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Trump’s unfiltered commentary on Lebanon is leaving Israel with an impossible choice

For more than two years now, Israel’s growing number of critics abroad have condemned it for what they allege is a reckless and indiscriminate war — with some charging genocide — that has seen tens of thousands killed in Gaza as well as expanding to Lebanon and several other fronts.
At the same time, some — mostly within Israel, particularly on the right — have leveled the opposite critique: Israel has been too timid, too deliberate when fighting terror groups sworn to its destruction. It needs to just finish the job.
On Tuesday, US President Donald Trump managed to make both of those arguments simultaneously.
“Israel is fighting Hezbollah too long, and too many people are being killed,” Trump said at the G7 conference of global leaders in France. “And you don’t have to knock down an apartment house every time you’re looking for somebody. Because there are a lot of people in those apartment houses. And they’re not all Hezbollah, that I can tell you.”
Then, minutes later: “I’m not happy with the way Israel has handled themselves with Lebanon and with Hezbollah. They should have been able to do the job faster. It just goes on forever.”
Trump followed that up with another somewhat ambiguous statement about Israel and Lebanon on Wednesday, saying he did not want Israel’s fight against Hezbollah to end. “I want Israel to be able to protect themself, but I do want them to use good judgment,” he said.
One could imagine Israel’s top military strategists watching Trump from a secure room in Tel Aviv, smacking their foreheads and exclaiming: “Good judgment! Defeat our adversary quickly with minimal civilian casualties! Why didn’t we think of that?”
In fact, the US president did put forward a solution of his own to the Lebanon morass: pulling Israel out of the fight against Hezbollah and subcontracting it to Ahmed al-Sharaa, the Islamist president of Syria.
In typical Trumpian fashion, the idea is so far outside the box as to be intriguing, but unlikely to happen. What is clear from the US president’s latest stream of consciousness, however, is that Israel now finds itself in an impossible spot.
Most Israelis, polls show, recognize the need to disarm Hezbollah, an Iranian terror proxy that amassed an army on the border and has rained missiles on northern Israel throughout much of the past two and a half years. And analysts say the only way to do so is through a combination of military and diplomatic pressure — depleting the terror group on the ground while shoring up the Lebanese government in its stead.
But the signed memorandum of understanding between the US and Iran, which claims to speak for the US’s allies (i.e., Israel), declares an end to fighting in Lebanon, indicating the US no longer supports Israeli military action against Hezbollah. Trump made as much clear in his comments to the G7, describing the Lebanon conflict as a sideshow that should not distract from the talks with Iran.
‘What do we want to happen?’
Soon, Israel may be forced to choose: Either keep up the military pressure and lose Trump’s diplomatic support, or stay on his good side — but only by ending, or scaling back, the conflict that many see as the country’s most urgent fight.
“Trump is not in the business of these prolonged wars, forever wars,” Ksenia Svetlova, executive director of the Regional Organization for Peace, Economics and Security, told The Times of Israel.
“Trump’s goal is no war in Lebanon, and consequently no war with Iran, because Iran ties these two things together,” she added. “But the goal that is important to Israel — and to I think all of the Israelis, who understand that we cannot continue the way it is — this goal is not achieved.”
At present, Israel is proceeding on the diplomatic and military tracks simultaneously. Fighting in Lebanon continued on Wednesday, with one IDF soldier killed and 12 injured. And Israel has held several rounds of direct talks in Washington, DC, with Lebanese officials, which are reportedly close to yielding a deal.
But both Svetlova and Dan Naor, an expert in Middle Eastern studies at Ariel University whose research focuses on Lebanon, did not put much stock in those negotiations, as historic as they have been.
Svetlova called them “discussions for the sake of the discussions.” Naor said that the fact of the direct talks is a symbolic victory over Hezbollah, which staunchly opposes negotiations with Israel, but that they were unlikely to yield significant progress.
“The Lebanese and the Israelis are broadcasting on different frequencies,” Naor told The Times of Israel. “That is, the Lebanese are talking about a nonbelligerency agreement and not a peace agreement. And I don’t know how much that will work. Certainly not now.”
What Naor does suggest is that the military pressure be combined with diplomatic and financial support for Lebanon’s government from the US, the Gulf states and Saudi Arabia in particular.
“If [the US] wants a Lebanese state without Hezbollah, they need Israeli military pressure to continue,” he said. “It has to come jointly. Because by itself, it won’t help, but it could be good if it comes along with collaborative efforts, external and internal.”
It’s unclear, however, how much those Arab states would be willing to play ball with a continued Israeli military offensive. In Svetlova’s read, Trump’s comments at the G7 were channeling the Saudi perspective, which wants to see the Lebanon fighting stop.
“There is pressure that he is feeling from Arab partners of his, specifically Saudi Arabia,” she said. “I think that the data about the high number of casualties, this is coming from the Saudis, who are very deeply involved in the attempts to achieve a permanent ceasefire in Lebanon.”
Also unlikely to get involved is Trump’s preferred candidate, Syria. While Syrian forces used to occupy Lebanon, and Hezbollah was a chief ally of the Bashar al-Assad regime that Sharaa’s forces deposed, the Syrian president is focused on rebuilding his country after more than a decade of civil war, along with securing domestic and international legitimacy. He has little reason to insert his military, which is weaker than Israel’s, in what could be a decades-long quagmire, and reports have said that the Syrian, Israeli and Lebanese leaderships are all opposed to this solution.
“I do not see Syria intervening in Lebanon,” Svetlova said. “Not today, not tomorrow, not after one year. It’s just not interested in that… And being a fragile state, and also dealing with tons of domestic issues, security, and so on, there is absolutely no way that Ahmed al-Sharaa is, can, or will be willing ever to do that.”
The best course of action, she said, is for Israel to first get its own house in order. Instead of just continuing to press the offensive, Svetlova said, Israel must come up with a plan to defeat Hezbollah diplomatically as well as militarily, and only then present that to Trump.
“Israel can, first of all, present its own strategy for Lebanon,” she said. “So what do we want to happen? How do we want it to happen? And again, I think that anybody who looks at the Lebanon scene understands that you cannot achieve this goal by military means only.”
And what if Trump tries to dictate terms? At a certain point, Naor said, Jerusalem needs to do what it thinks is best in combating one of its most powerful foes, even at the risk of angering a US president whose good graces may be fading.
“I don’t know if we need to take the American considerations into account,” he said. “There’s a clear Israeli consideration here, and this war can’t stop here. That is, the military pressure on Hezbollah can’t stop here.”
What happens if the US no longer supports that fight?
“I don’t know,” he said. “But to stop here is to go backward and lose much of what we’ve achieved.”

