Transcript [00:00] Iran is heading toward an unprecedented internal explosion. A deadlock in the negotiations [00:08] threatens to halt Iran's old production activities. 20,000 sailors are stuck in [00:15] a massive traffic jam of ships that is documented in the Strait of Homus. Trump conveyed a security [00:24] meeting and discussed whether to renew the war or not. And soon we will know which way the wind [00:31] is blowing. So, will only a renewal of the war and the strikes walk against Iran? Let me know [00:38] what you think about this in the comments. And meanwhile, here in Israel, the IDF is ready and [00:43] on high alert for a final operation to destroy the revolutionary guards in Iran. What is certain is [00:51] that Trump is not pleased with Iran's proposal to end this war. As the United States tightens [00:58] the blockade on Iran, US Treasury Secretary Scott descent warned that gas stations in Iran will soon [01:06] run out of gasoline supplies. Pumping is expected to collapse soon. The next stage, a gasoline [01:14] shortage in Iran, according to what he said. And at the same time, the regime is in a tail spin. [01:23] The Americans are still leaving a window open for a deal. But with Mo, who's going to sign this [01:29] deal? And you can be sure that Iran did not see this coming. We will soon bring you the possible [01:36] dramatic change in Israel's status because of the Homus crisis. I'm Pinto with me is Mati Shashani [01:44] and we are boots on the ground bringing you the whole truth about what's happening in Israel and [01:49] also the whole truth about what's happening in our neighborhood the Middle East. And this is [01:54] the opening of day 60 of the war roaring lion or by its American name epic fury. And the American [02:02] president made it clear in the White House that the Iranian framework which separates the opening [02:07] of the straits from the nuclear talks is not enough. Now Trump faces a question. Should he [02:14] increase the economic pressure in order to squeeze concessions out of Thran or return to a full-scale [02:22] military attack? Because of the naval blockade, Iran's warehouses are filling up with oil that [02:29] cannot be exported. And that troubles at the top of the Iranian leadership and it continues to keep [02:37] everybody busy there. There is growing concern over the possibility of renewal of protests [02:43] against the background of severe economic deterioration and reports of an approaching [02:48] collapse in the labor market. According to the assessments presented in a special meeting, [02:55] renewed protests is almost unavoidable. And the central question that remains open is when it will [03:03] erupt. Look, what at first seems like unclear military moves by Israel against Iran is now [03:11] beginning to become clear. It appears that Israel and the United States planned the stages of the [03:17] war carefully with the understanding that the fall of the regime would not happen in one day, but [03:24] through gradual military and economic suffocation. Yesterday, the president of the United States [03:30] conveyed a security discussion around Iran. Just before the historic visit of Britain's King [03:36] Charles and at the same time, Putin, the president of Russia, met with Iranian foreign minister [03:42] Basaraki, who received a message from Muchame and Putin promised, "We will continue the strategic [03:48] partnership with Iran." But on the ground, the partnership is not saving Thran. The United [03:55] States is very pessimistic about the negotiations, but very optimistic about the blockade, and the [04:01] numbers are already speaking. About 10 million barrels of oil have returned to Iran because [04:07] of the tightening embargo and the blockade. Iran cannot simply stop oil production because shutting [04:14] down the facilities could destroy them. And the result, the Islamic Republic is drowning in its [04:20] own oil. The humiliation is enormous. An economy that depends almost entirely on oil exports is now [04:28] forced to store surplus in ordinary sea containers in old and abandoned tanks and in storage areas [04:36] in southern Iran. As if that were not enough, at the beginning of the war, Tehran had already lost [04:42] more than 18.5 million gallons of stored fuel and after Israeli strikes set major oil terminals in [04:49] the capital on fire. Factories that produced parts of the maintaining the oil systems were [04:57] also hit and dozens of storage facilities were bombed. Now it becomes clear Israel may have to [05:04] understood. From the very beginning, we knew that the storage crisis would be Iran's choking point. [05:12] And while Thran searches for desperate solutions, it is even trying to send oil by train to China, [05:20] an unusual, expensive, and unprofitable move in the energy world where almost all oil exports [05:28] prefer maritime transport. Facing this reality, Iran is still flexing its muscles. It is offering [05:36] to open the straight of moons in exchange for lifting the American blockade and ending the war. [05:42] But it is asking to postpone the nuclear issue. The mediators are