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Mar 11, 2026

North Korean leader Kim watches cruise missile tests with his daughter

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and his teenage daughter have observed tests of strategic cruise missiles fired from a warship as North Korea threatened responses to U.S.-South Korean military drills

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Mar 11, 2026

A bus fire that killed 6 people could have been set deliberately, Swiss police say

Swiss police are investigating whether a deadly bus fire in Kerzers was set on purpose

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Mar 11, 2026

Lebanon's latest conflict brings rare public backlash against Hezbollah as war flares again

Israeli airstrikes in southern Lebanon are driving thousands of families to flee again, and some longtime Hezbollah supporters are now openly blaming the group

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Mar 11, 2026

Several dead after postal bus bursts into flames, authorities say

A bus caught fire in a Swiss town and police say at least six people were killed

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Mar 11, 2026

Canada's Liberals closer to a majority government after another opposition defection

The defection of another opposition lawmaker is all but assuring Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney will have a majority government soon

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Mar 11, 2026

A Senegal boarding school that drew students from the US is at the center of an abuse investigation

The American Dara Academy in Senegal is at the center of abuse allegations after students describe harsh punishments in a room they call the “magic room.”

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Mar 10, 2026

Haiti president’s assassination driven by greed and power, US prosecutors say

Opening statements begin in Miami trial of four men accused in the 2021 killing of Jovenel MoïseSign up for the Breaking News US email to get newsletter alerts in your inboxGreed, arrogance and power were the driving forces behind four men charged in the US for the 2021 assassination of Haiti’s last elected president, Jovenel Moïse , prosecutors told a court on Tuesday during opening statements.Federal prosecutors and defense attorneys began presenting opening statements in the trial in Miami for Arcangel Pretel Ortíz, Antonio Intriago, Walter Veintemilla and James Solages. They are charged with conspiring in south Florida to kidnap or kill Haiti’s former leader. Moïse’s assassination led to unprecedented turmoil in the Caribbean nation, where gang leaders have grown increasingly violent and empowered. Continue reading...

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Mar 10, 2026

Leavitt chafes at reporter's disbelief on Iran: 'The president is not making this up!'

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt snapped at CBS correspondent Nancy Cordes and insisted President Donald Trump wasn't "making anything up" when it came to the war with Iran."The president said yesterday for the first time that he had to strike Iran because he believed Iran was going to strike U.S. targets within seven days," Cordes explained during a Tuesday briefing. "He then bumped that down later to three days. Where is he getting that?""That's not the first time the president has said that he chose to launch Operation Epic Fury because he felt as though Iran was going to strike the United States and our assets," Leavitt insisted. "And he has said, was not going to sit back and allow the Iranian regime to threaten or to attack the United States of America any longer.""So is he making this up to justify his decision to go to war now?" Cordes wondered."The president is not making anything up, Nancy," Leavitt shot back. "He is looking at this every single day based on intelligence, based on facts, and based on intelligence that he himself and his negotiators have consumed based on their, again, negotiations with the rogue Iranian regime over the past year.""And Iran chose this path to death and destruction," she added. "Iran wanted to attack the United States of America, and the president was not going to sit back and allow that to happen. He was not going to sit back and allow that to happen ever. Everyone in this room should be grateful for it."

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Mar 10, 2026

White House insists Iran war will actually make gas cheaper

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt on Tuesday claimed that the U.S. and Israeli military strikes in Iran could ultimately make gas cheaper for Americans despite soaring prices at the pump. Leavitt was speaking during a news conference when she made the comment, just as the U.S. entered its 11th day of war in the Middle East. Gas prices rose nearly 9 percent in the week after the bombing campaign began, with the national average for a gallon of regular gas hitting $3.25, according to AAA."Rest assured to the American people — the recent increase in oil and gas prices is temporary, and this operation will result in lower gas prices in the long term," Leavitt said. "Once the national security objectives of Operation Epic Fury are fully achieved, Americans will see oil and gas prices drop rapidly, potentially even lower than prior to the start of the operation," Leavitt added. Leavitt: "Rest assured to the American people -- the recent increase in oil and gas prices is temporary, and this operation will result in lower gas prices in the long term." pic.twitter.com/MFw8SsD8fI— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) March 10, 2026