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Oliver Tree’s girlfriend slams ‘gossip’ in tribute after singer killed in helicopter crash

Singer Oliver Tree’s girlfriend has paid tribute after her boyfriend was killed in a helicopter crash — and has urged her followers to quiet down about “any other women that [he] may have been seeing.”
“right now im mourning my partner and best friend, anything else is unimportant. please have some respect,” fashion photographer Fiona Chernavskaya wrote on Instagram Wednesday.
She quickly shut down online chatter about their relationship — saying she doesn’t want to see “gossip about other women that Oliver may have been seeing,” adding “we were monogamous.”
“and please have some respect for my privacy, we kept out relationship very intimate. what i really don’t need is to see gossip about other women that Oliver may have been seeing. we were monogamous. right now i’m mourning my partner and best friend, anything else is unimportant. please have some respect,” she wrote over a photo of Tree on her Instagram story.
Chernavskaya appeared to be firing back at people who claimed that she may not have been Tree’s only girlfriend in the comments of a tribute post she made Tuesday.
“God damn how many girlfriends did he have?” one user blasted with a crying-laughing face.
“This is the 9th girl I’ve seen,” another proclaimed.
The cruel comments came three days after the 32-year-old rapper and songwriter died in a mid-air helicopter crash above Rio de Janeiro in Brazil.
Chernavskaya on Tuesday shared numerous photos of herself, including one of her kissing his head, addressed “to my best friend.”
“We traveled to 43 countries, and all 7 continents together. The magic, inspiration and joy you brought to my life and others, will never be forgotten or replaced,” she declared.
“You’d always tell me when we argued, if things don’t work out in this lifetime, you will find me in the next,” she wrote, addressing her late boyfriend.
Six people, including the “Alien Boy” singer, were killed in the helicopter crash Sunday, with one seen jumping from one of the helicopters before both hit the ground, according to a witness.
The helicopter Tree was on – a Bell 206B JetRanger III – crashed into a PR-DJJ aircraft 300 feet above Recreio dos Bandeirantes.

