Qatar, a key mediator of the truce negotiations, confirmed the extension in a statement Thursday.
“The Palestinian and Israeli sides had reached an agreement to extend the humanitarian truce in the Gaza Strip for an additional day," Qatar's foreign ministry said in its statement.
The Ministry added that negotiations continue in hopes of reaching a permanent ceasefire in Gaza.
26 min ago
Israel-Hamas truce extended for a 7th day at the last minute. Here's what you need to know
Minutes before a temporary truce between Israel and Hamas was set to expire at 7 a.m. local time Thursday (12 a.m. ET), the Israeli military confirmed it had been extended for another day, as negotiations for the release of additional hostages continue.
Hamas and Qatar also confirmed the extension of the truce.
Leading up to the deadline, negotiators in Qatar, including US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, were discussing details of a potential extension.
Shortly before the truce expired, Hamas said negotiations were at an impasse, claiming Israel refused an offer to extend the truce in exchange for receiving seven detained women and children and the bodies of three deceased women or children who Hamas claim were killed by Israeli bombardment.
Hostage situation: The truce has resulted in the return of 70 Israelis and dual nationals, primarily women and children. An additional three dual Israeli citizens and 24 foreign nationals were released outside of the deal. As of Wednesday, 210 Palestinians had been freed from Israeli prisons — mainly women and minors. On Wednesday, 16 hostages were released from Gaza, comprising 10 Israelis, four Thai nationals and two Israeli-Russians. Thirty Palestinians were also freed from Israeli jails, officials said.
Humanitarian aid crisis: Hundreds of aid trucks were lined up to cross into Gaza from Egypt Wednesday, an Egyptian official told CNN. But the level of aid and fuel entering Gaza remains insufficient, even with the truce between Israel and Hamas in place, United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres told the UN Security Council Wednesday. Meanwhile, northern Gaza’s healthcare system has lost over 60% of its capacity across all of its hospitals, according to the Hamas-run Ministry of Health.
On the ground: The Israeli military killed two Palestinian children when it opened fire Wednesday in Jenin in the occupied West Bank, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health. Also, the IDF opened fire at positions in southern Lebanon in two separate incidents on Wednesday, according to the Lebanese news agency (NNA).
International developments: US President Joe Biden has spoken to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu 15 times since the October 7 attacks, according to CNN’s tally. The two leaders held their first call on that day, and their most recent call was this past Sunday, according to readouts provided by the White House. And US Secretary of State Antony Blinken arrived in Israel on Wednesday as the truce between Israel and Hamas is poised to expire.
42 min ago
Israeli military says "operational pause will continue" amid ongoing talks for more hostage releases
From CNN staff
The "operational pause" in fighting between Israel and Hamas will continue amid ongoing talks for the release of more hostages, the Israel Defense Forces said, minutes before the truce was set to expire.
“In light of the mediators' efforts to continue the process of releasing the hostages and subject to the terms of the framework, the operational pause will continue,” the IDF said.
Hamas also confirmed the extension of the truce for a seventh day in a statement.
The group had previously said negotiations for an extension were at an impasse after Israel refused an offer to receive seven women and children and the bodies of three others who they claim were killed by Israeli bombardment in return for an extension of the truce.
CNN’s political and foreign policy analyst Barak Ravid reported prior to the expiration that “Israeli officials say Hamas proposed via mediators to release less than 10 hostages or to release hostages that are not women and children.”
Diplomatic sources close to the negotiations told CNN that Hamas was only able to offer seven women and children and offered to include an additional three elderly hostages.
22 min ago
Deal reached to extend Israel-Hamas truce, Israeli military says
From Tamar Michaelis
A vehicle carrying hostages released as part of a deal between Israel and Hamas, drives by, in Ofakim, Israel, November 30. Alexander Ermochenko/Reuters
A temporary truce between Israel and Hamas has been extended to a seventh day, Israel Defense Forces said Thursday morning, minutes before the deal was set to expire .
This is the second extension of the initial four-day truce that began on Friday.
The truce has resulted in the return of 70 Israelis under the agreement. During the pause, three dual-national Israeli citizens and twenty-four foreign nationals have also been released outside of the deal.
In exchange, 210 Palestinians have been freed from Israeli jails, officials said.
