This was CNBC’s live blog tracking developments in the Israel-Hamas war. Click here for the latest Israel news and updates on Gaza.
Israeli forces have entered Gaza, the IDF confirmed Saturday, ramping up the ground and air offensive in the Gaza Strip overnight and rejecting the United Nations’ demand for a humanitarian truce.
“We reject outright the UN General Assembly despicable call for a ceasefire,” Foreign Minister Eli Cohen said in a social media post on X, vowing to “eliminate Hamas.”
Overnight, Gaza saw “the heaviest and most sustained bombardment” to date, according to NBC News. Inside the besieged territory, one NBC crew member said it was “very dangerous everywhere,” amid extensive shelling and bombings from above and on the ground.
Communications with those inside Gaza have been cut off with a near-total blackout of internet and mobile phone services.
Hamas militants vowed to fight back with “full force” in response to the Israel Defense Forces’ announcement Friday that it was “expanding” its ground activity.
Meanwhile, a spokesman for the military wing of Hamas says it is prepared to swap dozens of hostages for all the Palestinian prisoners held by Israel, the Associated Press reported.
The spokesman, who calls himself Abu Obeida, said in a televised speech on Saturday a deal also could be struck but that Israelis “should know the price that they have to pay.”
The death toll continues to mount as the war enters its fourth week. At least 7,300 people have been killed in Gaza, according to the Hamas-run Palestinian Health Ministry. In Israel, at least 1,400 people have been killed and 5,400 injured, according to the IDF. More than 220 hostages were taken to Gaza.
Israel’s chief military spokesperson declined to say whether Israel was behind the telecommunications blackout that hit Gaza on Friday and which has left the besieged enclave largely cut off but said it would do what it needed to protect its forces.
Asked whether Israel had knocked out cellular services at the start of the ground offensive that began on Friday night, Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari said: “We do what we have to do to secure our forces for as long as we must, temporary or permanent, as much as we need to and we will not say anything further about that.”
— Reuters
Republican presidential candidates delivered speeches touting their staunch support for Israel at the annual Republican Jewish Coalition’s summit Saturday — and sought to peel support away from former President Donald Trump, the front-runner, who recently faced backlash for criticizing Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and calling Hezbollah, the Lebanese militant group, “very smart.”
“America needs a captain who will steady the ship, not capsize it, and Republicans need a candidate who can actually win,” former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley said in her remarks, pointedly criticizing Trump, who has drawn strong support from Orthodox Jews, according to a poll this year by the Jewish Electoral Institute.
“I will not criticize Israel’s prime minister in the middle of a tragedy and war,” Haley added as Israel expanded its ground offensive in Gaza, with Netanyahu warning of a long and difficult war after Hamas’ attack on Oct. 7.
Read the full story here.
— NBC News
The USS Dwight D. Eisenhower aircraft carrier and its strike group have moved through the Strait of Gibraltar, putting two American carriers in the Mediterranean Sea, a rare sight in recent years.
The USS Gerald R. Ford Carrier Strike Group is already in the eastern Mediterranean, part of a buildup of forces as the U.S. supports Israel in its war against Hamas.
The Eisenhower sailed into the Mediterranean on Saturday and is slated to move through the Suez Canal to the U.S. Central Command region as the American forces expand their presence in the Middle East to deter Iran and its proxy militant groups from trying to widen the war.
— Associated Press
Now that Israeli bombs have cut off cellular and internet service for most of the 2.3 million people in the Gaza Strip, it has fallen to a rare few Palestinians with international SIM cards or powered-up satellite phones to get the news out.
They described scenes of panic and confusion as Israel’s military attacks from the air, land and sea in the most intense bombing yet in the three-week war. Without social media to share their plight with the world, many seem consumed with fear and hopelessness.
Reached by WhatsApp, freelance photojournalist Ashraf Abu Amra in northern Gaza said the international community must intervene to save the people of Gaza from immediate death. Palestinian journalist Hind al-Khoudary reported that some 50,000 people have converged on Gaza’s largest hospital, where doctors are exhausted from operating on patient after patient using dwindling fuel and medical supplies.
