It secured daily life in the targeted area. I could see tel aviv functioning under fire. It could be done because iron dome was there. This was tremendously political. The Israeli Government have the leeway. There was damage to important cities. They could carry on their military and diplomatic field. [inaudible] the team that created iron dome is a miracle of engineering and costeffectiveness. When you fire a thing like that at 50,000 about the price of a new car in israel, not the United States. This is practically nothing. This is the cost of one apartment, its about 500,000 that you save. Also i need to mention the troops and the missile air defense command. 24 7 falling off their feet Walking Aroundtheclock securing defense of israel. I again wish to congratulate nato for the successful performance of the campaign and i think i want to express my feelings and the feeling of gratitude to the president and the United States. Especially the iron dome system. The lives that were saved
Defense secretary, Patrick Shanahan saying the u. S. Needs to make serious plans in case tensions get even worse. The u. S. Not only accusing iran of attacking oil tankers but also of detaining one of the ships crews and blocking tugboats from taking the damaged vessel away. Tehran denying it all. President trump says theres no doubt iran is responsible and he claims this video is proof. According to the pentagon, this is irans revolutionary guard removing a mine from one of the ships to hide the evidence after it failed to explode. The president called into this channel earlier today. Iran did do it. You saw the boat. I guess one of the mines didnt explode. Probably got essentially iran written all over it. You saw the boat at night trying to take the mine off and took it off the boat. That was exposed. That was their boat. That was them. They didnt want the evidence left behind. U. S. Officials tell fox news after the explosions, iranian gun boats surrounded a tanker and forced the c
A look through the Brainerd Dispatch archives with Terry McCollough combing the microfilm for tidbits of history through the decades going back to 1924.