Tuesday, June 16, 2026
U.S. and Iran Reach Agreement to Reopen Strait and Begin Nuclear Talks (NYT) The United States and Iran declared on Sunday that they would cease hostilities for the next 60 days, the first major agreement between the two nations since the start of a war that has gripped the Middle East since late February. For now, however, they left unresolved the critical issue of whether and how Iran would agree to strict limits on its nuclear program. Leaders of the two nations proclaimed that they had reached the agreement after an intensive flurry of last-minute negotiations complicated by an Israeli airstrike earlier in the day on a Hezbollah stronghold near Beirut. The framework commits both governments to halting military operations on all fronts, including Lebanon, and immediately reopening the Strait of Hormuz, allowing the free flow of oil and other products from the Middle East into global markets.
Israelis denounce Trumpâs deal with Iran (Washington Post) A âcatastrophe.â A âbad deal.â An agreement that âthrows a lifeline to the murderous regime in Tehran.â Among Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahuâs supporters and critics alike, in the press and on social media, the mood was clear as Israelis woke up Monday to news of a peace agreement between the United States and Iran: President Donald Trumpâs deal is not one that many in Israel like. The question now is whether Trumpâs deal is one that Netanyahu will stomachâor one he will seek to derail. Trump in brief expletive-punctuated interviews Sunday already accused the Israeli leader of jeopardizing the accord. In the first official Israeli comments after the announcement of the deal, Defense Minister Israel Katz said Israel wonât withdraw from land seized in Lebanon as the interim deal is pending. Katz said Israel plans to stay âindefinitelyâ in lands it holds in Lebanon, as well as Syria and the Gaza Strip. Over the past 2 1/2 years, Israel has taken control of areas in Gaza, Lebanon and Syria amounting to 1,000 square kilometers (386 square miles) of territory.
For His 80th Birthday, Trump Brought a Cage Match to the White House Lawn (NYT) President Trumpâs 80th birthday Ultimate Fighting Championship stunt on the South Lawn of the White House on Sunday night was a mass-media spectacle unlike any in the history of the presidency. Mr. Trump sat ringside beside his wife, Melania Trump, as fighters whaled on one another inches away inside an eight-sided cage wrapped in cryptocurrency advertisements. All five of his children and nearly all his grandchildren sat around him. Thousands more were there on the lawn beneath a 600-ton steel-arch contraption called the Claw. The White House loomed dramatically over a fighting pit packed with billionaires, cabinet members and Republican lawmakers. It was all such an astonishing sight for so many reasons: The use of the trappings of the White House for violent cage fighting. The corporate sponsorships. Much of the White House was given over to this production. Fighters were filmed walking out through various rooms inside the residence and warming up, barefoot, in the Indian Treaty Room of the Old Executive Office Building across the way.
Most AAPI adults say the US is no longer a great country for immigrants, new poll finds (AP) Many Asian American and Pacific Islander adults have experienced or witnessed some degree of upheaval because of the Trump administrationâs heightened immigration policies, a new AP-NORC/AAPI Data poll finds, while most say the U.S. is no longer the land of opportunity for immigrants. A new poll released Monday from AAPI Data and The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research shows about half of AAPI adults say theyâor someone they knowâhave been detained or deported within the last year, started carrying proof of immigration status or U.S. citizenship, upended travel plans or significantly changed their routines because of immigration status.
San Andreas Fault stress hits 1,000-year high, raising quake risk (USA Today) Tectonic stress along Southern Californiaâs San Andreas and San Jacinto fault systems has reachedâand in some areas exceededâthe highest levels seen in the past 1,000 years, according to new research led by Earth scientists at the University of HawaiĘťi at MÄnoa. Researchers say the system is not showing signs of an imminent rupture, but is operating under unusually high stress in a long-term seismic cycle that could support large earthquakes, including multi-fault events. Lead author Liliane Burkhard, a research affiliate at the University of HawaiĘťiâs Institute of Geophysics and Planetology and scientist at the University of Bern, said the system is highly stressed after more than 160 years since the last major rupture.
Starmer says Britain will ban under-16s from using a range of social media apps (AP) Britain will ban under-16s from using a range of social media apps, Prime Minister Keir Starmer said Monday, calling it âa big moment for our country.â The move makes the U.K. part of growing global movement to tighten online safety for children. Australia, Canada, Brazil and Indonesia have introduced legislation or announced age-based restrictions or requirements for childrenâs access to social media. France, Spain, Denmark, Thailand and South Korea are among others studying or developing similar approaches.
Trump goes to the G7 summit (Politico) âTrump is poised to face a swirl of questions from allies about the status of the Iran deal and his day-after plan,â POLITICOâs Myah Myah writes. âAdministration officials told reporters this weekend that as soon as itâs signed, the U.S. will shift its focus to demining the straitâ (and will probably ask G7 countries for help). But Trumpâs relations with G7 leaders have probably never been this bad. His relationship with Macron has always been tempestuous, and hit new lows after Trump mocked the French president over an apparent spat with his wife. Once-warm friendships with a trio of EuropeansâBritish PM Keir Starmer, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz and Italian PM Giorgia Meloniâhave all but disintegrated over their respective criticisms of the war. And donât forget he just abruptly decided to leave last yearâs G7 in Canada after a single day.
