A diplomat warned Americans of the "global threat" of Islamic extremism after two Israeli reservists were among those hurt in the New Orleans terror attack.
Jewish leaders slammed a massive crew of anti-Israel protesters who gathered in Times Square on New Year’s Day to call for “intifada revolution” on the same day an ISIS-inspired terrorist carried
At least 14 people were killed and 30 were injured in New Orleans when a person intentionally drove a pickup truck into a crowd during New Year's celebrations.
They were among the 30 injured and 15 killed in New Orleans French Quarter, which is being investigated as a terrorist attack.
Elad Shoshan, Consul of Israel for the Southwest United States, said two Israeli reservists who came to New Orleans as tourists were injured in the Bourbon Street terror attack.
A man "hellbent" on creating carnage drove around barricades and hurtled down Bourbon Street in New Orleans' French Quarter, police said.
Hundreds of activists gathered outside Tisch Hospital on Monday, accusing Israel of abducting over 450 medical personnel amid the ongoing war against Hamas in Gaza.
A link to another attack? The F.B.I. has found no definitive link between the New Orleans attack and the explosion of a Tesla truck outside a Trump hotel in Las Vegas, but investigators are not ruling anything out. The driver shot himself in the head just before the truck exploded.
The suspect in the truck attack that killed 14 and injured dozens on New Orleans' Bourbon street on New Year's had traveled to Egypt in 2023 for about a month.
Terror suspect Shamsud-Din Jabbar flew an ISIS flag as he plowed through New Year's Eve revelers in New Orleans. Hours later, New York demonstrators called for an "intifada revolution."
The FBI are investigating Wednesday's New Year's Day terror attack in New Orleans where suspect Shamsud-Din Jabbar plowed into dozens of revelers along the famed Bourbon Street -- killing 14 people before being fatally shot by police.
Partisanship, tolerance of antisemitism and worries about Islamophobia led the Biden administration and its media allies to look for domestic terrorism in all the wrong places.