A pro-Palestinian protest organized to "flood Manhattan for Gaza" began Friday afternoon in Columbus Circle and ultimately ended hours later in the vicinity of the Grand Central Terminal in New York City.
During the protest, a pro-Palestinian demonstrator was arrested by NYPD officers after he climbed a street post to tear down flags representing the United States and the United Nations.
The Israel Defense Force's International spokesperson, Lt. Col. Richard Hecht, and an Operations Officer in the Givati Brigade, Maj. (Res.) Shay, provided a briefing on the evacuation of the Rantisi Hospital.
The IDF said hundreds of Hamas terrorists were seen over and underground, and troops arrived at the hospital "knowing that there were Hamas terrorists in it."
"We called civilians to leave [the] hospital for three days," Shay said. "We wanted to evacuate civilians and sick people. We realized civilians are held by Hamas there. We got close, surrounded hospital and opened a safe passage out of hospital. We saw terrorists in the crowds evacuating between the civilians. We had a dilemma – do we attack Hamas terrorists between the people? We decided not to use snipers and not shoot."
Shay added: "We did not want people to panic. We saw Hamas terrorists shooting at people to force them back into hospital. We decided not to act and we unfortunately let the terrorists leave with civilians – they used people as human shields. We let that happen in order not to hurt civilians. We identified in that spot at least 5 to 6 terrorists inside the crowds and others in the hospital, we saw them via the windows."
Hecht said, "We will continue to destroy all Hamas capabilities. We are doing our best to encourage civilians to evacuate these areas. Hospitals need to be evacuated in order for us to deal with Hamas. Shifa Hospital: we are seeing a presence of several thousands in the courtyard. We are pushing forward to increase the number of people leaving the hospital."
According to Shay, people left the hospital by foot, in ambulances and on wheelchairs.
President Biden will travel to San Francisco for a high-stakes meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping at the 30th annual Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit.
The showdown between the leaders of the world's two largest economies, who are on the opposite end of many issues, is likely to dominate the summit.
For Biden, it will be an opportunity to highlight some of the areas where cooperation is possible, while also issuing stern warnings on key U.S. national interests in the region. The Chinese president will likely assert China’s ability to influence global affairs and act as a mediator in some of the world's conflicts.
APEC is a coalition of nations with conflicting interests and values. It groups member economies and not nations and covers nearly 40% of the global population, about 62% of GDP and almost half of global trade, according to the State Department. Participants include Taiwan, an island territory that Beijing considers part of China, but the U.S. backs with military support.
This will be the first meeting between Biden and Xi since they met on the sidelines of the G-20 meeting in Bali in November 2022. Biden’s meeting with Xi comes after several high-level U.S. officials met with their Chinese counterparts to ease tensions after the spy balloon incident earlier this year.
The U.S. and China are fundamentally at odds on many issues, and there are low expectations the meeting will yield significant results.
"There is no need for President Biden to meet with Xi Jinping to talk about Ukraine and Israel next Wednesday," China expert Gordon Chang told Fox News Digital. "If Biden wants Beijing to stop supporting Russia’s war against Ukraine and Iran’s war on Israel, he needs to impose severe costs on China."
Fox News' Chris Massaro contributed to this report.
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The Israel Defense Forces released a recap of its activity over the last 24 hours as its war against Hamas terrorists continues.
The IDF says it neutralized terrorist cells, took control of 11 Hamas terrorist posts, neutralized a vehicle rigged with explosives, located and destroyed an underground terrorist tunnel route, struck Hamas weapons storage facilities and struck military targets inside the Al-Shati Camp.
More than 11,000 people have been killed in Gaza and Israel since Hamas launched its largest attack against Israel in decades on Oct. 7, prompting military response from Israeli forces. Thousands more have been wounded, and many others have been taken hostage by Hamas and raped, tortured and murdered.
Service at Grand Central Terminal in Manhattan was temporarily suspended on Friday after mobs of pro-Palestinian demonstrators flooded the streets of New York City to protest Israel's war in Gaza, creating chaos as some tried to break into the closed station.
The pro-Palestinian rally began at 5 p.m. Friday with over a thousand individuals marching through the streets. Some were seen tearing down posters of the hostages being held by Hamas terrorists and crumbling them up while other demonstrators burned an Israeli flag.
According to an Instagram post from pro-Palestinian organizations, Within Our Lifetime and the City University of New York for Palestine, the protest was to "flood Manhattan for Gaza."
"Gaza calls, we respond. Palestine will be free, because when we resist we win together. Cease genocide. Cease the siege. Cease the blockade. Cease occupation. Cease funding Israel. Cease settler colonization. Cease Zionism. Cease imperialism," the social media post read, in part.
In social media posts, the Palestinian Youth Movement and other groups called for people to walk out of their workplaces, schools and other activities to join the demonstration.
Video from the protest Friday night showed one protester climbing up a streetpost to tear down American flags and United Nations flags while hoards of protesters gathered and cheered at the base.
Fox News' Sarah Rumpf-Whitten contributed to this report.
The nation's top universities are ramping up their efforts to combat antisemitism after facing intense backlash in the wake of the unfolding war between Israel and Hamas.
Columbia University announced Friday it would suspend Students for Justice in Palestine and Jewish Voice for Peace from campus through the end of the fall term over alleged violations of the school's policies.
A statement from Columbia senior vice president Gerald Rosberg said the two pro-Palestinian groups held an "unauthorized event" on Thursday "that proceeded despite warnings" and "included threatening rhetoric and intimidation."
