Friday, June 12, 2026
Trump calls off latest threats to strike Iran, citing a breakthrough in talks to end the war (AP) U.S. President Donald Trump said Thursday he had called off new military strikes on Iran, claiming a breakthrough in negotiations to end the war just hours after the American leader threatened to escalate the conflict by seizing control of Iranâs oil industry. Trump has said multiple times in recent weeks that the warring parties have been on the cusp of a deal without anything coming to fruition. A spokesperson for Iranâs Foreign Ministry said in a live phone call on state television that mediators were active and nothing had been finalized to end the conflict that began Feb. 28 when the U.S. and Israel jointly attacked Iran.
White House Again Shrugs Off High Prices Amid War With Iran (NYT) Prices jumped in May for the third straight month, leaving U.S. families and businesses to suffer the sting from the war with Iran. And for the third time, the White House largely shrugged off the news, insisting that the problem was temporaryâand that President Trumpâs agenda was working. âNo, I love it, the numbers were great,â the president told reporters on Wednesday. âI love the inflation.â It was a familiar pattern, one that appeared to underscore the widening chasm between Mr. Trump and the majority of Americans who say they are frustrated with the direction of the economy.
$60M and 7 federal agencies required to stage Trumpâs UFC fight at White House (AP) President Donald Trumpâs planned UFC fight on the White Houseâs South Lawn has required a monumental effort from more than seven federal agencies, hundreds of staff working onsite daily and at least $60 million, according to a legal filing that offers a glimpse into the preparations. The event is part of the 250th anniversary of Americaâs founding, and is scheduled for the weekend with the main attractionâseven mixed martial arts matchesâon Sunday.
Mexico City installed a chandelier in its metro for the World Cup. Then came the crush of memes (AP) The sound of construction roared over the most memed metro station in Mexico City as workers hammered at marble floors under a chandelier and rows of lamps reminiscent of a scene from âHarry Potterâ or âTitanic,â racing to finish ahead of the FIFA World Cup opening ceremony Thursday. Mexicans milling through the busy Hidalgo metro station pointed and laughed, occasionally snapping pictures of the face-lift that has become the subject of a cascade of internet memes. The cosmetic makeover that authorities have attempted to give the capital as visitors arrive from around the globe also has become a symbol of criticisms that the government is prioritizing its superficial appearance for World Cup fans over fixing critical structural issues that have long plagued the city. âPeople make fun of it because itâs a failed aesthetic, it doesnât make a lot of sense,â said Silvia Escamilla, 28, who was hustling to work among a crowd of Mexican commuters. âAll these renovations are like putting makeup on the city, because the infrastructure they could actually invest in just isnât there.â
Pentagonâs Hegseth warns Cuba that arms procurement could invite confrontation (Reuters) On Wednesday, U.S. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth traveled to the U.S. naval base/prison/CIA black site on Guantanamo Bay in Cuba. There, he warned Cubaâs government against procuring weapons which could be used against the U.S., even as the Trump administration has drummed up consent for a future invasion of the island nation. âIt would be unwise of the government of Cuba to try to procure or get access to the types of weapons that could reach this base or the American homeland,â Hegseth said. âThey would be inviting the kind of confrontation not only do they not want but âthey could not stand. No country on Earth can match the capabilities of the United States of America.â The state of Cubaâs economy has become increasingly dire over the past few months, as Trump has maintained the U.S.âs economic sanctions on the island nation while also blocking it from importing fuel. The White House has threatened to slap steep tariffs on countries that sell oil or gas to Cuba, leading to endless power outages as the Cuban government struggles to keep the lights on.
Peruâs presidential runoff shows a razor-thin gap between candidates (AP) The gap between Peruâs two presidential candidates narrowed to less than 20,000 votes Tuesday with 96% of ballots counted after Sundayâs runoff contest. The winner will be the South American countryâs ninth president in 10 years. Official figures showed nationalist congressman Roberto SĂĄnchez with 50.055% of votes, while conservative politician Keiko Fujimori had 49.945%. The electoral body has counted more than 17.8 million votes.
Only 11% of Europeans view US as ally, survey shows (Reuters) Only 11% of Europeans across 15 countries view the United States as an ally, a historic low and down from 16% half a year âago and 22% in November 2024, according to a survey published âby the European Council on Foreign Relations on Wednesday. The findings, released ahead of G7 and NATO summits, highlight Europeâs waning confidence in Washington as a reliable security partner. Majorities in âall surveyed countries expressed doubts that the U.S. would come to their âdefence in the event of an attack. Majorities in every country polled âexcept Bulgaria â thought U.S.-European relations would improve when U.S. President Donald Trump left office.
