Gaza, Hamas and Israel
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Murky brown floodwaters have swept away tents and drenched possessions and food since a winter storm swept in, adding to the already desperate humanitarian crisis.
Trump administration officials want to recruit around 10,000 troops under a U.S. general to stabilize postwar Gaza, officials say, but some governments are reluctant to commit to a mission that could expand to disarming Hamas.
Heavy rains inundated the Gaza coastline, flooding tents, collapsing buildings and killing more than a dozen people, including an infant.
Local officials said they were unable to cope with the storm because of fuel shortages and damage to equipment.
The next steps for the president’s 20-point Gaza peace plan have been mired in uncertainty and a lack of detail, but that may be set to change. Here’s what to know.
President Donald Trump’s Gaza ceasefire plan is set to enter a new phase within weeks, but crucial pieces of the agreement remain undefined as Israel tightens its military grip on the battered enclave.
EXCLUSIVE: United States Ambassador to the United Nations Michael Waltz recently returned from a Middle East swing, touting the "amazing progress" in the implementation of President Donald Trump’s Israel–Gaza peace deal.
The World Health Organization says Israel’s bombardment in Gaza for the past two years has left tens of thousands of Palestinians with life-changing injuries, including at least 6,000 people with amputations.
A cease-fire after two years of war with Israel has allowed Hamas to tighten its grip on power again. “It’s still standing,” one Israeli official said.
Aid deliveries into Gaza are falling short of the amount agreed upon in the U.S.-brokered ceasefire. That's according to an Associated Press analysis.
Severe weather conditions over the past 72 hours in Gaza have left 14 people dead, including three children, the director general of the Gaza-based Health Ministry Munir Al-Boursh told CNN.