US backs United Nations Security Council resolution on Gaza; Israel destroys 'vast tunnel network': Live updates

  • Oops!
    Something went wrong.
    Please try again later.

Editor's Note: For the latest news on the Israel-Hamas conflict, please see our live updates file here.

After days of negotiations, the U.S. signaled late Thursday it was ready to support a revised United Nations Security Council resolution urging delivery of crucial humanitarian aid into the battered Gaza Strip where roughly one in four people are starving.

An earlier draft brought forward by the United Arab Emirates called for a "cessation of hostilities," later dialed back to a "suspension of hostilities." A revised version would call for “creating the conditions for a sustainable cessation of hostilities.”

A vote on the revised resolution was not expected until Friday.

Seeking to avoid another U.S. veto, the 15-member council delayed voting multiple times since Monday to negotiate the language. U.S. Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield told reporters after the consultations that the United States backs the new text, and if it is put to a vote the U.S. will support it.

Earlier this month, the U.S. vetoed a Security Council resolution supported by almost all council members and many other nations that called for an immediate humanitarian cease-fire in Gaza. The General Assembly overwhelmingly approved a similar resolution on Dec. 12 in a 153-10 vote with 23 abstentions.

Palestinians inspect a house after it was hit by an Israeli bombardment on Rafah, southern Gaza Strip, on Dec. 21, 2023.
Palestinians inspect a house after it was hit by an Israeli bombardment on Rafah, southern Gaza Strip, on Dec. 21, 2023.

'We know they were raped' by Hamas: Chilling details of what hostages faced

Developments:

∎ Conservators removed the red-painted graffiti proclaiming "Free Gaza" and similar sentiments from the steps between the Lincoln Memorial to the Reflecting Pool on the National Mall in Washington, the Park Service said Thursday.

∎ Swedish furniture giant Ikea said that rerouting cargo shops around Africa to avoid Houthi rebel attacks in the Red Sea could lead to delivery delays.

∎ War Cabinet minister Benny Gantz, a possible successor to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, said he expects military activity in Gaza to be reduced soon. But he said Israel has "no intention to stop the fighting until the return of the abductees, and we will change the reality in the south (of Gaza) as well as in the north."

∎ Dozens of rockets slammed into Israel from Gaza and Hezbollah camps in Lebanon, ending a quiet run of more than 24 hours that had many Israelis hoping a cease-fire might be near. Hamas issued a statement reiterating its position that it won't discuss releasing hostages until Israel halts its invasion of Gaza.

∎ Police in Israel are investigating 19 prison guards in the death of a Palestinian inmate who was found with what the Palestinian Prisoners' Club described as "severe signs of violence" on his body a month ago. Police announced the investigation into Thaer Abu Assab's death on Thursday and the Israel Prison Service said it was cooperating.

Israel says it destroyed 'vast tunnel network'

The Israeli military on Thursday destroyed a "vast tunnel network” under Gaza City that authorities said included command and control positions, meeting rooms, and hideout apartments for top Hamas leaders Yahya Sinwar and Ismail Haniyeh.

The military released photos of an apparent explosion a day after it released videos showing underground structures with concrete walls, ventilation systems, and blast doors. Peter Lerner, an Israeli army spokesman, said Wednesday that some of the rooms were more than 60 feet underground with elevators, stairs, and separate water and electricity shafts. Enough water, food, weapons and communications equipment were stored for a lengthy stay, he said. One room was more than 160 yards wide.

The tunnels were a "center of power for the military and political factions of Hamas," Lerner said.

The complex was centered on Palestine Square in central Gaza City, under stores, government offices, and civilian apartment buildings. Some of the more than 100 hostages freed by Hamas said they were held are transported through tunnels.

More than 575,000 Palestinians in Gaza are starving, UN says

More than a quarter of Gaza households face "extreme" hunger, and there is a risk of famine unless access to adequate food, clean water, health and sanitation services is restored, a U.N. report released Thursday warned. More than 575,000 people have exhausted their food supplies and coping capacities and face catastrophic hunger, the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification report said. Cindy McCain, the agency's executive director said the U.N. has been warning of a coming catastrophe for weeks.

"Tragically, without the safe, consistent access we have been calling for, the situation is desperate, and no one in Gaza is safe from starvation,” McCain said.

The recent seven-day pause showed humanitarian aid can flow when the conditions allow, she said. The reopening of the Kerem Shalom border crossing also can help if aid personnel can work safely.

“More than anything, what is needed now is peace," she said. "The world must come together now to save lives.”

2023: Deadliest year for journalists ever

More journalists have been killed in the first 10 weeks of the Israel-Gaza war than have ever been killed in a single country over an entire year, according to an analysis released Thursday by the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists. The analysis found that at least 68 journalists and media workers have been killed since the war began, 61 of them Palestinian, four Israelis and three Lebanese. The report said investigations into the deaths were hampered by the widespread destruction in Gaza, and the fact that in many cases the family members, typically sources for the details, also were killed.