Europe shakes off innovation gloom (CSM) The handful of U.S. firms that dominate global tech and artificial intelligence has almost universal name recognition. And itâs quite widely known that they rely on semiconductors manufactured in East Asia, mainly Taiwan. But itâs safe to say that very, very few people realize that the worldâs only maker of the complex lithography machinesâused by Asian firms to fabricate the chips that power American tech advancesâis headquartered in ... Europe. (The Netherlands, to be precise.) Not knowing this little factoid is about more than industry trivia. It points to long-standing, and not entirely merited, views of the continent as an economic has-been, held back by red tape, capital constraints, and innovation inertia. In fact, the European Union is making quiet, consistent progress in undoing both limiting perceptions and policies. âEurope is no musty backwater,â The Economist stated in April. âIt has the talent, resources and incentive to lead. It should start to think, and act, like it.â
The War in Ukraine Has Now Gone On Longer Than World War I (NYT) The war in Ukraine has often been compared to World War I for its brutal infantry assaults and heavy casualties. Yet the idea that it could, by any measure, surpass a conflict so long and bloody that French soldiers hoped it would be âthe last of the lastâ once seemed unthinkable. That is just what happened on Thursday. The war in Ukraineâwhich reached 1,569 days, or more than four years and three monthsâhas now outlasted World War I. When President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia sent his troops into Ukraine in February 2022, he believed the country would fall within days. After Ukraine pushed the Russians back and the conflict settled into a war of attrition, even many of those fighting could not imagine it would last this long. But the war has raged on, and, with peace talks stalled, it shows no sign of ending soon. Polls suggest that about half of Ukrainians believe it will not end before next year, which would push it closer to another threshold: the duration of World War II, which lasted six years.
Washington Is Testing Singaporeâs Patience (Foreign Policy) One of the United Statesâ most important strategic partners in Southeast AsiaâSingaporeâis beginning to lose faith in the Trump administration. U.S. President Donald Trumpâs tariffs, coupled with the acute energy crisis caused by his war against Iran and U.S. government pressure to force Singapore into even closer alignment, have severely frustrated Singaporean leaders. As Singapore seeks a stable place in an increasingly disorderly international system, this could result in a more diversified Singaporean foreign policy, including a more prominent role for China. Alienating Singapore would be an unforced errorâand perhaps a significant one. The city-state sits on a small island strategically located on the vital Strait of Malacca that connects the Indian and Pacific oceans, and it serves as a de facto security ally of the United States. Singapore hosts and maintains U.S. warships at its Changi Naval Base and participates in a range of other military agreements, making it a potentially critical node of support to U.S. military forces defending Taiwan or addressing any number of other future contingencies throughout the Indo-Pacific.
Philippine town seeks immediate airlift of food to ease hunger in quake-hit villages (AP) The mayor of a southern Philippine town that was devastated by a powerful earthquake pleaded Thursday for helicopters to transport food to stave off hunger in several landslide-isolated villages. The 7.8 magnitude offshore quake, one of the strongest to hit the Philippine archipelago in a half century, struck Monday off the southern province of Sarangani and has left at least 47 people dead and injured 688 with 31 still missing. More than 45,000 people remained displaced, about half in emergency shelters, after the quake damaged more than 12,600 houses in farming towns and cities. Many were still too traumatized to return home due to aftershocks, provincial officials said.
Amnesty accuses Israelâs government of âethnic cleansingâ of Palestinians from the West Bank (AP) Amnesty International accused Israel on Wednesday of carrying out a campaign of âethnic cleansingâ of Palestinians from the occupied West Bank with the intention to annex the Palestinian territory. The accusation came in a new, 149-page report alleging that the forced displacement of West Bank Palestinians resulted from a concerted state policy, and not just the actions of violent settlers. While much of the displacement is driven by settlers who build outposts on Palestinian land, the report asserts that the process could not occur without the support of the government. U.N. data says that over 100 West Bank villages have been fully or partially emptied out between January 2023 and April 2026. At the same time, the United Nations has tracked more than 7,280 instances of individual Palestinian displacement because of demolition of homes and structures by Israeli forces, a figure that includes people who were displaced more than once.
More Employees Embrace âMicroshifting,â Carving Their Workday Into Chunks (WSJ) After working traditional hours for more than 20 years, John D. Connolly realized that wasnât how he worked best. âIâd be dialed in, looking at the computer for six hours but I wouldnât have any more gas in me,â says Connolly, 46. âIâd have to sit there for another 2½ hours.â Connolly, founder of financial-services advisory firm Bifrost Advisors, works at home before his toddler wakes up, takes a break to have breakfast with the family, and works for about four hours before lunch with his wife. He resumes work around 4 p.m. and continues until dinner, often returning to finish things up after his son is in bed. He puts in work on the weekends, when necessary. He is among the workers who have embraced âmicroshifting,â or carving their day into short chunks of work, with intentional breaks for family time or personal replenishment. While employees who work from home have long squeezed personal business into the workdayâwith or without the bossâs blessingâmore are now openly working at the times when they are most productive, often in segments of several hours, and some companies are encouraging it. âInstead of forcing everyone into a rigid schedule, we focus on output and deliverables,â says Woozle founder Mark Pacitti, who is based in Glasgow, Scotland, and works in two-hour microshifts himself. âIf someone does their best, deep research work in a focused five-hour window, thatâs more valuable to us and our clients than eight hours of diminishing returns.â