broadcasting optimism. But in [05:49] the White House, they understand that the real card is the blockade. Here the strategy changes. [05:56] No longer the blockade is hurting oil revenues, but rather Iran has nowhere to put the oil. And [06:03] this is already bringing the Iranian energy infrastructure closer to paralysis even before [06:08] any additional fire is used. Therefore, according to the American assessment, the blockade must not [06:15] be stopped now. Early relief would bring oxygen back to the regime and waste a rare strategic [06:22] lever. According to a report in the Wall Street Times, after the discussions conveyed by Trump, [06:28] the understanding is growing that only a military operation will cause Iran to become [06:33] flexible on the nuclear issue. American officials claimed that the Iranian negotiating team is not [06:39] even authorized by much or senior revolutionary guards officials to agree to a real concession. [06:46] And inside Iran, an internal battle is taking place over control of the country. The regime [06:52] is trying to broadcast business as usual, but the split between the diplomatic front and the [06:57] military level opposes the truth. Whoever speaks in Iran's name is not necessarily the one making [07:03] the decisions. The revolutionary guards are strengthening their grip, rejecting compromises, [07:09] and the regime is entering a dead end. Since World War II, there have been almost no absolute [07:16] victories, but the achievements against Iran are already very significant, and this looks [07:22] less like the end of the war and more like the stage where the pressure truly begins to crush [07:27] the regime from within. And apparently the crisis in the straight is playing in Israel's favor. [07:34] And right now the question is not only a security question but also an opening for a deep change in [07:41] the way all trade is preserved in the Middle East. And right now what's on the table is a move from [07:47] a system dependent on one bottleneck to a network of decentralized energy routes. Inside this move, [07:54] Israel, which until now has watched from the sidelines, may become a connecting player because [08:00] of its geographic location and infrastructures like EAPC. And was there a bribery case in the [08:10] high court of justice in the hag? Today we will bring you the katana connection that's shaping the [08:16] hag. A new FID event is igniting a storm around the suspended chief prosecutor in the H. According [08:28] to reports revealed today, Qatar promised to take care of him if he worked to issue arrest warrants [08:35] against Benjamin Netanyahu, the prime minister of Israel and senior Israeli officials. All the [08:41] details coming soon. I'm Pinto with me is Mati Shosani and we are boots on the ground bringing [08:48] you the whole truth about what's happening in Islam and this is day 60 of the war against [08:53] the revolutionary guards in Iran which is the head of the crumbling axis of evil in the Middle East. [08:58] And a second before we begin I want to call on you to continue spreading the truth. Share our [09:03] content with as many people as possible. Click the subscribe button and most importantly don't forget [09:09] to look for me Yahil Pinto and for Mati Shashani on our social media platforms so you can get our [09:15] firsthand perspective of what's happening in Israel during this war. The ceasefire with Iran [09:22] may be in place but no one here in Israel really believes that this is over. The missiles may have [09:29] stopped for now, but the injuries, the trauma, and the need to stay ready, that hasn't gone anywhere. [09:38] And through all of this, who was there from the very first moment? Meant Vida dome. When the [09:45] sirens went off, when the rockets hit, their teams were already on the ground treating the wounded, [09:52] evacuating the injured, saving lives again and again. And now, even as things quiet down, they [10:01] don't stop. They're restocking supplies, repairing ambulances, retraining teams, getting ready for [10:08] whatever comes next because they know it will come. But to stay ready, they need support. So, [10:16] if you want to make a real difference and save lives in Israel, go to saveifeisrael.com. Again, [10:24] that's savelifeisrael.com and you can help again the vid stay prepared, strong and fast so they can [10:32] keep saving lives whatever happens next. About 20,000 sailors are now stranded at the sea near [10:41] the straight of Hmuz as the maritime gridlock in the Persian Gulf turns from economic crisis into a [10:48] live security event. Maritime traffic has dropped sharply. Many ships are waiting without the [10:55] ability to continue. And the world is beginning to understand that this war is no longer being [11:01] fought only in the air with missiles or inside negotiations rooms. It is also being fought in [11:07] this narrow passage where every tanker, every mine, every revolutionary guard boat and every [11:14] American decision can move global energy prices. And the question now is simple. Is Homus still an [11:21] Iranian pressure card or has the