Gaza, Hamas
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Starmer to push US president to resume role in Gaza ceasefire talks - Donald Trump says he believes he will talk a lot about the situation in Gaza when he sits down with Sir Keir Starmer
Tom Cotton, a Republican Senator from Arkansas, responded to Macron's statement by saying on X: "This is a shameful endorsement of terrorists. The best way for this conflict to end is to back Israel in its righteous mission of rescuing the hostages and defeating Hamas."
"Here's the Scoop" Co-host, Morgan Chesky, speaks with Foreign correspondent Matt Bradley about the hunger crisis in Gaza and the latest on the U.S. cutting ceasefire talks short. Listen to today’s full episode of “Here’s the Scoop” wherever you get your podcasts.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and U.S. President Donald Trump appeared on Friday to abandon Gaza ceasefire negotiations with Hamas, both claiming it had become clear that the Palestinian militants did not want a deal.
Militants “didn’t want to make” a deal, Trump said after U.S., Israeli ceasefire negotiators pulled back from talks.
Mr Trump claims the militant group won't make a deal because they know it will have no bargaining chips once they are released. US President Donald Trump says Israel needs to make a decision soon on their next steps in Gaza.
The Hamas-run Palestinian health ministry said at least 54 people have starved to death in Gaza just this week. Twenty-eight western nations, more than a hundred humanitarian aid organizations, and top UN officials have all said Israeli policies are to blame.
Reversal comes following fierce global condemnation of ‘appalling’ humanitarian conditions inside besieged enclave