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In 1992, Francis Fukuyama penned his famous ‘End of History’ essay in which he argued that former President Ronald Reagan’s Cold War victory had ushered in an age in which free market democracies would flourish almost by osmosis with a light, guiding American hand.

Thirty-five years on, after 9/11, after watching Communist China become a global powerhouse and Russia grow more belligerent, it is obvious that this careful management of neo-liberalism has failed. What we need is a new beginning of history, starting with President Donald Trump.

Of course, we all see the stark difference between the vibrant Trump and his immediate predecessor, Joe Biden, the first commander in chief who looked less alive in office than his Disney animatronic in the Hall of Presidents. But it’s more than that.

Every president since Reagan has essentially been a caretaker for Fukuyama’s vision of a world order in which the U.S., as the undisputed leader, puts its interests last, confident that ‘our way of life’ will inevitably dominate the globe.

The Bushes, Clintons and Obamas did not shape the world so much as they sought to preserve the shape created by Reagan’s Cold War victory. Today, we need Trump to see foreign affairs with fresh eyes, and so he is.

On Tuesday evening, the president shocked the world, and maybe even Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, with whom he was sharing a press conference, by suggesting that the United States should take over Gaza and turn it into the Riviera of the Middle East.

On the domestic political left, and internationally, the idea of American Gaza was met with scoffing scorn and incredulity. But given the horrible conditions under which those in Gaza live and the intolerable threat they pose to Israel, we must ask why that is.

The answer is that, while the global institutions which neo-liberals created and rely on would never agree to Trump’s Gaza solution, these are the same groups that have failed to secure peace in the Middle East for decades.

Is trying something new so crazy? After all, it is the terrorists who favor the slow and steady status quo of death and destruction. Why give it to them?

And it isn’t just in the Levant that Trump is making waves. Regarding strategically vital Greenland and the economically vital Panama Canal, the new Trump Doctrine is not just that American interests should come first, but that putting them first actually benefits the entire world.

In all fairness, it made some sense in 1992 to think that, as the world’s lone superpower, the United States should be magnanimous and put developing nations first. But somewhere along the line, that magnanimity turned to self-loathing. 

In all fairness, it made some sense in 1992 to think that, as the world’s lone superpower, the United States should be magnanimous and put developing nations first. But somewhere along the line, that magnanimity turned to self-loathing. 

Former President Obama took such a dim view of American moral power that he preferred our nation lead from behind.

Under these caretaker presidents, the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), which was designed to burnish our reputation abroad, instead spent millions criticizing Western Colonialism and telling Africans they aren’t gay enough.

Reagan won the Cold War by keeping his eyes fixed on the aspirational America of the shining city upon a hill. Fukuyama mistakenly believed we had already achieved it and moved in.

Trump’s shining city on a hill may be a hotel and casino in Gaza, or a submarine base in Greenland. It might be freer passage between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. But what it will not be is more of the same.

It was Nietzsche who wrote, ‘In the mountains, the shortest way is from peak to peak; but for that one must have long legs.’ For too long, American foreign policy has labored in the valleys of conflict and discord, always waiting for the safest and easiest way to climb out, never quite managing to.

Like Reagan, Trump knows how to walk from peak to peak and how to ignore the naysayers who say change is impossible. 

At the end of history, one can only look backwards. Perhaps this is why we are a society of sequels and franchises rather than original stories, of old well-worn foreign policy paths, not new blazing trails.

At the beginning of history, all things are possible. There is no cynical past to foreclose on innovation and new ideas. 

Trump has no intention of managing the slow decline of America, nor simply standing athwart that decline yelling ‘Stop!’ No, for the first time in a long time, the American president sees new paths and visions for our nation, and under her leadership, for the entire world.

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The head of the Senate Judiciary Committee slammed Democrats on the panel this week for their attempts to schedule a second confirmation hearing for President Donald Trump’s FBI director nominee, Kash Patel, describing the effort Tuesday night as a ‘delay tactic’ designed to stall Patel from taking the reins of the sprawling law enforcement agency. 

