—— 29 MAR 2026 — SITUATION REPORT
Iranian Missile Hits Chemical Plant in Negev; IDF Kills 6 at Khan Younis Checkpoints; Triple-Front Attack Continues on Day 30 of Iran War
Gaza Deaths Since Oct 7 72,267+ documented β²
Israelis Killed (Oct 7 Attack) ~1,200
Hostages Remaining in Gaza 0 alive (all accounted for) βΌ
Displaced People in Gaza ~1.9 million
Israeli Settlers in West Bank ~700,000 β²
IDF Soldiers Killed (Gaza War) ~850
Years of Conflict 78 years
LATESTMar 29, 2026 Β· 6 events
03
Military Operations
- Al-Shifa Hospital ComplexIDF raided Al-Shifa Hospital on 15 November 2023, claiming Hamas command infrastructure. Tunnel shafts and weapons cache found; scale of command center disputed. Hospital rendered non-functional. Second raid March 2024 killed hundreds of militants.
- Hamas Leadership Elimination CampaignIDF systematically eliminated Hamas leadership: Mohammed Deif (presumed Aug 2024), Yahya Sinwar (Oct 16, 2024), Ismail Haniyeh (Tehran, Jul 31, 2024 β attributed to Mossad). Marwan Issa (deputy Qassam commander) killed Mar 2024. Senior PIJ commanders also targeted.
- Hamas Tunnel Network DestructionIDF declared goal to destroy Hamas's ~500km tunnel network. Used 2,000-lb bunker busters, controlled flooding (seawater pumps), and underground demolition. Estimated 30β50% of tunnels destroyed by 2024. Tunnel discoveries continued to reveal Hamas's extensive infrastructure.
- Philadelphi Corridor SeizureIDF seized the 14km Philadelphi Corridor along Gaza-Egypt border in May 2024, cutting Hamas weapons smuggling route. Egyptian government protested Israeli presence near border. Corridor's status was the main obstacle in Phase 2 ceasefire negotiations β Netanyahu insisted on Israeli control, Hamas demanded full withdrawal.
- Iran Direct Attack on Israel (April 13, 2024)Iran launched its first-ever direct attack on Israeli territory: 300+ drones, cruise missiles, and ballistic missiles. Israel, US, UK, France, and Jordan intercepted 99% of projectiles. Israel and partners' coordinated defense was unprecedented. Minor damage to Nevatim Air Base. Israel conducted limited retaliatory strike on Isfahan (Apr 19).
- Hezbollah Northern Front (Oct 2023βSep 2024)Hezbollah opened a 'support front' for Hamas from day one of the war, firing anti-tank missiles, rockets, and drones into northern Israel daily. ~60,000 Israelis evacuated from northern Israel. Israel-Hezbollah full war erupted September 2024; IDF killed Hezbollah Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah (Sep 27, 2024) and launched ground operation in south Lebanon.
- Houthi Attacks on Shipping / Israeli-Linked VesselsYemen's Houthi movement fired missiles and drones at Israeli-linked shipping in the Red Sea beginning November 2023, claiming solidarity with Gaza. ~100+ vessels attacked. US-led Operation Prosperity Guardian conducted strikes on Houthi positions in Yemen. Suez Canal traffic fell ~50%; global shipping costs surged. Houthis also launched ballistic missiles at Israel (mostly intercepted).
04
Humanitarian Impact
| Category | Killed | Injured | Source | Tier | Status | Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gaza Total Deaths (Oct 7, 2023 β Mar 2026) | 72,267+ documented | 171,948+ | Gaza Ministry of Health / UNRWA Situation Report #213 / UN OCHA | Official | Heavily Contested | Gaza Health Ministry reported 72,267 killed and 171,948 injured as of late March 2026. 691 killed since the October 2025 ceasefire. 391 UNRWA staff killed in Gaza. Independent peer-reviewed study (Feb 21) cross-verified 75,227+ deaths. Over 10,000 remain missing under rubble. True toll with indirect deaths may exceed 90,000β100,000. Israeli army official accepted ~70,000 in Jan 2026. |
| Palestinian Children Killed (Oct 2023 β Mar 2026) | 19,000+ | 37,000+ | Gaza MoH / UNICEF / Save the Children | Official | Evolving | UNICEF called Gaza the most dangerous place in the world for children. Highest child death toll in any conflict in the UN's recorded history. Gaza has the highest number of child amputees per capita in the world. More children killed in first months than in all global conflicts combined in 2022. |
| Healthcare Workers Killed in Gaza | 1,000+ | 2,000+ | WHO / Palestinian Health Ministry | Official | Verified | WHO documented over 700 attacks on health facilities in Gaza since Oct 7. Over 100 hospitals and clinics put out of service β 97% of schools damaged or destroyed. All 36 hospitals damaged or destroyed. Deadliest conflict for healthcare workers in WHO's history. |
| Journalists Killed (Gaza War) | 220+ | 50+ | Reporters Without Borders (RSF) / Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) | Institutional | Verified | Highest journalist death toll in any conflict in CPJ's 40-year history. RSF recorded 220 journalists killed by Israeli forces in less than two years. Includes Palestinian, Israeli, and foreign nationals. Many killed with press vest on; IDF investigations rarely resulted in accountability. |
| Aid Workers Killed in Gaza (Oct 2023 β Dec 2025) | 578+ | 100+ | UN Secretary-General / UNRWA / OCHA | Official | Verified | At least 578 aid workers killed between Oct 7, 2023 and Dec 3, 2025, including at least 387 UN personnel. Single largest loss of UN staff in any conflict. Gaza was the most dangerous place in the world to be an aid worker throughout most of 2025. |
| Israelis Killed (October 7 Attack) | ~1,200 | ~3,500 | IDF / Israeli National Security Council | Official | Verified | Deadliest attack on Jews since the Holocaust. ~364 killed at Nova music festival; ~400 soldiers and police killed; ~400+ civilians in kibbutzim and towns. 251 hostages taken to Gaza; all now accounted for (last body returned early 2026). |
| IDF Soldiers Killed (Gaza War, Oct 2023βpresent) | ~850 | ~4,500 | IDF | Official | Verified | Includes combat deaths in Gaza and related operations. Ceasefire since Oct 10, 2025 has significantly reduced IDF combat fatalities. Many deaths from explosive devices and urban ambushes during active combat phase. |
| Israeli Hostages β Final Account | ~30 (deceased in captivity) | N/A | Israeli PM Office / Hostages Families Forum / UN Security Council | Official | Verified | 251 taken Oct 7; ~105 released Nov 2023; 33 released Phase 1 ceasefire JanβMar 2025; remaining released or recovered as deceased under Oct 2025 ceasefire. Ran Gvili's body was the last returned, in early 2026. The UN Security Council convened the day after his return. Israel's UN representative removed his yellow hostage pin for the first time in 843 days. |
