Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal tells CBS News' Charlie Rose whether Hamas could support an Israeli-Palestinian peace agreement
Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal tells CBS News' Charlie Rose whether Hamas could support an Israeli-Palestinian peace agreement.
Watch CBS News
Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal tells CBS News' Charlie Rose whether Hamas could support an Israeli-Palestinian peace agreement.
"Face the Nation" host Bob Schieffer discusses the "terrible summer" dominated by a host of international crises from Ukraine to the Gaza Strip.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says Israel is "not obliged" to follow truce agreements that Hamas keeps violating.
House Intelligence Chairman Mike Rogers, R-Mich., discusses the delicate interconnections that make forging peace in the Middle East so difficult.
After a 19 day battle in Gaza, the cease fire will allow Palestinians to stock up supplies and survey the devastation. Barry Petersen reports.
The deal, brokered by Secretary of State John Kerry, would guarantee a much-needed break in the conflict as it enters its 18th day. Scott Pelley reports.
Hamas has built a maze of interconnected tunnels, believed to number in the hundreds, underneath Gaza to get around tight Israeli security. But the Israeli Defense Force says the tunnels are used by militants to smuggle weapons and explosives. Don Dahler reports.
Shells hit a U.N. school in Gaza where civilians took shelter from the fighting. The U.N. said it gave GPS coordinates of the school to both Hamas and the Israelis to help arrange a humanitarian ceasefire for an evacuation. Both sides are blaming each other, reports Barry Petersen.
After assessing Ben Gurion Airport's security measures, the FAA lifted its ban. The ban angered many Israelis, while Hamas declared the ban a victory. Don Dahler reports from Ben Gurion Airport.
As the fighting between Israel and Hamas continues, the toll on both sides is adding up. Barry Petersen reports on the latest from Gaza City, where he spoke with a young Palestinian victim of the bloodshed.
After a Hamas-fired rocket landed less than a mile away from Tel Aviv's Ben Gurion International Airport, major American and European air carriers suspended flights into and out of Israel. Don Dahler reports on from Tel Aviv, Israel.
The Federal Aviation Administration imposed a 24-hour flight ban for American airliners operating in Israel, while Michael Bloomberg flew to Tel Aviv on Israeli carrier El Al to protest the ban. Chip Reid reports from Washington.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu denounced Islamic extremism and defended Israel's military actions in a statement delivered Tuesday. Netanyahu appeared with U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon in Tel Aviv, where the two had a meeting.
Speaking in Tel Aviv alongside Israel's prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said the Israeli and Palestinian peoples have a common future and he will commit to finding peace.
In an appearance in Tel Aviv on Tuesday, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon advocated for continuing multilateral peace talks between Israel and the Palestinians.
U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon acknowledged Israel's right to defend itself, but cautioned that further military action in Gaza would not end the violence for good. Ban also called on the Palestinians to form a single government authority that would recognize Israel and continue participating in the peace process. He spoke at an appearance in Tel Aviv with Israel's prime minister.
American diplomats say Secretary of State John Kerry's new effort to build on an Egyptian proposal to forge a cease-fire between Israel and Palestinian militants will be no easy task. Margaret Brennan reports from Cairo, Egypt.
As fighting continues in Israel and Gaza, the numbers of dead and wounded on both sides continue to grow. Barry Petersen reports from Gaza City.
CBS News Homeland Security Correspondent Bob Orr and CBS News Senior National Security Analyst Juan Zarate discuss the implications of the alarming death toll in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict
CBS News' Barry Petersen reports on the latest developments in the fighting between Israel and Hamas in the Gaza Strip.
Secretary of State John Kerry says the U.S. supports Israel's right to defend itself, criticizing Hamas for refusing to sign a ceasefire.
CBS News Homeland Security Correspondent Bob Orr talks with CBS News Senior National Security Analyst Juan Zarate about the fighting between Israel and the Palestinians, and whether a durable ceasefire can be secured any time soon.
President Obama says the U.S. supports Israel's right to defend itself but worries about civilian casualties with Israel's incursion into the Gaza Strip.
After more than a week of heavy airstrikes on Gaza, Israel's prime minister warned he could order a "significant expansion" of the ground invasions. Holly Williams reports from Gaza City.
As a brief humanitarian truce is tested by small-scale attacks, an official tells CBS News a longer-term cease-fire has been agreed and is slated to begin Friday morning. Holly Williams reports from Gaza City.
President Trump accused Democrats of using what he calls the "Epstein hoax" to defect blame for the government shutdown.
Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene told "CBS Mornings" that President Trump's opposition to releasing files from the federal investigation into convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein is a "huge miscalculation."
A new prosecutor has been selected to take over Georgia's election interference case against President Trump and others.
Iran's Revolutionary Guard forces have reportedly seized an oil tanker in the Strait of Hormuz in the first such interdiction in months.
Australian man Johnson Wen was charged with "being a public nuisance" after rushing Ariana Grande, according to court documents.
A chimpanzee escaped its enclosure and was on the loose at the Indianapolis Zoo, but the animal was later located and returned to her exhibit, the zoo said.
An HC-130 Hercules helicopter and a Coast Guard cutter were dispatched to monitor the ship, officials said.
A New Jersey man is the first person believed to have died from alpha-gal syndrome, a meat allergy triggered by a tick bite, researchers say.
Walmart said Doug McMillon will be replaced on Feb. 1, 2026, by John Furner, head of Walmart's U.S. operations.