Up First from NPR - Israel Prepares Ground Invasion, Biden Confirms Support For Israel, Maui Reopens
Episode Date: October 11, 2023Israel's military is preparing a ground invasion into Gaza. Authorities believe that about 150 hostages are being held there by Hamas militants. In remarks to the nation, President Biden called Hamas'... attack on Israel an act of terrorism. And the Hawaiian island of Maui is welcoming back tourists after wildfires this summer leveled the historic town of Lahaina and killed almost 100 people. Want more comprehensive analysis of the most important news of the day, plus a little fun? Subscribe to the Up First newsletter.Today's episode of Up First was edited by Arezou Rezvani, Roberta Rampton, Mohamad ElBardicy and HJ Mai. It was produced by Mansee Khurana, David West and Lilly Quiroz. We get engineering support from Stacey Abbott. And our technical director is Zac Coleman.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Israel's military is preparing a ground invasion into Gaza.
Authorities believe about 150 hostages are being held by Hamas fighters.
Our team in Israel spoke with a man who's searching the internet for clues about his family's whereabouts.
I'm Laila Fadl, that's Michelle Martin, and this is Up First from NPR News.
In remarks to the U.S., President Biden called Hamas' attack on Israel an act of terrorism.
The brutality of Hamas, his bloodthirstiness brings to mind the worst, the worst rampages of ISIS.
What does this tell us about America's role in the conflict?
And the Hawaiian island of Maui is welcoming back tourists after wildfires
this summer leveled the historic town of Lahaina and killed almost 100 people. But how do residents
feel about that, especially while they're still mourning the loss of lives and homes?
Stay with us. We'll tell you what you need to know to start your day.
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Find the limited edition Royal Canadian Air Force $2 coin today. The declared war between Israel and Hamas has entered its fifth day and the death toll
has reached more than 2,000 people that we know of.
More than 1,200 Israelis are known dead after that surprise attack by Hamas fighters over
the weekend.
That attack has prompted a massive military response by Israel that has included some
1,300 airstrikes on Gaza.
Authorities there say at least 1,000 have been killed. I'm going to go to my colleague Leila Fowler because you're
in Jerusalem now. Leila, do you get the impression that this conflict will further escalate?
Yeah, there really feels like there is no question that it will escalate. The Israeli
military has said it secured the border and it appears they are now preparing for a ground
invasion into Gaza that will, quote, change the reality there. And there's been no cessation of rockets coming in from Gaza.
According to the Israeli military, the first plane carrying advanced U.S. armaments since this war
broke out have landed in Israel. Meanwhile, every day we hear new accounts of what are being
described as massacres in locations across the south of Israel. The latest, a kibbutz called Kafar Azzah that was retaken by Israeli forces, and inside
they found bodies of civilians in their homes and strewn in the streets, along with bodies
of Hamas militants who came into these towns armed.
The stories of the killings are really hard to hear.
Hundreds of young partygoers at a rave, a pro-peace academic, a grandmother.
And of course, Michelle, as you know, it's much harder to tell the stories out of Gaza
because journalists who weren't already there aren't allowed in now and civilians are trapped.
Gaza is under a new siege that has cut off food, fuel, water, and electricity.
Israeli airstrikes have wiped out parts of entire families
in what the Israeli Human Rights Organization, B B'Tselem calls a, quote,
criminal policy of revenge.
And we understand that there are still some 150 hostages that were believed to have been forcibly taken to Gaza.
Yeah, it feels like everyone here is one to two degrees of separation away from someone that's
missing. In text chats, on social media, families are frantically trying to find any information about their loved ones.
And that's how I ended up at the home of Ido Don north of Tel Aviv.
He says his family members disappeared on the day Hamas militants breached the Israeli border and killed so many inside Israel.
By the end of the day, his aunt Carmela Don, three of her grandchildren, and the father of two of the children were gone.
Don searched for clues online about what happened to Carmela, her granddaughter, Sahar Calderon,
Sahar's brother, Erez, the children's father, Ofer, and another granddaughter of Carmela's
with special needs named Noya Don.
And while he says he's praying that their value as a bargaining chip will keep them
alive, he's just not sure what Hamas might do after the attack this weekend.
Maybe we should recalculate all our predictions and assumptions about the Hamas because it's
totally different this time. In many ways, I think that Hamas is ISIS. We saw such killings
and murders and ruthless humiliation of bodies. We saw it only with ISIS.
Leila, what about that? Has something changed with Hamas?
Well, Hamas was notorious for suicide bombings on buses in the 2000s, but those were small-scale operations compared to this highly choreographed invasion by over a thousand fighters. Their
rockets have gotten deadlier and more long-range, and Israeli officials are now frequently
comparing it to ISIS, which they didn't in the past.
The president also said this.
Hamas does run Gaza.
They have a prime minister.
They have relations with other countries.
And Israel would want to see them isolated.
Leo, thanks so much for your reporting.
Thanks, Michelle. President Biden has had a series of calls with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
since Hamas launched its attack.
And yesterday, after his latest call, he delivered an unequivocal message
that there was no justification for the atrocities.
The brutality of Hamas, his bloodthirstiness brings to mind the worst, the worst rampages of ISIS. This is terrorism. But sadly, for the Jewish people, it's not new.
And Biden says he plans to ask Congress for more funding for Israel's national security needs.
NPR senior White House correspondent Tamara Keith is with us now to tell us more about all this.
Good morning, Tam.
Good morning.
So the president went into some graphic detail in his remarks describing what happened during the attacks on Israel.
What do you think he was trying to underscore there?
