Media
The alleged move comes as Jerusalem awaits Iran’s anticipated revenge attack for last week’s assassination in Tehran of Hamas political bureau chief Ismail Haniyeh.
The group, which includes many employees of the “BBC,” is disappointed with the ways the public broadcaster has treated complaints of Jew-hatred.
“The only limit on Hamas’s willingness to kill every single Jew is Israel’s power of self-defense,” wrote former U.S. ambassador David Friedman.
The Israeli premier dismissed reports he is obstructing an agreement, pointing the finger at Hamas.
Middle Eastern officials told the paper the assassination’s planning likely took months and extensive surveillance.
Andrea Levin, head of the media watchdog, writes of the paper’s “striking indifference” to “adhering to professional standards mandating accuracy.”
“Some of these comments, if ultimately attributable to the shooter, appear to reflect antisemitic and anti-immigration themes, to espouse political violence and are described as extreme in nature,” Paul Abbate, the deputy director of the FBI, testified to Congress.
Washington “put pressure on the Israelis to allow for humanitarian assistance to get in unimpeded, and we continue to work on those efforts,” Linda Thomas-Greenfield said.
Hezbollah-affiliated Al Mayadeen broadcast live from the site where a rocket barrage fired by the Lebanese terror group killed 12 children.
The summit came a day after Jerusalem delivered an updated proposal to the United States.
“Having allies is the only way to make this country have the conversations it should be having,” says Archie Gottesman, the organization’s co-founder.
The video appears to show the former president wandering away from his Israeli counterpart.