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The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
World
Amy Sedghi (now) and Caroline Davies (earlier)

Russia warns against travel to Middle East amid fears of Iranian attack on Israel – as it happened

Israeli soldiers at the border with Gaza.
Israeli soldiers at the border with Gaza. Photograph: Abir Sultan/EPA

Closing summary

It has just gone 4pm in Gaza and 5pm in Tel Aviv and Beirut. We will be closing this blog soon, but you can stay up to date on the Guardian’s Middle East coverage here.

Here is a recap of the latest developments:

  • Russia’s foreign ministry on Thursday advised against travel to the Middle East and German airline Lufthansa extended a suspension of its flights to Tehran, as the region was kept on edge by Iran’s threat to retaliate against Israel for an attack in Syria. Lufthansa said on Wednesday it had suspended flights to Tehran due to the situation in the Middle East. On Thursday, the airline said this had been extended until probably 13 April.

  • A video has surfaced of a senior official at Israel’s cyber intelligence agency, Unit 8200, talking last year about the use of machine learning “magic powder” to help identify Hamas targets in Gaza. The footage raises questions about the accuracy of a recent statement about use of artificial intelligence (AI) by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), which said it “does not use an artificial intelligence system that identifies terrorist operatives or tries to predict whether a person is a terrorist”.

  • Israeli forces killed three sons of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in an airstrike in Gaza without consulting senior commanders or political leaders including prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Israeli media reports said on Thursday. Quoting senior Israeli officials, Walla news agency said neither Netanyahu nor defence minister Yoav Gallant had been told in advance of the strike, which was coordinated by the Israeli military and the Shin Bet intelligence service.

  • Haniyeh said the Israeli attack that killed three of his sons and at least two grandchildren would not change Hamas’s demands for a permanent ceasefire and return of displaced Palestinians from their homes in ongoing negotiations mediated by Doha and Washington. “All our people and all the families of Gaza have paid a heavy price in blood, and I am one of them,” Haniyeh said. The Israeli military statement confirmed it had targeted Haniyeh’s sons, who it described as “three Hamas operatives” who were “on their way to carry out terrorist activities” but did not comment on reports that Haniyeh’s grandchildren had also been killed.

  • Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on Wednesday offered condolences in a phone call to Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh after the death of his three sons in Gaza, his office said. “President Erdoğan stressed that Israel will definitely be held to account before law for the crimes of humanity it has been committing,” his office said in a statement on social media.

  • Israel’s foreign ministry on Thursday denounced Ireland’s new prime minister Simon Harris for not mentioning the hostages held by militants in Gaza during a speech to the Irish parliament. Harris – who was sworn in on Tuesday – “forgot” to “mention the 133 Israeli hostages who have been rotting in Hamas tunnels for the past six months,” Israel’s foreign ministry said in a statement.

  • The US president, Joe Biden, has vowed that US commitment to defend Israel against Iran was “ironclad”. The US secretary of state Antony Blinken has also made clear that the US will stand with Israel against any threats from Iran, in a call with Israeli defence minister Yoav Gallant on Wednesday, according to the state department.

  • Iranian threats to carry out a missile strike against Israel are “unacceptable”, the UK prime minister, Rishi Sunak, said as he reaffirmed the UK’s support for Tel Aviv’s right to defend itself. Speaking to broadcasters on Thursday, Sunak condemned the Ayatollah’s comments, saying they were “unacceptable”. He said: “We, like the Americans, fully support Israel’s right to defend itself against that.”

  • German foreign minister Annalena Baerbock called her Iranian counterpart Hossein Amirabdollahian to urge “maximum restraint” to avoid further escalation, Reuters reported on Thursday.

  • The US Middle East envoy Brett McGurk has reportedly called the foreign ministers of Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar and Iraq, asking them to deliver a message to Tehran to lower tensions with Israel. The Reuters news agency, citing a source who spoke on the condition of anonymity, says that McGurk asked the officials to contact the Iranian foreign minister and convey the message – which they are reported to have done. McGurk’s calls were first reported by Axios but the White House has declined to comment.

