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LIVE | Trump Issues Ultimatum To Iran | Israel Iran War Updates | Netanyahu | Khamenei | N18G
Started streaming 29 minutes ago #trump #israeliranwar #israeliranconflict
US President Donald Trump’s self-imposed two-week delay to decide whether to strike Iran has sparked confusion and conjecture in Israel.
Some of Israel’s most senior officials had openly pushed for US involvement, arguing that American military involvement can shorten the conflict and allow Israel to achieve its goal of removing what it has long perceived as an existential threat of a nuclear Iran armed with ballistic missiles.
#trump #israeliranwar #israeliranconflict #news18 #news18live
#israeliranwar #trump #nuclearsites
U.S. President Donald Trump delivers an address to the nation on US military strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities. This comes as US attacked three Iranian nuclear sites, joining Israeli air campaign as Tehran promises to retaliate.
“I will be giving an Address to the Nation at 10:00 P.M., at the White House, regarding our very successful military operation in Iran. This is an HISTORIC MOMENT FOR THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, ISRAEL, AND THE WORLD. IRAN MUST NOW AGREE TO END THIS WAR. THANK YOU!” Trump wrote in a Truth Social post.
#israeliranwar #trump #nuclearsites #irannuclearsites #trumpattackiran #usattacksiran #usisraelrelations #news18live #news18
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-----------------------------------
LIVE | Trump Issues Ultimatum To Iran | Israel Iran War Updates | Netanyahu | Khamenei | N18G
Started streaming 29 minutes ago #trump #israeliranwar #israeliranconflict
US President Donald Trump’s self-imposed two-week delay to decide whether to strike Iran has sparked confusion and conjecture in Israel.
Some of Israel’s most senior officials had openly pushed for US involvement, arguing that American military involvement can shorten the conflict and allow Israel to achieve its goal of removing what it has long perceived as an existential threat of a nuclear Iran armed with ballistic missiles.
#trump #israeliranwar #israeliranconflict #news18 #news18live
#israeliranwar #trump #nuclearsites
U.S. President Donald Trump delivers an address to the nation on US military strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities. This comes as US attacked three Iranian nuclear sites, joining Israeli air campaign as Tehran promises to retaliate.
“I will be giving an Address to the Nation at 10:00 P.M., at the White House, regarding our very successful military operation in Iran. This is an HISTORIC MOMENT FOR THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, ISRAEL, AND THE WORLD. IRAN MUST NOW AGREE TO END THIS WAR. THANK YOU!” Trump wrote in a Truth Social post.
#israeliranwar #trump #nuclearsites #irannuclearsites #trumpattackiran #usattacksiran #usisraelrelations #news18live #news18
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NewsTranscript
00:00media president trump wrote quote this is a war that could have gone on for years and destroyed
00:05the entire middle east but it didn't and never will god bless israel god bless iran god bless
00:12the middle east god bless the united states of america and god bless the world the president
00:17really hit the reset button and said look let's actually produce long-term peace for the region
00:23earlier in the day iranian missiles could be seen being blown up in the sky above qatar
00:28the president says no one was hurt and there was hardly any damage at the el adid military base
00:35gulf nations like qatar saudi arabia and uae condemned iran's strike on the u.s base the u.s
00:42expected retaliation after bombing three of iran's nuclear sites new footage released by the air force
00:49shows the b2 bombers used in that mission before the ceasefire announcement israel said it carried out
00:55its most extensive airstrikes on iran when you understand the enormous war machine that was
01:03built on the iranian nuclear program by iran you understand what an enormous risk it is to the
01:09world president trump made his announcement around 6 p.m eastern time saying the ceasefire would take
01:15effect six hours later in new york connor hansen fox news connor thanks so much in the meantime we do
01:24want to bring into the conversation someone who's helped us make sense of it every step of the way
01:28that's of course uh ucla excuse me ucla political scientist benjamin rad he joins me um benjamin always
01:34good to see you here uh and that was the news today you know that uh this peace fire uh between iran
01:40and israel how is it holding up do we know is it too early to tell it just went into effect what 40
01:45minutes ago are they compliant yeah yeah and you you've highlighted that uh the iranians fired their
01:51last salvo of missiles hoping to be sort of have the last word in this conflict before the ceasefire
01:56took hold and from reports indicate a seven-story residential building in beersheba in israel was hit
02:02um and there's definitely been some casualties if not deaths so it's tragic to see that hopefully then
02:07that ends retaliation unless israel decides to respond to that if the number of casualties there
02:12increases it's difficult to tell we don't know what israel still has planned but as of now it seems
02:18like everyone is invested in this coming to an end um israel meeting it's you're coming close to
02:24meeting its goals as the prime minister noted and um you know iran the regime will you know live to
02:30to live another day to carry out whatever it wants to do you know benjamin all throughout the course of
02:36the afternoon here after this was announced we had been kind of piecing together some of the reporting
