The close-knit kibbutz that became home to a massacre


Dead Sea, Israel
CNN
 — 

People from Be’eri sometimes used to say the reason the Israeli kibbutz was so close to the Gaza Strip was because otherwise, it would be too perfect.

“It was a joke, something we used to say because Be’eri is so beautiful. It’s the place where you want your kids to grow up. The sunset is beautiful, the fields are green, it has everything you want from a vacation spot,” Lotan Pinyan told CNN on Wednesday.

Be’eri’s proximity to Gaza, which is only a few kilometers away, means the liberal community has been a frequent target of Hamas rockets fired from the enclave – usually intercepted by Israeli defenses. The rockets were the one downside of the otherwise idyllic spot, Pinyan and his friends would say. “It’s not a joke now,” he said.

Early on Saturday morning, Hamas militants stormed Be’eri and left behind a devastation of unimaginable scale.

They murdered more than 120 of its residents, including children, and kidnapped others. They set people’s homes on fire, then killed them when they tried to escape the heat and smoke. They looted, stole and destroyed what they could.

It all started with the sirens.

The community of about 1,100 people was woken up at 6:30 a.m., when the alarm indicating an imminent rocket attack went off.

Lotan and Michal Pinyan pictured with their family.

“But it was not normal. We are used to the bombing, we know what is sounds like: ‘tat – tat – tat.’ But this was different. It didn’t stop. Tat – tat – tat – tat – tat – tat – tat,” Michal Pinyan, Lotan’s wife, told CNN. “And then some 45 minutes later, we started getting messages that there are terrorists in the kibbutz,” Lotan added.

The family’s WhatsApp group was flooded with anxious messages between Michal’s parents, Amir and Mati Weiss, and her three brothers.

9:25 a.m. Mati: gunshots in the balcony

9:26 a.m. Ran: also here there are gunshots outside the shelter window

9:30 a.m. Mati: I hear voices in Arabic outside the house

9:31 a.m. Dalit: do you also hear the security forces?

9:43 a.m. Amir: dad is injured they are in the house

9:43 a.m. Ran: what do you mean?

9:44 a.m. Dalit: they came inside?

9:44 a.m. Lotan: what? talk to us

9:47 a.m. Ran: limor spoke to racheli, sending you something

9:49 a.m. Michal: mom keep writing all the time

9:52 a.m. Eddie: When????

9:57 a.m. Limor: When, what’s happening with you?

10:01 a.m. Michal: mom

10:01 a.m. Michal: Answer

10:03 a.m. Mati: save us

10:04 a.m. Mati: Save us

10:00 a.m. Michal: are you in the shelter?

10:04 a.m. Mati: dad was shot and they are throwing grenades

10:04 a.m. Mati: They blew up the safe room

10:04 a.m. Michal: inside the house?

10:04 a.m. Mati: yes

That message was the last one that came from Mati, Michal’s mother. After that, silence.

“We knew they were probably dead. But there was still a small hope that maybe they weren’t, that they were kidnapped,” Lotan said.

CCTV footage shows one of two Hamas Islamist militants entering Be'eri kibbutz after firing on a car filled with local residents

Across the kibbutz, Tom Hand was getting the same terrifying messages about terrorists breaking into his neighbors’ houses. All he could think about was his eight-year-old daughter Emily – one of the tallest in her class, with honey blond hair and pale skin that tanned in the sun, a talented dancer and singer, a fun, bright girl, he said.

Hand came to Be’eri 30 years ago as a volunteer, planning to stay a few months, and never left. After his wife, Emily’s mother, died of cancer a few years ago, he and Emily have lived here on their own.

A bullet-shuttered window of the entrance to a kindergarten is seen in Kibbutz Be'eri on Wednesday, Oct. 11, 2023

The community is close-knit; residents told CNN they eat meals together and share everything, including their salaries, which go into a communal treasury and are redistributed equally among all the families.

Politically, the kibbutz leans left. Many sees Gazans as their neighbors, Michal told CNN.

“There were people from Gaza who worked in the kibbutz and they were a part of the community, they’d bring their children to the kindergarten in the kibbutz. When they couldn’t come to work there anymore, we began collecting money from the community and there is now a fund that keeps them alive,” she said, adding that she is determined to keep sending the money to the family.