  • At least 33,545 Palestinians have been killed and 76,094 injured in Israel’s military offensive on Gaza since 7 October, the Gaza health ministry said in a statement on Thursday. The ministry does not distinguish between combatants and non-combatants.

  • Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel is continuing its war in Gaza but is also preparing for scenarios in other arenas, the Times of Israel reports. “We are in challenging times. We are in the midst of a war in Gaza that is continuing with full force … but we are also preparing for challenges from other fronts,” the website reports Netanyahu telling pilots at an air force base in southern Israel.

  • It has been reported by US media that Hamas does not have 40 living hostages who fit the criteria needed for an exchange under a proposed ceasefire deal. In an article published on Wednesday, The New York Times cites a senior Israeli official and a senior Hamas official as the sources. CNN also reported the claims, saying sources had told the news outlet that Hamas had informed international mediators it does not have the required number of living hostages who fit the criteria, including women, sick and elderly men. It also says that Israel is now pushing for Hamas to instead include younger male hostages, as well as soldiers in an initial release. The Guardian has been unable to verify the reports.

  • The Kremlin on Thursday called for all countries in the Middle East to show restraint and prevent the region slipping into chaos. Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said there had been no requests for Russia to mediate between Israel and Iran, though Peskov said the Israeli strike on the Iranian consulate in Damascus was a violation of all the principles of international law.

  • US senator Tim Kaine, a former vice-presidential nominee and leading foreign policy voice in the Democratic party, has said Joe Biden, now understands that Benjamin Netanyahu “played” him during the early months of the war in Gaza but “that ain’t going to happen any more”. In an interview with the Guardian on Tuesday, Kaine accused the prime minister of making Israel “dramatically less safe” and hurting its longstanding relationship with the US, and said the US president had come to realise the limits of his influence.

  • The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said it had struck a building used by Hezbollah in southern Lebanon, reported the Times of Israel on Thursday. The IDF also said tanks had shelled an area near Tayr Harfa to “remove a threat”.

  • Several countries including France and Jordan airdropped about 110 tonnes of humanitarian aid to Gaza, the French president and military said. The French military on Wednesday said the UK and Germany were involved in the operation, the largest France had taken part in so far.

  • The UN deputy secretary general Amina J Mohammed said that “humanity” and the “international community” has “lost” its “moral compass on Gaza”. In a social media post shared on Thursday by the UN, Mohammed urged action, saying: “We’re late.”

  • The US military said on Thursday that it had shot down 11 drones belonging to Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthi rebels, after the group claimed it had targeted Israeli and US ships off the Gulf of Aden. The latest Houthi attacks targeted two Israeli ships as well as a US commercial vessel and a US warship, the Houthis said in a statement.

  • The United Nations Agency for Palestine Refugees (Unrwa) has been awarded a Spanish civil order of chivalry and honour by the king of Spain. Philippe Lazzarini, the commissioner general of Unrwa, posted on social media on Thursday that it was “an honour” to receive the award. “This is in recognition of the extraordinary service of our teams wherever they are including in Gaza,” wrote Lazzarini.

UK prime minister says Iranian threats against Israel are 'unacceptable'

Iranian threats to carry out a missile strike against Israel are “unacceptable”, the UK prime minister, Rishi Sunak, said as he reaffirmed the UK’s support for Tel Aviv’s right to defend itself, reports the Press Association (PA).

Tehran has vowed to retaliate after two of its top generals were killed in an airstrike on its consulate in Syria earlier this month that the US military believes was carried out by Israel. Although Israel has not commented on the attack, Iran’s leader the Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said the country “must be punished and it shall be”.

Speaking to broadcasters on Thursday, Sunak condemned the Ayatollah’s comments, saying they were “unacceptable”. He said: “We, like the Americans, fully support Israel’s right to defend itself against that.”

According to the Press Association, Sunak added that Britain had already “highlighted Iran as a significant risk to regional security” and taken steps to protect the UK from threats from Tehran.

Thursday also brought the repatriation of three British aid workers killed in an Israeli airstrike in Gaza.

