US and Iran exchange fire as Vance says deal could be months away | First Thing
AI Summary
Israel launched airstrikes on Tyre and southern Lebanon on June 9, killing at least 8-13 people and triggering mass evacuations, despite a recently agreed ceasefire with the Lebanese government. The escalation occurred as Hezbollah rejected the ceasefire's conditions and Iran warned of further retaliation if Israeli operations continued.
Progressive: Progressive-leaning outlets emphasize that Israel violated a ceasefire agreement negotiated with the Lebanese government and continued military operations despite diplomatic pressure, including Trump's efforts to broker a broader Iran deal.
Moderate: Centrist outlets focus on the humanitarian toll and cyclical nature of the conflict, reporting on residents' evacuations and the interplay of warnings from Iran, Israel's military actions, and the fragile ceasefire efforts.
Conservative: Conservative-leaning outlets stress that Hezbollah's rejection of the ceasefire terms is the destabilizing factor, and highlight the group's ties to Iran and its refusal to accept agreements reached between Israel and the Lebanese government.
Vice-president says he expects war to end in a week or few months with ‘a deal that is good for US economically’. Plus, get ready for start of Fifa men’s World Cup
Good morning.
US forces have launched strikes against Iran in response to the downing of an Apache helicopter near the strait of Hormuz a day earlier, and Iran has retaliated by hitting American airbases in the Middle East. The exchange of fire came as the US vice-president, JD Vance, was vague on the possible timeframe for ending the Iran war, saying it could conclude in a week or a few months.
What did Vance actually say? “Right now, I feel that we are in a position to get a deal that is good for the United States economically and that really does deal with the Iranian nuclear program. Not just now, not just while Donald Trump is president, but for the long term, to where my kids can say when they’re adults: ‘Iran is not going to have a nuclear weapon.’”
Who is Steve Hilton? Since arriving in the US 14 years ago, he has had stints as an entrepreneur, a policy analyst and a Fox News host after years of working in the background of Conservative party politics in Britain.
Who has been supporting him? Hilton has assembled a broad coalition spanning working-class voters, Latino small-business owners, religious conservatives and Silicon Valley tech tycoons. He has managed to turn his British accent into an asset, priding himself on being a legal immigrant as opposed to the undocumented kind derided by the Republican establishment.
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