In a statement Tuesday night, Grassley criticized what he described as the ‘baseless’ attempt by Sen. Dick Durbin and other Democrats on the panel to push for a second hearing, noting that Patel testified for more than five hours before the committee and disclosed to the panel ‘thousands of pages’ of records, as well as nearly 150 pages of responses to lawmakers’ written questions. 

‘No one was convinced by the minority’s baseless efforts to mischaracterize and malign Kash Patel,’ Grassley said. ‘It’s additionally outrageous to assert that a nominee should come before the Senate to answer for government actions that occurred prior to their time at an agency.’

 

‘Further hearings on his nomination are unnecessary,’ Grassley concluded.

He said the committee still intends to vote on Patel’s confirmation as FBI director as early as next week.  

Grassley’s remarks – and his unrelenting support for Trump’s FBI director nominee – come after the Senate Judiciary Committee’s ranking Democrat, Dick Durbin of Illinois, urged Grassley to delay Patel’s confirmation vote Tuesday, citing what he described as ‘apparent falsehoods’ in Patel’s testimony last week, as well as the ‘recent removals and reassignments of FBI career civil servants.’

The letter, signed by all 10 Democrats on the panel, urged Grassley to delay Patel’s confirmation vote until Patel agreed to testify for a second time under oath about the recent removals and reassignments of FBI civil servants; and until DOJ agrees to provide the panel with volume two of former special counsel Jack Smith’s final report that refers or pertains to Patel’s testimony or actions, among other things.

‘Given the gravity of these matters, which bear directly on Mr. Patel’s integrity, his suitability to lead the nation’s premier law enforcement agency, and his regard for safeguarding classified information, we ask that the Chairman schedule an additional hearing for Mr. Patel to explain these matters in person,’ the Democrats said.

The letter – and Grassley’s swift dismissal of the effort – comes amid two new lawsuits from anonymous FBI agents that were filed separately this week. Both lawsuits sought to block any public identification of FBI employees who were involved in the Jan. 6 investigations into the U.S. Capitol riots after a list of agents involved and their roles was shared with DOJ leadership Tuesday afternoon in keeping with an earlier request from acting U.S. deputy attorney general, Emil Bove.

Both groups of FBI agents asked the court for emergency injunctive relief to block the names or identities of FBI agents involved in the Jan. 6 investigations from being shared, citing concerns that the probe or any retaliatory measures carried out as a result could have a chilling effect on the work of the FBI or spark retaliatory efforts inside the bureau. 

Lawyers for the Federal Bureau of Investigation Agent’s Association, a voluntary professional association representing more than 14,000 active and retired FBI special agents, told reporters Tuesday night that they see the Jan. 6 request as a ‘prelude’ to potential adverse action or mass layoffs in the bureau, citing fears that agents name could be subject to threats, harassment or targeting either by the public or inside the bureau.

To date, there are no known plans to conduct sweeping removals or take punitive action against the agents involved.

One retired FBI agent also urged calm, noting to Fox News in an interview that the acting director and deputy director of the FBI still remain in place. 

This person also stressed that the Jan. 6 investigation and the FBI personnel involved in investigating each case ‘fully followed Bureau and DOJ guidelines,’ and that violations of federal statutes were ‘proven beyond a reasonable doubt in federal courts of law.’

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General Motors is laying off roughly half of the employees who remain at its discontinued Cruise robotaxi business.

The plans come two months after GM said it would no longer fund Cruise after spending more than $10 billion since acquiring the self-driving car business in 2016.

“Today, Cruise shared the difficult decision to part ways with approximately 50% of its workforce,” Cruise said in an emailed statement. “We are grateful for their passion and contributions to help us reach this stage, and our focus is on supporting them into their next chapter with severance packages and career support.”

Cruise had nearly 2,300 employees as of the end of last year, a GM spokesman previously told CNBC.

In an internal email sent Tuesday morning to all Cruise employees, which was viewed by CNBC, Cruise President and Chief Administrative Officer Craig Glidden wrote that the 50% reduction came “as a result of the change in strategy we announced in December.”

“With our move away from the ride-hail business and toward providing autonomous vehicles to customers alongside GM, our staffing and resource needs have dramatically changed,” Glidden wrote.

