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President Trump announced on social media that “all shooting will stop” between Israel and Hezbollah.
Mr. Trump also said on his Truth Social platform that no Israeli troops would be going to the Lebanese capital of Beirut and any troops that were heading to the city have turned back.
The president said the agreement came after he had separate calls with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and “highly placed Representatives” of Hezbollah.
“They agreed that all shooting will stop — That Israel will not attack them, and they will not attack Israel,” Mr. Trump said.
President Trump said on Monday that talks with Iran “are continuing, at a rapid pace.”
He made the remark on his Truth Social platform without providing any additional information or details.
The U.S. military said Monday it has redirected 121 commercial vessels since the start of the U.S. blockade on Iranian ports and vessels.
It has disabled another five ships “to ensure compliance,” U.S. Central Command said on X.
The United Nations on Monday expressed alarm and called for all sides to respect the ceasefire as Israel expanded its offensive into Lebanon, while negotiations to end the U.S.-Iran war appeared in peril.
“We are deeply alarmed by the escalation in military activities across southern Lebanon and beyond,” said Stephane Dujarric, spokesman for U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres.
“We urge all actors to respect the cessation of hostilities and avoid further escalation,” Dujarric said.
President Trump said Monday that he has not heard from Iran on reports that they’re suspending talks with the U.S., but that “going silent would be very good.”
“I think we’ve been talking too much if you want to know the truth,” he told NBC News chief White House correspondent Garrett Haake.
“It doesn’t mean we’re going to go and start dropping bombs all over there,” the president said, according to Haake. “We’ll just go silent. We’ll keep the blockade. Blockade is a piece of steel.”
When Mr. Trump was asked if he can wait the Iranians out, he said, “I think I can wait as long as they want. They’re losing a fortune…”
Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) has warned residents of northern Israel to evacuate their homes if Israel goes through with the attack it has threatened in southern Beirut.
Iran’s semi-official Fars News, which is close to the IRGC, posted on X that the powerful paramilitary force was warning residents of Israel’s “northern regions and military settlements in the occupied territories that if they do not wish to be harmed, they should leave the area.”
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Monday he had ordered Israeli army troops to strike Hezbollah’s “terror headquarters” in southern Beirut. On Sunday Israeli troops took Beaufort castle in southern Lebanon, far north of the border between the two countries.
Iran said on Monday that the Israeli invasion of Lebanon constituted a violation of the U.S.-Iran ceasefire and that it was halting peace talks with the U.S.
Ministers from Germany and Norway had to call off a trip to Beirut on Monday as Israel continued its assault on the city, the ministers’ press services said.
German minister for international development Reem Alabali Radovan and Norwegian counterpart Asmund Aukrust had to abort and head back to Berlin “for military reasons” as they approached Beirut airport owing to a “rapidly worsening situation,” a spokesperson for Alabali Radovan told AFP.
The ministers had hoped to make the visit to show solidarity with the Lebanese people, but their German military aircraft had to land in Cyprus ahead of a return to Berlin, Norwegian daily VG reported.
A Norwegian government spokesman confirmed to AFP the trip had been scrapped.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had called earlier on the Israeli army to hit southern Beirut, saying they were going after “terrorist” targets.
On Sunday he ordered the scaling up of Israel’s Lebanon offensive with Israeli forces hitting positions of Iran-allied Hezbollah fighters.
“More than 3,000 people have been killed since March” in Israel’s deepest incursion into Lebanon in two decades, Aukrust told VG by telephone.
“What is happening now makes it all the more important to show our solidarity,” Aukrust added.
He said the Lebanese people “must know that where Norway is concerned we shall continue to fight for them and for international humanitarian law,” he went on.
Alabali Radovan called on “all sides” to de-escalate the fighting and urged ceasefire talks.
VG reported the ministers had been scheduled to meet with Lebanese President Joseph Aoun as well as civil society groups and displaced persons.
About 70 commercial ships have transited the Strait of Hormuz over the past three weeks with help from U.S. Central Command, a U.S. official told CBS News Monday.
CENTCOM has been communicating to the vessels how to use a path farther from Iran that the U.S. Navy cleared about a month ago. The New York Times first reported the story.
Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) said Monday that in the past 24 hours, 15 vessels – four of which were oil tankers – had transited the strait under its supervision.
Iran has been levying tolls on ships passing through the vital waterway.
The IRGC said in its statement that any vessels transiting the channel in “cooperation with hostile extra-regional forces” will be seen as “an imminent security threat and will be dealt with accordingly.”
