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Antony Blinken to hold talks with Benjamin Netanyahu in Israel

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Antony Blinken to hold talks with Benjamin Netanyahu in Israel

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US secretary of state Antony Blinken is due to hold talks with Israeli leaders on Tuesday as the Biden administration tries to revive stalled talks to end the war in Gaza and secure the release of hostages following the killing of Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar.

With Blinken set to meet Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, the state department said it believed there was “an opportunity to move the ball forward” on ceasefire negotiations. This is Blinken’s 11th visit to the region since the war erupted after Hamas’s October 7 attack on Israel last year.

But diplomats say there is little momentum for renewed talks as Netanyahu’s far-right government continues its offensive in Gaza and intensifies its assault against Hizbollah in Lebanon.

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Since Israeli forces killed Sinwar, the mastermind of Hamas’s October 7 attack, last week, Israeli strikes have killed scores of people in northern Gaza. Israel has also widened its attacks on Hizbollah in Lebanon, targeting branches of a microlender affiliated with the group and pressing ahead with its land offensive in the south.

The region is also bracing for the Israeli government’s response to an Iranian missile attack on Israel three weeks ago.

Netanyahu said after Sinwar’s death that the war could end if Hamas laid down its arms and returned the hostages. But Hamas has stuck to its position that it will only accept a deal if Israel agrees to a permanent ceasefire and withdraws its troops from the besieged strip, something Netanyahu has repeatedly rejected during months of US-led negotiations.

The Israeli prime minister faces pressure from far-right allies in his ruling coalition not to make concessions to the Palestinians. They have threatened to leave his government if he agrees to what they describe as a “reckless” deal with the Palestinian militant group.

Hamas, meanwhile, has to select a new leader to replace Sinwar, who had the final say on indirect negotiations with Israel.

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Blinken’s trip to Jerusalem comes a day after White House envoy Amos Hochstein held talks in Beirut with Lebanese leaders about diplomatic efforts to end the spiralling conflict between Hizbollah and Israel.

Hours after those talks, Israeli forces launched more than a dozen air strikes on the southern suburbs of Beirut. One attack killed four people, including a child, next to the entrance of a government hospital in south Beirut, Lebanese health officials said. Another strike hit a fisherman’s port close to Lebanon’s international airport.

Israel’s military spokesperson Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari alleged on Monday that Hizbollah had stored $500mn in cash and gold under the Sahel hospital, another medical facility in Beirut’s southern suburbs. He said the Israeli air force was “monitoring” the site but added it would “not strike the hospital itself”.

The Israeli military did not provide evidence for the claim, and the hospital has invited journalists to inspect its facilities on Tuesday, Lebanon’s National News Agency reported.

Israel’s year-long offensive against Hizbollah has killed almost 2,500 people in Lebanon and forced more than 1.2mn from their homes, mostly in the past month, according to Lebanese authorities.

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The conflict began after Hizbollah started firing rockets towards Israel following Hamas’s October 7 attack, forcing about 60,000 Israelis from their homes in northern Israel.

Despite suffering a series of military blows, including the killing of its leader Hassan Nasrallah last month, Hizbollah continues to launch rockets, drones and missiles at Israel.

On Tuesday, the Iran-backed group said it had fired rockets towards the Glilot military intelligence base in Tel Aviv’s suburbs as sirens were set off across Israel’s commercial hub. The group also said it launched projectiles at a naval base near the northern port of Haifa.

The Israeli military said most of the projectiles were intercepted and there were no immediate reports of injuries. Hizbollah has said it will not agree to a ceasefire as long as Israeli troops are fighting in Gaza.

About 80 Israeli civilians and soldiers have been killed by Hizbollah fire into Israel and during Israel’s land invasion of southern Lebanon.

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At Least 4 Dead and 4 Missing in West Virginia Flash Flooding

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At Least 4 Dead and 4 Missing in West Virginia Flash Flooding

At least four people died and four people were missing in West Virginia after flash flooding destroyed homes and washed away roads, as more rain deluged parts of the state on Sunday, officials said.

Louis Vargo, the director of the Wheeling-Ohio County Homeland Security and Emergency Management Agency, said at a news conference on Sunday that rainstorms Saturday night quickly became dangerous in Ohio County, which is about 50 miles west of Pittsburgh.

In a 30-minute period on Saturday night, 2.5 to four inches of rain fell, Mr. Vargo said, citing National Weather Service estimates.

He said he had worked in emergency management in the county for 35 years. “I’ve never seen anything like this,” he said.

As of Sunday afternoon, thunderstorms were producing heavy rain and an additional two to 3.7 inches of rain had fallen, according to the Weather Service, which issued a flash flood emergency for Fairmont, W.Va.

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“Additional rainfall amounts of 0.5 to 1 inch are possible in the warned area,” the service said. “Flash flooding is already occurring.”

Gov. Patrick Morrisey of West Virginia said on social media on Sunday that the flooding had contributed to a partial apartment building collapse in Marion County. There was no immediate information about whether anyone was injured.

The governor said at a separate news conference on Sunday afternoon that four people had been killed in the flooding that started on Saturday night. Officials did not provide details about those who died but said that one of the victims was a 3-year-old.

Four other people remained missing after Saturday night’s heavy rains. Jim Blazier, chief of the Wheeling Fire Department, said emergency workers were using drones, dogs and swift water rescue teams to look for those missing.