strait already become a trap that is closing in on tan itself? [11:28] I'm Pinto and this is your boots on the ground report. Closing day 60 of the roaring lion war or [11:35] by its American name epic fury. And this day does not begin with one map. It begins with a chain. Hm [11:43] pressures the Iran oil. Iranian oil pressures the Iranian economy. The economy pressures the streets [11:50] of Teh. The streets pressure the revolutionary guards and the revolutionary guards instead of [11:56] compromising are trying to push that pressure outward into Lebanon, into the Gaza Strip, [12:01] into the Hague, into the United Nations, into Russia and the global energy market at large. This [12:07] is no longer only a campaign of fire and response. It is a campaign of strangulation, time, political [12:13] decisions, and the question of who breaks first. In the state of Hmuz, the story almost looks slow, [12:20] but it is moving very quickly. In normal times, this shipping lane carries about 1ifth of the [12:27] world's oil and liqufied gas supply. Today, under the American blockade and the Iranian threat, [12:35] ships are stuck. Part of the maritime traffic has collapsed and shipping companies are beginning to [12:41] relocate wherever it is even worth entering the arena. According to the maritime traffic data, [12:49] in one week only, about 80 vessels passed through the straight of Hormuz compared to a normal daily [12:55] rate that could reach 130 or more before this war. That's not just a number. That's global [13:03] movement being choked. And at the same time, dozens of ships have been attacked since the [13:08] beginning of the conflict. And at least 10 sailors have been killed. Iran opened fire towards ships, [13:15] seized two of them, and according to the assessments, may have even placed naval [13:21] mines in the area. The International Maritime Organization and other officials are calling for [13:27] the creation of a safe corridor, but in practice, most ships are still not behaving as if the sea is [13:34] open. Even when Thran declares that the strait is open to vessels that are not hostile, ship owners, [13:43] insurance companies and captains understand very well the moment Iran decides who is hostile and [13:49] who is not. Freedom of navigation is no longer truly free. This is where the American strategy [13:55] comes in. Washington is not settling for warnings. It is maintaining the blockade on Iran's ports, [14:04] preventing tank killers from leaving, inspecting vessels, and applying pressure on anyone trying [14:09] to help the regime bypass the blockade. For Donald Trump, this is a weapon more precise [14:16] than a fighter jet. It does not necessarily blow up a facility in one moment, but it prevents the [14:23] regime from breathing over time. And every hour in which oil does not leave Iran is an hour in [14:30] which the pressure inside the Iranian system grows. Iran's problem is not only that it has [14:36] no one to sell to. Its problem is that it has nowhere to put the oil. Oil continues to flow [14:43] from the ground even when tankers do not leave the ports. Land storage facilities are limited. [14:51] giant tankers which are usually meant to transport the oil are now becoming floating storage units. [14:57] And when even those floating storage units fill up, Iran reaches the moment that every oil state [15:03] feels shutting down wells. Shutting down a well is not like turning off an air conditioner at home. [15:11] An oil well operates through natural pressure inside the reservoir. When it is forcibly stopped, [15:17] that pressure can change. Water can enter the oil layers, deposits can block pipes, and bringing the [15:24] well back into operation may require technology, equipment, and materials that Iran struggles to [15:30] obtain because of sanctions. That's why the naval blockade is not only a hit to the revenue. It [15:37] could become physical damage to Iran's energy infrastructure, damage that will keep hurting [15:43] even if an agreement is signed tomorrow morning. According to the latest assessments, Iran has [15:49] only 12 to 22 days of available storage capacity left before it will be forced to cut production, [15:56] possibly by around 1.5 million barrels per day. Loading oil onto the tankers has already been [16:04] reduced by about 70%. Iran is even trying to move oil by train to China, a slow, expensive route [16:12] that's not suited for the enormous quantities of a country like Iran that they need to move. [16:17] It may sound like a creative solution, but in global energy terms, it is a sign of distress, [16:23] not strength. And that stress does not remain at the port and moves into Thran. Iran's Supreme [16:30] National Security Council is already discussing fear of renewed protests. According to internal [16:37] assessments, the Iranian economy will not be able to withstand another 6 to 8 weeks [16:41] of this kind of naval blockade. Another figure in those assessments speaks of up to 2 million [16:48] private sector workers who could lose their jobs by the end of the spring. When you add inflation, [16:54] currency erosion, fuel