Trump Administration
“They’ve chosen to take the most extreme view and state that they don’t have to offer evidence,” a legal expert, who supports the president, told JNS.
The Trump administration’s department instead referred to accusations that the Jewish state engaged in “conflict-related abuses” associated with its war against Hamas in Gaza.
The Israeli prime minister said the U.S. president’s “bold leadership and global vision have made another peace agreement possible.”
Stephen Miran’s “expertise in the world of economics is unparalleled,” the U.S. president stated.
The U.S. secretary of state stressed that for there to be long-term peace in the region, the Gaza-based terrorist group “cannot continue to exist.”
The president said U.S. actions have changed the region’s security landscape and predicted things will be “a lot different” in the coming years.
“I haven’t determined that yet,” said the president, with Mike Waltz’s nomination as U.S. ambassador in Turtle Bay on pause.
The U.S. president told reporters in Pennsylvania that “they’re in a war. Some horrible things happen.”
The U.S. envoy is meeting with Israeli officials to discuss the hostage crisis and plans to expand Gaza aid after failed truce negotiations.
The White House said that pushing for statehood rewards the Hamas terrorist group in Gaza.
“Harvard will eventually come around,” Harrison Fields, a White House spokesman, told “The New York Times.”
The U.S. and Israel are examining “alternative options” to bring home the captives, according to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.