Iran, Israel and Netanyahu
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Twenty-four hours later, Israel began attacking Iran. In one instant, Netanyahu’s political problems were swept away. No more ultra-Orthodox parties complaining about the military draft or far-right parties shouting about praying in the al-Aqsa compound. “The cards are in his hands. If they weren’t a week ago, they are now,” said the official.
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The Mirror US on MSNIsrael 'undermined Trump's position' as Netanyahu signals country is 'losing' to IranIsrael "undermined Trump's negotiating position" on Iran by attacking the country, which Iran partly blamed on the U.S. Netanyahu is also signaling that his country is "losing" to Iran, an expert said
An investigation by The Associated Press earlier this year uncovered that the Israeli military uses U.S.-made AI models in war to sift through intelligence and intercept communications to learn the movements of its enemies. It’s been used in the wars with Hamas in Gaza and with Hezbollah in Lebanon.
The Israeli leader said U.S. homeland could be next on Tehran's targets and criticized U.S. far-right though he was appreciative of Trump's support.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will sit down for an interview airing Sunday with Fox News anchor Bret Baier, his first since Israel's strikes on Iran.
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Pahlavi — the eldest son of the former Shah of Iran, the last leader before the Islamic Revolution in 1979 saw him swept from power — issued his call to action in a video posted on X.
President Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu spoke by telephone on Tuesday, a White House official said. The official didn't provide details about the conversation.
Israel was not ready for a war of attrition and hopes for the magician Donald Trump. In Telegram, Israelis share what they discuss "in the kitchens," the observer writes Pravda.Ru Lyubov Stepushova.