51 min ago
Hamas military wing asks fighters to be ready for combat if truce isn’t extended
From CNN's Kareem El Damanhoury and Michael Rios
The Hamas military wing on Thursday asked its forces to maintain a high-combat readiness posture in case a truce with Israel isn’t renewed.
The Al-Qassam Brigades said on Telegram that its fighters should remain in the high-combat readiness position unless an official statement is issued confirming the extension of the truce, which was set to expire at 7 a.m. local time (midnight ET).
Key mediator Qatar is "very optimistic" an extension will be announced, a foreign ministry spokesperson told CNN on Wednesday.
However, the Israeli military said Wednesday it is prepared for the next stage of the war in Gaza when the truce ends.
7 min ago
Ahead of truce deadline, Israeli leaders ratcheted up war rhetoric
From Tamar Michaelis and CNN's Sugam Pokharel
Benjamin Netanyahu speaks to the media in Berlin, Germany, on March 16. Sean Gallup/Getty Images
Israeli government and military leaders ratcheted up war rhetoric Wednesday as questions swirled over whether a truce deal between Israel and Hamas would be extended.
“Over the past few days I’ve been hearing this question – will Israel go back to fighting after maximizing this phase of returning our hostages? So my answer is unequivocal – Yes,” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said.
Netanyahu vowed that Israel would fight until the end.
“This is my policy, the whole cabinet stands behind it, the whole government stands behind it, the soldiers stand behind it, the people stand behind it – that is exactly what we will do,” the prime minister said.
The Israeli military is prepared for the next stage of the war in Gaza when the truce ends, Herzi Halevi, the Israel Defense Forces chief of staff said Wednesday, according to an IDF statement.
Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, echoing Halevi, said “IDF troops in the air, ground, and sea, are prepared to resume operations immediately [should the decision be made]."
Gallant however added that Israel was "taking every possible measure to return the hostages and to maximize the current framework in which all the women and children held hostage in Gaza, will be released."
Meanwhile, Benny Gantz, who is a part of the emergency war cabinet, noted Wednesday that "we are in complex moments, and in a window of time within the outline for the return of our hostages."
"We will work to exhaust it as much as possible. At the same time, we are prepared and ready to return to combat, at any given moment, including these moments," he said.
Gantz stressed that fighting would "expand to wherever it is needed throughout the Strip. There will be no cities of refuge."
Halevi, the military chief of staff, on Wednesday approved plans for the next stage of the military operation in Gaza, according to the IDF.
On Tuesday, Halevi said the Israeli military was using the pause to beef up its readiness for combat.
“The IDF is prepared to continue fighting. We are using the days of the pause as part of the framework to learn, strengthen our readiness and approve future operational plans,” Halevi told a group of soldiers in northern Israel.
52 min ago
US wants Israel to move civilians out of southern Gaza before Israel focuses attacks there
From CNN's MJ Lee, Jennifer Hansler and Katie Bo Lillis
Biden administration officials are discussing with their Israeli counterparts how to protect thousands of civilians who fled to southern Gaza should the Israel Defense Forces target the area once the pause in fighting with Hamas ultimately ends, according to multiple United States officials.
Among the many options that US and Israeli officials are actively deliberating include moving civilians who went south at the onset of the war back up north once military operations there have ended, one senior US official told CNN. While much of northern Gaza has already been decimated from the fighting and airstrikes, Israel has made clear it is bent on finishing its military operations there.
Why start conducting operations in the south: A major reason Israel is expected to begin focusing its military operations in southern Gaza is that intelligence suggests Hamas leadership has fled to that region, according to one US official. That official did not say whether this was US or Israeli intelligence.
In private, Biden administration officials — including President Joe Biden himself — are telling their Israeli counterparts that they do not want to see the IDF resume the kinds of air strikes from earlier in the war that led to massive casualties and widespread destruction, multiple officials told CNN. Instead, Israel must be “more cautious, more careful, more deliberate, and more precise in their targeting,” one senior administration official said.
While it’s not clear whether Israel would ultimately agree, some US officials expressed optimism that Israel was at least receptive to considering such ideas.
“There is an understanding that a different type of campaign has to be conducted in the south than was conducted in the north,” another senior administration official said.
