INTERNACIONAL
Obama-era inspection flaws in Iran could persist as experts warn of nuclear blind spots

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Iran has agreed to let nuclear inspectors back into the country, Vice President JD Vance said Monday, as nuclear experts warned President Donald Trump’s new Tehran framework will only work if inspectors get the kind of unfettered access they say was missing from the Obama-era Iran deal.
The news, which Vance described as «a major milestone,» comes as Trump’s new Iran framework drew warnings from nuclear experts who told Fox News Digital the deal could leave Tehran too much control over its uranium stockpile unless inspectors first locate, secure and verify the material. The IAEA has not been able to resume full in-field verification of Iran’s declared nuclear program since last year’s strikes, apart from a June inspection at a single Iranian nuclear power plant.
The verification gap concern centers on language in the reported U.S.-Iran memorandum of understanding (MOU) saying the two sides will resolve the fate of Iran’s enriched uranium stockpile through a still-to-be-negotiated process. The MOU identifies onsite «downblending,» which means diluting enriched uranium so it is less usable for a nuclear weapon, under International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) supervision as the minimum acceptable method for dealing with the material. The MOU does not explicitly say Iran will retain a civilian nuclear program, but it says the two sides will discuss enrichment and other matters related to Iran’s «nuclear needs» in a final deal.
«Unfettered verification is everything,» Chuck DeVore, Chief National Initiatives Officer at the Texas Public Policy Foundation, told Fox News Digital. «There can be no denial for teams to inspect on the ground. Remote, technological means can achieve a lot, but nothing beats in-person inspections.»
TRUMP NUCLEAR TALKS FACE DEFINING QUESTION: WHAT HAPPENS TO IRAN’S URANIUM STOCKPILE?
Vice President JD Vance said the Iranians have agreed to let nuclear inspectors back into their country. U.S. nuclear experts are warning that Trump’s reported Iran framework could leave Tehran too much control over its uranium stockpile unless inspectors first fully account for and secure the material. (Photo by Spencer Platt / POOL / AFP via Getty Images)
IAEA supervision would only be meaningful if inspectors first regain enough access to fully account for Iran’s enriched uranium stockpile and ensure Tehran does not retain unchecked control of the material, experts warned Fox News Digital. Meanwhile, a recent IAEA report released this month underscored the agency’s limited visibility into Iran’s declared nuclear program after last year’s military strikes, saying that aside from a single inspection at an Iranian nuclear power plant, the agency «has not received information from Iran» about the status of its other declared nuclear facilities or associated nuclear material. «Nor has the Agency had access» to those sites for in-field verification, the report noted.
A senior administration official told Fox News Digital on background that the MOU required Iran’s regime to reaffirm that it will not procure or develop nuclear weapons, calling that a critical first step under Iran’s new Supreme Leader.
The official said the U.S. has reached understandings with Iran when it comes to its uranium stockpile, and the new deal is the first step of turning these understandings into real results, which include progress on enriched uranium stockpiles, dismantlement of nuclear sites, an enrichment ban and inspection access. The official added that the U.S. has already had productive discussions with Iran on those issues and, now that the MOU is formally in place, negotiators will work to make quick progress.
US-IRAN TALKS POSTPONED IN SWITZERLAND AMID ISRAEL-HEZBOLLAH TENSIONS; HORMUZ REMAINS A KEY ISSUE
The official also referred Fox News Digital to comments Vice President JD Vance made Thursday, when he said the deal’s benefits depend on Iran following through on its promises.
«They have promised not to enrich. They have promised that they would allow inspectors in to destroy that highly enriched stockpile. And then, of course, it’s not usable anymore. You take it somewhere else,» Vance said. «They promised a number of things, and that’s why the deal contemplates a number of benefits if they do those things. But it doesn’t do anything if they don’t actually meet those promises.»

