Thursday, June 11, 2026
US launches a second day of strikes on Iran and Iran fires back at the Gulf states and Jordan (AP) The United States launched a second round of airstrikes on Iran into Thursday morning after U.S. President Donald Trump warned that Tehran would âpay the priceâ for stalled negotiations, and Iran responded with strikes targeting Bahrain, Kuwait and Jordan. The new U.S. assault across multiple Iranian cities came as efforts to negotiate an end the war again appeared stuck. The American attack appeared more intense and wider than the day before, but Iran released little information on the extent of the damage. Kuwait closed its airspace for several hours because of the Thursday morning attack, but did not elaborate on any damage. Jordan said it intercepted 20 Iranian missiles fired toward an area that is home to an air base hosting U.S. troops, though no one was hurt.
A Challenge in the U.S.-Iran Talks: Both Sides Demand Victory (NYT) For weeks, the parameters of a preliminary agreement to end the war between the United States and Iran have been clear to its negotiators. The hang-up? How to devise a deal so each side can claim a win. Washington and Tehranâboth neither fully victorious nor completely defeated in the warâbadly want a deal. But they also need something they can present as favorable to the hawks and hard-liners back home. Added to this fundamental dispute are the peculiarities of the two countriesâ leaders. One of them is in hiding and slow to sign off on any proposal; the other is so unpredictable, his own envoys struggle to negotiate on his behalf. Unsuccessful efforts at devising this alchemy of wording have mired the two sides in a state of neither war nor peace. They have left the global economy in limbo, too, as both sides continue their blockades of the vital Strait of Hormuz.
Social Security at Risk for Cuts by 2032, Unless Congress Acts (NYT) The financial forecast for Social Security worsened this year, according to the annual financial report released on Tuesday by the programâs trustees. If Congress does not develop a plan to shore up the program, it will need to cut benefits for millions of Americans in just a little more than six years. Social Securityâs deteriorating finances have long been thought of as a future problemâfor another president, or another Congress, to resolve. But now, it is creeping ever closer because funds will run out before the end of the next presidentâs term. The Social Security Old-Age and Survivors Insurance trust fund, which helps pay retiree and survivor benefits to more than 68 million beneficiaries, is now expected to run out of money at the end of 2032, one quarter earlier than projected last year. That means incoming revenue would be enough to pay only 78 percent of benefits, in other words, a reduction of 22 percent, according to the report.
Billionairesâ Billions Are Increasing Faster Than Ever (NYT) Fifteen years ago, the worldâs billionaires collectively had $4.5 trillion. By 2024, their wealth had more than tripled to $14.2 trillion. Now, their combined wealth totals $20.1 trillionâan amount that is equivalent to nearly a fifth of the entire worldâs total yearly output. The stunning figuresâcalculated by the French economist Gabriel Zucman, director of the International Tax Observatory, a research organization funded by the European Unionâreveal more than a surprisingly rapid increase in the concentration of wealth at the tippy top. They also reflect a series of important global trends: the growing dominance of a few technology companies leading artificial intelligence development; the shrinking slice of the economic pie that goes to workers; and a deepening inequality that will be handed down to the next generation. These developments are particularly prominent in the United States, where roughly one-third of the worldâs nearly 3,000 billionaires reside.
Two more Texas screwworm infections found in animals far apart, USDA says (ABC News) On Monday, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) announced that it had confirmed two more cases of the New World screwworm infecting animals in Texas. Those confirmations bring the total number of screwworm cases in the U.S. up to four, after the worm was found in two calves living miles apart late last week. According to USDA Secretary Brooke Rollins, though, the U.S. cattle industry is ânot at riskâ from the larva. âThis is not a virus, itâs not a disease, itâs just a little pest, a larva that lands in a calfâs wound, for example, and it can be treated,â she said. Meanwhile, the USDA is racing to set up a new facility for breeding and releasing sterile flies into the wild, which will curb the pestâs population in the U.S. by preventing future generations from being bornâunfortunately, that operation will only reach full capacity in November 2027. The fly was originally eradicated from the U.S. in 1960s and was kept at bay thanks to eradication efforts across Central and South America, but Elon Muskâs DOGE cut U.S. funding for a screwworm monitoring and containment program last year, even as the parasiteâs population was inching closer to the U.S.-Mexico border.
Violent anti-immigration protests erupt in Belfast after brutal stabbing attack (Washington Post) Masked men set houses, vehicles and a city bus ablaze in Belfast on Tuesday night, torching neighborhoods across the city after a graphic video of an alleged knife attack by a Sudanese asylum seeker went viral, igniting the latest anti-immigration violence to convulse the United Kingdom. Ignoring pleas for calm from politicians and clergy, rioters rampaged through heavily immigrant neighborhoods in Belfast, the capital of Northern Ireland, in some cases going door-to-door and causing some families to flee under police protection. Men in balaclavas and hoods shouted âforeigners out,â witnesses said. One family with children had to be escorted from a burning house, according to the BBC, and a family of Ukrainian refugees fled through their back door as the front door burned. The riots spread from Belfast to towns across Northern Ireland and reached into Scotland and England by nightfall.
