
Missiles, Blasts, and Rising Tensions: Israel-Iran Conflict Enters Fifth Day
Loud booms echoed over Jerusalem and Tel Aviv early Tuesday, sending residents into panic as Israel and Iran exchanged heavy fire for the fifth consecutive day.
The Israeli military confirmed that it launched a series of large-scale airstrikes on military sites in western Iran overnight, targeting missile storage facilities, drone warehouses, and launch systems. Video footage released by the Israeli army appeared to show direct hits on missile launchers.
Meanwhile, Iran's state television announced that three of its employees were killed in a strike on its headquarters in Tehran. Several others were reportedly wounded, though no specific figures were provided.
"We Will Defend Our Interests," Says U.S.
As the region faces escalating tensions, the White House maintained that U.S. forces remain on alert but in a defensive stance. "We will defend American interests," said White House spokesperson Alex Pfeiffer, responding to growing concerns about a broader conflict.
G7 Leaders Call for Calm
In Canada, G7 leaders issued a joint statement urging both Israel and Iran to de-escalate. The message was clear: 'Iran must never obtain a nuclear weapon,' and the situation must not spiral further.
Adding to the drama, U.S. President Donald Trump abruptly left the G7 summit, prompting confusion about whether it was related to ceasefire talks. Trump denied the connection, posting:
'Wrong! It has nothing to do with a ceasefire... Something much bigger. Stay tuned!'
Earlier, he had urged Tehran's population to evacuate, intensifying fears of an even wider escalation. Tehran, home to nearly 10 million people, is now on edge as citizens brace for more attacks.
Diplomacy in the Background
While missiles continue to fly, European powers are pushing for a return to diplomacy. Top diplomats from France, Germany, and the UK have reportedly urged Iran to resume nuclear negotiations without delay or conditions, according to a French diplomatic source.
Oil Prices React
The geopolitical chaos has also spilled into the financial world. Oil prices climbed again on Tuesday, spurred by fears of supply disruptions if the conflict spreads. The market had cooled slightly on Monday, but Trump's dramatic warning reignited investor anxiety.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Gulf Insider
an hour ago
- Gulf Insider
Emirates Unveils New-Look Airbus A350 At Paris Airshow, Deepening $130bn Investment Ties With France
Emirates returns to the Paris Airshow after 15 years, showcasing its new A350 and reaffirming $130bn in aircraft investments with France. Emirates has returned to the International Paris Airshow for the first time in over 15 years, unveiling its newly delivered Airbus A350 and reinforcing its long-standing strategic partnership with France's aviation sector. The A350, which is on display until 19 June, features Emirates' next-generation cabin design across all three classes, with fully upgraded interiors and inflight technologies. Visitors at the show can experience the airline's enhanced Business Class and Premium Economy cabins, as well as a redesigned and more spacious Economy Class, reflecting Emirates' ongoing commitment to innovation in passenger experience. Sir Tim Clark, President Emirates Airline, said: 'We're pleased to be at the Paris Airshow, showcasing the very best of air travel on one of the most important platforms in the aerospace exhibition calendar. 'Coming back to France's most important aerospace show demonstrates how committed Emirates is to supporting the country's aviation industry – not just through our day-to-day operations, but through ongoing investments across the entire aerospace supply chain.' Emirates currently serves France with 21 weekly flights to Paris, including three daily A380 services, alongside a daily A380 to Nice and a daily A350 to Lyon. Emirates remains the only international airline to operate an A380 to Nice Côte d'Azur Airport. Since its inception in 1985, Emirates has invested heavily in the French aviation sector, including: Investing more than €114bn ($130bn) in the purchase of 254 Airbus aircraft, including the A300, A310, A330, A340, A380, and A350 models Supported thousands of jobs across the French aerospace industry, with Emirates acting as a key customer for French manufacturers such as Airbus, Safran, Thales, and Michelin In 2023, the airline signed a series of major supply contracts with Safran worth over €1bn ($1.14bn), including a €896m ($1bn) agreement for next-generation seats to be installed across Emirates' new A350 fleet, Boeing 777X-9, and the existing 777-300ER aircraft It also invested €322m ($367.5m) in Thales' AVANT Up inflight entertainment system, which will debut on the A350 Beyond aircraft, Emirates contributes €189m ($215m) annually to the French economy through operational expenditure including fuel uplift, overflight charges, catering, landing and handling fees, and crew accommodation The A350 on display features 32 lie-flat Business Class seats in a 1-2-1 configuration, 21 Premium Economy seats, and 259 Economy Class seats. The aircraft offers a redesigned interior with more headroom, wider aisles, advanced cabin lighting, and faster Wi-Fi, as well as Emirates' latest generation of inflight entertainment systems delivering a cinematic viewing experience. By the end of 2025, the Emirates A350 is expected to serve 17 destinations globally. The airline has so far inducted seven A350s into its fleet, with 58 more scheduled for delivery in the coming years, as Emirates continues to modernise its long-haul fleet with fuel-efficient and passenger-focused aircraft.