On Friday night, Emily went to her friend’s home for a sleepover. “They were having a girly night,” Hand said.

When the sirens went off at 6:30 on Saturday, Hand was not particularly worried; the alarms are not uncommon in the kibbutz. Emily was sleeping over at a friend’s house, and he was sure both children would be safe.

“Until I heard the shots. And it was already too late. If I had known … I could have maybe ran, got her, got her friend, got the mother, brought them back to my place. But by the time I realized what was happening, it was already too late,” he said.

He was not able to get in touch with them, and he was not able to go out because the kibbutz was by then overrun by swarms of heavily armed militants.

“I had to think of Emily. She already lost her mother, I couldn’t risk her losing her father too,” he said.

Meanwhile, the Pinyans, in shock from what they understood to be happening in their parents’ house, were bracing for the possibility that their home could be the terrorists’ next target.

Emily Hand, 8, was murdered during the attack in Be'eri on Saturday.

They were inside their safe room, but faced a problem. Its door is not lockable from the inside. While all Israeli homes built after 1993 must have a shelter, these safe rooms are designed to withstand a blast, not an armed incursion.

“We knew we had to keep the door closed, so we took anything we found in the safe room and wrapped it to the handle … we tied it to the window and then put a chair inside it and kept it tight with a baseball bat,” Lotan said.

He spent the next many hours sitting by the door, wrenching the bat against it, waiting for the military to come and rescue them.

Lotan and Michal Pinyan used a baseball bat to secure the door of their safe room.

The kibbutz has its own volunteer emergency squad, about 15 people who are supposed to protect the community from danger until the army comes. With an army base just a few minutes away, everyone thought that the Israel Defense Forces would come any moment. But that did not happen.

“We were waiting for about 20 hours, with no food, no water, no toilet,” Lotan said. “And the children, they never asked for anything. Not once,” Michal added.

The IDF told CNN that it took them days of intense battle to gain control of the kibbutz. To rescue the Pinyans, 15 soldiers stormed the house, formed a tight circle around the family and walked them to a safe place – while battle still raged in the kibbutz, the family said.

As they left, Lotan said, he covered the kids’ eyes so that they wouldn’t see the dead bodies.

“We saw them, all of them, soldiers, kibbutz members and terrorists. It was like someone sprinkled sesame on a bunny, spread all over the kibbutz, everywhere we went, there were bodies,” Lotan said.

Israeli soldiers carry the body of a Hamas militant in Kibbutz Be'eri on Wednesday, Oct. 11, 2023

Many of those eventually rescued from Be’eri by the military were evacuated to a hotel on the shores of the Dead Sea. Among them was Tom Hand, who spent the next few days waiting to hear anything about Emily.

Then, the news came.

“Two people from the kibbutz, a team of doctors, psychiatrists, social workers … and they tell you. Softly, but quickly, because they have a lot people to get through,” he said, adding he felt relieved.

Of all the horrible possibilities, death seemed the least painful.

“She was dead. I knew she wasn’t alone, she wasn’t in Gaza, she wasn’t in a dark room filled with Christ knows how many people, pushed around … terrified every minute of every day, possibly for years to come. So death was a blessing,” he told CNN, his voice broken, tears streaming down his tired, ashen face.

“In this crazy world, here is me hoping my daughter is dead,” he said.

Many of the people rescued from Be’eri are staying in the same hotel as Hand, which means he is surrounded by love – but also constant reminders of Emily. Many of her friends who survived the massacre are at the hotel.

“Emily’s friends know that she’s not here with me. So they ask me what happened to her … they look up at me and I say I don’t know yet,” he said. “But then they see their parents hugging me, crying … kids are not stupid, even at that age, so just by seeing that I’m sure they realize.”

The community is holding onto itself, trying to keep going, Michal Pinyan said. Every few minutes, someone comes by to give her a hug, have a chat, share a memory of her parents.

She told CNN that she knows her parents have died, because their bodies were identified by people who knew them personally. However, she has been asked to provide a DNA sample for official identification, which may take some time.

She has no idea what will happen next. “Nobody talks about funerals. We don’t have a place to go to. The kibbutz is a closed army space now,” she said.

Still, she believes Be’eri will be rebuilt in some form. “We will need lots and lots and lots of strength, physical and emotional, to go back. But we will go back it’s not a question,” she said.