Vice President JD Vance listens as a reporter asks a question in the James Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House, on Thursday, June 18, 2026, in Washington. (Jacquelyn Martin/AP)
«The Iranians have agreed to invite IAEA inspectors back into their country. That is a major milestone for the American people, and the first step in permanently denuclearize, easing or permanently ending a nuclear weapons program in Iran,» Vance added Monday after negotiations in Switzerland resumed. «And that’s exactly what we wanted to do. That’s exactly what we asked to happen.»
The Vice President said that the technical negotiations will continue over the next weeks and days, even in his absence. He said a framework for «proper political oversight» of these negotiations has been established as well. Vance simultaneously highlighted that «a lot of great progress on other nuclear talks» has already been made in the early days.
Andrea Stricker, deputy director of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies’ Nonproliferation Program, told Fox News Digital that any credible agreement must begin with recovering and safeguarding Iran’s enriched uranium stockpile, and not allowing Tehran to keep control of the material while it is diluted inside the country.
«Without verifiably dismantling and destroying all of Iran’s fundamental nuclear capabilities — nuclear material, facilities, centrifuges, manufacturing capabilities, equipment, documentation, and weaponization capacities, and ensuring scientists are redirected to civilian work — Iran’s pledge on paper is meaningless,» she told Fox News Digital, noting that Iran’s enriched uranium stockpile could, if recovered and further enriched, provide enough weapons-grade material for roughly 22 nuclear weapons.
HOW DOES TRUMP SOLVE KEY ‘NUCLEAR DUST’ HANG-UP IN NEGOTIATIONS TO END IRAN WAR?
DeVore was more cautious about assigning a single number to Iran’s potential weapons capacity, saying the estimate depends heavily on the sophistication of the weapon design. He said the same stockpile could translate into fewer basic weapons or be stretched further by a more advanced nuclear program.
He said onsite downblending, if properly verified, would be aimed at making Iran’s roughly 1,000 pounds of 60% enriched uranium unavailable for further enrichment. DeVore cautioned that the material would still need additional processing to be turned into weapons-grade uranium and said he does not believe Tehran can currently do that because key facilities were destroyed in last year’s strikes.

A satellite image shows damage at the Fordo enrichment facility in Iran after U.S. strikes on June 22, 2025. (Maxar Technologies)
Asked what would be needed to make any Iran deal enforceable, DeVore told Fox News Digital the U.S. must avoid repeating what he described as a key weakness of the Obama-era nuclear deal: allowing Tehran to restrict access or keep certain sites off limits. He said the «ultimate question» is onsite verification, warning that Washington cannot allow itself to be pushed into «an agreement for agreement’s sake.»
TOP SENATE REPUBLICAN RIPS INTO TRUMP’S IRAN DEAL, SAYS $300B MAKES OBAMA DEAL LOOK LIKE ‘A PITTANCE’
DeVore also said the Obama-era JCPOA gave inspectors too much notice and too little freedom to inspect suspicious locations as well, arguing that any new deal must avoid a system where Iran can delay, limit or steer inspections before the IAEA gets on the ground.

The flag of Iran waves in front of the International Atomic Energy Agency headquarters in Vienna, Austria. (Florian Schroetter/AP Photo)
DeVore told Fox News Digital that his concern is informed by his experience as a young special assistant for foreign affairs in the Reagan administration, when he worked on verification issues surrounding Cold War-era nuclear agreements with the Soviet Union, including the Peaceful Nuclear Explosions Treaty and the Threshold Test Ban Treaty.
In those negotiations, DeVore said, the danger was that the minimum level of verification sought by defense and intelligence officials could become the starting point for diplomats, meaning the final deal could end up below what experts believed was necessary.
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«Once you say, ‘This is the minimum we need,’ then that becomes the starting point, so anything agreed to is less than that,» DeVore said. «That’s what I fear.»
Fox News Digital reached out to the IAEA asking whether the agency can currently account for Iran’s enriched uranium stockpile and whether it has any comment on the verification questions raised by the reported framework but did not hear back. The agency did not release any statement after Vance said they would be allowed access to Iran in time for publication.
war with iran, nuclear proliferation, foreign policy, middle east foreign policy, treaties, sanctions
INTERNACIONAL
Mamdani breaks silence on ‘perverted’ ally who helped sell Platner before scandal-plagued collapse

