Tel Aviv : US President Joe Biden with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during a meeting in Tel Aviv on Wednesday, Oct. 18, 2023. (Photo: IANS/@POTUS)
Tel Aviv, October 18 (IANS) US President Joe Biden in his message has said that any state or hostile actor thinking of attacking Israel is "don't, don't, don't", media reports said.
He said that the attack on Israel has been described as its 9/11, but he says for a nation as big as Israel it was like 15 times more than 9/11, BBC reported.
He said that the attack have caused Israelis "shock, pain, rage" that "I and many Americans would understand."
Justice must be done, he said, adding, that Israelis must not to be consumed by rage.
Talking about 7 October incidents, he said that the Hamas attack makes one remember the worst ravages of IS. He said there was "no excusing the violence" and "the brutality would cut deep anywhere in the world".
"Seventh of October became the deadliest day since the Holocaust" for the Jewish community, he said. "The world watched then, it knew. The world did nothing."
"We will not stand by and do nothing - not today, not tomorrow, not ever," BBC reported US President as saying.
"Those who are waiting desperately to learn the fate of a loved one," he said, referring to those who had been taken hostage, "you are not alone".
"We are pursuing every avenue to bring home those being held by Hamas".
Guterres condemns Gaza hospital blast, calls for humanitarian ceasefire
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Wednesday condemned the deadly Gaza hospital blast and called for a humanitarian ceasefire in the region as the Israel-Hamas conflict continued to rage.
Addressing the Belt and Road Forum in Beijing, the UN chief said: "I am fully aware of the deep grievances of the Palestinian people after 56 years of occupation, but as serious as these grievances are, they cannot justify the acts of terror against civilians committed by Hamas on October 7 that I immediately condemned.
"But those attacks cannot justify the collective punishment of the Palestinian people."
Guterres also emphasised that hospitals along with clinics, medical personnel, and UN premises are protected under international law, according to a statement from UN spokesperson Stephane Dujarric.
In a tweet shortly after the blast at the Al-Ahli Baptist Hospital on Tuesday, the UN chief said in a post on X that "his heart is with the families of those who died", Xinhua news agency reported.
According to the Palestinian Health Ministry, the hospital was sheltering thousands of displaced people when it was attacked.
The World Health Organization said the facility was operational, with patients, health and caregivers, and internally displaced people sheltering there.
It was one of 20 hospitals in the north of the Gaza Strip facing evacuation orders from the Israeli military.
Palestine has accused the Israeli military of launching an airstrike on the hospital.
But the Israeli Defense Forces said that based on their intelligence data, the damage was caused by rockets launched by Islamic Jihad militants towards Israel that had gone astray.
Displaced civilians were reportedly seeking shelter at the hospital, following Israel's order to evacuate to the south in advance of what is expected to be a ground assault.
Gaza has a population of roughly 2 million and the crisis has displaced some 600,000 people, many of whom have sought safety in hospitals which are already overwhelmed with rising casualties and deaths.
The UN said that essential supplies such as food, water, and vital health medications are depleting in Gaza.
Out of 35 hospitals, four are inoperable because of significant damage and direct targeting.