Brandeis University similarly announced Monday it was banning its SJP organization from holding campus activities.
Harvard President Claudine Gay released a statement Thursday condemning antisemitism and described the pro-Palestinian "From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free" rally cry as crossing the line.
"Our community must understand that phrases such as ‘from the river to the sea’ bear specific historical meanings that to a great many people imply the eradication of Jews from Israel and engender both pain and existential fears within our Jewish community. I condemn this phrase and any similarly hurtful phrases," Gay wrote.
Fox News' Joseph A. Wulfsohn contributed to this report.
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A pro-Palestinian demonstrator set an Israeli flag on fire and stomped on it during a protest Friday in New York City.
The incident occurred during a protest that began in Columbus Circle in Manhattan where hundreds of people turned out. The person who lit the flag has their face covered with a keffiyeh.
Onlookers cheered as the flag burned.
Organizers invited those in favor of a cease-fire between Israel and Hamas, and those who support freedom for Palestinians.
"Gaza calls, we respond," read an Instagram post by protest organizers. "Palestine will be free, because when we resist we win together. Ceasefire."
Demonstrators were leading chants like, "5,6,7,8, Israel is a terror state," FOX 5 reported.
At one point, Palestinian supporters confronted an Israel supporter, who began crying, the New York Post reported.
"Cry, b****! Cry!" a pro-Palestinian supporter said.
At Grand Central Station , rioters were seen kicking doors and breaking windows. The station eventually closed, the Metro-North Railroad said.
Fox News Digital's Louis Casiano contributed to this report.
A pro-Palestinian rally at The University of Maryland is under investigation by the school and Maryland law enforcement after students claimed the demonstration turned "antisemitic."
Students spoke out against a Students for Justice in Palestine rally held on campus, Thursday, accusing it of antisemitic messages. Witnesses of the event told a local outlet that messages like "Holocaust 2.0" were written in chalk on campus walkways near where the rally was held.
The event led one student to fear for her safety. "Now that I know what some people on this campus think, I don't feel as safe walking around. Especially alone and especially at night," the student told a CBS affiliate.
The pro-Palestinian group that put on the rally says its mission is to "work in solidarity with the Palestinian people's struggle for human rights." An Instagram post advertising the rally called on students to "Walk out and sit in at Hornbake Plaza in calling for a ceasefire and reiterating our demands to the University of Maryland administration!!!"
"Bring flags, kuffiyahs, and chalk!!" the post added.
It also implored students to "Stand on the right side of history AGAINST GENOCIDE #ceasefirenow."
University of Maryland staff acknowledged the "hateful" and "antisemitic" turn the rally took Thursday and declared that an investigation into the incident was underway.
In a public statement, school officials said, "We are aware of hateful, antisemitic sentiment expressed at today’s demonstration by Students for Justice in Palestine. We condemn it in no uncertain terms. The offensive actions of a few should not reflect on the vast majority of protesters who were there to peacefully express their views, but there is no place for any antisemitic message, behavior or action at the University of Maryland."
The statement also noted that Maryland police are on the case as well, adding, "The University of Maryland Police Department (UMPD) has launched an immediate investigation and continues to conduct real-time threat assessments. Responsible parties will be held accountable."
The Anti-Defamation League’s D.C. chapter and University of Maryland Jewish groups put out a joint statement Friday condemning the rally.
"We are deeply disturbed that students at University of Maryland were met yesterday with antisemitic graffiti that said, ‘Holocaust 2.0.’ This imagery is deeply troubling whether it was meant to trivialize the Holocaust or seen as a direct threat against Jewish students. Either way it is dangerous and unacceptable," they stated.
Students for Justice in Palestine is a far-left group which celebrated the Hamas terrorist attack as a "historic" victory for Palestinian resistance. Brandeis University said Monday it will no longer recognize Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) on its campus.
The school’s spokesperson Julie Jette told Fox News Digital, "National SJP has called on its chapters to engage in conduct that supports Hamas in its call for the elimination of the only Jewish state in the world and its people. Such expression is not protected by Brandeis' principles of free speech."
It was also suspended from campus on Friday by Columbia University.
Fox News Digital's Gabriel Hays contributed to this report.
Michael Ramirez, the political cartoonist whose work mocking Hamas was pulled by The Washington Post following internal and external backlash, is speaking out about the "unfortunate" episode restricting free speech.
The cartoon titled "Human shields" depicted the terrorist group's spokesperson saying, "How dare Israel attack civilians," while a frightened-looking woman and four small children remain bound with rope to his body.
"I think it's empirically true that Hamas uses civilians, both Palestinians and Israelis, as human shields," Ramirez told Fox News Digital in an interview Friday. "I don't think it's a hidden knowledge that they operate their bases in densely populated areas and under civilian infrastructure, including hospitals, they fire rockets from densely residential areas, and by design, to sacrifice the lives of the innocent people."
Ramirez, who is employed by the Las Vegas Review-Journal, has a collaborative agreement with the Washington Post so that his work simultaneously appears in both papers on Tuesdays and Saturdays.
While the paper ultimately retracted the anti-Hamas cartoon, the Review-Journal is standing behind it.
He predicted his cartoon would spark some sort of visceral reaction among some based on the current political climate but suggested those who claim to be advocating for innocent Palestinians "have a tendency to kind of erase the boundaries" when it comes to Hamas.
