Trump Says Ceasefire Holds as Israel Pounds Gaza in Retaliatory Strikes
Donald Trump insists the US-backed ceasefire will hold despite ongoing Israeli airstrikes and militant attacks, with at least 70 Gaza civilians killed in recent strikes, officials said.
- President Donald Trump aboard Air Force One said `Nothing is going to jeopardize` the ceasefire after it went into effect on October 10.
- Mutual accusations have followed the truce, with both sides claiming violations since it took effect, and Hamas denies responsibility for the Rafah strike, remaining committed to peace.
- An Israeli military confirmation came on Wednesday that a soldier died, and President Donald Trump said aboard Air Force One `As I understand it, they took out an Israeli soldier`.
- Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ordered immediate 'powerful attacks,' and Israel faces a case at the International Court of Justice, The Hague, while Turkey urged pressure over alleged truce violations.
- Hamas denied responsibility for the Rafah attack and said it remained committed to the ceasefire deal, while Israel strongly denies genocide accusations and defends its actions as self-defence.
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34 Articles
After an attack on soldiers, Israel attacks the Gaza Strip, killing more than a hundred people. The U.S. government is unconcerned.
While smoke still hangs over the ruins, Israel says it is once again honoring the ceasefire. In a single night, according to health authorities in the enclave, the Israeli air force killed more than a hundred Palestinians, including dozens of children. President Trump called the strikes "fully justified" and assured that "nothing will jeopardize the ceasefire." Since the ceasefire took effect on October 10, dozens of Palestinians had already bee…
Is the ceasefire in Gaza really working?
Israel has said it is still committed to the ceasefire agreement with Hamas despite conducting a series of air strikes in Gaza overnight that reportedly killed more than 100 people.Both sides have accused each other of violating the US-brokered deal, with Israel claiming yesterday’s strikes were in response to the killing of an Israeli soldier last week and for Hamas’ failure to hand over the remains of all dead hostages.As the fragile ceasefire…
Although Israel has launched attacks on Gaza for the third time since the ceasefire, it will not (re)emerge in full-scale war, according to Inge Vrancken and Koert Debeuf, both experts on the Middle East. "This is a ceasefire Israel didn't want, but Trump has made it clear that US support will cease if the country resumes the war."
The Israeli Air Force has shot targets in the Gaza Strip just three weeks after the start of the ceasefire. According to local reports, more than 90 people were killed. Israel's government described this as a reaction to Hamas' attack, in which a soldier died. The terrorist organization ruling in Gaza rejected responsibility for this incident.
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