James Kirby, Jim Henderson and John Chapman were working for the aid group World Central Kitchen when their convoy was struck in an attack that killed four other aid workers.

Their families paid tribute to the three men, with Kirby’s saying he would be “missed by many” while Henderson’s described him as “our shining light”. Chapman’s family said he would be “missed deeply” and was “an inspiration to many”.

Here are some of the latest images on the newswires:

German foreign minister calls Iranian counterpart and urges 'maximum restraint' to avoid further escalation

Reuters reports that German foreign minister Annalena Baerbock called her Iranian counterpart Hossein Amirabdollahian to urge “maximum restraint” to avoid further escalation.

Iran has vowed revenge for the 1 April airstrike on its embassy compound in Damascus which killed a top Iranian general and six other Iranian military officers. Iran blames Israel for this, however, Israel has not declared its responsibility for the attack.

On Wednesday, Israel’s foreign minister threatened that its country’s forces would strike Iran directly if the Islamic Republic launched an attack from its territory against Israel.

The Kremlin on Thursday called for all countries in the Middle East to show restraint and prevent the region slipping into chaos.

Updated

US senator Tim Kaine, a former vice-presidential nominee and leading foreign policy voice in the Democratic party, has said Joe Biden, now understands that Benjamin Netanyahu “played” him during the early months of the war in Gaza but “that ain’t going to happen any more”.

In an interview with the Guardian on Tuesday, Kaine accused the prime minister of making Israel “dramatically less safe” and hurting its longstanding relationship with the US, and said the US president had come to realise the limits of his influence.

The Democratic senator for Virginia is best known nationally as Hillary Clinton’s running mate in the 2016 presidential election, a race they lost to Republicans Donald Trump and Mike Pence. The Biden ally is a member of the Senate foreign relations and armed services committees.

Kaine has repeatedly reiterated his backing for Israel’s right to defend itself against Hamas following the terrorist attack six months ago that killed 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and took about 250 people hostage. But he has joined other Democrats in expressing growing consternation over a hardline military response that has killed more than 33,000 Palestinians, according to the Gaza health ministry, and spurred a looming famine.

You can read the full interview written by David Smith in Washington, here:

Updated

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said it had struck a building used by Hezbollah in southern Lebanon, reports the Times of Israel on Thursday.

The Israeli news website wrote:

[IDF] fighter jets carried out a strike earlier today on a building used by Hezbollah in southern Lebanon’s Dhayra, where an operative was spotted.

Tanks also shelled an area near Tayr Harfa to ‘remove a threat,’ the IDF adds.”

A video has surfaced of a senior official at Israel’s cyber intelligence agency, Unit 8200, talking last year about the use of machine learning “magic powder” to help identify Hamas targets in Gaza.

The footage raises questions about the accuracy of a recent statement about use of artificial intelligence (AI) by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), which said it “does not use an artificial intelligence system that identifies terrorist operatives or tries to predict whether a person is a terrorist”.

You can read the full story by Harry Davies and Bethan McKernan here:

At least 33,545 Palestinians have been killed and 76,094 injured in Israel’s military offensive on Gaza since 7 October, the Gaza health ministry said in a statement on Thursday, Reuters reports.

Updated

Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel is continuing its war in Gaza but is also preparing for scenarios in other arenas, the Times of Israel reports.

“We are in challenging times. We are in the midst of a war in Gaza that is continuing with full force. In addition, we are continuing with ceaseless efforts to return our hostages, but we are also preparing for challenges from other fronts,” the website reports Netanyahu telling pilots at an air force base in southern Israel.

“We set a simple principle: Anyone who hits us, we hit them,” Netanyahu said, in apparent reference to Iranian threats to carry out strikes against Israel. “We are ready to fulfil our responsibilities to Israel’s security, in defence and attack.”

He was speaking amid concern that Iran was preparing to strike Israel in response for the killing of senior Iranian commanders.

Updated

The Kremlin on Thursday called for all countries in the Middle East to show restraint and prevent the region slipping into chaos, reports Reuters.

Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said there had been no requests for Russia to mediate between Israel and Iran, though Peskov said the Israeli strike on the Iranian consulate in Damascus was a violation of all the principles of international law.

It has been reported by US media that Hamas does not have 40 living hostages who fit the criteria needed for an exchange under a proposed ceasefire deal.

In an article published on Wednesday, The New York Times cites a senior Israeli official and a senior Hamas official as the sources. According to the NYT, “Israel had been relayed Hamas’s claim, and the senior Hamas official said that the group had informed mediators facilitating the negotiations”. The publication said the Israeli official and the Hamas official requested anonymity because of the sensitivity of the negotiations.

CNN also reported the claims on Wednesday, saying sources had told the news outlet that Hamas had informed international mediators it does not have the required number of living hostages who fit the criteria, including women, sick and elderly men.

It also says that Israel is now pushing for Hamas to instead include younger male hostages, as well as soldiers in an initial release.

The Guardian has been unable to verify the reports.

Russia advises against travel to Middle East

Russia on Thursday advised against travel to the Middle East and German airline Lufthansa extended a suspension of its flights to Tehran, as the region was kept on edge by Iran’s threat to retaliate against Israel for an attack in Syria, reports Reuters.

Iran has vowed revenge for the 1 April airstrike on its embassy compound in Damascus which killed a top Iranian general and six other Iranian military officers. Israel has not declared its responsibility for the attack.

According to Reuters, Russia’s foreign ministry told citizens they should refrain from travelling to the Middle East, especially to Israel, Lebanon and the Palestinian territories.

“We strongly recommend that Russian citizens refrain from traveling to the region, especially to Israel, Lebanon and the Palestinian territories, except in cases of extreme necessity,” it said.

“The tense situation in the Middle East region persists,” said the foreign ministry, which first issued such travel advice in October when it urged Russians not to visit Israel and the Palestinian territories after Hamas attacked Israel.

Lufthansa said on Wednesday it had suspended flights to Tehran due to the situation in the Middle East. On Thursday, the airline said this had been extended until probably 13 April.

A spokesperson said Lufthansa had decided not to operate a flight from Frankfurt to Tehran last weekend to avoid the crew having to disembark to spend the night in the Iranian capital, say Reuters.

Lufthansa and its subsidiary Austrian Airlines are the only two western carriers flying into Tehran, which is mostly served by Turkish and Middle Eastern airlines.

Austrian Airlines, which flies from Vienna to Tehran six times a week, said it was still planning to fly on Thursday but was adjusting timings to avoid an overnight layover.

According to Reuters, there was no immediate word from other international airlines that fly to Tehran.

Israel’s foreign ministry denounce Irish PM for not mentioning Gaza hostages in speech

Israel’s foreign ministry on Thursday denounced Ireland’s new prime minister Simon Harris for not mentioning the hostages held by militants in Gaza during a speech to the Irish parliament, report Agence France-Presse (AFP).

AFP also say that Israel is furious with Ireland over its intention to recognise a Palestinian state and to intervene in the genocide case brought by South Africa against Israel at the International Court of Justice (ICJ).

Harris – who was sworn in on Tuesday – “forgot” to “mention the 133 Israeli hostages who have been rotting in Hamas tunnels for the past six months,” Israel’s foreign ministry said in a statement.

It said Ireland was also “planning to award additional prizes to terrorism” by backing South Africa, which it called “the legal arm of the Hamas terrorist organisation, and the possible recognition of a Palestinian state in the future.”

“After the worst massacre of Jews since the Holocaust … there are those in Ireland who persist on being on the wrong side of history,” the statement added.

According to AFP, Harris, 37, Ireland’s youngest ever taoiseach, told the Irish parliament on Tuesday that “innocent children, women and men are being starved and slaughtered” in Gaza.

“We have not been silent on the unforgiveable terrorist actions of Hamas on 7 October, nor can we be silent on the disproportionate reaction of the Israeli government,” said the leader of the centre-right Fine Gael party.