Containers carrying fuel and cooking gas transferred to UN organizations in Gaza, Israel says
From Tamar Michaelis and CNN's Sugam Pokharel
Four containers of diesel fuel and four containers of cooking gas were transferred from Egypt to United Nations humanitarian aid organizations in the Gaza Strip on Wednesday, an Israeli government agency said.
Israel's Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT) said in a statement that the fuel passed through the Rafah crossing — the only crossing in and out of the enclave that is not controlled by Israel.
The aid trucks going into Gaza are part of the pause and the hostage-release framework agreed by Israel and Hamas, COGAT said.
“The fuel and cooking gas are designated for the operation of vital humanitarian infrastructure in the Gaza Strip,” it said.
In addition, 200 humanitarian aid trucks were transferred on Wednesday to the international aid organizations operating in the Gaza Strip through the Rafah crossing, COGAT said. Those trucks had to first go through a security check at the Nitzana crossing, it added.
The humanitarian aid trucks carried food, water, shelter equipment, and medical supplies.
1 min ago
Level of aid entering Gaza "remains completely inadequate," UN chief says
From CNN’s Caitlin Hu and Mitchell McCluskey
Antonio Guterres speaks during joint press briefing at the United Nations Headquarters in New York on November 28. Lev Radin/Sipa USA/AP
The level of aid and fuel entering Gaza remains insufficient, United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres told the UN Security Council on Wednesday.
“The level of aid to Palestinians in Gaza remains completely inadequate to meet the huge needs of more than 2 million people,” Guterres said. “And although the total volume of fuel allowed into Gaza has also increased, it remains utterly insufficient to sustain basic operations.”
Guterres noted the importance of opening more crossings into Gaza as the Rafah crossing with Egypt has become inundated.
“It is important to recognize that the Rafah border crossing does not have enough capacity, especially taking into account the slow pace of security procedures,” Guterres said. “That is why we have been urging the opening of other crossings, including Kerem Shalom, and the streamlining of inspection mechanisms to allow for the necessary increase of lifesaving aid.”
Hospitals in Gaza are also still overwhelmed, Guterres said.
“The medical system has broken down under the heavy caseload, acute shortages and the impact of hostilities,” Guterres said.
“Ultimately, we know that the measure of success will not be the number of trucks dispatched or the tons of supplies delivered – as important as these are,” Guterres said. “Success will be measured in lives that are saved, suffering that is ended, and hope and dignity that is restored.”
JUST IN: A temporary truce between Israel and Hamas was extended for a seventh day on Thursday, the Israeli military confirmed, minutes before it was set to expire. Hamas also confirmed the extension of the truce.
Israel Defense Forces said the "operational pause will continue" amid talks for the release of more hostages.
During the six-day pause in fighting, 97 Israeli and foreign national hostages have been released from Gaza, while 210 Palestinians have been freed from Israeli jails, officials said.
Meanwhile, the Israeli military said it was assessing a Hamas claim that the youngest Israeli hostage, 10-month-old Kfir Bibas, his brother and his mother are dead.
Qatar, a key mediator of the truce negotiations, confirmed the extension in a statement Thursday.
“The Palestinian and Israeli sides had reached an agreement to extend the humanitarian truce in the Gaza Strip for an additional day," Qatar's foreign ministry said in its statement.
The Ministry added that negotiations continue in hopes of reaching a permanent ceasefire in Gaza.
Minutes before a temporary truce between Israel and Hamas was set to expire at 7 a.m. local time Thursday (12 a.m. ET), the Israeli military confirmed it had been extended for another day, as negotiations for the release of additional hostages continue.
Hamas and Qatar also confirmed the extension of the truce.
Leading up to the deadline, negotiators in Qatar, including US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, were discussing details of a potential extension.
Shortly before the truce expired, Hamas said negotiations were at an impasse, claiming Israel refused an offer to extend the truce in exchange for receiving seven detained women and children and the bodies of three deceased women or children who Hamas claim were killed by Israeli bombardment.
Hostage situation: The truce has resulted in the return of 70 Israelis and dual nationals, primarily women and children. An additional three dual Israeli citizens and 24 foreign nationals were released outside of the deal. As of Wednesday, 210 Palestinians had been freed from Israeli prisons — mainly women and minors. On Wednesday, 16 hostages were released from Gaza, comprising 10 Israelis, four Thai nationals and two Israeli-Russians. Thirty Palestinians were also freed from Israeli jails, officials said.