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Fashion

Olivia Wilde Explains Whether Ex Jason Sudeikis Deliberately Served Her Papers On Stage During Breakup: ‘Jason Has Told Me…’

Over four years ago now, Olivia Wilde experienced one of the wildest Hollywood moments caught on camera. While presenting her directorial debut, Don’t Worry Darling, onstage at CinemaCon in 2022, she was served legal papers from her ex, Jason Sudeikis. The moment was downright shocking to everyone involved, and Wilde herself is still reeling from the incident.
In an interview on the Call Her Daddy podcast on June 17, the House alum addressed the incident head-on. “I will never forget, one of the most f— up things that I went through — among so many — was that I was served papers on stage,” Wilde said. “It was incredibly traumatizing.”
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She then went on to talk about how Sudeikis, whom she shares kids Otis, 12, and Daisy, 9, with, played a part in the whole thing.
“I know Jason has told me that he did not know [about the timing] and I need to believe that in order to continue,” she said. Wilde and Sudeikis were together for seven years before splitting in 2020 amid rumors of her relationship with Don’t Worry Darling star, Harry Styles.
“I think that lawyers can be super f— up and do f— up things, and I’m aware of that,” Wilde continued, partly removing responsibility from her ex. “I think that people are never their best selves when they’re engaging in that kind of process, and it was so f— up in so many ways.”
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Regardless of his involvement, the Ted Lasso star was open with Wilde about regretting how everything happened. “I know it really hurt him to see it happening to me,” Wilde said. “I think it was undeniable that it was a f— up thing, and I know he felt very, very bad that it happened to me.”
“It was a moment that I ended up doing a lot of therapy about,” she added, “still kind of do.”
Also in the interview, Wilde explained why the moment was so traumatizing for her.
“There’s the feeling of being on stage that is a vulnerable feeling, she said. “Also, that room couldn’t have been higher stress. The people in that room at CinemaCon are… it’s all the studio people. So it’s all the people you were trying to impress the most with your work and all the exhibitors, the people at the movie theaters, the people you need to sell your movies, and all the press.”
“It was like, I cannot f— believe this is happening to me here,” she reflected. “And yet, the crazy thing is, once you make it through things like that, you kinda feel like you can make it through anything.”
Wilde went on to date Styles for two years before splitting amicably in 2022. She and Sudeikis never got back together, but have been co-parenting ever since their split.
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Fashion

Angelina Jolie makes jaws drop at ‘Couture’ screening in New York; Actress shows off tattooed back in strapless gown – WATCH

Angelina Jolie made a stunning appearance in New York City as she continued promotions for her upcoming film ‘Couture’. In true movie-star fashion, the actress captivated fans and photographers as she stepped out of her car in a glamorous black-and-white ensemble. The Oscar-winning actress attended the event in a chic strapless black Bottega Veneta gown layered beneath an oversized white Calvin Klein jacket and she completed the sophisticated look with a pair of dark aviators. Looking every bit the movie star, Jolie paused to greet fans, sign autographs and pose for photographs before heading into the building.
Angelina Jolie wows at ‘Couture’ screening
Angelina Jolie shows off her back tattoos
Moments later, the actress emerged without the jacket, revealing the full silhouette of her elegant strapless gown. The look also offered a glimpse of her back tattoos.
About ‘Couture’
Jolie’s appearance comes as she promotes ‘Couture’, which she said, was a ‘deeply personal’ project. The film, directed and written by acclaimed French filmmaker Alice Winocour, sees Jolie portraying Maxine, an American film director working in Europe on a fashion show production, who receives a breast cancer diagnosis.
Angelina Jolie hosts dinner event
As part of the film’s promotion, Jolie recently hosted an intimate dinner at Atelier Jolie, her downtown New York creative collective on June 15. The event brought together cancer survivors, medical professionals and creatives to celebrate strength, healing and community.
Angelina Jolie on ‘Couture’
Reflecting on the film and her collaboration with Winocour, Jolie said at the event, “Alice is a wonderful director and approaches the stories of the women in Couture with sensitivity and hope. The film is not about an end for my character but rather about a renewed desire to live life until your last breath which particularly resonates with me at this time in my life.” The actress also opened up about the personal journey she experienced while making the film saying, “I am not sure I was strong enough even five years ago to do this. To be open and trusting to share and be vulnerable again.”
Angelina Jolie on losing her mom to cancer
Speaking about loss and family, Jolie added, “Things happen in life that take us off path. We lose ourselves and we feel isolated. I would have given anything to have my mother alive to be there for her grandchildren.” The actress first debuted Couture at the Toronto International Film Festival last September, where she discussed the film with Variety and said, “I felt very vulnerable.” She went on to add, “I feel like it’s such a personal film. It felt so private that in my mind, it’s probably the one film that doesn’t feel like a film.”
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The film is particularly personal for the actress, whose mother, Marcheline Bertrand, passed away from ovarian and breast cancer in 2007. In 2013, Jolie publicly revealed that she had undergone a preventive double mastectomy after learning she carried the BRCA1 gene mutation, which significantly increased her risk of developing breast cancer.
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Social media ban is punishing the wrong people, teen influencers say