When their children question going back to a place where such horrors happened, the Pinyans say they must.

“We explained to them that we don’t leave the ship sinking. We need to go and repair the place, repair the community. And after that, we can decide, as a family, what we will do next,” Lotan said.

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China’s exports and imports drop again in September

US Top News and Analysis 

An aerial view of a container ship leaving the dockyard in Qingdao in east China’s Shandong province.
Future Publishing | Future Publishing | Getty Images

BEIJING — China reported a smaller-than-expected decline in exports in September from a year ago, while imports missed, according to customs data released Friday.

In U.S.-dollar terms, exports fell by 6.2% last month from a year ago. That’s less than the 7.6% drop forecast by analysts in a Reuters poll.

Imports also fell by 6.2% in U.S.-dollar terms in September compared to a year ago — slightly more than the 6% decline expected by the Reuters poll.

China’s exports have fallen on a year-on-year basis every month this year starting in May. The last positive print for imports on a year-on-year basis was in September last year.

China’s trade slumped this year amid lackluster global demand for Chinese good and muted domestic demand.

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Bucking the decline in trade with major trading partners were Chinese imports from the European Union, up modestly in September from a year ago, according to CNBC calculations of the official data.

The U.S. is China’s largest trading partner on a single-country basis, while the Association of Southeast Asian Nations has recently surpassed the EU as China’s largest trading partner on a regional basis.

For the first three quarters of the year, China’s exports to the U.S. fell by 16.4%, while imports dropped by 6% during that time.

Russia was the only major country or region in the Chinese customs agency’s report that showed growth in both exports and imports for the first three quarters of the year from a year ago.

By product category, China’s global export of autos remained the fastest growing, up on a unit basis by 64.4% from a year ago for the first three quarters of 2023. That’s slower than the 69% pace for the year recorded as of August.

China’s exports of ships and boats for the year picked up pace from August on a unit basis to a 16.2% year-on-year increase in the third quarter.

The volume of China’s cosmetics imports fell by 14.2% in the first three quarters compared to a year ago. The volume of crude oil imports rose by 14.6% during that time but fell on a U.S. dollar basis.

The pace of crude oil imports on a year-to-date basis in September was little changed from August.

Slowing economic growth

China’s recovery from the pandemic slowed in the last few months, dragged down by a slump in the massive real estate sector.

The International Monetary Fund this week trimmed its 2023 China growth forecast to 5% from 5.2%, while maintaining a global growth forecast of 3% for the year. The world economy grew by 3.5% last year.

China is set to report September retail sales on Oct. 18, along with third-quarter GDP figures.

Amid rising tensions with the U.S. and Europe in the last few years, China has sought to boost its trade with regional partners in Southeast Asia, as well as countries participating in the Belt and Road Initiative. The BRI is a China-led push for developing regional infrastructure such as ports and railways.

As of the end of September, China said it has trains running to 217 cities in 25 European countries.

Cargo transported along those rail lines accounted for 8% of China-EU trade in 2022, up from 1.5% in 2016, Chinese officials said this week.

China also claimed imports and exports with Belt and Road partner countries reached $19.1 trillion between 2013 and 2022 — for an average annual growth in trade of 6.4%.

The third Belt and Road forum is scheduled to be held in Beijing Tuesday and Wednesday. Russian President Vladimir Putin is expected to attend.

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US Seeks to ‘Diversify’ China-Dominated Africa Minerals Supply Chain

USA – Voice of America 

Africa is the site of a new battle for influence as Washington ramps up efforts to build an alternative critical minerals supply chain to avoid reliance on China. Beijing dominates the processing of critical minerals such as cobalt, lithium and other resources from the continent that are needed for the transition to clean energy and electric vehicles.

But at the Green Energy Africa Summit this week in Cape Town, which was held on the sidelines of Africa Oil Week, few were willing to talk about it directly.

Asked whether the U.S. was playing catch-up with China, one of the panel’s speakers, Deputy Assistant Secretary in the U.S. State Department’s Bureau of Energy Resources Kimberly Harrington, said simply that Washington was looking to “diversify.”

For his part, fellow panelist Chiza Charles Newton Chiumya, the African Union’s director for industry, minerals, entrepreneurship and tourism, told VOA he didn’t want to use the term “competing” to describe the relative approaches of the West and China but agreed there is “lots of interest” in Africa’s critical minerals.