It was really notable coming from Biden. He used words like
slaughtered, butchered, massacred, and went into detail about the nature of what he said were
sickening atrocities. Hamas, he said, does not stand for the Palestinian cause. Hamas stands for
ending the state of Israel and murdering Jewish people. And he said that there was no justification
for the attacks. And to answer
your questions, what it seemed like he was doing here was telling Americans in no uncertain terms
that this was terrorism. This wasn't war in any traditional sense, and it wasn't far away or
abstract. Americans should be outraged, he was arguing. And he also noted that Americans are
among the dead and those held hostage.
I do have to say, though, that there is still concern among, you know, some in the United States.
I mean, some might say particularly among, you know, progressives about how Israel is going to respond in Gaza as it seeks to root out Hamas.
Did the president address those concerns?
He said that Israel has the right and the duty to respond to the attack. But he did draw a distinction about targeting civilians, about following international laws of war.
And he said he talked about this with Israel's Prime Minister Netanyahu.
I told him, the United States' experience with Israel is experiencing our response to be swift, decisive, and overwhelming. We also discussed how democracies like Israel and the United States are
stronger and more secure when we act according to the rule of law. His national security advisor,
Jake Sullivan, later confirmed to reporters that the U.S. is talking to Egypt and others
about providing safe passage for Palestinian civilians who live in Gaza and who are at the
moment completely trapped.
Moving to another subject, there have been a lot of questions about how these attacks could have
happened without warning, and about this as an intelligence failure, and about Iran's connection,
possible connection to these attacks. Did the president speak about that?
Biden did not utter the word Iran, but he did warn, quote, any country against taking advantage of Israel
right now, saying, I have one word, don't. Sullivan yesterday said that while it's clear
that Iran has long provided most of the funding and training for Hamas, the U.S. government does
not at the moment have evidence that Iran helped plan or direct these attacks, but he says they're
looking for it. And this all comes
as Biden is getting hit with a lot of blame from Republicans who say that his prisoner swap with
Iran led to the attack. That swap unlocked $6 billion in Iranian funds for humanitarian causes
only like medicine and food. Sullivan was asked whether the U.S. would look at refreezing those
funds. And he said, quote, not a dollar of that money has been spent, and I will leave it at that.
He, however, did not commit one way or another about what would happen with those funds.
That's NPS Tamara Keith.
Tam, thank you so much.
You're welcome. Maui schools shut down by the August wildfires are set to welcome their students back next week.
The disaster upended everyday life in West Maui, but officials reopened the area to visitors this week in an effort to help the island recover economically. Tourism is the island's number one source of income.
Associated Press reporter Jennifer Sinko-Kelleher was in Maui last week,
and she's with us now to tell us more. Jennifer, good morning.
Good morning.
So first, could you just tell us what West Maui, and especially Lahaina,
look like now, two months after the wildfires?
Well, the fire destroyed about 2,000 buildings, most of them homes.
It devastated most of Lahaina town in West Maui.
The so-called burn zone, it's very difficult to look at.
It can be jarring to see because the rest of Maui seems completely normal. Officials are slowly opening parts of
this burn zone to allow residents to come in and survey what's left. Even though people know that
they lost their homes, some of them hadn't been back to their property since the fire.
And as you can imagine, seeing the rubble of their lives is difficult.
And also rebuilding after something like this, a terrible tragedy like this
is difficult and it's time consuming. I'm just wondering what the island's residents are saying
about Maui reopening. Most of the people who lost homes, you know, they're staying in hotels
right now. So some people that I've talked to, they say they want to stay in the hotels for now.
They want to stay in Lahaina for now. They want to stay in
Lahaina in their community. They don't want to have to move again. Others who may have pets or
other needs have other housing preferences. There's a lot of feelings of uncertainty and being
unsettled. You know, a lot of people who work in the tourism industry and have lost homes, they say
that they're not ready to see tourists on vacation
while they're still mourning and processing having lost everything.
What the West Maui, particularly Lahaina, which is an historic, you know, town will
look like, you know, after or when rebuilding actually starts.
What can you tell us about that?
Like, what are some of the concerns there?
Well, soon after the fire, there was concern that whatever is rebuilt from the devastation won't look like the multicultural
working class neighborhood that was there. They're concerned that the fire will be an
opportunity for wealthy outsiders to scoop up land in Lahaina and further price out native
Hawaiians and other longtime Hawaii residents. So many Hawaiians and other
longtime residents have already left Hawaii because it's just so expensive to live here.
And so I've heard lots of mixed feelings about tourists returning and also what's going to be
built from all of this tragedy and devastation. You know, I think one thing that's clear to people in Lahaina is
that they want to preserve as much of its cultural heritage as possible. Lahaina is often thought of
as a tourist town, but it's an important historic place to Native Hawaiians. So on one of my visits
to Maui, I talked to a Lahaina resident, Archie Kalepa, who is concerned about what the new Lahaina will look like.
You have to multifamilies in one home.
That's the only way the people that live here can survive.
But at what cost?
We're making them live this way so others can come here and enjoy this place.
All they see is the beauty.
They don't see the beast that here and enjoy this place. All they see is the beauty. They don't see the
beast that is hidden behind this beauty. That is Associated Press reporter Jennifer
Asinko-Kelleher. Jennifer, thank you so much for sharing this reporting with us.
Thank you.
And that's Up First for Wednesday, October 11th. I'm Michelle Martin.
And I'm Laila Faldin. Today's episode of Up First was edited by Arzu Razvani,
Roberta Rampton, Mohamed El-Bardisi, and H.J. Mai. It was produced by Mansi Karana,
David West, and Lily Quiros. We get engineering support from Stacey Abbott,
and our technical director is Zach Coleman. Start your day here with us tomorrow.
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