Israel-Iran war LIVE: U.S. 'more than capable' of resuming war with Iran, says Hegseth
Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth asserts U.S. has ample weapons stockpiles to resume conflict with Iran amid escalating Israel-Iran tensions.
Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth asserts U.S. has ample weapons stockpiles to resume conflict with Iran amid escalating Israel-Iran tensions.
In breve
The article analyzes Pakistan's refusal to join the Abraham Accords, citing domestic public opinion, longstanding policy of non-recognition of Israel, and conditions tied to Palestinian statehood. It references recent statements by Pakistani defense and foreign officials, a Gallup poll, and U.S. political pressure, including a Trump social media post and a warning from Senator Lindsey Graham.
Punti chiave
- Trump demanded Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Turkey and others join Abraham Accords 'simultaneously' — Middle East Eye (citing Trump's Truth Social post)
- Pakistan Defence Minister Khawaja Muhammad Asif rejected joining Abraham Accords on 26 May 2026 — Middle East Eye
- 91% of Pakistanis sympathize with Palestinians; 2% with Israel (2023 Gallup survey) — Gallup Pakistan
- Pakistan's policy: recognition of Israel contingent on independent Palestinian state with East Jerusalem as capital — Middle East Eye (citing Foreign Office spokesperson Tahir Andrabi)
- Senator Lindsey Graham warned of 'severe repercussions' for countries refusing to join accords — X (Lindsey Graham)
Contesto
Article from Middle East Eye (29 May 2026) analyzes Pakistan's refusal to join Abraham Accords despite Trump's demand linking accords expansion to Iran peace deal. Pakistan cites non-recognition of Israel since 1947, contingent on Palestinian statehood. Domestic political costs high: 91% public sympathy for Palestinians. Saudi Arabia's position seen as influential but Riyadh also conditions normalisation on two-state solution. US pressure via Senator Graham's threats; Pakistan officials deny formal request. Key sources: Trump Truth Social post, Pakistan Foreign Office, Gallup survey, analyst interviews.
Lettura DEO
Verdetto: Publishable with minor caveats: the article is fact-based and well-sourced, but the headline and structured data should be aligned with the actual content to avoid misleading readers. The reliance on unverified social media posts and a single senator's statement are noted but do not invalidate the overall reporting.
Confidenza: 85/100
The article reports on a real, verifiable news event—Pakistan's public rejection of joining the Abraham Accords—with adequate sourcing including official statements from Pakistani ministers, a Gallup poll, and attributed quotes from U.S. politicians. The content is not fabricated or dangerously misleading; it provides context for Pakistan's position based on historical policy and public opinion. However, the confidence is set at 85 due to the mismatch between the headline/structured data (which suggests a live Israel-Iran war update) and the actual article content (which is an analysis piece on Pakistan). Additionally, the reliance on unverified social media posts and a single senator's remarks introduces minor uncertainty. The red flags highlight these specific factual concerns, but the core reporting is solid and publishable. Libre judge fallback via DeepSeek Gamma.
Cosa resta incerto
- Uncertainty around Trump's Truth Social post content
- Uncertainty around Graham's statements as individual senator's view, not US government policy
- The article's headline and structured data reference an 'Israel-Iran war LIVE' event, but the actual content is about Pakistan and the Abraham Accords, indicating a possible mismatch between the intended topic and the article's focus.
- The Trump Truth Social post is cited as a source but not independently verified; the article relies on a single outlet's reporting of it.
Categoria: cronaca
Entità: Israel-Iran, U.S., Iran, Hegseth