Iran war and Strait of Hormuz stuck in limbo
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Hegseth to face Congress for 1st time since Iran war began
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Iran war to pass key marker Comey indicted a second time Hegseth on Capitol Hill Pesticide provision debate The war between the U.S. and Iran is set to run past the
Live updates: Talks to end the war in Iran stall as economies feel the impact of rising energy costs
Talks between Iran and the United States seemed stalled despite President Donald Trump claiming Iran had informed that it was in a “State of Collapse.”
Maryam Rahmanian, an Iranian-American photojournalist living in Tehran, took portraits of civilians who decided to stay in the war-torn city.
By Dan Burns April 29 (Reuters) - Federal Reserve officials last met just over two weeks into the U.S.-led war on Iran and then had little data at their disposal beyond surging gasoline prices to assess its impact on the economy and the outlook for interest rates.
In these books, an emperor, an officer and an orphan look for anything that resembles a clear victory in the fog of war.
Forty years ago, in April 1986, there was an explosion at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant. It was the worst nuclear accident in history. Then the plant was in the USSR, it is part of northern Ukraine now.
On Page One of Kristin Hannah’s bestselling novel, “The Nightingale,” there is a line that may be remembered even longer than the book itself.
A schoolgirl, an ambulance driver, a migrant worker and a journalist. These are just some of the stories of civilians killed during the Iran War.