Trump, Israel and Gulf
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The militant group in Yemen was still firing at ships and shooting down drones, while U.S. forces were burning through munitions.
President Donald Trump heads to the Middle East for peace deals and business negotiations, even as tensions allegedly rise with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
The United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) said on Sunday it received a report of an incident 80 nautical miles off the United Arab Emirates' Jebel Ali port.
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Trump’s Unimpressive Yemen Cease-Fire Deal(And those attacks on Israeli ships were themselves in response to the Israeli government renewing its policy of starving and massacring the people of Gaza, with no Houthi attacks taking place while the Trump-brokered Gaza cease-fire had been in place).
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The Times of Israel on MSNTrump ditched Israel with surprise Houthi truce. That doesn’t bode well on IranDays after Yemeni group caused untold economic damage by hitting Ben Gurion Airport, the US president blindsided his allies; this has no doubt unsettled Jerusalem amid nuclear talks The post Trump ditched Israel with surprise Houthi truce.
For President Donald Trump’s boosters, these are proof that his hard-charging America First foreign and trade policies are yielding results better and faster than his predecessors could only imagine.
President Donald Trump said the United States was informed ... “CENTCOM is conducting strikes across multiple locations of Iran-backed Houthi locations every day and night in Yemen.
A new report shows how the Houthis will remain a major threat even if they agree to a Red Sea ceasefire so long as nations like Iran and Oman continue to support them.
In a way, the ceasefire for Iran and the Houthis is to prevent irreversible damage to Houthi capabilities on the ground.” The deal comes ahead of a high-profile trip by President Trump to the ...
For Trump, a president who often boasts about "holding the cards" in high-stakes negotiations—most famously during a heated encounter with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky at the White House in late February—Lipner felt the U.S. leader once again appears to have the necessary leverage to get his way.