— Associated Press
Hundreds of thousands of protesters in cities all over the world on Saturday marched in support of Palestinians and to demand a ceasefire in the war as Israel continued to expand its presence in Gaza this weekend.
This evening, for example, emergency responders in New York reported that the Brooklyn Bridge has been temporarily closed in both directions due to the protests.
And in London, for the third consecutive weekend, roughly 100,000 demonstrators marched, this time calling on the United Kingdom’s government to demand a ceasefire in the war. London’s police force reported on Saturday that it had made nine arrests, two of which were for assaults on officers.
Here are some of the major cities where people gathered in solidarity with Palestinians:
— Rebecca Picciotto
United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres reiterated urgent calls for a humanitarian pause in order to facilitate the delivery of aid and the release of hostages in Gaza.
“Regrettably, instead of the pause, I was surprised by an unprecedented escalation of the bombardments and their devastating impacts, undermining the referred humanitarian objectives,” Guterres said in a statement.
“This situation must be reversed. I reiterate my strong appeal for an immediate humanitarian ceasefire,” Guterres added, adding that a “humanitarian catastrophe is unfolding in front of our eyes.”
— Amanda Macias
Investors are watching over the weekend for signs of whether the conflict in the Middle East will escalate, which could ratchet up volatility in markets that already expected a busy week ahead with a Federal Reserve policy statement and Apple results.
On Friday, Israeli air and ground forces stepped up operations in the Gaza Strip, about three weeks after a deadly attack by the Islamist movement Hamas.
Investors have grown more worried about a widening conflict in recent days after the U.S. dispatched more military assets to the Middle East while Israel attacked targets in Gaza and Hamas supporters in Lebanon and Syria.
“The situation in Israel is … causing a lot of anxiety,” said Randy Frederick, managing director of trading and derivatives for Charles Schwab.
— Reuters
NBC News foreign correspondent Josh Lederman shared the following video on X while reporting from Ashdod, Israel, of the Iron Dome intercepting an incoming rocket.
Read more about the Iron Dome missile defense system here.
— Amanda Macias
One of the biggest threats to both Israeli troops and the 2.3 million Palestinians trapped in the Gaza Strip is buried deep underground.
Israel’s military said Saturday that its warplanes struck 150 underground Hamas targets in northern Gaza, including tunnels, combat spaces and other infrastructure. But the extensive labyrinth of tunnels built by Hamas is believed to stretch for hundreds of miles (kilometers), hiding fighters, an arsenal of rockets and now more than 200 Israeli hostages.
Clearing and collapsing those tunnels is crucial to dismantling Hamas. But Israel’s military could be at a serious disadvantage underground. Urban warfare experts say the militants can be hiding in millions of places, choosing when and where to ambush their enemies.
Former Israeli soldier Ariel Bernstein described urban combat in northern Gaza as a mix of ambushes, traps, hideouts and snipers in tunnels so disorienting that it was like he was fighting ghosts.
— Associated Press
Israeli Minister of Communications Shlomo Karhi on Saturday staunchly criticized Elon Musk’s announcement to deploy Starlink, the SpaceX-operated internet provider, in Gaza where access to internet and cellular communication has been cut off.
Earlier on Saturday, Musk, the CEO of SpaceX and Tesla, said in a post on X, formerly Twitter, that he would use Starlink to “support connectivity” for internationally recognized aid organizations in Gaza.
The communications minister responded to Musk with a post of his own, saying that Israel will use “all means at its disposal” to fight the launch of Starlink in Gaza. He added that Hamas would end up using Starlink for “terrorist activities.”
“Perhaps Musk would be willing to condition it with the release of our abducted babies, sons, daughters, elderly people. All of them!” Karhi wrote in the social media post. “By then, my office will cut any ties with starlink.”
Starlink has been used by the Ukrainian Armed Forces in its fight against Russia.