The conservative-leaning Ramirez shed light on his working relationship with Post opinions editor David Shipley, who handpicked the anti-Hamas cartoon after the cartoonist provided multiple options for him to choose from.
"In this case, we both thought that was a bold cartoon," Ramirez said.
It didn't take long for outrage on social media to mount but also within The Washington Post newsroom as the paper's executive editor Sally Buzbee wrote in an email Wednesday to staff acknowledging the "many deep concerns" that were made.
Left-wing critics accused the cartoon of being racist, pointing to the exaggerated features depicted in the cartoon of Hamas spokesman Ghazi Hamad. Ramirez rejected such claims, sending Fox News Digital examples of other political figures he has drawn including former President Trump, California Gov. Gavin Newsom, and Sen. John Fetterman, D-Penn., all having similar features.
But the pressure both internally and externally reached a boiling point as Shipley deleted the cartoon from the Post's website, replacing it with an apologetic editor's note and letters from readers condemning the illustration.
Fox News Digital's David Rutz and Joseph A. Wulfsohn contributed to this report.
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A Pro-Palestinian protester was seen lighting an Israeli flag on fire in New York City on Friday.
The incident happened during a protest that began in Columbus Circle in Manhattan.
An individual whose face was covered with a keffiyeh lit the Israeli flag on fire, then stomped on it.
Others in the crowd cheered the individual on while the flag was lit on fire.
French President Emmanuel Macron called for a cease-fire in Gaza in an interview with the BBC.
During the interview, Macron said he recognizes Israel's right to protect itself, but said "we do urge them to stop this bombing" in Gaza.
He also called on leaders in the U.S. and U.K. to join his calls for a cease-fire, stating "I hope they will."
"De facto - today, civilians are bombed - de facto. These babies, these ladies, these old people are bombed and killed. So there is no reason for that and no legitimacy. So we do urge Israel to stop," Macron said.
During a speech at the France Peace Forum on Friday, Macron said, speaking about Israel, "The challenges accumulate, often in these same countries who in the name of thinking of security because they have faced terrorism or regional instability. And, at the same time, the means aren't there."
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu responded by stating, "The responsibility for harming civilians lies with Hamas-ISIS and not with Israel."
"Let's recall that Israel entered the war because the terrorist organization brutally murdered hundreds of Israelis and kidnapped more than 200 Israelis. While Israel does everything to avoid harming civilians and calls on them to leave the combat zones - Hamas-ISIS does everything to prevent them from leaving safe areas and uses them as a human shield," Netanyahu said. "Hamas-ISIS brutally holds our hostages - women, children and the elderly - in a crime against humanity."
"World leaders must condemn Hamas-ISIS and not Israel," he said.
The son to a co-founder of Hamas was invited to a meeting of the United Nations Security Council by Israeli Ambassador Gilad Erdan.
Mosab Hassan Yousef sat behind the Israeli ambassador during the meeting on Friday afternoon.
During the meeting, Erdan blasted the United Nations for its actions taken against Israel during its war against Hamas.
"We are combatting a genocidal Nazi-like terror organization," Erdan said during the meeting.
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Pro-Palestinian rioters on Thursday spray painted "free Gaza" on an NYPD cruiser outside the New York Times building.
Windows on the police cruiser were also broken.
Hundreds of protesters were seen in Manhattan as the war between Israel and Hamas rages.
New York Times staffers were sent an email from their head of corporate security describing the protest as "peaceful," and noted "no entrances are blocked."
A group calling themselves the "Writers Block" walked into the Times building while carrying a banner calling for a cease-fire at around 5 p.m.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Conservative criticism is mounting against The Washington Post for pulling an anti-Hamas political cartoon after some staffers expressed "deep concerns" about the panel.
The cartoon by the Las Vegas Review-Journal's Michael Ramirez, who is also published in the Post twice a week, was titled "Human shields" and depicted a Hamas spokesperson saying, "How dare Israel attack civilians," while a frightened-looking woman and four children are bound with rope to his body.
The cartoon was featured in the Nov. 8 print edition of the paper and online, which was later deleted after backlash, both internally and externally.
"There was both external criticism and internal criticism. I think a number of people inside and outside were offended by the caricature, both of the man and the woman. I’m not sure, however, if the message itself [criticizing Hamas] was the problem," one Washington Post insider told Fox News Digital.
The deletion and The Post's subsequent apology angered some conservative political commentators online, who bashed the outlet for refusing to stand by the cartoon.
"Let the word go forth, for the woke have spoken: terrorist groups using human shields is not problematic," political consultant Noah Pollak wrote in a post on X. "But making fun of terrorist groups using human shields is deeply problematic."
"Kind of surprised the Washington Post pulled this cartoon, given that it's a completely accurate depiction of Hamas's tactics," The Bulwark's Sonny Bunch wrote on X.
Journalist Jeryl Bier wrote that he was not convinced of The Post's reasoning behind its apology. "I am skeptical that retracting a cartoon because some people complain is the ‘spirit of opinion journalism.’"
Fox News' Jeffrey Clark and David Rutz contributed to this report.
A United Nations watchdog has criticized the organization for passing multiple resolutions this week condemning Israel for various alleged human rights violations, but making no condemnation of Hamas or other groups or nations, at a time when antisemitism is on the rise.
"The U.N.’s assault on Israel with a torrent of one-sided resolutions, just one month after the largest massacre of Jews since the Holocaust, and on the 85th anniversary of Kristallnacht, is surreal," Hillel Neuer, executive director of UN Watch, said in a press release.