Video circulating Monday on social media showed what was described as damage to a container vessel off the coast of Iraq, as the U.K. navy’s Maritime Trade Operations Centre (UKMTO) said a ship in the same part of the Persian Gulf had been struck by a projectile.
Pro-Iran media outlets shared video of the Panama-flagged container ship MSC Sariska V with a large hole in its side above the waterline. UKMTO said a cargo ship 40 nautical miles southeast of Umm Qasr, Iraq, had a “large explosion following a hit from an unknown projectile on the starboard side.”
Data from maritime tracking website MarineTraffic showed MSC Sariska V off the port of Umm Qasr Monday afternoon.
There have been 44 confirmed incidents in the Middle East maritime region, which includes the Strait of Hormuz, since the conflict in Iran began, according to the UKMTO. Monday’s explosion came as Iran’s Tasnim news outlet, which is linked to Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps, said the regime was suspending direct talks with the U.S. and opening “other fronts” in the war, including in the Bab el-Mandeb strait.
At least 3,433 people have been killed in Lebanon since the war between Israel and Hezbollah began on March 2, according to the Lebanese health ministry. In a post on X, the ministry added that at least 10,395 people had been wounded as a result of the war.
Israel has pushed its ground invasion into Lebanon deeper over the past few weeks. Israeli forces seized Beaufort castle on Sunday, which is miles north of the two countries’ shared border, and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ordered strikes on the Lebanese capital Monday, targeting what he called Hezbollah’s “terror headquarters.”
The Israeli army issued an evacuation warning Monday to residents of the southern Beirut suburb of Dahiyeh, suggesting strikes were imminent.
The U.N. Security Council was to hold an emergency session Monday on the Israel-Hezbollah war.
Meanwhile, Iran announced Monday that it was suspending indirect negotiations with the U.S. over Israel’s operations in Lebanon and other U.S. and Israeli actions it considers violations of the U.S.-Iran ceasefire.
Israel and Hezbollah have continued attacking each other despite a ceasefire signed by the Israeli and Lebanese governments in mid-April. Both Israel and Hezbollah have accused each other of violating the U.S.-brokered ceasefire, which Hezbollah was not party to.
26 Israeli soldiers have died in the fighting with Hezbollah, according to the IDF.
Oil prices were rising Monday following the latest fighting to threaten the U.S.-Iran ceasefire, but Wall Street didn’t appear very worried, with U.S. stocks hanging near their records.
The S&P 500 was virtually unchanged from its all-time high set on Friday. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 102 points, or 0.2%, as of 10:15 a.m. Eastern time, and the Nasdaq composite was flat. Both are also coming off records.
Some of the sharpest losses hit companies with big fuel bills hurt by the rise in oil prices. United Airlines lost 2.9%, and cruise-operator Carnival fell 2.7% as the price for a barrel of international benchmark Brent crude oil climbed Monday by almost 7% to $97.47. That clawed back a chunk of its loss from last week and means it’s still well above its price of roughly $70 from before the war.
Expensive oil has already sent inflation around the world higher, which not only increases bills for households but also pushes up bond yields. High yields worldwide recently have threatened to slow economies and undercut prices for stocks and all kinds of other investments.
Some of the hardest hit by high interest rates are smaller companies, which have a tougher time borrowing to grow when loans are more expensive to repay. The Russell 2000 index of the smallest U.S. stocks sank 1%, much more than the rest of the market.
But hope seems to be remaining on Wall Street that the U.S. and Iran will ultimately reach an agreement to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, allow deliveries of oil to resume from the Persian Gulf and ease the upward pressure on inflation.
Iran announced Monday it had instructed its Houthi allies in Yemen to attack the other key Middle Eastern waterway, the Bab el-Mandeb strait In peace time, around 14% of global maritime trade passes through the waterway, according to the International Transport Forum, while about 20% of the world’s crude oil would typically transit the Strait of Hormuz.
CBS/AP
The Israel Defense Forces issued an evacuation warning Monday to residents of the southern Beirut suburb of Dahiyeh, after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed to strike what he called Iranian-backed Hezbollah’s “terror headquarters” in the Lebanese capital.
The IDF warned residents of Dahiyeh to “evacuate for their safety.”
“If Hezbollah continues to fire rockets at Israeli cities and towns, the IDF will respond by targeting targets in the southern suburbs,” it said in a post on X.
