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Hamas releases propaganda video showing Israeli-American hostage Edan Alexander
Hamas’ military wing released a propaganda video Saturday showing an Israeli American hostage.
It was the first video of its kind shared in months.
The undated video, posted on the secure messaging service Telegram, shows 20-year-old Edan Alexander. The message says Alexander has been held captive by Hamas for more than 420 days. If true, the video would have been taken this past week.
In the video – speaking in a mixture of Hebrew and English – Alexander speaks to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, saying “you have neglected us.”
He also addressed President-elect Donald Trump, asking him to use his “influence and the full power of the United States to negotiate for our freedom.”
In a statement via the Hostages and Missing Families Forum Headquarters, Alexander’s mother Yael Alexander said her son “represents all the living hostages who cannot make their voices heard, and this voice needs to reverberate and shake everyone!”
Alexander grew up in New Jersey and was a soldier in the Israeli military when Hamas militants attacked on the morning of Oct. 7, 2023. The then 19-year-old was able to send a quick message to his mother amid the intense fighting around his base near the Gaza border.
He told her that despite having shrapnel embedded in his helmet from the explosions, he had managed to get to a protected area. After 7 a.m., his family lost contact, the Associated Press reported.
“He told me even though things were already getting dangerous around him. That was the last time I heard my son’s voice. I cannot describe the pain of not knowing where your child is or how is he,” Yael Alexander told CBS New York in October.
When a week-long ceasefire last November brought the release of 105 hostages in exchange for 240 Palestinian prisoners, some of the freed hostages said they had seen Alexander in captivity. Varda Ben Baruch, his grandmother, told the AP that the hostages told her Alexander kept his cool, encouraging them that everyone would be released soon.
Alexander’s father Adi Alexander told “CBS Mornings” in September that they are pushing Israeli and American leaders for a ceasefire deal.
“We hope he’s holding up and we’re coming for him,” Adi Alexander said. “He needs to survive.”
Adi and Yael Alexander met with President Biden and Trump in Washington earlier this month and pleaded with them to work together to bring all the hostages home in a single deal, according to the AP.
More than 250 people were kidnapped and 1,200 killed when Hamas militants burst across the border and carried out a bloody attack on southern Israeli communities. Israel’s subsequent war against Hamas has since killed more than 43,000 Palestinians, according to local health officials.
Netanyahu’s office said in a statement Saturday that he has spoken with Alexander’s family after the release of the “brutal psychological warfare video.”
“The Prime Minister said in the conversation that he felt very well the agony going through Edan and the hostages and their families, and promised that Israel is working with determination and in every way to return them home, along with all the hostages who are in the hands of the enemy,” the statement said.
The Hostages and Missing Families Forum Headquarters said in a statement that the video is “definite proof that despite all the rumors – there are living hostages and they are suffering greatly.”
“One year after the first and only deal, it’s clear to everyone: returning the hostages is only possible through a deal,” the group said. “After more than 420 days of continuous abuse, starvation and darkness, the urgency of bringing home all 101 hostages cannot be overstated.”
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Trump puts candy on trick-or-treater’s head at Halloween event
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Video: Mamdani Leads in Latest Polls
new video loaded: Mamdani Leads in Latest Polls
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Mamdani Leads in Latest Polls
Three new polls show Zohran Mamdani leading the New York City mayoral race. The two other major candidates, Andrew Cuomo and Curtis Sliwa, made their last appeals to voters before election day.
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“I do not believe the city of New York has a future if Zohran Mamdani is elected mayor.” “I voted for Andrew Cuomo. I’m not a huge fan. I think he has a past. I was here, obviously, when his father was here. You know, with politics comes imperfection.” “His ideas about free transportation, his ideas about child care, his ideas about just the diversity of the city and the importance of diversity. It’s a wonderful thing.” “I voted for the first time. It was very exciting. Just the feel of like, going in there, voting for the first time. They shouted like, ‘Hey, first-time voters!’ So that added to the excitement of everything, and I was just happy to do my part.”
By McKinnon de Kuyper
October 30, 2025
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Trump says he wants to resume nuclear testing. Here’s what that would mean
A sub-surface atomic test is shown March 23, 1955 at the Nevada Test Site near Yucca Flats, Nev.
AP/U.S. Atomic Energy Commission
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AP/U.S. Atomic Energy Commission
President Trump said on Thursday that the U.S. would begin testing nuclear weapons again for the first time in decades.

“We’ve halted many years ago, but with others doing testing I think it’s appropriate to do so,” the president told reporters aboard Air Force One.
Experts say that the resumption of testing would be a major escalation and could upend the nuclear balance of power.
“I think a decision to resume nuclear testing would be extremely dangerous and would do more to benefit our adversaries than the United States,” said Corey Hinderstein, vice president for studies at the Carnegie Endowment for Nuclear Peace.
Here’s what a test would involve, and why the president might be calling for one now.
There’s currently only one place America could test a nuke — near Las Vegas, Nevada
The Nevada National Security Site, approximately 60 miles northwest of Las Vegas, is currently the only place where America could test a nuclear weapon, says Robert Peters, a senior research fellow for strategic deterrence at the Heritage Foundation.

