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Netanyahu dismisses Biden’s warning over “innocent lives being lost” in Israel’s war with Hamas in Gaza

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Jerusalem — In interviews over the weekend, President Biden said Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s disregard for the “innocent lives being lost” amid his country’s war with Hamas in the Gaza Strip was “hurting Israel more than helping Israel.”

Netanyahu said Mr. Biden was “wrong on both counts,” claiming that both his political and military policies were supported by an “overwhelming majority” of Israelis who “support the action that we’re taking to destroy the remaining terrorist battalions of Hamas.”

Mr. Biden’s remarks to MSNBC on Saturday reflected his growing frustration over the situation in Gaza, where the Hamas-run health ministry says well over 30,000 people have been killed since Israel launched its offensive in response to the Palestinian militant group’s Oct. 7 terrorist attack. That attack left about 1,200 people dead across southern Israel and saw Hamas seize roughly 240 hostages, about 100 of whom are believed to remain in captivity.

Natanyahu rejects Biden’s warning, draws own “red line”

Israel has maintained strict military control over all of Gaza’s borders since the war began and has been accused of severely limiting the flow of desperately needed humanitarian aid into the decimated Palestinian territory, where the United Nations says hundreds of thousands of people are facing imminent starvation.

As the humanitarian crisis worsens, Israeli military forces are still preparing to launch a ground operation into the southern Gaza city of Rafah, long a Hamas stronghold where Netanyahu says the U.S. and Israeli-designated terror group still has several combat units. But Rafah has also become a refuge for an estimated 1.5 million Palestinians who have fled from their homes elsewhere in Gaza. 

President Biden was asked over the weekend if Israel ignoring the many warnings from Washington, other Israeli allies and global humanitarian aid agencies against carrying out a Rafah siege would be a red line. 


Netanyahu says cease-fire deal would only delay Rafah offensive

03:36

“I’m never going to leave Israel,” vowed Mr. Biden, who has stressed Israel’s right to defend itself since the Hamas attack. “The defense of Israel is still critical, so there’s no red line [at which] I’m going to cut off [U.S. provision of] all weapons.”

But Mr. Biden added, without providing any detail of what they might be, that there were some “red lines” for Israel’s actions, suggesting he could take action if there were an operation by the Israel Defense Forces that caused an additional huge loss of civilian life.

“You cannot have 30,000 more Palestinians dead as a consequence,” said the U.S. president, adding that there were “other ways to deal, to get to, to deal with the trauma caused by Hamas.”

Netanyahu, responding to Mr. Biden’s remarks in an interview with Politico, vowed that his forces would push into Rafah. 

“I have a red line,” he said. “You know what the red line is? That Oct. 7 doesn’t happen again. Never happens again.”

Desperation grows in Gaza

Time and food are running out fast in Gaza, with the Biden administration’s hopes for a cease-fire before Ramadan now quashed and the U.N.’s World Food Program warning that more than 500,000 people — a quarter of the Gaza Strip’s total population — are “one step away from famine.”

11 killed in Israeli attack near the UAE Maternity Hospital in Rafah
An injured Palestinian child is seen in the Kuwait Hospital in the aftermath of Israeli attacks near the UAE Maternity Hospital in Rafah, southern Gaza, March 2, 2024.

Jehad Alshrafi/Anadolu/Getty


At the Emirati Hospital in Rafah, Ahmed al-Shair, the deputy head of the neonatal intensive care unit, has been monitoring the tiny babies examines being kept alive in the facility’s overcrowded incubators.

“We have approximately three or four babies in each one,” he told CBS News. “There’s no oxygen, milk or special medications. We sometimes have to choose whose conditions will allow them to live and whose won’t.”

Gaza’s bombed-out infrastructure and lawlessness as Israel attacks Hamas — a group that had run all the enclave’s institutions for almost two decades, including its police force — have impeded food delivery. Aid groups are wary of trucking goods into the northern part of the densely populated strip of land, where it’s most badly needed.


Time and food running out in Gaza

02:24

As an emergency alternative, the U.S. and several other countries have been dropping food and supplies from military aircraft, which isn’t just limited and costly, but dangerous as well. Health officials and witnesses say food parcels falling to the ground with parachutes that failed to open fully have killed at least eight people.