| West Bank Palestinians Killed (Oct 2023 β Mar 2026) | 1,133+ | 11,700+ | Palestinian Authority / B'Tselem / UN OHCHR | Official | Partial | Deadliest period in West Bank since Second Intifada. 22,000+ arrested. 36,000+ forcibly displaced per UN OHCHR March 2026 report. IDF operations in Jenin, Tulkarm, Nablus. 26+ killed in 2026; Palestinian-American Nasrallah Abu Siyam killed by settlers in Mukhmas on March 27. 257 settler incidents recorded in 25 days since Feb 28 Iran war β only 3% result in Israeli convictions (Yesh Din). |
| Second Intifada Total (2000β2005) | 4,228 total | ~50,000 | B'Tselem / Israeli MFA | Institutional | Partial | ~3,354 Palestinians killed (including combatants), ~874 Israelis killed (mostly civilians in suicide bombings). Deadliest sustained conflict between the two peoples in modern times until 2023. |
| Operation Protective Edge β Gaza War III (2014) | 2,251 Palestinians; 72 Israelis | ~11,000 Palestinians; ~500 Israelis | UN OCHA / B'Tselem / IDF | Official | Partial | UN found 1,462 Palestinian civilians killed including 551 children. IDF estimated higher combatant ratio. Most destructive Gaza war prior to 2023. $8.4B damage to Gaza infrastructure. |
| Operation Cast Lead β Gaza War I (2008β09) | ~1,385 Palestinians; 13 Israelis | ~5,000 Palestinians; 518 Israelis | UN Goldstone Report / B'Tselem / IDF | Official | Heavily Contested | UN Goldstone Report documented civilian casualties and alleged war crimes by both sides. IDF subsequently disputed numbers. 10 of 13 Israelis killed were soldiers; 4 by friendly fire. |
| 1948 Arab-Israeli War | ~15,000 total | Unknown | Benny Morris historical research / Israeli Government | Institutional | Partial | ~6,000 Israelis killed (~4,000 soldiers, ~2,000 civilians); ~5,000-8,000 Arab soldiers and Palestinian fighters killed. ~700,000β750,000 Palestinians displaced (the Nakba). Arab states' casualty figures vary widely. |
| First Intifada (1987β1993) | ~1,322 total | ~80,000+ | B'Tselem / Israeli Defense Ministry | Institutional | Verified | ~1,162 Palestinians killed by Israeli forces; ~160 Israelis killed by Palestinians. Tens of thousands injured, arrested, or subjected to 'break the bones' policy. Gaza refugee camps bore highest casualties. |
| Great March of Return (2018β2019) | ~214 Palestinians | ~36,000 Palestinians | UN Commission of Inquiry / B'Tselem | Official | Partial | Over 13 months of protests; Israeli snipers fired live ammunition at protesters. UN Commission found Israel violated international human rights law. No Israeli casualties from protesters' actions. |
| Operation Guardian of the Walls (May 2021) | 253 Palestinians; 13 Israelis | ~2,000 Palestinians; ~300 Israelis | UN OCHA / IDF / B'Tselem | Official | Partial | UN confirmed 67 children among Palestinian dead. 13 Israelis killed; 10 civilians (including 2 Thai workers). Both sides fired into civilian areas. 11-day war; Egyptian-mediated ceasefire. |
05
Economic & Market Impact
Gaza GDP Contraction (2023β2025) βΌ -86% vs 2022 baseline; 81% of all structures damaged
-86%
Source: World Bank / UNCTAD / UN OCHA (2025)
Gaza Reconstruction Cost (Estimate) β² Decades of sustained support needed; 97% of schools damaged/destroyed
$80B+
Source: UN OCHA / World Bank / UNCTAD; Board of Peace / Carnegie Endowment (Mar 2026)
Israel Defense Budget (2025) β² +NIS 31B emergency supplement after Iran conflict; war costs $55.6B (2023β2025)
NIS 136B+
Source: Israeli Ministry of Finance / Knesset / Bank of Israel
US Military Aid to Israel (FY2024) β² +$14.1B emergency supplemental (Apr 2024); aid relationship under review in 2026
$17.9B
Source: US State Department / Congressional Research Service
Gaza Unemployment Rate β² Up from 47% pre-war (2022); food avg 2 meals/day (up from 1 in Jul 2025)
~80%
Source: ILO / Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics / UN OCHA Mar 2026
West Bank GDP Contraction (2023β2025) βΌ Israel withholds $2.5B Palestinian clearance revenue; 36,000+ forcibly displaced
-25%
Source: World Bank / Palestinian MoF / UN OHCHR (Mar 2026)
2026 Gaza/West Bank Flash Appeal β² Covers 3.6M people across Gaza and West Bank; covers food, water, shelter, health
$4B
Source: UN OCHA 2026 Flash Appeal
Israeli Tourism Revenue Loss (2024) βΌ -75% vs 2019 peak; slow recovery projected as ceasefire holds
-$8B
Source: Israeli Tourism Ministry / World Tourism Organization
West Bank Settlement Economic Output β² Exceeds entire Palestinian GDP by 3x; 64,000+ new units approved in 12 months
$30B+
Source: UN OCHA / B'Tselem / UN OHCHR Mar 2026
Palestinian Territory Aid Dependency β² Gaza 100% aid-dependent; only ~200 trucks/day vs 600 needed; down 80% since Iran war (Feb 28) per COGAT
50%+
Source: World Bank / OECD DAC / WHO / COGAT Mar 2026
Gaza Food Price Inflation (March 2026) β² Up from 153% in February; orange prices +84% week-over-week; driven by 80% collapse in aid trucks since Feb 28
305%
Source: UN OCHA β Humanitarian Situation Report, March 2026
Israel Credit Rating (Moody's / S&P) β² S&P upgraded outlook to 'stable' post-ceasefire; Moody's holds Baa1 negative outlook
Baa1 / A (mixed signals)
Source: Moody's / S&P Global Ratings (early 2026)
US Reconstruction Commitment (Board of Peace) β² Announced by Trump at Feb 18, 2026 inaugural Board of Peace meeting in Washington; $7B in Gulf pledges collected
$10B
Source: White House / Board of Peace (Feb 2026)
Israel Economic Impact β Iran War (Day 30) β² Day 30 of US-Israel war on Iran (Feb 28 β Mar 29); Strait of Hormuz closure disrupting global oil; Bank of Israel emergency interventions; tourism suspended
NIS 15B+ est.
Source: Bank of Israel / Israeli MoF / Al Jazeera (Mar 2026)
06
Contested Claims Matrix
24 claims · click to expandDoes Israel's military campaign in Gaza constitute genocide?
Source A: South Africa / Palestinian Position
South Africa, joined by dozens of countries, filed an ICJ case alleging Israel is committing genocide as defined by the 1948 Genocide Convention. Citing Israeli leaders' statements ('human animals,' 'Amalek'), the mass killing of over 75,000 Palestinians, destruction of 80%+ of structures in Gaza, and siege cutting off food/water/medicine, they argue this constitutes acts committed with intent to destroy the Palestinian people in Gaza. South Africa filed a 750-page memorial (Oct 2024) with 4,000+ pages of exhibits.
Source B: Israeli / Western Position
Israel categorically rejects the genocide accusation as 'blood libel' and filed its counter-memorial on March 14, 2026 after two extensions. Israel argues it is conducting a legitimate military campaign against Hamas terrorists who committed the October 7 massacre. The US, Netherlands, Hungary, Paraguay, Iceland, Fiji, and others filed declarations of intervention in the case in early 2026. The ICJ's Jan 2024 provisional measures did not conclude genocide occurred.
