sábado, 27 de junho de 2026

Trump’s Social Media Advisor Reveals All: Epstein, Iran, and Mark Levin’s Israeli Propaganda

 

Live Updates: Mideast Hostilities Flare, Testing Fragile U.S.-Iran Truce

 


Live Updates: Mideast Hostilities Flare, Testing Fragile U.S.-Iran Truce

 

Bahrain said it had come under attack by Iranian drones, an apparent retaliation after the United States launched strikes on Iranian military sites overnight.

 

Aaron Boxerman

https://www.nytimes.com/live/2026/06/27/world/us-iran-strikes-hormuz#heres-the-latest

 

Here’s the latest.

Bahrain said it was targeted early Saturday by Iranian drones, an apparent retaliation after the United States launched strikes on Iranian military sites overnight. The flaring of hostilities underscored the limits of the truce between Washington and Tehran.

 

There were no immediate reports of damage in Bahrain, which accused Tehran of “destabilizing security, exporting chaos and undermining regional stability.” The Iranian government did not immediately comment. Before the cease-fire, Iran regularly launched strikes against neighboring Gulf states in retaliation for U.S. and Israeli attacks.

 

The drone attack came hours after the U.S. military said it had attacked Iranian missile drones and coastal radar sites. U.S. officials framed the strikes as a direct response to Iran’s firing of attack drones a day earlier at a container ship passing near the Omani side of the Strait of Hormuz. President Trump said on Friday that Iran had “foolishly” violated the cease-fire with the attack in the strait.

 

Iran’s foreign ministry accused the U.S. on Saturday of violating the cease-fire and vowed that the Iranian military would “defend the country’s sovereignty, security, and national interests with all its strength.”

 

Before the overnight clashes, the deal between the United States and Iran signed earlier this month had led to relative calm in the region, with an uptick in vessels traversing the Strait of Hormuz and signs of an emerging agreement, backed by the Trump administration, to wind down the war’s second front in Lebanon.

 

The agreement pushed discussion of many of the thornier questions between the United States and Iran, including the future of Iran’s nuclear programs, to a 60-day negotiation period, which began in Switzerland at the start of the week. While the deal did stipulate an end to the Iranian blockade of the strait for at least 60 days, Iran has insisted that it maintains authority over managing traffic through the waterway.

 

Both the U.S. and Iran have sought to demonstrate that they emerged victorious from the conflict, which is leading them to test one another’s red lines, analysts say. For now, neither the U.S. nor Iran seems interested in a return to full-blown war.

 

The war began in late February with a massive joint U.S.-Israeli military campaign against Iran that drew in much of the Middle East and sent global energy prices skyrocketing. It also ignited a war in Lebanon, where Israel has been fighting Hezbollah, an armed group backed by Iran.

 

On Friday, the Trump administration announced that it had brokered a rare agreement between Israel and Lebanon that U.S. officials hope could build toward an end to the conflict there. More than 3,000 people have been killed in Lebanon since Hezbollah attacked Israel in solidarity with Iran in March, according to  Lebanese authorities.

 

Lebanon’s government is distinct from Hezbollah, long the country’s most powerful force. Under the U.S.-backed agreement, Israeli forces would withdraw from two occupied parts of southern Lebanon to allow the Lebanese army to take full control there.

 

Israeli forces will still occupy much of the country’s south for an unknown period, however. And Hezbollah was quick to reject the deal, which also prompted scattered demonstrations by opponents in the Lebanese capital of Beirut.

Israelis See Their Friendship With the U.S. Slipping Away

 



news analysis

Israelis See Their Friendship With the U.S. Slipping Away

 

Criticism of Israel’s war in Gaza, anger over the Iran war and election results in New York all suggest Israel’s solid support from Washington may be on borrowed time.

 


David M. Halbfinger

By David M. Halbfinger

Reporting from Jerusalem

 

June 27, 2026, 5:02 a.m. ET

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/27/world/middleeast/israel-new-york-iran-war-mamdani.html

 

For weeks, the Israeli news media has been obsessing about the once-ironclad U.S.-Israeli relationship.

 

President Trump’s pursuit of a peace deal with Iran, which many Israelis see as a betrayal, and his repeated berating of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, have raised doubts about whether they can still call Mr. Trump the best friend in the White House that Israel has ever had.