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Mar 10, 2026

Up to 150 US troops wounded in Iran war despite Pentagon claims: report

As many as 150 U.S. troops have been wounded during the war with Iran, according to a new report on Tuesday.People familiar with the matter told Reuters that the number of wounded was far higher than the Pentagon has disclosed. The Defense Department has said that seven service members were killed in action.The Pentagon did not respond to Reuters' reporting."It's within that ballpark," White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters later on Tuesday.President Donald Trump and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth have said they expect additional casualties.

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Mar 10, 2026

Putin punks Trump as president's brags about phone call torched by Kremlin

A conversation between Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin saw the former brag about a chat the two world leaders had Monday— but the Kremlin had a very different version of the conversation.While Trump may view the chat as a win which left the Russian president impressed, the Kremlin decreed it was a much more balanced conversation. Speaking from Doral, Florida, on Monday, Trump claimed the pair had spoken of bringing peace between Russia and Ukraine. The president said, "We were talking about Ukraine, which is just a never-ending fight, and when his tremendous hatred between President Putin and President Zelensky, they can’t seem to get it together. But I think it was a positive call on that subject." Trump went on to say the pair spoke of a "number of highly important issues" and that their chat was "frank and constructive". He also said he'd pushed Putin to get "the Ukraine-Russia war over with.”But that was not the line given by the Kremlin, though, with The Daily Beast reporting a much more muted response from Russian officials. Putin aide Yuri Ushakov stressed the phone call between Putin and Trump was made by the US president, and that it was the first time the pair had spoken on the phone this year. Ushakov said, "They had not spoken by telephone for quite some time–their previous conversation took place at the end of December 2025."Today’s call, incidentally, lasted about an hour. The U.S. president noted that, as previously agreed, such communication should, of course, take place on a regular basis, and both leaders expressed their readiness for this."Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov undermined Trump further and said the US president made no mention of a ceasefire between Ukraine and Russia. Peskov said, "Trump didn’t ask about a ceasefire in Ukraine during his conversation with Putin." Trump had previously been denounced by the Governor of California, Gavin Newsom, for caving to Putin and instigating a trade deal. A post from the Gavin Newsom Press Office on X reads, "Trump waives the Russia oil ban! Putin’s good little boy." Attached is an image of Putin patting the heads of two children, with Trump and Bessent's faces edited on.

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Mar 10, 2026

Trump voter complains he misses 'Uncle Joe' Biden as he pumps pricey gas

Two Florida Donald Trump voters expressed their dismay at exploding gas prices on MS NOW on Tuesday morning, with one grudgingly admitting he misses President Joe Biden — and that he is now broke.As part of a report with host Anna Cabrera on the economic impact of Trump’s war on Iran, with oil prices going through the roof, MS NOW’s Alex Tabet spoke with the two men at a filling station in Lantana, Florida.“At this gas station just behind me, a gallon goes for about $3.79, diesel $5.19,” he reported. “Now, we've been chatting to two South Floridians who tell two very different stories of two very different Americas. One is Eric Silverman, he's a real estate investor. We chatted with him after he was filling up his luxury car with premium gas. And the other is Richard Stanley, he's a construction worker who we talked to right after he filled up his pickup truck with diesel. I want you to hear from both of these men about how they're processing this moment.” “Oil prices go up and down, stock market goes up and down. Interest rates go up and down,” Silverman conceded. "The short run, it sucks, but I think that it's going to be short run.”But construction worker Stanley said, “He [Trump] was bragging the other day on news, $1.90 or $2.90 somewhere — it's $5.50 a gallon.”“I miss my Uncle Joe,” he said with a grimace. “I was ballin' then, now I couldn't even tell you. I couldn't even show you $5 in my pocket.”MS NOW’s Tabet added, “Eric and Richard come from two very different walks of life. But what these two men have in common is they both voted for President Trump in 2024. You heard from Richard there, the construction worker, that he misses his Uncle Joe.” - YouTube youtu.be

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