"The only purpose of these eight lopsided condemnations is to demonize the Jewish state," Neuer said. "The world should not be deceived that these annual resolutions advance the cause of peace or human rights in any way."
The U.N.’s Second Committee, which focuses on Economic and Financial issues, announced the passage of three such resolutions, including one demanding that Israel cease the "exploitation, damage, cause of loss or depletion and endangerment" in the Golan Heights region of Syria.
Syria drafted and co-sponsored the resolutions, which passed with a vote of 151 in favor to six against — only Canada, Israel, the Federated States of Micronesia, Nauru, Palau and the U.S. opposed the measure, and 11 members abstained from voting.
"These are Arab lands," the representative of Syria said after the vote. "They will return to their original legitimate owners sooner or later."
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Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis sent medical supplies to Israel on Friday after Barzilai hospital in Ashkelon, Israel sustained damage from a Hamas attack, according to the Israeli consulate in Miami.
Consul General of the Israeli consulate in Miami, Mayor Elbaz-Starinsky made the announcement on Friday.
"Medical supplies were sent today to @Israel by @GovRonDeSantis. Thank you governor and the whole state of Florida for your staunch support. These supplies will be sent to Barzilai hospital in the City of Ashkelon which has sustained more than 10 HAMAS rockets and missiles," he wrote.
Columbia University announced it has suspended the school's Students for Justice in Palestine and Jewish Voice for Peace chapters.
Gerald Rosberg, senior vice president of Columbia University, said the student groups violated campus policy on Thursday afternoon when they held an unauthorized event that included threats.
"Columbia University is suspending Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) and Jewish Voice for Peace (JVP) as official student groups through the end of the fall term. This decision was made after the two groups repeatedly violated University policies related to holding campus events, culminating in an unauthorized event Thursday afternoon that proceeded despite warnings and included threatening rhetoric and intimidation," Rosberg said.
SJP and JVP will not be able to hold events on campus or receive university funding through the fall semester.
Rosberg said their suspensions will be lifted when they demonstrate a commitment to following university policies and engage in "consultations at a group leadership level with University officials."
"Like all student groups, SJP and JVP are required to abide by University policies and procedures. This ensures both the safety of our community and that core University activities can be conducted without disruption. During this especially charged time on our campus, we are strongly committed to giving space to student groups to participate in debate, advocacy, and protest. This relies on community members abiding by the rules and cooperating with University administrators who have a duty to ensure the safety of everyone in our community," Rosberg said.
The Israel Defense Forces said it conducted retaliatory air strikes against several Hezbollah targets on Friday.
IDF Spokesman Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari said in a post on X that fighter jets and aircraft launched the strikes in response to launches from Hezbollah on Thursday.
The IDF strikes were targeting buildings where Hezbollah terrorists were operating, Hagari said.
"In response to the launches in the last day, fighter jets and aircraft attacked a series of terrorist targets of the Hezbollah organization in Lebanese territory," Hagari said. "Among the targets attacked were a number of buildings and military positions where the organization's terrorists operated, a weapons warehouse and an intelligence infrastructure from which terrorists directed terror against the State of Israel."
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Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is condemning unrest in Montreal as "unacceptable" after police this week reported shots being fired at two Jewish schools and a fight between Israel and Palestinian supporters.
A Montreal police spokesperson told the CBC that investigators received two 911 calls yesterday morning regarding shots being fired at the Talmud Torah Elementary School and Yeshiva Gedola of Montreal, both in Quebec city’s Côte-des-Neiges neighborhood.
In both instances, police say the callers said the front doors of the buildings had been struck by bullets, but nobody was inside the facilities at the time and there were no injuries, according to the CBC.
On Wednesday, a 22-year-old student was taken into custody for allegedly assaulting a 54-year-old security guard at Concordia University in Montreal during an altercation between pro-Israel and pro-Palestinian supporters that left three injured, the news agency also reported.
"I understand that people are so profoundly disturbed by what they see happening there," Trudeau said Thursday, according to Reuters.
But he added that "violence, hate, anti-Semitism, Islamophobia and scenes such as the ones we saw in Concordia University or shots fired at Jewish schools overnight -- all of that is unacceptable."
Fox News Digital's Greg Norman contributed to this report.
IDF spokesman Lt. Col. Peter Lerner on Friday confirmed a report that Israeli soldiers found a Hamas terror tunnel inside a child's bedroom in northern Gaza.
"In more than once instance," Lerner said on "Outnumbered."
The Israel Defense Force's Combat Engineering Corps discovered the opening to a tunnel belonging to the terrorist group Hamas inside a civilian residence, the Times of Israel reported. The tunnel was located in an "upscale beachside neighborhood," at a house with an outdoor swimming pool, according to the report.
"Inside a bedroom scattered with brightly colored clothes, underneath one of three child-sized beds, soldiers had found a portal to where monsters were hiding," the report said.
According to those who closely track the Iranian-backed terror group, as well as admissions by its own leaders, Hamas has built an approximately 300-mile subterranean system that snakes beneath civilian homes, schools and hospitals in urban areas of the Gaza Strip.
Israel has pummeled Gaza with airstrikes targeting places where Hamas' underground command centers are believed to exist, often near civilian infrastructure where innocent Palestinians become casualties of the war.
Fox News Digital's Ruth Marks Eglash contributed to this update.
Pennsylvania Senator John Fetterman, a Democrat, elicited boos and verbal attacks from anti-Israel protesters when walking past them waving an Israeli flag.