The U.N. Security Council was to hold an emergency session Monday on the war in Lebanon, as Israeli forces continue pushing further north into Lebanese territory. IDF soldiers took the medieval castle of Beaufort on Sunday, marking what Netanyahu called a “dramatic shift” in the campaign against Hezbollah.
Iran announced Monday that it was halting peace talks with the U.S. over Israel’s ongoing operations in Lebanon. Israel and Hezbollah have continued trading fire for weeks, accusing each other of violating a U.S.-brokered ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon.
According to Lebanon’s health ministry, 3,355 people have been killed in Lebanon by the Israeli offensive since the war began on March 2, when Hezbollah started launching attacks on Israel in retaliation for the U.S.-Israeli assault on its benefactor, Iran.
An Iranian news outlet closely linked with the country’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps indicated Monday that the Iranian regime had given its Houthi rebel allies in Yemen the nod to start attacking commercial shipping via another key Middle Eastern waterway, the Bab el-Mandeb strait.
As Iran and the U.S. accused each other of new ceasefire violations and Israel ramped up its parallel war against Iranian-backed Hezbollah in Lebanon, diplomatic efforts appeared to flounder on Monday, and the Tasnim news agency said the regime had halted its indirect talks with the U.S. and given the Houthis marching orders.
Iran and its regional proxy forces “have placed on their agenda the complete blockade of the Strait of Hormuz and the activation of other fronts, including the Bab el-Mandeb Strait,” Tasnim said, calling the decisions a bid to “punish” Israel and its supporters for the ongoing Israeli operations in Lebanon.
Iran had threatened at least three times during the war to have its Houthi allies attack the shipping lanes of Bab el-Mandeb.

Getty/iStockphoto
The strait is, just like the gridlocked Strait of Hormuz, a key chokepoint for global energy supplies in the Middle East, and the Houthis have attacked ships in the region before.
Unlike Hezbollah in Lebanon, which launched attacks on Israel almost as soon as the U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran began, the Houthis have stayed out of the Iran war so far. Its leaders have warned, however, that they could engage if Tehran asks them to.
Iran’s negotiating team will suspend peace talks with the U.S. over Israel’s ongoing war with Hezbollah in Lebanon and other perceived violations of the U.S.-Iran ceasefire, according to Iran’s semi-official Tasnim news agency.
Tasnim, which is close to the country’s powerful Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), said Iran would halt “talks and the exchange of texts through a mediator” given the “continuation of the Zionist regime’s crimes in Lebanon.”
Echoing statements earlier in the day from Iranian officials, Tasnim said Israel’s war with Hezbollah in Lebanon was included in the ceasefire, which it said was being violated “on all fronts.”
The U.N. Security Council is set to hold an emergency meeting Monday on the war in Lebanon, after Israeli forces seized a medieval castle far north of the border between the two countries. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu also ordered strikes on what he describes as Hezbollah’s “terror headquarters” in Beirut.
According to Tasnim, Iran has repeatedly emphasised that Israeli operations in Gaza and Lebanon must cease, and that its forces must withdraw from Lebanese territory as part of any peace agreement with the U.S.
Iran has executed two more men arrested during anti-regime protests in January 2025, according to Mizan News, the Iranian national judiciary authority’s media outlet.
Iran accused the men of being “key organizers” of the protests in Tehran. The two men, identified as Mehrdad Mohammadinia and Ashkan Maleki, were convicted in connection with an arson attack on the Jafari Mosque in Kooy-e Nasr, Mizan said Monday, as well as charges including destruction of public property, clashes with security forces, blocking streets, and disrupting public order.
They were hanged on Monday morning after the Iranian Supreme Court upheld their sentence.
Mizan claimed one of the men had admitted to the crimes, but human rights groups have long accused Iran of obtaining forced confessions from detainees.
Iran, which was responsible for at least 2,159 executions in 2025, more than double the number from the previous year, has hanged more than 40 people on charges of espionage, links to opposition groups and alleged anti-establishment activities since the start of the war with the U.S. and Israel, according to BBC Monitoring.
Iran said Monday that Lebanon was included in the ongoing ceasefire between the U.S. and Iran that began on April 8, and that the U.S. and Israel “are responsible for the consequences of any violation.”
In a post on X, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi saidthe fragile U.S.-Iran ceasefire was “unequivocally a ceasefire on all fronts, including in Lebanon.”
“Its violation on one front is a violation of the ceasefire on all fronts,” he said, adding that the U.S. and Israel “are responsible for the consequences of any violation.”
