Israeli tanks, drones target last operational hospitals in Gaza

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Updated 20 January 2024
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Israeli tanks, drones target last operational hospitals in Gaza

  • Netanyahu and US at loggerheads after he rules out a sovereign Palestinian state

Israeli tanks and armed drones targeted two of Gaza’s few remaining operational hospitals on Friday as the number of Palestinian deaths from more than three months of war neared 25,000.

The Palestinian Red Crescent said displaced people were injured by intense gunfire from drones attacking civilians at Al-Amal Hospital in the southern city of Khan Younis.

Nearby in the same city, Israeli tanks converged on Gaza’s largest remaining functioning hospital, Nasser, where there was shellfire from the west and fierce gun battles to the south.
As the carnage continued, diplomats were dealing with the fallout after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu explicitly ruled out the creation of a sovereign independent Palestinian state, which is a long-standing pillar of US policy in the Middle East.
“Israel must have security control over the entire territory west of the Jordan River,” Netanyahu said. “It clashes with the principle of sovereignty, but what can you do?”
US State Department spokesman Matthew Miller responded that that the establishment of a Palestinian state was the only way to provide lasting security to Israel itself, along with reconstruction, governance and security for Gaza.
The White House said later that Netanyahu and President Joe Biden had discussed developments in Israel and Gaza in a phone call. Israel says it will fight on until Hamas is eradicated, an aim Palestinians call unachievable because of the group’s structure and deep roots in an enclave it has run since 2007.

Inside Gaza, the Health Ministry said 142 Palestinians had been killed and 278 injured in the past 24 hours, taking the death toll to 24,762. The World Health Organization said most of the enclave's 36 hospitals hadstopped working; 15 were partially functioning, at up to three times their capacity and without adequate fuel or medical supplies.

In the north, where Israel says it has started pulling out troops and shifting to smaller scale operations, 12 people were killed in airstrikes on a residential building near the largely non-functioning Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City. An Israeli strike on a house in Al-Nusseirat refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip killed five Palestinians.
 


Syrian military tells civilians to evacuate contested area east of Aleppo amid rising tensions

Updated 15 January 2026
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Syrian military tells civilians to evacuate contested area east of Aleppo amid rising tensions

  • Syria’s military has announced it will open a “humanitarian corridor” for civilians to evacuate from an area in Aleppo province
  • This follows several days of intense clashes between government forces and the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces

DAMASCUS: Syria’s military said it would open a corridor Thursday for civilians to evacuate an area of Aleppo province that has seen a military buildup following intense clashes between government and Kurdish-led forces in Aleppo city.
The army’s announcement late Wednesday — which said civilians would be able to evacuate through the “humanitarian corridor” from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Thursday — appeared to signal plans for an offensive in the towns of Deir Hafer and Maskana and surrounding areas, about 60 kilometers (40 miles) east of Aleppo city.
The military called on the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces and other armed groups to withdraw to the other side of the the Euphrates River, to the east of the contested zone.
Syrian government troops have already sent troop reinforcements to the area after accusing the SDF of building up its own forces there, which the SDF denied. There have been limited exchanges of fire between the two sides, and the SDF has said that Turkish drones carried out strikes there.
The government has accused the SDF of launching drone strikes in Aleppo city, including one that hit the Aleppo governorate building on Saturday shortly after two Cabinet ministers and a local official held a news conference there.
The tensions in the Deir Hafer area come after several days of intense clashes last week in Aleppo city that ended with the evacuation of Kurdish fighters and government forces taking control of three contested neighborhoods. The fighting killed at least 23 people, wounded dozens more, and displaced tens of thousands.
The fighting broke out as negotiations have stalled between Damascus and the SDF, which controls large swaths of northeast Syria, over an agreement to integrate their forces and for the central government to take control of institutions including border crossings and oil fields in the northeast.
Some of the factions that make up the new Syrian army, which was formed after the fall of former President Bashar Assad in a rebel offensive in December 2024, were previously Turkiye-backed insurgent groups that have a long history of clashing with Kurdish forces.
The SDF for years has been the main US partner in Syria in fighting against the Daesh group, but Turkiye considers the SDF a terrorist organization because of its association with the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, or PKK, which has waged a long-running insurgency in Turkiye. A peace process is now underway.
Despite the long-running US support for the SDF, the Trump administration has also developed close ties with the government of interim Syrian President Ahmad Al-Sharaa and has pushed the Kurds to implement the integration deal. Washington has so far avoided publicly taking sides in the clashes in Aleppo.
The SDF in a statement warned of “dangerous repercussions on civilians, infrastructure, and vital facilities” in case of a further escalation and said Damascus bears “full responsibility for this escalation and all ensuing humanitarian and security repercussions in the region.”
Adm. Brad Cooper, commander of US Central Command, said in a statement Tuesday that the US is “closely monitoring” the situation and called for “all parties to exercise maximum restraint, avoid actions that could further escalate tensions, and prioritize the protection of civilians and critical infrastructure.” He called on the parties to “return to the negotiating table in good faith.”
Al-Sharaa blasts the SDF
In a televised interview aired Wednesday, Al-Sharaa praised the “courage of the Kurds” and said he would guarantee their rights and wants them to be part of the Syrian army, but he lashed out at the SDF.
He accused the group of not abiding by an agreement reached last year under which their forces were supposed to withdraw from neighborhoods they controlled in Aleppo city and of forcibly preventing civilians from leaving when the army opened a corridor for them to evacuate amid the recent clashes.
Al-Sharaa claimed that the SDF refused attempts by France and the US to mediate a ceasefire and withdrawal of Kurdish forces during the clashes due to an order from the PKK.
The interview was initially intended to air Tuesday on Shams TV, a broadcaster based in Irbil — the seat of northern Iraq’s semi-autonomous Kurdish region — but was canceled for what the station initially said were technical reasons.
Later the station’s manager said that the interview had been spiked out of fear of further inflaming tensions because of the hard line Al-Sharaa took against the SDF.
Syria’s state TV station instead aired clips from the interview on Wednesday. There was no immediate response from the SDF to Al-Sharaa’s comments.