 

Then came Tuesday’s election results in New York City. Three pro-Palestinian candidates backed by Mayor Zohran Mamdani, a harsh critic of Israel, defeated moderates in hotly contested Democratic congressional primaries.

 

No one in Israel is suggesting a pivot to China or Russia quite yet. But those who have studied or steered the U.S.-Israel relationship say that the strains and tensions are fast becoming worrisome for Israel.

 

“I’m extremely concerned,” said Asaf Zamir, a deputy mayor of Tel Aviv who was Israel’s consul general in New York from 2021 to 2023. All three candidates had made fierce criticism of Israel central to their campaigns and political identities. “And they say it out loud in the most Jewish city in the world, after Jerusalem.”

 

Experts on the relationship warn that Israel may not be able to count on solid support from Washington for much longer — whether in concrete assistance like billions of dollars in yearly military aid, in symbolic backing like reliable vetoes of anti-Israel resolutions at the United Nations or even in tax exemptions for U.S. charities benefiting Israeli causes.

 

“There’s a cliff, and we’re heading towards it,” said Daniel C. Kurtzer, a Princeton professor who was ambassador to Israel under President George W. Bush.

 

Some pro-Israel moderates also won House primaries in New York on Tuesday. But the victories by the candidates Mr. Mamdani aided — Brad Lander and Claire Valdez, who accuse Israel of genocide in Gaza; and Darializa Avila Chevalier, who has questioned Israel’s right to exist and, like Ms. Valdez, calls it an apartheid state — landed like bold new dots on a scatter chart revealing a clear trend of rising American hostility to Israel.

 

Mr. Zamir, the Tel Aviv deputy mayor, said, “I’m waking up and hearing that we’re ‘genocidal’ and ‘apartheid.’”

 

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“I’m a left wing, two-state, pro-peace Israeli, but I’m not blind or crazy,” he added. “I know what the situation in Israel is, and we’re not those things we’re being called. And yet, more and more Americans are buying into and voting on those grounds. That troubles me.”

 

Israel was already hemorrhaging popularity in the United States, and in both parties, largely over its prosecution of the two-year war in Gaza after the Hamas-led Oct. 7, 2023, attacks, in which about 1,200 people were killed and some 250 taken hostage. Tens of thousands of Palestinian civilians were killed in the ensuing war, food shortages caused widespread famine and the enclave has been largely destroyed by Israel’s campaign.

 

Americans’ sympathy for the Palestinians exceeded their sympathy for Israel for the first time in a New York Times/Siena poll in September. And 60 percent of Americans said that they held unfavorable opinions of Israel in a Pew survey in April, up from 42 percent in 2022.

 

“If I were the Israelis, I wouldn’t necessarily be concerned with three or four members of Congress who are way out to the left,” Michael Koplow, an analyst at the Israel Policy Forum, a New York-based research group, said of Tuesday’s primary results.

 

But, he said, those new lawmakers signaled a broader Democratic turn against Israel. “Opposition to Israel is now the major foreign policy issue,” he noted. “It’s not on the fringe anymore, it’s not even relegated to the sidelines in terms of its importance. It’s front and center in campaigns and in worldviews.”

 

It could well be front and center again in the 2028 presidential primaries, and Israelis watching American politics say they can imagine the eventual nominees of both parties agreeing on little except that U.S. policy toward Israel needs to change.

 

For Democratic critics of Israel, the rift has focused on the perception that the two countries no longer share the same values, chiefly when it comes to human rights and Israel’s treatment of the Palestinians.

 

“The ‘specialness’ of this relationship was pleasant and easygoing and taken for granted for decades,” said Dahlia Scheindlin, an Israeli pollster who grew up in New York. That was until Israel’s war with Hamas, she added, when many Democrats and a growing number of Republicans “realized that a special relationship was all well and good as long as Israel wasn’t killing thousands of babies in Gaza. People just broke over that.”

 

Israel’s claim to being the “only democracy in the Middle East” has been tarnished in American eyes both by its oppressive treatment of the Palestinians and by its right-wing government’s efforts to overhaul Israeli institutions and consolidate its power.

 

That claim is also arguably less important to the United States at a time when the Trump administration is emphasizing the exertion of raw power and geopolitical transactionalism over America’s traditional self-image as the leader of the free world.

