Israeli security units are accused of human rights violations, which would trigger U.S. laws prohibiting the provision of military assistance.
Read Also
- Youth charged with attempted murder after Brampton park shooting
- North Korea test-fires suspected missiles after US and South Korea conduct fighter jet drill
- Tech, Media & Telecom Roundup: Market Talk
- AP PHOTOS: For the first time India's elderly and disabled are able to vote from home
- North Korea test-fires suspected missiles a day after U.S. and South Korea conduct a fighter jet drill
- Claws out! AOC and MTG square off in fiery committee exchange
- Financial Services Roundup: Market Talk
- Microsoft's Partnership With Mistral AI Cleared by U.K. Regulator
- Supreme Court Justice Alito faces fury after scathing report on ‘stop the steal’ flag outside his home
- Israel Defends Rafah Operation as ‘Limited and Localized’ at ICJ
Latest The Washington Post
- Russia seizes more land than Ukraine liberated in 2023 counteroffensive
- French police kill man who set fire to synagogue, officials say
- What Israel’s strategic corridor in Gaza reveals about its postwar plans
- Middle East conflict live updates: Israel expected to push back against South Africa’s request at ICJ
- Kenyan president aims to attract green investment during U.S. visit
- Ukraine’s failure to build defenses in Kharkiv aided Russian reinvasion
- No one is rocking in the ‘free world’
- U.S. officials see strategic failure in Israel’s Rafah invasion
- Families in Gaza scramble for safety — again — as Israel moves into Rafah
- A water war is brewing between the U.S. and Mexico. Here’s why.