⚖ RESOLUTION: ICJ proceedings at critical juncture. Israel filed its counter-memorial March 14, 2026 after two extensions. South Africa now considers whether to request additional written submissions before oral proceedings. Three rounds of provisional measures ordered. Final judgment expected by early 2028. Multiple countries intervened as third parties in early 2026.
What caused the Al-Ahli Hospital explosion on October 17, 2023?
Source A: Hamas / Palestinian / Arab Media Position
Hamas, the Palestinian Authority, Jordan, Egypt, and initial reports from Al Jazeera attributed the explosion to an Israeli airstrike, claiming 500 dead. Arab leaders canceled summits with US President Biden in response. Egyptian state TV broadcast as fact that Israel struck the hospital.
Source B: Israeli / Western Intelligence Position
Israel, the US (NSA, CIA), UK, French, German, and Canadian intelligence agencies assessed β based on intercepted communications, satellite imagery, and analysis of blast pattern, crater size, and casualty figures β that the explosion was caused by a misfired Palestinian Islamic Jihad rocket that fell short. The Pentagon concluded 100β300 killed, not 500, and that the damage was inconsistent with Israeli munitions.
⚖ RESOLUTION: Major contested claim. Western intelligence agencies and independent experts (including NYT and AP analysis) broadly support the misfired rocket conclusion. No independent forensic investigation was conducted on the ground. The incident remains a flashpoint in information warfare around the conflict.
Does Hamas deliberately use civilians as human shields?
Source A: Israeli / Western Position
Israel, the US, and Western governments assert Hamas systematically embeds military infrastructure within civilian areas β tunnels under hospitals and mosques, command centers in residential buildings, weapons stored in schools β making civilian casualties an inevitable consequence of legitimate military operations. The IDF released videos showing weapons in UNRWA facilities and alleged Hamas command beneath Al-Shifa Hospital.
Source B: Palestinian / Human Rights Position
Hamas denies systematically using human shields. Human rights organizations note that Gaza is one of the world's most densely populated territories (5,500 per kmΒ²), making any military infrastructure inevitably near civilian areas. HRW and Amnesty have documented specific Hamas violations but caution that the human shields framing is used by Israel to justify disproportionate attacks on civilian infrastructure. UN experts say human shields allegations do not negate Israel's obligations under IHL.
⚖ RESOLUTION: UN and human rights groups have documented Hamas firing from and near civilian areas, violating IHL. They simultaneously find Israel's response disproportionate and in breach of IHL's distinction and proportionality principles. Both parties have violated the laws of war, per multiple UN commissions.
Are Israeli settlements in the West Bank legal under international law?
Source A: International / Palestinian Position
The ICJ (2004 advisory opinion), UN Security Council (Resolution 2334, 2016), the International Committee of the Red Cross, and virtually all countries except Israel and the US (partially, pre-2019) declare Israeli settlements illegal under Article 49(6) of the Fourth Geneva Convention, which prohibits an occupying power from transferring its civilian population into occupied territory.
Source B: Israeli Position
Israel argues the Fourth Geneva Convention does not apply to the West Bank (which Israel terms 'Judea and Samaria') because it was not sovereign Jordanian territory and Israel is not an 'occupying power' in the classic sense. Israel further cites historical Jewish ties to the land and Oslo Agreement provisions. In 2019 the Trump administration reversed a Carter-era opinion and declared settlements 'not per se illegal'; Biden partially walked this back.
⚖ RESOLUTION: Overwhelming international consensus holds settlements are illegal under international law. Israel's position is rejected by the ICJ, UN, ICRC, and all but a small number of states. The Biden and Trump administrations differed on this; the Biden admin reverted to 'inconsistent with international law.' The ICJ's July 2024 advisory opinion on the occupation found Israeli settlements illegal and called for their dismantling.
Do Palestinian refugees have a legal right to return to their homes in Israel?
Source A: Palestinian / Arab / International Position
UN General Assembly Resolution 194 (1948) affirms that Palestinian refugees 'wishing to return to their homes and live at peace with their neighbours should be permitted to do so at the earliest practicable date.' Palestinians assert this right as non-negotiable and fundamental. UNRWA registers 5.9 million descendants as refugees. The right of return is a core demand in any Palestinian negotiating position.
Source B: Israeli Position
Israel rejects a wholesale right of return, arguing it would demographically end the Jewish state and is therefore incompatible with the two-state solution. Israel points out that hundreds of thousands of Jews were expelled from Arab countries in 1948β1950; the UNGA resolution is non-binding; and any resolution must be bilateral. Israel offers symbolic acknowledgment of Palestinian suffering without mass return.
⚖ RESOLUTION: One of the most intractable issues. UNGAR 194 is non-binding. Various peace proposals (Clinton Parameters, Geneva Initiative) suggested limited individual return to Israel combined with 'right of return' to a Palestinian state and compensation. No agreement has been reached. The refugee issue remains unresolved after 75+ years.
Who has sovereignty over Jerusalem?
Source A: Israeli Position
Israel claims all of Jerusalem β including East Jerusalem β as its 'eternal, indivisible capital,' a position enacted into law (Jerusalem Law, 1980). Israel holds the Western Wall and administers access to the Temple Mount under Jordanian Waqf oversight. The US recognized this position in 2017 and moved its embassy; a small number of countries have followed.
Source B: Palestinian / International Position
The UN General Assembly and Security Council do not recognize Israeli sovereignty over East Jerusalem, which was captured in 1967 and unilaterally annexed (a step not recognized internationally). The Palestinian Authority claims East Jerusalem as the capital of a future Palestinian state. UNSC Resolution 478 declared Israel's Jerusalem Law 'null and void.' Almost all embassies remain in Tel Aviv or suburbs, though this shifted after 2017.
⚖ RESOLUTION: International consensus holds Jerusalem's final status must be resolved through negotiations. The UN, EU, Arab states, and most of the world do not recognize Israeli sovereignty over East Jerusalem. The US recognition (2017) and embassy move was a major shift that isolated Washington in international forums. A two-state solution typically envisions West Jerusalem as Israel's capital and East Jerusalem as Palestine's capital.
Was the 1948 Palestinian displacement the result of systematic expulsion or voluntary flight?
Source A: Palestinian / Arab / Many Historians
The Nakba ('catastrophe') involved systematic expulsion of Palestinians through military operations, massacres (Deir Yassin, Tantura, etc.), psychological warfare, and deliberate destruction of villages. Palestinian historian Walid Khalidi and Israeli 'New Historians' including Benny Morris document orders to clear areas, destruction of 418 villages, and deliberate expulsion. Palestinians were not warned of war or offered return after fighting ended.
Source B: Traditional Israeli / Some Western Historians
Traditional Israeli historiography held that Palestinians fled voluntarily following calls from Arab leaders to evacuate temporarily pending Arab military victory. Morris (despite documenting expulsions) argues context was a war for survival; some expulsions were militarily necessary. Arab states bear responsibility for rejecting partition and launching the war. Palestinian leaders also told populations to flee.
