The Times of Israel liveblogged Thursday’s events as they happened.
FBI releases photos of wanted man in Charlie Kirk killing
US authorities investigating the killing of right-wing youth leader Charlie Kirk have released pictures of a man they were hunting, as Donald Trump paid tribute to a “giant of his generation.”
Kirk, a 31-year-old superstar on the Republican right who was credited with helping Trump return to the presidency last year, was shot while addressing a large crowd at Utah Valley University on Wednesday.
The killing — described by the FBI as a “targeted event” — shocked a nation already reeling from political tensions half a year into Trump’s second term.
Authorities acknowledged the gunman remained at large after having escaped initially into the woodland.
We are asking for the public's help identifying this person of interest in connection with the fatal shooting of Charlie Kirk at Utah Valley University.
1-800-CALL-FBI
Digital media tips: https://t.co/K7maX81TjJ pic.twitter.com/ALuVkTXuDc— FBI Salt Lake City (@FBISaltLakeCity) September 11, 2025
“We’re doing everything we can to find him, and we’re not sure how far he has gone yet, but we will do our best,” FBI Special Agent Robert Bohls tells a media briefing.
Authorities say the suspect was of university age and that they had quality video footage, yet to be released, identifying the man. The FBI also announced a reward of up to $100,000 for information.
The FBI has issued grainy photos of a person of interest — not yet a suspect — and asked for the public’s help identifying him. The pictures showed a man wearing a black baseball cap, dark sunglasses, and what appeared to be jeans, with a long-sleeved top emblazoned with a design including an American flag.
Bohls says the presumed murder weapon had been found.
“It is a high powered bolt action rifle. That rifle was recovered in a wooded area where the shooter had fled,” the FBI agent says.
Iran says enriched nuclear material ‘under rubble’ of facilities hit during Israel war
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi says that enriched nuclear material remains “under the rubble” of facilities damaged during the recent war with Israel.
In a televised interview, Araghchi says “all of our material is… under the rubble of the bombed facilities,” adding that the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran was assessing the condition and accessibility of the material in order to submit a report to the country’s Supreme National Security Council.
Moldovan official tells ToI Chisinau alarmed by Israeli accusations that its torpedoing talks over Uman pilgrimage
A senior Moldovan official tells The Times of Israel that the country is “deeply concerned” over comments by Israeli officials accusing the country of torpedoing talks over the upcoming Uman pilgrimage by demanding to keep special equipment Israel purchases to allow Jewish worshippers to fly in for the Rosh Hashana event.
The official also accuses the Israeli government of dragging its feet throughout the talks.
“Despite internal logistical, legal, and political constraints, the Republic of Moldova has acted promptly, transparently, and in good faith, assuming an active role in identifying a feasible solution to facilitate the transit of Hasidic pilgrims,” says the official.
Pilgrims travel through Moldova because there are no direct flights to Ukraine.
The official says that Moldova asked for a letter from Israel to start the negotiation process in March. That letter was only issued in July. Despite the delay, says the official, Recean created a 50-person working from the relevant ministries four days after the letter was received. Israel took another week to put its team together.
The two sides met on August 11, when Israel was informed of the costs of the pilgrimage.
According to Channel 12 news, the two countries had been in negotiations to establish a temporary terminal near Moldova’s Chisinau airport for travelers en route to Ukraine from Israel — as that country’s skies remain closed to civilian flights due to the ongoing war — but talks fizzled out when Moldova demanded to keep the temporary equipment after the pilgrimage ends.
To facilitate the large volume of travelers, Moldova demanded that Israel finance a temporary terminal near Chisinau’s airport, which would have cost around NIS 10 million ($3 million). The terminal itself would cost NIS 8 million ($2.4 million) to erect and be staffed by 90 airport security officers, 24 police officers and 50 translators.
Israel would also have needed to send tents, signage, security cameras, firefighting equipment, air conditioning and toilets — all of which Moldova reportedly demanded to keep for itself after the pilgrimage concluded.
The official denies that account. “Moldova did not request funds for the purchase of equipment but proposed that Israel bring in the security scanners under a temporary import customs regime, exactly as was done in 2023 with equipment brought from Romania,” says the official. “The remaining equipment — tents, signage, toilets, air conditioning, etc. — according to the expense estimates, involved only rental and installation costs, with no permanent purchases.”
The official insists that for legal reasons, the equipment could not be purchased on behalf of another state, though Israel demanded at the end of last month that it be turned over to Israel. Moldova proposed a solution under which any equipment purchased would be used for the next pilgrimage as well and would be used by Moldova in the interim.
“Claims that the Republic of Moldova demanded to keep the equipment for itself are incorrect and gravely distort the reality,” says the official.
“The Republic of Moldova proposed the only legal and tested solution, and the Israeli side’s refusal to accept the temporary import of scanners made the implementation of the project impossible,” continues the official. “The specific conditions laid out were based strictly on the experience of the 2023 pilgrimage transit, which showed that Chisinau International Airport cannot handle such a large passenger flow.”
Moldova is asking Israel to agree to release correspondence around the negotiations, and to correct statements it made about Moldova during the negotiations.
“Moldova remains open to constructive dialogue and reaffirms its commitment to bilateral cooperation with the State of Israel, in full compliance with national legislation and the principles of equitable partnership,” says the official.
Gaza antiquities rescued ahead of Israeli strike

Nearly three decades of archaeological finds in Gaza were hurriedly evacuated from a Gaza City building threatened by an Israeli strike earlier today, an official in charge of the antiquities told AFP.
“This was a high-risk operation, carried out in an extremely dangerous context for everyone involved — a real last-minute rescue,” says Olivier Poquillon, director of the French Biblical and Archaeological School of Jerusalem (EBAF), whose storehouse housed the relics.
On Wednesday morning, Israeli authorities ordered EBAF — one of the oldest academic institutions in the region — to evacuate its archaeological storehouse located on the ground floor of a residential tower in Gaza City that was due to be targeted.
The Israeli army did not confirm the warning when asked by AFP, but several sources say France, UNESCO and the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem played a key role in securing a brief reprieve that allowed most of the artifacts to be removed.
“With almost no international actors left on the ground, no infrastructure, nothing functioning, we had to improvise transport, labour and logistics,” said Poquillon.
The evacuation, he added, was carried out in strict secrecy, with “the overriding concern, as a religious organization, of not endangering human lives,” as Israeli military pressed operations in the territory’s largest urban hub.
The depot contained around 180 cubic meters of finds from Gaza’s five main archaeological sites, including the fourth-century Saint Hilarion Monastery, listed as a UNESCO World Heritage site.
All of these sites have been damaged, EBAF said, expressing concern for “unique” mosaics left exposed despite their fragility.
Former US Senator Bob Menendez’s wife sentenced to 4.5 years in bribery case

Nadine Menendez, the wife of former US Senator Bob Menendez, has been sentenced to four and a half years in prison for her role in an international corruption scheme involving gold bars that led to the downfall of her once-powerful husband.
Nadine Menendez, 58, was convicted in April of accepting hundreds of thousands of dollars’ worth of bribes in exchange for her husband doing favors for Egypt and New Jersey businessmen. She was found guilty of all 15 counts she faced, including bribery and fraud. Bob Menendez, a Democrat, represented New Jersey for 18-1/2 years in the Senate.
The sentence was imposed by US District Judge Sidney Stein in Manhattan.
Bob Menendez, who served as chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, was sentenced in January to 11 years in prison after his conviction at a separate trial. Prosecutors said he accepted bribes, including gold bars, cash and a Mercedes-Benz vehicle in exchange for shepherding U.S. military aid to Egypt and interfering in local prosecutions of businessmen.
“The defendant and her partner in crime, former Senator Robert Menendez, engaged in the most brazen form of public corruption – gold bars, cash, and a luxury car in exchange for a senator’s power,” Manhattan U.S. Attorney Jay Clayton said in a statement on Wednesday.
Nadine Menendez’s defense lawyers did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Prosecutors had urged Stein to sentence Nadine Menendez to at least seven years in prison, arguing that she played a critical role in the scheme. Her lawyers had suggested that a sentence of just over a year was appropriate, arguing she was acting at her husband’s direction.
“Nadine was not an elected politician, a pillar in her community, or even a businesswoman – she was an obedient wife,” her lawyers wrote in an August 22 court filing.
Nadine Menendez was to be tried together with her husband, but her trial was postponed after her lawyers said she needed treatment for breast cancer.
Bob Menendez was the first US senator found guilty of acting as a foreign agent. He resigned from the Senate in August 2024 and is serving his sentence at a low-security prison in Allenwood, Pennsylvania.
While holding off on Palestine recognition, Germany to back two-state solution resolution
While it will hold off on recognizing a Palestinian state, Germany has decided to back a UN resolution on Friday enshrining the New York Declaration that was led by France and Saudi Arabia in July and that backed a two-state solution, Bloomberg reports.
The declaration also called for the disarmament of Hamas and its removal from power in Gaza.
Security chiefs reportedly warned PM ahead of time that Doha strike would harm hostage talks
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was reportedly warned ahead of time by security officials that a strike on Hamas leaders in Qatar would harm hostage negotiations, but signed off on the Tuesday operation anyway.
Netanyahu was told that the timing for such a strike would be particularly damaging, as Hamas was in the process of deliberating a hostage deal proposal backed by Israel, and that it was worth giving the effort a chance, Channel 13 reports.
Netanyahu “chose not to accept the position of 90% of the recommendations from the security establishment, including the IDF chief of staff, the head of the National Security Council and the head of the Mossad,” a senior Israeli official tells the network.
A source familiar with the negotiations told The Times of Israel that hostage negotiations have been frozen since the strike, and Channel 12 reported that Israel expects Hamas to harden its stance and for Qatar to lose its motivation to pressure Hamas as a result of the operation.
Jacob Magid contributed to this report.
Israel will soon celebrate annexation of West Bank, Smotrich tells PM at E1 signing ceremony