Maine Senate candidate’s top strategist laughs at vetting process
Dan Moraff, top strategist for Maine Senate candidate Graham Platner, laughs when asked about his vetting process, admitting their firm missed controversial details. Fox News contributor Jonathan Turley criticizes the strategists for being ‘unserious,’ questioning the damage to public trust. Turley emphasizes the severe implications of the failed vetting on Democratic Party credibility and the integrity of the election.
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New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani announced that he will continue to work with Morris Katz, one of the leading political consultants behind Graham Platner’s doomed bid for Senate.
«I will continue to work with Morris Katz, he remains a top advisor of mine,» Mamdani said at a news conference on Monday.
Many of Katz’s fellow Democrats lambasted him after Platner withdrew from the race following a rape accusation – which Platner denied – from an ex-girlfriend, arguing that Katz failed to do his due diligence before promoting Platner to party leaders. Some in the party are now calling for him to be blacklisted from future political operations.
Katz and his consulting partner, Daniel Moraff, ignored multiple requests from their own vetting team to dig deeper into Platner’s past over concerns of possible scandals, a source familiar with the early stages of the Platner campaign previously told Fox News Digital. The duo paid just over $6,000 for a three-day vetting job, something that usually takes weeks and costs tens of thousands of dollars.
Morris Katz, 27, has been widely credited with helping New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani complete his upset victory last year against Andrew Cuomo and Curtis Sliwa. (Adam Gray/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
PLATNER’S THREE-DAY VETTING JOB COMES BACK TO HAUNT DEMS AS RAPE ALLEGATION ROCKS SENATE BID
In addition to a rape accusation, Platner also attracted scrutiny over a trove of controversial deleted Reddit posts, a Nazi-linked tattoo he acquired while serving in the military and his alleged mistreatment of women.
The reporter asking Mamdani about Katz cited a letter circulated by the Democratic Socialists of America urging their political allies not to work with him.
KINGMAKER MAMDANI CALLS ON PLATNER TO ‘DROP OUT OF THE RACE’ AFTER RAPE ALLEGATION

Democratic Senate nominee in Maine Graham Platner and his wife speak with supporters following his primary night victory speech, in Blue Hill, Maine in June 9, 2026. (Paul Steinhauser/Fox News Digital)
«Morris Katz is one of the chief parties responsible for the catastrophic campaign of scandal-ridden Maine Senate candidate Graham Platner,» the letter reads. «Billed as a top adviser to the campaign, Katz helped recruit Platner and supercharged his candidacy with slick video production, friendly media placements and political connections.»
Democratic sources claim that Katz pitched Platner as a potential successor to an elderly Sen. Bernie Sanders and a potential presidential contender — a characterization he now denies.
After Platner announced his intention to suspend his candidacy, Katz wrote on X that «as soon as the team became aware of the rape allegations against Graham Platner we advised he suspend his candidacy, and in the following days worked to wind down the campaign» and that he was «deeply disappointed.»
PLATNER AIDE HIT WITH BRUTAL TIMELINE CHECK AFTER CAMPAIGN DENIED RAPE CLAIM, THEN FOLDED DAYS LATER

New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani speaks during a primary-night watch party for congressional candidate Claire Valdez at 99 Scott Studio on June 23, 2026, in Brooklyn. (Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)
A community note attached to his post points out that Platner’s campaign initially denied the rape allegation.
Katz also threatened former Platner staffer Genevieve McDonald in an attempt to dissuade her from cooperating with reporters seeking to cover Platner’s alleged emotional abuse of women.
«Just want to be clear on where we are right now,» Katz wrote in the message obtained by the Bangor Daily News. «If the story goes in its current iteration we’ll communicate directly on the record, and by name, that Genevieve violated the personal trust of Amy and Graham and shared explicit falsehoods to sabotage the campaign.»
Katz also faced criticism earlier this year over a puberty book he previously authored.
The political consultant authored a book in 2020 that bills itself as a «puberty book» for «curious boys» aged 10 to 12. Sections of the book include «Your New Penis» and «The Magic of Masturbation.»
In a footnote on page 15 of the text, Katz wrote that he planned to «use images of my penis» to show children how genitalia develop during puberty, but that publishers shot the idea down for being «inappropriate.» Conservative critics swiftly condemned him over the remark, with Katz later saying the comment was joke.
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«Only a perverted freak would say that,» wildly popular conservative X account «Libs of TikTok,» which is operated by Chaya Raichik, posted to X in March.
«Morris Katz’s musings about exposing himself to ten-year-olds are absolutely disgusting,» the National Republican Senatorial Committee said of Katz back in March as news of the footnote spread.
Mamdani’s office did not respond to a request for comment when reached by Fox News Digital on Monday.
zohran mamdani, new york city, politics, midterm elections, graham platner
INTERNACIONAL
Detuvieron a un candidato opositor en el inicio de la campaña para las elecciones parlamentarias en Rusia

