U.S. Vice President Vance excursions the Church of the Holy Sepulcher within the Previous Metropolis of Jerusalem on Thursday.
Nathan Howard/Pool photograph through AP
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Nathan Howard/Pool photograph through AP
JERUSALEM — U.S. Vice President JD Vance criticized Thursday Israel’s parliament vote on West Financial institution annexation, saying it amounted to an “insult.” Vance’s scathing comment got here as his go to wrapped up Thursday and after U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio mentioned he would now be touring to Israel.
Vance’s phrases and the extraordinary diplomacy point out that U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration was intent on maintaining the momentum on the U.S.-brokered ceasefire between Israel and Hamas in Gaza.
Talking on the tarmac of Tel Aviv’s worldwide airport earlier than departing Israel, Vance mentioned that if the Knesset vote was a “political stunt, then it’s a very silly political stunt.”
“I personally take some insult to it,” Vance mentioned. “The coverage of the Trump administration is that the West Financial institution won’t be annexed by Israel.”
An intense U.S. push towards peace
Vance visits Holy Sepulcher

Vice President Vance visits the Church of the Holy Sepulcher within the Previous Metropolis of Jerusalem Thursday.
Nathan Howard/Pool photograph through AP
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Nathan Howard/Pool photograph through AP
In the meantime, Vance visited the Church of the Holy Sepulcher, the sprawling twelfth century basilica the place Christians consider Jesus was crucified, died and rose once more, in Jerusalem’s Previous Metropolis.
He’s then anticipated to fulfill Israel’s Protection Minister, Israeli navy leaders and different officers on the military’s headquarters in Tel Aviv.
On Wednesday, Vance sought to ease issues that the Trump administration was dictating phrases to its closest ally within the Center East.
“We do not need in Israel a vassal state, and that is not what Israel is. We wish a partnership, we wish an ally,” Vance mentioned, talking beside Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, in response to a reporter’s query about whether or not Israel was turning into a “protectorate” of the U.S.
Netanyahu, who will meet with Rubio as properly, expressed comparable sentiments whereas acknowledging variations of opinion as they push ahead the U.S.-proposed ceasefire settlement.
Israeli media referred to the nonstop parade of American officers visiting to make sure Israel holds up its facet of the delicate ceasefire as “Bibi-sitting.” The time period, using Netanyahu’s nickname of Bibi, refers to an previous marketing campaign advert when Netanyahu positioned himself because the “Bibi-sitter” whom voters might belief with their children.
Palestinians in Gaza in dire want of medical care

Palestinians stroll trough the destruction brought on by the Israeli air and floor offensive in Sheikh Radwan neighborhood in Gaza Metropolis, Wednesday.
Abdel Kareem Hana/AP
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Abdel Kareem Hana/AP
Within the first medical evacuation because the ceasefire started on Oct. 10, the pinnacle of the World Well being Group mentioned Thursday that they had evacuated 41 important sufferers and 145 companions out of the Gaza strip.
In a press release posted to X, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus referred to as on nations to indicate solidarity and assist some 15,000 sufferers who’re nonetheless ready for approval to obtain medical care outdoors Gaza.
His calls had been echoed by an official with the U.N. Inhabitants Fund who, on Wednesday, described the “sheer devastation” that he witnessed on his most up-to-date journey to Gaza, saying that there isn’t any such factor as a “regular beginning in Gaza now.”
Andrew Saberton, an govt director at UNFPA, advised reporters how tough the company’s work has change into as a result of lack of functioning and even standing well being care amenities.
“I used to be not absolutely ready for what I noticed. One cannot be. The sheer extent of the devastation appeared just like the set of a dystopian movie. Sadly, it’s not fiction,” he mentioned.
Saberton added that Palestinian girls can’t get entry to a hospital. “They usually do not even have entry to a non-public house in a tent. We have now tales of ladies giving beginning truly within the rubble, beside the street,” he mentioned.
Court docket listening to on journalists’ entry to Gaza
Individually on Thursday, Israel’s Supreme Court docket held a listening to into whether or not to open the Gaza Strip to the worldwide media and gave the state 30 days to current a brand new place in mild of the brand new scenario beneath the ceasefire.
Israel has blocked reporters from getting into Gaza because the battle erupted on Oct 7, 2023.
The International Press Affiliation, which represents dozens of worldwide information organizations together with The Related Press, had requested the court docket to order the federal government to open the border.
In a press release after Thursday’s choice, the FPA expressed its “disappointment” and referred to as the Israeli authorities’s place to disclaim journalists entry “unacceptable.”
The court docket rejected a request from the FPA early within the battle, resulting from objections by the federal government on safety grounds. The group filed a second request for entry in September 2024. The federal government has repeatedly delayed the case.
Palestinian journalists have coated the two-year battle for worldwide media. However like all Palestinians, they’ve been topic to powerful restrictions on motion and shortages of meals, repeatedly displaced and operated beneath nice hazard. Some 200 Palestinian journalists have been killed by Israeli fireplace, in line with the Committee to Shield Journalists.
“It’s time for Israel to carry the closure and allow us to do our work alongside our Palestinian colleagues,” mentioned Tania Kraemer, chairperson of the FPA.