The Chinese Embassy in Washington was also circumspect when asked whether it sees itself in competition with the U.S. for the natural resources.

“The tangible outcomes of China-Africa practical cooperation throughout the years are there for all to see,” spokesperson Liu Pengyu wrote in an emailed response.

“Supporting Africa’s development is the common responsibility of the international community. We welcome stronger interest and investment in Africa from all quarters to help increase the continent’s capability to achieve self-driven sustainable growth and move forward towards modernization and prosperity.”

Independent analysts, however, had a different take. The Chinese made it a “priority to corner the market for critical minerals about two decades ago and supported that strategy with massive public diplomacy and infrastructure investments into Africa — most of which [came] via long-term debt,” said Tony Carroll, adjunct professor in the African studies program at Johns Hopkins University, told VOA earlier this year.

“The West woke up to this strategy too late and have been scrambling ever since.”

Part of that response has been the Minerals Security Partnership set up by U.S. President Joe Biden’s administration last year as a way of diversifying supply chains. Partners include Australia, Canada, Finland, France, Japan, South Korea, Norway, Sweden, the United Kingdom and the European Union.

“We see anywhere from three to six times demand growth for critical minerals across the world. … So, I think our sense is that no single government, no single company, can create resilient supply chains,” said Harrington at the Green Energy Africa Summit.

“If the COVID-19 pandemic showed us anything…one of the primary things it showed us is that if we are too overly reliant on any one source in a supply chain … it creates vulnerabilities, and so I think our approach overall on this issue is to make sure that we have diversity,” she told VOA during a Q&A after the panel.  

“When it comes to China in general, our secretary of state has been crystal clear, we have areas in which we cooperate with China, we have areas in which we compete with China, and that’s not going to change,” she said. “This is a complex and consequential relationship and we see it as such.”

The view from Africa

While he didn’t want to use the word “competition” to describe the outside interest in Africa’s critical minerals, the AU’s Chiumya stressed during the panel discussion that Africa must benefit from its mineral wealth.

“This is not the first time that Africa is sitting at the frontier of having critical minerals. … In the past we have lost a chance,” he said, referring to the continent’s vast gold and diamond deposits. “This time around we want to do things different.”

“For a long time, our governments have not been able to effectively exploit the mineral wealth that is there and ended up effectively going into very bad deals” which have not contributed to the social and economic development of the African people, Chiumya added.

Democratic Republic of the Congo President Felix Tshisekedi has been among the African leaders demanding better terms from China for several years. His country produces some 70% of the world’s cobalt but remains one of the world’s least developed nations.

Tshisekedi complained in January that the Congolese people have not benefited from a $6.2 billion minerals-for-infrastructure contract with China that was signed by his predecessor.

Meanwhile in Zimbabwe, which has large lithium deposits, the government has imposed a ban on exports of raw lithium ore, insisting that it be processed at home. A Chinese company has since built a large lithium processing plant in the country.

U.S. critical mineral plans

Washington says environmental, social and governance standards are a key consideration for the U.S. when it comes to its dealings with the continent regarding critical minerals.

“We want to do our part to ramp up our efforts with like-minded partners in Africa to promote sustainable clean energy supply chains in mining,” said Harrington. She said it is also important to help countries “do some domestic processing and refining, because it’s really the value-added, that’s how you create jobs, that’s how you create local capacity.”

At the U.S.-Africa Summit in Washington in December, the DRC, the U.S. and Zambia — another major source of minerals — signed a memorandum of understanding to develop a supply chain for electric car batteries, in what was widely seen by analysts as a move to counter China.

Harrington said the MOU had “the overall goal of a lot of an EV (electric vehicle) battery being processed and refined locally,” even if some further refinement might need to be done in a third country. 

Additionally, on the sidelines of last month’s G20 summit, the U.S. and E.U. pledged to develop the partially existing Lobito Corridor — a railway connecting the DRC’s cobalt belt to Zambia’s copper belt and on to Angola’s port of Lobito, from where it can be shipped to international markets.

