Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

U.S. News

The latest news, videos, analysis and opinions on U.S. politics, business, government, society, culture and more. JNS covers breaking stories, features and in-depth reports on Washington, New York and cities and states across America where Jews live.

Talks with Tehran show promise, said the U.S. Middle East envoy, who hinted at “an array” of new countries joining the Abraham Accords normalization agreements.
“Several key Iranian nuclear facilities were destroyed and would need to be rebuilt over the course of years.”
The alleged attacker left a document in his car that stated “Zionism is our enemies until Jerusalem is liberated and they are expelled from our land.”
“Maybe Donald Trump doesn’t want Congress or even America to know the truth about what’s going on,” said Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer.
“If the general election becomes a one-on-one matchup, voters who disliked Cuomo but also aren’t fully comfortable with Mamdani could be up for grabs,” Henry Olsen told JNS.
The U.S. president also proclaimed that Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer is “groveling over him.”
Americans “are extremely troubled by the possibility that involvement could metastasize and draw the United States into a direct war with Iran,” a Quinnipiac University analyst stated.
The leaders also “reviewed next steps to promote durable peace between Iran and Israel,” said U.S. State Department spokesperson Tammy Bruce.
Ammaad Akhtar, 33, is accused of trying to give money, guns and ammunition to someone he thought was part of the terror group, and of making antisemitic threats.
Tehran “has broken every commitment it has ever made,” the Israeli envoy told the U.N. Security Council.
Eric Fingerhut, CEO of the Jewish Federation, told JNS he hopes that Jews “will organize themselves to make sure that there’s a serious opposition in the general election.”
A U.S. government-facilitated flight to Rome on Tuesday morning nearly coincided with the last Iranian missile barrage.