Tag Archives: Benjamin Neta​nyahu

Opponents say Netanyahu’s decision to arm “clans in Gaza” to help fight Hamas will come back to haunt Israel

Former Israeli Defense Minister and opposition lawmaker Avigdor Liberman on Thursday accused Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of authorizing weapons transfers to a criminal gang in Gaza that he likened to the ISIS terrorist group. Netanyahu appeared later in the day to confirm the operation, suggesting it would save the lives of Israeli forces battling Hamas in the Palestinian territory.

“They are receiving weapons from the state of Israel. It’s a total madness,” Liberman said in a radio interview. “It’s unclear to me who approved it.”

Liberman said the head of Israel’s primary domestic intelligence agency Shin Bet was aware of the weapons transfers, “but I’m not sure the [Israel Defense Forces] knows. We’re talking about the equivalent of ISIS in Gaza. No one can guarantee that these weapons will not be directed at Israel. We have no way of monitoring or following.”

Liberman appeared to be referring to a militia called the Popular Forces of Palestine, led by Yasser Abu Shabab. The group is opposed to Hamas, the Israeli- and U.S.-designated terrorist group Israel has been at war with for more than a year and a half. 

Popular Forces is believed to be a relatively small armed group based in the southern Gaza city of Rafah. It has been accused of looting trucks trying to deliver aid to Gaza’s starving population, which its leader reportedly denied.

There have been reports that Shabab, the group’s leader, was previously jailed by Hamas for smuggling drugs, as well as reports that his brother was killed by Hamas when the group cracked down on attacks on U.N. aid convoys

Late on Thursday, Netanyahu acknowledged that, “on the advice of security officials, we activated clans in Gaza that oppose Hamas. What’s wrong with that? It’s only good. It only saves the lives of IDF soldiers.”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu gives a news conference in Jerusalem, May 21, 2025.

RONEN ZVULUN/POOL/AFP/Getty


Abu Shabab denied receiving weapons from Israel in a statement posted on social media.

“We categorically reject these accusations and consider them a blatant attempt to distort the image of a grassroots force born from suffering — one that stood up to injustice, looting, and corruption,” the group said. “This desperate attempt to link us to the occupation is, in reality, an implicit admission that we have become a powerful and influential force.”

Hamas orchestrated and led the Oct. 7, 2023 terror attack on southern Israel that began the war in Gaza. It said, following Netanyahu’s remarks, that “every individual involved in these mercenary gangs [Israel has allegedly been supporting] is considered by us to be an Israeli soldier. We will deal with them with full force.”

Israeli opposition leader Yair Lapid responded to the claim that Israel is arming Abu Shabab with a warning that it could see a repeat of a grim history for the country.

For decades, including multiple terms in office for Netanyahu, Israel allowed Hamas to grow and entrench its control in Gaza, with millions of dollars in support from the Arab would pouring in. It was seen as a cynical bid to prevent a unified Palestinian leadership from taking hold in Gaza and the much larger territory of the West Bank.

“After Netanyahu finished giving millions of dollars to Hamas, he moved on to giving weapons to organizations close to ISIS in Gaza, all off the cuff, all without strategic planning, all leading to more disasters,” Lapid said on social media.

“Weapons that enter Gaza will eventually be turned against IDF soldiers and Israeli citizens,” he said.

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Dozens reportedly killed near Gaza Humanitarian Foundation hub in 3rd consecutive day of violence

At least 27 Palestinians were fatally shot and 161 others wounded on Tuesday as they tried to reach a food distribution center in Gaza run by a controversial U.S.-backed group, according to the Hamas-run Gaza Ministry of Health. It was the third day of deadly violence reported near a humanitarian hub run by the U.S.- and Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), a private organization accused by the United Nations of weaponizing aid.

“We were shocked by the numbers of injuries. A horrific number,” one ambulance driver said as the wounded were rushed to the Nasser Hospital in the southern Gaza city of Khan Younis. “All the injuries were directly to the head and chest. Many of them young people who went to get aid from the American foundation.”