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JPMorgan Chase is set to report third-quarter earnings — here’s what the Street expects

US Top News and Analysis 

In this article

JPM

Jamie Dimon, chairman and CEO of JPMorgan Chase, at the U.S. Capitol for a lunch meeting with the New Democrat Coalition in Washington, D.C., June 6, 2023.
Nathan Howard | Bloomberg | Getty Images

JPMorgan Chase is scheduled to report third-quarter earnings before the opening bell Friday.

Here’s what Wall Street expects, according to analyst estimates compiled by LSEG, formerly known as Refinitiv

Earnings per share: $3.96Revenue: $39.65 billion

JPMorgan will be watched closely for clues on how the industry fared amid surging interest rates and rising loan losses.

While the biggest U.S. bank by assets has navigated volatile rates adeptly so far this year, the situation has caught several peers off guard, including a trio of midsized lenders that collapsed after deposit runs.

Bank stocks plunged last month after the Federal Reserve signaled it would keep interest rates higher for longer than expected to fight inflation amid unexpectedly robust economic growth. The 10-year Treasury yield, a key figure for long-term rates, jumped 74 basis points in the third quarter. One basis point equals one-hundredth of a percentage point.

Higher rates hit banks in several ways. The industry has been forced to pay up for deposits as customers shift holdings into higher-yielding instruments like money market funds. Rising yields mean the bonds owned by banks fall in value, creating unrealized losses that pressure capital levels. And higher borrowing costs tamp down demand for mortgages and corporate loans.

Banks including JPMorgan have also been setting aside more funds for anticipated loan losses.

Wall Street may provide little help this quarter, with investment banking fees likely to remain subdued and trading revenue expected to be flat or down slightly.

Finally, analysts will want to hear what CEO Jamie Dimon has to say about the economy and his expectations for the banking industry. Dimon has been vocal in his opposition against proposed increases in capital requirements.

Shares of JPMorgan have climbed 8.7% year to date, far outperforming the 19% decline of the KBW Bank Index.

Wells Fargo and Citigroup are scheduled to release results later Friday morning. Bank of America and Goldman Sachs report Tuesday, and Morgan Stanley discloses results on Wednesday.

This story is developing. Please check back for updates.

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‘Best performing emerging market’: Analysts name stocks to cash in on India’s boom

US Top News and Analysis 

Stronger economic growth, accelerating government spending and a bottoming out of inflation are just some reasons why many analysts are bullish on India — and asset management firm AllianceBernstein is no exception. In an Oct. 9 note, analysts led by Venugopal Garre pointed out that Indian equity markets rebounded strongly in March after lagging from the end of 2021. While markets have started retracting since September, the benchmark Nifty 50 index remains elevated near 19,500 levels. “India has been the best performing Emerging Market in terms of USD returns at 8%, surpassing Brazil at 6%,” they wrote. The analysts expect the South Asian country to have “one of the highest returns among key markets throughout the world for the next several years.” In terms of asset allocation, AllianceBernstein is overweight on financials, while allocating a small portion of this weight to utilities. It is also overweight on consumer tech and building materials, and is equal weight on autos and discretionary spending, while being underweight on staples and metals. The asset manager says its portfolio has outperformed the benchmark Nifty index by 14.7% since its inception in 2019. Stock picks Food delivery player Zomato is among AllianceBernstein’s top stock picks in the country given recent recovery in the industry. The analysts are overweight on the stock at 120 Indian rupees ($1.44), representing an upside of around 10% from its Oct. 11 close Financial services provider HDFC Bank also made the asset manager’s list thanks to its “phenomenal” deposit-gathering ability. The analysts are overweight on the stock, giving it around 36% upside. Delhivery is another favorite stock, with a price target of 460 Indian rupees, giving it around 5% upside. The logistics company is seen as a “laggard” among consumer tech companies in India and has “tactical upside” amid expectations for stronger profitability and growth, the analysts said. New on the radar AllianceBernstein’s portfolio has also undergone a refresh to include two new stocks: NPTC and Paytm . Electricity generation company NTPC made the list for its opportunities in thermal, renewables and green hydrogen, the analysts wrote. The asset manager is overweight on the stock at 274 Indian rupees representing an upside of almost 15% from its Oct. 11 close. AllianceBernstein is also positive on digital lending player Paytm . “While it’s too early to declare winners in the digital lending space especially with the expected entry of Jio Financial Services, PayTM does appear to be on the right side of disruption with its dominant payments platform and a head start in digital credit products,” the analysts wrote. The asset manager is overweight on Paytm and gives it upside potential of 13.2%. — CNBC’s Michael Bloom contributed to this report.

