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How The Israel-Iran War Is Reordering the Middle East P.M. Edition for June 26. With a weakened Iran and a strengthened Israel, Middle Eastern countries are re-evaluating their diplomatic ties.
I'm Alex Ossola for The Wall Street Journal. This is the PM edition of What's News, the top headlines and business stories that moved the world today. We begin this evening with markets.
Major Wall Street banks modestly lifted their oil-price forecasts after geopolitical risks flared in the Middle East, but ...
The sluggish trading came as the market was coming off a broad sell-off following the Trump administration's decision to ...
Katy Barnato is Europe markets editor for The Wall Street Journal in London. She provides live coverage of finance and economics, setting up readers for the U.S. trading day.
Dan Neil is the author of the “Rumble Seat” column which runs Saturdays in The Wall Street Journal.
Shayndi Raice is The Wall Street Journal's deputy bureau chief for the Middle East and North Africa based in Israel. She serves in a player/coach role where she helps manage the Journal’s team ...
Stephen Kalin is a foreign correspondent for The Wall Street Journal based in the Middle East, where he has lived since 2009. He also began reporting from Ukraine after Russia invaded in 2022.
Proposals for an Israel-backed tribal ‘emirate’ in Hebron have sparked Palestinian outrage amid an Israeli push to undermine ...
A trade war. A real war with bombs dropped in the Middle East. A barrage of insults hurled by the president of the United ...
According to the Wall Street Journal, Trump could name his nominee to replace Powell unusually early, in an attempt to undermine him.
President Donald Trump’s decision to strike Iran’s three most significant nuclear sites helped rid the world of a grave nuclear threat and was a large step toward restoring U.S. deterrence.
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