Little information has been made public about GHF’s operations. CBS News has been told by one source that it has employed at least 300 American contractors, all heavily armed, who have been given “as much ammunition as they can carry.”

Mourners stand near the bodies of Palestinians killed by what the Hamas-run Gaza Health Ministry said was Israeli fire near an aid distribution site in Rafah, at Nasser hospital in Khan Younis, in the southern Gaza Strip, June 3, 2025.

Hatem Khaled/REUTERS


GHF said Tuesday that its operations continued without disruption at its four hubs in Gaza, though it acknowledged reports of violence, which it said took place, “well beyond our secure distribution site and operations area.”

In a statement, the Israeli military, which has taken control of an increasing portion of Gaza in recent weeks, said its troops had fired warning shots near the aid hub on Tuesday morning, and that it was aware of reports of casualties and was looking into them.

“During the movement of the crowd along the designated routes toward the aid distribution site — approximately half a kilometer [0.3 miles] from the site — IDF troops identified several suspects moving toward them, deviating from the designated access routes,” the Israel Defense Forces said in a statement. “The troops carried out warning fire, and after the suspects failed to retreat, additional shots were directed near a few individual suspects who advanced toward the troops.”

The IDF said it “allows the American Civil Organization (GHF) to operate independently in order to enable the distribution of aid to the Gazan residents — and not to Hamas. IDF troops are not preventing the arrival of Gazan civilians to the humanitarian aid distribution sites.”

GHF said in a statement on Tuesday that it had distributed a total of more than 7 million meals since it started operations about a week ago, and that “aid distribution was conducted safely and without incident at our site today.”

“We understand that IDF is investigating whether a number of civilians were injured after moving beyond the designated safe corridor and into a closed military zone. This was an area well beyond our secure distribution site and operations area. We recognize the difficult nature of the situation and advise all civilians to remain in the safe corridor when traveling to our distribution sites.”

Palestinians wait to receive food aid from a hub set up in Gaza by the U.S.-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation.

Among those killed this week was Reem Akhras, a mother of eight who was shot on her way to retrieve an aid parcel from a GHF hub, her family said. A CBS News team in Gaza attended her funeral Tuesday morning.

“You went to get us food, Mom,” Akhras’ young daughter cried, sobbing over her body. “We will never forgive them, Mom. Not in this life or the next.”

Volker Türk, the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, called the situation in Gaza “unconscionable” and demanded a “prompt and impartial investigation” into the deaths around the GHF hubs.

“Palestinians have been presented the grimmest of choices: die from starvation or risk being killed while trying to access the meagre food that is being made available through Israel’s militarized humanitarian assistance mechanism,” Türk said in a statement Tuesday. “This militarized system endangers lives and violates international standards on aid distribution, as the United Nations has repeatedly warned.”

“The wilful impediment of access to food and other life-sustaining relief supplies for civilians may constitute a war crime,” Türk said. “The threat of starvation, together with 20 months of killing of civilians and destruction on a massive scale, repeated forced displacements, intolerable, dehumanizing rhetoric and threats by Israel’s leadership to empty the Strip of its population, also constitute elements of the most serious crimes under international law.”

contributed to this report.

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Steve Witkoff Criticizes Hamas Response to Hostage Deal Proposal

U.S. Special Envoy to the Middle East Steve Witkoff criticized Hamas for its response to a proposed hostage and ceasefire deal, calling the response “totally unacceptable.”

In a post on X, Witkoff stated that Hamas “should accept the framework proposal” that was put forward, adding that it was “the only way” to “close a 60-day ceasefire day” in the next few days.

“I received the Hamas response to the United States’ proposal,” Witkoff said. “It is totally unacceptable and only takes us backward. Hamas should accept the framework proposal we put forward as the basis for proximity talks, which we can begin immediately this coming week.”

Witkoff continued:

That is the only way we can close a 60-day ceasefire deal in the coming days in which half of the living hostages and half of those who are deceased will come home to their families and in which we can have at the proximity talks substantive negotiations in good-faith to try to reach a permanent ceasefire.