But Musk has come under fire for his reported interference during some episodes of Russia’s war against Ukraine. In September, a Ukrainian adviser to President Volodymyr Zelenskyy criticized Musk for shutting down Starlink’s connection in the region in order to prevent a Ukrainian attack against Russian warships.
— Rebecca Picciotto
A Palestinian militant group in Gaza said it fired a barrage of rockets Saturday evening on Tel Aviv and on Ashkelon and Ashdod in southern Israel. The rockets by Al-Quds Brigades, the military arm of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad, was the latest in a series of rocket attacks on Israel on Saturday as Israeli forces continued its relentless aid and land bombardment.
One of the Israeli airstrikes across northern Gaza late Saturday afternoon caused damage to the Indonesian hospital in Beit Lahia, according to freelance journalist Anas al-Sharif, one of the few journalists in Gaza who remain connected to the outside world. He shared images of the hospital’s damaged roof.
The Israeli strikes caused a blackout that cut off telecommunications and internet access for Gaza’s 2.3 million people, disrupting ambulances and aid groups in the besieged strip and enabling the Israeli military to control the narrative in the new stage of fighting.
— Associated Press
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said at a Saturday press conference that Israel is in its second phase of what he expects will be a long and difficult war as the country expands its ground presence in Gaza.
Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant and Minister Benny Gantz also spoke at the briefing, reiterating that the war against Hamas is likely not near its end.
Netanyahu doubled down on Israel’s two goals in the war: to eradicate the military and governing powers of Hamas and to rescue all of the group’s hostages. In response to a question about the potential conflict between those goals, he rejected the idea that there was any tension between eliminating Hamas and saving the hostages.
The prime minister warned civilians in Gaza to find safe areas as Israel intensifies its presence in the region. On Friday night, Israel launched a series of bombings in Gaza. Since then, there have been a variety of reports that civilians have lost connection to internet and cellular communication.
Gallant spoke on the complications of returning the hostages under Hamas. He said there might be a higher probability of rescuing the abductees as Israel’s military pressure escalates, which Gantz emphasized in his own remarks.
Earlier on Saturday, a Hamas spokesperson reportedly said in a broadcast on a Hamas-run television channel that the militant group was prepared to return its hostages in exchange for Israel’s Palestinian prisoners.
— Rebecca Picciotto
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan told a mass pro-Palestinian rally in Istanbul on Saturday that his country was making preparations to proclaim Israel a “war criminal” for its actions in Gaza.
In his address to hundreds of thousands of people who joined the rally, Erdogan also held Western countries responsible for the deaths in Gaza for failing to stop Israel’s attacks.
“Israel, we will proclaim you as a war criminal to the world,” Erdogan said. “We are making our preparations, and we will declare Israel to the world as a war criminal.”
Separately, Oman’s Foreign Ministry said Israel’s siege and bombardment of Gaza amount to war crimes and crimes against humanity.
The Omani ministry said in a statement that a wide-scale Israeli ground invasion of Gaza would have “serious catastrophic consequences on the region and the world, and the prospects of achieving peace and stability.”
Oman has a long record of serving as a key broker between Iran and the West when regional tensions flare.
The ministry called for the international community to immediately intervene to stop the Israel-Hamas war and to speed humanitarian aid deliveries to Gaza.
— Associated Press
Israeli forces are currently operating on the ground in the Gaza Strip, the chief of general staff for Israel, Gen. Herzi Halevi said in a video statement.
“This is a war with multiple stages,” Halevi said. “Today we move to the next one.”
He said the invasion was “all in service of the war’s objectives — dismantling Hamas, securing our borders and the supreme effort to return the hostages home.”
Responsibility for the situation in Gaza lies with Hamas and its criminal actions, Halevi said.
“The objectives of this war require a ground operation,” he said. “Achievements demand risks and, as we know, every victory comes at a price.”
At least 7,300 people have been killed in Gaza, according to the Hamas-run Palestinian Health Ministry. In Israel, at least 1,400 people have been killed and 5,400 injured, according to the IDF. More than 220 hostages were taken to Gaza.
