Humanitarian aid organisation World Central Kitchen has said it is pausing its operation in Gaza after a number of its workers were killed in an Israeli airstrike.
World Central Kitchen (WCK) said it was “heartbroken to share” that a vehicle carrying its employees was hit by the strike, confirming earlier claims by both Israeli and Palestinian officials.
The Israel Defence Forces (IDF) earlier claimed that one of the three aid workers killed was also a “terrorist” who helped orchestrate the 7 October massacre last year.
But WCK’s statement said: “World Central Kitchen had no knowledge that any individual in the vehicle had alleged ties to the October 7th Hamas attack.”
It added: “World Central Kitchen is pausing operations in Gaza at this time. Our hearts are with our colleagues and their families in this unimaginable moment.”
WCK’s aid deliveries in Gaza were temporarily suspended earlier this year after seven of its workers, most of them foreigners, were killed in another Israeli airstrike.
WCK is a non-profit that says it is first to frontlines to provide “fresh meals in response to crises”.
Two others were killed in Saturday’s strike, according to an official from the Hamas-run Gaza health ministry – but did not give further details.
An uncle of one of the aid workers killed said he was “driving his car… normally as usual” but was “targeted without prior warning and without any reason”.
He added that he worked “providing food and helping people and the displaced” and was “deliberately targeted”.
The deadly incident is the latest to have impacted aid workers in Gaza, who help provide food, medicine, and shelter for the millions displaced there.
In an earlier statement, the IDF said the “terrorist” killed was “monitored for a while by IDF intelligence and was struck following credible information regarding his real-time location”.
“We emphasise that it was a civilian unmarked vehicle and its movement on the route was not co-ordinated for transporting of aid,” a spokesperson added.
At least 32 Palestinians were killed by Israeli strikes across Gaza overnight on Friday, Reuters said, quoting medics inside the territory.
Among them were seven killed when a house was destroyed in central Gaza, the Hamas-run Gaza civil defence agency said.
The agency said one of its officers was also killed in an attack in Jabalia, northern Gaza.
Meanwhile, Hamas has released a video of Israeli-American hostage Edan Alexander, 20, where he pleads for US President-elect Donald Trump to secure his release.
The captive’s mother Yael said the footage “gives us hope, but it also shows how difficult it is for Edan and for the other hostages, and how much they are crying out and praying for us to rescue them”.
According to the Gaza health ministry, at least 44,382 people have been killed and 105,142 injured inside the territory since Hamas’s attack on Israel on 7 October 2023.
Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire broken in Lebanon
Elsewhere in the region, Israel broke a short-lived ceasefire with Hezbollah on Saturday when its aircraft struck the Iranian-backed group’s weapons sites along the Lebanese border.
The 60-day truce was only brokered on Tuesday, with both sides promising to withdraw from southern Lebanon.
Image: Damage after one of the strikes that broke the ceasefire in Tyre, southern Lebanon. Pic: Reuters
Image: Smoke rises above the skyline in southern Lebanon near the border with Lebanon. Pic: Reuters
But the IDF said in a statement on Saturday that it had “acted during the day against activities in Lebanon that posed a threat to the State of Israel, violating the ceasefire understandings”.
The IDF detailed four incidents, in which it and the Israeli air force attacked Hezbollah targets.
Israel says it acted in response to ceasefire violations by Hezbollah, which has not commented on the strikes.
Some 1.2 million people have been displaced by the conflict in southern Lebanon, which reignited on 8 October after Hezbollah began attacking Israel in solidarity with Hamas.
Many displaced people have tried to return to their homes, despite warnings by both Israeli and Lebanese authorities to stay away from areas prone to clashes.
America appears to have hit the three key locations in Iran’s nuclear programme.
They include Isfahan, the location of a significant research base, as well as uranium enrichment facilities at Natanz and Fordow.
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Natanz was believed to have been previously damaged in Israeli strikes after bombs disrupted power to the centrifuge hall, possibly destroying the machines indirectly.
However the facility at Fordow, which is buried around 80 metres below a mountain, had previously escaped major damage.
Details about the damage in the US strikes is not yet known, although Mr Trump said the three sites had been “obliterated”.
The US has carried out a “very successful attack” on three nuclear sites on Iran, President Donald Trump has said.
The strikes, which the US leader announced on social media, reportedly include a hit on the heavily-protected Fordow enrichment plant which is buried deep under a mountain.