Those hazards are one reason the U.S. military — which has no boots on the ground in the Palestinian territory — will establish a temporary pier off the Gaza’s Mediterranean coast, so aid can be delivered by sea.  

But shipping all the necessary components and teams required to get the pier up and running will take weeks.

Tension as Ramadan starts without a cease-fire deal

In addition to the looming prospect of an Israeli offensive in Rafah, concern over a possible escalation in the five-month war was also mounting Monday as many countries started marking the Islamic holy month of Ramadan. It is a time of prayer and fasting for Muslims across the globe, but in recent years, it has also seen violent clashes in Jerusalem over Israel restricting access to Muslim holy sites.

The Biden administration has been scrambling for a cease-fire in exchange for the release of dozens more of the Israeli hostages still believed to be held in Gaza. Israel’s inability to rescue those people has fueled months of tense protests led by their families.

Despite Israel’s punishing airstrikes and ground offensive, Hamas and Israel have continued to accuse each other of refusing to make a reasonable deal. 

“I wish the Americans will be able to put more pressure in the coming few days, and rescue the whole region from an explosion,” Samer Sinijlawi, an activist with the Palestinian political party Fatah, told CBS News. 

“It’s a ticking time bomb,” he warned. “Nobody knows what will happen. But something will happen.”



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Tajikistan nationals with alleged ISIS ties removed in immigration proceedings, U.S. officials say

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When federal agents arrested eight Tajikistan nationals with alleged ties to the Islamic State terror group on immigration charges back in June, U.S. officials reasoned that coordinated raids in Los Angeles, New York and Philadelphia would prove the fastest way to disrupt a potential terrorist plot in its earliest stages. Four months later, after being detained in Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) facilities, three of the men have already been returned to Tajikistan and Russia, U.S. officials tell CBS News, following removals by immigration court judges. 

Four more Tajik nationals – also held in ICE detention facilities – are awaiting removal flights to Central Asia, and U.S. officials anticipate they’ll be returned in the coming few weeks. Only one of the arrested men still awaits his legal proceeding, following a medical issue, though U.S. officials speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss the sensitive proceedings indicated that he remains detained and is likely to face a similar outcome. 

The men face no additional charges – including terrorism-related offenses – with the decision to immediately arrest and remove them through deportation proceedings, rather than orchestrate a hard-fought terrorism trial in Article III courts, born out of a pressing short-term concern about public safety. 

Soon after the eight foreign nationals crossed into the United States, the FBI learned of the potential ties to the Islamic State, CBS News previously reported. The FBI identified early-stage terrorist plotting, triggering their immediate arrests, in part, through a wiretap after the individuals had already been vetted by U.S. Customs and Border Protection, law enforcement sources confirmed to CBS News in June. 

Several months later, their removals following immigration proceedings mark a departure from the post-9/11 intelligence-sharing architecture of the U.S. government. 

Now facing a more diverse migrant population at the U.S.-Mexico border, a new effort is underway by the Department of Homeland Security, Department of Justice and the Intelligence Community to normalize the direct sharing of classified information – including some marked top-secret – with U.S. immigration judges. 

The more routine intelligence sharing with immigration judges is aimed at allowing U.S. immigration courts to more regularly incorporate derogatory information into their decisions. The endeavor has led to the creation of more safes and sensitive compartmented information facilities – also known as SCIFs – to help facilitate the sharing of classified materials. Once considered a last resort for the department, Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas has sought to use immigration tools, in recent months, to mitigate and disrupt threat activity.

The immigration raids, back in June, underscore the spate of terrorism concerns from the U.S. government this year, as national security agencies point to a system now blinking red in the aftermath of the Oct. 7 attacks by Hamas on Israel, with emerging terrorism hot spots in Central Asia. 

A joint intelligence bulletin released this month, and obtained by CBS News, warns that foreign terrorist organizations have exploited the attack nearly one year ago and its aftermath to try to recruit radicalized followers, creating media that compares the October 7 and 9/11 attacks and encouraging “lone attackers to use simple tactics like firearms, knives, Molotov cocktails, and vehicle ramming against Western targets in retaliation for deaths in Gaza.”