Israel will soon celebrate the annexation of the West Bank, far-right Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich tells Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at a ceremony at which the premier signed an agreement authorizing a major construction project that would see some 3,400 housing units built in the contentious E1 area in the West Bank, between Jerusalem and the settlement of Ma’ale Adumim.
“The prime minister told me, ‘I’m staying here to hear what you have to say, and I know what you intend to say,'” says Smotrich.
“Mr. Prime Minister, all of us, soon, will thank you and congratulate and celebrate together the application of sovereignty throughout Judea and Samaria,” he adds, using the biblical name for the West Bank.
During the signing event, Netanyahu declared that “there will be no Palestinian state.”
Police probing suspected murder-suicide in Jerusalem

Police are investigating a suspected murder-suicide in Jerusalem after a man fatally shot his ex-wife, then shot himself.
From an initial investigation, police suspect that the two met outside the woman’s residence, after which the man shot her with his licensed handgun, which he owns as a security guard. He then attempted to take his own life.
According to Ynet, the woman had recently remarried and was pregnant.
Paramedics who arrived at the scene of the shooting in Jerusalem’s Gilo neighborhood found the pair, both in their mid-20s, lying on the ground unconscious and suffering from gunshot wounds.
The woman, who was in critical condition, succumbed to her injuries while en route to the hospital, Hebrew outlets report. The man is still alive, but in critical condition after being brought to a hospital.
According to law enforcement, there had been no previous complaints of violence regarding the two.
Knesset lit up in red, white and blue to mark 9/11 and assassination of Charlie Kirk

On the orders of Knesset Speaker Amir Ohana, Israel’s parliament is lit up in the colors of the American flag in memory of the victims of the September 11 attacks, as well as in honor of conservative influencer Charlie Kirk, who was shot dead on Wednesday in Utah.
“Today, 24 years ago, the deadliest terrorist attack took place on the soil of the United States, our closest ally, when four planes carrying passengers were hijacked by Islamist terrorists and crashed in various locations, taking the lives of nearly 3,000 people and changing the skyline of New York,” says Ohana in a statement.
“Tonight, one of the most prominent voices in the struggle against Islamist terror was murdered, one of the greatest and bravest freedom fighters of our time, Charlie Kirk,” he continues.
“In memory of the victims then, and in memory of the victim today, the Knesset is illuminated in the colors of the American flag as a sign of friendship and brotherhood between the two peoples. May God bless the bereaved families and comfort them.”
Qatari PM said slated to meet with top Trump officials in DC as US looks to boost ties after Israeli strike
Qatari Prime Minister Mohammed Abdulrahman Al Thani will travel to Washington tomorrow for meetings with top US officials to discuss the aftermath of Israel’s strike targeting Hamas leaders in Doha, Channel 12 says.
Al Thani will meet with US Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, special envoy Steve Witkoff and perhaps even President Donald Trump in an indication that Washington is looking to signal a boost in ties with Qatar against the backdrop of the strike.
Trump said earlier this week that he had instructed his aides to advance a new security agreement with Qatar, though the Gulf country already has the status of Major Non-NATO Ally. A new deal could perhaps see the sale of additional weapons or the dispatch of additional US troops to Qatar, Channel 12 says.
Smotrich pushes back on funding Gaza emigration program given that no countries are interested
More details emerge on government discussions earlier today about plans to facilitate the emigration of Palestinians from Gaza, which will be discussed with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio during his visit next week, reports Channel 12.
In the meeting with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, ministers, and senior defense officials, the Defense Ministry presented the forum with its program for Gazans to leave the Strip if they choose to.
Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich was skeptical about the prospects of any countries agreeing to take Gazans in, and argued that it was not worth spending money on if the Gazans would be back home in a year.
Netanyahu responded that Israel wouldn’t spend much on the plan, but that Israel should move it forward.
“Do it,” said National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir. “It’s the mission of the hour.”
Science and Technology Minister Gila Gamliel argued that Israel should push Egypt to take in the Gazans.
“You try,” responded Netanyahu dismissively.
In rare joint statement, UN Security Council condemns Israeli strike in Doha
UN Security Council members issue a rare joint statement condemning Israel’s strike in Doha earlier this week.
Such a press statement required the backing of all members, including the US, which has pushed back on criticism of Israel to date at the council.
“The members of the Security Council expressed their condemnation of the recent strikes in Doha, the territory of a key mediator, on 9 September. They expressed deep regret at the loss of civilian life,” the statement says.
“Council members underscored the importance of de-escalation and expressed their solidarity with Qatar. They underlined their support for the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Qatar, in line with the principles of the UN Charter.”
“Council members recalled their support for the vital role that Qatar continues to play in mediation efforts in the region, and alongside Egypt and the United States.”
“Council members underscored that releasing the hostages, including those killed by Hamas, and ending the war and suffering in Gaza must remain our top priority. In this regard, they reiterated the importance of the ongoing diplomatic efforts of Qatar, Egypt and the US, and called for the parties to seize the opportunity for peace,” the statement adds.
‘There will be no Palestinian state’: PM signs agreement pushing ahead with E1 settlement plan

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu signs an agreement to push ahead with the controversial E1 settlement expansion plan that will cut across land that the Palestinians seek for a state.
“We are going to fulfill our promise that there will be no Palestinian state, this place belongs to us,” Netanyahu says during a visit to the Ma’ale Adumim settlement in the West Bank, where thousands of new housing units would be added.
“We will safeguard our heritage, our land and our security… We are going to double the city’s population.” The event was streamed live by his office.
Last month, the E1 project, which would bisect the West Bank and cut it off from East Jerusalem, received final planning approval. Today’s signing ceremony is largely symbolic but allows authorities to move forward with construction.
Growing Israeli security establishment assessment is that Doha strike failed

Channel 12 reports that the Israeli security establishment’s growing assessment is that the Tuesday strike aimed at killing Hamas’s leadership in Qatar failed. It says this is the message that has been conveyed to the US, and is what Israeli ministers have been told.
The report has not been confirmed.
The most recent indications received by the Israeli security establishment are that the majority of the targets of the operation were not killed, the report says.
An unnamed Israeli official cited by the network says Jerusalem still hopes that some of the targets were ultimately killed.
Security officials discussing the strike are checking whether insufficient explosives were used or whether the Hamas officials managed to move to a different part of the targeted building before the bombs fell.
Ministers were also told today that Israel is not optimistic about the results of the strike and that a similar message was conveyed to Washington, the network says.
IDF says it killed member of Hezbollah-allied militia in southern Lebanon strike
A member of the Imam Hossein Division, an Iranian militia which operates alongside Hezbollah, was killed in an airstrike in southern Lebanon earlier today, the IDF announces.
According to the military, the operative, Wasim Saeed Jaba’i, was targeted in the town of Ain Baal, near Tyre.
Jaba’i was both a member of Imam Hossein and Hezbollah, and was considered a “central figure” in the Iranian militia’s force build-up efforts, the IDF says.
As part of his role, the IDF says Jaba’i advanced weapon procurement deals, assisted in carrying out rocket attacks against northern Israel during the conflict in Lebanon last year, and led efforts to rehabilitate the militia following the fighting.
The army says that the operative’s activities “constitute a violation of the understanding between Israel and Lebanon.”
מאמץ חיסול המחבלים בלבנון נמשך: צה"ל מחסל מחבלים בדיוויזיית האמאם חסין האיראנית
מוקדם יותר היום, צה"ל תקף במרחב עין באל את וסים סעיד ג'באעי, מחבל בדיוויזיית האמאם חסין האיראנית וכן בארגון הטרור חיזבאללה.
המחבל היווה גורם מרכזי בהפעלת הכוח ובהתעצמות הדיוויזיה, קידם עסקאות רכש… pic.twitter.com/MsfPKAHsV2
— צבא ההגנה לישראל (@idfonline) September 11, 2025
Fox News airs ad by unknown group warning Trump not to let Netanyahu ‘play’ him on Gaza

Fox News aired an ad against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu yesterday during one of US President Donald Trump’s favorite shows, “Fox & Friends.”
“For years, Netanyahu manipulated American presidents. He tricked Bill Clinton, he swindled Obama, he took Biden for a ride. Now he’s trying to con you about Gaza, President Trump,” the voice in the ad says.
“The Nobel Peace Prize you deserve is possible, Mr. President. But everyone who’s ever trusted Netanyahu has gotten burned. He cares only about himself. He’s desperate. He’s played weak American presidents for suckers. President Trump, don’t let him do that to you,” the ad warns.
The commercial is sponsored by an unknown group called MAGAFNP, which has no digital footprint.
📺 Am told this ad, sponsored by MAGAFNP, aired this morning on Fox & Friends in D.C. ⬇️
“Everyone who's ever trusted Netanyahu has gotten burned… He's played weak American presidents for suckers. President Trump, don't let him do that to you.” pic.twitter.com/g5ytm0jG2W
— Jacob N. Kornbluh (@jacobkornbluh) September 10, 2025
Katz picks up call from Turkish prankster who ridicules him before posting screen grab and defense minister’s number

