Iran, Israel
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In a conversation with The Economist's editor-in-chief, Zanny Minton Beddoes, Tucker Carlson discusses the U.S. relationship with Israel and the fallout of the Iran war. The full interview is here, behind The Economist's paywall: ZANNY MINTON BEDDOES,
That is, they attack adversaries, and when the adversary rebuilds, Israel merely attacks again. The United States is different. Americans see themselves as problem solvers, inclined to use their country’s might and its broad policy tool kit to fix things once and for all and then move on to the next problem.
On two major occasions, the Trump administration has gestured at Israel being mostly responsible for major inflection points in the Iran war — even though the evidence on both counts isn’t totally clear.
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. The United States is sanctioning two more International Criminal Court judges for targeting Israel with politicized lawfare, Secretary of State Marco Rubio announced on Thursday.
The United States views Iran through a prism of global responsibilities and strategic goals. Israel has a more regional approach. After nearly three weeks of war, their paths are diverging.
Eight months after the last war—that short-lived one—in the region, Israel and the United States launched an extensive and powerful military attack against Iran on Saturday. This is an unprecedented episode in the history of the Middle East, both ...
To grasp the importance of Israel’s unprecedented September attack on Hamas negotiators in Doha, just look at President Trump’s decision to sign an executive order guaranteeing Qatar’s security — a startling step for a non-NATO ally. The day before ...
Israel’s defense minister has threatened a surge in attacks against Iran and Britain condemned Iran for targeting a joint U.K.-U.S. base in the Indian Ocean