US Embassies in Saudi Arabia & Turkey Reduce Staff
State Department Orders Evacuations, Faces Criticism Amid Iran Retaliation
The State Department has ordered nonessential staff and families to leave US missions in Saudi Arabia and Turkey due to growing Iranian retaliation following US and Israeli strikes. This marks the largest regional drawdown since the Iraq War began in 2003, with ten embassies and consulates reducing staffing. Lawmakers accuse the agency of poor planning and slow action, while officials cite limits from Congress and fast-changing events. Despite strikes near embassies, no US personnel have been hurt. Criticism has followed the department in past crises, with over thirty-six thousand Americans returning home so far.
Support the show:
Get a discount at https://solipillow.com/discount/dnn.
Advertise on DNN:
advertise@thednn.ai
This is an automated, high-level news summary based on public reporting.
Report issues to feedback@thednn.ai.
View sources & latest updates:
https://sources.thednn.ai/044c770cb392d62b
States Round Up to Nickel as US Pennies Phase Out
Tuberculosis Cases Surge, Straining Budgets
UNESCO Sites in Iran, Lebanon Damaged in Conflict
Brea's Costco Deal: City's Tax Revenue vs. Developer's Profit
Slave Ship Timber Returns Home
Ohio State Names New President, Skips Search
Southern California Heat Wave: Stay Cool
Pope Leo Appoints New Almoner, Continuing Francis's Charitable Legacy
Unemployment Claims Drop, Job Market Resilience Amid Strains
Google Maps Gets AI Boost for Smarter Navigation
EVs Save Big as Gas Prices Soar
China's New Law: Unifying or Assimilating?
China-Linked Ships Signal 'Do Not Attack'