In a 27 March statement declaring that it would intervene at the ICJ, Ireland’s Department of Foreign Affairs cited “taking of hostages” as among violations of international humanitarian law that have occurred in Israel and Gaza since 7 October.

The leaders of Ireland, Malta and Slovenia, in a joint statement with Spain on 22 March, expressed “readiness to recognise Palestine” when “the circumstances are right”.

Here are some of the latest images on the newswires:

Updated

Netanyahu not consulted on killing of Hamas leader's sons, Israeli media say

Israeli forces killed three sons of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in an airstrike in Gaza without consulting senior commanders or political leaders including prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu, says Reuters citing Israeli media reports on Thursday.

Quoting senior Israeli officials, Walla news agency said neither Netanyahu nor defence minister Yoav Gallant had been told in advance of the strike, which was coordinated by the Israeli military and the Shin Bet intelligence service.

It said Amir, Mohammad and Hazem Haniyeh had been targeted as fighters and not because they were the sons of Hamas’s political leader. The Israeli military did not comment on reports that four of Haniyeh’s grandchildren had also been killed, reports Reuters.

The international news agency said no comment on the Walla report was immediately available from the prime minister’s office or the military.

The killing of Haniyeh’s relatives has added a potential complication to negotiations aimed at securing a halt in the fighting in Gaza in exchange for the return of the 133 Israeli hostages still believed to be held there.

However, Haniyeh said Hamas had “clear and specific” demands for agreeing to any pause in the fighting. “The enemy will be delusional if it thinks that targeting my sons, at the climax of the negotiations and before the movement sends its response, will push Hamas to change its position,” Haniyeh said on Wednesday.

Global calls for a ceasefire have been growing as the war has entered its seventh month but there has been little sign of progress in the talks.

Hamas is demanding an end to the Israeli offensive, a withdrawal of Israeli forces and permission for Gaza’s displaced Palestinians to return to their homes.

Israel wants to secure the return of the hostages but says it will not end the war until Hamas is destroyed as a military force, and that it is still planning to assault the southern city of Rafah, where more than a million civilians have taken refuge.

International community has 'lost' its 'moral compass on Gaza', says UN deputy secretary general

The UN deputy secretary general Amina J Mohammed has said that “humanity” and the “international community” has “lost” its “moral compass on Gaza”. She urged action, saying: “We’re late.”

In a social media post shared on Thursday by the UN, Mohammed is quoted as saying:

“We have lost our moral compass on Gaza as a humanity, as the international community.

We need to do something about that fast – we’re late.

There are thousands of children that continue to lose their lives.”

US says it downed 11 Yemen rebel drones

The US military said on Thursday that it had shot down 11 drones belonging to Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthi rebels, after the group claimed it had targeted Israeli and US ships off the Gulf of Aden, reports Agence France-Presse (AFP).

The US Central Command (Centcom) said on X that its forces had shot down three drones launched from Houthi-controlled areas on Wednesday morning, and eight drones later the same day.

“It was determined the UAVs presented an imminent threat to US, coalition, and merchant vessels in the region,” the statement said using the acronym for unmanned aerial vehicles.

The latest Houthi attacks targeted two Israeli ships as well as a US commercial vessel and a US warship, the Houthis said in a statement, according to AFP.

“The ships were targeted with a number of suitable naval missiles and drones,” the statement said.

Houthi rebels have launched dozens of missile and drone attacks on shipping in the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden since November, leading to retaliatory strikes by the US against Houthi targets in Yemen.

The United Nations Agency for Palestine Refugees (Unrwa) has been awarded a Spanish civil order of chivalry and honour by the king of Spain.

Philippe Lazzarini, the commissioner general of Unrwa, posted on social media on Thursday that it was “an honour” for himself and Unrwa to receive the award.

“This is in recognition of the extraordinary service of our teams wherever they are including in Gaza,” wrote Lazzarini.

He added:

It is testament to the indispensable role of the agency in providing relief, education and health care for Palestine refugees.

Thank you Spain for this humbling recognition and for your unwavering support over the years especially during the past very challenging period.”