He added that a string of executives will also depart this week: Marc Whitten, CEO; Nilka Thomas, chief human resources officer; Steve Kenner, chief safety officer; and Rob Grant, chief government affairs officer. Mo Elshenawy, president and chief technology officer, will stay on at Cruise through the end of April to help with transition duties, Glidden wrote.

The Cruise layoffs, which were first reported by TechCrunch, were expected, but executives had previously declined to speculate on the amount.

The job cuts were announced in conjunction with the Detroit automaker reporting the completion of Cruise becoming a wholly-owned subsidiary within GM, which is now focusing on “personal autonomous vehicles” rather than robotaxis.

About 88% of remaining employees are in engineering or related roles, and impacted employees were given 60 days’ notice, according to the company.

During the remainder of their time with Cruise, the affected employees will receive full base pay, as well as eight weeks’ severance. Employees who had been with Cruise for more than three years will receive an additional two weeks’ pay for every additional year spent at Cruise, the company said.

“While not an easy decision, we are focused on combining efforts with General Motors to accelerate autonomy at scale on personal autonomous vehicles,” Cruise said.

GM’s Cruise was considered a leader in the business along with Alphabet-backed Waymo until the company grounded its robotaxi fleet and announced the end of its commercial operations late last year. That came after a October 2023 accident in which external probes found the company misled or deceived regulators about the incident.

In January 2024, a third-party probe into Cruise revealed that culture issues, ineptitude and poor leadership were at the center of regulatory oversights and coverup concerns that had plagued the company.

The report addressed, in part, controversy that had swirled around Cruise since an Oct. 2, 2023, accident in which a pedestrian in San Francisco was dragged 20 feet by a Cruise robotaxi after being struck by a separate vehicle. Results of the investigation, which reviewed whether Cruise representatives misled investigators or members of the media in discussing the incident, were published months later in a 105-page report.

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INGLEWOOD, Calif. — LeBron James and the Los Angeles Lakers were still processing a series of emotions Tuesday, but managed to dial it in at the Intuit Dome to secure a 122-97 victory over the crosstown rival Clippers.

Those emotions were still raw for members of the team on the same day they welcomed Luka Donicic, who joined them on the bench for the first time.

“My emotions were all over the place Saturday,” James said while reflecting on the events that took place over the weekend. “We were coming off a huge win in the (Madison Square) Garden and I was out with my family at dinner and the first time I heard it I thought it was fake and that it was a hoax.”

It wasn’t until James received a Facetime call from Anthony Davis that there was a true understanding of how real everything was. The two had a lengthy discussion but even after the conversation things still didn’t feel real for the 40-year-old superstar.

“I’ve never seen this one,” James said about the situation. “I have seen it all up until this one. I’ve never been a part of a transaction like that. That was different.”

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Without his co-star with whom he won an NBA championship with in 2020, James produced 26 points, nine assists and eight rebounds in 31 minutes of play.

James cited that the roster changes still didn’t feel like his new reality until he saw Doncic in person.

Fourth-year guard Austin Reaves mentioned that it had been a tough couple of days because of the relationships he built with several of the players who had been traded away.

Reaves mentioned he’s leaned on veterans in the locker room like James to ask questions about having teammates who were no longer around and how he’s navigated his emotions throughout his career.

James remains committed to his role as the team’s leader and made it clear that he is willing to do whatever it takes to help Doncic succeed in Los Angeles.

Like most of the Lakers, Doncic is still “processing” what has transpired but still has his same overall career objective at the forefront.

“Win the championship,” Doncic said about his main objective as a Laker. “You don’t come here for nothing else but championships. I have everything left to prove and the goal is to win the championship.”

James had been spotted on the bench next to Doncic having a conversation and at times sharing a laugh.

“I’m really excited to be here,” Doncic said earlier in the day. “I get to play for the Lakers, not everybody can say that. Many, many legends played here with many, many championships. That’s pretty cool.”

If Doncic is successful in bringing a title to Los Angeles, it would be the 18th in the franchise’s history. The Lakers are currently second among teams in the league with the most titles, trailing the Boston Celtics.

Did Luka Doncic make his Lakers debut?

Doncic didn’t play for the Lakers on Tuesday, but an opportunity to play with the team before the NBA All-Star break was not completely ruled out.