⚖ RESOLUTION: Israeli 'New Historians' (Morris, PappΓ©, Segev) have since the 1980s documented the expulsion was far more systematic than the 'voluntary flight' narrative suggested. Morris found no single Arab radio call to flee; most Palestinians fled a mixture of expulsion and war panic. The Nakba is now widely recognized as a historical catastrophe. Debate continues on the degree of intent and comparability to other events.
Is Israel's blockade of Gaza legal under international law?
Source A: Israel / US Position
Israel argues the Gaza blockade is a legitimate naval and land blockade under the laws of armed conflict (San Remo Manual), aimed at preventing weapons smuggling to Hamas. The 2011 UN Palmer Report found the Israeli naval blockade was legally imposed and in conformity with international law. Israel says it allows adequate food, medicine, and civilian goods. Erez and Kerem Shalom crossings have been open for many civilian goods.
Source B: UN / Human Rights / Palestinian Position
ICRC, UN, HRW, Amnesty, and most human rights organizations call the blockade illegal collective punishment under Article 33 of the Fourth Geneva Convention. The blockade has caused systematic deindustrialization of Gaza, 40%+ unemployment, a 'diet' restriction policy that Israel's own officials referenced, and denied reconstruction materials for years. UNRWA has documented food insecurity affecting the majority of Gaza's population even before October 7.
⚖ RESOLUTION: Contested under international law. The Palmer Report found the naval blockade legal; the land blockade is more disputed. Many legal experts argue the totality of restrictions since 2007 constitutes collective punishment regardless of military justification. The ICJ's July 2024 advisory opinion found Israel's policies in Gaza, including prolonged blockade, violated international law.
Does Israel operate an apartheid system against Palestinians?
Source A: Human Rights Organizations / Palestinian Position
Amnesty International (2022), Human Rights Watch (2021), B'Tselem (2021), and the UN Special Rapporteur have concluded Israel operates a system of apartheid over Palestinians β a crime against humanity β based on legal distinctions between Israeli Jews and Palestinians (different law systems in West Bank, movement restrictions, nationality laws, settlement expansion). South Africa's ICJ brief explicitly invokes apartheid comparisons.
Source B: Israeli / Western Government Position
Israel rejects the apartheid designation as antisemitic propaganda. Israeli officials note Arab citizens of Israel (21% of population) vote, serve in parliament and courts, and have equal legal rights. Israel argues the West Bank situation stems from a security situation not from racial policy. The US, EU, and most Western governments have not adopted the apartheid designation and consider it counter-productive to peace efforts.
⚖ RESOLUTION: The apartheid designation is contested but has gained significant international institutional backing. Amnesty, HRW, and B'Tselem explicitly use the term. Western governments largely reject it. The ICC's and ICJ's analyses of the situation may eventually engage with the question more formally. The UN's 2022 Special Committee report adopted similar language.
Did Hamas commit systematic sexual violence on October 7?
Source A: Israeli / UN / Western Position
A UN special mission (Special Representative on Sexual Violence in Conflict Pramila Patten) confirmed in March 2024 'clear and convincing information' that sexual violence, including gang rape, rape of corpses, and mutilation, was committed by Hamas during the October 7 attack. Israeli police and hospitals documented rape victims; testimony from survivors and witnesses was collected. The UN called for accountability.
Source B: Hamas / Some Skeptical Voices
Hamas categorically denied its fighters committed rape on October 7, calling the claims fabrications. Some journalists and academics questioned the scale and nature of evidence, pointing to limited forensic evidence available. Gaza-based Palestinian civil society groups did not corroborate claims. Initial Israeli accusations were sometimes overstated (the 'beheaded babies' claim was partly retracted by Israeli officials).
⚖ RESOLUTION: The UN Special Mission and most international bodies have confirmed sexual violence occurred on Oct 7. The UN's Pramila Patten mission found credible evidence. Specific scale and whether it was a systematic military strategy remains debated. Hamas's denial is broadly rejected by investigators. Israel has been criticized for delays in its own investigation.
Is Hamas a terrorist organization or a legitimate resistance movement?
Source A: Western / Israeli Position
Hamas is designated a Foreign Terrorist Organization by the US, EU, UK, Australia, Canada, and Japan based on its suicide bombings, rocket attacks, and the October 7 massacre. Western governments argue Hamas's violence against civilians and its charter rejecting Israel's existence makes it ineligible for political negotiations without prior disarmament and recognition of Israel.
Source B: Arab / Palestinian / Some International Position
Arab states, Russia, China, Turkey, Iran, and most of the Global South do not designate Hamas as a terrorist organization, viewing it as a Palestinian resistance movement responding to occupation. Hamas won the 2006 Palestinian elections β a legitimate democratic exercise. Scholars of international law note occupied peoples have a right to resistance under international law.
⚖ RESOLUTION: Deeply contested. In Western political and legal frameworks, Hamas is a terrorist organization. In Arab, Muslim-majority, and Global South contexts, it is widely seen as a resistance movement. Hamas's own governing record in Gaza (repression of civil society, corruption, targeting of civilians) complicates both framings. The October 7 atrocities have solidified Western positions and shifted some neutral governments.
Has Israel's military response in Gaza been proportionate under international humanitarian law?
Source A: Israel / US Position
Israel asserts it has taken unprecedented measures to limit civilian harm: dropping leaflets, sending pre-recorded calls, using smaller munitions where possible, setting up 'safe zones,' and allowing humanitarian corridors. The IDF's targeting process involves legal review. Given Hamas's tunnel network and urban warfare tactics, casualties are regrettably but inevitably high. No army has ever faced a similar challenge of fighting an enemy in a densely populated urban tunnel complex.
Source B: UN / Human Rights / Palestinian Position
UN experts, HRW, Amnesty, the ICJ, and many international law scholars argue Israel's campaign is disproportionate and indiscriminate. Over 50,000 deaths including 16,000+ children, destruction of 60%+ of all buildings in Gaza, targeting of journalists (150+ killed), medics, and UN staff (250+ killed), and use of 2,000-lb bombs in refugee areas are cited as evidence of IHL violations. ACLED data shows civilian harm far exceeding any previous urban warfare standard.
⚖ RESOLUTION: UN commissions and human rights bodies have found Israel has violated IHL's proportionality and distinction principles. The ICC sought warrants on this basis. Israel rejects these findings. Independent military experts are divided on specific operations. The question will ultimately be subject to ICC prosecution and potentially ICJ ruling.
Is UNRWA infiltrated by or complicit with Hamas?
Source A: Israeli Position
Israel provided intelligence to the US and other donors alleging 12 UNRWA staff participated in the October 7 attack, and that a significant percentage of UNRWA's 13,000 Gaza staff had affiliations with Hamas or PIJ. Israel has long sought to abolish UNRWA, arguing it perpetuates the refugee problem and provides political cover for Hamas. Israel released footage of Hamas using UNRWA facilities.
Source B: UN / UNRWA / Palestinian Position
UNRWA fired the 9 employees against whom Israel provided evidence pending investigation. An independent UN review (Colonna Report, April 2024) found UNRWA had 'no proof' of widespread Hamas infiltration and criticized Israel for not providing substantive evidence against most accused employees. UNRWA's humanitarian mandate covers 5.9 million Palestinian refugees; abolishing it would devastate basic services in Gaza, West Bank, Jordan, Lebanon, and Syria.