Boos and shouts of "Shame!" were thrown at Fetterman as he exited the building, waving the Israeli flag while passing progressive protesters from the veterans group About Face calling for a cease-fire amid Israel's war against the Palestinian terrorist organization Hamas.
Several protesters were in the process of being arrested outside the Russell Senate Office Building as Fetterman walked by, while others — including one wearing a keffiyeh, a symbol of Palestinian nationalism — shouted at the senator from behind police tape.
"What a joke!" one protester yelled as Fetterman passed by them. Another accused Fetterman of supporting "genocide."
Fetterman, however, laughed off the criticism, continuing to wave the Israeli flag and walking off as the protesters chanted for a cease-fire.
One protester was heard at the end of the video shouting that Fetterman was "doing a disservice to Pennsylvania."
"Jacka-- [Fetterman] saw veterans getting arrested and laughed," tweeted About Face, the progressive, anti-war veterans group that called for the National Guard to "stand down" to Black Lives Matter protests in 2020.
"We asked to see [Senator Kirsten Gillibrand]," About Face continued. "We were put in cuffs."
"We need leaders who listen to veterans demanding a [cease-fire]," the group added.
Fetterman's office did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital's request for comment. Neither did Gillibrand's office or About Face.
Fox News Digital's Houston Keene contributed to this update.
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More than half of the countries across the globe now pose heightened risks for Americans, the State Department says, as it issued another "worldwide caution" this week for travelers as the Israel-Hamas war rages on.
The State Department’s travel advisory system rates countries on a level of 1 to 4 based on the risks Americans face while visiting them.
As of Friday, 21 countries have earned the "Level 4: Do Not Travel" rating, while 20 are at "Level 3: Reconsider Travel" and more than 70 are at "Level 2: Exercise Increased Caution."
Among the countries that pose the greatest threats to Americans’ safety is Lebanon, which borders Israel to the north.
"Do Not travel to Lebanon due to the unpredictable security situation related to rocket, missile, and artillery exchanges between Israel and Hezbollah or other armed militant factions," the State Department warns. "Reconsider travel to Lebanon due to terrorism, civil unrest, armed conflict, crime, kidnapping, and Embassy Beirut’s limited capacity to provide support to U.S. citizens."
The State Department also is urging any Americans to reconsider travel to Israel due to "terrorism and civil unrest."
Fox News Digital's Greg Norman contributed to this report.
A U.S. defense official confirms a one-way attack drone was launched at U.S. forces at al-Tanf Garrison, Syria on Friday morning.
The drone was shot down before it reached its target. No injuries or damage to infrastructure, the official said.
This is the fifth confirmed attack on U.S. forces in Iraq and Syria since Wednesday night's U.S. airstrikes in Syria (four in Syria, one in Iraq).
This is the 23rd attack in Syria and there have been 24 attacks in Iraq.
The Israel Defense Forces said three drones were launched from Lebanon at northern Israel on Friday after 4:30 p.m. local time. Israeli jets intercepted one aircraft, and two additional aircraft fell in the northern area, the military said.
“The incident has ended and its details are under review,” the IDF added.
U.S. forces conducted a self-defense airstrike Wednesday on a Syrian weapons storage facility in response to a series of recent attacks targeting American personnel in Iraq and Syria, the Department of Defense said.
Fox News Digital's Louis Casiano and Liz Friden contributed to this update.
Israel Defense Forces (IDF) on Wednesday launched a raid on the city of Jenin and its refugee camp - two strongholds of Palestinian terrorist activity - in the West Bank.
The IDF operation in the West Bank, known by Israelis by its biblical name Judea and Samaria, raises questions about the opening of a third front in Israel’s response to Hamas’ multipronged attack against the Jewish state on Oct. 7, resulting in the massacre of 1,400 people in southern Israel.
The IDF said in a statement that its counterterrorism forces "exchanged fire with armed terrorists, over ten terrorists were killed, and over 20 wanted suspects were apprehended, among them Nur and Minur Salma, Palestinian Islamic Jihad terrorists." The U.S. has designated the Iran-backed Palestinian Islamic Jihad a foreign terrorist organization.
The fighting comes at a time when the Biden administration is cautioning Israeli actions in the West Bank, especially when it comes to violence from a small group of extremist settlers who have been involved in armed confrontations with Palestinian villagers in the area.
Fox News Digital's Benjamin Weinthal contributed to this update.
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Anti-Israel protesters invaded the lobby of The New York Times on Thursday, demanding a cease-fire in Gaza and insisting the liberal paper favors Israel in its coverage of the ongoing war.
A group of protesters entered the atrium of the Times building in Midtown Manhattan carrying a banner calling for a cease-fire. They also wrote "lies" across the door in paint, read names of Palestinians killed in Gaza aloud, scattered mock editions of the newspaper and accused the media of "complicity in laundering genocide."
The Times’ head of corporate security told staffers via email that the protests were "peaceful" and pointed out that no entrances were being blocked, according to the Associated Press.
The protesters included media industry employees who referred to themselves as "Writers Bloc," according to the AP. They stayed inside the Times' lobby for over an hour. It's unclear if any arrests were made.
The Times has stood by its coverage of the war between Israel and Hamas.
"The New York Times has extensively covered the Israel-Hamas war with fairness, impartiality, and an abiding understanding of the complexities of the conflict. We fully support this group’s right to express their point of view, even as we disagree with their characterization of our coverage," spokesperson Danielle Rhoades Ha told Fox News Digital.
