US to send top diplomats to Middle East as regional tensions spread. @DailyNews2006 #usa

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US to send top diplomats to Middle East as regional tensions spread. @DailyNews2006 #usa


US to send top diplomats to Middle East as regional tensions spread.
@DailyNews2006

US Secretary of State Blinken to visit nine countries as Israel’s war on Gaza widens to Lebanon and threatens to engulf region.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken speaks to reporters prior to a meeting with Israeli Defence Minister Yoav Gallant in Tel Aviv,…

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  1. US to send top diplomats to Middle East as regional tensions spread.
    @DailyNews2006

    US Secretary of State Blinken to visit nine countries as Israel's war on Gaza widens to Lebanon and threatens to engulf region.

    US Secretary of State Antony Blinken speaks to reporters prior to a meeting with Israeli Defence Minister Yoav Gallant in Tel Aviv, Israel, on November 30, 2023 [Saul Loeb/Reuters]

    The United States is to engage in a

    renewed diplomatic push to calm

    tensions in the Middle East as the

    region teeters on the brink of a re-

    gional conflagration following a

    suspected Israeli strike on a

    Hamas leader in Lebanon, twin

    bombings in Iran and no end in

    sight to Israel's war on Gaza.

    US Secretary of State Antony

    Blinken will engage in some shut-

    tle diplomacy while on a week-

    long whistlestop tour of several

    countries that begins on Thursday.

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    Blinken will visit Israel, the West

    Bank, Turkey, Greece, Jordan,

    Qatar, the United Arab Emirates,

    Saudi Arabia and Egypt, US State

    Department spokesperson

    Matthew Miller told reporters.

    He will discuss immediate mea-

    sures to increase humanitarian as-

    sistance to the Gaza Strip, while

    also stressing to Israel that it

    needs to do more to lower ten-

    sions in the occupied West Bank,

    Miller said.

    Blinken will also focus on pre-

    venting the conflict from expand-

    ing to other countries. "He will

    discuss specific steps parties can

    take, including how they can use

    their influence with others in the

    region, to avoid escalation," Miller

    added.

    Ahead of Blinken's visit, special

    envoy Amos Hochstein, an experi-

    enced hand who has helped bro-

    ker maritime talks between Israel

    and Lebanon in the past, is ex-

    pected to lay the groundwork.

    Blinken's trip, the fourth since

    Israel's war on Gaza began on

    October 7, comes as interlinked

    conflicts in the region reach boil-

    ing point. In recent days, Israel

    has ramped up its attacks on

    Gaza, the occupied West Bank,

    Syria, and on Hezbollah and

    Hamas in Lebanon, and is sus-

    pected of killing top Hamas offi-

    cial Saleh al-Arouri in Beirut on

    Tuesday.

    Yemen's Iran-aligned Houthi

    rebels have been disrupting global

    commerce, targeting vessels

    linked to Israel in the Red Sea in

    support of Hamas. Leading a

    multination maritime coalition,

    Washington has issued what ap-

    peared to be a final warning to

    the Houthis. Over the weekend,

    US-led multinational forces sank

    three rebel ships and killed a

    number of rebels, leading Iran to

    deploy a warship to the region.

    'Important time'

    On Wednesday, Iran was hit by

    twin explosions that killed more

    than 80 people commemorating

    the death of top Iranian general

    Qassem Soleimani, who was killed

    in a US drone strike four years

    ago. Esmail Qaani, commander of

    Iran's Quds Force, blamed the US

    and Israel for the attack. The US

    State Department's Miller rebutted

    the claims, calling suggestions of

    US involvement "ridiculous" and

    adding that he had "no reason to

    believe that Israel was involved".

    Reporting from occupied East

    Jerusalem, Al Jazeera's Laura

    Khan said that the US "absolutely"

    wanted to "restore some calm".