Tools
Change country:

Vox podcasts tackle the Israel-Hamas war 

Orange glowing lights blaze in the night sky over a dark city skyline.
Israeli forces’ flares light up the night sky in Gaza City on November 6, 2023. | Abed Khaled/AP

Looking to understand the Israel-Hamas war? Start with these Vox podcast episodes.

The Israel-Palestine conflict goes back decades, but this latest war has taken an unprecedented toll in terms of the number of people killed, and represents a significant step back from any hopes of securing a two-state solution and a permanent peace. Vox podcasts are covering the conflict in depth, offering our listeners context and clarity about the history of the conflict, a deeper understanding of the players in Israel and Palestine and on the world stage, and the toll of Hamas’s attack and Israel’s retaliation on the people in the region.

Today, Explained, Vox’s daily news explainer podcast, has been covering the conflict since it began, with an episode posted right after Hamas’s October 7 attack on Israel that took the lives of around 1,200 people and resulted in the kidnapping of an estimated 240 hostages. The show has since continued to cover many threads in this story, from where Hamas comes from to how false information about the conflict has spread on social media and how information warfare is used in the Middle East. Vox podcasts The Weeds and The Gray Area have also been covering the unfolding crisis, its stakes, and its impact.

You can find those and all our other episodes on the topic below; we’ll continue to add more as new episodes are published.


Biden’s breaking point on Gaza

May 9, 2024 | President Joe Biden says the US won’t supply further weapons if Israel is going to use them in Rafah. Axios reporter Barak Ravid explains what that means for the war.

Israel, Gaza, and Eurovision

May 7, 2024 | The pop music competition is facing boycott calls over Israel’s participation. Switched on Pop’s Charlie Harding and historian Tess Megginson explain why the apolitical event keeps getting political.

Is divesting from Israel possible?

May 6, 2024 | Yes, but it’s hard. Inside Higher Ed’s Josh Moody and UC Merced’s Charlie Eaton explain.

Columbia’s free-speech fight

April 24, 2024 | Daily Spectator news editor Sarah Huddleston reports on the protests at her university. AAUP President Irene Mulvey explains the stakes for campus free speech.

Why Iran attacked Israel

April 15, 2024 | The Economist’s Gregg Carlstrom explains. Jerusalem-based journalist Noga Tarnopolsky explores whether the unprecedented attack hurts or helps Benjamin Netanyahu.

Israel’s attack on World Central Kitchen

April 4, 2024 | The Wall Street Journal’s Stephen Kalin explains what happened, and Refugees International president Jeremy Konyndyk lays out what this means for Gazans.

How Israel is upending Democratic races

March 5, 2024 | Super Tuesday is the biggest day of the presidential primary campaign, but the biggest race in the biggest state isn’t about Biden or Trump. Instead, the leading candidates for California’s open Senate seat — three Democrats and a Republican — are finding themselves talking a lot about Israel, Palestine, and the war in Gaza.

The protest vote against Biden

February 27, 2024 | Michigan’s primary today will test President Biden’s viability with Muslim voters amid the war in Gaza. One Arab American leader says the community is abandoning Biden and looking for alternatives — Donald Trump might be one of them.

Rafah, the last “safe” zone

February 15, 2024 | Palestinians are trapped in Rafah, Gaza’s southernmost city, where about 1.5 million people have sought refuge. After Israel bombed Rafah this weekend, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is threatening a ground invasion. Palestinian journalist Aseel Mousa takes us inside Rafah, and the Economist’s Anton La Guardia explains why diplomatic efforts to halt the fighting have stalled.

Iran and the Axis of Resistance

January 31, 2024 | Iran-backed militias use drones, missiles, and even TikTok dances to antagonize the United States and Israel. The International Crisis Group’s Ali Vaez explains how the war in Gaza has energized the self-described Axis of Resistance.

Israel at the International Court of Justice

January 29, 2024 | South Africa took Israel to court over claims of genocide. Courthouse News reporter Molly Quell and the International Crisis Group’s Robert Blecher explain what happened next.