Fox News Digital's Brian Flood and Nikolas Lanum contributed to this update.
The University of Pennsylvania is apologizing after images were shared on social media showing light projections with anti-Israeli messages displayed on campus buildings.
University officials say that police are conducting an investigation into the incident, which they characterized as "vile" and "antisemitic."
"Last night, vile, antisemitic messages were projected onto several campus buildings, including Penn Commons, Huntsman Hall, and Irvine Auditorium. Penn Police were notified and quickly responded, and a full investigation is currently underway," said University of Pennsylvania President Liz Magill.
She continued, "We will pursue this matter to the fullest extent and take swift action in accordance with our policies."
Phrases including "From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free" and "Zionism is racism" were projected onto the facade of several buildings on UPenn's campus in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
"For generations, too many have masked antisemitism in hostile rhetoric," Magill wrote. "These reprehensible messages are an assault on our values and cause pain and fear for our Jewish community."
She concluded, "Penn has a long and rich history of robust debate about complicated issues of the day. Projecting hateful messages on our campus is not debate, it is cowardice, and it has no place at Penn."
Fox News Digital's Timothy H.J. Nerozzi contributed to this update.
Police believe Iran may be linked to the attempted murder of the former head of Spain's People's Party in Catalonia.
Alejo Vidal-Quadras was shot in the face while in the Salamanca region of Madrid on Thursday around 1:30 p.m. He was later taken to the hospital where he is still recovering.
A police source with inside information on the investigation told The Associated Press that 76-year-old Vidal-Quadras, while recovering in the hospital, theorized the gunmen could be linked to Iran.
The Iranian foreign ministry previously placed sanctions on Vidal-Quadras due to his relationship with Iran's opposition-in-exile, the People’s Mujahedin of Iran.
Police say they have no evidence the Iranian government was involved in the assassination attempt, but they are looking into the theory as one of several possible motives.
Two men seen on a Yamaha motorcycle are believed to be connected to the assassination attempt.
The man who shot Vidal-Quadras dismounted the black motorbike and pulled the gun while his face was obscured by a helmet. Both men escaped on the vehicle following the attack.
The single gunshot fractured Vidal-Quadras's jawbone but is not believed to be life-threatening.
The scene of the shooting has been roped off by authorities, and no suspects have been arrested yet.
Fox News Digital's Timothy H.J. Nerozzi contributed to this update.
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Iran’s foreign minister is warning that an expansion of the Israel-Hamas war has now "become inevitable" as military activity is escalating inside the Gaza Strip, a report says.
Hossein Amirabdollahian made the comment during a telephone conversation with his Qatari counterpart Sheikh Mohammed Bin Abdulrahman Al Thani last night, according to Reuters, citing a report on Iranian state television.
"Due to the expansion of the intensity of the war against Gaza's civilian residents, expansion of the scope of the war has become inevitable," Amirabdollahian reportedly said.
Israel continued to bombard Hamas inside Gaza on Friday, the 34th day of the war. Overnight, the Israel Defense Forces said it killed a handful of Hamas terrorists, including two commanders who participated in the Oct. 7 attack on Israel.
The IDF also reported that 37 of its soldiers have been killed since the ground portion of the fight against Hamas began, according to Fox News’ Trey Yingst.
American troops in Iraq and Syria have been repeatedly attacked by groups likely backed by Iran since the war started.
In response to one of the recent incidents in Syria, U.S. military forces conducted an airstrike against a weapons facility in the country on Wednesday.
Fox News Digital's Greg Norman contributed to this update.
The IDF said Friday it has attacked more than 15,000 terrorist targets in the Gaza strip and destroyed or confiscated 6,000 weapons since the start of the war on Oct. 7.
The seized or destroyed weapons include firearms, rockets, anti-tank missiles, anti-aircraft missiles, explosive devices and ammunition, according to the Israeli military.
The IDF said targets struck include Hamas operational headquarters, terrorist infrastructures, rocket array infrastructures, logistics warehouses, command and control targets, governmental targets, intelligence targets, launch sites, terrorist tunnels and individual Hamas terrorists.
The Hamas-led health ministry in Gaza claims the number of Palestinians killed by Israeli strikes has risen to 11,078, including 4,506 children and 3,027 women. Those numbers cannot be independently verified and Hamas does not distinguish between its fighters and civilians.
The ministry said in an online statement Friday that another 27,490 Palestinians in Gaza have been wounded, the Associated Press reported.
Israel has rejected calls for a cease-fire and vowed to continue the war until Hams is wiped out.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
There was internal uproar at The Washington Post over a political cartoon that mocked the terrorist group Hamas, Fox News Digital confirmed.
In an email to staffers on Wednesday, the paper's executive editor Sally Buzbee wrote, "Given the many deep concerns and conversations today in our newsroom, I wanted to ensure everyone saw the notes sent out tonight by The Post's opinions editor, David Shipley, to Post readers and to his staff in opinions."
The Post cartoon titled "Human shields" depicted a Hamas spokesperson saying, "How dare Israel attack civilians," while a frightened-looking woman and four small children remain bound with rope to his body.
The cartoon was featured in the Nov. 8 print edition of the paper and online, which was later deleted upon viral backlash.
Buzbee forwarded the editor's note penned by Shipley offering a somber message to readers expressing regret over the cartoon.