⚖ RESOLUTION: The Colonna Report found UNRWA's mechanisms were inadequate but found no proof of systematic infiltration. The US paused then restored partial UNRWA funding. Most European donors restored funding. Israel proceeded to ban UNRWA from Israeli territory (effective January 2025). The ban has severely disrupted aid operations in Gaza and West Bank.
Is a two-state solution still viable?
Source A: Palestinian Authority / Most International Position
The PA and most of the international community maintain a two-state solution β an independent Palestinian state alongside Israel, based on 1967 lines with East Jerusalem as the Palestinian capital β is the only path to lasting peace. International consensus, endorsed by UNSC Resolution 2334 and almost all world governments, supports this framework. The Gaza war has intensified global calls for a pathway to Palestinian statehood.
Source B: Current Israeli Government Position
PM Netanyahu and his coalition government categorically oppose a Palestinian state: 'I will not allow it.' Israel's National Security Strategy calls for normalization with Arab states without a Palestinian state. After October 7, Israeli public opinion has hardened against a Palestinian state. Smotrich and Ben-Gvir support annexation of the West Bank. The settlement enterprise is widely cited by analysts as having made two states geographically impossible without major settlement evacuation.
⚖ RESOLUTION: Most analysts consider two states increasingly difficult but not formally dead. Settlement growth, Hamas governance of Gaza, and Israeli and Palestinian domestic politics have all made it harder. Some propose confederation models or phased approaches. UN recognition of Palestinian statehood has grown (146 countries as of 2024 recognize Palestine), but without meaningful territorial reality.
Is Israel using starvation as a weapon of war in Gaza?
Source A: UN / Human Rights / Palestinian Position
The ICC Prosecutor sought arrest warrants for Netanyahu and Gallant specifically alleging use of starvation as a method of warfare β an explicit war crime under the Rome Statute. The UN's Integrated Food Security Phase Classification found catastrophic famine conditions (IPC Phase 5) in northern Gaza. OCHA documented systematic Israeli restrictions on aid trucks, flour, fuel, and commercial goods. UN experts declared a 'human-made famine.' Babies died of malnutrition.
Source B: Israeli Position
Israel denies using starvation as a weapon. Israel argues: (a) aid trucks were available but delayed by complex logistics and UN operational failures; (b) Hamas diverted aid intended for civilians; (c) Israel opened multiple crossings and allowed significant tonnage. Israeli officials produced statistics on aid volume. Israel points to Hamas seizure of aid supplies and use of civilians as leverage.
⚖ RESOLUTION: ICC issued arrest warrants based on starvation evidence (Nov 2024). IPC/UN nutrition data confirmed famine in northern Gaza. Independent aid organizations uniformly reported restrictions imposed by Israel as the primary bottleneck, not logistics. Whether it meets the legal threshold of using starvation as a 'method of warfare' is the subject of ICC proceedings.
Does the ICC have jurisdiction over the situation in Palestine, and are its warrants legitimate?
Source A: ICC / International Law / Palestine Position
The ICC Pre-Trial Chamber confirmed in 2021 that it has territorial jurisdiction over the Occupied Palestinian Territory. Palestine is an ICC member state. The court issued warrants for Netanyahu and Gallant following standard procedures. ICC member states are obligated to arrest warrant subjects. The UK, France, Germany, Netherlands, and other states said they would honor the warrants if Netanyahu visited. Draft warrants for Ben-Gvir and Smotrich were reportedly completed before prosecutor Khan went on indefinite leave.
Source B: US / Israeli Position
The Trump administration (Feb 2025) imposed financial and visa sanctions on ICC Prosecutor Karim Khan, his deputies, nine judges, and the UN Special Rapporteur β forcing Khan to take indefinite leave. Israel filed motions to cancel the warrants and had a partial victory in April 2025 when the ICC Appeals Chamber ordered the lower court to review some jurisdiction arguments. The US condemned the warrants as 'outrageous' and threatened consequences for states that enforce them.
⚖ RESOLUTION: The ICC warrants remain legally active and binding on 125 member states, but the US sanctions campaign has severely hampered the court's operations. Prosecutor Khan is on indefinite leave. Netanyahu's travel is curtailed. Israel's partial victory in appeals requires the lower court to reconsider some jurisdiction arguments. The warrants remain the most significant international accountability mechanism despite enforcement challenges.
Did Hamas operate a command center beneath Al-Shifa Hospital?
Source A: Israeli / US Position
Israel and the US intelligence community long asserted Hamas operated a command-and-control node beneath Al-Shifa Hospital. When IDF raided the hospital (November 2023), they showed evidence of tunnels, weapons, and a Hamas operational room. Biden said the evidence confirmed Hamas presence. A second raid (March 2024) killed hundreds of militants in the hospital complex.
Source B: Hamas / Doctors / International Position
Hamas denied operating beneath the hospital. Hospital directors said there was no command center; patients and staff were endangered. After the initial November 2023 raid, many journalists reported the evidence shown was less than expected β tunnels were real but smaller than claimed. MSF and WHO documented the hospital's destruction and said it was rendered non-functional. The full scale of Hamas's use remains disputed.
⚖ RESOLUTION: IDF confirmed tunnel shafts and weapons caches at Al-Shifa. The claim of a major command center was more ambiguous after initial raids; the March 2024 operation found more extensive Hamas presence. International law experts debate whether Hamas presence justifies attacking a hospital, and whether proportionality was maintained.
Did Hamas or Israel bear greater responsibility for collapse of Phase 2 ceasefire negotiations?
Source A: Israeli / US Position
Israel argued Hamas made maximalist demands in Phase 2 negotiations, demanding complete Israeli military withdrawal and refusing bridging proposals. Netanyahu faced coalition pressure from far-right ministers Ben-Gvir and Smotrich threatening to collapse the government if fighting did not resume.
Source B: Hamas / Qatar / Egypt Position
Hamas and mediators Qatar and Egypt said Israel sabotaged Phase 2 by withdrawing from agreed frameworks after Phase 1 succeeded. They accused Netanyahu of prioritizing coalition survival over hostages' lives. Hamas stated it fulfilled Phase 1 obligations and agreed to bridging proposals rejected by Israel. Hostage families in Israel accused Netanyahu of prioritizing politics over getting their loved ones home.
⚖ RESOLUTION: Collapse of Phase 2 talks is disputed with both sides pointing at the other. Independent analysis suggests both parties bore responsibility: Hamas maximalist demands, Netanyahu coalition pressures, and US diplomacy failures all contributed. Mediators Qatar and Egypt blamed Israel more directly. The resumed fighting exacerbated the humanitarian catastrophe and complicated hostage recovery.
Did Israeli intelligence receive warnings about the October 7 attack?
Source A: Investigative Journalists / Some Officials
Multiple reports (NYT, Haaretz, Israeli state inquiry) revealed Israeli intelligence had a document ('Jericho Wall') describing the exact Hamas attack plan and had been warned by Egyptian intelligence. SIGINT unit commanders warned of unusual Hamas military exercises. A female IDF soldier repeatedly warned superiors her intelligence indicated an imminent Hamas operation; she was dismissed. Questions arose about command failures and overconfidence.