The Lakers have three games remaining on the schedule before the break, but there will be an evaluation period with the newly acquired star before he puts on a Lakers uniform for an official game.

Lakers general manager Rob Pelinka said Doncic will initially be listed as day-to-day and work with the Lakers’ medical team to work toward having the guard play in a game soon. 

Doncic is expected to participate in 5-on-5 drills on Wednesday with the Lakers.

Maxi Kleber and Markieff Morris were also sent to the Lakers as part of the trade. Kleber is dealing with a right ankle injury and was spotted with crutches and a walking boot on Tuesday morning. He is expected to have his surgically repaired foot re-evaluated in eight weeks.

Morris did suit up for the Lakers but did not record a statistic against the Clippers.

The Lakers remain in search of a big man

JJ Redick told reporters before the game that he’s open to making larger changes to the Lakers’ starting lineup after the team traded away two of their best-starting defenders (Anthony Davis and Max Christie). Redick said he and his staff will evaluate the entire group.

Jaxson Hayes started at center for the Lakers as the replacement for Davis. It was Hayes’ fifth start of the season. It remains unclear if Hayes will start at center the rest of the season but it isn’t completely out of the question.

Hayes finished with six points, six rebounds and four assists in 24 minutes of play.

While there’s a clear need for another quality big man on the roster, Pelinka hinted that a long-term solution may take more than the next few days before the trade deadline to discover.

‘We know we have a need for a big — the market for bigs right now leading into the last two or three days of the trade deadline is very dry,’ Pelinka said. ‘There’s just not a lot available. So maybe we’ll be able to do some stuff around the margins. I would say, in terms of a big move for that position, it’s probably more realistic that would be something that comes in the offseason.’

The Lakers have been tied to various centers across the league as potential trade targets, including Robert Williams III of the Portland Trail Blazers, Jonas Valanciunas of the Washington Wizards and Walker Kessler of the Utah Jazz.

‘We know that our roster has continued work to do to be complete,’ Pelinka said. ‘We’re going to build a roster that fits JJ Redick’s basketball philosophy.’

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NEW ORLEANS – Xavier Worthy told USA TODAY Sports last March that the Kansas City Chiefs were his ideal landing spot.

A congratulatory text from Patrick Mahomes after Worthy ran an NFL combine record 4.21 seconds in the 40-yard dash only intensified the wide receiver’s ambition. But not in Worthy’s wildest dreams did he envision it would come into fruition, and he’d be a part of the Chiefs’ historic quest for a three-peat.

“This is stuff you can’t imagine,” the Chiefs rookie wide receiver said. “Getting drafted here was one thing. Coming back-to-back-to-back Super Bowls is another.”

Worthy’s registered 59 receptions, 638 receiving yards and six touchdowns during the regular season. He ranked sixth in receptions and seventh in receiving yards among all NFL rookie receivers.

The rookie wideout has made strides in his route running and rapport with Mahomes in recent weeks. Worthy tallied a career-high eight catches for 79 yards in Kansas City’s Christmas Day win over the Pittsburgh Steelers. In the AFC championship game, Worthy produced a game-high six catches for a new career-best 85 receiving yards.

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One of Worthy’s catches was a highlight snag on a 50-50 ball where he snatched the football from two Buffalo Bills defenders on crucial third-and-5 in the first half.

It’s a play that underscored Worthy’s budding confidence and growth in his rookie campaign.

“Xavier has done a great job this year of getting better every week. Whether it’s his route running, whether it’s getting on the same page as Patrick (Mahomes). He’s worked very hard at that part of his game,” Chiefs coach Andy Reid said.

“It’s paid off later in the season here. He’s not a big guy. To be able to persevere through 17 games, plus some playoff games, is a tribute to him and his conditioning.”

Worthy leads Kansas City in postseason catches (11) and targets (13) entering Super Bowl 59. He and tight end Travis Kelce are the Chiefs’ only two players with over 100 receiving yards this postseason.

The Chiefs have been able to exploit Worthy’s speed versus opponents during their Super Bowl run. They’ve utilized his speed on reserve runs, short, intermediate and some long routes – all part of his expanded route tree in his rookie campaign.