Iran’s foreign ministry accused the U.S. Monday of another violation of the truce, after U.S. strikes on drone and radar sites in Iran triggered a retaliatory attack from Iran – the second such incident in a week.
“The United States is also violating the ceasefire including this morning,” said foreign ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei during a weekly news briefing, vowing that Iran would “take whatever measures we deem necessary to defend Iran’s national security.”
In Lebanon, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed that Israeli forces would push deeper into the country after seizing the medieval castle of Beaufort on Sunday. He also ordered strikes on what he said were Hezbollah’s “terror headquarters” in a southern Beirut suburb.
Iran has called a European Union statement condemning an attack on Kuwait “a masterclass in selective outrage.”
In a statement Friday, the EU “strongly condemned” a previous attack on Kuwait by Iran, saying such attacks “pose a serious threat to regional security and stability.”
Responding to the statement Monday, Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei said in a post on X that blaming Iran for “exercising its right to self-defense” in the face of U.S. attacks launched from neighboring nations was “a masterclass in selective moral outrage.”
“It is hypocritical and reckless,” he added.
Both the U.S. and Iran have described recent strikes – carried out despite a fragile, ongoing ceasefire – as defensive.
President Trump said early Monday that his critics should, “relax, it will all work out well in the end,” despite the latest flare-up in fighting.
“Iran really wants to make a deal,” he said Monday, after his administration made what a source told CBS News were somewhat significant changes to the current draft memorandum of understanding being haggled over by the two countries.
Iran on Monday said contradictory U.S. positions and Israel’s ongoing incursion into Lebanon were delaying negotiations on the document, which is believed to include a 60-day extension of the ceasefire, a reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, and a framework for in depth talks on Iran’s nuclear program and other contentious issues.
The U.S. military intercepted two Iranian missiles “targeting American forces in Kuwait” early Monday, which was late Sunday evening in the U.S., Central Command (CENTCOM) said in a brief statement on Monday.
“Last night at 11 p.m. ET, U.S. forces successfully intercepted two Iranian ballistic missiles targeting American forces based in Kuwait,” CENTCOM posted on X. “These missiles were immediately defeated and no American personnel were harmed.”
Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps said early Monday that it had targeted an airbase it claimed the U.S. used to launch attacks Sunday against on at least one Iranian island in the Strait of Hormuz.
Iranian state media didn’t say which U.S. base in the region was attacked, but the sequence of events mirrored an exchange of fire last week, when U.S. strikes described by the Pentagon as “purely defensive” drew retaliatory missile fire by Iran aimed at Kuwait.
Four U.S. service members and three contractors suffered minor injuries related to an Iranian ballistic missile strike on a Kuwaiti air base last week, a U.S. official told CBS News on Sunday. All seven returned to duty within 24 hours, the official said.
A U.S. official said Sunday evening that Secretary Rubio spoke with both Lebanon’s President Josef Aoun and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu over the weekend about the ongoing negotiations between Israel and Lebanon.
To advance the talks, the U.S. proposed a sequence of events that would see the Iranian-backed Hezbollah militia in Lebanon stop all attacks on Israel, and in return, Israel would refrain from escalation in Lebanese capital Beirut.
The idea is that those first steps would create space for gradual deescalation and an effective cessation of hostilities.
Aoun tried to advance the proposal, but the response from Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, a senior Lebanese lawmaker who’s acted as an interlocutor between the U.S. and Hezbollah, which has long been designated a terrorist organization, was described by the U.S. official as evasive and disappointing.
Berri said he could “guarantee” Hezbollah’s commitment to a ceasefire, but only if Israel stopped its attacks on the group first. That, the official said, was disappointing, as it was the Iranian-backed group that initiated the current round of fighting on March 2.
Hezbollah started launching rockets and drones at Israel in retaliation for the U.S.-Israeli strikes on its Iranian benefactors, two days after the U.S. and Israel launched their war with Iran.
The U.S. does not expect Israel to tolerate ongoing attacks against civilians by Hezbollah, the source said, adding that the fastest way to deescalate and protect civilians on all sides would be for Hezbollah to stop firing immediately.
Lebanese President Joseph Aoun said Monday that his country was facing “a vicious and reprehensible Israeli aggression,” as Israel stepped up its offensive against Hezbollah with the capture of the medieval Beaufort Castle.
Aoun condemned the Israeli offensive in a post on X and pledged to “work to end the suffering of the Lebanese people, and people in the south (of Lebanon) in particular.”