 

For Republican critics, many of whom accuse Israel of dragging the United States into fighting its wars — most recently in Iran — the argument centers on how much American and Israeli national interests really still overlap.

 

“After 40 years of Israel calling itself a strategic asset to the U.S., there’s a legitimate question: Is Israel an asset or is it becoming a liability?” said Alon Pinkas, who was Israel’s consul general in New York in the early 2000s.

 

The more American voters feel they are paying for the Iran war in higher prices at the gas pump, he said, the more their elected officials will wonder, “What does America get from this relationship with Israel?”

 

Even so, the United States has a long way to go before support of Israel could fairly be called into question. The Trump administration has accelerated billions in arms sales and emergency military aid to Israel, backed Israel in peace talks with Hamas, eased some pressure on West Bank settlement expansion and taken a host of actions to curb anti-Israel protests on American college campuses.

 

Should the alliance fray further, however, there is a lot that Israel could lose.

 

Already, because of the talks with Iran, the Trump administration is trying to constrain Israeli actions against its enemies in the region — most noticeably in Lebanon — in ways that Israelis say they never anticipated.

 

Israelis also can no longer count on receiving billions of dollars a year in U.S. military aid, something that Mr. Netanyahu effectively acknowledged this year when he proposed that Israel gradually wean itself from that assistance.

 

Other measures that an increasingly frosty Congress, White House or both could take to express displeasure with Israel include stripping charities supporting West Bank settlement of federal tax-exempt status. Ms. Valdez, one of the House primary winners in New York, had tried to do that at the state level in Albany.

 

 

“These are all things that Israel has assumed would never come from the U.S.,” Mr. Koplow, the analyst, said.

 

Experts say it is easy now to imagine even this administration publicly lashing out at Israel — such as by withholding its veto from U.N. Security Council resolutions critical of Israel, a step it has taken only rarely over the years.

 

Mr. Kurtzer, the former U.S. ambassador, suggested that Mr. Trump might use a withheld veto to try to punish Israel if he is blamed for Republican losses in the midterm elections.

 

“Right now, even today in this environment, a U.S. veto is almost automatic, but who knows?” Mr. Kurtzer said. “You have a mercurial president who judges everything not on the basis of our relationship with Israel but on the basis of what it does for him.”

 

The strained relationship is starting to enter the Israeli political conversation in the prelude to elections this fall. Naftali Bennett, who toppled Mr. Netanyahu in 2021 and is trying to repeat that feat, said this week that the U.S.-Israeli alliance was at an all-time low and that repairing it would be a huge undertaking.

 

“For the first time since the establishment of Israel,” he said, “Israel is a net negative in the United States.”

 

“That’s a disaster,” he added.

 

Other candidates have suggested that Israel should crack down on settler violence against Palestinians or give diplomacy a chance rather than trying to solve every problem militarily.

 

For now, as Israelis watch their support in the United States continue to bleed, there is little to do but wait.

 

Mr. Zamir said the worst part was psychological.

 

“I don’t fear the loss of military aid,” he said. “We can live without it. I fear the loss of backing toward the rest of the world — the feeling that you have our back.”

 

David M. Halbfinger is The Times’s Jerusalem bureau chief, leading coverage of Israel, Gaza and the West Bank. He also held that post from 2017 to 2021. He was the politics editor from 2021 to 2025.

Rupert Lowe, leader of the right-wing party Restore Britain, is facing a significant backlash and online "meltdown" from his most prominent supporters.



 Rupert Lowe accused by his supporters of softening his immigration position

Rupert Lowe, leader of the right-wing party Restore Britain, is facing a significant backlash and online "meltdown" from his most prominent supporters. This fallout stems from an interview where he was accused of softening his uncompromising stance on immigration.

The Cause of the Backlash

During an interview with American podcaster Patrick Bet-David, Lowe stated that he has "no problem" with a multicultural society, provided that immigrants integrate, pay taxes, and accept the laws and culture of the country they move to. He followed up on these comments by releasing a video on June 25, 2026, defending "integrated immigrants". In the video, he argued that Britain cannot treat people who came to the country in good faith in an unfair or illegal manner.