With every journalist killed, the war becomes harder to document, the report says.

“The Israel-Gaza war is the most dangerous situation for journalists we have ever seen,” said Sherif Mansour, CPJ’s Middle East and North Africa program coordinator. “The Israeli army has killed more journalists in 10 weeks than any other army or entity has in any single year."

Hamas holds firm: No hostage talks until Israel stops shooting

Palestinian militants won't negotiate further prisoner-hostage swaps until the Israeli “aggression” on Gaza ends, Hamas said in a statement Thursday. The announcement appeared to blow up a deal the Wall Street Journal said Israel had proposed that would have created another one-week cease-fire in exchange for the release of about 40 more hostages. More than 100 captives remain in militant custody.

The militant group has issued similar edicts in recent days, although the arrival of the leader of the Hamas political wing, Ismail Haniyeh, in Egypt for talks Wednesday had fueled chatter that negotiations for a cease-fire and hostage deal could be underway.

“There is a Palestinian national decision that there should be no talk about prisoners or exchange deals except after a full cessation of aggression,” the latest militant statement said.

Israeli opposition leader says 2-state solution still not dead

The Oct. 7 attack by Hamas on Israeli communities bordering Gaza that killed 1,200 people will "significantly" delay a long-awaited Palestinian state but doesn't mean the idea is dead, Israel's opposition leader says. Yair Lapid also told the Saudi-based Al Majalla he believes Israel needs centrist politics as opposed to the far-right direction of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who has shown little support for a two-state solution. But Lapid says he agrees with Netanyahu that Hamas must be eradicated as an organization and an ideology for lasting peace to come to the Middle East.

“We (Israelis) are here to stay," he said. "The one thing that the Arab world must understand is we are not guests in the Middle East. Hezbollah and Hamas are the ones who are going to disappear."

UN wants probe of claims Israelis killed unarmed men in front of families

The U.N. Human Rights Office is demanding Israel conduct an immediate, independent investigation into a report that soldiers summarily killed at least 11 unarmed Palestinian men in front of their family members in Gaza City this week.

Israeli troops on Tuesday reportedly surrounded and raided a home in the city's Al Remal neighborhood where four families were sheltering, the U.N. agency said in a statement Wednesday. According to Al Jazeera and the Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor, the soldiers allegedly separated the men from the women and children and then shot and killed at least 11 of the men in front of their family members, the U.N. agency said.

Survivors shared details of the alleged carnage with Al Jazeera, including women who said at least one child was killed and others were wounded by Israeli gunfire.

Euro-Med, a Swiss-based advocacy group, said 13 members of the Anan family and their displaced in-laws were killed and that other family members were critically wounded. Euro-Med said it had received similar reports about alleged atrocities committed by Israeli forces in other areas, including killings and executions of civilians "without reason."

The Israeli military did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the alleged attack.

UN Security Council again delays vote: Aid resolution not resolved; Gaza death toll tops 20K

Michigan neurosurgeon's family 'barely staying alive' in Gaza

Yamaan Saadeh, a neurosurgeon at the University of Michigan, says he just wants to know his family is safe. His 70-year-old father, stepmother and three sisters are trapped in southern Gaza, where the situation is deteriorating as civilians are caught in the crossfire between Israel and Hamas. They have found shelter in a house with one bathroom they are sharing with 50 other people.

All three of Saadeh's sisters were valedictorians of their classes and study medicine in Gaza. Since the war broke out, they have had to put their studies on hold, Saadeh says.

"They're barely staying alive," Saadeh said. "My dad has lost some hearing because of the bombing. His health is OK, but there's also the frailty that comes with age, and this situation." Read more here.

Phaedra Trethan

A US neurosurgeon's anguish: His family trapped in Gaza is 'barely staying alive'

Israel government shows signs of splintering as war drags on

Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir called for disbanding the government's War Cabinet and threatened to pull his right-wing Otzma Yehudit party out of the ruling coalition amid speculation that the military operation in Gaza may soon be eased. Losing the party's support would be a political blow to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who has drawn sharp criticism following the militant attack Oct. 7 that resulted in 1,200 deaths in Israel and the seizing of more than 240 hostages, more than half of whom remain are still being held in Gaza.

The U.S. and most of the world have been pressing Israel to roll back its assault, which the local Health Ministry says has taken more than 20,000 Palestinian lives.

"If someone intends, God forbid, to curb the (operation) before Hamas has been defeated and all the abductees have been returned - let them take into account that Otzma Yehudit is not with them," Gvir said on social media. "The idea of ​​reducing operations in Gaza is the war management failure of the reduced cabinet. It must be disbanded immediately."

Contributing: The Associated Press

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Israel Hamas war live updates: Vast tunnels uncovered under Gaza