Officials said that an unidentified fire station and a rescue truck were lost to the flooding.

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Power outages were reported as of Sunday afternoon, according to the Appalachian Power Company. Efforts to restore power were impeded by natural gas leaks, Mr. Vargo said. If power is turned on before a gas leak is fixed, it could cause an explosion.

Mr. Morrisey declared a state of emergency in Ohio County on Sunday.

“Please do not get on the road in the affected areas,” the governor urged residents. “Stay off the road.”

Johnny Diaz contributed reporting.

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Netanyahu says ‘we’ll do what we need to do’ with Iran’s leader

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Netanyahu says ‘we’ll do what we need to do’ with Iran’s leader

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Benjamin Netanyahu has warned his armed forces will “do what we need to do” with Iran’s leadership as he claimed regime change could “certainly be the result” of Israel’s attacks on the Islamic republic.

The Israeli premier’s remarks — in response to a question about assassinating Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei — came after a weekend of escalating hostilities where the bitter foes traded strikes on cities and energy infrastructure.

Since launching its surprise assault on Friday, Israel has killed key figures Iran’s military and nuclear programme and has launched air strikes across the country, pitching the two of the Middle East’s most powerful militaries into outright war.

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Asked in an interview with Fox News whether ousting Khamenei’s regime was one of the goals of Israel’s assault, Netanyahu said it “could certainly be the result because the leadership is very weak”. 

“Eighty per cent of the people would throw these theological thugs out,” Israel’s prime minister continued. “The decision to act, to rise up, is the decision of the Iranian people.”

A US official confirmed a Reuters report that Donald Trump had vetoed an Israeli plan to kill Khamenei. Netanyahu declined to comment on the report.

“But I can tell you, I think that we do what we need to do, we’ll do what we need to do. And I think the United States knows what is good for the United States,” he added.

Israel has long pursued an assassination policy against its enemies in the region. Its armed forces have decimated the top ranks of the Iran-backed militant groups Hamas and Hizbollah since Israel was attacked by Hamas on October 7, 2023.

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Netanyahu spoke after Trump earlier on Sunday called for a deal between the warring parties, saying “many calls and meetings” were now taking place that would lead to peace soon. “Iran and Israel should make a deal, and will make a deal,” he wrote on Truth Social.

In a later call to ABC News, Trump said also Russian President Vladimir Putin was “ready” to mediate — adding that he was “open” to the idea and had discussed it with his Russian counterpart.

But despite Trump’s remarks Israel and Iran continued to trade strikes on Sunday.

Israeli officials said Israel’s armed forces had carried out strikes on more than 80 targets, including the ministry of defence, military and nuclear sites, as well as at least two energy facilities. Scores of Iranians have been killed in the attacks but authorities have not released a total figure for deaths and injuries.

Iranian state media reported that Israel had carried out numerous attacks across Tehran including at least two in residential neighbourhoods in the city centre, and struck a major water pipeline, causing leaks in northern parts of the capital.

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Online videos also showed columns of fire and smoke rising in downtown Tehran and other parts of the city, and police reported heavy traffic at Tehran’s exit routes, signifying many residents were leaving the capital for safer cities. Explosions were reported in Mashhad, Iran’s easternmost city, in a sign of Israel expanding its assault across the country.

Meanwhile, Iran continued to fire barrages at Israel, including one on Sunday afternoon, and three during the night that killed 11 people and injured more than 200, as well as hitting refining infrastructure in the port of Haifa, according to a regulatory filing from the Bazan group.

Officials from the two countries also continued to trade threats, with Israel’s defence minister Israel Katz threatening to inflict similar destruction on Tehran as it did on Beirut in its offensive against the Lebanese militant group Hizbollah last year. Iran’s President Masoud Pezeshkian pledged a “more painful” response should Israel continue its onslaught.

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Oakland County sheriff urging vigilance after shootings of 2 Minnesota lawmakers

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Oakland County sheriff urging vigilance after shootings of 2 Minnesota lawmakers

Manhunt underway after targeted shootings of 2 Minnesota lawmakers

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Manhunt underway after targeted shootings of 2 Minnesota lawmakers

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Oakland County Sheriff Michael Bouchard is urging lawmakers to be “vigilant and aware of their surroundings” following the shootings of two Minnesota lawmakers on Saturday.

Minnesota state Rep. Melissa Hortman and her husband were killed, and state Sen. John Hoffman and his wife were injured in what Gov. Tim Walz has called a “politically motivated” incident.

Officials have identified the suspect in the shootings as 57-year-old Vance Luther Boelter. The Federal Bureau of Investigation released a photo Saturday afternoon that appears to show Boelter standing outside of one of the lawmakers’ homes, wearing a mask and dressed like a police officer. 

Security camera image showing suspect Vance L. Boelter

The FBI released this image taken from home security video showing Vance L. Boelter, the suspect in the shooting of two Minnesota lawmakers on June 14, 2025.

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Bouchard said in a written statement on Saturday that he had spoken with multiple legislators and warned them to stay vigilant “in the event there are other evil and violent, copycat individuals who might want to harm elected officials.”

Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel said on Saturday that her department was not aware of any danger to the state in connection with the shootings.

As of Sunday afternoon, federal and state officials are looking for Boelter. The FBI says it’s offering a $50,000 reward for information leading to his arrest and conviction.

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