CNBC could not independently verify the number of deaths.
— Annie Nova
People display posters during demonstrations in Tel Aviv, Israel, on Oct. 28, by family members and supporters of hostages who are being held in Gaza after they were kidnapped from Israel by Hamas gunmen.
— Reuters Photo
The spokesman for the military wing of Hamas says the group is ready to swap dozens of hostages it is holding for all the Palestinian prisoners held by Israel.
The spokesman, using the nom de guerre Abu Obeida, said in a televised speech Saturday that such a deal also could be conducted in stages, but that Israelis “should know the price that they have to pay.”
On Saturday, hundreds of relatives of hostages gathered in a square in downtown Tel Aviv and demanded that the government put the return of their loved ones ahead of Israel’s military objectives.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was expected to meet with the hostage families later Saturday. Military officials have said they are trying to both topple Hamas and bring back the hostages but have not explained how they could obtain both objectives at the same time.
The families of the hostages fear Israel’s ramped-up offensive in Gaza is endangering the captives.
— Associated Press
Israeli Foreign Minister Eli Cohen said he will reconsider the relations between Turkey and Israel in light of criticism from Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Israel’s actions in the war against Hamas.
The foreign minister added that he has ordered envoys to Turkey to return to Israel.
“Given the grave statements coming from Turkey, I have ordered the return of diplomatic representatives there in order to conduct a reevaluation of the relations between Israel and Turkey,” Cohen wrote in a social media post on Saturday.
Erdogan spoke at a pro-Palestinian rally at Istanbul’s Ataturk airport on Saturday to condemn Israel’s attacks in Gaza. He doubled down on claims that Hamas is not a terrorist organization but rather a front of liberation.
The rally followed Erdogan’s earlier remarks on social media, denouncing Israel and calling on the country to “get out of this state of madness and stop its attacks.”
Relations between Israel and Turkey have been historically precarious. Erdogan had criticized Israel in the past for its treatment of Palestinians, but he sought to mend relations in an effort to shift to a more cooperative diplomatic approach with neighbors in the Middle East. In March 2022, Israel’s President Isaac Herzog visited Turkey in a step to normalize relations.
That diplomatic sea change may be reversing as Erdogan continues to publicly lash out at Israel for its wartime attacks, which have exacerbated a humanitarian crisis in Gaza.
— Rebecca Picciotto
Philippe Lazzarini, the head of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East, wrote an open letter on Saturday to his staff stationed in Gaza where internet and cellular connectivity are severely limited.
“The whole UNRWA family, including myself, is deeply worried about you, as most channels of communication have been cut across Gaza since last night,” Lazzarini said in the letter.
Internet and telecommunications access were cut off on Friday following a series of Israeli bombings in Gaza. Major cellular providers in Gaza said that the attacks had wiped out the last of their infrastructure, disabling most connectivity in the region.
Lazzarini said he had been able to contact a few UNRWA colleagues located in Rafah, a city in the south of the Gaza Strip near northern Egypt. He said he has been disconnected from other staff members in Gaza.
He called the situation in Gaza “hell on earth” and said the “communications blackout is yet another action taken to try to impede the humanitarian response to the civilians of the Gaza Strip.”
Convoys of humanitarian aid have trickled into Gaza over the past week as civilians are left without adequate access to food, water, medical resources, fuel, shelter and now, communications. However, sustaining the aid deliveries has proven difficult as officials negotiate how to send the trucks across the Rafah border crossing without getting diverted by Hamas.
— Rebecca Picciotto
The U.N. human rights chief said Israel’s overnight intense air and ground bombardment has taken the crisis in Gaza to “a new level of violence and pain.”
U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk’s comments came in a statement Saturday as Gaza remained cut off from the outside world following a communication blackout.
He said the communication blackout has added to the misery and suffering of civilians in the Palestinian territory, with ambulances and civil defense teams no longer able to locate the wounded.
