WSJ What’s News - U.S. Pushes for Mideast Cease-Fire After Sinwar’s Death
Episode Date: October 18, 2024A.M. Edition for Oct. 18. President Biden and European leaders call for negotiations to end the Israel-Hamas war after the killing of Hamas Gaza chief Yahya Sinwar. WSJ Middle East correspondent Rory ...Jones explains whether the warring parties are likely to respond to that pressure. Plus, China’s economy cools amid lingering questions around Beijing’s fiscal support. And Donald Trump adopts Robert F. Kennedy Jr’s health-policy agenda. Luke Vargas hosts. Sign up for the WSJ’s free What’s News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Diplomatic pressure mounts to end the war in Gaza after Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar's
death. Sinwar has been the guy calling the shots since the October 07 attacks.
And so even just figuring out who's really calling the shots now about a ceasefire
is important for negotiators.
Plus, China's economy cools amid lingering questions around Beijing's fiscal support.
And Donald Trump adopts Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s health policy
agenda.
It's Friday, October 18th.
I'm Luke Vargas for The Wall Street Journal, and here is the AM edition of What's News,
the top headlines and business stories moving your world today.
We begin with the diplomatic situation in the Middle East. President Biden is in Germany
today for meetings with European allies that were intended to be about the war in Ukraine,
but American diplomatic efforts are now shifting to push for an end to fighting between Israel
and Hamas, a day after Israeli forces killed Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar in a potential inflection
point in the more
than year-long conflict.
And joining us now with the latest is Wall Street Journal Middle East correspondent Rory
Jones.
Rory, you spoke to our colleagues on the PM show last night, but things have been moving
quite a bit since then.
We've now heard from a number of world leaders following Sinwar's death.
On the tarmac last night in Germany, President Biden congratulated Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, but then quickly pivoted on to say that it was time to move
on toward a ceasefire in Gaza. And we've also heard comments pretty much to that effect
from French President Emmanuel Macron. And we have a clip of that to play.
This occasion must be seized so that all the hostages can be freed and the war finally stopped.
Indeed, military operations must be brought to an end.
From now on, after this outcome, a ceasefire in Gaza must be accepted,
and finally, a credible political perspective should be opened for both Israelis and Palestinians.
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz echoed much of that sentiment as well.
So Rory, a number of Western leaders here seemingly in lockstep.
And yet I've got to ask what tangibly we are expecting to see now.
Yeah, well, I think there's definitely going to be increasing international pressure on
Israel and its Prime Minister Netanyahu to try to get a ceasefire in Gaza.
Clearly Sinwar's death sort of complicates that because
the person who was calling the shots and making the decisions on a ceasefire is now dead.
So it depends on whether the Egyptians and the Qataris, the mediators who have tried
to get a ceasefire together, whether they can talk with members of Hamas that are outside the region and try to get notes to Hamas
inside Gaza. Sinwar's brother, Mohammed, is still alive or is believed to be alive
and so he could be an important person in figuring out whether ceasefire
negotiations do restart.
And have we heard either from Hamas or its allies since yesterday's attack?
The way that Hamas' allies are characterizing this is like Sinwar dying is an example of
Palestinian resistance against Israel and he will now become a symbol of that resistance.
Hezbollah, Hamas' Lebanese ally, has said that it will escalate attacks on Israel after
Sinwar's death, but Hezbollah in its statement didn't explicitly mention Sinwar's death when it said that it was going to escalate attacks on Israel after Sinwar's death. But Hezbollah in its statement didn't explicitly mention Sinwar's death when it said that it
was going to escalate attacks.
It's seemingly still tying its firing on Israel to a ceasefire in Gaza.
And so if that comes together, it might mean that Hezbollah also stops fighting essentially.
Something we'll have to watch very closely.
And I just have to ask, we've heard these
comments from Western leaders sort of trying to push for an end to fighting in this moment
now though for his part Netanyahu doesn't seem fully on board.
Let's play a clip of him speaking last night.
While this is not the end of the war in Gaza, it's the beginning of the end.
To the people of Gaza, I have a simple message.
This war can end tomorrow.
It can end if Hamas lays down its arms and returns our hostages.
Natanjah Uchmah-Moran, Ph.D.
Expand on that, Rory, if you can.
What, if anything, are we hearing from the Israeli side about their appetite now for
any diplomacy?
Rory Willis, Ph.D.
Yes, so Israeli media is reporting this morning that Netanyahu is convening a meeting with
security chiefs and other ministers
to discuss how to get the hostages back. The number one priority now for the Israeli public,
if you look at polls, most Israelis want the hostages back and to end the war. And so Netanyahu
is definitely going to face growing domestic pressure on top of that international pressure
that we've already talked about. At the same time, he is also facing pressure from many of his right-wing allies to finish
Hamas off, in essence.