El presidente ruso, Vladímir Putin, inició este lunes la campaña para las elecciones legislativas de septiembre con la detención del opositor Borís Nadezhdin, exaspirante al Kremlin en 2024.
Nadezhdin, de 63 años, fue trasladado a una comisaría horas antes de que Putin participara en su primer acto electoral, en un intento de revertir la caída en los sondeos del partido oficialista Rusia Unida. Poco después, el dirigente opositor fue liberado.
Antiguo colaborador del asesinado viceprimer ministro Borís Nemtsov, fue uno de los pocos políticos rusos que acudió hace dos años al entierro del fallecido líder opositor Alexéi Navalni.
Nadezhdin, la última esperanza
“Vino la policía. Me llevan a la comisaría de Dolgoprudni”, un distrito de la región de Moscú, escribió en su cuenta de Telegram el político.
Horas después, Nadezhdin publicó un mensaje en el que informó haber sido acusado de extremismo por publicar en 2023 un enlace con una imagen de Navalni.
El opositor Boris Nadezhdin fue detenido y liberado poco después en Rusia (Foto: REUTERS/Ramil Sitdikov)
“No he cometido el acto del que se me acusa. Nunca publiqué y no pienso publicar en ningún lugar una imagen con simbología extremista”, escribió el político, que había sido declarado el viernes agente extranjero por el Ministerio de Justicia.
Nadezhdin, cuyo nombre es muy similar a la palabra “esperanza”, aseguró entonces que proseguiría la campaña de recogida de firmas de cara a las parlamentarias del 20 de septiembre, aduciendo que la legislación no se lo impedía.
Leé también: Trump anunció que EE.UU. se convirtió en “el guardián del estrecho de Ormuz” y que cobrará un arancel del 20% a los barcos
En cambio, según la prensa local, desde la enmienda introducida en mayo de 2024 el estatus de agente extranjero impide a la persona afectada concurrir a unos comicios.
Por si había alguna duda, fuentes policiales informaron hoy a la agencia de noticias TASS que Nadezhdin podría ser arrestado durante 15 días por extremismo, lo que lo inhabilitaría definitivamente como candidato a un escaño en la Duma o cámara de diputados.
Tras horas de detención en una comisaría de la región de Moscú, Nadezhdin fue puesto en libertad y tendrá que presentarse ante el juez que estudia su caso el próximo viernes, 17 de julio.
Enemigo del pueblo
Nadezhdin acusó al Kremlin de intentar “excluir a los rivales más peligrosos” para garantizar “el resultado deseado”.
El político, que llegó a tener una intención de voto del 15 % en vísperas de las elecciones presidenciales, también comparó la categoría de agente extranjero con la de “enemigo del pueblo” de tiempos soviéticos.
Nadezhdin también intentó presentar su candidatura en los comicios presidenciales de marzo de 2024 abogando, entre otras cosas, por unas negociaciones de paz entre rusos y ucranianos. No obstante, la Comisión Electoral Central (CEC) rechazó su solicitud por defectos de forma durante el proceso de recogida de firmas.
“Todo por la victoria” en Ucrania
“Todo por la victoria” era el nombre del foro de la plataforma patriótica Frente Popular en el que participó Putin este lunes.
“Nuestra fuerza reside en que siempre superamos todas las dificultades y todos los temores. Y eso nos hace más fuertes. Y es precisamente por eso que, por supuesto, siempre vamos hacia adelante y seguiremos haciéndolo”, proclamó desde la tribuna.
Las declaraciones de Putin, realizadas frente a militares y miembros de sus familias, se producen después de que la CEC aprobara el domingo las listas electorales de once partidos.
Leé también: La administración Trump aseguró que la Corte Penal Internacional representa “una amenaza intolerable” contra los Estados Unidos
Debido al hartazgo con la guerra, la contracción económica, el alza de los precios, el bloqueo de internet y, más recientemente, la grave crisis de suministro de combustible debido a los ataques ucranianos contra las refinerías en todo el país, la popularidad de Rusia Unida se encuentra bajo mínimos históricos, según los sondeos.
Según medios independientes, la formación gubernamental supera a duras penas el 20 % en intención de voto, mientras las compañías demoscópicas oficialistas le otorgan un porcentaje por encima del 30.
Yábloko, el único partido opositor legal en Rusia, tiene difícil superar el 5 % de votos, el mínimo para acceder al arco parlamentario, ya que su postura pacifista ha hecho que muchos de sus candidatos hayan sido encarcelados o excluidos de la carrera electoral por criticar la campaña militar en Ucrania.
(Con información de EFE)
Rusia, Vladimir Putin
INTERNACIONAL
Trump administration probes UNRWA over alleged employment of 1,500 terrorists