In May, ICE arrested an Uzbek man in Baltimore with alleged ISIS ties after he had been living inside the U.S. for more than two years, NBC News first reported. 

In the past year, Tajik nationals have engaged in foiled terrorism plots in Russia, Iran and Turkey, as well as Europe, with several Tajik men arrested following March’s deadly attack on Crocus City Hall in Moscow that left at least 133 people dead and hundreds more injured. 

The attack has been linked to ISIS-K, or the Islamic State Khorasan Province, an off-shoot of ISIS that emerged in 2015, founded by disillusioned members of Pakistani militant groups, including Taliban fighters. In August 2021, during the U.S. military withdrawal from Afghanistan, ISIS-K launched a suicide attack in Kabul, killing 13 U.S. service members and at least 170 Afghan civilians. 

In a recent change to ICE policy, the agency now recurrently vets foreign nationals arriving from Tajikistan, Uzbekistan and other Central Asian countries, detaining them while they await removal proceedings or immigration hearings.

Only 0.007% of migrant arrivals are flagged by the FBI’s watchlist, and an even smaller number of those asylum seekers are ultimately removed. But with migrants arriving at the Southwest border from conflict zones in the Eastern Hemisphere, posing potential links to extremist or terrorist groups, the White House is now exploring ways to expedite the removal of asylum seekers viewed as a possible threat to the American public. 

“Encounters with migrants from Eastern Hemisphere countries—such as China, India, Russia, and western African countries—in FY 2024 have decreased slightly from about 10 to 9 percent of overall encounters, but remain a higher proportion of encounters than before FY 2023,” according to the Homeland Threat Assessment, a public intelligence document released earlier this month. 

A senior homeland security official told reporters in a briefing Wednesday, that the U.S. is engaged in an “ongoing effort to try to make sure that we can use every bit of available information that the U.S. government has classified and unclassified, and make sure that the best possible picture about a person seeking to enter the United States is available to frontline personnel who are encountering that person.”

Approximately 139 individuals flagged by the FBI’s terror watchlist have been encountered at the U.S.‑Mexico border through July of fiscal year 2024. That number decreased from 216 during the same timeframe in 2023. CBP encountered 283 watchlisted individuals at the U.S.-Canada border through July of fiscal year 2024, down from 375 encountered during the same timeframe in 2023.

“I think one of the features of the surge in migration over recent years is that our border personnel are encountering a much more diverse and global population of individuals trying to enter the United States or seeking to enter the United States,” a senior DHS official said. “So, at some point in the past, it might have been primarily a Western Hemisphere phenomenon. Now, our border personnel encounter individuals from around the world, from all parts of the world, to include conflict zones and other areas where individuals may have links or can support ties to extremist or terrorist organizations that we have long-standing concerns about.”

In April, FBI Director Christopher Wray warned that human smuggling operations at the southern border were trafficking in people with possible connections to terror groups.

“Looking back over my career in law enforcement, I’d be hard-pressed to think of a time when so many different threats to our public safety and national security were so elevated all at once, but that is the case as I sit here today,” Wray, told Congress in June, just days before most of the Tajik men were arrested.

The expedited return of three Tajiks to Central Asia required tremendous diplomatic communication, facilitated by the State Department, U.S. officials said.  

Returns to Central Asia routinely encounter operational and diplomatic hurdles, though regular channels for removal do exist. According to agency data, in 2023, ICE deported only four migrants to Tajikistan.

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Here Comes the Sun: Ralph Macchio and more

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Here Comes the Sun: Ralph Macchio and more – CBS News


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Actor Ralph Macchio sits down with Lee Cowan to discuss the sixth and final season of “Cobra Kai.” Then, Tracy Smith visits The Broad museum in Los Angeles to learn about Mickalene Thomas’ exhibition “All About Love.” “Here Comes the Sun” is a closer look at some of the people, places and things we bring you every week on “CBS Sunday Morning.”

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The Depraved Heart Murder – CBS News

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A surgeon is accused of drugging his girlfriend in order to control her. “48 Hours” contributor Nikki Battiste reports.

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