The other sites hit were at Natanz and Isfahan. It brings the US into direct involvement in the war between Israel and Iran.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu hailed the “bold decision” by Mr Trump, saying it would “change history”.
Iran has repeatedly denied that it is seeking a nuclear weapon and the head of the UN’s nuclear watchdog said in June that it has no proof of a “systematic effort to move into a nuclear weapon”.
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Trump: Iran strikes ‘spectacular success’
Addressing the nation in the hours after the strikes, Mr Trump said that Iran must now make peace or “we will go after” other targets in Iran.
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Commenting on the operation, he said that the three Iranian sites had been “obliterated”.
“There will be either peace or there will be tragedy for Iran far greater than we have witnessed over the last eight days,” he said.
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Benjamin Netanyahu said Donald Trump and the US have acted with strength following strikes on Iran’s nuclear facilities.
In a posting on Truth Social earlier, Mr Trump said, “All planes are safely on their way home” and he congratulated “our great American Warriors”. He added: “Fordow is gone.”
He also threatened further strikes on Iran unless it doesn’t “stop immediately”, adding: “Now is the time for peace.”
It is not yet clear if the UK was directly involved in the attack.
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Among the sites hit was Fordow, a secretive nuclear facility buried around 80 metres below a mountain and one of two key uranium enrichment plants in Iran.
“A full payload of BOMBS was dropped on the primary site, Fordow,” Mr Trump said. “Fordow is gone.”
There had been a lot of discussion in recent days about possible American involvement in the Iran-Israel conflict, and much centred around the US possibly being best placed to destroy Fordow.
Meanwhile, Natanz and Isfahan were the other two sites hit in the US attack.
Natanz is the other major uranium enrichment plant in Iran and was believed to have possibly already suffered extensive damage in Israel’s strikes earlier this week.
Isfahan features a large nuclear technology centre and enriched uranium is also stored there, diplomats say.
Israelis are good at tactics, poor at strategic vision, it has been observed.
Their campaign against Iran may be a case in point.
Short termism is understandable in a region that is so unpredictable. Why make elaborate plans if they are generally undone by unexpected events? It is a mindset that is familiar to anyone who has lived or worked there.
And it informs policy-making. The Israeli offensive in Gaza is no exception. The Israeli government has never been clear how it will end or what happens the day after that in what remains of the coastal strip. Pressed privately, even senior advisers will admit they simply do not know.
It may seem unfair to call a military operation against Iran that literally took decades of planning short-termist or purely tactical. There was clearly a strategy of astonishing sophistication behind a devastating campaign that has dismantled so much of the enemy’s capability.
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How close is Iran to producing a nuclear weapon?
But is there a strategic vision beyond that? That is what worries Israel’s allies.
It’s not as if we’ve not been here before, time and time again. From Libya to Afghanistan and all points in between we have seen the chaos and carnage that follows governments being changed.
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Hundreds of thousands have died. Vast swathes of territory remain mired in turmoil or instability.
Which is where a famous warning sign to American shoppers in the 80s and 90s comes in.
Ahead of the disastrous invasion that would tear Iraq apart, America’s defence secretary, Colin Powell, is said to have warned US president George W Bush of the “Pottery Barn rule”.
The Pottery Barn was an American furnishings store. Signs among its wares told clumsy customers: “You break it, you own it.”
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Iran and Israel exchange attacks
Bush did not listen to Powell hard enough. His administration would end up breaking Iraq and owning the aftermath in a bloody debacle lasting years.
Israel is not invading Iran, but it is bombing it back to the 80s, or even the 70s, because it is calling for the fall of the government that came to power at the end of that decade.
Iran’s leadership is proving resilient so far but we are just a week in. It is a country of 90 million, already riven with social and political discontent. Its system of government is based on factional competition, in which paranoia, suspicion and intense rivalries are the order of the day.
After half a century of authoritarian theocratic rule there are no opposition groups ready to replace the ayatollahs. There may be a powerful sense of social cohesion and a patriotic resentment of outside interference, for plenty of good historic reasons.
But if that is not enough to keep the country together then chaos could ensue. One of the biggest and most consequential nations in the region could descend into violent instability.
That will have been on Israel’s watch. If it breaks Iran it will own it even more than America owned the disaster in Iraq.
Iran and Israel are, after all, in the same neighbourhood.
Has Israel thought through the consequences? What is the strategic vision beyond victory?
And if America joins in, as Donald Trump is threatening, is it prepared to share that legacy?
At the very least, is his administration asking its allies whether they have a plan for what could come next?