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A controversial United Nations agency is being investigated by U.S. officials for alleged ties to terrorism. The U.N. Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA), the U.N. organization for Palestinian refugees, has more than 1,500 employees being probed for links to terrorism.
U.S. officials have increasingly called on U.N. member states to defund UNRWA after decades of concerns about its school materials promoting terror, the presence of Hamas tunnels beneath UNRWA schools and charges that staff members participated in the Hamas terrorist attacks of Oct. 7 against Israel.
US URGES DONORS TO ABANDON UNRWA FUNDING AS UN DEFENDS AGENCY’S MISSION
This picture taken during a media tour organized by the Israeli army on February 8, 2024, shows Israeli soldiers inside an evacuated compound of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) in Gaza City. (Jack Guez/AFP via Getty Images)
While the U.N. conducted its own UNRWA investigation in 2024 through the Office of Internal Oversight Services (OIOS) following claims that 19 UNRWA employees were part of the Oct. 7. attacks, OIOS found insufficient evidence to support the participation of 10 employees. For the remaining nine, UNRWA terminated their contracts.
As the USAID Office of the Inspector General, a law enforcement agency separate from USAID, continues to investigate 1,500 UNRWA employees, it recently announced that it had referred a total of 108 current or former UNRWA staff to the State Department for suspension or exclusion from working with organizations that receive U.S. funds. Those members were found to be involved in the Hamas invasion of southern Israel, or were members of terrorist groups.
A U.S. diplomatic official briefed by USAID OIG investigators confirmed to Fox News Digital that at least 1,500 current or former UNRWA employees are under investigation for ties to foreign terrorist organizations in Gaza.

Aid trucks of The United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestinian Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) deliver aid near Gaza City on June 19. (Dawoud Abo Alkas/Anadolu via Getty Images)
A senior U.S. official who spoke with Fox News Digital said that the USAID OIG investigation «smartly picked up where the U.N. failed» by looking beyond Oct. 7 participation. The official said the USAID OIG investigation is «critical, as U.S. taxpayers should never fund the salaries of aid workers that are members of a foreign terrorist organization.»
The senior official told Fox News Digital, «USAID OIG’s investigation is helping prevent terrorists from criss-crossing across aid organizations that have received or are seeking U.S. or Board of Peace funding.»
Hamas was designated as a Foreign Terrorist Organization (FTO) in 1997 by the State Department, and as a Specially Designated Global Terrorist group (SDGT) in 2001.
HAMAS SAYS IT WILL DISSOLVE GAZA GOVERNMENT, BUT ISRAEL WARNS GROUP STILL SEEKS HEZBOLLAH-STYLE CONTROL