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Phillies upset Braves in NLDS again; Nick Castellanos makes MLB history

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

One hundred and four wins in the regular season mean nothing for the Atlanta Braves.

For the second year in a row, the Philadelphia Phillies took down their NL East rivals in the NLDS, winning the series in four games after beating the Braves on Thursday, 3-1.

The Phillies finished 14.0 games back of the Braves, who won the division easily. At one point, Atlanta led it by 17.0 games. But for them, it’s all out the window, despite their regular season record being the best in the majors.

CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

Austin Riley and Nick Castellanos exchanged solo home runs in the fourth inning, but with the game tied at one, Trea Turner reminded everyone why he got $300 million in the offseason with a solo shot of his own, giving the Phillies a 2-1 lead.

Ranger Suarez tossed five innings of one-run ball before Rob Thomson went to the bullpen to face the top of the Braves’ order. Seranthony Dominguez got the first two batters out, but after Riley singled to bring up 54-homer-hitter Matt Olson, Thomson brought in Jose Alvarado for the lefty-lefty matchup, and Olson flied out to end the threat.

In the bottom of the sixth, Castellanos went deep again, making it a two-run Phils lead and knocking Spencer Strider out of the game. He became the first person in MLB history to multiple home runs in back-to-back games in postseason history.

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In the top of the seventh, the lead run came to the plate, which forced Thomson to go with former Brave Craig Kimbrel earlier than he probably would’ve like. But he walked Travis d’Arnaud, bringing up the likely NL MVP in Ronald Acuña Jr. with the bases loaded. Acuña gave one a ride, but Miguel Rojas made a leaping catch on the warning track to get the Phillies out of the jam.

Gregory Soto, going for the four-out save, put the two first Braves on to lead off the ninth, and runners were at the corners with none out. So, Thomson went back to his bullpen to bring in Matt Strahm, and with ease, he retired all three batters he faced, leaving Acuña on deck to end the game. Strahm had just two saves during the regular season – of course, he gets one in the biggest game of his life.

Turner was a triple away from the cycle in his four-hit night, and he’s hitting .500 in this postseason. Acuña went 0-for-4 and hit just .143 in the four games. Philly relievers combined for 4.0 innings of scoreless relief.

Atlanta had one of the best offenses, literally, ever. Their 307 home runs and .501 slugging percentage were the most ever in a season, and they led the majors in just about every offensive category, including their 5.85 runs per game. In this series, they scored just eight, or two per game.

The Houston Astros are the only division winners to be playing in the League Championship Series this year.

The Phillies will face the Arizona Diamondbacks, who are in their first NLCS since 2007 – that series, between the five and six seeds in the NL, respectively, begins Monday in Philadelphia.

If the Phillies win that series, it will be the first time they will have won back-to-back pennants since 2008 and 2009.

Oh, and teams to out-homer their opponents this postseason are 14-1. So, hit home runs.

 

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Travis Kelce’s big day helps Chiefs’ win streak extend to 5; Broncos’ woes continue

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

Taylor Swift was at Arrowhead Stadium, so Travis Kelce had to show out.

But for the tight end, it’s pretty much just business as usual. He finished with nine catches for 124 yards, both season-highs, in the Kansas City Chiefs‘ 19-8 win over the Denver Broncos on Thursday night.

Kelce did most of his damage in the first half, as he made seven catches for 109 yards. Even more impressive is he did this on a bum ankle after spraining it this past Sunday against the Minnesota Vikings.

CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

The injury looked worse than it was at first, but even after he returned in that game, he scored a touchdown.

Kelce couldn’t find the end zone in this one – in fact, Kansas City’s lone touchdown was scored by Kadarius Toney, while Harrison Butker knocked down two field goals to put Kansas City up 13-0 at the half. The Broncos had just 94 total yards of offense in the first half, as Russell Wilson threw for just 37 yards and an interception.

Butker knocked down his third field goal of the night on the first drive of the second half, but both offenses were slow for the rest of the night. Denver finally got on the scoreboard in the fourth quarter with an impressive one-handed catch in the end zone by Courtland Sutton. Javonte Williams ran it in for the two-point conversion, and suddenly, it was a one-possession game.

