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Tag: middle east foreign policy

  • Trump signs ‘Make Iran Great Again’ hat alongside Lindsey Graham

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    President Donald Trump was photographed with a signed “Make Iran Great Again” hat alongside Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., as nationwide demonstrations in Iran continued against the regime’s political and economic corruption.

    In a photo posted Monday morning on Graham’s X account, the senator could be seen flashing a thumbs up next to Trump as the president holds the black hat emblazoned with his signature.

    “Another great day with @POTUS who has brought America back, stronger than ever, at home and abroad,” Graham wrote. “God bless our Commander in Chief and all of the brave men and women who serve under him.”

    “I’m proud to be an American,” the post continued. “God bless and protect the brave people of Iran who are standing up to tyranny.”

    IRAN CRACKDOWN RATTLES MIDDLE EAST AS ANALYSTS WEIGH US OPTIONS SHORT OF MILITARY INTERVENTION

    Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., posted a photo of himself posing with President Donald Trump, who is holding a signed “Make Iran Great Again” hat. (Lindsey Graham / X)

    Demonstrations have spread to more than 220 locations across 26 of Iran’s 31 provinces, the U.S.-based Human Rights Activists News Agency reported early Monday. At least 20 people have been killed, the group said, and more than 990 have been arrested.

    Iran protests

    Protesters march in downtown Tehran, Iran, Monday, Dec. 29, 2025.  (Fars News Agency via AP)

    What began as protests over economic hardship quickly escalated, with demonstrators chanting anti-government slogans.

    Iran’s collapsing currency has fueled a deepening economic crisis. Prices for staples such as meat and rice have surged, while the country grapples with inflation of around 40%.

    IRANIAN PROTESTERS CLASH WITH SECURITY FORCES AS TEAR GAS FILLS TEHRAN STREETS AMID NATIONWIDE UNREST

    In December, the government introduced a new pricing tier for its heavily subsidized gasoline, raising the cost of some of the world’s cheapest fuel and adding to public anger. Tehran has signaled that further increases may follow, with officials now set to review fuel prices every three months.

    The protests have continued even after Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on Saturday said that “rioters must be put in their place.”

    Iran's leader Khamenei

    Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei waves to the crowd during a meeting with officials, Islamic countries’ ambassador to Iran and a group of people in Tehran, Iran, on Monday, March 31, 2025.  (Office of the Iranian Supreme Leader via AP)

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    Khamenei’s branding of the pro-democracy activists as “rioters” came a day after Trump’s unprecedented message of solidarity to the demonstrators.

    Fox News Digital’s Benjamin Weinthal and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • Rubio reveals shared intelligence prevented possible Hamas attack, discusses international stabilization force

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    U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Saturday said that the U.S., Israel and other mediators of the Gaza peace deal had shared intelligence to avoid a possible attack last weekend and would do so going forward. 

    “We put out a message through State Department, sent it to our mediators as well, about an impending attack, and it didn’t happen,” he told reporters while flying from Israel to Qatar. “So that’s the goal here, is ultimately to identify a threat before it happens.”

    This comes a week after the State Department said it had “credible reports” that Hamas was planning an attack on Palestinian civilians in violation of the agreement.

    Rubio said Saturday the U.S. has talked with countries like Qatar, Egypt and Turkey who are interested in contributing to an international stabilization force in the region. He added that Indonesia and Azerbaijan are also interested.

    EXCLUSIVE: RUBIO SAYS US-ISRAEL ALLIANCE REMAINS FIRM AS HE HEADS TO QATAR AMID BACKLASH OVER DOHA STRIKES

    Secretary of State Marco Rubio speaks to the media after visiting the Civil-Military Coordination Center in Southern Israel on Friday.  (Fadel Senna/Pool Photo via AP)

    But, he said, “Many of the countries who want to be a part of it can’t do it without” a United Nations resolution supporting the force.

    Rubio also met with President Donald Trump in Qatar ahead of the president’s Asian tour.

    Vice President JD Vance was also in Israel earlier this week along with special envoy Steve Witkoff and Trump adviser and son-in-law Jared Kushner in an attempt to solidify the ceasefire deal, which took effect earlier this month.

    TRUMP DIRECTED ENVOY TO WARN QATAR AHEAD OF ‘UNFORTUNATE’ ISRAELI STRIKE, WHITE HOUSE SAYS

    Trump with the erir of Qatar

    Reporters look on as President Donald Trump, seated center, meets with Emir of Qatar Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani, seated left, and Qatar Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman bin Jassim Al Thani, seated right, aboard Air Force One at Al Udeid Air Base in Doha, Qatar on Saturday.  (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein)

    Next week, Rubio said the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Dan Caine, is expected to travel to Israel as well.

    Trump thanked Qatar for their part in helping secure the peace deal while meeting with Qatar’s Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thanimet and Qatar Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman bin Jassim Al Thani.