Israel Katz picked up a video call from a Turkish prankster who proceeded to curse at him before the defense minister hung up.
The Turkish caller managed to take a screenshot of Katz, which the former published online along with Katz’s phone number.
Katz has had the same number for years, despite it being leaked to the public before.
The defense minister was also sent thousands of hate messages and death threats, some from bots, after the call, according to Hebrew media.
Court rejects police request to extend restrictions on Qatargate suspect Urich
The Rishon Lezion Magistrate’s Court rejects the police’s request to extend restrictions on key Qatargate suspect Jonatan Urich from contacting others involved in the affair, along with a new request asking to ban him from working in the Prime Minister’s Office.
The court delays implementation of the decision by three days to give the police the opportunity to appeal.
Judge Menahem Mizrahi was strongly critical of the police, saying there was no justification for requesting the ban on Urich, a close aide to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, working in the PMO.
He said that a draft position paper authored by the security services regarding Urich’s alleged threat to national security had still not been completed despite the passage of several months, and that there was therefore no professional document to back the police’s claim that Urich is a threat and justifying the ban on his professional activities.
The judge says the police should have concentrated on claims regarding Urich’s potential to obstruct justice if the restrictions on his contacts with Qatargate suspects were to be revoked, noting that the Supreme Court made similar comments in response to an appeal which reached the top court.
Mizrahi also criticized the police for its handling of the request, saying it had first asked for a 30-day extension, then a day later asked for a 60-day extension while also adding the request for the ban on working in the PMO.
The judge also says that banning Urich from his place of work is a “tough condition” which harms Urich’s constitutional rights, “and I do not believe that evidence has been presented to me that justifies the alleged fear that the suspect will harm state security or will commit similar offenses again.”
The judge further writes that the police have not requested a similar condition for other suspects in the affair, some of whom he says are alleged to have committed more severe crimes than Urich.
“This is an unfocused investigation that is sailing at sea without a captain, which the court cannot accept,” writes Mizrahi.
The police have appealed against Mizrahi’s decisions on several occasions, with the Lod-Central District Court ruling in favor of those appeals four times, while also criticizing Mizrahi on more than one occasion.
IDF denies that Zamir ignored warnings from top military lawyer about legality of Gaza City evacuation
The military says a report by Haaretz, claiming that IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir ignored warnings by Military Advocate General Maj. Gen. Yifat Tomer-Yerushalmi that issuing evacuation notices to residents of Gaza City could be illegal, is “false.”
“Following the erroneous reports that were published, it should be clarified that the claim that the chief of staff ordered the evacuation of Gaza City contrary to the legal opinion given to him is false. The IDF acts and will continue to act in accordance with the law. Any other claim is baseless,” the IDF says in a statement.
The IDF says that Tomer-Yerushalmi “is fully involved in the IDF’s assessments regarding the Gaza Strip, including the issue of moving the population for its protection, and presented to the relevant officials the legal conditions required for this.”
The evacuation warnings were only distributed after officials from the Defense Ministry’s Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories “confirmed that these [legal] conditions were met,” the army adds.
The Haaretz report said that the military advocate general contacted Zamir on Thursday last week to tell him it was not possible to declare that proper preparations were in place for the evacuation of Gaza City, and that the Intelligence Directorate was concerned that the evacuation would violate the laws of war due to the dire humanitarian conditions in the south. She therefore said issuing the evacuation warnings should be postponed, but Zamir decided to go ahead regardless, the report says.
Coalition transfers $25 million to Religious Services Ministry, despite cross-government cuts to fund war
The coalition-controlled Knesset Finance Committee approves the transfer of NIS 80 million ($24.2 million) to the Religious Services Ministry, as the government simultaneously moves to slash spending across ministries to fund ballooning wartime needs.
Much of the new funding will go toward activities for religious councils, including establishing five new ones, bodies that provide jobs for political activists — particularly from ultra-Orthodox party Shas — and funnel resources to religious institutions, in addition to the annual pilgrimage to Mount Meron on Lag Ba’Omer, housing expenses for Chief Rabbis, and other ministry activities.
At the same time, the Knesset voted yesterday to advance an across-the-board 3.35% cut to ministerial budgets starting next year, part of a NIS 31 billion ($9 billion) wartime spending package. Most of the additional funds are slated for defense, with NIS 1.6 billion ($473 million) for humanitarian aid in Gaza.
While most ministries face impending cuts, critics note, significant sums are still being channeled to coalition-linked allies, in this case, Shas.
“The religious councils are a political body effectively controlled by Shas,” says ITIM CEO Rabbi Seth Farber, who, along with local authority leaders, has called for their closure. “The Ministry of Religious Services operates based on political interests and chooses to strengthen and expand the religious councils.”
The allocation is on top of the government’s recent approval of NIS 40 million ($11.9 million) in state funding for ultra-Orthodox schools tied to Shas’s Bnei Yosef network.
IDF claims it killed dozens of terrorists in recent days of operations in Gaza City outskirts
The IDF says it has expanded its operations on the outskirts of Gaza City’s Sheikh Radwan neighborhood and the Kafr Jabalia area in recent days.
During the operations, the 162nd Division’s forces located and destroyed dozens of Hamas sites, including booby traps, weapon depots, and two tunnels spanning hundreds of meters, the military says.
In addition, the IDF says dozens of terror operatives were killed by the forces and in strikes, including a platoon commander in Hamas’s Sheikh Radwan Battalion and the commander of a Nukhba Force cell who invaded Israel during the October 7 onslaught.
This video published by the IDF on September 11, 2025, shows the demolition of a Hamas tunnel in Gaza City. (Israel Defense Forces)
UAE said weighing Qatari request to close Emirati embassy in Tel Aviv over Doha strike
The UAE is reportedly considering a Qatari request to close Abu Dhabi’s embassy in Tel Aviv as part of a series of steps Doha is pushing against Israel in retaliation for Jerusalem’s strike targeting Hamas leaders in Doha.
The UAE, which is already eager to rid itself of Israeli Ambassador to Abu Dhabi Yossi Shelley over his reported misconduct, has attentively received the Qatari request, Haaretz reports, citing unnamed diplomatic sources in Gulf states.
While Qatar didn’t respond to the June Iranian strike on the al-Ubeid airbase near Doha that houses US troops, it is not planning to take that approach this time around, a regional diplomat tells Haaretz.
“The gloves are off,” the diplomat says.
Qatar has fumed at Israel for the Tuesday strike, highlighting that both Jerusalem and Washington were the ones who had asked Doha to host Hamas leaders in recent years, believing it would be best to keep an eye on them inside of a US-allied country, as opposed to other places where adversaries have more influence.
Meanwhile, the Kan public broadcaster reports that Gulf countries will reevaluate their ties with Israel during an emergency Arab-Islamic summit on Sunday in Doha that was called to discuss the Israeli strike,
Elizabeth Tsurkov seen embracing loved ones for first time in Israel after release from captivity in Iraq

The Prime Minister’s Office releases the first clear footage of Israeli academic Elizabeth Tsurkov greeting relatives and friends at the Sheba Medical Center near Tel Aviv last night, following her release from captivity in Iraq.
Tsurkov is seen walking with significant difficulty, as she is said to be suffering from severe back pain that was exacerbated during her captivity. She had undergone a spinal operation prior to being kidnapped in 2023 by the pro-Iran Iraqi militia Kataeb Hezbollah.
Footage released by the PMO shows Tsurkov reuniting with friends and family at the Sheba Medical Center near Tel Aviv. Wearing a gray US Embassy Baghdad shirt and walking with significant difficulty, she is seen smiling and joking with doctors and loved ones.
The clip shows her having to lie on a couch as loved ones embrace her.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu spoke with Tsurkov earlier today, with the Israeli-Russian academic thanking the premier for helping secure her release, the prime minister’s office says.
The Times of Israel reported earlier today that Israel had very little to do with freeing Tsurkov, with the US and Qatar playing much bigger roles.
Netanyahu’s office highlights the efforts of US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, US hostage envoy Adam Boehler and Israeli hostage envoy Gal Hirsch in securing Tsurkov’s release.
Former Israeli hostage Elizabeth Tsurkov is greeted by family and friends at Sheba Medical Center on September 10, 2025. (Ronen Horesh/GPO)
Two senior Hamas officials spotted at funeral of Hamas members killed in Qatar
Hamas official Osama Hamdan, who is usually based in Lebanon, and another senior member of the terror group, Izzat al-Rishq, who has been residing in Qatar in recent years, were spotted at the funeral in Doha of the five Hamas members and the Qatari security officer killed in a strike. The two appeared in photos published by Hamas.
Other senior leaders – including those initially rumored to have been killed, such as Hamas’s chief negotiator Khalil al-Hayya, top official Khaled Mashaal, and Hamas West Bank leader Zaher Jabarin – have not been seen so far at the funeral.
בכירי חמאס אוסאמה חמדאן (בדרך כלל בלבנון) ועיזת א-רישק (בדרך כלל בקטר) נראו בהלווית חמשת אנשי חמאס ואיש הביטחון הקטרי בדוחה pic.twitter.com/EA1j6xllrq
— Nurit Yohanan (@nurityohanan) September 11, 2025
‘Shame’ Israel still denying media access to Gaza, watchdog says
The Foreign Press Association condemns Israel for continuing to deny independent access to foreign journalists nearly two years into the war in Gaza.
“Israel must stop killing journalists in Gaza and give the foreign press free and independent access to the territory,” says the association, which has more than 350 members working for foreign media outlets in Israel and the territories.
“This continued and institutionalized delay in the process is a mark of shame on Israel and its allies, who have too often chosen not to speak up in defense of basic press freedoms,” the board of the association says in a statement.
The association points out that Israel’s Supreme Court has repeatedly postponed hearings on its petition demanding access to Gaza.
The association “notes with dismay that it has been a full year since it submitted its second petition to the Israeli Supreme Court for free and independent access to Gaza,” the statement says.
“Despite the urgency, the court has repeatedly agreed to the government’s request for delays and postponed one hearing after another.”
The association also slammed Israel for targeting Palestinian journalists operating inside Gaza.
“Palestinian journalists have been directly targeted. Places where they habitually gathered have been bombed,” it says, adding that at least 200 of them have been killed by Israeli fire.
“Despite all of these dangers, they continue to inform the world while facing not only violence, but also hunger and repeated displacement.”
Last month, Israeli strikes on a hospital in Gaza killed more than 20 people, including five journalists, according to local authorities.
The FPA also criticized Israeli leaders and the military for going to “extreme lengths to discredit the work of our Palestinian colleagues, and to a great extent, the work of the foreign press as a whole.”
“This campaign of delegitimization has created and amplified hazardous working conditions for journalists, leading to the normalization of incitement, harassment, and attacks on foreign press both from Israeli civilians and members of Israel’s security forces.”
Israel’s military has accused many of the journalists killed in its strikes of being “terrorists,” members of the Palestinian terror groups Hamas or Islamic Jihad.
During the war, the Israeli military has taken only a handful of foreign journalists into Gaza via military embeds.
Zamir ignored warnings from top IDF lawyer that Gaza City evacuation may be illegal

IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir ignored warnings by Military Advocate General Maj. Gen. Yifat Tomer-Yerushalmi last week that issuing evacuation notices to residents of Gaza City could not be deemed legal until the necessary humanitarian conditions were in place for the population to be relocated, the Haaretz daily reports.
According to the report, military leaders presented an “unrealistic picture” to Tomer-Yerushalmi of conditions in southern Gaza where Gaza City’s residents will need to move to, and included plans to move people to already overcrowded regions of the war-torn territory.
According to the report, the IDF also overestimated the ability of hospitals and the healthcare system in southern Gaza to deal with additional casualties, leading to concerns that moving such a large number of people to an area without adequate medical services could create a humanitarian disaster.
The military advocate general reportedly contacted Zamir on Thursday last week to tell him it was not possible to declare that proper preparations were in place for the evacuation of Gaza City, and that the IDF Intelligence Directorate was concerned that the evacuation would violate the laws of war due to the dire humanitarian conditions in the south.
She therefore said dropping the evacuation warning notices should be postponed, but Zamir decided to go ahead regardless.
An estimated one million Palestinians were residing in Gaza City until recently, although reports indicate some 200,000 have now left the city ahead of the IDF’s impending operation there, and following warnings the army has issued via pamphlet drops of the upcoming attack.
Israel has a legal obligation under the laws of armed conflict to facilitate the provision of aid to at least parts of the civilian population, and not to create a situation of dire humanitarian conditions.
The IDF said in response to the story that the evacuation orders were approved by officials from the COGAT agency of the Defense Ministry, which coordinates Israel’s humanitarian response in Gaza, “after verifying that the required conditions were met and that the humanitarian situation in southern Gaza allowed for the operation.”
US issues new round of sanctions against Yemen’s Houthis
The United States has imposed a fresh round of sanctions targeting Yemen’s Houthis, in what the Trump administration says was Washington’s largest such action aimed at the Iran-aligned group.
The US Treasury Department says in a statement it is issuing sanctions against 32 individuals and entities as well as four vessels in an effort to disrupt the Houthis’ fundraising, smuggling and attack operations.
Among the targets are several China-based companies that Treasury says helped transport military-grade components, as well as other companies that help arrange for dual-use goods to be shipped to the Houthis. The sanctions also target petroleum smugglers and Houthi-linked shipping companies, Treasury said.
The Houthis have disrupted commerce since late 2023 by launching hundreds of drone and missile attacks on vessels in the Red Sea, saying they were targeting ships linked to Israel in solidarity with Palestinians over Israel’s war in Gaza.
In May, President Donald Trump announced a surprise US ceasefire agreement with Houthis.
UK fires ambassador to the US Peter Mandelson over his links to Jeffrey Epstein

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer has fired the country’s ambassador to the United States, Peter Mandelson, over his links to the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
In a statement in the House of Commons, Foreign Secretary Stephen Doughty says the decision came in the wake of the publication this week of emails Mandelson sent to Epstein in the 2000s, in which he gave his support to the disgraced financier even when he was facing jail for sex offenses.
Doughty says the emails showed that the “depth and extent” of Mandelson’s relationship with Epstein was “materially different” from what was known when he was appointed ambassador to Washington last year in the wake of the Labour Party’s election victory.
Mandelson, who took up his post in February this year after what the government described as an “extensive” vetting process, has voiced his deep regret over his previous links with Epstein and said he knew nothing about his criminal activities.
“In light of the additional information in the emails written by Peter Mandelson, the prime minister has asked the foreign secretary to withdraw him as ambassador to the United States,” Doughty says.
In particular, he points to Mandelson’s suggestion that Epstein’s first conviction in 2008 was “wrongful and should be challenged.”
On Wednesday, The Sun newspaper published emails that it said showed Mandelson telling Epstein to “fight for early release” shortly before he was sentenced to 18 months in prison.
“I think the world of you,” Mandelson told him before he began his sentence for soliciting prostitution from a minor.
The decision to fire Mandelson comes just a day after Starmer said he had “confidence” in him. It’s the latest blow to the prime minister ahead of a state visit by US President Donald Trump to the UK next week, which is likely to be met with protests and some controversy. Last week Starmer also saw his deputy, Angela Rayner, quit over a tax error on a home purchase.
Poll: Jewish Israeli support for separation of religion and state lowest in over a decade
Support among Israelis for separating religion and state has fallen to its lowest point since 2012, according to the 2025 Religion and State Index published by the religious rights organization Hiddush.
Just 57% of respondents said they back the principle, down one point from 2024, three points from 2023, and 11 points from its 2017 peak, when 68% expressed support.
Hiddush has been publishing its yearly Religion and State Index since 2009.
The survey was conducted by the Rafi Smith Polling Institute by telephone on July 31–August 1, 2025, based on a sample of 800 men and women representing the Israeli adult population who identify as Jewish, with an additional oversample of 100 respondents from the religious public (margin of error: ±3.5%).
The poll also finds that 83% of Israel’s Jewish adults support the concept of freedom of religion, a number that has remained largely stable over the years.
Ben Gvir, Ukrainian minister agree on plan to send dozens of Israeli cops to secure Uman pilgrimage
Israel and Ukraine take an important step in preparations for the Uman pilgrimage, as National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir and Ukrainian Ambassador Yevgen Korniychuk agree on a plan that will see dozens of Israeli police officers and medics sent for the Rosh Hashanah holiday, according to the Ukrainian embassy in Israel.
Ultra-Orthodox volunteers from Israel will also fky to Ukraine, as will Israeli border agents. Kyiv Rabbi Moshe Azman will oversee a medical and security network.
Israeli police officers and border officials will hold meetings with their Ukrainian counterparts in the coming days, says Korniychuk.
Over 40,000 Jewish pilgrims are expected to make the trip this year.
Korniychuk praises Ben Gvir for working quickly to come to an agreement, but notes that the planning process has been made more difficult because of strained ties at the highest levels.
“Everything is moving forward according to plan,” an Israeli official tells The Times of Israel. “I don’t expect any major difficulties.”
Hamas says Israeli attack against group’s leaders in Doha won’t alter its terms on ending Gaza war
Hamas says the Israeli attack that targeted its leaders in Doha will not alter the Palestinian group’s terms on ending the war in Gaza.
Hamas official Fawzi Barhoum, in a televised speech, says the attack targeted its negotiation delegation while they were discussing US President Trump’s ceasefire proposal.
“This crime was… an assassination of the entire negotiation process,” Barhoum says.
“We affirm that the US administration is a full accomplice in this crime,” he adds.
No senior Hamas members have been confirmed killed in the strike.
Barhoum says in the pre-recorded speech that Israel struck the home of the head of Hamas’s negotiating delegation, Khalil al-Hayya. His wife, as well as the wife of his son Himam al-Hayya — who was killed — were injured in the strike. Other family members were also wounded, Barhoum says.
Barhoum says the failed attempt to assassinate Hamas’s leadership would not change the movement’s positions in the ceasefire negotiations: ending the aggression, a full Israeli withdrawal from the Gaza Strip, a “genuine” prisoner exchanges, and Gaza’s reconstruction.
He adds that the strike was an attempt to create a false image of victory for Israel, after it failed to achieve gains during 23 months of war.
Dublin won’t participate in Eurovision 2026 if Israel does, says Irish broadcaster

