Media

CBS host with kids, ex-wife in Israel recounts ‘roller-coaster weekend’

FILE - The CBS logo appears at their broadcast center in New York on May 10, 2017. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer, File)

“CBS Mornings” co-host Tony Dokoupil opened up about his experience of having two children and his ex-wife in Israel amid the country’s ongoing conflict with Palestinian militant group Hamas, telling viewers it was “a roller-coaster weekend.”

“I have an 11-year-old and a 14-year-old who live in Israel, they live there with their mother — my ex-wife — they are safe, but just as a father I think people can understand: If somebody, anybody, is firing rockets in the direction of your children without regard to whether they are struck or not, you’re going to feel a thing or two,” Dokoupil said Monday on “CBS Mornings.” “So it’s been a roller-coaster weekend.”

Dokoupil said he has been “sad, … angry and disgusted” watching the situation unfold in Israel.

“We’re talking about the direct, close-range murder of more than 700 civilians in their cars, in their homes, at a festival, and then the kidnapping and then the hostage-taking and then the evidence of rape,” Dokoupil said. “And I think there’s enough moral clarify in the world to say that this is wrong, it’s terrorism, and if it’s being done in your name, speak up.”

Pointing to Hamas’s history of violence, Dokoupil said there is “understandable fear” on behalf of the Israelis, specially with regards to the hostages.


Maintaining he approaches the topic “fairly” as a journalist, Dokoupil noted he is also a father, which cannot be separated from his job at times.

“I also just wanted to be clear with our viewers that I come to this fairly and as a journalist, but I’m also a father and you can’t separate those two at a certain point,” he said.

Fighting between Israeli forces and Hamas, which is recognized as a terroist organization by the U.S. government, raged on for the third day Monday after Hamas launched a surprise attack against Israel over the weekend.

Hamas forces invaded multiple Israeli towns by land, sea and air Saturday, as well as launching a barrage of rocket fire into Israel from Gaza. Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu quickly declared the country at war against Hamas, and the country has since launched several retaliatory airstrikes into Gaza.

The total death toll continued to rise Monday to a total of around 1,600 people, The Associated Press reported. About 900 people, including 73 soldiers, were killed in Israel, according to state media.

In Gaza, more than 680 have been killed so far, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health.

Hamas has claimed to have taken more than 100 hostages in the conflict, including both Israeli soldiers and civilians. The militant group pledged to kill captured Israelis if attacks targeted Gaza civilians without warnings, the AP reported.