02:39about how it came together kind of how the sausage is made in this uh ceasefire diplomacy if you will
02:45why do you think though it's taken so long for iran and israel to even acknowledge that they had agreed
02:52to a ceasefire why the reluctance well the reluctance was to make sure in part for iran their their position
03:02was they were not going to agree to a ceasefire when they saw it as they were the ones who were
03:07attacked so they wanted to see would israel agree to this and the conditions to be clear before they
03:12preemptively agreed to a conflict that they didn't initiate so there is that aspect of it the israelis
03:18presumably did not want to agree until they finished doing what they wanted to do so there was a
03:23round of missiles and munitions that were launched a couple hours ago and um wanted to complete its task
03:28there so i suspect that that's kind of what we saw we were waiting the last few hours for each side to
03:33get out what it needed to get out and then go from there okay yeah i guess that makes sense um you know
03:38and i have to ask this you know we're watching some of these scenes in tel aviv jerusalem uh and southern
03:44israel looking into uh the gaza strip we're learning from our colleague trey yankst at fox he says
03:50significant damage in southern israel after a direct missile impact uh and so i'm going to ask you the same
03:56question i asked you uh saturday night where do we go from here what now uh many were anticipating that
04:04this could be somewhat protracted here uh trump i thought uh somewhat stylistically calling this the
04:0912-day war uh kind of a nod to the six-day war that israel fought in 1967 um so my question again
04:17what now well the fighting stops doesn't mean the war ends or the conflict ends there are still some
04:24outstanding issues number one there's about 500 kilograms of highly enriched uranium that is
04:29unaccounted for that iran was able to take out of fordo put into the tunnels of esfahan which were
04:35not bombed we don't know where they are the iaea doesn't know where they are so there's something
04:40that allows iran to continue or reconstitute its nuclear enrichment program and possibly to weaponize
04:45there's that aspect of it then there's a question of also what were israel's longer-term goals now
04:52if the short-term goal was to eliminate iran's nuclear enrichment capacity that hasn't happened
04:57but you still have in power a government that is as of now committed to israel's destruction
05:02as of now is very anti-american is that going to change so if you leave behind elements of the
05:09weapons program and the missile program that can be reconstituted coupled with an ideology that
05:14remains as virulently anti-american anti-israel as it was before the war then where where do we stand
05:20that remains to be seen whether iran will soften its position on those other areas and whether or
05:26not it'll aggressively seek to rebuild its program now i should note that the iranian parliament is
05:32considering a bill that would have a cease cooperation with the iaea so that means if iran
05:37is no longer allowing any inspectors and monitors in there's a fear that it could resume much quickly
05:42a missile program and a nuclear enrichment program without anyone observing and knowing what's going on so
05:48that would take us right back to where we were a few weeks ago or a few months ago all of this is
05:54speculative we simply don't know how this will play out let's talk about the state of iran's nuclear
05:59program here uh of course president trump saturday night said it was obliterated and then in the press
06:04conference uh on sunday morning the chairman of the joint chiefs and the secretary of defense
06:08um kind of couched that language uh saying it was damaged destroyed uh severely severely harmed here
06:16um we were just showing you uh some of the pictures i want to put them back up kind of the before and
06:22after satellite imagery there of the fordo nuclear site um and you were mentioning this that the
06:32iranians took out enriched uranium from these sites before the u.s strikes is that what you said
06:40has that been reported yeah yeah so it it appears that they took them out before the israelis even
06:46struck so they took them out uh maybe several weeks ago we don't know the exact timeline
06:49but there's about 500 kilograms or so about 800 pounds i think that comes out too that is unaccounted
06:56for and we know that the highly enriched uranium which was processed at this fordo refinery facility
07:02which you're seeing a satellite image of here was then taken to another facility
07:05in esfahan which was targeted by the israelis but the israelis did not target the tunnels underneath
07:11where those 500 kilograms would be stored we don't now now we don't know where they are the
07:16iranians have filled those tunnels with dirt and sand making them um unreachable for now but that's
07:22not to say that they're there or somewhere else we simply don't know where they are the iaea does not
07:26know where that uh 500 kilograms is and that's something to be concerned about because it means that
07:32iran still has the the elements it needs and it has the scientific know-how even with a lot of its top
07:38scientific leadership having been killed well don't bet against israeli intelligence i mean maybe they
07:44know where it is if they they also have said they it's unaccounted for i mean publicly they're saying
07:50it's unaccounted for privately we don't know they could have commandos on the ground they could have
07:54assets on the ground but no more than we do i want to put this up uh the new york times just posted
07:58this uh i want to cite the reporting from peter baker who covers the white house uh saying that