Ireland will not take part in next year’s Eurovision Song Contest if Israel is allowed to participate, Irish broadcaster RTE says, arguing that doing so would be “unconscionable” because of the conflict in Gaza.
Israel has participated in Eurovision as a longtime member of the European Broadcasting Union (EBU), which organizes and co-produces the annual event.
Ireland’s RTE says a number of EBU members had raised concerns about Israel’s taking part during a meeting in July.
“RTE feels that Ireland’s participation would be unconscionable given the ongoing and appalling loss of lives in Gaza,” the broadcaster says in a statement.
“RTE is also deeply concerned by the targeted killing of journalists in Gaza, and the denial of access to international journalists to the territory, and the plight of the remaining hostages,” it adds.
Israel has denied targeting journalists in the enclave.
A final decision about Ireland’s participation in the 2026 competition, which will be held in Vienna, will be made once the EBU makes its own decision on Israel, RTE says.
The EBU is not immediately available for comment.
Ireland has taken part in the contest since 1965 and won seven times, with only Sweden matching its record number of victories.
UAE condemns Netanyahu’s ‘hostile remarks’ against Qatar
United Arab Emirates condemned Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s “hostile remarks” against Qatar, adding that any attack on a Gulf state is an attack on the Gulf’s “joint security system,” UAE official Afra Al Hameli says.
On Wednesday, Netanyahu warned Qatar to either expel Hamas officials or “bring them to justice, because if you don’t, we will.”
Netanyahu’s warning came a day after Israel attempted to kill Hamas political leaders in an airstrike on Doha, escalating its military campaign in the Middle East and prompting a flurry of international condemnations.
US authorities say have ‘good video footage’ of Charlie Kirk suspect
US investigators said Thursday they are confident they will identify the gunman who shot dead right-wing influencer Charlie Kirk at a university in Utah, having gathered images of the suspect.
“We do have good video footage of this individual. We are not going to release that at this time,” Beau Mason, commissioner of the Utah Department of Public Safety, told reporters.
“We are working through some technologies and some ways to identify this individual,” he said, adding that “we are confident in our abilities right now.”
“We have recovered what we believe is the weapon that was used in yesterday’s shooting. It is a high powered bolt action rifle,” FBI agent Robert Bohls tells a media briefing, adding that “we have images of the suspect.”
“We’re doing everything we can to find him, and we’re not sure how far he has gone yet, but we will, we will do our best,” the agent said.
German police suspect ‘religious’ motive in teacher stabbing
A 17-year-old Kosovar suspected of stabbing a teacher at a German vocational college last week may have had a “religious” motive, a state interior minister says.
“Initial analysis of the seized data carriers indicates that the crime was religiously motivated,” Herbert Reul tells the North Rhine-Westphalia state parliament’s interior committee.
Trump says he’ll posthumously award Charlie Kirk highest US civilian honor
US President Donald Trump announces that he will posthumously award the highest US civilian honor to murdered right-wing activist Charlie Kirk.
“I’m pleased to announce that I will soon be awarding Charlie Kirk posthumously, the Presidential Medal of Freedom,” Trump says during a ceremony at the Pentagon marking the September 11, 2001, al-Qaeda attack.
Palestinians in Gaza City face dilemma as Israeli forces advance

Palestinians in the relatively unscathed Nasser area of Gaza City are having to decide whether to stay or go after the Israeli military dropped leaflets today warning that troops would take control of the western neighborhood.
Israel has ordered the hundreds of thousands of people living in Gaza City to leave as it intensifies its all-out war on Hamas, but with little safety, space and food in the rest of Gaza, people face dire choices.
“It has been almost two years, with no rest, no settling down, not even sleep,” says Abu Ahmed, a father, as he and his family prepared to flee the city in a truck pulled by a motorcycle, laden with some of their belongings.
“We can’t sit with our children just to sit with them. Our life revolves around war,” he says. “We have to go from this area to that area. We can’t take it anymore, we are tired.”
Gaza City families continue to stream out of their homes in areas targeted by Israeli aerial and ground operations, heading either westward toward the center of the city and along the coast, or south toward other parts of the strip.
But some are either unwilling or unable to leave.
“We don’t have enough money, enough to flee. We don’t have any means to go south like they say,” says Ahmed Al-Dayeh, who was attending the funeral of one of the people killed in Thursday’s strikes, who was his friend.
18 killed in Israeli strikes across Gaza on Thursday, Hamas health authorities say
Israeli forces killed 18 people across the territory on Thursday, according to medics and local Hamas health authorities — 11 in strikes on various parts of Gaza City, five in a strike on a single location in the al-Shati refugee camp, and two who were searching for food near Rafah in the south.
IDF says ‘incident over’ after drone alert sirens triggered in south
The military says the sirens that sounded in Eilat and Be’er Ora in southern Israel a short while ago were triggered by a “suspicious aerial target.”
“The incident is over,” the IDF says, without elaborating further.
There are no reports of injuries.
Netanyahu discussing plan to allow ‘voluntary emigration’ of Gazans starting next month

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is holding a high-level meeting on the “voluntary emigration” of Palestinians from the Gaza Strip, the office of one of the attendees tells The Times of Israel. Senior defense officials and cabinet ministers are attending.
The forum is discussing a plan to allow Gazans to leave as early as October, reports Channel 13.
The Prime Minister’s Office does not respond to a request for comment.
According to the Channel 13 report, the defense establishment has presented a plan under which Gazans could begin leaving the war-torn Strip beginning next month by air and by sea.
Defense sources tell the outlet that Israel is in talks with a number of African countries about receiving Gazans, but no agreement has been reached.
Critics of the policy accuse of Israel of trying to ethnically cleanse Palestinians from Gaza, given that many of those pushing the policy in the middle of a devastating war haven’t pledged to allow those who leave to return, as they push for the re-establishment of Israeli settlements in the enclave.
Former IDF commander of West Bank division promoted ahead of entry into post as head of Northern Corps

Yaki Dolf, the former commander of the West Bank division, is promoted to the rank of major general ahead of entering the role of chief of the Northern Corps.
A ceremony is held at the IDF headquarters in Tel Aviv, attended by Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir, Defense Minister Israel Katz, and Dolf’s family.
The Northern Corps is a unit only activated in wartime to operate troops on a tactical level, while freeing the regional command to engage in planning and strategy.
Dolf will be replacing Maj. Gen. Dan Goldfus, who will go to head the Depth Corps, a shadowy multidisciplinary unit responsible for military operations beyond Israel’s borders, especially within the so-called “second circle,” meaning Iran’s proxies in Yemen, Iraq, and other areas not directly on Israel’s borders.
Dolf was reprimanded over the deaths of two soldiers in separate incidents in 2019.
Emir attends funeral Doha strike victims; Hamas’s Hayya not spotted among mourners

Qatar’s emir, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, attends the funeral of a Qatari security officer along with five Hamas members killed in the Israeli strike on Hamas’s headquarters in Doha.
According to Hamas’s statement on Tuesday, the dead are Jihad Labad, head of the office of top Hamas official Khalil al-Hayya; Himam al-Hayya, Khalil al-Hayya’s son; and three others described as “associates” — either advisers or bodyguards: Abdallah Abd al-Wahid, Muamen Hassouna, and Ahmad Abd al-Malek.
While Hamas has asserted that Khalil al-Hayya and its other leaders were not killed in the strike, he and other top officials in the terror group are not spotted at the Doha funeral, despite his son being among those killed.
The funeral is for all six people killed in the strike, but the emir is seen comforting the family of the Qatari security officer killed, with a diplomatic source indicating that the Qatari victim was the primary reason for Tamim’s presence.
سموّ الأمير @TamimBinHamad حفظه الله يواسي ذوي شهيد الوطن بدر سعد محمد الحميدي الدوسري
إلى الفردوس الأعلى بإذن الله 🤲🏼#نديب_قطر | #قطر 🇶🇦 pic.twitter.com/Jfyjxop7jy
— نديب قطر (@NadeebQa) September 11, 2025
Suspected drone infiltration sirens triggered near Ramon Airport in south
Sirens warning of a suspected drone infiltration are sounding in Be’er Ora, close to Ramon Airport, and in Eilat in southern Israel.
The military says it is looking into the details.
Earlier, a Houthi drone from Yemen was shot down by the Israeli Air Force, according to the IDF.
Qatar denies report that it’s reevaluating partnership with US after Israeli strike in Doha
Qatar rejects a report in Axios that in the wake of Israel’s strike on Hamas leaders in Doha, Prime Minister Mohammed al-Thani told White House envoy Steve Witkoff that Qatar will reevaluate its security partnership with Washington “and maybe find some other partners” who can protect the Gulf emirate.
In a statement, Doha calls the claim “categorically false,” and “a clear and failed attempt to drive a wedge between Qatar and the US by those who benefit from chaos in the region and oppose peace.”
“The Qatar-US security and defense partnership is stronger than ever and continues to grow,” says Qatar’s International Media Office. “Our two countries have supported each other for many years, and we will continue working together to promote global peace and stability.”
The emirate hosts the largest US military base in the Middle East, and has served as the key Arab mediator for Washington on a range of complex issues. In 2022, then-US president Joe Biden named Qatar as a “major non-NATO ally.”
In an account similar to the Axios report, a diplomatic source told The Times of Israel yesterday that a senior Qatari official called Doha’s partnership with the US into question during a conversation Witkoff following Israel’s strike in Doha.
The senior Qatari official pointed to both the Israeli strike yesterday and a June 2025 Iranian strike targeting a US military base in Qatar and lamented that the US has failed to protect his country, the source said.
Egyptian source says Cairo will continue Gaza mediation efforts after Israeli strike in Doha
Egypt will continue mediating ceasefire negotiations between Israel and Hamas in the wake of Israel’s strike on Hamas leader in Doha, an “informed Egyptian source” tells the Qatari al-Araby al-Jadeed outlet.
“Egypt will not allow its mediation efforts to turn into cover for Israel to continue its attacks,” says the source.
At the same time, say Egyptian diplomatic sources, Cairo “will not allow the continuation of the situation as usual after this dangerous development,” and will avoid meeting Israeli delegations in the near future.
“As long as [Prime Minister Benjamin] Netanyahu continues his current policies, engagement will be minimal and will serve only Egypt’s national security interests,” says a senior Egyptian official.
Israeli-Egyptian ties mostly revolve around close security and intelligence relations, and the export of Israeli natural gas to Egypt.
Reports: Settlers sprayed graffiti, set vehicles on fire in Palestinian village overnight
Palestinian media reports that several settlers sprayed graffiti reading “Ramot, revenge, hit hard, get to work” — apparently calls for revenge following Monday’s deadly terror attack at the Ramot junction in northern Jerusalem, carried out by two Palestinian shooters — and also set vehicles on fire last night in the Palestinian village of Atara, near Ramallah in the West Bank.
There were no casualties.
Security camera footage from the scene overnight shows two figures spray-painting the graffiti and setting the vehicle ablaze.
בזמן שישנתם:
#2 https://t.co/kJDd2NpuNQ pic.twitter.com/qmYUdxu9DB— מסתכלים לכיבוש בעיניים (@Mistaclim) September 11, 2025
لحظة اعتداء المستوطنين على منزل ومحاولة إحراق مركبة في بلدة عطارة شمال رام الله، فجر اليوم. pic.twitter.com/sO31RiuOzw
— شبكة فلسطين للحوار (@paldf) September 11, 2025
‘Suspicious package’ sent to Herzog during London visit, his office says