Turkish president offers condolences to Hamas chief for sons’ killings in Gaza

Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on Wednesday offered condolences in a phone call to Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh after the death of his three sons in Gaza, his office said, according to Agence France-Presse (AFP).

“President Erdoğan stressed that Israel will definitely be held to account before law for the crimes of humanity it has been committing,” his office said in a statement on social media.

Erdoğan has called Israel a “terrorist state” and accused it of conducting a “genocide” in Gaza. He has called Hamas “liberators” or “mujahideen” fighting for their land, say AFP.

Haniyeh, who is based in Qatar, told Al Jazeera network that three of his sons and some of his grandchildren were killed in an Israeli strike.

Haniyeh said the deadly strike would fail to force Hamas’s hand in negotiations towards a truce and hostage release.

Several countries including France airdropped about 110 tonnes of humanitarian aid to Gaza, the French president and military said, reports the news agency, Agence France Presse (AFP).

“Faced with the humanitarian emergency in Gaza, France continues to deliver medicine and food to the population,” French president Emmanuel Macron said on X late on Tuesday.

“With Jordan and other partners, the airdrop today allowed the delivery of more than 110 tonnes of cargo.”

The French military on Wednesday said the UK and Germany were involved in the operation, the largest France had taken part in so far.

The airdrops come as Muslims in the Gaza Strip mark a desperately sad Eid al-Fitr for the end of the Ramadan fasting month, with little food and after Israeli bombardment overnight killed 14 people including children, according to the health ministry there, reports AFP.

Aid workers have repeatedly urged Israel to allow more food convoys in through the land border with Egypt, where trucks have been waiting in long lines for permission. They say the overland route is more efficient and cheaper than airdrops.

Jason Burke and Malak A Tantesh in Rafah have reported on how Palestinians in Gaza marked the end of Ramadan in the shadow of war. Here is a snippet from the feature:

As cold, driving rain swept across the rubbish- and rubble-strewn streets of Rafah early on Wednesday morning, residents of the crowded city in the south of Gaza set out to celebrate the end of the holy month of Ramadan and the festival of Eid al-Fitr.

Prayers were held in mosques badly damaged in the continuing Israeli offensive, in the crowded schools where many have lived since being forced to flee ruined homes elsewhere in the territory, and on the sand among the rows of tents now home to hundreds of thousands.

By noon, the clouds had cleared but the spring sun brought little of the warmth usually associated with a day of faith, friendship and family.

“It doesn’t feel like Eid because of the lack of a beautiful atmosphere, and we are not buying clothes and sweets, or gathering together like we usually do,” said Jana Muhammad Sorour, a 12-year-old dispatched by her displaced family to sell homemade goods to neighbours in Rafah to raise much-needed funds.

“I hope that the war will stop and that I will get clothes and candy like other holidays, and most importantly, go home.”

You can read the full piece here:

Hamas leader repeats Gaza ceasefire call after sons and grandchildren killed

Three sons and at least two grandchildren of the Hamas leader, Ismail Haniyeh, have been killed in an Israeli airstrike in the Gaza Strip, the exiled political chief of the militant group has said from his base in the Qatari capital of Doha.

Haniyeh told Al Jazeera on Wednesday that his children Hazem, Amir and Mohammed and several of their children were visiting relatives for Eid at the Shati refugee camp in northern Gaza when their car was targeted in an Israeli airstrike. Sixty of his relatives had been killed in the six-month-old war, he said, including 14 who died after an Israeli airstrike hit the family home in Gaza City in October.

The Hamas leader said the attack would not change the group’s demands for a permanent ceasefire and return of displaced Palestinians from their homes in ongoing negotiations mediated by Doha and Washington.

“All our people and all the families of Gaza have paid a heavy price in blood, and I am one of them,” Haniyeh said.

The Israeli military statement confirmed it had targeted Haniyeh’s sons, who it described as “three Hamas operatives” who were “on their way to carry out terrorist activities”.

