Wednesday, June 17, 2026
Initial deal to end US-Iran war moves toward formal signing despite lingering questions (AP) An initial agreement between the United States and Iran to extend their shaky ceasefire inched toward a formal signing despite questions Monday over the fate of Tehranâs nuclear program and an offensive by Israel in Lebanon that could prolong the fighting and scuttle the deal. The agreement signed electronically Sunday is meant to provide a meaningful truce in a monthslong war that has killed thousands across the Middle East, including the top leaders of Iranâs theocracy, and raised the prices of fuel, food and other basic goods far beyond the region. But logistical and military challenges underscored the fragile nature of the deal, which was set for a ceremonial signing Friday in Geneva.
Higher prices for gas, groceries and flights will outlast the Iran war, experts say (AP) A tentative deal to end the Iran war makes it reasonable to ask how soon prices will drop for gasoline, groceries, airline tickets and other items that got more expensive during the conflict. Not so fast, experts say. Even after oil starts flowing again from the Middle East, it could take a while for consumers to see a difference at local fuel pumps, supermarkets and other places they shop, according to economists and industry analysts. Fighting over the Strait of Hormuz disrupted not only supplies of crude and refined fuel but also the supply chains for fertilizer, food and even footwear. Businesses expect higher costs to linger. âIt is not clear, despite three months of war, that anything has been achieved that makes the American consumer better off,â Brett House, an economist who teaches at Columbia Business School, said. âIn fact, by almost any measure, not just the American consumer, but the world, is worse off as a result of this attack.â
College sticker prices hit a new high at elite schools (Independent) A small group of American universities is crossing a threshold that once seemed absurd: $100,000 for a single year as an undergraduate. At least 16 institutions are now approaching or exceeding that figure when tuition, fees, housing and other miscellaneous costs are combined, according to a recent analysis by New York Magazine. The listâcorroborated by data obtained by CNBCâis dominated by elite, high-demand schools, including the University of Chicago, Georgetown University and Wesleyan University. College costs have surged in the past 40 years but the leap to six-figure price tagsâboth a financial and psychological milestoneâraises new questions about how colleges set prices, who ultimately pays and whether the higher education market is nearing a breaking point.
Cuba quantifies impact of US oil blockade on childrenâs health and daily life (AP) Some of Cubaâs sickest people are feeling the effects of the U.S. energy blockade, with surgeries delayed, kidney dialysis treatments disrupted and children with cancer facing a higher risk of death, according to a report published Monday by Cuban state-run media. The survival rate for children with cancer has fallen to 65% from 85% before the energy restrictions began in January, according to the report released by Cubadebate. It also said 100,000 children younger than 7 are no longer receiving the daily liter of milk previously provided by the state and that the countryâs 16-vaccine immunization program for infants is âat risk.â Additionally, it said, another 100,000 Cubans are on waiting lists for surgery and the treatment schedules of nearly 3,000 patients requiring kidney dialysis have been disrupted. Regarding medication, 300 of the 395 essential medicines produced on the island are unavailable due to a lack of chemical components required to manufacture medications.
Surging Chinese exports threaten Europeâs economy, raising concern at G7 summit (AP) For eight years, the United States has waged economic war on China, slapping big taxes on Chinese products before they enter America. But the campaign hasnât dented Chinaâs industrial prowess. The worldâs second biggest economy is exporting more products than ever. Itâs just redirecting them away from the U.S. tariff wall and toward more open markets in Europe and elsewhere in Asia. The shift in Chinese trade risks creating a European sequel to the China Shock that wiped out hundreds of thousands of factory jobs in the American heartland in the 2000s and contributed to the political upheaval that put Donald Trump in the White House twice. Despite U.S. sanctions, China last year notched a record global trade surplusâan astonishing $1.2 trillion. Chinaâs trade practices will be near the top of the agenda this week as leaders of the G7 rich democracies gather in Ăvian-les-Bains, France.
At G-7, allies plan for a world less reliant on the U.S. (Washington Post) At this weekâs Group of Seven summit, President Donald Trump will find Americaâs closest allies in a new posture: increasingly willing to tell him no. After years of tariff threats, diplomatic whiplash and public confrontations, many world leaders have concluded that Trump is not an interruption to the international order but a feature of itâa reordering likely to endure regardless of who sits in the Oval Office. Rather than simply accommodating Trump, they are increasingly preparing for a future in which the U.S. is a less predictable partner and Europe is less inclined to follow Americaâs lead. Many of the leaders gathering here share some of Americaâs broader goals, but they are also increasingly willing to resist U.S. pressure. Yet even as European leaders prepare for a future less reliant on Washington, they remain eager to avoid an open rupture with Trump. âHistorians will point to Greenland as a point when the transatlantic alliance began to break, when the divorce really started to happen,â said Max Bergmann, director of the Europe, Russia and Eurasia Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
Ukraine Targets Moscow Oil Facility With Drones as G7 Leaders Meet (NYT) As the Group of 7 leaders gathered Tuesday for a summit focusing in part on Russiaâs war in Ukraine, President Volodymyr Zelensky said that Ukrainian drones had targeted an oil refinery in Moscow, about 10 miles from the Kremlin. Moscowâs mayor, Sergei Sobyanin, said that the city had come under attack by dozens of drones, at least one of which struck the Moscow Oil Refinery. The Moscow Oil Refinery supplies more than a third of the cityâs fuel demands, along with jet fuel and other petroleum products, according to industry publications. A day earlier, Russia bombarded the Ukrainian capital, Kyiv, and other cities with a missiles and drones that killed at least 11 people and injured dozens more. Some of Ukraineâs most cherished cultural institutions, including the Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra, one of the holiest cathedrals in the Eastern Orthodox church, were damaged in the strikes.
