Middle East
Exiled figures say Israel’s targeted strikes are the regime’s fault, and offer hope for liberation.
U.S. media report Jerusalem preparing for possible strike against Iran as negotiations falter; Washington orders embassy staff out of the region.
“These U.S. steps are not insignificant,” Jason Brodsky, policy director of United Against Nuclear Iran, told JNS.
The sixth round of talks is expected to begin in Muscat next week, according to Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmail Baghaei.
The attack on Hudaydah port reportedly marks the first time that the Jewish state has struck the Iranian-backed terror group from the sea.
“This is a world leader in human rights, and this is what they do?” said Philip Khazzam, descendant of the property’s owners.
In an interview with Israel’s Army Radio, Yasser Abu Shabab claimed dozens of Gaza families were being absorbed by the militia daily, and called on international media to stop spreading Hamas propaganda.
Saad bin Atef al-Awlaki said there are “no red lines” in his first video message since taking over the terrorist group’s Arabian Peninsula branch.
Experts differ on the implications of the Shi’ite group’s performance.
Tom Barrack met the Israeli PM in Jerusalem and said afterward that Trump envisions a Syria not used by any third party to threaten its neighbors.
The unlikely rise of the new Lebanese government can serve as a historic bookend for over 40 years of rising Shia power in Lebanon.
“The rude and arrogant leaders of America repeatedly demand that we should not have a nuclear program. Who are you to decide whether Iran should have enrichment?”