You can read the full piece by Bethan McKernan here:

US reportedly asks Iran's neighbours to help lower tensions

The US Middle East envoy Brett McGurk has reportedly called the foreign ministers of Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar and Iraq, asking them to deliver a message to Tehran to lower tensions with Israel.

The Reuters news agency, citing a source who spoke on the condition of anonymity, says that McGurk asked the officials to contact the Iranian foreign minister and convey the message – which they are reported to have done.

McGurk’s calls were first reported by Axios but the White House has declined to comment.

Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, said Israel “must be punished and it shall be” for the Damascus strike that killed seven Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps members.

Israel has not confirmed it was behind the strike on the Iranian consulate in Syria, but the Pentagon has said it was.

Iran’s foreign ministry said on Wednesday the foreign ministers of Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Qatar and Iraq spoke on the phone with Iran’s foreign minister and discussed regional tensions.

Those tensions have flared and spread since Israel launched its war in Gaza in the wake of the Hamas 7 October attacks.

Most recently, the US president, Joe Biden, has vowed that US commitment to defend Israel against Iran was “ironclad”. The US secretary of state Antony Blinken has also made clear that the US will stand with Israel against any threats from Iran, in a call with Israeli defence minister Yoav Gallant on Wednesday, according to the state department.

Updated

Opening summary

It has gone 8am in Gaza and 9am in Tel Aviv. This is our latest Guardian live blog on the Israel-Gaza war and the wider Middle East crisis.

The US Middle East envoy Brett McGurk has called the foreign ministers of Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar and Iraq to ask Tehran to lower tensions with Israel, Reuters reports, citing a source.

Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, said Israel “must be punished and it shall be” for the strike on Iran’s embassy in Syria that killed seven Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps members. Israel was suspected to be behind the attack but it has not acknowledged its involvement.

McGurk’s calls were first reported by Axios.

More on that in a moment but first, here’s a summary of the latest developments:

  • US president Joe Biden has vowed that US commitment to defend Israel against Iran was “ironclad” as concerns rose in Washington that a “significant” Iranian strike could happen within days, in retaliation for the bombing of an Iranian consular building in Damascus. US and allied officials fear that a strike is imminent and could come in the form of a direct missile launch from Iran, rather than an attack through a proxy like Hezbollah in Lebanon.

  • Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei reiterated on Wednesday a promise to retaliate against Israel over the killings of Iranian generals in Syria. Israel has not acknowledged its involvement. Khamenei spoke at a prayer ceremony, saying the airstrike that demolished Iran’s consulate in Syria earlier this month was “wrongdoing” against a diplomatic post that is considered Iranian territory. “The evil regime must be punished, and it will be punished,” he said.

  • Israel’s foreign minister threatened on Wednesday that its country’s forces would strike Iran directly if the Islamic Republic launched an attack from its territory against Israel. “If Iran attacks from its territory, Israel will respond and attack in Iran,” Israel Katz said in a post on X in both Farsi and Hebrew.

  • Iran’s Mehr news agency removed a report on Wednesday from its official channel on X that had said the country was closing its airspace over the capital Tehran and denied in a new post that it had published any such news. In the original report posted on X, the semi-official news agency cited the Iranian defence minister as saying that all air traffic had been suspended over Tehran from 2030 GMT on Wednesday “due to military drills”.

  • Axios is reporting that the senior US military commander in charge of the Middle East is expected to go to Israel on Thursday to coordinate around a possible attack on Israel, two Israeli officials told the news outlet. The commander of the US military central command (Centcom) Gen Erik Kurilla is expected to meet senior Israel Defense Forces (IDF) officials and Israeli defence minister Yoav Gallant, reports Axios.

  • US secretary of state Antony Blinken, has also made clear that the US will stand with Israel against any threats from Iran, in a call with Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant on Wednesday, according to the state department.