How the war in Gaza ends

January 18, 2024 | Israel’s war against Hamas has now been raging for over 100 days. According to Ian Lustick, professor emeritus at the University of Pennsylvania, history tells us what it will take to end it.

Israel’s next move

January 3, 2023 | Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu faces trouble at home and abroad. AP correspondent Tia Goldenberg and scholar Hussein Ibish explain the significance of a high-profile killing in Lebanon.

The fight over campus antisemitism

December 12, 2023 | Three elite university presidents walk into Congress for a hearing on antisemitism. Only two still have their jobs. New York magazine reporter Nia Prater tells us what happened, and a Harvard professor of Jewish history explains why he thinks resignations won’t make campuses safer.

How Palestine went global

December 4, 2023 | People with no direct connection to the Middle East have taken to seeing the Palestinian cause as an anti-colonial struggle connected to their own experience. Columbia historian Rashid Khalidi explains why “decolonization” is resonating worldwide.

The American politics of Israel

November 29, 2023 | The Israel-Hamas war is dividing the previously united Democrats and uniting the recently fractured Republican Party. Semafor’s David Weigel explains what that means going into 2024.

The hostage deal (brought to you by Qatar)

November 27, 2023 | After 50 days of the Israel-Hamas war, both sides took a breather to save lives. And it couldn’t have happened without Qatar.

Inside the occupied West Bank

November 20, 2023 | With the world focused on Gaza, Israeli settlers and soldiers are increasing attacks on Palestinians in the West Bank. Writer Nathan Thrall and journalist Dalia Hatuqa explain the decades of tension that shape life in the West Bank.

A call from Gaza

November 14, 2023 | People are desperately trying to escape Gaza as the siege on the strip continues. Mohammed Ghalaieny, a Palestinian British man, tells us why he is choosing to stay, even as other foreign nationals escape through the Rafah border crossing with Egypt.

A Jew and a Muslim get honest about Israel and Gaza

November 13, 2023 | Zack Beauchamp, a Vox senior correspondent who writes about democracy and Israel, speaks with Shadi Hamid, a columnist at the Washington Post, research professor of Islamic studies at Fuller Seminary, and author of The Problem of Democracy: America, the Middle East, and the Rise and Fall of an Idea. They discuss the October 7 attack, the subsequent war in Gaza, what it means for Israelis and Palestinians, and how Jews and Muslims in the United States can find common ground amid their communities’ grief. This conversation was recorded on November 2, 2023.

BDS and the history of the boycott

November 8, 2023 | If you turn on the news or scroll through your social media feed of choice, there’s a good chance you’ll see the latest on the Israel-Hamas war — and the reaction to it. But there’s one call to action making its way down social media feeds that feels different from all these other responses. It’s called BDS, short for boycott, divest, and sanction. And like just about everything related to this conflict, it’s complicated and controversial. The Weeds host Jonquilyn Hill sits down with Vox senior reporter Whizy Kim to explain the controversial movement, and with Cornell professor and author of Buying Power: A History of Consumer Activism in America Lawrence B. Glickman to discuss the history of boycotts and whether they even work.

Ceasefire?

November 8, 2023 | Protesters, politicians, and the pope are calling for a ceasefire in the Israel-Hamas war, but the US and Israeli governments remain opposed. Vox’s Jonathan Guyer and Jon B. Alterman from the Center for Strategic and International Studies explain what happens next.

The view from Israel

November 2, 2023 | Israelis overwhelmingly disapprove of their government’s handling of the October 7 attacks, but their desire for unity keeps Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in power. Michael Koplow of the Israel Policy Forum explains what Israel’s government should do next, and professor Noah Efron of Bar-Ilan University describes the mood among Israelis.

Gaza’s humanitarian crisis

October 30, 2023 | Cut off from water and power and recovering from a communications blackout, Gaza is plunged deeper into crisis. It’s not just a humanitarian problem, says leading human rights attorney Kenneth Roth — it’s a violation of international law.