Hamas’s response comes after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu accepted the controversial proposed hostage and ceasefire deal, while Hamas had reportedly criticized it.

Breitbart News previously reported that the ceasefire proposal deal “calls for the release of 10 living hostages — roughly half of those remaining — as well as the bodies of 18 dead Israeli hostages.”

Witkoff’s ceasefire proposal calls for the release of 10 living hostages — roughly half of those remaining — as well as the bodies of 18 dead Israeli hostages, in exchange for a 60-day ceasefire, 125 convicted Palestinian terrorists serving life sentences, 1, 111 Gaza residents detained during the present conflict, and the resumption of humanitarian aid through the United Nations, i.e. not the new Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF).

In Hamas’s response to Witkoff’s proposed hostage and ceasefire deal, Hamas requested that the “sequence and the timetable for the release of the 10 live hostages and the bodies of the 18 dead hostages” be changed, and also requested that the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) “fully withdraw to the lines it was positioned before the previous ceasefire collapsed in March,” Axios reported.

Hamas’s response was sent through Bishara Bahbah, a Palestinian-American businessman, as well as to mediators in Egypt and Qatar, according to the outlet.



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Iran has increased its stockpile of near weapons-grade uranium, nuclear watchdog says

Iran has further increased its stockpile of uranium enriched to near weapons-grade levels, a confidential report by the United Nations nuclear watchdog said Saturday, and called on Tehran to urgently change course and comply with the agency’s probe.

The report comes at a sensitive time as Tehran and Washington have been holding several rounds of talks in the past weeks over a possible nuclear deal that U.S. President Donald Trump is trying to reach.

The report by the Vienna-based International Atomic Energy Agency — which was seen by The Associated Press — says that as of May 17, Iran has amassed 900.8 pounds of uranium enriched up to 60%.

That’s an increase of 294.9 pounds — or almost 50% — since the IAEA’s last report in February. The 60% enriched material is a short, technical step away from weapons-grade levels of 90%. A report in February put this stockpile level at 605.8 pounds.

There was no immediate comment from Tehran on the new IAEA report.

The IAEA report raised a stern warning, saying that Iran is now “the only non-nuclear-weapon state to produce such material” — something the agency said was of “serious concern.”

Rafael Mariano Grossi, the director-general of the International Atomic Energy Agency, speaks to journalists attending a weeklong seminar at the agency in Vienna, Austria, Wednesday, May 28, 2025.

Jon Gambrell / AP


Approximately 92.5 pounds of 60% enriched uranium is theoretically enough to produce one atomic bomb, if enriched further to 90%, according to the watchdog.

The IAEA report, a quarterly, also estimated that as of May 17, Iran’s overall stockpile of enriched uranium — which includes uranium enriched to lower levels — stood at 20,387.4 pounds. That’s an increase of 2,101.4 pounds since February’s report.

Iran’s nuclear program

Iran has maintained its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes only, but the IAEA chief, Rafael Mariano Grossi, has warned that Tehran has enough uranium enriched to near-weapons-grade levels to make “several” nuclear bombs if it chose to do so.

Iranian officials have increasingly suggested that Tehran could pursue an atomic bomb.

U.S. intelligence agencies assess that Iran has yet to begin a weapons program, but has “undertaken activities that better position it to produce a nuclear device, if it chooses to do so.”

Israel said Saturday’s report was a clear warning sign that “Iran is totally determined to complete its nuclear weapons program,” according to a statement from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office.

It said IAEA’s report “strongly reinforces what Israel has been saying for years — the purpose of Iran’s nuclear program is not peaceful.”

It also added that Iran’s level of enrichment “has no civilian justification whatsoever” and appealed on the international community to “act now to stop Iran.”



A look at the state of Iran’s nuclear program amid talks with U.S.

03:07

It is rare for Netanyahu to make statements on Saturday, the Jewish day of rest, underlying the urgency with which he sees the matter.

Grossi said Saturday that he “reiterates his urgent call upon Iran to cooperate fully and effectively” with the IAEA’s years-long investigation into uranium traces discovered at several sites in Iran.

