other footage from the attack.
As the group passes the first border fence, the gunman with the camera shouts repeatedly, “Go right!” He appears to know where he is headed, indicating the depth of planning and coordination as Hamas launched a multi-pronged assault across the Gaza border.
Less than two minutes later, the militants cross the second security fence. They are in Israel and heading toward a kibbutz, racing along dirt roads between plowed fields among a group of motorbikes. Many of the men have rifles like AK-47s, while some carry rocket-propelled grenades slung across their backs.
Seventeen minutes into the video, the pickup truck stops as the gunman opens fire for the first time across an open field with Israeli buildings visible in the distance. It is unclear if he hits anything. For a few minutes, the group pauses and appears to regroup. One man urges everyone not to shoot into the air and waste fire.
Intense fighting continues for contested areas in northern Gaza, CNN team reports
From CNN’s Jeremy Diamond and team in Sderot, Israel
Smoke rises from northern Gaza, as seen from Sderot, Israel, on Wednesday.
CNN
Intense fighting is still ongoing in northern Gaza, according to a CNN team at Israel’s border with the enclave.
It comes after Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant proclaimed Tuesday that Hamas had “lost control” of the northern Gaza Strip, including in Gaza City.
Israeli forces continued to strike some of the northernmost areas of Gaza on Wednesday evening near Beit Lahia and Jabalya. CNN witnessed several large explosions, flares and tracer fire in that area.
A CNN team in Sderot also heard multiple large explosions coming from the direction of northern Gaza overnight. Then, in the pre-dawn hours Wednesday morning, intense firefights broke out.
While it’s clear that Israeli forces have secured large swaths of northern Gaza and pushed deep into Gaza City, many areas in northern Gaza remain contested, and according to the Israel Defense Forces, its forces continue to face ambushes by Hamas militants.
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UN Security Council to vote on resolution calling for series of humanitarian pauses in Gaza
From CNN's Becky Anderson and Sahar Akbarzai
The United Nations Security Council will vote on a resolution on Wednesday afternoon calling for a series of humanitarian pauses in Gaza, a diplomat briefed on the matter said.
It also advocates for the immediate and unconditional release of all hostages held in Gaza by Hamas, especially children.
The resolution was drafted by Malta and has the support of the 22-member Arab Group, including the United Arab Emirates, which is an elected member of the UNSC, the diplomat told CNN.
The vote is expected to happen around 3 p.m. ET Wednesday and is likely to pass, the diplomat said.
Some context: About a month ago, the United States vetoed a draft resolution at the UNSC that called for a humanitarian pause in Gaza.
That draft resolution was proposed by Brazil. It condemned Hamas’ October 7 attacks in Israel and urged the release of hostages taken, also calling on all parties to comply with international law and to protect civilian lives in Gaza during Israeli airstrikes.
Speaking after the vote, US ambassador to the UN Linda Thomas-Greenfield said that the US wanted more time to let American on-the-ground diplomacy “play out.”
The Security Council is the UN’s most powerful body but is frequently hampered by the veto power held by each of its five permanent members. Twelve of the council’s 15 members approved the October draft, with the UK and Russia abstaining, and a US veto.
CNN’s Caitlin Hu and Richard Roth contributed reporting to this post.
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At least 42 journalists have been killed since Israel-Hamas war started, according to nonprofit
From CNN's Kareem El Damanhoury
Fatma Kanso, mother of Issam Abdallah, mourns over her son's body during his funeral in his home town of Al Khiyam, Lebanon, on October 14. Abdallah was a Lebanese national and Reuters videojournalist who was killed in southern Lebanon by shelling from the direction of Israel.
Zohra Bensemra/Reuters
The death toll among journalists covering the war between Israel and Hamas has soared to 42 — an average of at least one death per day since the conflict began October 7, according to the nonprofit Committee to Protect Journalists.
Most of the journalists — 37 — were Palestinian, according to CPJ data released Wednesday. Four of the journalists were Israeli and one was Lebanese, the CPJ said.
Al Qahera News photographer Ahmed Fatima and local radio director Yaacoub Al-Barsh were among the latest journalists killed in strikes on Gaza, CPJ said, citing multiple news outlets and press freedom groups.
The latest conflict has been the deadliest period for journalists since the Committee to Protect Journalists starting tracking such data in 1992.
“CPJ is also investigating numerous unconfirmed reports of other journalists being killed, missing, detained, hurt, or threatened, and of damage to media offices and journalists’ homes,” the nonprofit added.
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Israel's operation at Gaza hospital is its own decision, White House says
From CNN's Kevin Liptak
The US continues to believe Israel should not target hospitals in Gaza from the air and that civilians should be protected from the crossfire, National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby said, as Israel continues its raid on the enclave’s largest medical facility.