Why does the US always side with Israel?

October 25, 2023 | This was the top question we got when we asked Today, Explained listeners hat they wanted to know about this conflict. Joel Beinin, Middle East history professor emeritus at Stanford, has answers.

Hearts, minds, and likes

October 23, 2023 | False information about what is happening in Israel and Gaza is taking over social media faster than journalists like BBC Verify’s Shayan Sardarizadeh can check it. That’s exactly how digital propagandists want it, says professor and social media expert Marc Owen Jones.

Biden goes to Israel

October 18, 2023 | It’s been 11 days since Hamas attacked Israel, killing civilians and taking hostages. Israel’s retaliation has killed hundreds of Palestinians and created a humanitarian crisis in Gaza. Senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment Aaron David Miller and Middle East analyst Michael Wahid Hanna explain what role diplomacy will play in the coming days.

How Palestinians view Hamas

October 16, 2023 | The US along with Israel and many of its allies have long considered Hamas a terrorist group. Khaled Al-Hroub, a professor at Northwestern University in Qatar, explains how its reputation is a lot murkier among Palestinians, who elected the group to political power in 2006.

Israel, Hamas, and how we got here

October 10, 2023 | This Israel-Hamas war is unlike the ones that came before it, says Haaretz’s Allison Kaplan Sommer. But it was years in the making, says Vox’s Zack Beauchamp.