Deadlocked Wars: How Major Powers Misread the Regions They Attacked (NYT) President Trump and his Russian counterpart, Vladimir V. Putin, both resist the idea that ostensibly weaker powers fought them to a stalemate. Iran and Ukraine have pushed back robustly against this âmight makes rightâ mentality, with top officials adopting an even more defiant tone in recent days. In an open letter to Mr. Putin this month, President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine derided Mr. Putin for clinging to power as he aged. âYou did not expect full-scale resistance from Ukraine, and you did not foresee that things would go this far,â Mr. Zelensky wrote. After Iran unleashed a missile barrage against Israel last week in retaliation for attacks against Hezbollah in Lebanon, Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, the speaker of Parliament and Iranâs top negotiator, threatened more. âUntil there is a sincere commitment to restoring trust, Iranâs response will not change,â he wrote on X. âBoth conflicts have produced a similar outcome: a weaker power has trapped a stronger one in a costly confrontation,â Fiona Hill, who ran Russian and European affairs at the National Security Council during the first Trump administration, wrote in a policy paper for the Brookings Institution this week. âLike Putin, Trump did not have a plan for what would happen next.â The root of the issue is that both presidents sparked wars with limited understanding of the opposing side, Ms. Hill said.
Switzerland Rejects Measure to Cap Its Population at 10 Million (NYT) Swiss voters defeated a nationwide ballot initiative on Sunday to limit the population to 10 million people. The vote rejected what would have been one of the most drastic measures taken by a European country to stem the arrival of new immigrants. Final returns, which came in quickly after polls closed at noon local time, showed the measure failing, with about 45 percent in favor and 55 percent opposed. Federal officials announced on Sunday afternoon that the initiative had failed. The measureâs support was heaviest in rural states, and its opposition was strongest in cities and in border regions, including the French-speaking areas in the west.
Some Chinese youth turn to virtual parents (BBC Chinese) During mealtimes, Vincent Zhang, a tech worker in Shanghai, has a habit of whipping out his phone to check on his âvirtual parentsâ: a middle-aged couple online, armed with an endless stream of warm words for their imaginary child. Many call the couple mum and dad, telling them about their lives and asking for birthday blessings. With nearly two million followers on DouyinâChinaâs version of TikTokâPan Huqian and Zhang Xiuping are among a niche group of content creators called âvirtual parentsâ. They have exploded in popularity, drawing young Chinese followers who feel increasingly squeezed between the pressure of succeeding and the expectations of their families. âMy parents are never the ones who tell me not to drive myself too hard or that I am already good enough,â says 33-year-old Vincent. âBut virtual parents will ask me whether I am happy today.â
A rare posthumous trial shows how slowly justice moves in Japan (CNN) When a Japanese court granted Hiromu Sakahara a retrial, there was no defendant in the dock celebrating the prospect of freedom. Instead, family members gathered around his grave to share news that he had longed to hear in life after a decades-long fight for justice. Sakahara died in 2011 while serving a life sentence for murdering a store manager in the rural town of Hino in 1984âbased on a confession that he said was forced. A rare posthumous retrial is expected to begin soon, but the long delays in Sakaharaâs case added momentum to calls for reform to speed up the excruciatingly long process people must go through to seek redress in Japan. Sakahara first filed for a retrial in 2001. Even after his death a decade later, his family kept pushing for a new hearing. Part of the problem in Japan is the lack of legal representation for those brought in for questioning over an alleged crime. Japan hasnât made access to lawyers during interrogations an absolute right. Japanâs legal system has also been criticized for handing prosecutors too much power.
The economy in the occupied West Bank is being dismantled, report says (AP) The economy in the West Bank is teetering toward collapse as Israel maintains a web of restrictions that limit opportunities for Palestinians living under long-term military occupation, according to a new report from a leading conflict tracker. The International Crisis Group says that Israeli measures restricting movement, withholding revenue and taking land are not only crippling the Palestinian economy but also fueling deep instability. It says Israeli policies suggest a concerted effort to âadvance Israelâs own declared goal of extending its control and preventing a Palestinian state from emerging.â The roughly 3.4 million Palestinians living in the West Bank today face roughly 30% unemployment and have seen their economy contract substantially since the start of the Israel-Hamas war.
Mass shootings in South Africaâs poorest areas are a symptom of organized crime and police failures (AP) A mass shooting in South Africa this week was the latest in a trend of killings in some of the countryâs poorest areas that experts say is a symptom of organized crime gangs taking advantage of the failures and sometimes absence of police. The shooting carried out by multiple suspects in an informal settlement of shacks in Johannesburg left 12 people dead and at least 15 wounded, according to authorities. South Africaâs president deployed the army to the streets in several hotspots earlier this year in an attempt to combat organized crimeâan unusual move seen by critics as an admission that police in Africaâs most developed country were losing the battle in those areas. Alongside that, South Africaâs police force has been embroiled in allegations of corruption and collusion with criminal syndicates. That has resulted in more than a dozen senior officers being arrested and top officials, including the police minister and the national police commissioner, being suspended.









