David French, a columnist with The New York Times, wrote that the Zionist is encountering many of the same obstacles that the United States faced in Iraq, and it is repeating many of the same errors.
Six months in, the war in the Gaza Strip has dramatically shifted the Palestinian people’s nutrition circumstances from nearly proper food security to food scarcity.
Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali has stressed that “the evil regime” should be and will be punished for what it did in the Syrian capital Damascus against Iranian consulate.
A growing number of Google employees have joined protests calling on the company to drop the $1.2 billion contract that provides Zionist regime with cloud and machine learning services, codenamed Project Nimbus.
The United Nation chief has criticized Zionist regime for denying international journalists' entry into the war-torn Gaza Strip, warning that the decision could add to the trauma of the war.
Ron Tomer, president of the Zionist regime’s Manufacturers Association, said in response to Turkey imposing export restrictions on the regime: “Israel must be independent.”
French foreign minister has proposed the imposition of sanctions on the Zionist regime in a bid to put pressure on the regime to accept allowing the delivery of international aid into Gaza.
Several Palestinian citizens were martyred and others injured, including children and women, in the Zionist regime’s aerial and artillery strikes targeting several areas across the Gaza Strip, early Tuesday morning, on the 186th day of the aggression on the region.
The Cairo Review of Global Affairs published an article called “How American Public Opinion on Palestine Shifted” written by Geneive Abdo to examine the growing support for the Palestinian nation among the American society despite the fact that pro-Palestine groups are facing pressures from Zionist lobbyists and their advocates in the United States.
The Zionist regime’s fiscal deficit grew to 6.2 percent of gross domestic product (GDP), or NIS 15 billion ($4 billion), in March over the prior 12 months.
The decision by the US to not use its veto on Resolution 2728 was influenced by factors such as popular pressure in Western countries against the ceasefire.