There's still plenty of Hamas fighters out there that will want to continue the fight
against Israel.
At the same time, Israel has killed now most of Hamas' military leadership in Gaza.
It's taken out the former head of its political wing, Ismail
Hineya, and his deputy earlier this year. So it's really destroyed a lot of Hamas's
leadership capabilities. And so Netanyahu could potentially use those successes as a
way to wrap up this war and try to push for the release of the hostages.
I've been speaking to Wall Street Journal Middle East correspondent Rory Jones. Rory, thank you so much for the update.
Thanks, Luke.
Coming up, China's economic growth slows, and Donald Trump embraces Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s
war on junk food to win over his supporters. We've got those stories and more after the break.
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China's economic growth cooled to 4.6% in the third quarter.
GDP figures released today that highlight the challenges that policymakers there are
facing in trying to kickstart economic activity.
Though they have announced stimulus measures, key details including how much more Beijing
intends to borrow to finance its support plan and what exactly it intends to spend it on
remain unclear, making for a volatile few weeks for Chinese stocks.
However, unemployment and retail sales data also released today showed some signs of the
economy stabilizing and Chinese stocks have ended the trading session higher.
Meanwhile, the country's main commercial banks have cut their deposit rates for a second time
this year, a move that could help to ease pressure on lenders' profits after officials
lowered mortgage and
lending rates as part of their stimulus efforts. Looking ahead, investor expectations are high
that a key committee of China's legislature will sign off on a big new fiscal package when
it convenes toward the end of this month. And in other things we're watching in
markets today, Netflix shares are up after the streaming giant delivered its most profitable quarter ever.
American Express and Procter & Gamble are set to report earnings ahead of the market
open, with Amex's cardholder spending figure seen as a key metric for investors and analysts,
and an update on U.S. monthly housing starts for September is due at 8.30 a.m. Eastern.
Early in his bid to retake the White House, Donald Trump spent little time talking about
health policy.
But more recently, he's adopted the Make America Healthy Again mantra, a key part of
Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s presidential campaign.
With the race for the White House practically tied, Trump has been trying to appeal to Kennedy
supporters in swing states such as Nevada, where some polls had Kennedy add or near double-digit
support before he dropped out and endorsed Trump in August.
The Journal's Natalie Andrews reports that while a few of R.F.K. Jr.'s ideas have unnerved
some in Republican policy circles, Trump has committed to considering
Kennedy for any job in his administration, including Secretary of Health and Human Services.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is associated a lot with some things he said in the past about
vaccines possibly being tied to autism, which health officials have pushed back on
and debunked.
He also talks a lot about how he doesn't want chemicals in food and he doesn't want people
who have ties to the food industry being in control or being allowed to influence how
food is marketed in the United States and talks a
lot about chronic disease, especially chronic disease among children.
And these are things that parents are very concerned about and the Trump team feels highlighting
these issues helps them with women who they need to bring on board in their campaign.
And finally, as Floridians contend with the aftermath of Twin Hurricanes, a development
binge that has seen new homes continue to be built in flood-prone places is setting
the stage for more potential losses in the future.
According to an analysis for the journal by climate modeling firm First Street Foundation,
more than 75,000 new properties have been built in high-risk flood areas in the state
since 2019, a trend that journal reporter Jean Eaglesham told us puts Florida's real estate sector
and the banks that finance it on a collision course with insurers who have raised rates
and pulled back on coverage because of big payouts from natural disasters.
The developers say that Florida has a strict building code, so their properties are elevated, for example,
if they're in official flood zones.
But what we found is a lot of these properties
are going up just outside the flood zones.
So they still sell them on the ocean view,
on the beautiful landscape and so forth,
but they don't have to conform to the regulations
for the official flood zone,
even though you're still on a high flood risk.
Certainly in Florida, there are already signs this year that the boom may be at least slowing,
may be reversing.
It's a factor of higher insurance rates, higher other property costs.
And it's tough now.
And in some areas of Florida, it's very, very expensive to own a home.
And it's not just Florida developers who've continued to build in flood-prone places.
Almost one in five new properties built nationwide between 2019 and 2023 are in areas at high
risk of flooding, according to First Street's analysis, which found that Texas, California,
and North Carolina have also seen heavy building in such zones.
And that's it for What's News for Friday morning.
Today's show was produced by Daniel Bach and Kate Bullivant with supervising producer
Christina Rocca.
And I'm Luke Vargas for the Wall Street Journal.
We will be back tonight with a new show.
Otherwise, have a great weekend and thanks for listening.