Wednesday, June 10, 2026
The Era of Me-First Energy (NYT) The monthslong closure of the Strait of Hormuz is reinforcing an expensive geopolitical lesson about how risky it can be to rely on imported energy. From South America to Southeast Asia, governments and private companies are being forced to look inward and take steps to harness what they can domestically, even when doing so raises upfront costs. Call it the era of me-first energy. Guyana, a fast-growing South American oil producer that ran short of fuel this spring, is discussing building its first refinery. Indonesia is accelerating plans to harness more power from the sun. Many other Asian countries have turned to coal in order to plug their energy gaps, at least for now. And in Europe, Belgium is trying to nationalize nuclear energy. Individuals are also taking matters into their own hands, buying electric vehicles to avoid rising fuel costs or installing rooftop solar panels to lower electricity bills. In the Philippines, imports of electric cars and solar equipment from China recently hit records. Countries and businesses can do only so much on their own. Still, each gallon of gasoline or kilowatt-hour of electricity available locally offers that much more of a buffer in the next war or shipping disruption.
Trump Wants to Call the Shots. But in Iran, He Keeps Hitting His Limits. (NYT) President Trump has defined his career in politics with displays of dominance and control. But in the Middle East, he faces a rolling crisis that keeps thwarting those impulses. On Sunday, Mr. Trump lashed out at Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, telling The Financial Times that the Israeli leader âwonât have any choiceâ but to accept a U.S.-negotiated deal with Iran. âI call all the shots,â he said. But early Monday, Mr. Trump was still trying to rein in Mr. Netanyahu, writing on social media just after 5:30 a.m.: âIsrael and Iran must immediately stop âshooting.ââ One hundred days after starting the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran on Feb. 28, Mr. Trump is grappling with his own version of the sort of Middle East military quagmire that beset his predecessorsâand that he promised to avoid. âTrump launched a war of choice overestimating Americaâs military capacity and underestimating Iranâs,â said Aaron David Miller, a former State Department official who is a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. âThat is a box that Trump cannot get out of right now.â
Trump says US 'must' respond after confirming Iran shot down Apache helicopter (WSJ/AP) President Trump on Tuesday accused Iran of shooting down a U.S. Apache helicopter near the Strait of Hormuz and said the U.S. must respond to the attack. The downing of the helicopter late Monday set off a race to find two American crew members before Iranian forces could close in on them. They eventually were rescued by a drone boat in a first-of-its-kind operation at sea, the military said. The unmanned surface vessel, a Saronic Corsair, located the crew in the waters off the coast of Oman and brought them to shore. Then early Wednesday, the United States launched airstrikes against Iran after blaming Tehran for the crash of the helicopter, prompting new attacks from Iran and further widening the retaliatory strikes that threaten to derail talks to end the war. Iran launched attacks on sites in Bahrain and Kuwait, which both sounded alerts and fired air defenses in response. Jordan also reported shooting down five missiles that Iran shot at an air base hosting U.S. forces.
Fewer Americans say democracy is central to countryâs identity, poll finds (AP) As the U.S. prepares for an extravagant celebration of its founding principles, fewer Americans see their country as exceptional, a new poll finds. The survey from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research highlights many Americansâ feeling of unease over the future of its representative governmentâparticularly among young people. Only about one-quarter of Americans say the U.S. stands above all other countries in the world, the new poll found, while 44% say itâs one of the greatest countries in the world, along with some others. About 3 in 10 say there are better countries than the U.S., an increase from 19% in an AP-NORC poll conducted in June 2016. Agreement about other aspects of the countryâs underlying character appears to be eroding, the survey found. Americans are less likely to see a democratically elected government as âextremelyâ or âveryâ important to the United Statesâ identity as a nation than they were just a few years ago.
US carriers spent $6.5B on fuel in April; global profit forecast is cut nearly in half (AP) U.S. airlines spent more than $6 billion on jet fuel in April, up 78% from a year earlier despite using slightly less fuel, government data released Monday showed. Meanwhile, the airline industryâs top global trade group warned that soaring energy costs could nearly halve profits in 2026. In an effort to contain costs, airlines around the world have raised airfares and fees, cut other perks and canceled flights or trimmed schedules.
Judge Throws Out Policy Imposing $100,000 Fees for Skilled Worker Visas (NYT) A Trump administration initiative to impose $100,000 fees on employers seeking visas for skilled foreign workers amounts to an unlawful tax on those companies and must be voided âin its entirety,â a federal judge ruled on Monday. The decision by Judge Leo T. Sorokin of the Federal District Court for the District of Massachusetts nullified one of a series of tactics the Trump administration has used to restrict legal immigration, even in fields in which foreign skilled labor helped address severe shortages.
Forecasters warn of flooding risk as 2 storms form off southern Mexicoâs Pacific coast (AP) Tropical Storms Boris and Cristina formed off of southern Mexicoâs Pacific coast on Monday, according to the National Hurricane Center. According to the hurricane center, the center of Boris should reach the coast of Guerrero, Mexico, with little change in strength forecast until landfall. Tropical Storm Cristina formed about 100 miles west-southwest of the coast of Managua, Nicaragua. The government of Honduras has issued a tropical storm warning for Puerto Sandino to the Guatemala/El Salvador border.