The IAEA also circulated to member states on Saturday a second, 22-page confidential report, also seen by the AP, that Grossi requested following a resolution passed by the 35-member IAEA Board of Governors last November.

In this so-called “comprehensive report,” the IAEA said that Iran’s cooperation with the agency has “been less than satisfactory” when it comes to uranium traces discovered by IAEA inspectors at several locations in Iran that Tehran has failed to declare as nuclear sites.

Western officials suspect that the uranium traces discovered by the IAEA could provide evidence that Iran had a secret military nuclear program until 2003.

One of the sites became known publicly in 2018 after Netanyahu revealed it at the United Nations and called it a clandestine nuclear warehouse hidden at a rug-cleaning plant.

Iran denied this but in 2019 IAEA inspectors detected the presence of manmade uranium particles there.

After initially blocking IAEA access, inspectors were able to collect samples in 2020 from two other locations where they also detected the presence of manmade uranium particles.

The three locations became known as Turquzabad, Varamin, and Marivan. A fourth undeclared location named as Lavisan-Shian is also part of the IAEA probe but IAEA inspectors never visited the site because it was razed and demolished by Iran after 2003.

In Saturday’s comprehensive report, the IAEA says that the “lack of answers and clarifications provided by Iran” to questions the watchdog had regarding Lavisan-Shian, Varamin and Marivan “has led the agency to conclude that these three locations, and other possible related locations, were part of an undeclared structured nuclear program carried out by Iran until the early 2000s and that some activities used undeclared nuclear material.”

FILE – The flag of the International Atomic Energy Agency flies in front of its headquarters during an IAEA Board of Governors meeting in Vienna, Austria, on Feb. 6, 2023.

Heinz-Peter Bader / AP


How the world could react to U.N. report

Saturday’s comprehensive report could be a basis for possible further steps by European nations, leading to a potential escalation in tensions between Iran and the West.

European countries could move to trigger snap-back sanctions against Iran that were lifted under the original 2015 nuclear deal ahead of October, when the deal formally expires.

On Thursday, senior Iranian officials dismissed speculation about an imminent nuclear deal with the United States, emphasizing that any agreement must fully lift sanctions and allow the country’s nuclear program to continue.

The comments came a day after Trump said he has told Netanyahu to hold off on striking Iran to give the U.S. administration more time to push for a new deal with Tehran.

Trump said on Friday that he still thinks a deal could be completed in the “not too distant future.”

“They don’t want to be blown up. They would rather make a deal,” Trump said of Iran. He added, “That would be a great thing that we could have a deal without bombs being dropped all over the Middle East.”

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Israeli PM Netanyahu Says Hamas Leader Sinwar Has Been Killed

(UPI) — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced Wednesday that Hamas’ Gaza chief Mohammed Sinwar has been killed by the Israel Defense Forces.

In a speech delivered in the Knesset, Israel’s parliament, Netanyahu declared that “We eliminated [Mohammad] Deif, [Ismail] Haniyeh, Yahya Sinwar and Mohammed Sinwar.”

Mohammed Sinwar was the younger brother of Yahya Sinwar, the one-time leader of Hamas who was killed in Rafah in October 2024. Deif Sinwar, also once a top Hamas leader, was killed in July 2024 in an IDF strike in Gaza, as was Haniyeh, who was assassinated in Tehran, Iran, two weeks later.

Mohammed Sinwar was one of Israel’s top targets after he took over for his brother, who was the mastermind behind the Hamas Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel that left more than 1,200 Israelis dead and started the war between Hamas and Israel that has lasted for nearly 600 days.

Netanyahu made the claim of Sinwar’s death after the IDF stated it had struck several military targets across the Gaza Strip over the past 48 hours.

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Israel says it killed Hamas leader as desperation grows in Gaza



Israel says it killed Hamas leader as desperation grows in Gaza – CBS News










































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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that the de facto leader of Hamas, Mohammed Sinwar, was killed in an Israeli airstrike near the entrance of Gaza’s European hospital earlier this month. It comes amid growing desperation in Gaza. Elizabeth Palmer reports.

