Hello and welcome to the programme.
This is NewsHour from the BBC World Service.
We're coming to you live from London.
I'm Paul Henley.
The Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu can count the recent wave of attacks he ordered on Iran as a big domestic win.
Polls suggest more than 80% of Jewish Israelis support what he did and believe is where Israel was victorious.
What isn't yet clear is what Mr Netanyahu plans to do next to capitalise on that win.
perhaps to realise what he's claimed are new opportunities to secure the release of hostages still being held in Gaza.
In the meantime, the Israeli offensive in Gaza continues.
At least 60 people have died today, some of them while queuing for aid.
Medical officials say about 20 people were killed on an airstrike on a beachfront cafe.
One eyewitness says women and children were present when a warplane fired on the site.
This man saw the blast and ran to help.
Everyone was happy sitting in the cafe.
They were escaping the sadness.
Then the missile hit.
It tore into the children, the women, the men and the workers.
No one was spared.
And these Palestinians had gathered at a school in Gaza City which was hit by an Israeli airstrike.
We were sleeping under gas protection in the middle of the night.