Vote looms in Switzerland after foes of migration put proposal to cap population at 10 million (AP) Swiss voters will take up an unprecedented proposal to limit Switzerlandâs population, part of a longtime push by right-wing leaders to cap the number of foreigners who migrate to the rich and economically vibrant Alpine country. A national vote on whether to cap Switzerlandâs population at 10 million in coming decades culminates with in-person balloting on Sunday. Recent polling suggested that it could be a close contest. Supporters of the initiative dislike an influx of expatriates from the neighboring European Union, and say Swiss infrastructure, housing, social programs, natural resources and way of life have been strained under demographic growth.
Ukraineâs Neighbors Seek Shelter as More and More Drones Fly Overhead (NYT) The red alert came from a crisis control room buried under the Lithuanian capital. It sent the president, prime minister, mayor, school children and hundreds of thousands of other residents racing to underground shelters for cover from a fast approaching drone. Military radar showed the drone coming in from the east, where Russia and its close ally Belarus have long loomed as a menace to NATOâs eastern flank. But, according to Lithuanian officials, the drone that triggered the take-cover order last month in the capital, Vilnius began its journey in Ukraine, as did dozens of others that in recent weeks have entered the airspace or waters of Lithuania, Estonia, Latvia, Finland and Romania. All are members of NATO and strong supporters of the Ukrainian militaryâs battle against the Kremlin. Ukraine has been sending swarms of drones to hit Russian ports, oil terminals and other facilities on the Baltic Sea. But some veer off course en route and end up menacing countries that have been among Ukraineâs staunchest allies. Repeated recent episodes of drones changing direction highlight how the devices are scrambling clear lines between friend and foe, intent and result.
Aftershocks complicate Philippine recovery from quake that killed 45 and displaced thousands (AP) Dozens of rescuers in hard hats scrambled out of a partially collapsed grocery in a southern Philippine city Wednesday as it was rattled by an aftershock from a powerful earthquake that left at least 45 people dead and 17 others missing in the region. A safety officer blew his whistle and others screamed to warn about 30 firefighters and coast guard personnel to dash to safety as concrete debris crashed down from the leaning three-story building in General Santos city in a frantic scene witnessed by an AP video journalist. The earthquake has been followed by more than 2,100 aftershocks including a few that ranged up to 6.4 magnitude, which is strong enough to cause more casualties and damage. More than 25,000 people remain displaced, many of them staying in 45 government-run emergency shelters and still too traumatized to return home, officials said.
Sea of tents in heart of Beirut lays bare Lebanonâs crisis (Financial Times) In a central Beirut parking lot, between waterfront nightclubs and restaurants popular with parliamentarians, about 1,000 people who fled Israeli bombings sleep in identical blue tents, differentiated only by numbers spray-painted in white. The tent grid looks like a refugee camp, even if neither its inhabitants nor the Lebanese government will call it one. It has become a symbol of the uprooting of Lebanonâs people during Israelâs war with Hizbollah, and of the struggle to shelter them indefinitely. Nearly 1mn, about a fifth of Lebanonâs population, remain displaced more than a month and a half after the ceasefire that nominally halted the conflict. For Lebanonâs leaders and its people, the vast displacement has begun to look less like a temporary emergency than something more permanent. Lebanonâs impoverished state can ill afford a drawn-out crisis. Lebanese minister Haneen Sayed said that while the country received $700mn in aid, including from Gulf countries and the UN, during the 2024 war between Israel and Hizbollah, the total this time was less than $250mn. Shipments of donated supplies were also a quarter of what they were during the last war.
Israel is tightening its grip on east Jerusalem with evictions and demolitions (AP) Fakhri Abu Diab fought for decades to save his home. But when Israeli authorities arrived with bulldozers two years ago, he was powerless to stop them. He and his wife now live among shards of memory: a bicycle where his bedroom stood; the garden where he planted tomatoes as a boy; a portrait of his late mother painted on a wall, based on a photograph lost in the demolition. Their mobile home, set up amid the rubble, is also marked for removal. For decades, Israel has worked to expand the Jewish presence in annexed east Jerusalemâthe heart of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and home to major Jewish, Christian and Muslim sites. Settlers have exploited discriminatory policies and archaeological claims to evict Palestinians far from the regionâs war zones. Activists say those efforts have gone into overdrive in recent years, as Israel is no longer constrained by U.S. pressure and attention has shifted to Gaza, Lebanon and Iran. Over 260 homes and other structures were demolished in 2025, a 70% increase from three years earlier.
Congoâs Ebola outbreak rises to over 100 deaths out of 550 cases as conflict slows response (AP) More than 100 people have died from Ebola less than a month after authorities declared an outbreak of the disease in eastern Congo, a grim toll as officials intensify efforts to slow the disease discovered weeks late. Attacks on health workers from angry residents, skepticism among some locals and armed conflict in hot spots continue to challenge efforts to stop the Ebola outbreak declared on May 15, caused by a severe form of the disease.