"As editor of the opinion section, I am responsible for what appears in its pages and on its screens. The section depends on my judgment," Shipley began. "A cartoon published by Michael Ramirez on the war in Gaza, a cartoon whose publication I approved, was seen by many readers as racist. This was not my intent. I saw the drawing as a caricature of a specific individual, the Hamas spokesperson, who celebrated the attacks on unarmed civilians in Israel."
"However, the reaction to the image convinced me that I had missed something profound, and divisive, and I regret that. Our section is aimed at finding commonalities, understanding the bonds that hold us together, even in the darkest times," he continued. "In this spirit, we have taken down the drawing. We are also pushing a selection of responses to the caricature. And we will continue to make the section home to a range of views and perspectives, including ones that challenge readers. This is the spirit of opinion journalism, to move imperfectly toward a constructive exchange of ideas at all possible speed, listening and learning along the way."
Fox News Digital's Joseph A. Wulfsohn contributed to this update.
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The outside of a Jewish campus organization's building at Boston University was defaced with graffiti reading, "Free Palestine," in the latest incident of rising antisemitism on campuses across America.
The Boston University Police Department and the Suffolk County District Attorney’s Office are investigating the vandalism at the Boston, Massachusetts university after graffiti was found written on the window of a Jewish student organization, authorities confirmed.
According to the organization's website, the Florence & Chafetz Hillel House at Boston University is a place of worship and a community center for the campus' Jewish population.
Robert Lowe, chief of the BU Police Department, confirmed to BU Today, the university’s official online news publication, that officers received a call about the vandalism on Tuesday evening at 5 p.m.
When authorities arrived, Hillel staff members said that "an unknown person had tagged an exterior window of the building."
Police said that the words, "Free Palestine" were written over a preexisting blue and white sign that read, "We Stand with Israel."
In a campus-wide letter, Executive Director and University Chaplain Rabbi Jevin Eagle says the act of vandalism has left the Jewish community "shaken" and "disheartened."
"We are grateful for the swift response from BU, BU Police, and the Suffolk County District Attorney," he wrote. "This horrific act is being investigated as a religious hate crime."
Fox News Digital's Sarah Rumpf-Whitten contributed to this update.
A Palestinian, who was heralded as a "hero" and compared to "Rosa Parks" by liberal media after she assaulted an Israel Defense Force (IDF) soldier in Nabi Selah, a village in the West Bank, was arrested Monday by the IDF for allegedly inciting terrorism and calling to drink the blood of Jews.
"The IDF has carried out substantial numbers of counterterrorism activity since Oct. 7 and has apprehended hundreds of suspects. Overnight, the IDF carried out activity to apprehend individuals suspected of involvement in terrorist activity and incitement," the IDF said. "During the activity, Ahed Tamimi, who is suspected of inciting violence and calling for terrorist activity to be carried out, was apprehended in the town of Nabi Saleh. Tamimi was transferred to Israeli security forces for further questioning."
Ahed Tamimi,'s arrest pertained to a social media post allegedly from her social media account, which called for Palestinians to drink Jewish blood and eat their skulls.
"Our message to the herd of settlers, we are waiting for you in all the West Bank cities from Hebron to Jenin - we will slaughter you and you will say what Hitler did to you was a joke, we will drink your blood and eat your skulls, come on, we are waiting for you," the image, posted to IG stories, allegedly said.
Tamimi's mother first denied that the posts were from her daughter's official account, and later said the account was hacked.
Tamimi was an icon to the liberal media after an Israeli military court sentenced her to eight months in prison for slapping and kicking two soldiers in 2018. The assault featured glorified coverage in liberal media outlets.
Fox News Digital's Hannah Grossman contributed to this update.
Lebanese terrorist group Hezbollah said seven of its fighters were killed on Friday, but did not offer specifics other than to say the were "martyred on the road to Jerusalem."
A Hezbollah official and a Lebanese security official said the seven fighters were killed in neighboring Syria Friday morning, the Associated Press reported.
Pro-government Syrian media outlets reported an Israeli airstrike on the central province of Homs early Friday.
Iran-backed Hezbollah is allied with the Syrian government and in recent years has sent forces to Syria to assist Iranian ally President Bashar Assad against armed opposition groups.
The Israel Defense Forces said Friday that it struck targets in Syria in response to a drone strike on the Red Sea city of Eilat that Israel said was fired from Syria.
Hezbollah says 68 of their fighters have been killed since the Israel-Hamas war began on Oct. 7. The Lebanese group has traded fire with Israeli troops dozens of times in recent weeks.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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Last month, twins Ziv and Gali Berman were average Israeli citizens. They cheered for Maccabi Tel-Aviv Soccer Club, worked for a sound and lighting company, and enjoyed traveling for concerts when they were able.
Now, the Israeli Defense Forces believe the 26-year-old brothers were taken from their own home and are being held hostage by Hamas in the Gaza Strip.
On Oct. 7, violent attacks broke out across Israel as Hamas launched a coordinated assault on civilian and military targets. In addition to those killed and injured in the mayhem, hundreds of Israelis were taken hostage by the terrorist organization.
The twins' brother, Liran Berman, spoke with Fox News Digital on Wednesday about the night of the terrorist attack and ongoing efforts to rescue his siblings.
"I went to nine funerals of friends, neighbors. It was the worst week of my life," Liran told Fox News Digital about the time since the war broke out. "Nine funerals since then. Since the last funeral, the ninth, I haven't managed to cry anymore. No more tears are left."
Fox News Digital's Timothy H.J. Nerozzi contributed to this update.