A “suspicious package” was sent to Israeli President Isaac Herzog in London, where he is on a trip this week, and is currently under investigation, his office says in a statement.
“During the visit, a suspicious package addressed to the president was received. Local and Israeli security forces are now handling the suspicious object,” the statement reads, without providing further information.
Houthi drone shot down by air force, IDF says
A drone launched by the Houthis in Yemen at Israel was intercepted by the Israeli Air Force a short while ago, the IDF says.
No sirens sounded, “according to protocol,” the military adds.
Islamic Jihad claims responsibility for bomb attack on armored carrier in West Bank

The Palestinian Islamic Jihad’s local wing in the West Bank city of Tulkarem takes responsibility for an explosive device attack against IDF troops earlier.
The terror group says in a statement that it set off the bomb against an armored vehicle near Nitzanei Oz Crossing.
Two soldiers were lightly injured in the incident.
The IDF says it has encircled Tulkarem and has set up roadblocks in the area following the attack.
Explosive attacks against troops in the West Bank have been relatively rare in recent months.
Four Haredi draft dodgers arrested yesterday at airport on way to Uman — report

Four draft dodgers were arrested at Ben Gurion International Airport yesterday after attempting to fly abroad to attend the annual Rosh Hashanah pilgrimage to the Ukrainian city of Uman, Channel 12 news reports.
According to the report, a total of seven Haredi draft dodgers have been arrested in recent days trying to make the pilgrimage.
The extremist ultra-Orthodox Jerusalem Faction plans to block Route 4 in Bnei Brak from 4 p.m. today in protest of the arrests.
Haredi political leaders have been lobbying for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and military officials to allow draft-dodging yeshiva students to join the annual pilgrimage to Uman, which hosts tens of thousands of Hasidic Jews who visit the tomb of Rabbi Nachman of Bratslav over Rosh Hashanah.
The Attorney General’s Office recently informed the government that it has no right to create a mechanism to let ultra-Orthodox draft dodgers leave Israel.
Sam Sokol contributed to this report.
Israeli strikes damaged Yemen’s national museum, historical sites in Sanaa, Houthi ministry says

SANAA, Yemen — The Israeli airstrikes in Yemen that killed at least 35 people and wounded more than 130 also caused damage to Yemen’s national museum and other historical sites in its capital city, the Houthi Culture Ministry says.
The status of the artifacts inside the museum is still unclear, but thousands of historical artifacts are at risk of damage, according to the ministry. Associated Press photos and video footage from the site of the strike showed damage to the building’s facade.
The ministry calls on the UN cultural agency UNESCO to condemn the attack and to intervene to help protect the historical building and its artifacts.
IDF says it struck Hezbollah ‘strategic weapons’ site, terror infrastructure in Lebanon
The IDF confirms carrying out airstrikes in Lebanon’s eastern Beqaa Valley, saying it targeted a Hezbollah “strategic weapons” manufacturing and storage site.
The facility has been targeted by the IDF several times previously.
Additionally, the military says it hit Hezbollah infrastructure in the southern Lebanese town of Zrariyeh.
“The presence of the terror infrastructure constitutes a violation of the understandings between Israel and Lebanon,” the IDF adds.
Spain’s sports minister blasts ‘double standards,’ says Israel should be banned from events, like Russia

BARCELONA, Spain — Spanish Sports Minister Pilar Alegria says that Israeli teams should be banned from sports in the same way that Russian sides broadly were in 2022 after the country’s invasion of Ukraine, highlighting a “double standard.”
The presence of a team named Israel-Premier Tech at the Vuelta a Espana cycling grand tour has led to huge protests in Spain, whose government has described Israel’s offensive in Gaza as “a genocide.”
Israel-Premier Tech is a private outfit owned by billionaire Israeli-Canadian property developer Sylvan Adams, not a state team, but it has been hailed by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for refusing to quit the Vuelta despite vehement protests.
“It is difficult to explain and understand that there is a double standard,” Alegria tells Spanish radio station Cadena SER.
“Given that there has been such a massacre, a genocide, such an absolutely terrible situation we are living through day-by-day, I would agree that the international federations and committees should take the same decision as in 2022,” she adds.
“No team, no club from Russia participated in an international competition, and when the individuals participated, they did it under a neutral flag and without a national anthem.”
Alegria says she would like Vuelta organizers to block Israel-Premier Tech from competing, but accepted that such a decision could only be made by the cycling world governing body, UCI.
Netanyahu: Soldiers can ‘enter Haredi and leave Haredi,’ thanks to efforts by IDF

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu hails young ultra-Orthodox men for choosing to enlist in the IDF, speaking at a ceremony for soldiers and hesder yeshiva students at the Western Wall tunnels.
Videos online show Netanyahu being greeted with cheers upon his arrival at the ceremony, which opened the school year for ultra-Orthodox pre-military preparatory programs and hesder yeshiva students. Hesder yeshivas allow observant young men, mostly from the national-religious sector, to combine Torah studies with a shortened military service of one year and five months.
“Torah study will always continue, but a large public can combine both safra (the book) and saifa (the sword),” the premier says, using a Talmudic phrase. “And today we have refined this, with very strong efforts by the IDF, to make it possible for someone to enter Haredi and leave Haredi. To preserve both the heritage of Israel and the defense of Israel.”
He praises the efforts of the military’s new Hasmonean Brigade, a unit for ultra-Orthodox troops, and the IDF’s Netzah Yehuda Battalion, also made up of largely ultra-Orthodox fighters, saying: “I saw how in their service in Gaza they eliminated dozens of terrorists in exemplary combat.”
He also notes that one of the bystanders who helped eliminate the two terrorists in the Jerusalem shooting attack earlier this week was an off-duty soldier from the Hasmonean Brigade.
Netanyahu’s remarks come amid growing public opposition to the longstanding blanket draft exemptions for the ultra-Orthodox, in light of the IDF’s manpower squeeze during the ongoing war in Gaza and heavy reliance on reservists. The premier has said he is working to recruit the ultra-Orthodox into the IDF, rejecting claims he is delaying the process to appease Haredi political allies.
Two soldiers lightly hurt in bomb blast on armored carrier in West Bank
Two soldiers are lightly injured after an explosive device hit a Panther armored personnel carrier (APC) near a West Bank checkpoint a short while ago.
The incident took place near the Nitzanei Oz Crossing, close to Tulkarem.
The military says it has encircled Tulkarem and set up roadblocks in the area following the attack.
Syria busts Hezbollah-linked cell in Damascus area, seizes arms
DAMASCUS, Syria — Syria says that its forces dismantled a cell affiliated with Lebanon’s Iran-backed Hezbollah terror group, a key ally of the ousted president, Bashar al-Assad.
“Specialized units in cooperation with the general intelligence service… were able to arrest a terrorist cell belonging to the Hezbollah militia that was active” in the Damascus countryside, a Syrian Interior Ministry statement says, quoting a local commander.
“Preliminary investigations showed that the cell members underwent training in military camps in Lebanese territory, and were planning to carry out operations inside Syrian territory that threaten national security and stability,” the statement says.
Forces seized ammunition and weapons, including Grad-type rockets, launchers, and anti-tank missiles, it says, adding the case was referred to the judiciary.
Times of Israel staff contributed to this report.
Police shoot Palestinians trying to sneak through West Bank barrier

Police this morning shot two Palestinians who tried to sneak through a breach in the West Bank security barrier, Ynet reports. Both were moderately injured from the gunfire.
The pair tried to illegally enter Israel just three days after two terrorists used the same opening to cross into Jerusalem, where they carried out a shooting attack that killed six civilians and injured over 20.
The investigation into the terror attack is ongoing, and its details have been placed under a gag order by the Jerusalem Magistrate’s Court, police announced earlier this week.
Security forces are still trying to track down others involved in the attack and are continuing searches in the towns where the terrorists came from — Qatanna and al-Qubeiba, both northwest of Jerusalem.
Israeli airstrikes reported in Lebanon’s Beqaa Valley
Lebanese media reports Israeli airstrikes in Lebanon’s eastern Beqaa Valley area.
The IDF has not yet commented.
الطيران الحربي المعادي استهدف منطقة الشعرة في البقاع pic.twitter.com/PSntWXZhnZ
— nbnlebanon (@nbntweets) September 11, 2025
Ryanair may not return to Israel even when Gaza war ends, CEO says

DUBLIN, Ireland — Ryanair may not return to Israel when violence related to the Gaza war recedes, Group Chief Executive Michael O’Leary says, saying the airline was being “messed around” by airport authorities there.
“I think there is a real possibility that we won’t bother going back to Israel… when the current violence” recedes, O’Leary tells journalists in Dublin.
The airline earlier this summer said it would not return to Israel until October 25 at the earliest.
In phone call, Trump demanded Netanyahu not repeat Qatar strike — report