Gulf Insider
2 hours ago
- Gulf Insider
Trump Rejects Netanyahu's Request To Join War, As Israel Needs Large US Bunker Buster Bombs
In the past 48 hours, Israel has asked the Trump administration to join its war effort, per Axios Israel seeks help targeting & destroying the fortified Fordow uranium enrichment site Axios says the Trump administration is so far rejecting the Israeli request But if Fordow remains intact, Israel's mission to dismantle Iran's nuclear program will be considered a failure AJ: At least 80 people – including 20 children – have been killed in Iran and four in Israel, with hundreds wounded on both sides in the ongoing tit-for-tat attacks. Axios underscores that 'Israel lacks the bunker buster bombs and large bomber aircraft needed to destroy Iran's Fordow uranium enrichment site, which is built into a mountain and deep underground. The U.S. has both within flying distance of Iran.' Meanwhile, the images coming out of Iran show unprecedented and shocking scenes of oil refineries burning uncontrollably while nearby highway traffic has been forcibly stopped… Reports of an Iranian hypersonic missile strike on Haifa earlier: And this stunningly close and at a good angle video shows major impact in Tel Aviv: Some regional accounts are speculating this was a hypersonic strike on Tel Aviv: 🚨عاجل: صواريخ فرط صوتية إيرانية تضرب تل أبيب بقوة الآن. أعتقد بعد هذا المشهد سيتم ضرب عموم إيران خلال الـ 24 ساعة المقبلة — محمد مجيد الأحوازي (@MohamadAhwaze) June 15, 2025 These missiles are clearly causing significant damage in Israel – an unprecedented first: Latest updates: An unconfirmed Israeli airstrike has targeted Iran's defense ministry headquarters, causing minor damage. The Israeli Air Force reportedly bombed the Shahran oil depot near Tehran, Iranian state media reports. Two Israeli citizens have been arrested on suspicion of carrying out security offenses under instructions from Iran. Iran struck a two-story home in Tamra, east of Haifa, killing three. Jordan has suspended all flight operations in its airspace until further notice Several missiles were observed streaking above Jerusalem on Saturday night Israel also carried out airstrikes in Yemen Saturday night, aiming to eliminate Abdul Malik al-Houthi, a senior Houthi military leader Al Jazeera, citing Iran's Tasnim news agency, reported that an Israeli airstrike targeted the country's defense ministry headquarters in Tehran on Saturday evening, causing minor damage to one of its buildings. '[A]n attack on Tehran this evening by the air force of the Zionist regime, the headquarters of the defence ministry was targeted. One of the headquarters' buildings was lightly damaged,' the state news agency reports. The Iranian government did not comment on the reported strike. Additionally, Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) claimed its missiles and drones targeted fighter jet fuel production facilities and energy supply centers in Israel, according to a statement reported by state media. The IRGC warned that its 'offensive operations will continue more fiercely and widely' if Israel's actions IDF has not confirmed the attack. * * * Several missiles were observed streaking above Jerusalem on Saturday night, a witness told Reuters, as Iran launched another direct assault on Israel. The IDF confirmed that missiles fired from Iran had been detected, with defense systems actively engaged to intercept them.'Upon receiving an alert, the public is instructed to enter a protected space and remain there until further notice,' the IDF said in a statement, Reuters reports. The IDF did not comment on possible injuries or damages. Meanwhile, Israeli authorities have arrested two citizens suspected of carrying out security offenses under instructions from Iran, officials told the Jerusalem Post. A gag order has been issued on further details, according to Channel 12's Amit Segal. Yesterday, two Israeli citizens were arrested on suspicion of committing security offenses under Iranian direction.A gag order has been issued on the rest of the details. — Amit Segal (@AmitSegal) June 14, 2025 * * * Jordan has suspended all flight operations in its airspace until further notice due to escalating tensions between Israel and Iran, the Guardian reported, citing Jordan's state news agency. Similarly, the Syrian Civil Aviation Authority announced a temporary closure of Syrian airspace to civilian flights, according to SANA. * * * The Israeli Air Force reportedly bombed the Shahran oil depot near Tehran, Iranian state media reports. The IDF said not officially commented on the alleged strike. The purported attack comes after Iranian media said Israel struck on the South Pars field in the southern Bushehr province. #BREAKING Electricity has been cut in Tehran's