Freed Hamas hostage Edan Alexander evacuates Israel

(NewsNation) — An American-Israeli hostage who was held captive in the Gaza Strip for more than 19 months has left Israel amid Iranian strikes.

NewsNation confirmed Edan Alexander evacuated Israel on Wednesday with his mother on a special evacuation flight back to the U.S. Once on American soil, he will return to his hometown of Tenafly, New Jersey, on Thursday.

“I want to tell you, Edan, we love you and we are so happy you’re back,” Yitzchak Gershovitz, his family rabbi, told CBS News. “This is our brother. Our son returns home, and our hearts are full of joy and happiness. There’s only one word: it’s a miracle of God.”

The U.S. Embassy in Israel was working Thursday to evacuate Americans via flight and cruise ship, as the Israel-Iran conflict ramps up and President Donald Trump weighs potential U.S. military action.

Edan Alexander held hostage for 19 months

Taken from his military base in southern Israel during Hamas’ attack on Oct. 7, 2023, Alexander was one of 251 kidnapped during the violence that claimed around 1,200 lives.

He was believed to be the last remaining American-Israeli hostage in Gaza.

During his captivity, his mother, Yael Alexander, told NewsNation, “It’s very, very tough to wake up every day. It’s a nightmare, but this is our life now, and whatever we are doing, it’s not enough.”

  • Edan Alexander hugs family member
  • Edan Alexander poses for a picture with his father, Adi.
  • Edan Alexander smiles with family members
  • People watch a live broadcast of Israeli-American soldier Edan Alexander

After 584 days in captivity, Alexander was released May 12 as part of a deal brokered by the Trump administration.

Israel’s retaliatory offensive in Gaza has killed more than 55,000 Palestinians, mostly women and children, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry, which doesn’t differentiate between civilians and combatants in its count. The campaign has destroyed large areas of Gaza and displaced around 90% of its population.

Hamas was hopeful to use Alexander’s release to revive ceasefire talks, but Israel launched a renewed offensive days later. A permanent ceasefire has not yet been reached.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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CNBC was left holding the bag on Friday when Elon Musk abruptly backed out of a live, heavily promoted interview moments before it was set to air, as SpaceX shares slid below the price of their first public trade.

The network had spent the morning teasing the sit-down, billed as Musk's first television interview since SpaceX went public. Anchor Scott Wapner threw to correspondent Julia Boorstin at the Allen & Co. gathering in Sun Valley, Idaho, to explain why it suddenly wasn't happening.

"We've been promoting this exclusive interview that Elon Musk was expected to give to our Julia Boorstin, which is now apparently no longer happening. I want to bring in Julia Boorstin, who's been in Sun Valley. Julia, do you want to explain to us exactly what happened here, as this was imminent?" said Wapner.

"Yeah, we were expecting to start an interview with Elon Musk right now at noon Eastern. We just got word that he has to postpone," Boorstin replied, adding that the network hopes Musk will offer a new time.

Boorstin noted that SpaceX shares were trading below the level of their very first trade and well off the highs the stock reached after its record June debut. As she spoke, shares were off nearly 3% at around $148. SpaceX priced its IPO at $135 and opened at $150 on June 12 before surging in its opening sessions, then slipping back below that opening level as it was pulled into major market indexes.

She said there was plenty she had hoped to raise, including Grok 4.5, the AI model Musk's company launched Wednesday, and how SpaceX is holding down customer prices as component costs climb. That thread would have followed a CNBC interview a day earlier with OpenAI's Sam Altman about efficiency gains in his company's newest models.

Wapner called it an unfortunate development and said the network would report any update.