08:03trump's announcement of a ceasefire caught even some of his own top officials by surprise
08:07israel has not yet confirmed the ceasefire and within hours of the announcement there were fresh
08:13israeli attacks against iran uh and we brought you uh our viewers of the news that there were iranian
08:19attacks against israel just in the last hour uh and the ceasefire according to president trump's post
08:26on truth social about how the timing broke down is in effect here but they're right uh we haven't
08:32heard from bb netanyahu the idf anyone in israel about the ceasefire no and i don't think that's
08:41too surprising i think they were also waiting to see what the iranians would do at the very last
08:46minute we again we saw that salvo um targeting tel aviv and beersheba in southern israel the extensive
08:52damage that was done there and i think for the israelis they would want to assess to see what
08:56is there anything they still need to do does iran still have active missile batteries and ballistic
09:01missiles capable of causing further damage if they were to be not trusted if they violated the
09:07ceasefire israel needs to make sure i think that it can neutralize those incoming threats before it
09:13fully commits but that again is also speculation uh sometimes you know the absence of a formal
09:19a statement doesn't necessarily mean that they have not reached an understanding with trump
09:23officials behind the scenes which i suspect is what happened i don't think president trump would
09:27have made that statement yeah yeah exactly yeah um i have to ask you about iran's retaliation
09:34uh to what the united states did um that's kind of getting lost in the ceasefire talk but it happened
09:38today got a reminder of viewers um uh too little to no effect though might i add and i have to read this
09:45from the new york times as well iran gave advance notice to qatari officials that the attacks were
09:50coming to minimize casualties um what does that say about iran's posture uh especially vis-a-vis to the
09:58united states that they were very bellicose in their rhetoric saying they're going to respond to the
10:04hilt and then they gave the qataris a heads up uh they coordinated this with u.s officials as well
10:11via intermediaries to have little to no effect why why go to great lengths to contrive such a
10:18safe phasing uh excuse me face-saving measure um with little snow effect because they were looking
10:26to de-escalate they were quite frankly they had to take one final step to a symbolic step targeting a
10:31major u.s air base it was very symbolic it was performative it was done so they can point at it and
10:38and tell the iranian people that they were successful in attacking a u.s installation with
10:43the hope that the iranian people don't know any better which most of them do and to say that we
10:48we did respond that they could sort of be you know go down in history as having said they responded to
10:53the u.s attack with a counter-attack of their own but the idea though was to do so in a way as to not
10:58escalate and that's why the advance notice was given that's why everyone's calling it performative
11:03that's exactly what it is with that advance notice it basically renders it in practicality useless and
11:09ineffective but symbolically meaningful that that is a plastic formula for de-escalation
11:15so benjamin were you surprised they chose al-udid and qatar the largest u.s base in the middle east
11:22they've done it before in bases in iraq and syria and elsewhere but they went after qatar they brought
11:28qatar into it were you surprised well they had to bring somebody into it and it's interesting
11:32that they didn't go to the uae where the u.s where the fifth fleet is based um and in part because
11:38the uae has better relations with israel perhaps and qatar does not have as warm relations with
11:43israel and add to the fact that maybe they felt that you know the proximity of qatar to where the
11:49missiles launched from and the ability of the qataris to be able to intercept these missiles maybe
11:54it was much more isolated less likely that anything could go wrong i mean all of these things would
11:58factor in and probably iran felt given that we've seen statements from from qatar in the past few
12:04days talking about the brotherly love between the the two nations maybe iran felt that this was the
12:10one quote-unquote ally with whom it had enough wiggle room to be able to do something like this
12:15but even still this is iran attacking a sovereign state that was not involved in this conflict
12:20whatsoever yeah i want to get to lastly here the question of regime change in iran um president trump
12:26brought the term up in a post on true social over the weekend seemingly kind of opening the door to
12:32that very notion uh vis-a-vis iran um vice president vance was asked about it kind of closing the door
12:38yet again here with the ceasefire do you think that that's now off the table um that the notion of a
12:45regime change in iran will be considered by israel the u.s others or not and i always say that i only
12:52ask this because do we know where the ayatollah is i mean who made the call today who ultimately
12:58decided that they're going to participate in a ceasefire with israel who in iran is calling the
13:04shots right now if the ayatollah is still alive and we have no indication that he isn't he would be the
13:09one the ultimate authority to sign off on a ceasefire but it's interesting that we weren't able to hear
13:13from him earlier when early proposals were made um when the decision to fire qatar was made that had to
13:19come with the approval of the supreme leader but i want to come back to this idea of regime change
13:24regime change can be imposed from without but it only endures from within meaning other countries can
