Turkish President Erdogan says Iran's response to Israeli strikes is 'legitimate'
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New York Times
3 minutes ago
- New York Times
Two War Reporter Brothers, 60 Countries and Now a Pair of New Books
In 2006, the journalists Jon Lee Anderson and his brother, Scott, both happened to be reporting stories from Lebanon. Israel had invaded the country in a bid to crush Hezbollah. Jon Lee was in Beirut, trying to learn what he could about a shadowy war. Scott was doing the same in the southern city of Tyre, where the Israelis had imposed a blanket curfew, threatening to shoot anything that moved. Scott was traveling with the photographer Paolo Pellegrin to see what was happening at a hospital when a drone strike missed their vehicle by a matter of yards. The shock wave knocked all the buttons off Scott's shirt and gave him a concussion. Blood was pouring out of his ear. The frighteningly close call convinced the brothers that they needed a rule. 'We have a kind of superstition, which is that it's not good to be in the same war zone at the same time,' Jon Lee said. 'And the one time we were, Scott nearly got killed.' The Andersons were recounting this story in Scott's New Jersey living room — comfortably far from a war zone, though finding them on the same continent, let alone in the same city, was a matter of fortuitous timing. Scott, 66, who lives in Jersey City, was leaving for a monthlong trip to Turkey with his teenage daughter in a few weeks; Jon Lee, 68, who lives with his wife in Dorset, England, was passing through New York to give a talk at the Americas Society before visiting his daughter in New Hampshire, where she was about to give birth. It isn't exactly common for two people from the same family to do the uncommon work of reporting from some of the world's most dangerous hot spots — Jon Lee as a staff writer for The New Yorker, Scott as a contributing writer to The New York Times Magazine. Nor is it common for siblings to have new books coming out in the same month. In another accident of fortuitous timing, Scott's 'King of Kings' and Jon Lee's 'To Lose a War' both publish in August. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.


New York Times
3 minutes ago
- New York Times
Iran Is Holding at Least 4 American Citizens, Rights Groups and Families Say
Iran has for decades practiced what critics call hostage diplomacy, a policy of detaining foreigners and dual nationals to leverage them for prisoner swaps and the release of frozen funds. In the aftermath of the 12-day war with Israel and the United States, Iran is once again targeting Americans. At least four Iranian Americans — two men and two women — are in Iranian custody, according to human rights groups, lawyers and Hostage Aid Worldwide, a nonprofit organization that was founded by former hostages to aid families and that is in touch with the current detainees' friends and families. Three of the Americans are in jail, and one has been barred from leaving the country, they said. The detentions are likely to increase the already tense political climate between Tehran and Washington after the United States joined Israel's attack on Iran and bombarded and severely damaged three of its nuclear sites in June. Nuclear negotiations with Washington have not resumed since the war in June, but Iran's foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, said this past week in an interview with local news media that he and the U.S. special envoy, Steve Witkoff, have been communicating directly through text messages. President Trump has said that he would not tolerate countries' wrongful detention of Americans and that their release is a top priority for his administration. Mr. Witkoff's office did not respond to a question on whether the detention of dual American citizens was brought up in communications with Mr. Araghchi. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.


New York Times
3 minutes ago
- New York Times
Mike Huckabee, Israel's Passionate Defender as Gaza War Drives Allies Away
International condemnation of Israel for its nearly two-year-long war in Gaza is growing. Outrage over starvation in the enclave has led to calls from Israel's allies for a Palestinian state. The U.N. secretary general said the situation was 'a moral crisis that is challenging the global conscience.' And yet there are few more passionate defenders of the country right now than Mike Huckabee, the U.S. ambassador to Israel, a Baptist minister and the first evangelical Christian to serve in the role. Even after his boss, President Trump, broke with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel and acknowledged 'real starvation' in Gaza, Mr. Huckabee did not. 'There is hunger and there are some serious issues that need to be addressed,' Mr. Huckabee said this past week at his official residence in central Jerusalem. But, he said, 'it's not like Sudan or Rwanda or other places where there has been mass starvation.' The Gaza Health Ministry has said scores of people, including many children, have died of malnutrition. It is not clear how many also had other illnesses. Mr. Huckabee defended the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, an aid group led by his longtime friend Johnnie Moore, another evangelical Christian. The group, backed by Israel and run largely by U.S. contractors, has been widely criticized for shootings by Israeli troops near its food distribution sites. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.