“I always knew Xavier was gonna be a great football player. Obviously, the talent is there but the way he works. He gets after it (and) he’s extremely smart. We put a lot on his plate, and he wants more,” Mahomes said. “He wants to continue to be better and be great for the football team.”

Worthy’s progression has helped the Chiefs get to a third straight Super Bowl. He’s coming off arguably the best game of his young career.

Now, he’s a confident player going into the biggest game of his life. When USA TODAY Sports asked Worthy who is going to be the fastest player on the field on Sunday, his answer – and smile – said it all.

“You’re looking at him,” Worthy said.

There are 4.21 reasons why his response is valid.

Follow USA TODAY Sports’ Tyler Dragon on X @TheTylerDragon.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

LOS ANGELES — When UCLA head coach Mick Cronin publicly calls out his team or goes off on other tangents, the college basketball world loves to fire back at the sixth-year head coach. How could it be constructive? How can his team succeed?

Well, maybe there is a method to the madness. 

After a sluggish four-game losing streak to start 2025 and some fiery words from their coach, the Bruins have flipped the script and rattled off six wins in a row. The latest one may be its most impressive yet: taking down No. 9 Michigan State in front of a revitalized Pauley Pavilion.

‘You can call them the hottest team in the league right now, and deservedly so,’ said Michigan State coach Tom Izzo.

Cronin’s rants could be one of several reasons why the Bruins are quickly riding high and contenders in the Big Ten. During the four-game skid that included two losses by double-digits, the offense averaged 65.5 points per game and made less than 45% of its buckets in each contest. Three of them were also in different time zones, something Cronin complained about.

UCLA started the season strong and looked like a contender for a top four seed in the NCAA Tournament, but the string of bad losses pushed it toward bubble territory. 

Then the Bruins returned to the West Coast, and things started to click. They haven’t left the Pacific Time Zone in three weeks, and the offense has pieced it together. In the five ensuing games, it averaged 80.8 points per game and made more than half of its shots in four of those victories. 

‘We knew we had to do something after those losses, and I think we did a great job of coming together and focusing on day-by-day, focusing on the next day, and just trying to stick through it,’ said forward Tyler Bilodeau. ‘We knew we were going to get over the hump and we just have to keep doing that.’

The rise of the 7-footer 

There’s been a catalyst during the run, and it’s happened by accident. In the Jan. 21 win over Wisconsin, 7-foot-3-inch Spain native Aday Mara entered the game after not getting any playing time the game before and completely dominated the Badgers. Offensively and defensively, Wisconsin had no answers for Mara’s dominance near the bucket as he posted a career-high 22 points.

Since then, Mara has seen his role increase, going from getting garbage time and spot minutes to the delight of the home crowd to being a difference maker on the court. He can effortlessly grab rebounds, shows finesse posting up around the rim and his long arms are resulting in opposing players having their shots swatted into the crowd or completely missing the net.

‘I saw him early in the year and I didn’t think he was very good,’ Izzo said. ‘I saw him in the last four or five games and I think he’s really good. He creates some problems for you offensively.

‘That kid’s gonna be really good,’ he added.

Defense gets to Spartans

The offense has been scoring for the Bruins, but Tuesday’s win over the Spartans was a vintage performance from a Cronin team. UCLA shot only 35% from the field – it’s worst shooting night of the season – and in the second half, went nearly eight minutes without a field goal as Michigan State clawed back.

But what did it do to stay in the game? Cause havoc defensively. 

Michigan State turned the ball over a whopping 16 times. Izzo joked fans sitting courtside should have had helmets ‘because the ball was just kind of flying over there.’ Those turnovers led to the Spartans unable to get into transition opportunities and 19 points off turnovers for the Bruins, who only coughed the ball up three times in the contest.

“I told the guys, if we get to the NCAA tournament and we play every game with three turnovers, we’ll cut the nets down,” Cronin said.

The defensive intensity was something Izzo didn’t think his team handled well, calling it “the most physical game I’ve been in the Big Ten in a long time.” The physicality is why a tough bucket by UCLA’s Eric Dailey Jr. with seven seconds left was the game-winner. 

