What is the current state of U.S. military actions against Iran?
Upping the ante. I'm Chris DiMeo, Fox News. The U.S. is stepping up its attacks on Iran. The sirens are blaring just north of Tel Aviv as Iran fires even more ballistic missiles, something they've done several times after the U.S. military obliterated all of the Iranian military targets on Karj Island. And this sends a clear message to the regime.
This is where 90 percent of its crude oil exports are processed. Now, President Trump has left the oil infrastructure untouched. But he said if Iran continues attacking ships in the Persian Gulf, that will change. Meanwhile, reinforcements are coming. The USS Tripoli is on its way from Japan with 2,500 sailors and 2,500 Marines. They're arriving in the region next week.
Meanwhile, multiple Iranian missiles slipped through Israel's air defense. A cluster bomb hit the outskirts of Tel Aviv. Thankfully, no one was injured. Fox's Nate Foy in Tel Aviv. The U.S. State Department ramps up incentives for Iranians with information on their country's top leaders. Iranian citizens could earn up to $10 million and the ability to move to the U.S.
if they're able to provide information regarding the whereabouts of 10 senior Iranian leaders. Those include Iran's new supreme leader, its national security advisor, as well as its defense council secretary and military office chief.
The State Department is offering the reward money, saying the men command Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, which plans and organizes terrorism around the world. Secure channels, including the Signal messaging app, have been made available for those with information at the website rewardsforjustice.net. In Washington, Sean Langell, Fox News.
A Los Angeles jury deliberating in the first social media addiction trial. Lawyers from Meta and YouTube argue their platforms are safe for the vast majority of young people. Attorneys for a young woman say the tech companies designed their products to be addictive, leading to mental health issues. America's listening to Fox News. Join Fox in supporting our troops.
From daily needs to global emergencies, help us be there for those who serve. Visit go.fox slash Red Cross to donate to service to the armed forces today. Cuba's president says his government has officially started talks with the Trump administration as Havana works to halt a regime change as it deals with an energy crisis.
Those conversations signal a potentially historic and economic and strategic partnership with the U.S., which would be massive. By the way, the announcement comes as the island continues to struggle and suffer through some of its worst economic shock in history, thanks in part to the U.S.-led oil embargo, which has kept fuel from entering the country for about three months.
The resulting lack of energy, food, and rolling blackouts leading to unprecedented protests, which have, frankly, called into question the leadership's effete grip on the island's enkindled masses. Now, the talks, if successful, could potentially lead to Cuba's biggest economic opening since the nationalization of its economy all the way back in 1961 in the wake of the Cuban Revolution.
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