The U.N. Security Council is set to hold an emergency meeting Monday on Lebanon, after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the castle’s seizure marked a “dramatic shift” in his country’s battle against Iranian-backed Hezbollah.
The Israel Defense Forces said a soldier was killed Monday in fighting in southern Lebanon, bringing to 26 the number of Israeli military deaths since Israel ramped up its assault on Hezbollah in tandem with the joint U.S.-Israeli war with Iran in early March.
The IDF also issued another evacuation warning to residents of multiple Lebanese villages Monday, as Netanyahu ordered an attack on what he called Hezbollah’s “terror headquarters” in the southern Beirut suburb of Dahiyeh.
CBS/AFP
Iran’s foreign ministry said Monday that the United States has continued to violate the ceasefire, after U.S. strikes on a southern port triggered a brief military flare-up – the second under very similar circumstances in a week.
“The United States is also violating the ceasefire including this morning,” said foreign ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei during a weekly news briefing, vowing that Iran would “take whatever measures we deem necessary to defend Iran’s national security.”
Baqaei asserted that a lack of trust, constant change of positions by the U.S., and Israeli actions in Lebanon were delaying diplomatic attempts to extend the ceasefire, according to the Reuters news agency.
“We insist that a ceasefire in Lebanon is an essential condition for any deal aimed at ending the war,” Baqaei said, reiterating a longstanding Iranian demand in the negotiations with the U.S.
Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and the country’s Defense Minister Israel Katz announced Monday that they had ordered forces to launch new attacks on targets purportedly linked to Iranian-backed Hezbollah in the southern Dahiyeh neighborhood of Lebanon’s capital Beirut.
CBS/AFP
Kuwait’s air defences intercepted missile and drone attacks, the military said Monday, with the country later blaming Iran.
“The General Staff of the Army wishes to advise that any sounds of explosions heard are the result of air defence systems intercepting these hostile attacks,” the army said in a post on X.
The foreign ministry later said in a statement that it was “holding Iran fully responsible for these heinous attacks.”
KUNA, the state news agency, reported that air raid sirens sounded across the Gulf nation, which is a U.S. ally.
The attack appears to have come from Iran’s powerful Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) after the U.S. strikes on Iran over the weekend.
In a statement, the IRGC said that “following an attack a few hours ago by the invading U.S. military” on the port of Sirik, the IRGC struck the “air base from which the attack originated, and the predetermined targets were destroyed.”
It warned that “if such aggression is repeated, the response will be entirely different,” and “responsibility for the consequences” will lie with the U.S.
CBS/AFP
President Trump, in a post on his Truth Social platform at about 1 a.m. Eastern on Monday, criticized critics of his handling of the Iran war and offered new optimism that a deal to deescalate the conflict could still be imminent.
“Iran really wants to make a deal, and it will be a good one for the U.S.A. and those that are with us,” he wrote. “But don’t the Dumocrats, and various seemingly unpatriotic Republicans, understand that it is MUCH tougher for me to properly do my job and negotiate, when political hacks keep negatively ‘chirping,’ at levels never seen before, over and over again, that I should move faster, or move slower, or go to war, or not go to war, or whatever. Just sit back and relax, it will all work out well in the end – It always does!”
The U.S. military launched “self-defense strikes” targeting Iranian radar sites and command and control sites for drones over the weekend, U.S. Central Command said Sunday.
“The measured and deliberate strikes occurred on Saturday and Sunday in response to aggressive Iranian actions that included the shootdown of a U.S. MQ-1 drone that was operating over international waters,” CENTCOM said. “U.S. fighter aircraft swiftly responded by eliminating Iranian air defenses, a ground control station, and two one-way attack drones that posed clear threats to ships transiting regional waters.”
The U.S. strikes targeted sites in Goruk and on Qeshm Island, CENTCOM said.
Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps said early Monday local time that it had targeted an airbase it claimed the U.S. had used to launch attacks on a telecoms tower on Siri Island, state media reported, although the IRGC did not specify which base it was referring to or where it was located.
Kuwait, meanwhile, said its air defenses engaged incoming drone and missile fire early Monday. The Guard’s statement was likely referring to the attack on Kuwait.
Defense officials told CBS News on Monday morning that the new round of strikes against Iranian targets took place right on the Strait of Hormuz, one on the coast, another on an island in the latest military escalation during the fragile ceasefire.
The U.S. has lost a least two dozen multi-million-dollar Predator and Reaper Drones, primarily to Iranian fire, since the war began.