Whether it’s shooting at a high percentage or clamping down defensively, UCLA is finding ways to win at the right time. In addition to the home crowd going from a snoozefest to a raucous one, the Bruins are creeping toward becoming a March Madness lock, getting the double-bye in the Big Ten Tournament and winning the conference. 

Could the fiery criticism from Cronin be the reason the Bruins turn it around? Don’t rule it out.

‘They lost four in a row and everyone pronounced them dead,’ Izzo said. ‘Sometimes you need a jolt, and he gave them one.’

“You better hope he keeps yelling.’

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After President Donald Trump announced that America ‘will take over the Gaza strip,’ Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., pushed back against the idea, suggesting that the move would betray the ‘America First’ principle Trump voters expected.

During his inauguration speech last month, Trump unequivocally declared that throughout his administration he will ‘put America first,’ echoing a longstanding pillar of his political philosophy, which he also expressed during his 2017 inaugural address.

But Paul is throwing a red flag in response to Trump’s newly unveiled Gaza plans.

‘The pursuit for peace should be that of the Israelis and the Palestinians. I thought we voted for America First. We have no business contemplating yet another occupation to doom our treasure and spill our soldiers blood,’ Paul declared in a Wednesday post on X.

The senator made the comment in response to a post in which Secretary of State Marco Rubio declared on Tuesday, ‘Gaza MUST BE FREE from Hamas. As @POTUS shared today, the United States stands ready to lead and Make Gaza Beautiful Again. Our pursuit is one of lasting peace in the region for all people.’

While delivering remarks alongside Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanhyahu on Tuesday, Trump said that Palestinians should be settled outside the Gaza Strip, and that the U.S. will transform the region, which he described as a ‘demolition site.’

‘The U.S. will take over the Gaza Strip,’ Trump declared, saying, ‘we’ll own it, and be responsible for dismantling all of the dangerous unexploded bombs and other weapons on the site … level it out, create an economic development that will supply unlimited numbers of jobs and housing for the people of the area.’

‘I do see a long term ownership position,’ Trump said of the region.

Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich., called Trump’s proposal ‘ethnic cleansing.’

‘This president is openly calling for ethnic cleansing while sitting next to a genocidal war criminal. He’s perfectly fine cutting off working Americans from federal funds while the funding to the Israeli government continues flowing,’ she declared in a post on X.

In a post on another X account she declared, ‘Palestinians aren’t going anywhere. This president can only spew this fanatical bulls— because of bipartisan support in Congress for funding genocide and ethnic cleansing. It’s time for my two-state solution colleagues to speak up.’

Rep. Diana Harshbarger, R-Tenn., welcomed the president’s remarks.

‘This is what the leader of the free world looks like, folks. President Trump campaigned on securing peace in Gaza, and he’s doing just that. Promises made, promises kept — it’ll never get old,’ she said in a tweet.

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The Palestinian terrorist group whose attack on Israel launched the war in Gaza is now calling President Donald Trump’s proposal for the U.S. to rebuild the territory a ‘recipe for creating chaos and tension in the region.’ 

Trump sent shockwaves throughout the Middle East after announcing last night that the U.S. will ‘take over the Gaza Strip,’ level it and rebuild the area. 

‘Instead of holding the Zionist occupation accountable for the crime of genocide and displacement, it is being rewarded, not punished,’ Hamas told the Associated Press Wednesday. 

Hamas’ attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, led to the Israeli military entering the Gaza Strip in their mission to eliminate the Palestinian terrorist group. As a result, the conflict has rendered much of the territory uninhabitable. The U.N. estimated late last year that 1.9 million people – around 90% of Gaza’s population – have been internally displaced. 

Hamas added to the AP that Trump’s plan is a ‘recipe for creating chaos and tension in the region.’ 

‘What President Trump stated about his intention to displace the residents of the Gaza Strip outside it and the United States’ control over the Strip by force is a crime against humanity,’ a senior Hamas official also told Fox News on Wednesday.

‘We demand that the mediators, especially the United States, oblige the occupation to implement the ceasefire agreement in its three stages without procrastination or manipulation, as we are committed to implementing the agreement as long as the occupation commits to it, and any manipulation in implementing the agreement may cause it to collapse,’ the official added.