Source B: Israeli Government / IDF Position
Israeli intelligence assessed that Hamas was deterred and not capable of or intending such an operation. The 'Jericho Wall' document was assessed as aspirational, not operational. Intelligence analysis failures were systemic. PM Netanyahu's office shifted blame to intelligence services; military commanders accepted responsibility. An official state commission of inquiry was established to investigate the failures.
⚖ RESOLUTION: Significant intelligence failure confirmed across Israeli institutions. The State Commission of Inquiry (Shamgar Commission) is investigating. Reports confirm warnings existed but were misinterpreted or dismissed. This has become a major political issue in Israel, with Netanyahu accused of ignoring security warnings to pursue judicial reform and West Bank management.
Is Israel's presence in the West Bank an illegal occupation?
Source A: International / Palestinian Position
The UN General Assembly, ICJ (2004 and 2024 advisory opinions), UNSC, ICRC, and virtually all states hold that Israel is the occupying power in the West Bank and that the Fourth Geneva Convention applies. The ICJ's July 2024 advisory opinion went further, finding Israel's prolonged occupation is itself illegal under international law and must be ended, requiring evacuation of settlements and allowing Palestinian self-determination.
Source B: Israeli Position
Israel argues the West Bank's status is disputed, not occupied: Israel was not present before 1967 as the West Bank was not under Jordanian sovereignty in the legal sense; no sovereign state existed there. Israel terms it 'administered territory' or (in Israeli right discourse) 'liberated territory.' The ICJ advisory opinion is non-binding. Israel argues it is entitled to hold the territory until a negotiated peace is achieved.
⚖ RESOLUTION: The July 2024 ICJ advisory opinion was the most definitive international legal ruling to date, finding the occupation itself (not just specific policies) illegal. The UNGA adopted a resolution demanding withdrawal within 12 months. No enforcement mechanism exists. Israel has not complied. The ICJ's finding shifts the legal landscape significantly.
Has Israel deliberately targeted journalists in Gaza?
Source A: Press Freedom / Palestinian Position
RSF documented 220 journalists killed by Israeli forces in less than two years β the highest journalist death toll in any conflict in recorded history. CPJ data confirms 248 journalists and media workers killed in the conflict overall. Multiple incidents involved journalists killed in clearly marked press vests with no military activity nearby. Al Jazeera journalists' families were killed. CPJ and RSF called for ICC investigation into journalist targeting.
Source B: Israeli Position
Israel denies deliberately targeting journalists. The IDF says journalists embedded with or near Hamas positions are legitimate targets if they serve as active combatants or shields. Israel says some killed as journalists were actually Hamas members. Israel claims journalists' deaths are collateral in an unprecedented urban war and that it has conducted internal investigations.
⚖ RESOLUTION: IDF has not provided specific targeting justifications for most journalist deaths. RSF documented 220 killed by Israeli forces in under two years. Several targeted killings appeared to be direct strikes on individuals in clearly marked press gear. ICC investigation is ongoing though hampered by US sanctions on the prosecutor.
Is Trump's 'Board of Peace' a legitimate governance framework for post-war Gaza?
Source A: US / Israeli / Arab Partners Position
The Trump administration's 20-point Comprehensive Plan, backed by UNSC Resolution 2803 (Nov 2025), established the Board of Peace to oversee Gaza's reconstruction and governance. The National Committee for the Administration of Gaza (NCAG), led by Dr. Ali Sha'ath and agreed to by both Fatah and Hamas, provides technocratic governance. The US committed $10B at the inaugural Board meeting (Feb 18, 2026). Twenty-seven countries joined the Board; envoys from 50 countries attended. Proponents argue it is the first mechanism with real resources and US backing.
Source B: Palestinian / International Critics / UN Position
Critics including the Arab Center DC, Chatham House, and Carnegie Endowment argue the Board of Peace is a top-down imposition that excludes Palestinian self-determination, has no mention of Palestinian statehood in its charter, and was designed as a rival to the UN. NATO allies broadly declined to join. The Palestinian Authority fears it could be sidelined permanently. The Board includes countries with ICC-wanted leaders (Russia). The 'New Gaza' plan β potentially a tourism zone β is seen as erasing Palestinian political aspirations.
⚖ RESOLUTION: The Board of Peace has begun Phase 2 operations as of January 2026, but faces skepticism from European allies and Palestinian civil society. UNSC Resolution 2803 provides some legitimacy. Whether the plan leads to meaningful Palestinian self-determination, Hamas disarmament, and durable peace β or entrenches a US-Israeli managed technocracy β remains the central question of 2026.
Is Israel's closure of Al-Aqsa and the Church of the Holy Sepulchre during the Iran war a legitimate security measure or a violation of religious freedom?
Source A: Israeli Position
Israel has implemented nationwide emergency gathering restrictions due to active Iranian ballistic missile attacks on Israeli territory. The closures of Al-Aqsa Mosque (second consecutive Friday, March 27 and 29) and the restriction on the Latin Patriarch's Palm Sunday Mass (March 29) are framed as temporary security measures applicable to all large gatherings β not as religious discrimination. Israeli authorities point to the active missile threat requiring people to remain near shelters.
Source B: Palestinian / Christian / International Position
Critics, including EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas, the Jordanian Waqf authority, and Christian leaders, condemned the closures as 'violations of religious freedom' and a continuation of Israeli policies restricting access to holy sites that predate the Iran war. The Jordanian-administered Waqf oversees Al-Aqsa and called the closures illegal. The Latin Patriarch was prevented from celebrating Palm Sunday Mass at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre β the holiest site in Christianity β for the first time in modern history. Critics noted Israeli military exercises and political events have not been similarly restricted.
⚖ RESOLUTION: Israel's emergency security restrictions have closed major religious sites for the first time in modern history during the Iran war period. The EU and Jordan condemned the closures as violations of religious freedom and existing international arrangements. The long-term impact on the Jordanian Waqf's custodianship arrangements for Al-Aqsa and Christian community access to Jerusalem's holy sites is under international scrutiny.
Is Israel moving toward de facto annexation of the West Bank?
Source A: UN / International / Palestinian Position
UN OHCHR's March 2026 report found Israel approved 36,973 settlement housing units in East Jerusalem and ~27,200 in the West Bank in one 12-month period, established 84 new outposts, and forcibly displaced 36,000+ Palestinians. The report said the displacement 'appears to indicate a concerted Israeli policy of mass forcible transfer throughout the occupied territory, aimed at permanent displacement, raising concerns of ethnic cleansing.' Finance Minister Smotrich openly advocates annexation of Area C.
Source B: Israeli Government Position
Israel argues settlement expansion is legal within its sovereign territory or disputed land to which Jews have historical and legal claims. Ministers like Smotrich and Ben-Gvir support formal annexation of parts of the West Bank, but no formal annexation declaration has been made. The Israeli government characterizes its military operations in Jenin, Tulkarm, and Nablus as counter-terrorism, not annexation. Settlement construction requires cabinet approval and is presented as addressing housing needs of a growing population.
⚖ RESOLUTION: No formal annexation has been declared, but the ICJ's July 2024 advisory opinion found the occupation itself illegal and called for withdrawal. UN OHCHR's March 2026 report documents the pace of settlement expansion and forced displacement as unprecedented. Analyst consensus increasingly describes the situation as de facto annexation through 'facts on the ground.' Only 3% of settler violence cases resulted in Israeli convictions (Yesh Din, 2025).
