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Trump pledges to solve ‘horrible’ situation in Israel quickly if elected

The Republican frontrunner for the White House says that the Jewish state would not have been attacked on Oct. 7 if he was still president.

Donald Trump
Former President Donald Trump, 2024 Republican frontrunner for the U.S. presidential election in November, speaks after winning the Iowa Caucuses in Des Moines, Iowa, on Jan. 15, 2024. Source: YouTube Screenshot.

Former President Donald Trump said on Monday that Israel would not have been attacked on Oct. 7 if he had still been president, and pledged to “solve” the “horrible” situation in the Jewish state if he is reelected in November.

In his victory speech after winning the Iowa caucuses by a landslide with 20 delegates, the 2024 Republican frontrunner for the White House declared from the state capital in Des Moines that current U.S. President Joe Biden is the “worst president that we’ve had in the history of the country.”

Trump, who served as president from 2017 until 2021, claimed that if he had remained in Washington, “Russia would not have attacked [Ukraine], Israel would never have been attacked.”

He said that these two issues would be resolved quickly should he be voted back into office later this year.

“The Ukraine situation is so horrible, the Israeli situation is so horrible, what’s happened. We’re going to get them solved, we are going to get them solved very fast,” he said.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis finished in distant second place to Trump with eight delegates, edging out Trump’s former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, Nikki Haley, with seven delegates. Entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy, who finished fourth with three delegates, announced that he is suspending his campaign and endorsed Trump.

“Periods of heightened conflict abroad too often coincide with increased fear, discrimination, and violence at home, putting both Jewish and Muslim Americans at risk,” the groups said.
The U.S. Justice Department said that the group “systematically targeted vulnerable children, coerced them into producing abuse material and threatened to destroy their lives if they resisted.”
“When Israel is fighting for the safety and security of its people, it is of special significance that representatives of many countries choose to sit together around the table of freedom and express partnership,” the Israeli ambassador said.
As missile barrages continue to target Israeli civilians, Katz warns Iran will pay “a heavy and escalating price for this war crime.”

“Citizens should contribute as much as they can to the country, and the state should give back. That kind of reciprocal relationship is our guiding principle,” she says.
Army says strikes on missile production, air defenses and naval assets have reduced the Islamic Republic’s capacity to attack.