The humanitarian and human rights consequences will be devastating and long-lasting,” Turk said. “Given the manner in which military operations have been conducted until now, in the context of the 56-year-old occupation, I am raising alarm about the possibly catastrophic consequences of large-scale ground operations in Gaza and the potential for thousands more civilians to die.”
— Associated Press
Israel continued to bombard Gaza City, the Al-Shati refugee camp and the Beit Lahia region in northern Gaza with heavy airstrikes into the day, NBC News reported on Saturday.
Southern areas of Gaza, including Khan Younis and Rafah, were also seeing repeated shelling, according to NBC News.
See NBC News’ complete coverage of the Israel-Hamas war here.
— Terri Cullen
Saudi Arabia’s foreign ministry released a statement on Saturday condemning any ground operations by Israeli forces that may threaten the lives of Palestinian civilians.
“The Kingdom condemns and denounces the ground operations carried out by the Israeli army in the Gaza Strip, and warns of the danger of continuing to carry out these blatant and unjustified violations of international law against our brotherly Palestinians,” the statement said.
— Reuters
Aid convoys continue to trickle into Gaza as displaced Palestinians struggle daily for food, water and fuel in the Gaza Strip.
— Getty Images
As the Israeli military continues to escalate its ground offensive in Gaza, the country once again ordered Palestinians in northern Gaza and Gaza City to relocate south.
“This is an urgent military advisory from the Israel Defense Forces,” military spokesman Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari said in a video message posted on X. “For your immediate safety, we urge all residents of northern Gaza and Gaza City to relocate south immediately. This is a temporary measure. Moving back to northern Gaza will be possible once the intense hostilities end.”
— Terri Cullen
Elon Musk said Saturday that Starlink, the internet provider operated by SpaceX, will try to help internationally recognized aid groups regain connectivity after an Israeli attack on Friday cut off telecommunication and internet access to many residents of Gaza.
Musk’s announcement was posted on X, formerly known as Twitter, in response to New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez who, in her own X post, said that it was “unacceptable” to cut off communication to 2.2 million people.
“Starlink will support connectivity to internationally recognized aid organizations in Gaza,” Musk wrote in the post.
Starlink’s network of satellites is designed to provide high-speed internet to any region, but Gaza needs Starlink terminals in order to connect.
Currently, Gaza is in a near-total internet and cellular blackout. On Friday, Gaza’s biggest telecommunications provider, Paltel, said that Israeli bombardment had destroyed the last of its infrastructure.
It would not be the first time that the SpaceX and Tesla CEO would provide internet access to an area at war. The Ukrainian Armed Forces have used Starlink in the war against Russia.
— Rebecca Picciotto
Israel’s military says it is striking Hezbollah military infrastructure in Lebanon.
It said the strikes were ordered Saturday after “several anti-tank missile and mortar shell launches were identified from Lebanese territory toward Israel,” including Israeli military posts along the Israel-Lebanon border.
There has been concern that the Israel-Hamas war could expand into Lebanon and northern Israel if Hezbollah decides to join the conflict.
— Associated Press
Hamas is trying to find eight Russian-Israeli hostages who are among the more than 220 kidnapped by the group during its Oct. 7 attack on Israel, following Moscow’s request to release them, the AFP reported citing Russian state media.
“From the Russian side, via the foreign ministry, we received a list of citizens that have dual citizenship,” the AFP reported senior Hamas representative Moussa Abu Marzook as saying, as quoted by state news agency RIA Novosti.
“We are looking for those people… It is hard but we are looking. And when we find them, we will let them go,” he said. “We are very attentive to this list and will process it carefully because we consider Russia to be a closest friend.”
Russia has good relations with Hamas and does not consider it to be a terrorist group. Russia did not condemn Hamas for its Oct. 7 attack on Israel, which killed at least 1,300 people. It also has good relations with Israel.
— Natasha Turak
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has said that Israel’s bombardment of Gaza runs counter to international law and risks creating a catastrophe that could last decades.
Lavrov made the comments, some of Moscow’s most critical of Israel yet, in an interview with the Belarusian state news agency Belta, which released them on Saturday.