The Nevada site is around 1,300 square miles in size, larger than the state of Rhode Island. Starting in the 1950s, scientists conducted atmospheric nuclear tests at the site, but from 1962 to 1992, testing was done underground.
Today, testing would likely be done in “a complex of deep underground mineshafts,” Peters said.
Scientists dig a deep shaft either directly below ground or into the side of a mountain. They then put a nuclear device in a chamber at the end of the shaft and seal it up. The detonation is contained by the rock, reducing the risk of atmospheric fallout.
Although underground testing is far safer than atmospheric testing, it still carries risks, said Hinderstein. In the past, some radioactive fallout has leaked from test shafts. Additionally, the test could shake buildings as far away as Las Vegas, and Hinderstein said some of the newer buildings in Vegas could even be at risk of damage.
“All of these big highrises — including Stratosphere, including the Trump Hotel,” she said. “They’re not designed for massive, significant seismic activity.”
America’s last test in Nevada was over 30 years ago
At the end of the Cold War, the nation’s major nuclear powers declared a voluntary moratorium on nuclear testing. Russia, then the Soviet Union, tested its last nuclear weapon in 1990, the U.S. conducted its final test in 1992, and China conducted its last test in 1996.
The U.S. conducted hundreds of underground tests in Nevada. Each massive explosion created a subsidence crater visible at the surface.
NNSA/NNSS
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NNSA/NNSS
The voluntary test moratorium has been in place as part of an effort to maintain nuclear stability. The U.S currently uses scientific experiments and supercomputer simulations to make sure its bombs still work.
Last year, NPR was one of a handful of organizations granted rare access to the top-secret underground tunnels where the tests take place. Scientists working in the tunnels said they were confident they could continue to ensure the safety of America’s nuclear weapons without testing.
Although a full-scale nuclear detonation would be “complementary” to current experiments, “our assessment is that there are no system questions that would be answered by a test, that would be worth the expense and the effort and the time,” Don Haynes, a nuclear weapons scientist from Los Alamos National Laboratory told NPR as they walked through the tunnels.
Indeed Hinderstein says, preparing for a nuclear test is no small matter. While a basic demonstration test could be done in approximately 18 months. Conducting a test that would produce scientifically useful data would likely take years.
In this photo taken from video distributed by Russian Defense Ministry Press Service on Wednesday, Oct. 22, 2025, the crew of the Bryansk nuclear submarine of the Russian navy prepares to conduct a practice launch of an intercontinental ballistic missile during the drills of Russia’s nuclear forces.
AP/Russian Defense Ministry Press S
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AP/Russian Defense Ministry Press S
Trump’s announcement is likely reacting to some recent tests by Russia
On Sunday, Russia announced it had conducted a successful test of a new nuclear-powered cruise missile. Then on Wednesday President Vladimir Putin announced the successful test of another doomsday weapon — a nuclear-powered underwater drone, which Russia says can be used to attack coastal cities.
Trump never called out Russia by name, but he did suggest recent testing was behind the announcement. “I see them testing,” he said aboard Air Force One, “and I say, ‘Well if they’re going to test I guess we have to test.’”

While testing nuclear-powered weapons is not the same as testing nuclear weapons themselves, Russia’s tests are highly provocative. They come just months before the expiration of the last nuclear treaty between the U.S. and Russia, designed to put limits on their arsenals.
The back-and-forth has all the hallmarks of the start of an arms race, noted Jon Wolfsthal, the director of global risk at the Federation for American Scientists.
“We saw this play out throughout the Cold War through nuclear testing, nuclear deployments, nuclear investments,” he said.
Many experts warn that now is not the time to resume nuclear testing
Hinderstein, who served as a deputy administrator of the National Nuclear Security Administration, the agency responsible for America’s nuclear weapons, from 2021-2024, said that a decision to resume testing would not be in America’s interests.
At the end of the Cold War, the U.S. had conducted more than a thousand nuclear tests — far more than any other nation (China, by comparison had conducted just 45).
Other nations, “have more to gain by resuming nuclear testing than the United States does,” she said.
Testing would likely be expensive adds Paul Dean, vice president for global nuclear policy at the Nuclear Threat Initiative. “The cost estimates I’ve seen have been at around, ballpark, $140 million per test,” he said.
“It’s not necessary to conduct a nuclear explosive test right now” agreed Robert Peters of the Heritage Foundation. But he added. “But there very well be compelling reasons to test in the coming months and years. That’s how bad things are getting.”
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