Shahran neighborhood after Israeli airstrikes targeted gasoline and oil depots in the western part of the city. — Iran International English (@IranIntl_En) June 14, 2025 The strikes have disrupted electricity supply in the area, though the full extent of the damage remains unclear. The Israel Defense Forces have not yet commented on the operation. * * * Iran confirmed an Israeli airstrike struck the Shahran oil depot but said the situation was 'fully under control,' according to SHANA, the news agency of Iran's oil ministry, Reuters reports. The state media outlet reported that the targeted tank contained a limited fuel volume. No further details on damage or casualties were disclosed. * * * Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz wrote on X, 'Tehran is ablaze' amid reports of the strike on the oil depot. 'Hundreds' of Iranian missiles were launched at the Israeli cities of Tel Aviv and Haifa – which Iran described as 'cluster missiles' in what was the fifth salvo today. Iran launched shortly after Israeli Air Forces completed 'a wave of strikes against military and strategic assets, nuclear program sites and high-ranking figures' according to a Saturday evening statement by the IDF. The latest Iranian launch came after Iranian state TV said 'heavy and destructive' attacks against Israel were expected within hours. Air raid sirens could be heard in Haifa and northern Israel. It appears that Israel intercepted most of the rockets, though some got through – as footage has been posted on social media of a refinery on fire in Haifa. Iranian new attack managed to direct hit some of the very crucial strategic assets of Israel after Israel started unprovoked attacks against Iran — Furkan Gözükara (@GozukaraFurkan) June 14, 2025 'At this hour, Israeli Air Force pilots continue to conduct widespread strikes across various regions in Iran — an ongoing operation lasting nearly 40 hours and targeting over 150 objectives,' said IDF spokesman Brig. Gen. Effie Defrin, who added that protective measures will remain in effect. According to the Times of Israel , one of the missiles hit a two-story home in Tamra, east of Haifa, killing one woman and injuring 13 others. The death toll from the Iranian ballistic missile strike on a two-story home in Tamra, east of Haifa, has climbed to three, first responders told the Times of Israel. A 20-year-old woman was killed when missile directly struck her home, according to authorities. Firefighters extracted four individuals from a four-story building in the area, but two were pronounced dead at the scene, according to the Jerusalem Post. The Magen David Adom (MDA) reports that a two-story home was struck by an Iranian ballistic missile in the Arab city of Tamra to the east of Haifa, resulting in 14 injuries, one of which is critical. — OSINTdefender (@sentdefender) June 14, 2025 Meanwhile in Iran… Israel also carried out airstrikes in Yemen Saturday night, Israel's military carried out airstrikes in Yemen on Saturday night, aiming to eliminate Abdul Malik al-Houthi, a senior Houthi military leader, according to Israel Defense Forces (IDF) sources cited by the Jerusalem Post. The operation's outcome remains uncertain, with one Israeli official tell the Israeli publication, 'We will soon know if it succeeded.' The target of an assassination strike by the Israeli Air Force earlier in Houthi-controlled Yemen is reported to be Houthi Chief-of-Staff Muhammad Abd Al-Karim Al-Ghamari. — OSINTdefender (@sentdefender) June 14, 2025 The IDF has not issued an official statement on the airstrike. The airstrike in Yemen comes as the IDF continues conducting strikes on targets in Tehran while intercepting a barrage of ballistic missiles launched from Iran, the IDF said. Earlier, the International Atomic Energy Agency announced on Saturday that there was 'no damage seen' at the Fordow Fuel Enrichment Plant or at the Khondab heavy water reactor under construction in Iran. There has also been no further damage at the Natanz nuclear plant since Friday. * * * Israel's military on Saturday has been busy touting that its warplanes have total air superiority over Western Iran and the capital area, as the Islamic Republic's defenses have been largely degraded and destroyed. A senior IDF military official has been cited in local media as saying very significant damage has been inflicted on key nuclear sites and that the IDF will 'continue'. 