“While we condemn terrorism, we categorically disagree that you can respond to terrorism by violating the norms of international humanitarian law, including indiscriminately using force against targets where civilians are known to be present, including hostages that have been taken,” said Lavrov.
It was impossible, he added, to destroy Hamas – as Israel has vowed to do – without destroying Gaza along with most of its civilian population.
“If Gaza is destroyed and 2 million inhabitants are expelled, as some politicians in Israel and abroad propose, this will create a catastrophe for many decades, if not centuries,” warned Lavrov.
“It is necessary to stop, and to announce humanitarian programs to save the population under blockade.”
— Reuters
Hamas has proclaimed Israel’s overnight ground incursion to be a failure. The group said in a statement Saturday that its military arm, the Al Qassam Brigades, used anti-tank Kornet rockets and mortar shelling to repel the attack and claimed its fighters inflicted casualties among Israeli troops. The militant group did not provide evidence.
Qassam Brigades said late Friday its fighters were clashing with Israeli troops in the town of Beit Hanoun in northwestern Gaza and in Al-Bureij in central Gaza.
Al-Quds Brigades, the military wing of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad movement, said it fired a barrage of rockets Saturday morning on the Kissufim kibbutz, northwest of the Negev desert.
Israel’s military announced it shot down a missile fired at an Israeli drone from Lebanon Saturday. It was not immediately clear if the missile was fired by Lebanon’s Hezbollah militant group.
Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency said an Israeli drone fired three missiles on a Hezbollah stronghold in an area relatively far from the border Saturday. The agency said the drone struck Safi Mountain in Lebanon’s southern Apple province where Hezbollah has posts.
A Lebanese security official, meanwhile, confirmed the report, but a Hezbollah official said they had no immediate comment about the strike when contacted by the Associated Press.
— Associated Press
Families of the Israeli hostages taken captive by Hamas are demanding to meet with Israel’s defense minister as they express fear over Israel’s expanding ground offensive and its potential impact on the hostages.
“This night was the most terrible of all nights. It was a long and sleepless night, against the backdrop of the major IDF operation in the Strip, and absolute uncertainty regarding the fate of the hostages held there, who were also subject to the heavy bombings,” a statement from the families read. It said that the ground operation endangers the lives of the 229 hostages being held in Gaza.
“The families are worried about the fate of their loved ones and are waiting for an explanation,” it continued. “Every minute feels like an eternity. We demand that Defense Minister Yoav Gallant and members of the war cabinet — meet with us this morning!”
IDF spokesperson Daniel Hagari told the press that bringing the hostages home remains a “supreme national effort.”
— Natasha Turak
Israeli forces are inside Gaza and expanding their offensive on the besieged territory, IDF spokesman Daniel Hagari told press in an update. He said troops are “still in the field and continue the war,” and that there have been no IDF casualties so far.
Hagari confirmed that IDF forces had entered the northern Gaza Strip and said that Hamas commanders had been killed, including one he said had been a “major participant” in the Oct. 7 attacks on Israel.
He added that more humanitarian supplies would be allowed into Gaza today, including food, water, and medicine.
— Natasha Turak
U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin held a call with Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant Friday night, during which he reiterated “the importance of protecting civilians during the Israel Defense Forces’ operations,” according to a Pentagon readout.
Austin also stressed the need for “humanitarian aid delivery for civilians in Gaza” and the release of all the hostages held by Hamas, the Pentagon said.
— Natasha Turak
Israel Defense Forces said their fighter jets “struck 150 underground targets” in northern Gaza overnight.
The targets included “terror tunnels, underground combat spaces and additional underground infrastructure,” the military said, adding that “several Hamas terrorists were killed.”
In its daily update, the IDF said that in the last 24 hours, “ground forces, accompanied by fighter jets and UAVs, conducted limited operations in the territory of the Gaza Strip.” Videos showed plumes of smoke as it struck buildings and sites it said were associated with Hamas.