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    A military vehicle maneuvers in Gaza

    A military vehicle maneuvers in Gaza as seen from the Israeli side of the border on Friday.  (Reuters/Amir Cohen)

    “This should be an enduring peace,” Trump told reporters of the deal.

    His visit to Qatar was part of a refueling stop before heading on to Asia.

    The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report. 

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  • White House considers cash rewards for Gazans aiding search for slain hostages

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    The U.S. is planning to offer rewards to Gazans who help locate the bodies of the deceased hostages who were held by Hamas, a pair of senior White House advisors told reporters Wednesday evening.

    “We’re probably going to put together some sort of program where we’re going to ask people to see if they can help us to locate bodies. And we’re going to pay rewards for that type of good behavior,” one advisor said.

    As part of the ceasefire agreement, all 20 living hostages have been returned to Israel, along with nine bodies of the deceased. Nineteen more bodies have yet to be located.

    Hamas claims it does not know the location of the other bodies, and “significant efforts and special equipment” would be needed to locate them.

    IDF SAYS BODY TURNED OVER BY HAMAS DOESN’T MATCH ANY HOSTAGES

    Former Israeli hostage Eitan Horn embraces family and friends after returning home Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025, following his release under the ceasefire deal with Hamas. (Stoyan Nenov/Reuters)

    An advisor tamped down accusations that Hamas had violated the ceasefire agreements, insisting the terms of the agreement prioritized living hostages, and they expected bodies to be difficult to locate in a war zone.

    Still, they added, “I can tell you that we’re not going to leave here until everybody comes home.”

    “We’ve heard a lot of people saying, ‘Well, you know, Hamas violated the deal, because not all the bodies have been returned.’ I think the understanding we had with them was we’d get all the live hostages, out, which they did honor that.”

    EXCLUSIVE: ISRAELI AMBASSADOR SAYS NO PEACE IN GAZA UNLESS HAMAS HANDS OVER ALL 48 HOSTAGES, DISARMS

    Israeli intelligence and Turkish retrieval experts, trained for Turkey’s frequent earthquakes, will aid the effort to locate the 19 remaining bodies.

    “You have to understand the complexity of the conditions on the ground,” an advisor said. “The entire Gaza Strip has been pulverized. It looks like something out of a movie. And there’s very, very little buildings left standing.”

    The advisor equated the debris levels to those seen after the 9/11 attack on the World Trade Center. “This is, I don’t know, it feels like multiple times more.”

    Amid the debris are unexploded ordnance, further complicating body retrieval.

    An advisor also detailed plans for “safe zones” behind the Yellow Line — the area still occupied by the Israeli Defense Forces in Gaza — for Palestinians looking to flee Hamas as the militant group conducts executions across the strip.

    Hamas terrorists

    Armed Hamas terrorists stand guard in Rafah, Gaza, during the group’s ongoing clashes with rival factions. (Reuters/Hatem Khaled/File Photo)

    “Israel is very committed to creating safety for the people of Gaza who want to live in peace. And so this is a new line of effort that we requested. And that it was met with a lot of enthusiasm from Israel to try to set this up.”

    Violent clashes between Hamas and rival groups have been reported in areas across Gaza, and videos circulating across social media appear to show executions.

    An advisor told reporters it had told Hamas to stop the killings.

    “There have been a lot of reports in Gaza of Hamas killing and going after Palestinian civilians. That’s something that we’ve been working with the mediators to send a message to say we’d really like to see that stop.”

    Woman in front of rubble in Gaza City

    Palestinian resident Hayam Meqdad, 49, walks over debris of her destroyed home in Gaza City on Oct. 15, 2025, a day after the ceasefire took effect. (Ebrahim Hajjaj/Reuters)

    “We are seeing different actions on all sides that, obviously, that President Trump and his team are working very hard to minimize.”

    An Israeli military official told Fox News Digital the killings are “Hamas’ deliberate attempt to show the killing publicly and reestablish its rule by terrorizing civilians.”

    Trump earlier this week suggested Hamas was conducting police activities and those who were killed were gang members.

    “[Hamas] do want to stop the problems and they’ve been open about it, and we gave them approval for a period of time,” he told reporters on Monday.

    “You have close to 2 million people going back to buildings that have been demolished, and a lot of bad things can happen. So we want it to be — we want it to be safe.”

    The president added on Tuesday: “They did take out a couple of gangs that were very bad gangs, very, very bad.”

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    “And that didn’t bother me much, to be honest with you,” he added.

    On Monday, Hamas returned all living hostages, showing a positive sign for the historic but tenuous ceasefire agreement with Israel. The IDF, in turn, pulled back in Gaza to behind what’s known as a “Yellow line,” part of Phase One of the agreement.

    Fox News’ Efrat Lachter contributed to this report. 

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  • Trump deserves huge credit for achieving peace in Gaza, but marred the moment with his campaign of retribution

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    President Trump issues plenty of threats.

    Sometimes they get results, sometimes they don’t.

    And sometimes it’s just bluster. Especially if it’s an online posting, such as saying that Chicago’s mayor and Illinois’ governor should go to jail for resisting him on dispatching troops to the Windy City.