Read full article on: vox.com
I’m a super-commuter — I travel across 4 states to work in NYC and my salary is worth it
When taking the job, Rice rationalized that his commute would actually be shorter than someone who actually lives in New York. "I calculated my commute versus someone living in Long Island," he said. "It came out to be roughly the same amount of time."
nypost.com
‘Live’s Kelly Ripa and Mark Consuelos Read Out Adorable “Puppy Personal Ads” on National Dog Rescue Day
"Allie is searching for her soul mate. Are you?"
nypost.com
Asylum Applicants Allowed to Remain Surge Under Biden
Two thirds of asylum seekers in U.S. immigration courts over the past decade have been legally entitled to remain in the country.
newsweek.com
I was called a freak for having no belly button — now I earn six figures as a fitness influencer
The athlete suffered from a condition called gastroschisis, a birth defect in which a baby's intestines poke through a hole in the abdominal wall near the belly button, sometimes along with other organs.
nypost.com
Pope Francis Risks US Fury With Border, Conservative Bishops Comments
The pope said his conservative critics within the Catholic Church in the U.S. are trapped in a "suicidal attitude."
newsweek.com
The very best beach towels of 2024, per our reviews
Perfect to snag before this Memorial Day.
nypost.com
Marjorie Taylor Greene Shares Video Response to Body Comments
The Republican congresswoman posted a video following a chaotic clash in a House hearing last week.
newsweek.com
Ukraine May Soon Have to Sue for Peace | Opinion
While the war with Russia has enabled a quiet extension of Volodymyr Zelensky's term, it is a fitting moment to take stock of a catastrophe that has been overshadowed by the Gaza war.
newsweek.com
Iran's first vice president, Mohammad Mokhber, appointed acting president after crash
Iran’s first vice president, Mohammad Mokhber, has been appointed president of the Islamic Republic after the death of President Ebrahim Raisi in a helicopter crash.
latimes.com
The Best Deals for Switching Electric Companies
Some of the cheapest options come via 100 percent renewable energy plans where all of the electricity usage is offset by green power generation.
newsweek.com
To Avoid Danger, U.S. Must Lead on Crypto and Blockchain | Opinion
My fellow Democrats aren't trying to smother the emerging industry being born from artificial intelligence—they're trying to establish wise and fair rules.
newsweek.com
Israel on Iran President’s Helicopter Crash Death: ‘It Wasn't Us!’
Azin Haghighi/Anadolu via Getty ImagesAn Israeli official has gone on the record to deny their country was behind the helicopter crash which claimed the lives of Iran’s president, foreign minister, and others Sunday.President Ebrahim Raisi, Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian, and the six other passengers on board the chopper that went down in
thedailybeast.com
Black Cat Determined to Remain Center of Attention After Owners Have Baby
"Wherever the baby is, Otis is never far behind," the cat's owner, Lahni Amosa from Sydney, Australia, told Newsweek.
newsweek.com
Top Democrat calls for Biden to replace FDIC chairman to fix agency's 'toxic culture'
The most powerful Democrat in Congress on banking and financial issues called for President Joe Biden to replace the chairman of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. on Monday, saying the agency is broken and there must be “fundamental changes."
abcnews.go.com
What Happened to Amari Galan? Missing Colorado Toddler Found Dead
Amari Galan was found dead on Sunday after a search lasting nearly two days.
newsweek.com
Woman Asks About Skin Care Changes For Her 30s, Gets 'Ruthless' Response
Newsweek asked an expert to answer one woman's viral plea for skin care advice ahead of turning 30.
newsweek.com
Iran's President Died in a 50-Year-Old American Helicopter
The US-made Bell 212, developed in the 1970s, has been one of the leading helicopters for the Iranian Air Force since the Islamic Revolution.
newsweek.com
Livvy Dunne and Paige Spiranac match in sheer dresses at SI Swimsuit event: ‘Twinning’
They're the dynamic duo bound to break the internet.
nypost.com
Washington Commanders continue transforming their front office
The franchise named Brandon Sosna senior vice president of football operations and is expected to hire David Blackburn as its director of player personnel.
washingtonpost.com
Red Lobster files for bankruptcy after losing millions on ill-fated all-you-can-eat shrimp promotion
Red Lobster's largest investor "forced huge cost reductions, including many that were penny wise and pound foolish because they hurt sales.”
nypost.com
Catholic Monk Comes Out as Transgender: 'Deal With Us'
In a declaration, the Vatican said God created men and women as biologically different beings.
newsweek.com
Cruise ship captain detained after crash kills 2, leaves 5 missing
A Czech national, the captain was on the Swiss-based cruise ship Saturday night when it struck a motorboat that was carrying eight people late Saturday.  
nypost.com
El presidente de República Dominicana avanza a la reelección y sus rivales reconocen derrota
El presidente de República Dominicana, Luis Abinader, se encaminó a la reelección el domingo con poco más de un 20% del avance del escrutinio y un apoyo del 59,09% de los votos, después de que sus contendientes reconocieran su derrota.
latimes.com
The best Father’s Day gift ideas inspired by celebrities