In addition, the IDF said it “executed a targeted operation from the sea in the southern Gaza Strip,” targeting Hamas military facilities that were utilized by the militant group’s naval commando forces.
Israeli naval vessels and aircraft were involved in the operation and soldiers left the area after the mission was completed, the IDF said.
— Joanna Tan
The Hamas militant group vowed to fight back with “full force,” in response to Israel’s escalated ground and air attacks inside Gaza overnight
“Al-Qassam Brigades and all Palestinian resistance forces are fully prepared to confront the aggression with full force and thwart the incursions,” the group said on Telegram.
On Friday, a spokesperson for the Israel Defense Forces said its forces were “expanding the ground activity” and had “increased attacks in Gaza.”
— Joanna Tan
Relentless bombardments on Gaza continued for hours overnight in what NBC News correspondent Ellison Barber said was “by far the heaviest and most sustained bombardment into Gaza to date.”
The Israel Defense Forces announced Friday night that the military was expanding ground operations into Gaza.
Inside Gaza, a crew member of NBC News told colleagues in a text message: “The situation we’re in is difficult, so difficult and very dangerous,” he wrote. “We’re being extensively shelled by artillery and by air.”
He said “every street” was affected and people were “carrying their dead and injured in the most basic methods … on trollies and in tuk-tuks.”
“It’s very dangerous everywhere — they are bombing us from the sky above and the ground,” he added.
— Joanna Tan
Israel’s foreign minister has rejected the United Nations’ call for a “humanitarian truce” in Gaza, calling it “despicable.”
In a post on X, formerly Twitter, Eli Cohen said: “We reject outright the UN General Assembly’s despicable call for a ceasefire. Israel intends to eliminate Hamas just as the world dealt with the Nazis and ISIS.”
The UN General Assembly on Friday voted to adopt a resolution calling for an “immediate, durable and sustained humanitarian truce” between Israel and Hamas militants in Gaza.
The non-binding resolution saw an overwhelming 120 nations vote in favor of the ceasefire. Fourteen countries, including the U.S. and Israel, voted against the resolution while 45 others abstained.
— Joanna Tan
Israel claims to have killed the head of Hamas’ aerial array, Asem Abu Rakaba, in overnight strikes.
“Abu Rakaba was responsible for Hamas’ UAVs, drones, paragliders, aerial detection and aerial defense,” said the Israel Defense Forces and the Israeli Security Agency in a joint statement.
Abu Rakaba was said to have taken part in planning the killings and kidnappings that took place in communities in southern Israel on Oct. 7. “He directed the terrorists who infiltrated Israel on paragliders and was responsible for the drone attacks on IDF posts,” the statement said.
CNBC was not able to verify those claims.
— Joanna Tan
President Joe Biden said he ordered the military strikes against facilities in eastern Syria to stop Iran and its affiliates from further attacking U.S. personnel and facilities.
“I directed the strikes in order to protect and defend our personnel,” Biden said in a letter to the House Speaker.
The strikes were in response to a series of attacks by militia groups affiliated with Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) since Oct. 17, he added.
The precision strikes targeted facilities used by the IRGC and its affiliated groups for command and control, munitions storage, and other purposes, the president said.
The goal was to “degrade and disrupt the ongoing series of attacks against the United States and our partners,” and to “deter Iran and Iran-backed militia groups from conducting or supporting further attacks on United States personnel and facilities,” he added.
— Joanna Tan
The U.S. State Department has urged American citizens in Lebanon to “leave now while commercial flights remain available due to the unpredictable security situation.”
“The best time to leave a country is before a crisis if at all possible,” the U.S. embassy in Lebanon said in a security alert.
The State Department updated its travel advisory for Lebanon to Level 4, “do not travel” on Oct. 17.
It citied “the unpredictable security situation related to rocket, missile, and artillery exchanges between Israel and Hizballah or other armed militant factions.”
“There is no guarantee the U.S. government will evacuate private U.S. citizens and their family members in a crisis situation,” the U.S. embassy in Beirut warned.