Humanitarian aid crisis: Hundreds of aid trucks were lined up to cross into Gaza from Egypt Wednesday, an Egyptian official told CNN. But the level of aid and fuel entering Gaza remains insufficient, even with the truce between Israel and Hamas in place, United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres told the UN Security Council Wednesday. Meanwhile, northern Gaza’s healthcare system has lost over 60% of its capacity across all of its hospitals, according to the Hamas-run Ministry of Health.
On the ground: The Israeli military killed two Palestinian children when it opened fire Wednesday in Jenin in the occupied West Bank, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health. Also, the IDF opened fire at positions in southern Lebanon in two separate incidents on Wednesday, according to the Lebanese news agency (NNA).
International developments: US President Joe Biden has spoken to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu 15 times since the October 7 attacks, according to CNN’s tally. The two leaders held their first call on that day, and their most recent call was this past Sunday, according to readouts provided by the White House. And US Secretary of State Antony Blinken arrived in Israel on Wednesday as the truce between Israel and Hamas is poised to expire.
The "operational pause" in fighting between Israel and Hamas will continue amid ongoing talks for the release of more hostages, the Israel Defense Forces said, minutes before the truce was set to expire.
“In light of the mediators' efforts to continue the process of releasing the hostages and subject to the terms of the framework, the operational pause will continue,” the IDF said.
Hamas also confirmed the extension of the truce for a seventh day in a statement.
The group had previously said negotiations for an extension were at an impasse after Israel refused an offer to receive seven women and children and the bodies of three others who they claim were killed by Israeli bombardment in return for an extension of the truce.
CNN’s political and foreign policy analyst Barak Ravid reported prior to the expiration that “Israeli officials say Hamas proposed via mediators to release less than 10 hostages or to release hostages that are not women and children.”
Diplomatic sources close to the negotiations told CNN that Hamas was only able to offer seven women and children and offered to include an additional three elderly hostages.
A vehicle carrying hostages released as part of a deal between Israel and Hamas, drives by, in Ofakim, Israel, November 30. Alexander Ermochenko/Reuters
A temporary truce between Israel and Hamas has been extended to a seventh day, Israel Defense Forces said Thursday morning, minutes before the deal was set to expire .
This is the second extension of the initial four-day truce that began on Friday.
The truce has resulted in the return of 70 Israelis under the agreement. During the pause, three dual-national Israeli citizens and twenty-four foreign nationals have also been released outside of the deal.
In exchange, 210 Palestinians have been freed from Israeli jails, officials said.
The Hamas military wing on Thursday asked its forces to maintain a high-combat readiness posture in case a truce with Israel isn’t renewed.
The Al-Qassam Brigades said on Telegram that its fighters should remain in the high-combat readiness position unless an official statement is issued confirming the extension of the truce, which was set to expire at 7 a.m. local time (midnight ET).
Key mediator Qatar is "very optimistic" an extension will be announced, a foreign ministry spokesperson told CNN on Wednesday.
However, the Israeli military said Wednesday it is prepared for the next stage of the war in Gaza when the truce ends.
Benjamin Netanyahu speaks to the media in Berlin, Germany, on March 16. Sean Gallup/Getty Images
Israeli government and military leaders ratcheted up war rhetoric Wednesday as questions swirled over whether a truce deal between Israel and Hamas would be extended.
“Over the past few days I’ve been hearing this question – will Israel go back to fighting after maximizing this phase of returning our hostages? So my answer is unequivocal – Yes,” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said.
Netanyahu vowed that Israel would fight until the end.
“This is my policy, the whole cabinet stands behind it, the whole government stands behind it, the soldiers stand behind it, the people stand behind it – that is exactly what we will do,” the prime minister said.
The Israeli military is prepared for the next stage of the war in Gaza when the truce ends, Herzi Halevi, the Israel Defense Forces chief of staff said Wednesday, according to an IDF statement.
Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, echoing Halevi, said “IDF troops in the air, ground, and sea, are prepared to resume operations immediately [should the decision be made]."
Gallant however added that Israel was "taking every possible measure to return the hostages and to maximize the current framework in which all the women and children held hostage in Gaza, will be released."
