Kassia Kiva
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Iran launched an overnight drone strike on Kuwait's international airport, killing one person and injuring more than 60 others just days after the airport reopened following earlier strikes.
Officials say multiple hostile drones slammed into Terminal 1, causing widespread damage and forcing all commercial flights to stop.
Videos posted online show smoke pouring from the terminal.
The attack came after the U.S.
targeted an Iran-linked oil tanker attempting to break through the American blockade.
The U.S.
military confirmed the retaliatory strikes on an Iranian military facility after Iran fired the missiles and drones toward Kuwait and also Bahrain.
Meanwhile, in an interview with the New York Post, President Trump confirmed the validity of an Axios report and claimed that he had a tense call with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
An intelligence source confirms the findings of the CIA's assessment to the Daily Wire.
Despite weeks of sustained U.S.
and Israeli strikes, Iran's regime still possesses roughly 70% of its missile stockpile from before the war and about 75% of mobile launchers, even after launching hundreds of missiles at Israel, the United Arab Emirates, and the U.S.
military sites across the region.
This assessment breaks with President Trump's Wednesday claim that Iran only had 18 to 19% of missiles left.
The CIA assessment also reportedly concludes that Iran has reopened underground storage sites, repaired damaged missiles and resumed work on weapons that were near completion before the war began.
CEO Michael Rousseau says he plans to retire by the end of the third quarter while the company maintains the decision aligns with long-term succession planning.
But critics, especially in Quebec, argue his handling of the tragedy disrespected French-speaking Canadians.
In the video, he expressed his, quote,
yet spoke only minimal French, fueling outrage in a region where language laws require equal service in both French and English.
Beyond the law, one of the pilots killed, Antoine Forrest, grew up in a French-speaking city in southwestern Quebec.
The controversy follows the fatal March 22 crash when an Air Canada jet struck a rescue vehicle, killing both pilots and injuring dozens.