07
Political & Diplomatic
N
Benjamin Netanyahu
Prime Minister of Israel (2022βpresent; also 1996β99, 2009β21); ICC arrest warrant active
Today, for the first time in 843 days, I can say: all our hostages are home. But our work is not finished β Hamas must disarm or be destroyed.
B
Itamar Ben-Gvir
National Security Minister, Israel; Otzma Yehudit party leader; draft ICC warrant reportedly prepared
My right β our right β to live supersedes the right to movement of the Arabs of Gaza. There is no famine in Gaza.
S
Bezalel Smotrich
Finance Minister, Israel; Religious Zionism party leader; draft ICC warrant reportedly prepared
There is no Palestinian nation. There is no Palestinian people. There is no Palestinian language.
G
Yoav Gallant
Former Defense Minister of Israel (dismissed Nov 2024); ICC arrest warrant issued Nov 2024
We are fighting human animals and we act accordingly. I have ordered a complete siege on Gaza β no electricity, no food, no water, no fuel.
G
Benny Gantz
Opposition leader, Israel; National Unity party; Former war cabinet member (resigned Jun 2024)
I left the war cabinet because decisions were being made without a clear post-war strategy β and hostages were not the priority they should be.
H
Isaac Herzog
President of Israel (ceremonial head of state)
It is an entire nation out there that is responsible. It is not true this rhetoric about civilians not being aware, not involved.
A
Mahmoud Abbas (Abu Mazen)
President, Palestinian Authority; PLO Chairman
We must have a fully independent Palestinian state on the 1967 borders, with East Jerusalem as its capital. This is our inalienable right.
S
Mohammad Shtayyeh
Former Prime Minister, Palestinian Authority (resigned Feb 2024); replaced by Mohammad Mustafa
Israel is conducting a war of total destruction of the Palestinian people. The international community must act now.
B
Marwan Barghouti
Imprisoned Fatah leader; widely seen as most popular Palestinian political figure
Palestinian popular resistance is not terrorism. It is the legitimate response of a people under occupation that the world has refused to liberate.
A
Dr. Ali Sha'ath
Head of National Committee for the Administration of Gaza (NCAG); technocratic Gaza governor under Trump's Board of Peace plan
Our mandate is the restoration of core public services, the rebuilding of civil institutions, and the stabilization of daily life in Gaza. We answer to no faction β only to the Gazan people.
S
Yahya Sinwar (deceased)
Hamas military and political leader; architect of Oct 7 attack; killed by IDF Oct 16, 2024
We have decided to pay the price for freedom and to end the occupation. This is just the beginning.
H
Ismail Haniyeh (deceased)
Hamas Political Bureau Chief; killed in Tehran July 31, 2024 in assassination attributed to Israel
We extend our hands for a just peace. But our hands will remain on the trigger as long as there is occupation.
D
Mohammed Deif (deceased)
Hamas military commander (Qassam Brigades); killed Aug 2024; ICC warrant cancelled Feb 2025
This is the day of the greatest battle to end the last occupation on earth. We have decided to put an end to all crimes.
M
Khaled Meshaal
Hamas Political Bureau; based in Qatar; led Hamas in exile during 2007β2017
We in Hamas do not fight the Jews because they are Jews. We fight the occupiers because they are occupiers.
G
AntΓ³nio Guterres
UN Secretary-General
The ceasefire offers hope, but humanitarian conditions in Gaza remain catastrophic. Reconstruction will take decades. The international community cannot turn away now.
A
Francesca Albanese
UN Special Rapporteur on the Situation of Human Rights in the Palestinian Territories
There are reasonable grounds to believe that the threshold indicating Israel's commission of genocide is being met. The facts on the ground speak for themselves.
T
Volker TΓΌrk
UN High Commissioner for Human Rights; issued Mar 2026 report on West Bank settlement expansion
Israel must immediately and completely cease and reverse the establishment and expansion of settlements, evacuate all settlers, and end the occupation of Palestinian territory.
K
Karim Khan
ICC Prosecutor; sought arrest warrants for Netanyahu, Gallant; on indefinite leave since May 2025 after US sanctions
We cannot have a world where the laws of war that protect civilians, hospitals, and aid workers apply to some but not others.
R
Cyril Ramaphosa
President of South Africa; his government filed the ICJ genocide case; Israel submitted counter-memorial Mar 14, 2026
South Africa knows what it looks like when a government decides that a people are less than human. We have seen genocide before. We see it now in Gaza.
B
Joe Biden
US President (2021βJan 2025); staunch Israel supporter; later pressured Israel on Gaza humanitarian crisis
Israel has a right to defend itself against Hamas terrorism. We will stand with Israel. But we also need a humanitarian pause to get more aid in.
T
Donald Trump
US President (2025βpresent); brokered Oct 2025 ceasefire; chairs 'Board of Peace' for Gaza reconstruction
We are going to transform Gaza into the Riviera of the Middle East. The Board of Peace will do what the United Nations could never do β it will actually get things done.
L
Philippe Lazzarini
Commissioner-General, UNRWA; agency banned from Israeli territory Jan 2025; now operating with 6 clinics in Gaza
More than 200 of our colleagues have been killed. Our premises have been bombed. We are struggling to keep the humanitarian operation alive in Gaza.
K
Kaja Kallas
EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy (2024βpresent); formerly Prime Minister of Estonia
Israel's barring of the Latin Patriarch from celebrating Palm Sunday Mass at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre is a violation of religious freedom. The EU calls on Israel to respect access to holy sites for all faiths.
E
Recep Tayyip ErdoΔan
President of Turkey; severed trade with Israel; called Netanyahu 'Hitler of our time'
Netanyahu β who has turned Gaza into a death camp β is no different than Hitler. He will face justice before international courts.
M
Mohammed bin Salman
Saudi Crown Prince; normalization talks with Israel paused after Oct 7; key regional actor
Normalization with Israel without a credible pathway to a Palestinian state is not something Saudi Arabia can accept.
Z
Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir
IDF Chief of Staff (2025βpresent); warned March 26, 2026 of force sustainability crisis across five simultaneous fronts
I am raising 10 red flags before the IDF collapses into itself. Settler violence against Palestinians is morally and ethically unacceptable β and it is threatening our military cohesion.