Reaction from Supporters

Because Lowe's party, Restore Britain, was founded on a platform significantly further to the right of Nigel Farage's Reform UK—advocating for extreme measures like the "most ambitious programme of mass deportations ever seen in Britain"—his nativist base reacted with anger.

  • Accusations of Backtracking: Prominent hardline activists and Restore accounts on X (formerly Twitter) accused him of abandoning the core principles of the movement.
  • Calls for an Apology: High-profile far-right activists, such as Steve Laws, publicly demanded that Lowe apologize to the party membership. They criticized him for spouting what they labeled "boomer nonsense" in mainstream interviews.

Broad Political Context

The controversy arrives at a delicate moment for Lowe's party. Restore Britain has been under intense media scrutiny following a Mail on Sunday report exposing that some of its canvassers and donors have ties to white supremacist organizations. While Lowe has previously tried to court hardline voters by criticizing Farage's immigration plans as "pitiful," his recent attempts to draw a line between integrated legal residents and illegal migrants have alienated the very base he sought to mobilize

 

Rupert Lowe Defends 'Integrated Immigrants' After Supporter Revolt


Rupert Lowe has responded to criticism from some of his own supporters after comments about integrated immigrants sparked a backlash online. During an interview, Lowe argued that while he believes multiculturalism has failed, people who came to Britain legally, contribute through work, pay taxes, obey the law and have integrated into British society should be treated fairly and within the law. His remarks angered some hardline supporters, who accused him of softening his position on immigration. Lowe rejected those claims, insisting his views have remained consistent for decades. He reiterated his support for mass deportations of illegal migrants, foreign criminals and those with no right to remain, while arguing that any action taken against legal residents must be lawful and fair. The row has exposed divisions within Britain's immigration debate and among supporters who had previously backed Lowe's hardline stance.


The minimum 21-year jail term handed to Vickrum Digwa for the murder of university student Henry Nowak has been officially referred to the Court of Appeal. Solicitor General Ellie Reeves KC ordered the review under the Unduly Lenient Sentence scheme, stating that the case "horrified" her and the British public.

 


Prosecutors in Henry Nowak Murder Trial Appeal Vickrum Digwa’s LENIENT Sentence

The minimum 21-year jail term handed to Vickrum Digwa for the murder of university student Henry Nowak has been officially referred to the Court of Appeal. Solicitor General Ellie Reeves KC ordered the review under the Unduly Lenient Sentence scheme, stating that the case "horrified" her and the British public.

The Court of Appeal will determine whether the current minimum sentence fell outside a reasonable range and should be increased.

Case Background

  • The Crime: On December 3, 2025, 23-year-old Vickrum Digwa fatally stabbed 18-year-old Southampton University student Henry Nowak with a 21cm ceremonial blade.
  • The Cover-up: Digwa lied to arriving police officers, claiming Nowak had launched a racist attack against him.
  • The Police Response: Misled by Digwa's lies, Hampshire police handcuffed a dying Nowak and treated him as a suspect, ignoring his pleas that he could not breathe.
  • The Trial: Digwa was found guilty of murder at Southampton Crown Court after the jury rejected his claims of self-defense. On June 1, 2026, he was sentenced to life imprisonment with a minimum term of 21 years.

The Core Controversy

The initial sentencing calculation by Judge William Mousley KC used a statutory starting point of 15 years. Aggravating features—including Digwa's persistent lies that led police to ignore Nowak's fatal injuries—pushed the term to 23 years, which was mitigated down to 21 years.

However, legal experts and public figures argue the judge should have applied a 25-year starting point under Schedule 21 of the Sentencing Act 2020 because Digwa brought a weapon to the scene.

Broader Fallout

  • Public Outrage: Newly released body-worn camera footage showing a dying Nowak handcuffed while Digwa sat unrestrained sparked widespread public fury and violent protests in Southampton.
  • Independent Investigations: The Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) is actively investigating the Hampshire and Isle of Wight Constabulary's handling of the incident.
  • Further Trials: Digwa’s mother, Kiran Kaur, was convicted of assisting an offender for trying to hide the murder weapon and is scheduled for sentencing on July 17, 2026

 

BREAKING NEWS: Prosecutors in Henry Nowak Murder Trial Appeal Vickrum Digwa’s LENIENT Sentence