Social media has risks but has given us opportunities too, teen influencers say
Ziame Stewart can barely remember a time he was not performing for social media.
The 15-year-old has always loved singing and dancing, and says he has been filming “silly little videos” almost his whole life.
He started by making videos for friends and family when he lived abroad as a young child, but his hobby gradually grew into a passion and now potentially a future career.
Had Ziame been born a few years earlier, his career might have been in trouble before it even began thanks to the UK’s new policy banning under-16s from social media.
Although he will be turning 16 just before the new rules come into effect next spring, the budding singer and dancer is still frustrated. He thinks the policy could bury a generation of creative talent.
He points to hugely successful artists such as Justin Bieber and Billie Eilish, and his own personal inspiration, British rising star Sekou, who were all discovered on social media as teenagers.
“Imagine if this ban was put through ages ago – we wouldn’t have any of this music,” he tells the BBC.
Every day, Ziame posts covers of popular hits, snippets of his own original music, and dance videos set to trending tracks on social media. He’s convinced that promoting his work, connecting with fans and selling tickets to his shows would be a Herculean task without the platforms.
“I would not be doing what I’m doing now.”
While people like Ziame worry the ban could have unintended consequences, proponents insist it is necessary to protect children from harmful content, addictive algorithms, online predators and cyberbullying.
Revealing the plans on Monday, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said: “I am not prepared to compromise on the safety and happiness of our children, and that is why this ban must happen.”
He said the policy would give children more time, security and freedom to grow up.
Additional restrictions for older children, aged 16 and 17, are in the works too, with more details to be announced next month.
The UK government is joining Australia – where similar world‑leading laws came into force in December – in arguing that tech giants have had plenty of time to make their platforms safer but have failed to do so.
Many teens see where parents and policymakers are coming from.
Harry Sawtell – a beauty influencer who has more than 100,000 followers on his social media accounts – knows first-hand how cruel social media can be.
His feeds are full of upbeat “get ready with me” videos, posts unpacking shopping hauls, and clips in which he talks about his life as a gay teen.
“I came out as gay at quite an early age,” he says. “I feel like a lot of people can be horrible about that or the fact I’m a bit flamboyant…
“You can receive a lot of backlash and hate for being yourself.”
On the flip side, he says that connections made through social media can be critical for vulnerable teens.
“I’ve definitely had some people message me before saying that I’ve helped them come out and be able to express themselves.”
Harry, 16, says his community – including his parents who work for BBC local radio – have always been supportive, but social media gives him the opportunity to see people like him living happy, fulfilling lives.
“That can obviously help make you feel like you have got a bright future,” he says.
Fashion-obsessed 14-year-old Miley Williams also feels like social media has helped her become more comfortable in her own skin.
She tells the BBC she has conflicting feelings about the ban coming to the UK. “I’m a bit 50/50.”
For her, social media isn’t just a hobby – it’s a job.
After building a following from a viral video three years ago, she now earns a modest income of about £400 a month. She’s also got brand deals and receives free gifts, while her dance videos, short skits and outfit try-ons bring in cash too.
Even if she can get around the ban, most of her followers are under 16. She fears she’ll be out of work and her future in the influencing industry will be undermined – as well as her ability to support herself through university.
However, Miley admits she does occasionally feel uneasy about social media.
Her account is heavily monitored by her parents who shield her from the worst of the online world, but she knows strangers send her inappropriate messages. Once in a while, fans even track her down and follow her around in real life.
Sometimes Miley also worries about the consumerist and addictive nature of these platforms. Doom-scrolling and the pressures around posting can take the fun out of social media, she feels. “It can get a little bit too much at times.”
But ultimately, she says social media has changed her life for the better.
And her mum, Victoria, says she’s frustrated that decisions around social media use are being taken out of parents’ hands.
Though she shares the concerns of many people pushing for the ban, she believes strict parenting can overcome those concerns.
Inappropriate comments or messages are filtered out and cyber bullies are blocked. “If they’re not nice, they get deleted,” she says.
What about sneaky scrolling after bed time? It doesn’t happen in her household. “We take it off her at night time… because I know for a fact she’ll get her phone back out.”
And life does not pass Miley by because she’s glued to a screen, Victoria stresses, running through a weekly schedule which includes boxing, cheerleading, daily studies, dedicated family time and outings with friends, along with content creation.
“She’s still a normal child in my eyes.”
With social media companies the only ones legally responsible for keeping teens off their platforms, Victoria says she’ll probably help Miley skirt the ban – confident in her own strict rules. “I’ve got to let her follow her dream.”
Ziame’s mum told the BBC she feels similarly: “I wouldn’t be for the ban for him… that’s [his] passion.”
Ziame says people his age have been misunderstood and their opinions disrespected by policymakers.
“Social media is a massive, massive part of my life,” he says. “I know it’s coming off like I’m in a relationship with social media,” he jokes, “but I don’t think I could live without [it].”
What would he say to the prime minister if he could make him listen?
“I think you should put yourself in our shoes.”