shortages, damage to electricity, and difficulty paying salaries, [17:00] you understand why the Iranian street frightens the regime no less than the American fleet does. [17:06] That's exactly why the latest Iranian proposal is so important. The Iran is proposing to reopen [17:11] the Strait of Homus, remove the American blockade, and end and delay the discussion [17:16] of the nuclear issue to after a later stage. In other words, first give us the air. First, [17:23] let us export oil. First, let us return the money to the treasury. And only afterwards, [17:29] we will start talking about the nuclear issue. The reason that we started this war in the first [17:35] place. Okay, this is what they want to talk about. Washington understand the trap. President Donald [17:42] Trump is conveying a meeting in the situation room after his meeting with King Charles and [17:49] he made clear to his advisers that the Iranian framework is not sufficient. The White House [17:54] emphasized that the president's red lines are very clear. Iran cannot separate Homus from the nuclear [18:00] issue because if the blockade is lifted now, the regime will receive receive oxygen without paying [18:06] the real political price. That's exactly what Thran is trying to achieve, a partial victory [18:11] that looks like a ceasefire. But in practice, buys a time. Secretary of State Marco Rubio presented [18:19] the problem sharply. When Iran talks about opening the straight, it is not necessarily talking about [18:25] full freedom of navigation. It wants to preserve control, coordination, permission for passage, [18:31] and possibly also fees of ships. From the American point of view, that's not called opening Homus. [18:38] That's called normalizing a situation in which the revolutionary guards decides who passes through [18:44] the international shipping lane and how much money they need to pay. Homus is not Thrron's private [18:50] road. It is an artery of the global economy. But inside the American administration, there is also [18:56] a debate. Some advisers believe that the blockade should be allowed to work for several more months [19:03] because it could cause long-term damage to Iran's oil industry and force the regime to compromise. [19:10] Others warned that the revolutionary guards are tightening their grip, that the Iranian position [19:16] is hardening, and that negotiating team may not even be authorized to make concessions on the [19:24] nuclear issue. In other words, even if the diplom the diplomats are talking, it is not clear that [19:31] the people who really decide want to deal. And that leads to the big question. Who is America [19:38] actually negotiating with? American officials are concerned that what appears to be deep division [19:45] and power struggles inside the regime, the new supreme leader Muchame is barely seen. [19:52] Not sure if he's alive or not alive. President Pazakan is weak. Foreign Minister Abasaraki is [19:58] speaking with mediators with Pakistan, with Oman and also with Russia. But behind the diplomatic [20:04] window stands the revolutionary guards and they are not necessarily prepared to approve what the [20:10] political level can say outside met in Russia with President Vladimir Putin. Putin said that he had [20:18] received a message from much wished him well and promised that Moscow would continue to maintain [20:24] a strategic relationship with Iran. I actually welcomed Russia's support for diplomacy and said [20:31] that recent events had proven the depth of the partnership between the two country. But this [20:39] needs to be said quietly and clearly. Russia can provide diplomatic backing. It can provide a sense [20:46] of strategic depth. It can help Iran feel that it is not alone. But it cannot open whole moves by [20:53] itself. It cannot refill the regime's treasury and it cannot erase the public pressure inside Iran. [21:01] At the same time, the United States is expanding the pressure to the aviation area as well. [21:06] Treasury Secretary Scott Bass warned that any party providing services to sanctioned Iranian [21:13] airliners could be exposed to American sanctions. That includes fuel, catering, landing fees, [21:20] maintenance, and every small service that allows an aircraft to keep operating. It sounds [21:27] bureaucratic, but this is exactly how a modern system is choked. not only through tanks and [21:33] planes, but through every small pipe that keeps the state alive. Now, let's return to the military [21:40] front that is closest to us here in Israel. This afternoon, the IDF struck more than 20 [21:46] kzbala terror infrastructures in the Becca Valley and in southern Lebanon. In the Becca Valley, [21:52] the IDF struck a site used for manufacturing weapons and storing weapon stockpiles. after his [21:58] bal reconstruction activity had been identified there in southern Lebanon. The IDF struck weapons [22:05] depots, military buildings, and launchers from which had fired rockets towards Israel. This [22:12] is not just another pinpointed strike. This is a blow to Hisbala's attempt to restore production, [22:18] storage, and