The Middle East crisis Israel-Iran
Israeli sources: Iranian attack could happen before the election
Iran plans to attack Israel with drones and ballistic missiles in the near future, Israeli sources told Axios.
According to Israeli intelligence, Iran is planning an attack to be carried out by Iranian-allied militias in Iraq before the November 5 US election.
The data comes after an Iranian source told CNN on Wednesday that there will be a "painful" response to the attack carried out by Israel last week. The source said it is likely to happen the day before the election.
Israeli sources: Iranian attack could happen before the election
Iran plans to attack Israel with drones and ballistic missiles in the near future, Israeli sources told Axios.
According to Israeli intelligence, Iran is planning an attack to be carried out by Iranian-allied militias in Iraq before the November 5 US election.
The data comes after an Iranian source told CNN on Wednesday that there will be a "painful" response to the attack carried out by Israel last week. The source said it is likely to happen the day before the election.
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The North Korea crisis
Expert: Pyongyang's timing favors Trump above all
That North Korea's test-fire of an intercontinental ballistic missile, the first in nearly a year, is happening now is no coincidence, according to experts the Wall Street Journal spoke to.
The outcome of the election will affect Washington's relationship with North Korea, and the robot that was test fired late on Wednesday evening is said to have been designed to be able to reach the United States.
Pyongyang has denied Joe Biden's attempts to arrange a meeting. Trump, on the other hand, is the only US president to have met a North Korean leader during his time in the White House.
There is no doubt that it is Trump and not Kamala Harris who benefits from Kim Jong-Un's decision, says North Korea expert Lee Sung-yoon at the Woodrow Wilson International Center.
- It only helps the candidate who was once his pen pal.
Expert: Pyongyang's timing favors Trump above all
That North Korea's test-fire of an intercontinental ballistic missile, the first in nearly a year, is happening now is no coincidence, according to experts the Wall Street Journal spoke to.
The outcome of the election will affect Washington's relationship with North Korea, and the robot that was test fired late on Wednesday evening is said to have been designed to be able to reach the United States.
Pyongyang has denied Joe Biden's attempts to arrange a meeting. Trump, on the other hand, is the only US president to have met a North Korean leader during his time in the White House.
There is no doubt that it is Trump and not Kamala Harris who benefits from Kim Jong-Un's decision, says North Korea expert Lee Sung-yoon at the Woodrow Wilson International Center.
- It only helps the candidate who was once his pen pal.
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The election in the United States The vote
Expert believes in faster results than in the 2020 election
In the last 2020 presidential election, it took nearly five days for the major news media to declare Joe Biden the winner. Probably we won't have to wait as long this time, says an expert to The Hill.
One reason why the result took so long four years ago was the large number of postal votes as a result of the corona pandemic. Several states were not prepared to handle and count them quickly.
- Things will be different this year. [...] Famous last words perhaps, but I would be surprised if it takes as long as 2020, says Quinn Yeargain, associate professor of law at Michigan State University.
If the election is as close as the polls indicate, however, the result could be delayed, especially if it concerns the swing states of Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. The reason is that none of those states allow mail-in ballots to be processed until election day at the earliest.
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Trump sues CBS for 100 billion after Harris interview
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump is suing CBS News for $10 billion, equivalent to just over SEK 100 billion, after an interview with Kamala Harris in the legendary program 60 Minutes. That's what Fox News writes.
Trump's lawyers believe that the interview, which was broadcast on October 6, was misleading with the aim of influencing the election results.
According to the lawsuit, 60 Minutes allegedly clipped Harris' answers incorrectly. The lawyers demand that the channel release a full transcript of the interview.
CBS News denies that it manipulated the interview in any way. According to Fox News, the channel will not release a transcript.
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump is suing CBS News for $10 billion, equivalent to just over SEK 100 billion, after an interview with Kamala Harris in the legendary program 60 Minutes. That's what Fox News writes.
Trump's lawyers believe that the interview, which was broadcast on October 6, was misleading with the aim of influencing the election results.
According to the lawsuit, 60 Minutes allegedly clipped Harris' answers incorrectly. The lawyers demand that the channel release a full transcript of the interview.
CBS News denies that it manipulated the interview in any way. According to Fox News, the channel will not release a transcript.
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