President Trump’s edits to the U.S.-Iran memorandum of understanding included somewhat significant changes related to the Strait of Hormuz and the removal of highly enriched uranium, according to a source with knowledge of the negotiations.
The broad strokes of the memorandum include a 60-day cessation of violence, along with clauses that call for reopening the strait and a framework to reopen negotiations on Iran’s nuclear program.
Multiple sources told CBS that the arrangement also involves the potential of waivers or sanctions relief to Iran that could allow it to access billions in frozen assets depending on the progress of the diplomacy.
Mediators led by Pakistan are handling the back-and-forth between Washington and Tehran. Details of each exchange are limited. Mr. Trump had said Friday that he would make a final determination on the deal that day, but then further edits were sent to Iran. Mr. Trump told Lara Trump in an interview taped Thursday that he was in “no hurry” to make a deal.
The White House did not respond to a request for comment. Axios was the first to report Mr. Trump’s requested edits to the memorandum.
Four U.S. service members and three contractors suffered minor injuries related to an Iranian ballistic missile strike on a Kuwaiti air base last week, a U.S. official told CBS News.
All seven returned to duty within 24 hours, the official said.
Iran launched a ballistic missile towards Kuwait at 10:17 p.m. Eastern time on Wednesday, CENTCOM had previously said. The missile was intercepted by Kuwaiti forces. Kuwait also reported drone and missile attacks on Thursday morning.
Iran’s Revolutionary Guard said Thursday that it had targeted an American base in retaliation for U.S. strikes on the southern part of the country, though it did not specify where that base was. The U.S. described its strikes as defensive.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed to push deeper into Lebanon after his military took over the medieval castle of Beaufort on Sunday, calling it a “dramatic shift” in the campaign against Hezbollah.
Israeli forces used the Beaufort castle, also known as Qalaat al-Chakif, as a base during their previous two-decade occupation of southern Lebanon that ended in 2000.
In a video statement released hours after the military took Beaufort, Netanyahu said “we have returned united, determined and stronger than ever”.
“Now my directive is to deepen and expand our hold in places that were under Hezbollah’s control. The capture of Beaufort is a dramatic stage and a dramatic shift in the policy we are leading.”
The push to Beaufort came as the Israeli military issued a sweeping evacuation order to areas south of the Zahrani River, north of the Litani and around 25 miles from the border. It said it was targeting “Hezbollah infrastructure in Tyre and several additional areas in southern Lebanon” as Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency reported a series of strikes on the area.
Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam had accused Israel on Saturday of pursuing a “scorched-earth policy and collective punishment” in the south, urging a halt to the fighting.
France said on Sunday it requested an emergency meeting of the United Nations Security Council, alarmed by Israel’s “ever-deeper occupation of Lebanese territory.”
Mediators are continuing to discuss a memorandum of understanding between Iran and the U.S. as of Sunday morning.
President Trump made edits to the memorandum on Friday, according to a source with knowledge. The edited proposal was then sent back to Tehran for approval. A response has not yet been shared.
This is the third round of edits that the president has made to the U.S. proposal, which has been passed back and forth to Tehran through mediators. That process is led by Pakistan. The source indicated the U.S. changes were somewhat significant though details were not immediately available. There is no immediate deadline.
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هلدینگ کاسپین استانبول | خرید ملک در ترکیه | صرافی معتبر ایرانی در ترکیه | خرید و فروش طلا در ترکیه | مهاجرت به ترکیه | واردات و صادرات در ترکیه | نیازمندیهای ترکیه | اخبار ترکیه | اخبار جهانی | توریست ایران | خدمات توریستی در ایران | تورهای گردشگری ایران | هلدینگ اول | خدمات کاریابی و فریلنسری و شغل | مرجع اطلاعات ایران (همه چیز در ایران) | کیف پول و خدمات مالی و پرداخت یار | اخبار ایران | تابلو زنده قیمت ارز در ترکیه و استانبول | صرافی آنلاین ترکیه | قیمت طلا و نقره در ترکیه | سرمایه گذاری در ترکیه | جواهرات در ترکیه | نرخ لحظه ای ارزها در استانبول | قیمت دلار امروز در ترکیه | قیمت دلار استانبول امروز | قیمت لحظه ای دلار | اخبار روز ترکیه استانبول | اپلیکیشن ISTEX | اپلیکیشن قیمت لحظه ای دلار و یورو و لیر و ارزها در ترکیه
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