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Israeli strikes kill dozens in Gaza as controversy and concern grow over humanitarian aid

Israeli strikes killed at least 52 people in the Gaza Strip on Monday, including some 36 in a school-turned-shelter that was struck as people slept, igniting their belongings, according to local health officials. The military said it targeted militants operating from the school.

Israel renewed its offensive in March after ending a ceasefire with Hamas. It has vowed to seize control of Gaza and keep fighting until Hamas is destroyed or disarmed, and until it returns the remaining 58 hostages, a third of them believed to be alive, from the Oct. 7, 2023, attack that ignited the war.

The strike on the school in the Daraj neighborhood of Gaza City also wounded more than 55 people, said Fahmy Awad, head of the Hamas-run Gaza Health Ministry’s emergency service. He said a father and his five children were among the dead. He said the school was hit three times while people slept, setting their belongings ablaze.  

Palestinians comb the area following an Israeli airstrike at dawn on a school in the al-Daraj neighborhood of Gaza City that killed at least 31 people on May 26, 2025.

Dawoud Abo Alkas / Anadolu via Getty Images


The Israeli military said it had targeted a militant command and control center inside the school that Hamas and Islamic Jihad used to gather intelligence for attacks. Israel blames civilian deaths on Hamas because it operates in residential areas, adding that “numerous steps were taken to mitigate the risk of harming civilians,” according to French news agency AFP.

Israel says it plans to seize full control of Gaza and facilitate what it describes as the voluntary migration of its over 2 million inhabitants, a plan that has been rejected by Palestinians and much of the international community.

Israel’s military campaign has destroyed vast areas of Gaza and internally displaced some 90% of its population. Many have fled multiple times.

Hamas-led militants killed some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and abducted 251 people in the 2023 terrorist attack. More than half the hostages have been returned in ceasefire agreements or other deals, eight have been rescued, and Israeli forces have recovered the remains of dozens more.

The offensive has destroyed vast areas of Gaza, rendering entire neighborhoods uninhabitable. Hundreds of thousands of people have been forced to shelter in schools and squalid tent camps for well over a year.

Israel’s retaliatory offensive has killed around 54,000 Palestinians, according to the Hamas-run Gaza Ministry of Health. It says more than half the dead are women and children but does not distinguish between civilians and combatants in its count.

Growing concern over food shortages in Gaza

Israel began allowing some humanitarian aid into Gaza last week after blocking all food, medicine, fuel or other goods from entering for 2-1/2 months. But aid groups say the supplies that have come in are nowhere near enough to meet the mounting needs of the enclave’s residents.

U.N. World Food Program Executive Director Cindy McCain said Sunday on the CBS News’ “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan” that the number of aid trucks allowed to enter Gaza last week was only a “drop in the bucket” compared to what’s needed to stave off potential famine in the Palestinian territory.

A new aid system, supported by Israel and the United States but rejected by U.N. agencies and other aid groups, is expected to begin operations as soon as Monday, despite the resignation of the American who was supposed to lead the effort, who said it would not be able to operate independently.

Israel plans to roll out the new aid distribution system, run by a group known as the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation and made up of former humanitarian, government and military officials, to set up distribution points guarded by private security firms. Israel has long accused Hamas of siphoning off aid supplies brought into Gaza, without providing evidence.

Palestinians, struggling with hunger due to an Israeli blockade, wait in line to receive hot meals distributed by charity organizations in Jabalia Refugee Camp, in Gaza City, Gaza, May 17, 2025.

Mahmoud ssa/Anadolu/Getty


The foundation said in a statement that it would begin delivering aid Monday and would reach a million Palestinians — around half of Gaza’s population — by the end of the week.

U.N. agencies and major aid groups have refused to cooperate with the planned U.S.-backed system, saying it would force even more displacement, fail to meet local needs and violate humanitarian principles that prohibit a warring party from controlling humanitarian assistance. They also say there is no evidence of systematic diversion of aid by Hamas or other armed groups.

