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Elderly couple, son and daughter-in-law killed when Iranian missile hit their apartment building during alert.
“We are systematically eliminating the Revolutionary Guard’s money machine,” said the Israeli prime minister.
Israeli Air Force fighter jets take part in coordinated wave of attacks targeting weapons production and launch sites.
Israeli lawmaker Ariel Kallner says a ceasefire would allow Tehran to regroup and warns against pauses in pressure on the regime.
Of these, 118 remain hospitalized, including two in critical condition.
Soldiers uncover weapons, dismantle observation posts and kill operatives as part of ongoing effort to secure northern Israel
The rapper is set to headline the three-day event, dubbed the Wireless Festival, in London in July.
Iran has “no red lines,” Israel’s Foreign Ministry said.
The National Jewish Advocacy Center called the decision about the Surfside election a “major voting rights victory.”
The team said that the person it banned purchased tickets, which were used by people who performed a Nazi salute.
Although AIPAC supports Goldman, a source on the congressman’s campaign told JNS that “it makes no sense to suggest that we’re in the hands of AIPAC.”
“To have that full commitment and engagement, both at the public level, but also in the faith school system, is incredibly powerful,” Heather Mann, a project officer with UNESCO, told JNS.
The Israeli Foreign Ministry called the decision a “major step in holding the Palestinian authority accountable for its long-lasting terror support—financially and legally.”
The program aims to address “antisemitism as both a rhetorical challenge and an ever-shifting but persistent social reality,” Kelly Carr, an associate professor at the university, stated.
The U.S. president told reporters that the next 24 hours were a “critical period” as Iran faces a deadline to reach a deal.
Prosecutors said Dalin Brown, 24, allegedly broke into a house under construction, started a fire and carved antisemitic messages into the walls.
Students for a Democratic Society stated that the event seeks to “expose UW’s refusal to divest from war and genocide during tourism season.”
“The people there now are much more reasonable than the lunatics,” the U.S. president said of Tehran’s current leadership.
Humzah Mashkoor, 20, planned to route money through cryptocurrency and travel overseas to join the terrorist group before his arrest at Denver International Airport in December 2023.
“It’s pretty terrifying to see a speaker walk onto campus giving a Nazi salute, and seeing the hatred that he carries,” Juli Goodman, executive director of Hillel at Ohio University, said.
The U.S. envoy said the “Politico” profile of an “antisemitic bomb-thrower” ignores how the U.N. rapporteur is “sabotaging the U.N.’s mission of peace.”
U.S. President Donald Trump told Fox News that if the Iranian regime doesn’t strike a deal by Tuesday, he would consider “blowing everything up and taking over the oil.”
“I will stand up anytime, anywhere you need me to call out the antisemitism and all the other horrible instances of hatred espoused toward the people of the Jewish religion,” the New York City mayor said.
“Religious liberty is foundational to our Constitution, and the freedom to practice one’s faith openly and in community is central to the American story,” said Scott Bessent, the U.S. treasury secretary.
The U.S. president told reporters that the next 24 hours were a “critical period” as Iran faces a deadline to reach a deal.
Elderly couple, son and daughter-in-law killed when Iranian missile hit their apartment building during alert.
Israeli lawmaker Ariel Kallner says a ceasefire would allow Tehran to regroup and warns against pauses in pressure on the regime.
U.S. President Donald Trump told Fox News that if the Iranian regime doesn’t strike a deal by Tuesday, he would consider “blowing everything up and taking over the oil.”
The two attacks constitute “a severe economic blow to the Iranian regime, amounting to tens of billions of dollars.”