  • Three sons and at least two grandchildren of the Hamas leader, Ismail Haniyeh, have been killed in an Israeli airstrike in the Gaza Strip, the exiled political chief of the militant group has said from his base in the Qatari capital of Doha. Haniyeh told Al Jazeera on Wednesday that his children Hazem, Amir and Mohammed and several of their children were visiting relatives for Eid at the Shati refugee camp in northern Gaza when their car was targeted in an Israeli airstrike. The Israeli military statement confirmed it had targeted Haniyeh’s sons, who it described as “three Hamas operatives”. The Hamas leader said the attack would not change the group’s demands for a permanent ceasefire.

  • Israel has agreed in ceasefire talks in Egypt to concessions about the return of Palestinians to the north of Gaza, but believes Hamas does not want to strike a deal, Israeli officials told Reuters on Wednesday. Two officials with knowledge of the talks told the news agency that under a US proposal for a truce, Israel would allow the return of 150,000 Palestinians to north Gaza with no security checks. In return, they said, Hamas would be required to give a list of female, elderly and sick hostages it still holds alive. Netanyahu’s office declined to comment.

  • It is being reported that Hamas does not have 40 living hostages who fit the criteria needed for an exchange under a proposed ceasefire deal. The New York Times is citing a senior Israeli official as the source. CNN also reported the claims earlier, saying sources had told the news outlet that Hamas had informed international mediators it does not have the required number of living hostages who fit the criteria, including women, sick and elderly men. It also says that Israel is now pushing for Hamas to instead include younger male hostages, as well as soldiers in an initial release.

  • Israeli War Cabinet minister Benny Gantz has claimed Hamas has been defeated militarily, although he also said Israel will fight it for years to come. “From a military point of view, Hamas is defeated. Its fighters are eliminated or in hiding” and its capabilities “crippled,” Gantz said in a statement to the media in the southern Israeli city of Sderot. But he added: “Fighting against Hamas will take time. Boys who are now in middle school will still fight in the Gaza Strip,” reports the Associated Press.

  • Aid shipments to Gaza are expected to resume soon from Cyprus, officials said on Wednesday. The US plans to set up a dock, with a target date of 1 May, on Gaza’s Mediterranean coast that will enable aid deliveries which will be pre-screened in Cyprus, with Israeli oversight. With that jetty in place, Cyprus expects aid to resume soon, Cypriot president Nikos Christodoulides said.

  • Israeli forces kept up combat operations and airstrikes on Gaza on Wednesday, reported AFP, a day after Netanyahu vowed no let up in the campaign to destroy Hamas and bring home the hostages. Netanyahu insisted on that “no force in the world” would stop Israeli troops from entering Gaza’s far-southern city of Rafah which is packed with displaced Palestinians.

  • Eid al-Fitr was observed by Muslims across the world on Wednesday, including in Gaza, where Eid prayers were held outside the ruins of a mosque in Rafah to mark the end of the holy month of Ramadan. Some displaced worshippers knelt on plastic tarpaulin outside tents where they are living after Israeli offensives destroyed their homes and infrastructure.

  • According to the UN, 95% of pregnant and breastfeeding women in Gaza are not getting adequate food or nutrition. In a release published by the UN’s Population Fund (UNFPA), that was updated on 2 April, the UN agency warned that about 155,000 pregnant women and new mothers were “struggling to survive”.

  • At least 33,482 Palestinians have been killed and 76,049 have been injured in Israeli strikes on Gaza since 7 October, according to the latest figures from the Gaza health ministry, which is run by Hamas. The ministry does not distinguish between combatants and non-combatants.

  • Spanish prime minister Pedro Sánchez warned on Wednesday that Israel’s “disproportionate response” in the Gaza war with Hamas risks “destabilising the Middle East, and as a consequence, the entire world”. Sánchez also insisted that the recognition of a Palestinian state, long resisted by Israel and its key allies, is “in Europe’s geopolitical interests”. It is as the Palestine ambassador to Ireland welcomed Dublin’s promise to formally recognise Palestinian statehood and hoped other EU members will follow.

  • The US Central Command (Centcom) says that its forces successfully engaged three unmanned aerial vehicles launched from Houthi-controlled areas of Yemen over the Gulf of Aden and Red Sea. There were no injuries or damage reported, the statement added.

Updated

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