Destiny Littleton was supposed to be on a flight from Israel back to the US on Tuesday. That plan is now up in smoke, as she navigates bomb shelters in Jerusalem during Iran’s counterstrike. She has no idea when she’ll be home.The former NCAA and Team USA women’s basketball player moved to Israel in November to play for Hapoel Jerusalem in the country’s top women’s basketball division. She called it an “amazing” experience, before Saturday. But now, she said she would not come to Israel if she could do it all over again. CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM”It’s scary. And it’s hard not to take it to the ‘what ifs.’ You really can’t. We’re going to have to pray and hope everything will be okay and that we can leave safely,” Littleton told Fox News Digital. Earlier on Sunday, an Iranian missile struck a location just 30 minutes away from Littleton, killing eight people. “It’s my reality right now. It’s a war zone. Right now it’s pretty routine, you sit around, you wait for an alert on your phone, you wait for a siren, you go into a shelter in place, you wait for the all clear, and you just do it again, and do it again, and do it again,” she said. “We’re in a country that is unfortunately used to this type of activity, so they’re normalized to it, so it’s unfortunate that they are normalized to it, but we aren’t, so this scares us.” On Saturday, Littleton posted an Instagram video of her, teammates and locals screaming in fear as drones flew over an apartment building they were in, as explosions were seen going off in the distance. In earlier videos, she documented her experience fleeing to a bomb shelter as sirens blared in the background, and then moving to a new location after the first shelter she went to felt “uncomfortable.” TOMAHAWKS SPEARHEADED US STRIKE ON IRAN — WHY PRESIDENTS REACH FOR THIS MISSILE FIRSTShe has struggled to even pick up on news updates on the situation, as the only news she’s been able to access has been broadcast in Hebrew. She also feels wary of some of the information being broadcast, labeling it “propaganda.”Littleton expects this experience to impact her psyche moving forward. “Right now I can’t tell you the full effect that this is going to have on me. But I do know that just with this 48+ hours of being in an active war zone, even the little noises you jump at,” she said. “So there is going to be some trauma there.”She doesn’t expect to return to Israel to play basketball in the future. Littleton said she researched the potential risks that would have come with moving to Israel, and briefed herself on the country’s conflicts with neighboring nations. But she did not expect it to reach this level. “I had to make a decision, and the decision came with a lot of research,” she said. “I had friends who were already here, and I was asking them… so I got a lot of positive feedback from that, and I ultimately made the decision to come here… It just comes down to risk, weighing the option
US women’s basketball player speaks out on being trapped in Israel during Iranian counterstrike