'Since the beginning of the operation, Iran's nuclear project has suffered heavy blows in two main areas: Damage to the production of the weapon core through strikes on uranium enrichment and conversion sites in Natanz and Isfahan [and] damage to the regime's weaponization group through the elimination of nine nuclear scientists with unique knowledge and experience in developing the nuclear detonation device,' the official said. And further that 'all the scientists eliminated in the opening strike had, over the years, been involved in developing the nuclear detonation device.' The CIA at this moment still assesses that Iran does not produce a bomb, and was likely not actively seeking it. Iran's latest response is as follows: 'This aggression pushes the region into a dangerous cycle of violence,' Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi says during a call with his Chinese counterpart Wang Yi, according to a statement from his ministry. 'Iran has responded and will respond in a firm manner to the barbaric actions of the Zionist regime.' Netanyahu is meanwhile maintaining that the has the 'clear support' of US President Donald Trump, in a new televised address: In an English video statement, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says Iranian leaders are 'packing their bags' amid Israel's airstrikes. 'I'll tell you what would have come if we hadn't acted. We had information that this unscrupulous regime was planning to give the nuclear weapons that they would develop to their terrorist proxies. That's nuclear terrorism on steroids. That would threaten the entire world,' he says. He adds that the operation has the 'clear support' of US President Donald Trump. 'Our enemy is your enemy… We're dealing with something that will threaten all of us sooner or later. Our victory will be your victory,' Netanyahu says, wishing the US leader a happy birthday. 'This is what Israel is doing with the support, the clear support of the president of the United States, Donald Trump, and the American people and many others in the world.' Below are sites the IDF has claimed to have hit: From nuclear sites to air defense systems, we've dismantled some of Iran's most dangerous military a breakdown of the key targets struck across Iran: — Israel Defense Forces (@IDF) June 14, 2025 The latest developments via Al Jazeera: Iran and Israel trade missiles and air strikes as the conflict that's killed dozens escalates with no end in sight. At least 80 people – including 20 children – have been killed in Iran and four in Israel, with hundreds wounded on both sides in the ongoing tit-for-tat attacks. US President Donald Trump has lauded Israel's premeditated assault and warned of much worse to come unless Iran quickly accepts the sharp downgrading of its nuclear programme. Continuing Iran-US nuclear talks is unjustifiable while 'barbarous' Israeli attacks persist on the country, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi says. The Israeli military says its air strikes on Iran killed more than 20 Iranian army and Revolutionary Guards commanders. Israel's latest attacks on an Iranian gas field takes tensions to a different level * * * Overnight has seen the continual trading of tit-for-tat missile salvos between Israel and Iran, with Israeli fighter jets busy over western Iran, where they've claimed to have achieved complete domination of the skies after taking out anti-aircraft missile batteries. Images of large-scale destruction have emerged from both capitals, with Israeli authorities saying at least four citizens have been killed – though casualty figures could be much higher amid an ongoing emergency response – and Iran says Israeli attacks have killed at least 78, including women and children, and wounded over 320 others. Israel has shared footage of successful aerial attacks on Iran's ballistic missile launchers in some cases, while the IDF has announced that 70 Israeli Air Force fighter jets participated in the overnight operation in Tehran to establish 'aerial freedom of action' over the Iranian capital. Some 40 sites were targeted, including air defense systems, IDF Spokesman Brig. Gen. Effie Defrin has said. Israeli jets were able to fly over and around the capital for some two-and-half hours. 'The dozens of aircraft are flying freely over Tehran, thanks to the opening blow that removed the threat of Iranian air defense systems,' he declared. Characterizing this as the deepest operation the Israeli Air Force (IAF) has ever been involved in over Iran, he announced: 'Tehran is no longer immune; the capital is exposed to Israeli strikes.' Israeli jets have yet to strike all of Iran's nuclear facilities, and Prime Minister Netanyahu has warned that this could continue for several days more. There is serious damage reported at Natanz nuclear site. There have been conflicting reports over whether there is any radiation or chemical contamination at the site. Some sections of the Isfahan site have been damaged, the IDF has said, while the other key site of Fordo has yet to be targeted. Important, Israel says that nine nuclear scientists have been killed as a result of Friday