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France down Senegal 3-1 as Mbappe breaks record with brace

France stuttered, steadied and eventually stunned as Kylian Mbappe broke his country’s all-time goalscoring record in an ultimately thrilling 3-1 win over Senegal at MetLife Stadium.
Substitute Bradley Barcola netted either side of a pair of exquisite strikes from his captain, Mbappe, who is now within two goals of matching Miroslav Klose’s scoring record at the World Cup and on 58 for his country. His team as a whole might just feel like their candidacy to win this tournament is all the stronger, given that they showed just how effectively they could brush off a remarkably dreary start to the World Cup. In the first half, they were lucky that Senegal’s sprightly forwards couldn’t punish the numerous lapses of one of the pre-tournament favorites, but in the second they looked like the best team on the planet.
A historic day for Mbappe was one in which he typified his side as a whole. For the first 45 minutes, he was somewhere between a non-entity at best, a hindrance at worst, functioning on an entirely different wavelength to the rest of his star-studded team. When he and France clicked, however, there was nothing Senegal could do. In the first 20 minutes of the second half, France were irresistible, Michael Olise the creative hub around which everyone charged. The mood took Les Bleus and they became absolutely unstoppable.
That perhaps made it even more frustrating that this team were so diffident for so long. France arrived at this tournament with a hype that was inevitable given the spectacular talent of their front line: Ballon d’Or holder Ousmane Dembele and his fellow European champion Desire Doue, breakout star of the season, Michael Olise, and Kylian Mbappe. So exciting was that front four that it was enough for the world to forget how consistently French sides under Deschamps have trod the line between effective and unwatchable.
The first half at MetLife Stadium unquestionably strode into that latter category. France’s back six seemed unable or unwilling to progress the ball with verve and speed, while that attacking quartet dropped ever deeper in pursuit of possession. Switching positions can doubtless be effective when the ball zips around the pitch. It is just not entirely clear that your attack is functioning at peak efficiency if Olise is dropping deep so that repurposed center back Jules Kounde can take up advanced positions. That much would become apparent in the second half.
No wonder France ended the first half with one shot worth 0.02 xG. The last time a team produced so little in a 45 minute spell at a World Cup? France in the first half of the final three and a half years ago.
This was the time for Senegal to inflict more misery on their former colonial power, the side who they had so memorably stunned 24 years ago in South Korea. The excellent Nicolas Jackson had to watch his shot crash back off the post, and Mike Maignan only to roll just wide of goal. Ismaila Sarr should have done better on the stroke of halftime after Sadio Mane glided through a static French defense. Instead, the Crystal Palace forward turned over from close range and gave Les Bleus the wake-up call they needed.
Deschamps, oft derided for his conservatism, made no personnel changes but pushed Olise centrally and Dembele out wide. It was an adjustment that worked with aplomb. Twice, Olise fizzed passes through the line in an attempt to bring Mbappe to life. The Real Madrid man was slow in getting going, but the controversial denial of a penalty when Mane seemed to clip him brought on his pugnacious side.
Seconds later he was turning home in expert fashion, timing his run in the box just right to meet an Olise through ball and guide low and precise past Edouard Mendy.
With a lead to play with, this became all the easier for the French, particularly given that they could turn to the likes of Barcola and Rayan Cherki off the bench. The latter burst in behind to meet the through ball of Adrien Rabiot and loft over Mendy. That is the worry for the field. The worry for France is that they can switch off, they can get run through as Ibrahim Mbaye did in added time, a thundering strike daring Maignan to do anything but palm the ball into the net.
Unfortunately for Senegal, Mbappe was not done. The ball breaking to him 30 yards out, he sensed that this might be a prime moment to etch himself in his country’s footballing history. He larruped the ball into the left corner of the net. What a way to bring a conclusion to what was looking like an off day. If he and France are this on for a full 90, good luck to their opponents.

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