Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

U.S. Politics

“The Houthis continue to leverage an expansive support network to facilitate their illicit activities,” said U.S. under secretary Brian Nelson.
Since Hamas’s Oct. 7 massacre, Poland’s Confederation Party has intensified its anti-Israel and antisemitic rhetoric.
A unilateral deal to free the five Americans being held by the terror group is a “very real option,” according to senior U.S. officials.
“Endorsing murderous terrorist organizations like Hamas is repugnant, dangerous and against everything we stand for as a country,” says deputy White House spokesperson.
Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, who voted against the bill, said that “We must not do petty politics on the backs of the great IDF fighters.”
Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese calls for “respectful political debate.”
“We mourn all of the innocent lives that have been lost in Gaza, including those tragically killed today,” the U.S. vice president said on Saturday at a Michigan fundraiser.
The invitation “symbolizes the U.S. and Israel’s enduring relationship,” congressional leaders said.
“The next step to ending Iranian aggression is by deepening the United States’ international space partnerships,” says Sen. Joni Ernst.
“Any university receiving federal funding has a duty to promote equal opportunity to all students and to comply with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act.”
Karim Khan, prosecutor of the International Criminal Court in The Hague, provided “material support” to Hamas, the senators wrote.
The U.S. State Department “unequivocally rejects dehumanizing and inflammatory language, regardless of who is targeted by such rhetoric,” a spokesperson said.