Meanwhile, Benny Gantz, who is a part of the emergency war cabinet, noted Wednesday that "we are in complex moments, and in a window of time within the outline for the return of our hostages."
"We will work to exhaust it as much as possible. At the same time, we are prepared and ready to return to combat, at any given moment, including these moments," he said.
Gantz stressed that fighting would "expand to wherever it is needed throughout the Strip. There will be no cities of refuge."
Halevi, the military chief of staff, on Wednesday approved plans for the next stage of the military operation in Gaza, according to the IDF.
On Tuesday, Halevi said the Israeli military was using the pause to beef up its readiness for combat.
“The IDF is prepared to continue fighting. We are using the days of the pause as part of the framework to learn, strengthen our readiness and approve future operational plans,” Halevi told a group of soldiers in northern Israel.
Biden administration officials are discussing with their Israeli counterparts how to protect thousands of civilians who fled to southern Gaza should the Israel Defense Forces target the area once the pause in fighting with Hamas ultimately ends, according to multiple United States officials.
Among the many options that US and Israeli officials are actively deliberating include moving civilians who went south at the onset of the war back up north once military operations there have ended, one senior US official told CNN. While much of northern Gaza has already been decimated from the fighting and airstrikes, Israel has made clear it is bent on finishing its military operations there.
Why start conducting operations in the south: A major reason Israel is expected to begin focusing its military operations in southern Gaza is that intelligence suggests Hamas leadership has fled to that region, according to one US official. That official did not say whether this was US or Israeli intelligence.
In private, Biden administration officials — including President Joe Biden himself — are telling their Israeli counterparts that they do not want to see the IDF resume the kinds of air strikes from earlier in the war that led to massive casualties and widespread destruction, multiple officials told CNN. Instead, Israel must be “more cautious, more careful, more deliberate, and more precise in their targeting,” one senior administration official said.
While it’s not clear whether Israel would ultimately agree, some US officials expressed optimism that Israel was at least receptive to considering such ideas.
“There is an understanding that a different type of campaign has to be conducted in the south than was conducted in the north,” another senior administration official said.
Four containers of diesel fuel and four containers of cooking gas were transferred from Egypt to United Nations humanitarian aid organizations in the Gaza Strip on Wednesday, an Israeli government agency said.
Israel's Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT) said in a statement that the fuel passed through the Rafah crossing — the only crossing in and out of the enclave that is not controlled by Israel.
The aid trucks going into Gaza are part of the pause and the hostage-release framework agreed by Israel and Hamas, COGAT said.
“The fuel and cooking gas are designated for the operation of vital humanitarian infrastructure in the Gaza Strip,” it said.
In addition, 200 humanitarian aid trucks were transferred on Wednesday to the international aid organizations operating in the Gaza Strip through the Rafah crossing, COGAT said. Those trucks had to first go through a security check at the Nitzana crossing, it added.
The humanitarian aid trucks carried food, water, shelter equipment, and medical supplies.
Antonio Guterres speaks during joint press briefing at the United Nations Headquarters in New York on November 28. Lev Radin/Sipa USA/AP
The level of aid and fuel entering Gaza remains insufficient, United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres told the UN Security Council on Wednesday.
“The level of aid to Palestinians in Gaza remains completely inadequate to meet the huge needs of more than 2 million people,” Guterres said. “And although the total volume of fuel allowed into Gaza has also increased, it remains utterly insufficient to sustain basic operations.”
Guterres noted the importance of opening more crossings into Gaza as the Rafah crossing with Egypt has become inundated.
“It is important to recognize that the Rafah border crossing does not have enough capacity, especially taking into account the slow pace of security procedures,” Guterres said. “That is why we have been urging the opening of other crossings, including Kerem Shalom, and the streamlining of inspection mechanisms to allow for the necessary increase of lifesaving aid.”
Hospitals in Gaza are also still overwhelmed, Guterres said.
“The medical system has broken down under the heavy caseload, acute shortages and the impact of hostilities,” Guterres said.
“Ultimately, we know that the measure of success will not be the number of trucks dispatched or the tons of supplies delivered – as important as these are,” Guterres said. “Success will be measured in lives that are saved, suffering that is ended, and hope and dignity that is restored.”