Bloodshed over the weekend highlighted the brittleness of the cease-fires in both places. Still, Israel, Hamas and Hezbollah each have reasons to postpone a new escalation, at least for a few weeks.
The most likely impact of the two ceasefires is for all parties to avoid returning to war. The risk of one blown ceasefire ...
The Israel-Hamas War has spilled onto the global stage. Political polarization has deepened far from the conflict. The global economy—including oil ...
Sunday’s delayed start to the truce was a minor problem compared with the difficult choices and American leverage needed to ...
In leaked comments from Knesset committee, outgoing IDF chief defends staying on job until now, urges 'effective sanctions' ...
Long lines of Palestinians -- some kneeling to kiss the soil as they stepped into the northern part of the strip -- were ...
Israeli troops fired on people trying to return home to southern Lebanon and delayed a return home for northern Gaza ...
Ali Al-Ansari, media attache to the Qatari Embassy to the United States, told Newsweek his nation "appreciates the important ...
Naim Qassem insisted Hezbollah had emerged from the fight with Israel victorious, despite painful and unprecedented setbacks, ...
Hezbollah leader Sheikh Naim Qassem said Monday that Israel should withdraw from the occupied border areas in southern ...
It was unclear if the relative quiet on Tuesday was a sign that both Hamas and Hezbollah had halted trying to cross through ...