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Jon Stewart backs Tucker Carlson on Iran: ‘You tell him, brother'

Jon Stewart backs Tucker Carlson on Iran: ‘You tell him, brother'

The Hill20-06-2025
Jon Stewart and Tucker Carlson have clashed as much as any two ideologically opposed television personalities in their careers. But on whether the U.S. should wade into the ongoing conflict between Israel and Iran, the two men have found themselves agreeing.
'It's such a bizarro world,' Stewart said on Thursday. 'You've got me nodding my head to Tucker Carlson videos.'
'The Daily Show' host opened his podcast with an allusion to Carlson's interview this week with Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas). During the conversation, Carlson laid into the Texas Republican for his calls for regime change in Iran, which has been targeted by Israeli strikes against its nuclear and military infrastructure.
'You're a senator who's calling for an overthrow of the government and you don't know anything about the country,' Carlson exclaimed in response to Cruz's difficulty answering a question about the population of Iran. Cruz called the line of questioning 'snide.'
The two men had several other testy exchanges during their hours-long conversation, including over Cruz's support for Israel as it and Iran exchange tit-for-tat strikes.
In the introduction to Stewart's 'The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart,' which featured CNN's Christiane Amanpour and former Obama advisor Ben Rhodes for a discussion on the conflict, Stewart was beside himself.
'You've got Tucker Carlson going, 'Why are we going to war with Iran, again,' and I'm like, 'You tell him, brother,'' he said, laughing. 'That's how f—– upside-down we find ourselves in this moment.'
Carlson, a noted isolationist, has rarely been aligned with Stewart on foreign policy. The two men clashed in February after Carlson interviewed Russian President Vladimir Putin, a move that Stewart slammed on his show as uncritical and sycophantic.
In turn, Carlson later shot back that Stewart was 'a tool of the regime in the most sinister way.'
Recently, the former Fox News anchor has been outspoken about his opposition to President Trump's handling of the Middle Eastern conflict. In response, Trump took a swipe at Carlson, calling him 'kooky' and questioning his perspective.
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Israel says hundreds of truckloads of aid are waiting to enter Gaza. Why can't the U.N. bring them in?
Israel says hundreds of truckloads of aid are waiting to enter Gaza. Why can't the U.N. bring them in?

Los Angeles Times

time19 minutes ago

  • Los Angeles Times

Israel says hundreds of truckloads of aid are waiting to enter Gaza. Why can't the U.N. bring them in?

TEL AVIV, Israel — The United Nations and experts say that Palestinians in Gaza are at risk of famine, with reports of increasing numbers of people dying from causes related to malnutrition. Yet Israel says hundreds of truckloads of aid are waiting at the border for the U.N. to distribute in Gaza. On Thursday, Israel's military took journalists to the Gaza side of the Kerem Shalom crossing, where hundreds of boxes of aid were on pallets filling a huge lot. Israel says it has allowed in around 4,500 aid trucks since it lifted a total blockade in May — around 70 truckloads a day, one of the lowest rates of the war and far less than the several hundred the U.N. says are needed each day. Israel says it lets in enough aid and faults U.N. agencies for not doing enough to retrieve and get it to those in need. The U.N. says it is hampered by Israeli military restrictions on its movements and incidents of criminal looting. Here's a look at why the aid can't be delivered. 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A U.N. official who was not authorized to discuss the issue publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity said Israeli forces opened fire toward crowds who tried to take food from an entering truck convoy. Israel's military said soldiers shot at a gathering of thousands of Palestinians in northern Gaza who posed a threat, and it was aware of some casualties. On its website, OCHA said there is a breakdown of law and order, which is partly due to the collapse of Gaza's Hamas-run civilian police force, leading to insecurity at the crossings and for convoys moving within Gaza. It said this is further compounded by the increase of armed gangs. The military frequently assigns routes for trucks to use that are 'unsuitable, either impassable for long truck convoys, passing through crowded markets, or controlled by dangerous gangs,' OCHA said. When the U.N. objects to a route, the military provides few alternatives, it said. The U.N. also struggles with facilitation from the military. 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Maxwell attorney says he hasn't spoken about pardon with Trump team

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Boston Globe

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  • Boston Globe

In Epstein furor, Trump struggles to shake off a controversy his allies once stoked

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