13:31come in they can topple a government they can impose a new government of their own but for that
13:35government to endure for it to take hold for it to become an organic part of the society and the
13:41fabric of the people it needs to have popular support it needs to be homegrown to some extent it
13:47needs to originate in some form from within and have the support of the public absent that all of
13:54this talk about regime change is is really just speculative folly and i think that's where it
14:00needs to stay you know benjamin um these iranian figures that so many of us have now learned their
14:05names um one of whom has somewhat been absent in all of this and correct me if i'm wrong here but the
14:11iranian president mahmoud pozeshkian uh he was just elected last year uh and elected is a liberal term
14:19i'm using uh after the death of his predecessor ebrahim raisi in a helicopter crash where is he in all
14:27of this we've heard the irgc commanders that have been taken out members of the iranian air force
14:31uh the iranian foreign minister the iranian ambassador to the un all their names have been in the mix the
14:37ayatollah of course where is he yeah and this you ask a great question and this only underscores the
14:43sort of the bizarre system that is the islamic republic and the dysfunction of the different
14:49powers and branches and government so under the under the system of the islamic republic the supreme
14:54leader is and and the irgc who he oversees are in charge of iran's national defense against outsiders
15:01and also the supreme leader dictates and determines foreign policy the president is really responsible
15:08for managing domestic affairs and even then the supreme leader will have the ultimate say
15:12so really you have a position that is sort of a nominal token political position that is you know
15:19semi-democratically elected again as you mentioned it you know it to one extent is always up for
15:25debate and with extremely limited powers and virtually none when it comes to national defense
15:30foreign relations and diplomacy all of that more or less goes through um folks that are that are
15:36picked and or curated by the supreme leader or the supreme leader himself so it's not a surprise because
15:41the president is a non-factor in all matters of um foreign relations i guess hindsight's 2020 lastly
15:48though um have you been surprised knowing how weakened the regime is in iran that they decided multiple
15:56times a day uh to counter attack israeli sites and targets um for the last 12 days did you think
16:03they had that in them did you anticipate that to be their response i was surprised though in hindsight i
16:12shouldn't have been at the capacity they had at their their arsenal of ballistic missiles and just when
16:18we thought maybe they had exhausted it again we thought they were done because they were not attacking
16:22u.s planes flying overhead or israeli jets flying into iranian airspace and yet we see this sort of
16:27last salvo of the last few hours and the devastation they can cause what what is notable um but not
16:34surprising is that their proxies were all but non-existent i'm talking about hezbollah hamas the
16:40houthis they were non-factors in this so what we saw was a failure of iran to live up to the boasts and
16:46the claims that it made that are projected outwardly that it made to its people that it made to the
16:51international community about its ability to defend its territory and to protect its leadership it
16:55failed i mean on all fronts in that sense of the term was it able to inflict damage on israel indeed
17:01we saw that within the last hour but nowhere near what it what it said it would do do you think though
17:07that feeling is felt inside iran a sense of failure absolutely i mean there's going to be a reckoning
17:14and an accounting for this there is the absence of leaders who who you know you you have a vacuum
17:20of leadership for those who were killed and then those who are still alive and have to now justify
17:25their failure and their inaction and inability to live up to the promises they had been making
17:29for decades about the strength of their military the strength of their armed forces of the irgc
17:34of of the state to withstand uh attacks of this kind all of it was uh was just um fiction i see
17:42benjamin rad we're gonna leave it at that i can't thank you enough i'm sure we'll be talking soon
17:45welcome back in to live now from fox i'm indy mack hhs secretary robert f kennedy jr makes remarks
17:54on health insurance thank you dr oz um during the transition last january uh one of the people i was
18:03bringing on as a special government advisor was a long-term friend of mine called jake levine
18:10and i i asked jake what can you give me an agenda the most important things that we can do
18:18very quickly as soon as we get in there and jake called a professor at harvard named david cutler
18:26a famous economist who spent an entire career studying the health care system and advising
18:32reforms and he asked he posed that question to dr cutler he said what is the single most important
18:39thing that we could do to improve the patient experience in this country how we could do very
18:46very quickly without regulations and without legislation and dr cutler immediately said to him
18:54you can convene the insurance companies and get them to voluntarily agree to end uh the scourge
19:03of pre-authorization and um very early on the administration we brought in chris clump and chris
19:12clump i'm gonna ask jake and chris clump to come up and join me
19:15uh chris clump was a a very very uber successful health care entrepreneur from silicon valley
19:26who specialized in healthcare technology and in building his company he had met virtually all of
