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The dogfight was the first time an F-35 downed a manned aircraft.
The Israeli military says its air campaign aims to expand aerial superiority across the Islamic Republic.
A total of 145 people are still in care, according to Israel’s Health Ministry.
“This strategy of escalation is a major fault that is jeopardizing the entire region,” said the French president.
The inbound-only flights were being operated by all four Israeli airlines, led by flag carrier El Al, to bring home tens of thousands of Israelis stranded abroad by the war.
“Keep going to the end—we are with you,” the American defense secretary told his counterpart.
Israeli forces pound Iranian command centers; Jerusalem says Air Force has fired thousands of munitions to degrade the Islamic Republic’s power.
Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps sent two Soviet-era Su-24 tactical bombers toward Al-Udeid Air Base, on Monday morning.
The IDF has been deployed across Lebanon’s south following Hezbollah’s decision to join the war on behalf of Iran.
“The Iranians were pretending to negotiate but were obfuscating the whole time,” the U.S. special envoy said on “The Mark Levin Show.”
“This is a necessary, principled move confronting evil,” said Gideon Sa’ar, Israel’s foreign minister.
Militias near the Iran-Iraq border are being considered an ally in internal fighting, according to “Reuters.”
Spanish Foreign Minister José Manuel Albares stated that the government’s position on the use of its bases against Iran “has not changed one iota.”
Sen. John Fetterman was the lone Democrat to vote against the measure, and Sen. Rand Paul was the only Republican in favor.
Jasmine Crockett’s seat in Texas’s 30th Congressional District is likely to be taken up by Frederick Haynes III, a pastor who condemned Israel as an “apartheid” state the day after Oct. 7.
“Targeting any house of worship is an attack on the fundamental freedoms that define our nation,” the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Indiana stated.
The Israeli-American Civic Action Network stated that referring to Israel as an apartheid state “provides rhetorical cover to those who seek Israel’s destruction.”
The bill would remove restrictions preventing government contracts with companies that join economic campaigns against Israel.
Sid Rosenberg issued an on-air apology after his post drew backlash, stating that the comment “had nothing to do with anybody’s religion or faith.”
A spokeswoman for AIPAC, which has $96 million on hand, said that “our six million grassroots members are as determined and eager as ever to participate this election cycle.”