Trump announced in a joint press conference with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House Tuesday that ‘The U.S. will take over the Gaza Strip, and we will do a job with it, too,’

 ‘We’ll own it and be responsible for dismantling all of the dangerous, unexplored bombs and other weapons on the site,’ he continued.

‘Level the site and get rid of the destroyed buildings, level it out, create an economic development that will supply unlimited numbers of jobs and housing for the people of the area,’ Trump also said. ‘Do a real job. Do something different. Just can’t go back. If you go back, it’s going to end up the same way it has for 100 years.’ 

Fox News’ Chief Foreign Correspondent Trey Yingst said the timing of Trump’s comments ‘raises huge questions about the current ceasefire agreement that is supposed to see the remaining hostages released from Gaza.’

‘There are dozens of living hostages inside the Gaza Strip right now being held by Hamas, the group that is currently in control of Gaza. And it would not be surprising if tomorrow, Hamas threatens to step back from the current agreement or puts more pressure at the negotiating table,’ Yingst said in a video posted on X last night.

‘But the timing of these remarks is very significant remembering that these hostages remain in Hamas captivity and Palestinians being removed from Gaza has been a red line not only for Hamas but for regional countries including Egypt, Jordan and others as it relates to the Palestinian people there,’ he added. 

Fox News’ Trey Yingst and Emma Colton contributed to this report. 

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JERUSALEM—President Donald Trump’s decision to restore his maximum pressure campaign on the Islamic Republic of Iran jolted the clerical regime in Tehran and established a clean break with the Biden administration’s concessionary policy toward the rogue nation, according to Mideast experts.

Trump also warned the regime on Tuesday that if it carries out his assassination, advisers will ensure that the country is ‘obliterated.’

Trump’s message to the Iranians seemingly got their attention. Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said on Tuesday that ‘If the main issue is ensuring that Iran does not pursue nuclear weapons, this is achievable and not a difficult matter.’ He also added that ‘maximum pressure is a failed experiment, and trying it again will only lead to another failure.’ He did not respond Trump’s sanction order targeting Iranian oil exports and Tehran’s support for jihadi terrorist organizations. 

Yossi Mansharof, an Iran analyst at the Misgav Institute for National Security and Zionist Strategy in Israel, told Fox News Digital, ‘Despite oil sanctions on Iran, data from the Energy Information Administration (EIA) reveals that Iran’s oil revenue surged to $144 billion in the first three years of Biden’s presidency (January 2021–January 2024), $100 billion more than during the last two years of the Trump administration. ‘

Mansharof continued, ‘While Biden tightened sanctions, he did not enforce them, allowing Iran to continue profiting from oil exports, providing critical support to its economy. This approach reflects a flawed strategy of attempting to engage Ali Khamenei [the supreme leader of Iran] diplomatically while ignoring Iran’s oil smuggling.’

Fox News Digital also reported extensively on Biden’s decision to extend sanctions waivers that enabled repeated payments of $10 billion to be delivered into Iran’s coffers. 

Mansharof welcomed the reinstatement of the maximum economic pressure campaign. He warned, however, that in light of Iran’s progress on building a nuclear weapon ‘it is unclear whether this strategy is sufficient.’ He said, ‘Military pressure on Iran is needed to disrupt its activities, send a clear message on its nuclear ambitions, and prevent further destabilizing actions.’

Both the Republican and Democratic administrations have classified Iran’s regime as the world’s worst state sponsor of terrorism. Trump’s Tuesday signing of the National Security Presidential Memorandum (NSPM) restoring maximum pressure on Iran states its aims are to deny ‘Iran all paths to a nuclear weapon, and countering Iran’s malign influence abroad.’ Iran’s regime funds the U.S.-designated terrorist movements Hamas and Hezbollah.

Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs President Dan Diker told Fox News Digital, ‘President Donald Trump’s reimposed maximum pressure campaign  to cripple the Iranian regime is another differentiator from the former Biden administration’s defensive and even conciliatory approach to the Iranian regime.’

He added, ‘The first Trump administration maximum pressure that came in parallel with canceling its participation in the ill-fated JCPOA had essentially bankrupted the regime and Trump’s continuation of economic warfare against the regime underscores his commitment to U.S. primacy and power projection in the terror-ridden Middle East short of direct military intervention.’