launch capabilities. Hisbala is now threatening to return to the tactics of the 1980s [22:27] and deploy suicide terrorists to prevent the enemy from establishing itself. That threat [22:32] was not made in a vacuum. Hisban understands that the space in southern Lebanon is changing. [22:38] The IDF is destroying infrastructure, hitting warehouses, preventing reconstruction, and making [22:44] clear that even under the title of ceasefire, it will not allow the organization to return to the [22:49] same villages, the same launchers, and the same homes where weapons were hidden before the war. [22:55] In the north, the struggle is not only over fire, it is over control of the day after. Will southern [23:02] Lebanon be an area of the Lebanese state or an area of an armed Iranian militia? Can the Lebanese [23:08] government negotiate at all if announces in advance that it is not committed to its decisions? [23:16] And that's the heart of the story. As long as holds independent weapons, Lebanon sovereignty [23:22] remains partial. A government can convey, envoys can be sent, agreements can be discussed and [23:30] signs, but if an arm organization can torpedo everything with one rocket, then there is no [23:35] truly a full state. Inside Gaza, the IDF continues to dismantle what Kamas built underground. Forces [23:44] from the Northern Brigade and the Alam engineering units under the command of division 252 have been [23:50] operating in recent months in northern Gaza and in the Betanoon area east of the yellow line. As part [23:57] of the operation, about 14 kilometers of tunnels and underground routes were destroyed. Inside the [24:03] tunnels, the forces found living quarters and many weapons and around 70 terrorists who crossed the [24:09] ceasefire lines and posed an immediate threat that were eliminated. That number 14 kilometers tells [24:18] us something about the nature of the war. Hamas did not build such a tunnel to hide for one day. [24:24] It built a system of life, movement, storage, and attack. living quarters, weapons, movement between [24:32] areas, the ability to reappear after the ground above was hit. That's why a ceasefire cannot be [24:40] considered the end of the war in an entire military city remains beneath the surface. [24:45] The IDF is not fighting only the terrorist who fires. It is fighting the system that allows [24:51] the next terrorist to appear. And here again the return to Iran because Hamas in Gaza in Lebanon, [24:59] the Houthis in Yemen, the militias in Iraq and the pressure in Hus all are part of the same system. [25:06] Sometimes it fires missiles. Sometimes launches a drone. Sometimes it seizes a ship. Sometimes [25:13] it sends a diplomat to Moscow. Sometimes it tries to shift the plane onto Israel in an [25:19] international code. That happens a lot. But the principle remains the same. Apply pressure from [25:25] several directions so that no one can handle all the fronts at once. And before we continue, if you [25:33] understand how important it is to bring the full picture from the ground, not just the headlines, [25:38] but who is operating, how they're operating, where the threat is coming from, and what's [25:45] really happening behind the scenes. Help us keep spreading the truth. Like this report, [25:50] share it with friends, family, and people who need to understand the Middle East without filters, [25:56] and click the subscribe button so that you never miss another boots on the ground update. You can [26:01] also look for Yelpinto and Mati Shashani on our social media platforms, and check out our website [26:06] tbnisrael.com to subscribe to our newsletter. And there's another front, a quieter one, but [26:15] no less important. A new affidaviate surrounding the international criminal court in the heg has [26:22] ignited the storm after it was alleged that katal promised to take care of the suspended [26:29] chief prosecutor Karim Khan if he moved to issue arrest warrants against prime minister of binamo [26:36] prime minister of Israel and other senior Israeli officials. Khan and his lawyers strongly deny the [26:41] allegations and kata also rejects them. But the very appearance of the affidavi together with [26:49] the reports of a private intelligence operation intended to discredit the complaints against Khan [26:56] raised a difficult question about the way that money intelligence law and propaganda meet around [27:04] Isl. This matters because the war against Israel is not being fought only on the battlefield. It's [27:10] also being fought on the courtrooms, on social media networks, on campuses, in newspapers, and [27:16] in international institutions. When a prosecutor in the Hague moves against Israeli leaders during [27:21] wartime and at the same time allegations emerge about foreign involvement, smear operations, [27:27] and behind-the-scen promises, the public needs to understand that this is part of the campaign. [27:33] There's not always an explosion. Sometimes there is an affidavi. Sometimes there is a campaign. [27:41] Sometimes there is a headline trying to turn Israel from the attacked country into the