Kirby said the US did not sign off on the specific operation around Al-Shifa Hospital nor does it approve any of Israel’s military plans.
He said he would “refrain … from providing a running commentary on what is an ongoing operation.”
He repeated his assertion from a day earlier that the US doesn’t “want to see hospitals attacked from the air” or to “see innocent civilians, patients, medical staff become victims of crossfire between Hamas and Israeli Defense Forces.”
He said the operation around Al-Shifa was “not a focus” of President Joe Biden’s phone call Tuesday with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Kirby also said the decision Tuesday to unveil downgraded intelligence about Hamas’ use of the Al-Shifa Hospital as a command node was unrelated to Israel’s forthcoming operation.
“My delivery of some downgraded information yesterday, the timing of that really came after work by the intelligence community to prepare that information for downgrade, and it had nothing to do with any operational timing or any decision making by the Israeli Defense Forces,” he said.
CNN cannot independently verify Israel’s claims that Hamas is operating from the hospital.
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FBI has seen significant increase in reported threats since October 7 attack, mostly against Jewish community
From CNN's Hannah Rabinowitz
The FBI has seen a significant increase in threats since the October 7 attack in Israel, FBI Director Christopher Wray told Congress on Wednesday.
He said the “biggest chunk” have been against the Jewish community.
“The number of tips and threats that are being reported to us have gone up significantly since October 7,” Wray testified to the House Homeland Security Committee.
The director said that the FBI has also received a “large number of tips and leads related specifically to Hamas and radicalization and recruitment.” Though Hamas itself has historically worked only to fundraise within the US for terrorism overseas, the FBI “cannot and (does) not discount the possibility” that the group may change its tactics in the future and perpetrate attacks outside of Israel, Wray said.
He also said law enforcement is watching for individuals who “may exploit” the violence in Gaza to encourage or carry out an attack on US soil.
“We are urgently running down every tip and lead we get and trying to mitigate them,” he said.
Wray said that lone actors and other foreign terrorist organizations may be inspired by the conflict. Several terrorist organizations, including Hezbollah and al Qaeda, have already threatened attacks on the United States, he said.
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"Explosions are shaking the buildings" after rocket fire near hospital, reporter inside Al-Shifa says
Israeli forces have “invaded the hospital with large numbers of soldiers and military vehicles, including tanks, armored vehicles, troop carriers, and bulldozers” and were preventing anyone from leaving, Al Za’anoun said.
Israel has claimed Hamas militants have set up a command center at Al-Shifa, an allegation denied by Hamas and hospital officials. CNN cannot verify either side’s claims. Hamas said Al-Shifa is now under the control of Israeli forces.
On Wednesday, Al Za’anoun said four militants had been shot dead — but stressed that he believed the shootings happened outside the hospital complex, on a nearby street.
Medical staff inside the hospital described explosions, the sound of gunfire, and reports of interrogations taking place, with people being handcuffed and blindfolded.
Several hours before Al-Za’anoun’s report, a senior Israeli defense official told reporters there had been no gun battles inside the hospital complex that he was aware of — though he acknowledged the operation was ongoing at the time.
The Israeli official confirmed several people had been interrogated in parts of the complex in which Israeli forces were operating.
“If there (is) an individual or individuals that we related to Hamas, then we will interrogate them,” the official said.
The official said there had been “no friction with patients, medical staff or injured civilians,” who, the official said, were located in a part of the hospital not part of the Israeli operation.
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Truck delivers fuel to UN agency in Gaza to be used only to transport aid from Rafah, director says
From Asmaa Khalil and Mostafa Salem
A truck carrying fuel crosses into Rafah, Gaza, on November 15.
Said Khatib/AFP/Getty Images
Around 23,000 liters (6,078 gallons) of fuel from Egypt were delivered to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) to be used only for transporting aid from Rafah, the organization’s director in Gaza, Thomas White, said on X.
“Just received 23,027 [liters] of fuel from Egypt (half a tanker) – but its use has been restricted by Israeli authorities - only for transporting aid from Rafah,” White wrote. “No fuel for water or hospitals.”
The truck carrying the fuel crossed the border from Egypt into Gaza on Wednesday morning, a CNN stringer at the Rafah border crossing saw. It’s the first truck to carry fuel into the Gaza Strip since Israel imposed a blockade on the strip following Hamas’ attack on October 7.
Israel’s Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT), a government agency that liaises with Palestinians on civilian affairs, said earlier that UN trucks transporting humanitarian equipment from the Rafah crossing into the southern Gaza Strip will be refueled at the crossing Wednesday.