The JCPOA, an acronym for the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, was former President Obama’s signature foreign policy deal. It was supposed to slow down Iran’s drive to build an atomic bomb in exchange for massive economic benefits for Iran. In 2018, President Trump withdrew from the JCPOA and famously termed it ‘the worst deal in history.’ Trump said at the time of the withdrawal, ‘At the heart of the Iran deal was a giant fiction that a murderous regime desired only a peaceful nuclear energy program.’

According to the Trump administration, the JCPOA did not prevent Iran from securing a nuclear weapons device and allowed Tehran to finance global terrorism.

Diker said, ‘Trump will face an Iranian regime octopus that is still extending its terror tentacles across the region, particularly in the Israeli controlled Judea and Samaria (West Bank) while prosecuting charm offensive with European and other powers to fend off the US initiative to strangle the Iranian regime.’

Fox News Digital’s Alexandra Koch contributed to this story. 

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Fox Corp. is finally getting into the direct-to-consumer streaming game.

The company known for its news and sports TV content said Tuesday it’s aiming to launch a subscription streaming service by the end of the year.

The streaming service is not meant to upend Fox’s place in the traditional bundle, CEO Lachlan Murdoch said on the company’s quarterly earnings call. Murdoch offered few details on the streaming service beyond the high-level announcement. He said the company is designing the app now, and further information will be released in the coming months.

Fox’s upcoming streaming option is expected to include both its sports and news content, Murdoch said.

Unlike its legacy media competitors, Fox has so far been on the sidelines of streaming, with the exception of the Fox Nation streaming app, which includes exclusive programming to the service and on-demand Fox News primetime shows, and its free, ad-supported service Tubi. Fox, which will broadcast the Super Bowl on Sunday, is also offering the NFL’s biggest game on Tubi for the first time ever.

However, the late move into subscription-based streaming comes after Fox, alongside Warner Bros. Discovery and Disney, in January dropped efforts to launch a joint venture sports streaming app called Venu.

The three companies had planned to pool together all of their sports content and offer it on the Venu streaming service. However, following legal hurdles that delayed the original fall 2024 launch date, the companies called off their plans.

Out of the three partners, Fox was the only one without another option to offer its sports content outside of the cable TV bundle. Warner Bros. Discovery offers its live sports content on streamer Max. Disney’s ESPN has its ESPN+ app and is developing a separate direct-to-consumer ESPN streamer. The company is targeting an August launch of ESPN “Flagship,” the unofficial name of the all-inclusive ESPN service.

Fox’s Murdoch referred to the end of Venu as the company’s “only disappointment in sports.”

Fox has focused its strategy on sports and news content after selling its entertainment assets to Disney in 2019. The company has reported stable viewership and advertising revenue, even during the recent ad market slump. Live sports and news remain the highest-rated content in the traditional TV bundle, even as consumers cut the cord for streaming alternatives.

“We’re huge supporters of the traditional cable bundle, and we always will be,” Murdoch said on Tuesday’s call. “But having said that, we do want to reach consumers wherever they are, and there’s a large population, obviously, that are now outside of the traditional cable bundle.”

He said the company’s subscriber expectations “will be modest, and we’re going to price the service accordingly.” He added Fox doesn’t intend to convert any traditional cable TV customers into streaming customers with the app.

Murdoch said the company doesn’t “expect to have any exclusive rights costs or additional incremental rights costs” and will simply package its existing content. This means the costs of creating and distributing the platform will be “relatively low,” especially when compared with competitors.

In addition to shelling out billions for original entertainment programming, media companies have been spending big on exclusive sports media rights for their streaming platforms. In many cases, exclusive live sports have helped to drive subscriber and ad revenue growth for streamers.

On Tuesday, Murdoch also noted the recent rise of so-called skinny packages from traditional pay TV distributors, saying it bodes well for Fox’s portfolio since those packages most often consist of mainly sports and news content.

“We’re very pleased with this trend of the bundle. It’s financially, economically positive for us,” said Murdoch on Tuesday. “We would hope that this bundle will be attractive to the cordless customers — the cord-cutters and cord-nevers.”

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