— Joanna Tan
Amid the latest bloodshed in the Middle East, Pope Francis led special Friday evening prayers in St. Peter’s Basilica for a world “in a dark hour” and in “great danger” from what he described as the folly of war.
Francis delivered his remarks in the form of a prayer to the Virgin Mary and didn’t mention by name the conflict that exploded when Hamas militants attacked southern Israel on Oct. 7 and Israel retaliated by sealing off the Gaza Strip and battering the Palestinian territory with airstrikes.
He said he was praying for “especially those countries and regions at war,” and he pleaded with Mary to “take the initiative for us, in these times rent by conflicts and laid waste by the fire of arms.”
“This is a dark hour,″ Francis said in a subdued voice, in his remarks in the basilica.
— Associated Press
The brutality and elation of Hamas militants as they killed Israeli civilians — including babies, young children and the elderly — is evident in an Israeli government compilation of videos shown to about two dozen journalists in New York on Friday.
The videos, which were aired for the first time outside of Israel, consist mostly of GoPro, cell phone and dash cam footage recorded by the attackers themselves. The atrocities and war crimes shown suggest that jihadism has evolved in chilling and perverse new ways.
Hamas appears to have combined the tactics of the Islamic State militant group, the Taliban and other organizations by mounting large-scale attacks that included an estimated 2,000 fighters, mass hostage-taking, rape, beheadings and livestreaming.
On October 7th, Hamas killed over 1,000 Israeli civilians in the worst terrorist attack in the country’s 75 year history. The militants appear at ease in the videos, slowly searching houses filled with signs of everyday life — a freshly-made breakfast, an iPad, a pair of shoes — as Israelis civilians hid in nearby safe rooms. Hamas members appear amazed and elated by the success of their operation and the slow response of Israeli security forces.
Israeli officials who attended the screening told reporters that Hamas attacked more than 30 locations and that it took hours for Israeli forces to dislodge them. “In some places, it took 8 to 12 hours,” said retired Maj. General Mickey Edelstein, currently serving as a reservist. “In some places, it took over a day.”
Read the full NBC News report here.
— NBC News
The Palestinian telecommunications provider Paltel says internet service in Gaza Strip has been cut off by Israeli bombardment. Services were cut Friday evening, following a heavy round of Israeli airstrikes that lit up the night sky over the darkened territory.
Rights groups and journalists also say they lost contact with colleagues in the enclave. The Associated Press’s attempts to contact people in Gaza did not go through.
— The Associated Press
The White House confirmed that about 85 trucks carrying humanitarian aid have arrived in Gaza but added that the region desperately needs fuel.
“No fuel has yet been allowed in,” National Security Council spokesman John Kirby told reporters on a conference call.
“The U.N. Relief Agency was able to get hold of a little bit over a day’s worth of fuel from a commercial facility in Gaza,” he said, adding that the fuel in Gaza is expected to run out soon.
— Amanda Macias
Israeli shelling of the Gaza Strip has killed 50 of the hostages abducted by Hamas during its terror attacks of Oct. 7, a representative of the Palestinian militant group told Russian news outlet Kommersant, according to a Google translation.
Captives will not be released until a ceasefire is agreed with Israel, Hamas representative Abu Hamid said, as a delegation of the group visited Moscow.
Al-Qassem, the armed wing of Hamas, also posted on its Telegram account that it estimates 50 “prisoners” have been killed in Israeli bombardment.
CNBC could not independently verify the figures, and the Israel Defense Forces did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The IDF has previously said that Hamas captured roughly 224 people, of which only four have been released to date.
Some questions have risen over the accuracy of numbers reported by Hamas and Hamas-controlled facilities, such as the death toll supplied by the Gaza Health Ministry.
U.S. President Joe Biden on Oct. 25 said he has “no confidence in the number that the Palestinians are using” for the death toll reported in the Hamas-run Gaza Strip, according to Reuters, without disclosing why.
— Ruxandra Iordache
UN adopts resolution calling for an immediate humanitarian truce; IDF ‘expanding their activity’ in Gaza