Hezbollah says they were shooting people. And hezbollah says it is prepared to enter the conflict when the time comes. We will speak to the Palestinian Red Crescent for more on the conditions on the ground. Hello, im matthew amroliwala, welcome to verified live, the United Nations has warned it will be impossible for around a million palestinians to leave Northern Gaza by midnight after israel told them to move for their own safety. The order comes ahead of an expected Israeli Ground offensive. The main un agency in the gaza strip called the order horrendous and warned that gaza was becoming a hell hole on the brink of collapse. The World Health Organization appealed to israel to immediately rescind the order, saying unimaginable Human Suffering is now unfolding. Israel has been dropping leaflets into Northern Gaza, telling people to leave. Hamas has dismissed the israeli order as psychological warfare. Israel has deployed tanks on gazas boundaries. In a Statement Released after a sixt
360 i m sorry it will an apology from harvard s campus et cetera. good news about the u.s. economy but why so many don t believe it. ellie reave is here to explain it. a ran emotional day for a family of four, michigan high school students he gunned down two years ago. we start with breaking news. short time ago, the u.n, citing no mention in the resolution of the attack by hamas. 13 countries voted in favor, the u.k. abstained. in israel that country s defense minister says he believes there are signs hamas is in his words beginning to break inside gaza. an israeli flag was seen raced in the height of gaza city in the north. alex joins us now. so those comments from the defense minister. what evidence is there if any to support what he said? well, anderson, no doubt israel has degraded hamas s capabilities. they have taken out several thousand of their fighters, they have killed many of their senior commanders and seized a lot of their arsenal. fighting remains particula
and division over the war you rages on college campuses. also good news about the u.s. economy, but why so many don t believe it. elle reeve is in west monroe, louisiana, to understand. and a school shooter hears his ntence, an emotional day for the parents of four students he gunned down. the united states vetoed a u.n. security council resolution, calling for an immediate ceasefire in gaza, citing no mention in the resolution of the attack by hamas. 13 countries voted in favor. the uk abstained. in israel, that country s defense minister said he believes there are signs hamas is, in his words, beginning to break inside gaza. today, an israeli flag was raised in the middle of palestine square in the heart of gaza city in the north. alex marquardt has more on the scale and intensity of the battle. alex joins us now. what evidence, if any, is there to support what he said? reporter: well, anderson, no doubt israel has significantly degraded hamas capabilities. they ha
this is gps, the global public square. welcome to you in the united states and around the world. i m fareed zakaria coming to you live from new york. today on the program, after seven days, the truce between israel and hamas is over and the war is back on. i ll ask a former idf officer whether israel s tactics will change in this phase. will it be more precise, more careful about civilian casualties as the united states has asked? and then i will talk to a man who knows the casualties well. a british palestinian surgeon who has worked in gaza hospitals during the war. finally, the death of america s most famous 20th century statesman, henry kissinger. i will talk to his biographer niall ferguson how he changed the world for better and for worse. but first, here is my take. henry kissinger, who died this week at 100 years old, may have been the most famous foreign policy practitioner in modern american history. but he practiced for just eight of the hundred years. he
united states and around the world. i m fareed zakaria coming to you live from new york. today on the program, after seven days, the truce between israel and hamas is over and the war is back on. i ll ask a former idf officer whether israel s tactics will change in this phase. will it be more precise, more careful about civilian casualties as the united states has asked? then i will talk to a man who knows those casualties well. a british palestinian surgeon who has worked in gaza s hospitals during the war. finally, the death of america s most famous 20th century statesman hen ry kissinger. i will talk to his biographer, neil ferguson how kissinger changed the world for better or for worse. but first, here s my take. henry kissinger, who died this week at 100 years old, may have been the most famous foreign policy practitioner in modern american history, but he practiced foreign policy for just eight those hundred years. he left office as secretary of state nearly half a c