accused [27:46] country. In the United States itself, this war is already affecting the Jewish community. Students [27:53] and surveys point to deep concerns over rising anti-semitism and anti-ionism. A large majority [27:59] of American Jews describe anti-semitism as a serious problem, and many report changing [28:06] their behavior because of fear. Some fear that Israel and its Jewish supporters will be blamed [28:12] for dragging America into war. That's exactly the propaganda dream of Israel's enemies, not only to [28:18] harm Israeli military, but to turn Jews around the world into people who feel suspected, defensive, [28:24] and afraid. in Europe as well. The story is becoming complicated. German Chancellor Frederick [28:30] Me attacked Trump and said that the Americans do not have a convincing strategy against Iran. He [28:36] argued that the Iranians are stronger than expected and that they are humiliating the [28:41] United States through their ability to drag out the negotiations. Behind those statements is [28:46] criticism of Washington, also a sign of broader Western weakness. Some European countries did [28:53] not want to be part of this war. Some restricted the use of bases and airspace. Meanwhile, Ian is [28:59] testing who is the West. How is the West willing to stand against it? And who would rather lecture [29:06] from the sidelines. But the Huz crisis itself may create a deep shift in Israel's regional status. [29:13] For decades, the world relied on one choke point, the Strait of Homus. Now, as that route is shaken, [29:21] Saudi Arabia is making greater use of the east-west pipeline to the Red Sea. The United [29:26] Arab Emirates is relying on Fajira infrastructure and other players are examining land routes to [29:34] the Mediterranean Ocean. Inside this new way of thinking, Israel could move from being an [29:40] observer on the sidelines to becoming a connecting player. Not because it has oil, because we don't, [29:47] but because of its geography, because of the Red Sea, because of the Mediterranean Sea, [29:53] and because of the infrastructure such as the Elat Ashkillon pipeline, which could become [29:58] part of the regional layer of flexibility. The world will not abandon Homus tomorrow, but it is [30:05] beginning to understand that it must not rely on Homus alone. In such a reality, whoever can offer [30:12] an alternative route gains new importance. Is can become a bridge between the Gulf and Europe, [30:19] between energy and transit, between security and economy. This is not a magic solution. There are [30:25] limitations of capacity, security, regulation and regional cooperation. But the direction is clear. [30:32] Iran did not want this to happen. Yet the crisis that it created may strengthen Israel's strategic [30:40] position. This is how day 60 comes to a close. In the north, Hisbala is trying to rebuild itself [30:48] and is threatening to bring back the old terror tactics of the 1980s. In Gaza, the IDF continues [30:56] to dismantle Hamas's underground system. In Hmuz, thousands of sailors and ships are trapped inside [31:03] a crisis that has become economic, security related, and human. In Thran, the regime is [31:10] searching for air inside a blockade that is beginning to touch the oil wells themselves. [31:15] In Washington, Trump understands that if he lifts the blockade before the nuclear issue is resolved, [31:22] he may hand the victory that it is looking for. This campaign is no longer only a question of [31:29] ceasefire or war. It is a question of who breaks first when the sea is blocked. The economy is [31:34] choked and Israel's enemies are looking for a way to turn distress into victory. And if Iran [31:41] is not willing to place the nuclear issue at the heart of their agreement, will the next stage be [31:46] another round of talks or the military decision that everybody is trying to postpone? So, keep [31:52] spreading the truth. Follow us. Most importantly, do not forget to click the subscribe button so [31:58] that you stay tuned to the truth in real time and never miss another boots on the ground report. [32:03] Keep looking for us and Mati Shosani on our social media platforms and also look for our website [32:10] tbnisel.com and subscribe to our newsletter. The best thing that you can do as always is to pray [32:17] because God is listening. He's listening to your prayers whatever they are. If you want to pray [32:23] about the situation in Israel, in the Middle East, in Iran, you can ask him to intervene, [32:29] to give wisdom to our leaders, to the negotiating teams, to give courage to the people of Iran, [32:35] to protect the Israeli soldiers in Lebanon, to protect the children of this land physically [32:42] and mentally, and to keep praying for the peace of Jerusalem. It's the best thing you can do. Hello, [32:47] this is Mati here in Jerusalem with TBN Israel. This is Yaya Pinto from TVN Israel here in [32:53] Jerusalem. TBNN Israel is keeping viewers informed with Israel focused news, culture, [32:59] and what God is doing in this land. Support TBNI Israel today online at tbn.org/israel. Thank you.