The decision came after criticism leveled at the Supreme Court for upholding a request to hold a larger anti-war protest in Tel Aviv.
“Every terrorist target and any target that supports terrorism in Lebanese territory will be struck.”
Recent shows revive a debate that has echoed across Jewish and Christian tradition for millennia.
Nahariya hospital moves underground as Metula residents stand fast despite frequent Hezbollah rocket attacks.
“You are constantly in pursuit, but there is no way to get to everything.”
The film documents the circumstances of the small rural town of Gniewoszów, focusing on one of its last living survivors, along with a resident who says he saw Jews murdered there six months after the Nazis’ reign of terror ended.
A combat medic with the IDF’s 769th Brigade speaks with JNS about the complex reality faced by Israel’s northern residents due to ongoing attacks by Hezbollah.

“It’s a great victory for the First Amendment right to free speech, including the right to draw attention to bigotry and hateful speech,” Paul Eckles, of the Brandeis Center, told JNS. “We commend our client for having the courage to speak out.”
“What the enemy is trying to push through today against the Palestinian resistance, via our brotherly mediators, is extremely dangerous,” the terrorist group said.
“I stood on a chair at the kitchen table, watching mom and Bubbe grate the apples for the charoset, and I would sneak little bits of fruit,” says a daughter who has since become a mother.
“My intent was to honor our Jewish neighbors and friends,” Nathalie Kanani stated. “We are all human, and even with the best intentions, honest mistakes can happen.”
The question follows a controversial ruling by the Israeli High Court of Justice instructing the military to permit an anti-war protest on Saturday night in larger numbers than wartime restrictions on public gathering allow.
“I will stand up anytime, anywhere you need me to call out the antisemitism and all the other horrible instances of hatred espoused toward the people of the Jewish religion,” the New York City mayor said.
NOW PLAYING ON JNS TV
Trump’s Iran strategy explained
ISRAEL UNDIPLOMATIC with hosts Ruthie Blum and Mark Regev.

This episode rips open the chess match behind the current war in Iran and President Trump’s looming ultimatum. Senior contributing editor at JNS Ruthie Blum and former Israeli ambassador to the United Kingdom Mark Regev—both former advisers in the Prime Minister’s Office— explain how modern war and diplomacy actually collide in real time. As missiles fly and deadlines tick down, the discussion unpacks whether Trump’s 15-point plan is a genuine peace offer or a calculated setup for massive escalation, revealing how military pressure, internal regime cracks and global energy chokepoints like the Strait of Hormuz all intertwine. Finally, the hosts clash over the ultimate question: is this the beginning of the end for Iran’s regime… or just another phase of a much bigger game?
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Trump’s Iran strategy explained
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Why Israel’s wartime resilience is reshaping the Iran conflict
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How the Iran conflict is reshaping alliances in the Arab world
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How Israel eliminated one of Iran’s top military commanders
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How Trump used strategic chokepoints to pressure Iran and China
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How media framing shapes coverage of Iran and global conflicts
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Is the Iranian regime near collapse?
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How Iran missile strikes are reported in Western media
Press releases from Israel and around the pro-Israel and Jewish world
The Passover story—of slavery, resistance, liberation—is not just a Jewish story. It is a human story, now playing out.
“Don’t miss this incredible opportunity to participate in a global celebration of heritage and hope,” says co-chair Sara Cannon.
With two graduate degrees in education, Josh Micley is an experienced leader who has served as a camp director, public school teacher and school administrator.

Retired Maj. Gen. Danny Rothschild and nuclear expert Ori Nissim Levy detail the military campaign, Iran’s enriched uranium stockpile and next steps.
A new collaboration expands efforts to address antisemitism and advance student leadership.
And volunteerism becomes one of its primary engines.
“We’re opening the door for talented Jewish professionals to pursue chaplaincy with the highest standards of training, ethics and clinical experience,” said Leslie Ginsparg Klein, dean and chief academic officer of Gratz College.
Through a new Fuente Latina program, young journalists visit key sites and report on major stories, earning international bylines.
Debates over which form of political antisemitism is “worse” obscure a more dangerous reality.
The event brought together professionals from camps, congregations, campuses, JCCs, youth groups, schools and community organizations.