The Israel Defense Forces says it has arrested 41 Palestinians in an overnight raid in the West Bank.
The military said Friday that 14 of those arrested were Hamas terrorists.
The Israeli military said it also destroyed the homes of two terrorists who it said carried out an attack that killed an Israeli woman and seriously wounded an Israeli man in August. At the time, an offshoot of the secular nationalist Fatah party, the Al Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigade, claimed responsibility for the attack,
Israeli forces “sealed” a shop in Hebron which they said was used to print “incendiary material for Hamas.” They also raided three West Bank neighborhoods where they confiscated weapons.
The IDF says it has arrested 1,540 Palestinians in the West Bank, 930 of whom were identified as terrorists, since the start of the war with Hamas on Oct. 7. Palestinian authorities claim the number is much higher, with 90 detained Thursday night and 2,400 arrested in the West Bank since the start of the war, the Associated Press reported.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
The top United Nations human rights official is calling for an investigation into what he called Israel's "indiscriminate bombardment and shelling" of densely populated areas in the Gaza Strip.
Speaking in the Jordanian capital Friday, Volker Türk said Israel “must immediately end the use of such methods and means of warfare and the attacks must be investigated," the Associated Press reported.
Citing civilian casualty figures provided by the Hamas-led health ministry in Gaza, Türk said Israel's targeting of civilian infrastructure raises "serious concerns that these amount to disproportionate attacks in breach of international humanitarian law.”
Israel has said Hamas terrorists hide military targets amongst civilian infrastructure and has released videos showing rocket launchers inside boy scout clubs and other places. The IDF alleges Hamas has placed its main military compound beneath Al-Shifa hospital, the largest hospital in Gaza.
Türk said strikes on and near hospitals have been "particularly intense," adding that any use by Palestinian armed groups of civilians or civilian structures to shield themselves from attack contravenes the laws of war.
Even so, he said the actions of Palestinian terrorists "does not absolve Israel of its obligation to ensure that civilians are spared.”
The Associated Press contributed to this update.
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Deputy Pentagon Press Secretary Sabrina Singh announced on Thursday that there have been 56 injuries total to U.S. service members since October 17th from the attacks in Iraq and Syria.
Singh says this includes 25 cases of traumatic brain injury (TBI).
According to Singh, all have returned to duty including the two service members who were being treated at Landstuhl, Germany for their TBI's.
On Wednesday, U.S. Forces conducted a self-defense airstrike on a Syrian weapons storage facility.
The strike was conducted by two F-15 fighter jets targeting the Maysulun weapons storage facility in eastern Syria, the Department of Defense said.
"The President has no higher priority than the safety of U.S. personnel, and he directed today's action to make clear that the United States will defend itself, its personnel, and its interests," Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin said Wednesday.
U.S. and coalition forces in Iraq and Syria have been attacked at least 46 times since Oct. 17, many from drone strikes. Of these attacks, 24 occurred in Iraq and 22 took place in Syria. They included a mix of one-way attack drones and rockets.
Fox News Digital's Elizabeth Pritchett and Louis Casiano contributed to this update.
The Israel Defense Forces said it is conducting strikes in response to anti-tank missiles launched from Lebanon toward a northern Israel military post near the area of Manara.
"IDF artillery is currently striking the source of the fire," the force posted on its website just after noon local time.
Hezbollah has traded fire with Israeli troops along the border since the day after Hamas’ Oct. 7 surprise attack in southern Israel sparked war in the Gaza Strip. Both sides have suffered casualties, but the fear is that the conflict will escalate and spiral into a regional fight.
The terrorist group's leader, Hassan Nasrallah, gave a speech last week in which he said Hezbollah "already entered the battle on Oct. 8."
For Hezbollah, fully entering the Israel-Hamas war would risk dragging Lebanon — beset by economic calamity and internal political tensions — into a conflict it can ill afford, fueling domestic opposition to the group.
For now, the terrorist group can show support for Hamas by harassing Israel's military on the northern border while threatening to launch a full-scale war unless Israel agrees to a ceasefire.
Fox News Digital's Elizabeth Pritchett and the Associated Press contributed to this post.
Israeli forces were conducting airstrikes in northern Gaza Friday morning as the Israel-Hamas war enters its 34th day, according to Fox News' Trey Yingst.
Yingst shared that three hospitals in the northern Gaza Strip are reportedly surrounded by Israel Defense Forces troops while an undisclosed number of civilians are inside being treated. The hospitals are believed to be where Hamas militants are hiding.
On Thursday, approximately 80,000 people left northern Gaza through the evacuation corridors as Israel works to limit civilian casualties, according to Yingst via the IDF.
Overnight, the IDF said it killed a handful of Hamas' Nukbha terrorists, including two commanders, who participated in the Oct. 7 attack on Israel. Ahmed Musa, company commander, and Omar Al-Hindi, platoon commander, were the two leaders killed in western Jabalya, based on IDF and Israel Securities Authority intelligence.
Musa was one of the commanders over Hamas' invasion into Zikim Base, Kibbutz Zikim and the Yiftach Post, the IDF said. He was also accused of leading attacks against IDF troops in western Jabalya within the past 24 hours.
Mohammed Kahlout, head of the Sniper Array of Hamas' Northern Brigade, was also killed overnight, based on IDF and ISA intelligence, in addition to approximately 19 Hamas operatives who planned to attack Israeli forces.
The IDF also reported that 37 of its soldiers have been killed since the ground portion of the fight against Hamas began, according to Yingst.
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