Chapter 1: What is the main topic discussed in this episode?
The mission is on schedule. I'm Lisa Lucera, Fox News. White House Press Secretary Caroline Levitz says President Trump's assessment of a four- to six-week military operation in Iran remains unchanged.
We are very close to meeting the core objectives of Operation Epic Fury, and this military mission continues unabated.
President Trump has said the U.S. is in negotiations right now, which includes Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Vice President J.D. Vance, but did not say who they are in contact with from Iran.
Chapter 2: What is the current status of military operations in Iran?
Meantime, Iran continues to hit its neighbors, including Arab states.
The United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Qatar, all reserving the right to respond and retaliate. While some Gulf nations publicly push for diplomacy, Saudi Arabian Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman reportedly doesn't want the war to end, asking President Trump to keep it going until the Iranian regime is toppled.
Fox's Jonathan Hunt in Tel Aviv. The attorney for the plaintiff reacting after a jury in Los Angeles awarded his client more than $6 million after finding Meta and YouTube knew their platforms were addictive to children. Mark Lanier had this message for the companies. You will be
held accountable for the features, regardless of whether the children are getting sent pornographic pictures, regardless of whether they're being sexploitated.
The woman, now 20, only identified as KGM, testified she became addicted to the platforms at 10 years old. The companies say they will appeal. Two teenage boys who admitted to using deep fakes to create nude photos of classmates sent us to probation and community service.
Classmates of the boys at a private school in Pennsylvania describing the shock, loss of innocence, and trauma of having to identify their own faces in pornographic photos, anxiety attacks, and problems in school. One saying she needed therapy just to walk around her own neighborhood. Fox's Lisa Brady. America's listening to Fox News.
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An American man who was held for more than a year in Afghanistan by the Taliban is back in the U.S.
Dennis Coyle is back on American soil for the first time since being taken from his home in Kabul in January 2025. Friends and family gathered in San Antonio, Texas to greet his plane. Coyle, who is 64, was not charged with a crime, according to his family. Afghanistan's leader ordered his release after they wrote to him asking for a pardon.
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