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But the Chiefs were able to waste some clock and drive far enough down the field for Butker to drill his fourth field goal of the night, putting the Chiefs up 11 with 1:55 to go.

It was not an offensive showing like some expected, but for Kansas City, they did more than enough, as Denver continues to struggle. They fell to 1-5 on the season, and Wilson completed just 13 of his 22 passes for a grand total of 95 yards. He threw two picks, and Denver racked up just 197 yards of total offense to Kansas City’s 389.

Mahomes threw for 306 yards on 30-of-40 passing, while Isiah Pacheco ran for 64 yards on 16 carries – he also has six catches for 36 yards.

The Chiefs have now won five straight after losing the season opener – they will host the Los Angeles Chargers in Week 7, while Denver hosts the Green Bay Packers.

Denver has now lost 16 straight games to Kansas City.

 

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Beyoncé showing up for Taylor Swift's movie premiere was a 'fairytale'



CNN
 — 

Forget about Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce, she and Beyoncé are the true power pair of the year.

On Wednesday night it was the era of two queens when Beyoncé attended the premiere for Swift’s “Eras Tour” concert film in Los Angeles.

Naturally, the internet went bananas.

Both women have reigned supreme this year with powerhouse concert tours that they are capitalizing on by bringing them to the big screen.

First up is Swift’s, which “due to unprecedented demand” opened with early access shows on Thursday and will have additional showings over the weekend.

Queen Bey, who recently wrapped her “Renaissance Tour” in Kansas City, has announced that her “Renaissance: A Film by Beyoncé” will hit theaters on December 1.

The women have been longtime admirers of each other and, early Thursday, Swift posted a video of the two of them together in a theater with Beyoncé tossing popcorn.

Read more: Can you sing and dance during Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour film?

Swift wrote in the caption, “I’m so glad I’ll never know what my life would’ve been like without @beyonce’s influence.”

“The way she’s taught me and every artist out here to break rules and defy industry norms,” Swift wrote. “Her generosity of spirit. Her resilience and versatility. She’s been a guiding light throughout my career and the fact that she showed up tonight was like an actual fairytale.”

Given how often the world pits female superstars against each other, the mutual support of two of music’s biggest stars was a powerful statement.

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What is Israel’s Iron Dome? Here’s what you need to know about the missile defense system

US Top News and Analysis 

Israel’s Iron Dome anti-missile system intercepts rockets launched from the Gaza Strip, as seen from the city of Ashkelon, Israel October 9, 2023.
Amir Cohen | Reuters

Israel is once again relying on its Iron Dome to fend off attacks from the Palestinian militant group Hamas, orchestrating its missile defense system to protect its citizens amid the ongoing conflict.

The strategic importance of the short-range system has been underscored in the wake of a devastating and coordinated assault from Hamas on southern Israel over the weekend.

Israel has responded by pounding Gaza with airstrikes, while the country is expected to launch a ground offensive in the region in the coming days.

Israel has also ordered the “complete siege” of the Gaza Strip, seeking to stop the supply of electricity, food, water and fuel to the already blockaded population of roughly 2.3 million people.

As a result of the persisting violence, at least 1,200 Israelis have been killed, with more than 2,700 injured, according to Israel’s military. Meanwhile, the Palestinian Ministry of Health says 1,203 people in Gaza have been killed, with 5,763 injured.

What is Israel’s Iron Dome?

The Iron Dome, or “Kippat Barzel” in Hebrew, is widely regarded as one of the most important tools in Israel’s arsenal. In part, that’s because it is thought to be highly effective.

Israel’s Defense Ministry claimed the Iron Dome successfully intercepted 97% of all Palestinian rockets fired during one weekend surge of Gaza fighting last year, while the system recorded a 95.6% success rate during a rocket attack by the Palestinian Islamic Jihad in May. The militant group, which seeks the destruction of Israel, has been designated a terrorist organization by Israel, the U.S., the European Union and others.

The mobile all-weather defense system, which became fully operational in March 2011 and has been upgraded several times since, is designed to protect Israeli citizens by launching guided missiles to intercept incoming rockets and other short-range threats in mid-air.

The system has been “tested consistently” since first being put to use in April 2011, Israel’s Defense Ministry says, and “successfully prevented countless rockets from hitting Israeli communities.”