Jake Wood, the American heading the foundation, unexpectedly resigned Sunday, saying it had become clear that the foundation would not be allowed to operate independently. It’s not clear who is funding the group. The foundation said in a statement Monday that it would “not be deterred” by Wood’s resignation and would begin its delivery as planned.

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9 young siblings killed in Israeli airstrike in Gaza



9 young siblings killed in Israeli airstrike in Gaza – CBS News










































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Israel has carried out a slew of airstrikes across Gaza over the past day, including one strike that killed nine of 10 siblings, all age 12 and younger. The parents of the victims are both doctors at Gaza’s Nasser Hospital, where the father and the couple’s only surviving child, who were both wounded in the strike, are now hospitalized. Haley Ott reports.

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India Rapidly Condemns Antisemitic D.C. Slaughter as Relationship with Israel Grows Closer

Indian Foreign Minister S Jaishankar on Thursday condemned the murder of two young Israeli diplomats in Washington, DC, “in the strongest terms” and said that “the perpetrators must be brought to justice.”

“Our thoughts and prayers are with their families and colleagues,” Jaishankar said.

“Thank you, dear friend!” Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar replied via social media.

The Indian and Israeli foreign ministers were discussing Wednesday night’s killing of Yaron Lischinsky, 30, and Sarah Lynn Milgrim, 26, reportedly by a 30-year-old left-wing pro-Hamas activist named Elias Rodriguez.

Lischinsky and Milgrim, a couple on the verge of becoming engaged, were both employed by the Israeli Embassy in Washington. Lischinsky, a Christian with dual Israeli and German citizenship, had been working as a research assistant at the embassy for several years. Milgrim was Jewish. She grew up in Kansas and joined the Israeli Embassy in D.C. in November 2023.

A man identified as Rodriguez, a resident of Chicago, was spotted lurking outside the Capital Jewish Museum before opening fire on a small group of people who emerged from a reception for young diplomats held inside. Lischinsky and Milgrim were hit by the volley of bullets at close range and killed.

Rodriguez reportedly entered the Capital Jewish Museum to be taken into custody, chanting “Free, free Palestine” and dropping a keffiyeh, the scarf that has come to be associated with Palestinian terrorism. The FBI is investigating his ties with far-left and pro-Palestinian groups. He was charged with two counts of first-degree murder on Thursday.

Israel and India have been developing a close friendship in recent years, including a military partnership. When India responded to a horrific attack by Pakistan-based terrorists this month, Israeli-made Harop “kamikaze drones” were prominent among the weapons they used. India is also a devoted customer for Israeli radar systems and precision-guided weapons.

The perpetrators of the attack, identified by India as an Islamist gang called Lashkar-e-Taiba, reportedly quizzed their victims by asking them questions about Muslim religious writings, and shot them dead when they could not answer correctly. One Muslim civilian was killed in the attack, a heroic pony-ride operator who attempted to subdue one of the heavily armed terrorists.

Israel strongly supported India’s response to the Kashmir atrocity. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he was “deeply saddened” by the “barbaric terrorist attack” on the Kashmir tourist haven of Pahalgam, and supported India’s right to respond.

“Our thoughts and prayers are with the victims and their families. Israel stands with India in its fight against terrorism,” Netanyahu said.

Pakistani officials were enraged by the alliance between Israel and India, denouncing their friendship as an “axis of occupation” and comparing India’s presence in the disputed Kashmir province to Israel’s “occupation” of the Palestinians.

Indian Foreign Ministry spokesman Randhir Jaiswal on Thursday called the Washington, DC, terror attack “deeply shocking.”

“Those responsible for this heinous act must be brought to justice. Safety and security of diplomatic staff is paramount,” he said.

The Hindustan Times reported India is planning to ask U.S. officials for more security for its diplomats and embassy in Washington. A high-level Indian delegation is scheduled to visit Washington in June, and the Indian Foreign Ministry is said to be concerned about threats to their safety by Khalistani separatists.

“The security of our diplomats is a sensitive matter. We are having a close look at the issue after what happened to the two Israeli embassy officials,” said one of the Hindustan Times’ sources.