aerial operations. Clearly Israel is going for leadership decapitation of military and nuclear programs. Impact scene from Tel Aviv: Still, even with Iran's military capabilities now being steadily degraded, the Islamic Republic has to some degree shown it can regroup and hit back. Israeli media has described a state of panic on the streets, and in some cases residential areas have been demolished: Israelis on Saturday described the fear, chaos and confusion as several Iranian missiles slammed into houses and apartments in central Israel overnight, causing widespread destruction, killing three people and wounding dozens. Warning sirens sent millions of people rushing for safe rooms and bomb shelters as Iran fired several waves of missiles in response to Israeli strikes on its military leadership and nuclear program. While the IDF said most were intercepted, several missiles — apparently armed with large explosive warheads — slammed into homes in Tel Aviv, Ramat Gan and Rishon Lezion. 'We shut the door, started watching the news through the computer, and suddenly there was a boom so loud that the whole building teetered,' Tali Horesh, resident of a Tel Aviv high-rise that was hit Friday night, told the Ynet news site. ⚠️RAW FOOTAGE: Iran launched multiple ballistic missiles toward Israel in the past hours. The IDF cannot, and will not, allow Iran to attack our civilians. — Israel Defense Forces (@IDF) June 13, 2025 Meanwhile President Trump has been nowhere to be seen, and certainly hasn't faced reporters' questions on where the United States stands in all this. Is Israel committed to full war for regime change in Iran at this point? Israel has decided to assassinate Iran's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei to try to cause total state collapse. Unless Iran establishes deterrence in the very short term by striking both Israeli and US assets in the region and eliminating top figures in the Israeli regime, they will… — ☀️👀 (@zei_squirrel) June 14, 2025 developing…


Gulf Insider
2 hours ago
- Gulf Insider
White House Seeks Meeting With Iran's Foreign Minister As Iran Eases Punishing Strikes: Axios
As tensions soar and Americans anxiously contemplate the possibility of yet another major US war in the Middle East, the Trump administration has been in contact with the Iranian government, discussing a possible meeting this week between Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi and US envoy Steve Witkoff, Axios reports, citing 'four sources briefed on the issue.' The outlet also says Trump officials reassured Middle East allies that the administration doesn't plan to join the war unless Americans are targeted — a clear red line that incentivizes Israel to find a way to drag Iran across it, or to fabricate an incident altogether, much as Israel did in 1954's famed 'Lavon Affair.' An Arab diplomat in deep contact with Iran says the red line is already very much in mind in Tehran: 'The Iranians are very careful so far not to do anything that can push the U.S. to get involved.' Following those reports, Iran over Monday night pared back the pace of its heavy bombardment of Israel, after consecutive nights of deadly, damaging strikes demonstrating the power of Iran's hypersonic missiles. In a new twist, however, Iran hit Israel with a daylight barrage on Tuesday morning — albeit one that was reportedly modest in volume, perhaps only 20 missiles. Of course, there's nothing modest about it if you happen to be in one of the impact areas: One of several footages, triangulation of which have allowed to suggest that IDF's Intel gathering unit 8200 was hit in Herzliya, outside Tel Aviv: — Bashkarma🇺🇸🌏🇷🇺 (@Karmabash) June 17, 2025 Earlier on Monday, Israel struck various targets in Iran, including the state-run television network IRIB in mid-broadcast (though it quickly resumed broadcasting with the same host). The IDF also claimed it killed a highly senior Iranian general who himself succeeded another general assassinated in Israel's opening of the war. JUST IN: Israeli Air Force strikes the studio of Iranian state run Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting (IRIB) in Tehran while they were on live newscaster was in the middle of a show when the building was hit. — Collin Rugg (@CollinRugg) June 16, 2025 The Axios reports come in stark contrast to a stream of bellicose rhetoric emanating from Trump, along with potentially ominous moves of US military assets. On Monday, Trump used social media to say that 'everyone should immediately evacuate Tehran!' Also yesterday, Fox News reported that the USS Nimitz -led aircraft carrier group was steaming toward the Middle East from the South China Sea, where it will join the already on-station USS Carl Vinson strike group. At the same time, a large