Israelis Embrace Fight With Iran
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KANANASKIS, Alberta — Leaders of some of the world’s biggest economic powers arrive in the Canadian Rockies on Sunday for a Group of Seven summit, overshadowed by an escalating conflict between Israel and Iran and U.S. President Donald Trump’s unresolved trade war with allies and rivals alike.
The UK government is trying to walk a tightrope on relations with Israel, expressing support for its military action against Iran while also criticizing the war in Gaza.
Trump's first multilateral summit of his second term, the G7, comes amid the backdrop of Israel and Iran on the brink of war, and tariffs.
Concerns of wider conflict rise, including at G7 summit Iran refuses ceasefire talks amid Israeli attacks, official says Trump vetoes Israeli plan to target Iran’s
President Donald Trump arrives in Canada as the center of attention for a Group of Seven summit of world leaders whose main purpose will be to mollify him.
President Trump vetoed a plan presented by Israel to the U.S. to kill Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
After Israel's recent attacks on Iran, dozens of Winnipeggers lined up on Portage Avenue to protest the military strikes and the ongoing war and humanitarian crisis in Gaza.
President Trump heads to Canada on Sunday for the first gathering of the Group of Seven (G-7) alliance since he returned to office in January, a summit that has taken on fresh urgency amid rising tensions in the Middle East.
Canada’s Mark Carney will host world leaders in Kananaskis in coming days, with his plans for a unity G7 summit to unblock trade at the mercy of a new Mideast war and the temperament of Donald Trump.
People walk through debris from a building damaged in Israeli strikes in Tehran, Iran, on Friday. The Iranian Canadian Congress says the attack was devastating and diplomacy is the best way to end the conflict. ARASH KHAMOOSHI/The New York Times News Service