6.7 magnitude earthquake shakes part of Indonesia, causing scattered damage (AP) A 6.7 magnitude earthquake shook part of central Indonesiaâs Sulawesi island Tuesday, causing scattered damage and rattling residents of a city devastated by a quake and tsunami eight years ago. The strong shaking sent people fleeing into open areas in and around Palu, a city of about 400,000 people and the capital of Central Sulawesi province. Several hospitals evacuated patients, some with IV drips, outdoors as a safety measure. Images from the area showed heavily damaged structures with partially collapsed roofs, shattered walls and debris scattered across the streets. The National Disaster Management Agency said information on the damage, possible casualties and displaced people was still being gathered.
Mines in the Strait (Reuters) While the United States and Iran are reportedly approaching a deal to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, it will realistically be some time before the number of ships that pass through the Strait dailyâcurrently around 12 to 15 vessels per dayârecovers back to the 120 to 140 vessels from before the war began. One reason is mines, which naval forces have placed at some locations in the Strait. An operation by conventional minesweepers and underwater drones to clear the Strait could take 40 to 50 days before the insurance, shipping and oil companies are satisfied that itâs sufficiently safe to sail. Given that a supertanker and its cargo of crude oil are worth about $300 million, war risk underwriters can understandably get skittish at even a whiff of mines.
Interim US-Iran peace deal sparks anger among Israelis, who lash out at Netanyahu (AP) Israelis from across the political spectrum reacted angrily Monday to the news of an initial deal between the U.S. and Iran, calling it a disaster for Israel and directing their fury at one man: Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. The Israeli leader said at a news conference Monday that âwith an agreement, without an agreement,â he would continue fighting to prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons, which Tehran has long maintained it isnât trying to do, saying its nuclear program is for civilian purposes. Critics say Netanyahu led President Donald Trump into the war with Iran while overpromising what it could achieve, and Trump now might be dragging Israel out of the conflict before it feels ready. They say the prime minister misjudged Trumpâs appetite for a protracted conflict, was outflanked by Iran in negotiations and grew increasingly sidelined by the regionâs other major players.
Can you believe your eyes? (NYT) Hany Farid, 60, is the worldâs leading expert in spotting deepfake images and video on the internet. A professor, Farid has built a career out of his ability to differentiate visual reality from fakery. Every day he gets requests from governments, from journalists, from law enforcement and others hoping for his help in understanding whatâs a real image and whatâs a fake, whether a voice is a personâs or an A.I. cloneâs. Faridâs done the research to show that most people cannot tell the difference between the real and the fake. And now heâs becoming one of them. He spends hours and hours on this work: watching videos, geolocating, seeking inconsistencies, doing math. It used to be that he was proud to discover the rare fake in a world of reality. Now itâs the opposite. And the deepfakes are slowly breaking him. âI donât trust anything,â Farid said. âEvery image I see, Iâm drawing lines for shadows and doing geometry in my head, trying to figure out what Iâm looking at. Itâs over. Within a year or two, our whole visual system will be utterly useless.â
Astronaut Victor Glover describes his Moon mission (Religion News Service) On a humid evening in late March, Victor Glover huddled with his fellow Artemis II astronauts to have what the spacefarers called their âultimate dinner.â It was their last full meal before embarking on their historic journey around the Moonâthe first human-crewed visit to Earthâs silver satellite since 1972. After Glover finished his meal, the cook returned with something else: Communion elements. The cook, a Christian himself, then sat next to Glover and Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen as the men paused to pray before observing the Christian sacrament together. It was a quiet moment of religious ritual shortly before a rocket launch so explosively loud that, even a mile away, the boom rivaled the sound of standing near a screaming jet engine. But as millions back home marveled at the nine-day missionâs breathtaking photographs and technical accomplishments, Glover said the journey was also steeped in spiritual significance, from blastoff to splashdown. During the mission, which coincided with the Christian Easter holiday and the Jewish celebration of Passover, Glover made reference to the Bible and his faith in his public statements at least twice: âAs we continue to unlock the mysteries of the cosmos, I would like to remind you of one of the most important mysteries there on Earthâand thatâs love,â Glover said, referencing the Gospel of Matthew during a CBS broadcast. âChrist said, in response to what was the greatest command, that it was to love God with all that you are. And he also, being a great teacher, said this: âI give you equal to it, and that is to love your neighbor as yourself.ââ