Want to give Dad the star treatment this Father’s Day? There's no need to roll out the red carpet to add a little luxe to his life.
nypost.com
MLB expected to investigate Shohei Ohtani’s ex-teammate, David Fletcher, for gambling on sports
ESPN reported Friday night that Fletcher placed bets with Mathew Bowyer, an alleged illegal bookmaker in Southern California.
nypost.com
Jack White Trashes Joe Rogan
Rocker White lashed out at Rogan following his recent interview with "Empire" star Terrence Howard.
newsweek.com
"CBS Mornings" celebrates Tony Dokoupil's 5-year anniversary
"CBS Mornings" celebrates Tony Dokoupil as he marks five years as an anchor on the show.
cbsnews.com
The Sneaky Move Uber and Lyft Are Using to Lower Their Tax Bill
Gig corporations freeload off other employers that comply with laws and support safety nets.
slate.com
This popular exercise could help you live longer and stop knee pain
It’s the cycle of life. Lifelong bicyclers may live longer, have stronger immune systems and are less likely to experience knee pain or osteoarthritis, than people who don’t bike ride. Although previous studies have already shown several benefits of cycling, new research, now shows that people who cycle regularly have significantly less chance of d
nypost.com
Woman Leaves Boots Outside for a Week—Finds Nest, Mysterious Eggs Inside
Social-media users adorned the nest found in the viral clip, with one writing "nature truly is so beautiful."
newsweek.com
"CBS Mornings" celebrates Vlad Duthiers' 5-year anniversary on "What to Watch"
"CBS Mornings"celebrates the 5-year anniversary of Vlad Duthiers hosting "What to Watch" by taking a look back at some favorite moments.
cbsnews.com
Tourist Attempts Aesthetic Video in Venice, You Know How It Ends
This woman proved the lengths a solo traveler must go for the perfect shot.
newsweek.com
'Wheel of Fortune' Praised for Not Allowing Contestant's Answer
To be successful in "Wheel of Fortune," contestants must say all words included in the answer and they must be said correctly.
newsweek.com
Ricky Stenhouse Jr. — and his dad — fight Kyle Busch in wild NASCAR brawl
Kyle Busch had to answer to two Ricky Stenhouses after a controversial start to the NASCAR All-Star race Sunday.
nypost.com
Target to cut prices on 5,000 items in bid to lure cash-strapped customers
Target joins other retailers and other major businesses moving to slash prices as inflation-weary consumers grow thriftier.
cbsnews.com
Slouching doesn’t impact your spine — it affects your memory
Researchers say there’s no backbone to the argument that slouching is bad for your spine.
nypost.com
Man Leaves $200 Tip for Tattoo Artist, Sparks Debate
"Tip what you want to tip," said one commenter.
newsweek.com
Rep. Elise Stefanik demands sanctions on ‘illegitimate’ ICC over Netanyahu arrest warrant bid
House Republican Conference Chair Elise Stefanik called Monday for Congress to sanction the International Criminal Court following prosecutors’ announcement they will seek an arrest warrant against Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. “The ICC is an illegitimate court that equivocates a peaceful nation protecting its right to exist with radic
nypost.com
Pregnant? Researchers want you to know something about fluoride
Elevated prenatal exposure to fluoride was associated with increased risk of neurobehavioral problems in 3-year-olds, according to a study of children in Los Angeles.
latimes.com
Kevin Costner admits he felt ‘broken’ on a ‘daily basis’ amid Christine Baumgartner divorce
"I've taken big bites out of life, life's taken big ones out of me, right?" the actor said. "I'm not going to lose myself because I've been bruised."
nypost.com
Sudan's Agony Continues Unabated While World Watches | Opinion
The beleaguered Sudanese people need help.
newsweek.com
Man seriously injured by grizzly bear while hunting with father
Despite suffering broken bones and lacerations during the attack, the man was able to defend himself with his gun and the bear ran off.
cbsnews.com
Judge Merchan Makes 'Smart Move' in Donald Trump Trial: Legal Analyst
Judge Juan Merchan, who is overseeing Donald Trump's criminal hush money case, said closing arguments will be next week.
newsweek.com
Parents Charged With Murder After Infant's Brutal Death
Two Florida parents remain behind bars after being charged with murdering and abusing their 6-month-old baby girl after her death is ruled a homicide.
newsweek.com
Google, Meta warned that undersea internet cables at risk for Chinese espionage: report
The concerns are reportedly centered on underwater fiber-optic cables in the Pacific Ocean that are partially owned by the Big Tech firms and used to maintain the flow of data from the US to Asia.
nypost.com
Shelter Dog Stares out of Crack in Kennel Every Day Waiting to Be Picked
"He seems to always be looking through that crack whenever I am there to walk the pups," Shellby Hall told Newsweek.
newsweek.com
Simone Biles blasts fans who are ‘disrespectful’ about Jonathan Owens marriage: ‘F–k off’
Simone Biles made it clear that she won't tolerate negative comments about her husband, Bears defensive back Jonathan Owens and their marriage.
nypost.com
Inside the ultra-luxe Maldivian hotel where Sienna Miller babymooned: $3K-per-night villa, tree houses, hypnobirthing classes
“I would highly recommend coming here, just the two of you. Ultimately, indulgence and delicious food is all you care about at that point,” she gushed.
nypost.com