19:34the big insurance ceos in this and hospital ceos in this country and he spent the last uh several
19:43months calling them each up one by one and getting them to agree to this program and it was an extraordinary
19:50effort i'm so happy for his leadership for jake's leadership on this issue the two of them have
19:57been working hand in hand to make this extraordinary day happen and it's so important for our country
20:03because the because this has been one of the worst things eight as uh dr oz pointed out 85 percent of
20:13americans say that they have had delays in health care because of prior authorization and the doctors
20:22hated uh doctors report that it cost them 12 to 15 hours a week filling out forms some nurses are
20:30spending over half their time dealing with the administrative burden of this um and health care is
20:37often delayed to americans the cost of administration is enormous to our health care system and we're
20:44going to be able to eliminate a lot of those costs by what we're doing today i just want to read you
20:52an experience that a very close friend of mine who's a physician uh had with this one of his many
21:02experiences had experiences with pre-authorization and this is all too common in our country um
21:14a patient from new jersey suffering from severe heart failure
21:18was transferred to new york presbyterian hospital for a life-saving transplant by my friend the doctor
21:26to survive until a donor heart became available the patiently urgently needed a mechanical heart pump
21:33a device essential to sustain their life during the wait the insurance company had approved the heart
21:38transplant but then denied authorization for the mechanical heart pump deeming it unnecessary
21:46the decision created a perplexing contradiction the patient was cleared for a transplant
21:52not for the critical device needed to keep him alive until the transplant could happen
21:57with the patient in the operating room and his life at stake the medical team was faced with a profound
22:05ethical challenge should they adhere to the insurance company's denial which would likely lead to the
22:10patient's death or take action to save the patient's life knowing it could result in legal or professional
22:17consequences the medical team chose to prioritize the patient's survival in planning the mechanical heart
22:24pump this decision allowed the patient to live long enough to receive a successful heart plan my friend
22:30the doctor was then sued by the insurance company and ultimately that lawsuit was dropped but there are
22:39many situations in this country where they were that ethical decision for one reason or another would not have
22:46been made and people lose their lives because of prior authorization um in the past the insurance industry
22:55has made commitments to prior authorization but they have not kept them
23:00and in this case we think it's very very different because one a number of patients covered by this is
23:06unprecedented as dr hodd said 257 million patients are covered by the group that we met with this morning
23:15and while we're in that meeting another company joined the the group and we expect we're gonna have rolling
23:24and bring enrollments so we expect many other companies to also join the other differences we have standards
23:31this time we have um we have deliverables we have specificity on those deliverables we have metrics and
23:43we have deadlines and we have oversight so uh we're all gonna be i'm very grateful to the insurance
23:50company for stepping up and the hospital systems for stepping up uh we're all very very grateful to
23:57president trump or his leadership in giving us the impetus to make this happen this has been something
24:05that we have been struggling with in this country for decades two decades of presidents have promised to
24:11do this and none of them have succeeded congressman murphy has been working on this issue for 35 years
24:18and it's a priority for him and it's been a priority for many people in congress and can i ask congressman murphy and
24:26senator marshall to come up as well
24:30so you know today because president trump's leadership
24:35we are really agreeing to this momentous and monumental accomplishment achievement
24:42and we hope to see uh the dividends of this success story immediately materialize as a better
24:52experience for the american for millions of hundreds of millions literally of american patients i want
24:59to thank all of you for being here and we're happy to take questions
25:23so the dashboard was something you should be able to audit as well it would hopefully be public so people
25:27would have transparency into the process and the insurance companies have all sort of felt the
25:32same or at least sung from the same hymnal that the major limiting factor are doctors offices abilities
25:37to provide digital data to them so we also want to keep doctors accountable what percentage of doctors
25:42are actually able to send over a document in a timely fashion so this claim could be adjudicated
25:47instantaneously chris you want to take the question about uh the platform it's going to be on
25:51uh yep i chris klomp director of medicare for cms uh uh industry has pledged to provide metrics uh along
25:59several key dimensions including uh numbers of percentages of code reductions requiring
26:03prior authorization as well as adherence to define standards around timeliness uh and transparency of
26:09that process as well as adoption of electronic prior authorization standards that are being rolled out
26:14as part of the regular rule making process by cms both for medical procedures and for pharmaceutical
26:19procedures those should be available on the ahip website we intend to publish those as well ourselves at cms
26:30go ahead