Iran threatens to retaliate
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Iran, Trump
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US, Iran and Israel
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Iran fires missiles
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The Pentagon is gearing up to ask Congress for billions to fund the Iran war. Yet the path through Congress is tricky and getting trickier.
The new war has led to panic buying and a surge in food prices for Gazans as they try to recover from Israel’s two-year offensive against Hamas.
The Economist's front page also came with a chilling warning.
As Iran retaliates for an Israeli strike on the South Pars gas field, one analyst warns the war is "now hitting the plumbing of the global energy system."
The U.S.-Iran war has begun cutting into discretionary spending, raising mortgage rates, battering stock markets and souring consumer sentiment.
Former Foreign Secretary Sir James Cleverly tells the BBC that Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has damaged the UK's credibility in the international sphere.
Even as Iran confronts the gravest threat to its regime yet, it is signaling a willingness to prolong its conflict with the United States and Israel in a bid to finally reshape the region in its favor.
By Bo Erickson MEMPHIS, March 23 (Reuters) - Four weeks into the Iran war, U.S. President Donald Trump will shift his focus from overseas conflict to law‑and‑order, visiting Memphis, Tennessee, on Monday to highlight his crime crackdown to bolster his party ahead of November midterm elections.