On Thursday’s Front Page: FBI Director Christopher Wray has announced he will resign from his post at the end of the Biden administration, the dramatic fall of Syrian President Bashar Assad has left Middle Eastern powers scrambling to adapt to a shifting landscape, and more.
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FBI Director Christopher A. Wray announced Wednesday he would resign from his post at the end of the Biden administration, withdrawing from the 35,000-person law enforcement agency before President-elect Donald Trump takes office and likely fires him.
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Defense Secretary nominee Pete Hegseth appears poised to at least make it to his confirmation hearing early next year after a round of meetings with key Republican senators avoided raising overt red flags.
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The dramatic fall of President Bashar Assad has left Middle Eastern powers scrambling to adapt to a shifting landscape. While Turkey and Israel have moved swiftly to secure their strategic interests, Gulf states and Egypt are cautiously recalibrating in the face of a newly realigned Syria.
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Secretary of State Antony Blinken personally apologized Wednesday to the families of 13 U.S. troops killed by a suicide bomber during America’s disastrous withdrawal from Afghanistan, but said the withdrawal itself has not turned out as badly as his critics had feared.
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The political left is giving Luigi Mangione the Che Guevera treatment. Images of the man accused of killing the CEO of the nation’s largest health insurance company are splashed across T-shirts, coffee cups and other merchandise being hawked online and on the streets of New York City.
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