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Pope Leo XIV calls for end of Israel-Hamas war in Gaza and

Pope Leo XIV called Wednesday for sufficient humanitarian aid to be allowed into war-ravaged Gaza, where humanitarian agencies say a total blockade has sparked critical food and medicine shortages. Israel has, under massive pressure from the U.S. and other allies, started to allow more aid into Gaza this week, but it has not eased its military operations, and aid agencies say the amount of humanitarian goods entering the strip is nowhere near enough to meet the urgent needs of a battered civilian population.

The United Nations announced Monday that it had been cleared to send in aid for the first time since Israel imposed a total blockade on March 2, sparking severe shortages of food and medicine.

“The situation in the Gaza Strip is worrying and painful,” the pope said during his first weekly general audience in St. Peter’s Square. “I renew my heartfelt appeal to allow the entry of sufficient humanitarian aid and to put an end to the hostilities, the heartbreaking price of which is paid by children, the elderly, the sick.”

Leo, who was elected on May 8 to be the Catholic Church’s first U.S. pope, has made peace an early theme of his papacy, calling for a ceasefire in the Israel-Hamas war.

Pope Leo XIV blesses the crowd at the end of his first weekly general audience at St. Peter’s Square, at the Vatican, May 21, 2025.

FILIPPO MONTEFORTE/AFP/Getty


The Israeli army has stepped up its offensive in Gaza in recent days, with the enclave’s Hamas-run Ministry of Health saying some 600 people have been killed over the last week alone. Israel says both the restrictions on aid and the stepped-up military campaign are aimed at pressuring Hamas — long designated as a terrorist group by the U.S. and Israel — to release the remaining 58 hostages held in Gaza and to accept a ceasefire on Israeli terms.

Israel has vowed to carry on with its war until the hostages, about 20 of whom are believed to be alive, are free, Hamas is defeated and disarmed and its leaders are sent into exile. The war was sparked by the Hamas-led, Oct. 7, 2023, terrorist attack on Israel, which killed some 1,200 people and saw 251 taken as hostages into Gaza.

The health ministry, which does not differentiate between combatant and civilian casualties, says more than 53,500 Palestinians have been killed in Israel’s retaliatory war, many of them women and children.

Charity calls Israeli easing of Gaza blockade “a smokescreen”

The amount of aid Israel has started to allow into war-ravaged Gaza is not nearly enough and is “a smokescreen to pretend the siege is over,” the MSF aid group said Wednesday.

“The Israeli authorities’ decision to allow a ridiculously inadequate amount of aid into Gaza after months of an air-tight siege signals their intention to avoid the accusation of starving people in Gaza, while in fact keeping them barely surviving,” said Pascale Coissard, Medecins Sans Frontieres (Doctors Without Borders) emergency coordinator in the southern Gaza city of Khan Younis. “The current authorization for 100 [trucks] per day, when the situation is so dire, is woefully inadequate.”

“Meanwhile, evacuation orders are continuing to uproot the population, while Israeli forces are still subjecting health facilities to intensive attacks,” Coissard said.

Palestinians, struggling with hunger due to an Israeli blockade, wait in line to receive hot meals distributed by charity organizations in Jabalia Refugee Camp, in Gaza City, Gaza, May 17, 2025.

Mahmoud ssa/Anadolu/Getty


Israel said 93 trucks had entered Gaza from Israel on Tuesday, but the United Nations said the aid had been held up.

Asked Tuesday about Israel’s latest moves, U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio told reporters in Washington that the Trump administration had been “pleased to see that aid is starting to flow in again.’

“I understand your point that it’s not in sufficient amounts,” he told a journalist. “But we were pleased to see that decision was made. I understand another 100 trucks are behind that and maybe more in the next few days.”

Rubio said the U.S. was working with the U.N.’s World Food Program “to walk through some of the ideas and plans they had for distribution” of aid inside Gaza, but he stressed that in the administration’s view, “ultimately the answer here is for this [war] to end, hopefully with the elimination of Hamas, because the people of Gaza deserve a more prosperous, peaceful future, which they will never have as long as Hamas exists.”

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