United States President Donald Trump demanded that Israel not strike Qatar again during a Tuesday phone call with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu following the IDF’s targeted attack against Hamas leaders in Doha, two sources with knowledge tell Axios.
“It’s unacceptable. I demand that you do not repeat it,” Trump told Netanyahu in the call, according to the sources.
Trump’s advisers were shocked by the strike, the report adds, noting that one source close to Trump expressed concern over the way Netanyahu and his top adviser, Strategic Affairs Minister Ron Dermer, handled the matter, calling it “an unpleasant reminder” of behavior that caused tension with Trump in his previous term.
Despite the reported warning and widespread international condemnation, Netanyahu has firmly defended the strike, warning Qatar — and “all nations that harbor terrorists” — that additional strikes could follow if they do not expel terror figures.
Qatar to host emergency Arab-Islamic summit on Israeli strike
DOHA, Qatar — The Qatari capital will host an emergency Arab-Islamic summit next Sunday and Monday to discuss the Israeli attack on Doha that targeted Hamas leaders on Tuesday, according to an invitation by Qatar’s news agency.
Elizabeth Tsurkov reportedly suffering severe back pain after release from captivity

Israeli-Russian academic Elizabeth Tsurkov is suffering from severe back pain that is making it difficult for her to sit, after being freed from captivity by pro-Iran Iraqi militia Kataeb Hezbollah, the Ynet news site reports.
Tsurkov underwent a spinal operation before she was kidnapped in Iraq, and it is likely that the pain was aggravated during her captivity, the report says.
Tsurkov is undergoing testing at Sheba Hospital in Ramat Gan, in a protocol similar to the one for hostages returning from Hamas captivity in Gaza.
Qatar says funerals of those killed in Israeli strike to be held this afternoon

DOHA, Qatar — Qatar says it would hold funerals in the capital Doha for those killed in an unprecedented Israeli strike that targeted Hamas figures in the Gulf country earlier this week.
“The Ministry of Interior announces that the funeral prayer for the martyrs of the Israeli targeting… will be held on the afternoon of Thursday, September 11, 2025, at Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdul Wahhab Mosque, and they will be buried in the Mesaimeer Cemetery,” it says in a statement on X.
Report: Israel struck Hamas in Qatar after ditching similar operation in NATO member Turkey
The Lebanese newspaper Al-Akhbar reports, citing Egyptian sources, that Israel struck Hamas’s headquarters in Qatar after deciding not to pursue an operation in Turkey, where many Hamas leaders also reside.
According to the sources, Netanyahu’s government chose to act in Qatar out of the belief that the Trump administration could handle the issue with Qatar, unlike with Turkey, because of its NATO membership.
The report did not elaborate on the timing of the planned operation in Turkey.
Lebanon says one killed in Israeli drone strike in country’s south
BEIRUT, Lebanon — Lebanon says an Israeli strike in the country’s south killed one person.
“An Israeli enemy drone strike targeted a motorcycle on the Ain Baal-Bazuriyeh road, killing one person,” Lebanon’s Health Ministry says in a statement, referring to an area in south Lebanon’s Tyre district.
The statement does not specify if the casualty was a combatant or civilian.
Since a ceasefire with Hezbollah in November, Israel has struck terror operatives it accuses of violating the agreement.
An Israeli airstrike targeted a motorcycle between the towns of Ain Baal and Bazourieh in the Sour district. pic.twitter.com/IFhZwSqtq5
— Beirut Wire (@beirutwire) September 11, 2025
Belgian festival nixes performance of German orchestra due to Israeli conductor

FRANKFURT, Germany — A prominent German orchestra’s performance at a Belgian festival has been canceled because of its Israeli conductor, sparking a furious reaction from Berlin.
Belgium’s foreign minister distances himself from the decision by Flanders Festival Ghent, where the Munich Philharmonic was to perform on September 18, led by its future chief conductor, Israel’s Lahav Shani.
Shani, who officially takes over as conductor of the Munich orchestra for the 2026-27 season, is currently music director of the Israel Philharmonic.
As a result, festival organizers said on Wednesday they were “unable to provide sufficient clarity about his attitude” toward the government, whose ongoing war against the Hamas terror group in Gaza has triggered international uproar.
“We have chosen to refrain from collaboration with partners who have not distanced themselves unequivocally from that regime,” the organizers say in a statement, while also noting Shani had “spoken out in favour of peace and reconciliation several times in the past.”
Organizers add that “the current situation” was leading to “emotional reactions,” and they wanted to “maintain the serenity” of the event, according to the statement.
German Culture Minister Wolfram Weimer criticizes the move as a “disgrace for Europe.”
“Under the guise of supposed criticism of Israel, a cultural boycott is being carried out here,” he says in a statement.
Belgian Foreign Minister Maxime Prevot says the cancellation seemed “excessive.”
“We must not confuse the Jewish community and Israelis with Netanyahu’s policies,” he tells local radio RTBF, referring to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
The Israel Philharmonic Orchestra says in response: “The Israel Philharmonic Orchestra expresses its profound regret and firmly condemns the decision made by the Flanders Festival Ghent. In the world of music and art, there is simply no place for withdrawing an invitation based on one’s place of origin. We extend our heartfelt gratitude to the Munich Philharmonic for their steadfast support of Lahav Shani, and we send Lahav a warm embrace of solidarity and encouragement.”
Times of Israel staff contributed to this report.
Iranian media: Hezbollah operative captured in daring IDF raid freed in exchange for Elizabeth Tsurkov
Israeli hostage Elizabeth Tsurkov was freed from captivity in Iraq in exchange for two members of Iranian proxy groups, among them a senior Hezbollah member captured in a daring IDF raid last year, the semi-official Iranian Tasnim news agency reports.
Imad Amhaz was captured in November during a commando raid on the coast of Batroun, northern Lebanon, and was considered by the military to have been a “significant source of knowledge” in the terror group’s naval force.
Police arrest illegal Palestinian resident who robbed teen in Givatayim
Police announce that they arrested a Palestinian illegally residing in Israel on suspicion he stole money and jewelry from a 17-year-old.
The suspect, a 24-year-old from Hebron, allegedly confronted the teenager last month with several other men in a parking lot in Givatayim. The men threatened the 17-year-old, causing him to fear for his life, police say.
Under pressure from the group, the teenager withdrew money from a nearby ATM and handed them the cash. He also transferred money to the men via electronic payment apps. In total, he was robbed of some NIS 3,200 ($960).
After that, the 24-year-old suspect forcibly stole jewelry that the teenager had been wearing, police add.
The victim later reported the incident to the police, who identified and tracked down the suspect from Hebron, but are still in the process of locating additional suspects.
A prosecutor’s statement was filed against the suspect earlier this week, and his detention was extended until September 12. Police say that state prosecutors plan to file charges against him in the coming days.
COGAT: Almost 170 aid trucks entered Gaza, 310 collected from crossings yesterday

Nearly 170 trucks carrying humanitarian aid entered the Gaza Strip yesterday through the Kerem Shalom and Zikim crossings, Israel’s Coordinator of Government Activities (COGAT) says.
According to COGAT, around 310 trucks’ worth of aid were also collected by the United Nations and other international organizations from the Gaza side of the crossings yesterday to be distributed.
“The contents of hundreds of trucks are still awaiting collection on the Gazan side of the crossings,” COGAT says.
Similar amounts of aid deliveries have been reported daily in the past few weeks.
The UN has said 600 trucks of aid need to be distributed each day in order to properly feed the Strip’s roughly two million people amid the war.
COGAT also says that “tankers of UN fuel entered for the operation of essential humanitarian systems” yesterday, and that it coordinated the exit of over 250 sick Palestinians — mostly children — and their caregivers out of the Strip via the Kerem Shalom Crossing to the Allenby Bridge Crossing with Jordan for treatment abroad.
Karhi tells AG she no longer represents him and Communications Ministry in legal cases

Communications Minister Shlomo Karhi tells the Attorney General’s Office that it will no longer provide him legal representation, according to a letter cited by Hebrew media outlets.
“I am informing you that in accordance with clause 22 of the Bar Association Law, you and your friend no longer have any power to represent me and the Communications Ministry,” the letter says, apparently referring to Attorney General Gali Baharav-Miara and her deputy Gil Limon.
Last month, the government voted to fire Baharav-Miara, but the High Court of Justice froze the decision.
Israeli review says UN-backed declaration of Gaza famine biased, 2 panel members praised Oct. 7

Israel’s Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT) and the Foreign Ministry publish a new report accusing the UN-backed Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) of issuing a biased and methodologically flawed declaration of famine in Gaza.
The IPC’s Famine Review Committee report, released on August 22, found that conditions in Gaza City meet the threshold for famine — the first such designation in the Middle East.
The Israeli review says the IPC relied on selective and inconsistent data, ignored July 2025 figures showing improvements in food security, and used arm circumference measurements instead of standard weight-for-height ratios, inflating malnutrition rates.
It also notes that mortality data in Gaza does not meet famine thresholds and questions the neutrality of some committee members, citing public support for Hamas and the Houthis, and two members’ praising of the October 7, 2023, massacre that started the war.
COGAT concludes that the famine declaration erodes trust in humanitarian reporting and calls for a reassessment of the IPC’s process.
Report: Egypt warns US targeting Hamas leaders on its soil would have ‘devastating consequences’
The Lebanese daily Al-Akhbar, citing its sources, reports that Cairo has made clear to the Americans that any attempt to strike Hamas officials in Egypt — similar to Israel’s action in Qatar — “would have devastating consequences.”
According to the report, Egypt also conveyed its willingness to host leaders of Gaza-based terror groups, including Hamas, and provide them with protection while they are on its territory.
IDF’s 36th Division pulls out of Khan Younis to gear up for Gaza City offensive

