The Israeli military did not offer an immediate comment, but earlier on Sunday it ordered residents of Al-Shuka and Al-Salam to move to a humanitarian area
A combative Donald Trump made a rare live appearance on CNN on Wednesday, repeating his false claims about the 2020 election, hurling insults and mocking a former magazine columnist he was found liable of sexually abusing and defaming.
Trump, during a one-hour "town hall" on the cable television network that he regularly denounced as "fake news" while in the White House, took questions on a broad range of subjects including the war in Ukraine, the debt limit, immigration and his multiple legal challenges.
"Most people understand that what happened was a rigged election," Trump said of his 2020 presidential election defeat by Democrat Joe Biden.
If re-elected, he said he would pardon a "large portion" of the hundreds of Trump supporters who have been jailed for their roles in the January 6, 2021 storming of the US Capitol.
The frontrunner for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination declined to unreservedly commit to accepting the results of the next White House vote when pressed by CNN anchor Kaitlin Collins, the mediator for the event held before a friendly Republican audience.
"If I think it's an honest election, absolutely I would," Trump said.
The former president also waded into the tense negotiations between the Biden White House and Congress over raising the US debt limit, urging Republican legislators not to do so if Democrats don't agree to spending cuts.
"I say that the Republicans out there congressmen, senators, if they don't give you massive cuts, you're gonna have to do a default," Trump said, before quickly adding that he sees such a scenario as unlikely.
The US government has never intentionally defaulted on its debt, and some economists warn that the effects on financial markets may be calamitous and trigger mass layoffs.
On the war in Ukraine, Trump said Russian leader Vladimir Putin made a "tremendous mistake" by invading but he declined to say who he wanted to win the war or whether he would continue to provide military assistance to Ukraine if re-elected.
"I don't think in terms of winning and losing. I think in terms of getting it settled," he said. "They're dying, Russians and Ukrainians. I want them to stop dying and I'll have that done in 24 hours."
Trump slammed Biden over his handling of immigration saying that Thursday, when a Covid-era policy that the former president put in place lapses, will be a "day of infamy" along the US border with Mexico.
"You're going to have millions of people pouring into our country right now at a level that nobody's ever seen before," he said, while suggesting that he may reinstitute a policy of separating families at the border to deter migrants.
"When you have that policy, people don't come," he said. "I know it sounds harsh."
The CNN event was seen as the first major test of the 2024 presidential campaign for Trump, who has done only a couple of rallies before crowds of supporters since announcing in November that he would seek the White House again.
Biden responded to Trump's appearance with a fund-raising appeal. "It's simple, folks," he tweeted. "Do you want four more years of that?"
Democratic National Committee chair Jaime Harrison said the "American people were just reintroduced, in primetime, to a dangerous, extreme candidate who seeks to undermine democracy."
The CNN appearance came just one day after Trump was ordered by a New York jury to pay $5 million in damages to E. Jean Carroll, a former columnist for Elle magazine who accused him of raping her in a Manhattan department store changing room in 1996.
Trump vehemently repeated his denials, saying it was a "made up story" and Carroll was a "whack job."
Trump dismissed other legal challenges he is facing as the work of Democrats out to torpedo his bid to be the Republican standard-bearer in the 2024 election. "They're doing this for election interference," he said.
Trump had a number of testy exchanges with Collins, a former CNN White House correspondent, calling her a "nasty person" at one point, while playing to the crowd, which responded with repeated applause and laughter.
CNN said the audience was made up of New Hampshire Republicans and undeclared voters who plan to vote in the state's 2024 Republican presidential primary, the first in the nation.
CNN, which recently underwent a leadership change, came in for some criticism for giving the twice-impeached former president a primetime slot but defended the move by saying it plans to provide the same town hall format to other presidential candidates.
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