Hamas terrorists in the northern Gaza Strip on Dec. 1, 2025. (Omar Al-Qatta / AFP via Getty Images)
In the press release describing its effort, the USAID OIG said that individuals referred for debarment included «UNRWA school principals, teachers, security personnel, attendants, psychosocial counselors and medical professionals.»
They included two deputy school principals, one of whom served as a Hamas deputy company commander and another of whom was a squad leader. USAID OIG additionally referred a teacher with «expertise as a sniper for Hamas,» and one who tracked explosive device assignments. Another referred individual was a school principal assigned to a Hamas military manufacturing unit. Under his school, there were «three anti-tank positions and a tunnel shaft.»
In the case of Oct. 7 involvement, the USAID OIG specifically mentioned a teacher ordered «to bring two anti-tank missiles to a prescribed location during the Oct. 7 terror attacks,» and a deputy school principal charged with communications.
TRUMP-BACKED BOARD OF PEACE, ISRAEL ‘WILL TAKE ACTION’ IF HAMAS REMAINS OUT OF COMPLIANCE: NETANYAHU ADVISOR

President Donald Trump attends the inaugural Board of Peace meeting at the U.S. Institute of Peace in Washington, D.C., Feb. 19, 2026. (Kevin Lamarque/Reuters)
The USAID OIG stated that it expects to make further referrals to the State Department in addition to «potential criminal referrals to the Department of Justice.»
As a result of its investigations, the State Department has banned Hafez Mousa Mohammed Mousa from any future work with U.S. government entities. An UNRWA school principal, Mousa was working with the Hamas East Jabaliya Battalion and «coordinated communications with other suspected Hamas members during the Oct. 7 attacks,» the USAID OIG report explains.

Photos released by the Israeli Defense Force show three individuals that the Israeli military claims are Hamas terrorists inside an UNRWA compound in Rafah. (IDF)
In response to Fox News Digital’s questions about whether it will blacklist other identified UNRWA employees, a State Department spokesperson said that «it is no surprise that another 100 UNWRA employees were determined to be involved in the barbaric Oct. 7 attack. President Trump and Secretary Rubio have affirmed time and time again that no State Department funding will be provided to UNWRA, which has been totally infiltrated by Hamas and terrorist sympathizers.»
On July 1, the Board of Peace posted on X that UNRWA «has no place in the new Gaza.»
An official briefed on developments with the Board of Peace told Fox News Digital that the USAID OIG’s investigations are «quite concerning to us.»

An American flag and USAID flag fly outside the USAID building in Washington, D.C., U.S., February 1, 2025. (REUTERS/Annabelle Gordon)
The official explained that «we can’t really have an institution operating inside of Gaza where they’re purportedly delivering aid and services to two million people but also allegedly participating in and supporting terrorism. That is anathema to creating a safe and prosperous Gaza for Gazans.» Moving forward without UNRWA will require being «responsible and deliberate in terms of how we transition those services over to ensure there are no gaps in critical aid delivery, whether it’s health services, vaccinations, food, or other goods.»
Last month, Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Sen. Jim Risch (R-Idaho) posted about the infiltration of UNRWA on X, saying, «It is time for the United States to take action to address this growing problem and the systemic radicalization in UNRWA facilities.» Risch said he would work with the U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. «to root out the terrorist links at the U.N.»
The U.S. Representative for United Nations Management and Reform, Ambassador Jeff Bartos, told a U.N. meeting in June on UNRWA funding, that it was time «to break this cycle.»
«This year, you have the choice to stop underwriting an organization that has become a subsidiary of Hamas, whose employees took part in one of the most barbaric terrorist attacks in human history on Oct. 7, 2023,» Bartos said. «This year, you have the choice to give the Palestinian people living in Gaza the opportunity to find durable solutions and prosper, instead of subjecting them to endless cycles of dependency and forever refugeehood.»
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Hamas’ theft of aid is continuing to cause harm in Gaza. While not calling out Hamas by name, on Sunday, the U.N. Deputy Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process and Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator for the Occupied Palestinian Territory Dr. Ramiz Alakbarov released a statement strongly condemning the «obstruction of humanitarian operations in Gaza by the de facto authorities.» He noted that the previous day, «armed personnel affiliated with the de facto authorities forcibly entered the Abu Rashid food distribution point in Jabalia,» and additionally «entered a [World Food Programme] warehouse and reportedly assaulted two truck drivers who were delivering humanitarian supplies.»
Alakbarov said the incidents «are not isolated» and «reflect an increasingly dangerous pattern of intimidation, violence and obstruction, including smuggling attempts, targeting and abusing humanitarian operations.»
Fox News Digital reached out to UNRWA for comment.
anti semitism, hamas, terrorism, israel, united nations
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