Protesters, police clash in Bolivia after president signs law enabling a harsher crackdown (AP) Protesters in Bolivia demanding the resignation of conservative President Rodrigo Paz hurled firecrackers, stones and sticks at police who responded with tear gas on Monday, leading to dozens of arrests as road blockades continue to paralyze the Andean nation. The renewed clashes in the central city of Cochabamba erupted after President Paz signed a measure that could pave the way for a hardline government crackdown on the demonstrations that have roiled Bolivia over the past five weeks, disrupting transportation and causing shortages of food, fuel and medical supplies. Protesters have set up 90 blockades on key routes nationwide, effectively isolating major cities.
The European Union has a Taiwan problem (Bloomberg) The EU is worried about signs that Trump is looking to ingratiate himself with Chinese President Xi Jinping as a means of warming up US-China relations. In doing so, the thinking goes, he may be giving Beijing a greenlight for further incursions and provocations tied to the island democracy. Put that together with increasing Chinese aggressiveness in the region and youâve potentially got a recipe for trouble. In a worst-case scenario of a US-China war over Taiwan, research from Bloomberg Economics shows the EU economy would suffer a hit equivalent to about $2 trillion over the first year. Germanyâs economy alone would contract by about 14%, roughly twice as much as the US or China. Those conclusions underline one of the main lessons from Trumpâs attack on Iran: the US may call the shots in global affairs, but Europe often pays the bigger price.
20,000 people displaced by the Philippine earthquake that killed at least 37 (AP) Rescuers searched ruined buildings in the southern Philippines on Tuesday to ensure no one was still trapped a day after one of the strongest earthquakes to hit the country in a half-century killed at least 37 people and displaced more than 20,000. The earthquake centered off Mindanao, the second most populous Philippine island, injured nearly 500 people. Hundreds of aftershocks have continued to jolt the area.
Lebanon says Israel has bombed it nearly 3,500 times during ceasefire (Reuters) Israel has carried out nearly 3,500 air strikes on Lebanon âand hundreds of controlled explosions since the U.S. announced a ceasefire âfor the country on April 16, Lebanon's defence minister, Michel Menassa, said on Monday. During a cabinet meeting, Menassa âsaid that from April 17 to June 7, Israel had carried out 3,491 air âstrikes, 407 controlled demolitions and six "razing" operations, or demolitionsâwhich have left some entire villages in the southernmost strip of Lebanon entirely flattened. The statistics were later published on X by âthe office of Lebanon's Prime Minister Nawaf Salam. Salam said the latest escalation between Iran and Israel had âcaused additional â waves of displacement, straining Lebanon's ability to host fleeing families.
Israelis push Netanyahu to keep fighting in Lebanon (Washington Post) Rani Ben Dov, one of the few farmers still left in this northern border town, was exhausted. He was tired of seeking shelter from incoming Hezbollah fire, but even now the last thing he wanted was for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to pull the plug on the military offensive in Lebanon, just a mile away. âWe need to let the generals do what they need to do and eliminate Hezbollah,â Ben Dov said, as the sound of shelling punctured the hot summer air. âWe canât just leave.â The sentiment is pervasive. In war-weary border villages, on prime time talk shows, within the political opposition and among Netanyahuâs supporters, Israelis are pushing their prime minister to fightâand stayâin Lebanon. For weeks, Iran has demanded an end to hostilities between Israel and Hezbollah, the Shiite militia it supports in Lebanon, as a condition of a comprehensive peace deal with President Donald Trump. Trump has voiced frustration about Netanyahu âconstantly fightingâ in Lebanon, but Israeli military and political analysts say Netanyahu almost certainly will keep forces in Lebanon for several more months, if not years.
UN inquiry finds Israeli forces shield settlers during attacks on Palestinians (Reuters) Israeli authorities are directly involved in settler attacks that have killed, injured and âdisplaced Palestinians in the occupied West Bank, while Israeli security forces provide protection to settlers, a U.N. inquiry said on Tuesday. The report by the Commission âof Inquiry on the Occupied Palestinian Territory found that Israeli authorities have enabled settler attacks through financial and military support, in a climate of impunity fostered by judicial and law-enforcement bodies. It said attacks on Palestinian villages and agricultural land have surged since 2023, rising by 130%, including incidents involving groups of masked assailants. Israeli security forces have routinely accompanied settlers and acted as a shield for the violence, âthe report said.
Conflicts on rise globally, highest level since WWII, data shows (NPR) If you've been thinking it seems like there are more wars raging in the world these days, it turns out you're right and the data proves it. A new study by researchers at a university in Sweden recorded the highest number of conflicts between states in 2025 since World War II, and the highest number of fatalities recorded since the Rwandan genocide. There were 65 active conflicts in 2025, according to researchers at the Uppsala Conflict Data Program (UCDP) at Uppsala University, regarded as a leading source of information on violence worldwide. Out of that total, the number of direct conflicts between individual states doubled from the previous year to eight in 2025âthe highest number of such conflicts since UCDP began collecting data in 1946. Fatalities were the highest on record since 1994, with approximately 244,600 people killed in conflict in 2025, the data shows. That's up from 187,000 deaths in 2024.















