they ve cleared north of rafah. and he claims israel s army has killed one hamas fighter for every civilian. the army has continued to target the city with air strikes, which medical workers say killed more than a0 people in the last day alone. the armed wing of hamas says israeli strikes have also killed two hostages in the last four days, and seriously injured eight others. and a senior hamas official has threatened to halt hostage exchange negotiations if israel goes ahead with the assault on rafah. meanwhile, us presidentjoe biden has told benjamin netanyahu israel should not proceed with the offensive in rafah without a plan to ensure the safety of the huge number of palestinians sheltering there. with the latest here s our international editor jeremy bowen. at the southern end of gaza, this is the heavily guarded borderfence with egypt. for palestinian refugees there is no further to go. leiua fled here with her two handicapped daughters. getting on for 1.5 million pale
we will issue an invitation for ukraine tojoin nato when allies agree and when conditions are met. we owe it to the ukrainians, because they are fighting there so that the british, australians, americans don t have to fight with russia. translation: we are grateful to partners promising - new packages of security and defence. so how significant was this year s summit? for more on that i spoke with ivo daalder, former us ambassador to nato and now ceo of the chicago council on global affairs. i m sure you are following this week s nato summit very closely, was the gathering in your mind a success? yes, i think it is very difficult to call it anything other than a success. a number of things are very important for the ukrainian audience, it was important that nato reaffirmed not only its commitment to help ukraine in every possible way to defend itself against this brutal invasion that the russians launched, now more than 500 days ago, but also to not only open a door but to sa
we will issue an invitation to ukraine to join nato when allies agree and when conditions are met. we allies agree and when conditions are met. we owe it to the ukrainians, conditions are met. we owe it to the ukrainians, because . conditions are met. we owe it i to the ukrainians, because they are fighting there so that the british, are fighting there so that the british, australians, americans don t british, australians, americans don t have british, australians, americans don t have to fight with russia russia. translation: ~ ., ., ., translation: we are grateful to artners translation: we are grateful to partners promising translation: we are grateful to partners promising new translation: we are grateful to partners promising new packages| partners promising new packages of security and defence. so how significant was this year s summit? let s bring in ivo daalder, former us ambassador to nato and now ceo of the chicago council on global affairs. i m sure y
democracy is messy. it turns out border security is not actually a risk, it s just a talking point for the election. u.s. strike on the streets of baghdad. killing a militant commander who is blamed for the attacks on american forces. you can see how precise and accurate this was, and the u.s. may go after other leaders of militant groups. the major questions, whether the u.s. strikes will deter attacks by these militant groups. the administration is making clear that what we saw is not the end. good morning, everyone, it s top of the hour, i m phil mattingly with poppy harlow in new york. we are just three hours away from the supreme court hearing arguments in one of the most consequential cases of our life times. one that has huge implications for the presidential election. can donald trump be thrown off the ballot for his role in the deadly january 6th attack on the capitol. trump, his legal team urging the highest court in the land to overturn a ruling in co
charles. that s right. listening to the president speaking just now, you d think that we got all good news in the jobs report today. in fact, i was reading his statement from earlier on the jobs data. the first line, this is bidenomics in action. but charles, you ask the average american how they feel with what they re bringing home, when they have to pay for groceries. seems to be a disconnect versus the rosy picture coming out of pennsylvania avenue. i want to dig into the numbers that we got today. the economy added 209,000 jobs in the month of june. that is the lowest addition that we have seen since december of 2020. it was significantly below expectations as well. if you listen to the labor secretary, she says it s good news. this is very much a part of bidenomics. creating good jobs in every community across the country. we re seeing job growth and wage increases in a tight labor market, workers have more power to choose and to look for better working conditions and