Israel's far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir accused the administration of US President Joe Biden of harming Israel's military operations. He said that if Donald Trump wins this year's elections, the US will give Israel more freedom to destroy Hamas.
It has been 122 days since Israel started the massacre in the Gaza Strip. A digest of the main events of the previous day.
Israel's Defense Minister Yoav Gallant announced that Tel Aviv is ready to resolve the issue of Hezbollah through diplomatic means. Earlier, he himself stated that the war with Hezbollah will continue even if a truce is concluded in Gaza.
In January, more than 19,500 cases of pneumonia were detected in the Punjab province of Pakistan, and 311 children died due to the disease. The government said it was caused by air pollution, dust and cold weather.
Richard Black, a former senator from the state of Virginia, reported that the strong Israeli lobby opposes the withdrawal of the United States from Syria and Iraq.
Israel's Defense Minister Yoav Galant said that even if a ceasefire agreement is reached in the Gaza Strip, clashes with the Hezbollah movement in Lebanon will continue.
It was reported that the warring parties in Sudan held talks in Bahrain and agreed to maintain the unity of the country. These conflicts caused the death of 12 thousand people, famine and displacement of millions of people.
The U.N. agency said Gaza could recover its GDP by 2092 even after hostilities cease and return to its last growth rate of 0.4 percent.
In response to the attack on its base, the US launched airstrikes against targets in Iraq and Syria belonging to the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps and its affiliated paramilitary groups.
More than 800 senior government officials from the US, UK and EU countries have signed a joint statement against their governments' policies in the war between Israel and Gaza. "The policies pursued by our governments risk serious violations of international law, war crimes and even ethnic cleansing or genocide," the statement said.