01
Historical Timeline
1941 β PresentMilitaryDiplomaticHumanitarianEconomicActive
1948 β The Nakba and Founding War
1947
UN Partition Plan (Resolution 181)
1948
The Nakba β Palestinian Exodus
1948
Israel Declares Independence
1949
Armistice Agreements β Green Line Established
1956β1967 β Suez Crisis to Six-Day War
1956
Suez Crisis β Israel, UK, France Attack Egypt
1964
PLO Founded
1967
Six-Day War β Israel Occupies West Bank, Gaza, Sinai, Golan
1967
UN Resolution 242 β Land for Peace Framework
1967β1987 β Early Occupation and Regional Wars
1973
Yom Kippur War
1967
Israeli Settlement Enterprise Begins
1974
Arafat Addresses UN β PLO Recognized
1978
Camp David Accords β Egypt-Israel Peace
1982
Israeli Invasion of Lebanon β Sabra and Shatila Massacre
1987β1993 β First Intifada
1987
First Intifada Begins
1987
Hamas Founded
1988
Palestinian Declaration of Independence
1993β2000 β Oslo Peace Process
1993
Oslo Accords I β Mutual Recognition
1995
Oslo II β PA Areas A, B, C Framework
1995
PM Rabin Assassinated
2000
Camp David Summit Collapses
2000β2007 β Second Intifada and Gaza Disengagement
2000
Second Intifada (Al-Aqsa Intifada) Begins
2004
ICJ Advisory Opinion β Separation Barrier Illegal
2004
Yasser Arafat Dies
2005
Israel Withdraws from Gaza β Disengagement
2006
Hamas Wins Palestinian Legislative Elections
2007β2023 β Gaza Blockade and Periodic Wars
2007
Hamas Seizes Gaza β Blockade Imposed
2008
Operation Cast Lead β Gaza War I
2010
Mavi Marmara Flotilla Raid
2014
Operation Protective Edge β Gaza War III
2015
Palestine Joins ICC
2017
US Recognizes Jerusalem as Israel's Capital
2018
Great March of Return β Gaza Border Protests
2020
Abraham Accords β Israel Normalizes with UAE, Bahrain
2021
Operation Guardian of the Walls β Gaza War IV
2021
ICC Formal Investigation Launched β Palestine
2023β2026 β October 7 Attack and Gaza War
2023
October 7: Hamas Mass Attack on Israel
2023
Israel Launches Massive Air Campaign on Gaza
2023
IDF Ground Operation Enters Northern Gaza
2024
ICJ Genocide Case β South Africa vs. Israel
2024
ICC Issues Arrest Warrants β Netanyahu, Gallant, Hamas Leaders
2024
Hamas Leader Yahya Sinwar Killed by IDF
2025
Gaza Ceasefire Phase 1 β Hostage Deal
2025
Israel Resumes Major Military Operations in Gaza
1948 β Present
Mar 1, 2026
Israel Closes All Gaza Crossings as Iran War Begins
Mar 3, 2026
Kerem Shalom Crossing Partially Reopened After Closure
Mar 8, 2026
Israeli Settlers Kill Three Palestinians in West Bank Attacks
Mar 15, 2026
Israeli Forces Kill Palestinian Family of Four in West Bank
Mar 17, 2026
UN Human Rights Office: Settlement Expansion Driving Mass Displacement in West Bank
Mar 20, 2026
Al-Aqsa Mosque Barred to Worshippers on Eid al-Fitr β First Time Since 1967
Mar 21, 2026
13 European Nations and Canada Condemn Surge in West Bank Settler Attacks
Mar 22, 2026
~100 Masked Settlers Torch Homes and Vehicles in Jalud and Qaryut
Mar 23, 2026
Settler Violence Continues Second Night Across West Bank Villages
Mar 24, 2026
Al Jazeera Weekly Wrap: West Bank Eid Violence Surge, Gaza Aid 80% Below Pre-War Levels
Mar 25, 2026
11 Palestinian Families Forcibly Evicted from Silwan's Batn al-Hawa β East Jerusalem
Mar 25, 2026
IDF Soldiers Kill Palestinian Worker, Wound Three During Vehicle Pursuit Near Checkpoint in Hebron Hills
Mar 25, 2026
Foreign Policy: Israel Advancing End to Palestinian Self-Determination Amid Iran War
Mar 26, 2026
Board of Peace Gaza Disarmament Plan Revealed: Full Hamas Disarmament Required by Day 90
Mar 26, 2026
IDF Chief of Staff Zamir: '10 Red Flags Before the IDF Collapses' β Forces Stretched Across Five Fronts
Mar 26, 2026
15 Diplomatic Missions Condemn 'Settler Terror'; 257 Incidents Recorded in 25 Days Since Feb 28
Mar 27, 2026
Palestinian-American Teenager Shot and Killed by Israeli Settlers in Mukhmas
Mar 27, 2026
Gaza Strikes Continue; Al-Aqsa Mosque Closed for Second Consecutive Friday
Mar 28, 2026
Houthis Enter Iran-Israel War: First Ballistic Missile Attack on Israel Since November 2025
Mar 28, 2026
IDF Drone Strike Kills Man East of Khan Younis; Hamas Operatives Targeted in Gaza City
Mar 28, 2026
UK Hosts International Peace Fund Conference at Lancaster House; Palestine Embassy Opens in London
Mar 29, 2026
IDF Airstrikes Kill 6 Including Child at Police Checkpoints in Southern Khan Younis
Mar 29, 2026
Iranian Ballistic Missile Strikes Ne'ot Hovav Chemical Industrial Zone in the Negev
Mar 29, 2026
Israel Bars Latin Patriarch from Palm Sunday Mass at Church of Holy Sepulchre; EU Condemns
Mar 29, 2026
Iran Launches Six Missile Salvos at Israel; Sirens Across Central Israel and West Bank
Mar 29, 2026
Houthis Launch Second Wave of Drone and Missile Attacks on Israel Within 24 Hours
Mar 29, 2026
Hezbollah Fires Rockets at Tiberias and Northern Israel in Coordinated Multi-Front Attack
Source Tier Classification
Tier 1 β Primary/Official
CENTCOM, IDF, White House, IAEA, UN, IRNA, Xinhua official statements
CENTCOM, IDF, White House, IAEA, UN, IRNA, Xinhua official statements
Tier 2 β Major Outlet
Reuters, AP, CNN, BBC, Al Jazeera, Xinhua, CGTN, Bloomberg, WaPo, NYT
Reuters, AP, CNN, BBC, Al Jazeera, Xinhua, CGTN, Bloomberg, WaPo, NYT
Tier 3 β Institutional
Oxford Economics, CSIS, HRW, HRANA, Hengaw, NetBlocks, ICG, Amnesty
Oxford Economics, CSIS, HRW, HRANA, Hengaw, NetBlocks, ICG, Amnesty
Tier 4 β Unverified
Social media, unattributed military claims, unattributed video, diaspora accounts
Social media, unattributed military claims, unattributed video, diaspora accounts
Multi-Pole Sourcing
Events are sourced from four global media perspectives to surface contrasting narratives
W
Western
White House, CENTCOM, IDF, State Dept, Reuters, AP, BBC, CNN, NYT, WaPo
White House, CENTCOM, IDF, State Dept, Reuters, AP, BBC, CNN, NYT, WaPo
ME
Middle Eastern
Al Jazeera, IRNA, Press TV, Tehran Times, Al Arabiya, Al Mayadeen, Fars News
Al Jazeera, IRNA, Press TV, Tehran Times, Al Arabiya, Al Mayadeen, Fars News
E
Eastern
Xinhua, CGTN, Global Times, TASS, Kyodo News, Yonhap
Xinhua, CGTN, Global Times, TASS, Kyodo News, Yonhap
I
International
UN, IAEA, ICRC, HRW, Amnesty, WHO, OPCW, CSIS, ICG
UN, IAEA, ICRC, HRW, Amnesty, WHO, OPCW, CSIS, ICG