number of military refueling aircraft were being deployed to Europe. Even if the reports of US diplomatic outreach are true, from Iran's perspective, little or nothing the Trump administration says can be trusted, and even ostensibly peaceful overtures must be evaluated as a potential tactic to set up a surprise US strike. After all, Israel's initiation of a war on Iran came two days before American and Iranian delegations were scheduled to meet in Oman for a sixth round of discussions pursuant to a new deal about Iran's nuclear program. Since Israel's attack, Trump has repeatedly stated that he knew about it in advance, saying for example that 'We were well-informed about everything,' and 'I always knew the date.' Here's what one official told Axios about the pursuit of a new meeting: 'A meeting with the Iranians this week is under consideration… They do want to talk. But what we don't know is, have they been brought to their knees fully so that they realize that in order to have a country, they have to talk? And assuming they get there, is there any degree of [uranium] enrichment you would allow them to have?' The suggestion that Iran is anywhere close to being 'on its knees' seems fanciful, considering Iran has launched multiple missile barrages, the effects of which have significantly exceeded expectations. Two dozen Israelis have been killed and at least 400 injured, with the country also enduring major hits to government buildings, apartment towers and power plants. The starring role in those barrages has been played by Iran's highly advanced hypersonic missiles — a weapon that neither Israel nor even the United States has in its arsenal: The unnamed official's rhetorical question about whether there's 'any amount of enrichment' the US would allow may offer a glimmer of hope for an end to the Israel-initiated war. Iran sees enrichment as a right it possesses as a sovereign state, and has repeatedly said an outright ban on enrichment is completely out of the question. Iran has long been under a religious order, or 'fatwa,' forbidding the development of any weapon of mass destruction, and the country has long assured the world that it has no intention of building a nuclear weapon — an assurance the US intelligence community validated in 2007 and has repeatedly re-confirmed since then — most recently, just this March. Meanwhile, anti-Iran hawks have been warning of an imminent Iranian nuclear bomb for more than three decades: In this major New York Times article from 30 years ago, one senior official said Iran's 'intensive effort' put them on pace to have all the requisite atomic bomb components' in two years' The seeds of today's crisis were sown in May 2018, when Trump withdrew the United States from the nuclear deal that had been negotiated between Iran and various Western governments and signed in 2015. Under that deal, Iran agreed to a wide array of safeguards. They included eliminating its medium-enriched uranium, reducing its low-enriched uranium inventory by 98%, capping future enrichment at 3.67%, slashing its number of centrifuges, submitting to enhanced external monitoring and rendering its heavy-water reactor unusable by pouring concrete in it. At the time of Trump's withdrawal, Iran was in full compliance, according to the International Atomic Energy Agency. In response to the re-imposition of US sanctions, Iran began straying from the deal's terms, seemingly pushing the only lever it had to bring the deal back and get out from under sanctions that have sapped Iran's economy and inflicted a cruel toll on innocent Iranian citizens. The 2015 deal was so thorough that Trump's pursuit of a new agreement puts him in the awkward position of finding a way to differentiate it from the one he repeatedly railed against on the 2016 campaign trail, and again as he killed it. Iran hawks have been pushing for a deal that bans nuclear enrichment altogether. Some may take that position out of sincere concern, but the most powerful hawks in Israel and America certainly take it with full knowledge that Iran will never accept it, helping pave the way for the US-led war they've long yearned for. Indeed, soon after Israel's war on Iran began, Israel and its US-based collaborators began pressing Trump to commit the American military to the fight — in defiance of his campaign promises to end the era of endless US wars. Trump needn't burden himself with that decision: The US Constitution vests the power to initiate war with Congress . This is not our if it were, Congress must decide such matters according to our Constitution.I'm introducing a bipartisan War Powers Resolution tomorrow to prohibit our involvement.I invite all members of Congress to cosponsor this resolution. — Thomas Massie (@RepThomasMassie) June 16, 2025