    But his relentless personality – backed by the world’s most powerful military – can be overpowering.

    TRUMP NOMINATED FOR NOBEL PEACE PRIZE OVER ISRAEL-HAMAS CEASEFIRE DEAL

    President Trump’s recent headway on Middle East peace has been remarkable – though it’s been marred at the last second with echoes of the Letitia James prosecution. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

    It’s hard to overstate what a remarkable achievement Trump is in the process of assembling by getting Israel and Hamas to end their brutal and bloody two-year-old war.

    It’s fair to say no other president could have pulled this off. Joe Biden certainly couldn’t. In fact, not since Jimmy Carter staged the marathon Camp David talks with Anwar Sadar and Menachem Begin has a president brokered peace between the Israelis and one of their Arab enemies. 

    Trump himself engineered the Abraham Accords, with help from Jared Kushner, joined by the U.A.E. and Bahrain, in his first term, and later by Sudan and Morocco. That gave him the experience to tackle this immensely tougher challenge and spur more Nobel Peace Prize speculation.

    U.S. President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu

    Trump had to pressure Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu into accepting his peace deal. (Chen Mengtong/China News Service/VCG via Getty Images)

    Now some quick caveats are in order. The president says he expects the remaining 20 hostages to be returned Monday or Tuesday, but the Hamas terrorists could come up with new objections that derail the train.

    Reporters were asking about Phase 2, which would include returning the bodies of deceased hostages, but the president wisely deflected those questions.  

    So no popping of champagne corks quite yet.

    EXCLUSIVE: ISRAELI AMBASSADOR SAYS NO PEACE IN GAZA UNLESS HAMAS HANDS OVER ALL 48 HOSTAGES, DISARMS

    Presumably, it was these reservations that prompted anchors and correspondents on the air to appear rather sober-faced as they covered the latest developments. But I think it was more than that.

    Some of these journalists are not exactly supportive of Trump. And so it’s not easy for them to shower him with credit. They say the right words – tremendous accomplishment and so on – but the body language sends a different message.

    Look, Israel has been in a state of war, or cold war, with the surrounding countries since its founding in 1948.

    And in a broader sense, the Jews and the Arabs have had hostile relations for many centuries. It’s in the Bible, the plea to Pharaoh to “let my people go.”

    Now, there remain crucial unanswered questions about who will rule Gaza, most of it reduced to rubble, in the future. Israel was subject to a brutal massacre on Oct. 7, but it has also found itself increasingly isolated as more than 60,000 Palestinians have been killed. Many Israelis, and American Jews, believe Bibi Netanyahu let the war drag on too long to protect his political standing.

    Trump had to pressure Bibi into accepting his peace deal, essentially by threatening to have the U.S. walk away.

    Now Hamas is essentially being asked to surrender by turning in its weapons. Trump says he will join with other countries in a peace council to prevent the resumption of war. But those details remain murky, beyond the fact that the terrorists will no longer be in charge, as they have been since Israel voluntarily withdrew from the Gaza Strip nearly two decades ago.

    GRAND JURY INDICTS NY AG LETITIA JAMES ON BANK FRAUD CHARGES IN VIRGINIA FEDERAL COURT

    So just as the president was basking in some well-deserved praise for essentially remaking the Middle East, there was a new development.

    A grand jury indicted Letitia James, New York’s attorney general, for mortgage fraud.

    This, in a nutshell, underscores the duality of the Trump presidency.

    It seems like a petty move, and in a video, James said “we will fight these baseless charges aggressively.”

    A picture of Letitia James

    A grand jury indicted New York State Attorney General Letitia James for mortgage fraud – in essence, underscoring the duality of Trump. (Jim Franco/Albany Times Union via Getty Images)

    As with the recent indictment of James Comey, the indictment was returned only because Trump replaced his own U.S. attorney in Virginia’s eastern district with White House aide and loyalist Lindsey Halligan, who has no prosecution experience.

    Trump told his AG, Pam Bondi, in a memo that James, like Comey, was “guilty as hell.” The Wall Street Journal says that “Pam” memo was intended to be secret.

    Career prosecutors had decided there wasn’t enough evidence to charge James, who brought a civil suit against candidate Trump on real estate inflation that produced a fine which grew to half a billion dollars – so outrageous that an appellate court tossed it out. James also won her job by promising to go after Trump, calling him an “illegitimate” president.

    SUBSCRIBE TO HOWIE’S MEDIA BUZZMETER PODCAST, A RIFF ON THE DAY’S HOTTEST STORIES

    James has owned a home in Brooklyn for decades, and two years ago she bought a house in Norfolk, Va. with her niece.

    The career prosecutors found little evidence that James was dishonest in completing the paperwork.

    The media spotlight immediately shifted from Trump the global peacemaker to Trump the crusader who is doggedly pursuing a campaign of retribution against his enemies.

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    At the very moment he was drawing praise from around the world, Trump stepped on his own story.

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