The IDF’s 36th Division has been withdrawn from southern Gaza’s Khan Younis after several months of operations against Hamas, and is now preparing for the upcoming Gaza City offensive, the military says.
The military says that in recent months, the division’s forces demolished dozens of kilometers’ worth of Hamas tunnels; razed hundreds of Hamas military infrastructures; established the so-called Magen Oz corridor splitting east and west Khan Younis; and eliminated hundreds of terror operatives, including some who participated in the October 7 onslaught.
Five IDF divisions, made up of tens of thousands of troops, are set to participate in the upcoming offensive against Hamas in Gaza City, according to the army.
Netanyahu informs senior appointments panel he picks David Zini as next Shin Bet head

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu informs the Senior Appointments Advisory Committee, led by former Supreme Court president Asher Grunis, that he chooses Maj. Gen. David Zini as the next head of the Shin Bet security agency.
Zini, a father of 11, had until recently served as head of the IDF Training Command and General Staff Corps. He has also been responsible for advancing the drafting of Haredi soldiers to the military. He was dismissed from the army several months ago after going behind IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir’s back to discuss the Shin Bet appointment with Netanyahu.
He is a controversial figure due to his self-described “messianic” views, and according to reports, officials in the Shin Bet have threatened to resign if he takes over the agency.
“After looking at several candidates from the service and other security agencies, and with attention to the consequences of October 7 on the Shin Bet, I decided to nominate a new Shin Bet chief who comes from outside the ranks of the organization,” a letter from the Prime Minister’s Office to the appointments panel says.
Zini was nominated by Netanyahu as head of the agency in May, though the appointment has been fraught from the start, as the ouster of Shin Bet chief Ronen Bar was itself a point of contention.
Under an agreement between the government and the attorney general in July, Netanyahu was to inform the head of the Senior Appointments Advisory Committee of his pick to head the domestic security agency, which would review the candidate’s suitability for the job.
The two-month period since the agreement was approved by the High Court, according to Hebrew media outlets, was designed to give the Shin Bet time to complete its part in the criminal investigations in the Qatargate and leaked documents scandals, both of which involve Netanyahu’s close aides.
Report: Houthis to begin launching missiles at multiple cities simultaneously to hinder interception

The Lebanese daily Al-Akhbar, citing a well-informed military source, reports that yesterday’s Israeli strike in Sanaa will lead to a change in the tactics of the Houthi rebel forces in Yemen.
According to the source, the Houthis could target sites in several Israeli cities at once, attempting to disrupt Israel’s air defense capabilities.
Report: Despite strike in Qatar, Hamas leadership united on completing ceasefire talks
The Saudi daily Asharq Al-Awsat reports that following the attempted assassination of senior Hamas officials in Qatar, there is consensus within Hamas’s leadership to complete the ceasefire negotiations in Gaza “in a way that serves Palestinian demands,” according to the report.
The demands, it says, are “a full end to the war and guarantees of the withdrawal of Israeli forces from the Strip.”
The report adds that in the coming days, contact with the mediators will be reestablished once the security situation stabilizes, allowing negotiations to resume.
IDF says some 200,000 Palestinians have left Gaza City as it gears up for offensive

Tens of thousands of Palestinians evacuated Gaza City over the past day, bringing the total number of those who left the area in recent weeks to around 200,000, according to IDF estimates.
Around one million Palestinians were estimated to be residing in Gaza City before the IDF began to prepare for a major offensive against Hamas there.
On Tuesday, the IDF ordered all of Gaza City to evacuate immediately ahead of the planned offensive.
Civilians have been instructed to head for an Israeli-designated humanitarian zone in the Strip’s south.
Trial of man charged with attempting to assassinate Trump at golf course set to begin

FORT PIERCE, Florida — Opening statements are set to begin this morning for the trial of a man charged with trying to assassinate US President Donald Trump while he played golf in South Florida last year, when he was campaigning for a second term.
Ryan Routh is representing himself after US District Judge Aileen Cannon agreed to let him dismiss his court-appointed attorneys. They are, however, standing by in the courtroom if needed.
He has pleaded not guilty to charges of attempting to assassinate a major presidential candidate, assaulting a federal officer, and several firearm violations.
Until this week, Routh has appeared at hearings shackled at the wrists and ankles and dressed in a tan jail jumpsuit. But with jurors present, Routh has been unrestrained and dressed in a sports coat and tie. Cannon has said that Routh will be allowed to address jurors and witnesses from a podium, but he will not have free rein of the courtroom.
A panel of 12 jurors and four alternates was sworn in on Wednesday at the federal courthouse in Fort Pierce, Florida. There are four white men, one Black man, six white women, and one Black woman on the jury, and the alternates are two white men and two white women. The panel was selected from a pool of 180 potential jurors.
The trial begins nearly a year after prosecutors say a US Secret Service agent thwarted his attempt to shoot the Republican presidential nominee. It’s expected to run another two or three weeks.
Americans to mark 24th anniversary of September 11 attacks

NEW YORK (AP) — Americans are set to mark 24 years since the September 11, 2001, attacks with solemn ceremonies, volunteer work, and other tributes honoring the victims.
Many loved ones of the nearly 3,000 people killed will join dignitaries and politicians at commemorations on Thursday in New York, at the Pentagon, and in Shanksville, Pennsylvania.
Others choose to mark the day at more intimate gatherings.
James Lynch, who lost his father, Robert Lynch, during the World Trade Center attack, said he and his family will attend a ceremony near their hometown in New Jersey before spending the day at the beach.
“It’s one of those things where any kind of grief, I don’t think it ever goes away,” Lynch said as he, his partner, and his mother joined thousands of volunteers preparing meals for the needy at a 9/11 charity event in Manhattan the day before the anniversary. “Finding the joy in that grief, I think, has been a huge part of my growth with this,” he said.
The remembrances are being held during a time of increased political tensions. The 9/11 anniversary, often promoted as a day of national unity, comes a day after conservative activist Charlie Kirk was shot and killed while speaking at a college in Utah.
No reports of injuries as IDF says it downed Houthi missile
A ballistic missile launched by the Houthis in Yemen at Israel a short while ago was intercepted by air defenses, the military says.
There are no immediate reports of impacts or injuries. Sirens had sounded in several towns in the southern Negev Desert area.
The attack comes hours after the IDF struck Houthi targets in Yemen in response to the Iran-backed group’s previous missile and drone fire on Israel.
Since March 18, when the IDF resumed its offensive against Hamas in the Gaza Strip, the Houthis have launched 82 ballistic missiles and at least 35 drones at Israel.
IDF says ballistic missile fired at Israel from Yemen, triggering sirens in the south
The Israel Defense Forces says it has identified a ballistic missile launch from Yemen, with air defenses working to down the projectile.
Sirens have been activated in communities the southern Negev and Arava areas.
FBI chief says subject released after being questioned over Charlie Kirk killing
WASHINGTON — FBI Director Kash Patel says the person who was in custody in relation to the death of conservative influencer Charlie Kirk has been released after being interrogated by law enforcement.
“The subject in custody has been released after an interrogation by law enforcement. Our investigation continues and we will continue to release information in interest of transparency,” he says in a post on X.
FBI chief says suspect detained in Charlie Kirk killing
US authorities have detained a suspect in the fatal shooting of right-wing activist Charlie Kirk, FBI Director Kash Patel says, following the attack at a university in Utah.
“The subject for the horrific shooting today that took the life of Charlie Kirk is now in custody,” Patel says on X. “We will provide updates when able.”
In heated phone call, Trump told Netanyahu that Qatar strike was unwise — WSJ

US President Donald Trump told Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that his decision to target Hamas inside Qatar wasn’t wise, the Wall Street Journal reports, citing senior administration officials.
Trump made the comments during what the Journal describes as a heated phone call on Tuesday after the attack, which the US president was angry to hear about from the American military rather than Israel.
According to the newspaper, Netanyahu responded that he had a brief window to launch the strikes and took the opportunity. A second call between the men later on Tuesday was cordial, with Trump asking Netanyahu if the attack had proven successful, the Journal reports, adding that the premier said he didn’t know.
The report also quotes a senior administration official who says Trump is increasingly frustrated with Netanyahu, feeling that the prime minister unilaterally takes moves that box him in and which conflict with his aims in the Middle East.
Qatar decries Netanyahu’s ‘reckless’ warning that Israel will act against Hamas chiefs if Doha doesn’t
Qatar hits back at Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in a strongly worded statement, describing his remarks about the Gulf country’s hosting of a Hamas office as “reckless.”
Netanyahu earlier warned Qatar to either expel Hamas officials or “bring them to justice. Because if you don’t, we will.”
The war with Iran has been draining for all of us in Israel. But when I heard about a high casualty incident – ballistic missile impacts in Arad and Dimona that left nearly 200 people wounded – I drank a cup of coffee, packed a bag, and headed south.
There, I spoke with Shilgit, the head of an after-school program for underprivileged youth. Standing outside her destroyed center, Shilgit said it was a miracle that no children were hurt and spoke about the community coming together in the hours since.
As a Times of Israel reporter, I’m committed to telling stories of resilience like Shilgit’s. But my colleagues and I can't do this alone. If you value work like this, please consider joining our reader support group, The Times of Israel Community. Your financial support is essential to keep real human reporting like this going.
— Stav Levaton, military reporter
We’re really pleased that you’ve read X Times of Israel articles in the past month.
That’s why we started the Times of Israel - to provide discerning readers like you with must-read coverage of Israel and the Jewish world.
So now we have a request. Unlike other news outlets, we haven’t put up a paywall. But as the journalism we do is costly, we invite readers for whom The Times of Israel has become important to help support our work by joining The Times of Israel Community.
For as little as $6 a month you can help support our quality journalism while enjoying The Times of Israel AD-FREE, as well as accessing exclusive content available only to Times of Israel Community members.
Thank you,
David Horovitz, Founding Editor of The Times of Israel