Originally produced in Israel, the Iron Dome was developed by state-owned Rafael Advanced Defense Systems with U.S. backing — and Washington continues to provide funding for it today.

An Iron Dome launcher fires an interceptor missile as rockets are fired from Gaza, in Ashkelon, Israel May 10, 2023.
Amir Cohen | Reuters

Israel’s Defense Forces say the Iron Dome is a compilation of several features: the technology itself, the machinery used to intercept incoming rockets, the soldiers who operate the system and the commanders who supervise the network.

How does it work?

In practice, the Iron Dome uses radar to track incoming rockets and can determine whether the missile’s trajectory poses a threat to a protected area, such as a strategically important site or populated center.

If the rocket does pose a threat, a command and control center can respond by launching its own Tamir missile to intercept it. The system is not configured to fire on rockets outside of a protected area, meaning these are ignored and left to land harmlessly elsewhere.

A Congressional Research Service report published in early March described the Iron Dome as a mobile anti-rocket, anti-mortar and anti-artillery system that can intercept launches from 2.5 to 43 miles away.

It is estimated to have at least 10 batteries deployed nationwide, each of which is designed to defend a 60-square-mile populated area. Each battery is equipped with three to four launchers and each launcher contains up to 20 Tamir interceptors.

The Center for Strategic International Studies, a U.S. think tank, has previously estimated that a complete Iron Dome battery costs roughly $100 million to produce.

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Prior to Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack, the U.S. was estimated to have provided nearly $3 billion to Israel for Iron Dome batteries, interceptors, co-production costs and general maintenance. U.S. lawmakers have repeatedly voted in favor of providing funding to Israel’s Iron Dome’s in recent years.

“Thanks to the Iron Dome, we have not sustained tremendous casualties from the rockets that have been fired,” Lt. Col. Jonathan Conricus, a spokesperson for Israel’s Defense Forces, said Saturday in a video statement posted via X, formerly known as Twitter.

At the time of that broadcast, the IDF’s Conricus said the overwhelming majority of the casualties Israel had sustained had been the result of “close-contact fighting” and “cold-blooded killings” of civilians and soldiers.

The Iron Dome has its weaknesses, however, and analysts have warned that the defense system could encounter challenges when responding to heavy rocket fire.

The Center for European Policy Analysis, a U.S. think tank, said in June 2021 that should militants successfully identify and achieve the saturation of Israel’s Iron Dome, “critical updates to the system may not be achievable.”

A saturation attack is designed to overwhelm the Iron Dome shield with simultaneous missile attacks from various directions to impair the system’s ability to sufficiently respond.

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SEAN HANNITY: Hamas is officially under siege

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

FOX News host Sean Hannity reacts to the war in Israel and calls out anti-Semitism on “Hannity.” 

SEAN HANNITY: Hamas is officially under siege. This war will not end until Hamas no longer exists. Make no mistake, the terrorists of Hamas, they are responsible. They are alone responsible for the immense human suffering on both sides of the Gaza border. The media mob, radical left-wing Democrats, watch, wait, you will see, I’ll be proven right, they will very soon be attacking Israel for defending itself.  

YALE PROFESSOR URGED TO RESIGN FOR ‘VILE’ COMMENTS ABOUT HAMAS ATTACKS ON ISRAEL: ‘SETTLERS ARE NOT CIVILIANS’ 

So, be prepared for the propaganda war from the left to begin, but here are the facts tonight: Gaza cannot produce its own clean water because Hamas re-purposed the city’s plumbing. Why? Because they wanted to produce more rockets to attack Israel. Gaza cannot produce its own electricity. Why? Because Hamas accidentally knocked out critical infrastructure during a rocket attack against Israel and failed to rebuild a power plant after diverting aid and supplies to build rockets and dig tunnels with Israeli and American money and cement.  

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Yes, U.S. money, Israeli money, money that was supposed to be used to build schools and hospitals? Nope. It’s been used for terrorist attacks, tunnels to kill Israelis and others. Now, Gaza doesn’t even have a reliable sewer system because Hamas dug it up. Why did they dig it up? They wanted to turn the metal sewage pipes, you got it, into more rockets. The terrorists of Hamas, they are evil. It’s that simple, and as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has stated, Hamas is ISIS.

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