Friday, June 19, 2026
Trump Demanded Iranâs âUnconditional Surrender.â But Iran had a secret weapon. (NYT) It was less than 15 weeks ago when President Trump, at the height of his bravado about how the war with Iran would end, declared âthere will be no deal with Iran except UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER.â When the text of the deal intended to wind down the conflict was finally released on Wednesday, it read nothing like a surrender document. Instead, the Iranians emerged from a confrontation with the worldâs most powerful military having not only survived, but with much to celebrate. It starts with the resumption of Tehranâs ability to reap billions of dollars in oil sales, lifting pressure on the struggling regime. It also suggests that, over time, Iran may negotiate some permanent way to exercise sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz. And the memorandum describes a pathway in which Iran could begin receiving billions of dollars in assets that have been frozen for years. Â Â Â Â Â It was Mr. Trump himself who offered what may be the most cleareyed answer about why he needed to end this war so fast. He didnât want comparisons to Herbert Hoover, he told reporters. âHe was always the one I didnât want to be,â Mr. Trump said of the 31st president, who presided over the market crash that ushered in the Great Depression. âI didnât want to see economic catastrophe.â Later he noted that if the war continued, the world would have begun to run out of oil stockpiles. That combinationâeconomic chaos and disrupted oil marketsâis exactly what the Iranians viewed from the opening days of the war as their most potent weapon. They executed on that vision with precision, closing the strait and blowing up petrochemical facilities, desalination plants, hotels and air bases across the Gulf. And by the presidentâs own testimony, it worked.
The Iran War has altered the world order (NYT) No matter what happens, the war has permanently altered the world order, reports Patricia Cohen, who covers the global economy. For one thing, the blockage of the Strait of Hormuz has changed where nations buy their energy and what kinds of energy theyâre buying. In some places, like South Korea and Japan, thereâs been a turn toward coal, which pollutes the atmosphere. In others, itâs likely to propel a turn toward renewable sources like nuclear, wind and solar. Chinaâs a big beneficiary of that because itâs so far ahead of the rest of the world in developing those energy technologies. Thatâs the second big change: Beijing is even more important on the world stage. âChina looks to be an out-and-out winner,â concluded analysts from a global energy consulting firm. Third, safe passage through the Strait of Hormuz may never truly return. Iran wants to impose a fee on ships that sail through the narrow waterway, which could violate international agreements. But even if it doesnât, Tehran has demonstrated that it can disrupt trade there any time it wants to. Shipping companies donât like the uncertainty. Finally, the World Bank says that growth of the global economy is slowing. Separately, inflation is starting to roar.
A cityâs push for facial recognition on public buses ignites debate over security and privacy (AP) Officials in Kansas City, Missouri, are preparing to equip some public buses with facial recognition cameras capable of detecting whether a passenger appears on a list of banned riders or missing persons. Supporters and opponents alike view the effort as a major litmus test for tapping the AI-powered software on a U.S. public transportation system, positioning Kansas City as the latest epicenter in a fierce debate over whether the safety benefits of artificial intelligence are worth the privacy costs. âThe idea of running face recognition on a camera that is pointed on live spaces in public is a line that until recently has never really been crossed in the last 25 years,â said Jay Stanley, senior policy analyst for the Project on Speech, Privacy and Technology at the American Civil Liberties Union. âIt may be used for a very narrow watch list today, but there are very good reasons to think itâll expand over time,â he said.
Two sides of a political chasm share one fear in Colombiaâs presidential race: A return to the past (AP) The memories of Colombiaâs six decades of armed conflict are still like open wounds etched on its victimsâ bodies and minds. For Blanca Nubia Monroy, itâs a black-and-white scale of justice tattooed on her forearm, identical to the one used to identify her 19-year-old sonâs body after he was kidnapped and killed by Colombian soldiers in 2008. For Sigifredo LĂłpez, itâs flashbacks from the seven years he was held captive by guerrillas in the South American countryâs dense jungles and the trauma of surviving after his companions were massacred in 2007. Both have radically different views of who should win Colombiaâs presidency on Sunday. But their fear is the same: Returning to a more violent past. The armed struggle between Marxist guerrillas, Colombian military forces and right-wing paramilitaries has resulted in more than 10 million peopleâone in five Colombiansâbecoming victims of conflict, according to a government registry documenting killings, kidnappings, forced displacement and more.
Pentagon chief lashes out at NATO allies and announces a review of US forces in Europe (AP) U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth lashed out at NATO allies on Thursday, announcing a six-month Pentagon review of American forces in Europe that will depend on how fast they take responsibility for their own security. Hegseth lambasted European allies for failing to provide U.S. forces access to bases in Europe to launch attacks on Iran, calling it âshameful.â Hegseth said earlier Thursday that Americaâs allies in Europe must take the lead on the defense of their own continent and help turn NATO into âa read hard-line military alliance.â
Western Europe Braces for Another Round of Heat (NYT) Just two weeks after an unusually early and severe heat wave, Western Europe has been hit by another round of scorching weather, with temperatures expected to reach 113 degrees Fahrenheit by the weekend. Hot, dry air from North Africa has formed a dome over the Iberian Peninsula, trapping and pushing heat toward France, Switzerland, Italy and Germany, where temperatures of 95 degrees Fahrenheit or higher are expected to persist through next week. The high temperatures are a shock to residents, and also to many tourists who had avoided traveling in July and August because of the heat and expected milder conditions in Western Europe so early in the season. One of the biggest challenges of dealing with the summer heat is the rarity of air-conditioning in Western Europe. Traditionally mild summer conditions and strict building regulations make installation both difficult and costly. Outside four- and five-star hotels, a few modern developments, and some museums and restaurants, most places simply do not have it.
Moscow hit by largest Ukrainian attack since start of Russia's full-scale war (BBC) Moscow has come under the largest Ukrainian attack since the start of the full-scale war, with close to 200 drones hitting targets around the Russian capital and setting columns of thick smoke billowing high into the sky. Seventeen people were wounded in the Moscow region, according to local governor Andrei Vorobyov. Almost 1,000 drones and four Ukrainian cruise missiles were intercepted and destroyed across the country in 24 hours, Russiaâs defence ministry was quoted as saying. An oil depot was struck in the southern Rostov region, where one person was killed. Volodymyr Zelensky said Kyiv had once again hit the Moscow region with âlong-range sanctionsââa euphemism for Ukrainian long-distance strikes on Russia. âItâs time to end this war, and Russia must take the necessary steps in diplomacy,â he added. âWe donât want this war and have never wanted it,â Zelensky said. âBut if Ukraine burns, your Moscow will burn too.â
Heat in Indiaâs textile factories stifles workers (AP) For dozens of workers at a textile manufacturer on the edge of Surat, the blazing temperatures and high humidity on a recent afternoon were amplified by steam, radiating heat and chemical smells that emerged from the heavy machines that dominate nearly every inch of the low-ceilinged factory floor. The machines, called stenters, roared like engines, boilers hissed and drum washers released clouds of steam. The sound was relentless, the air heavy. âThe heat does make us weak. We sweat a lot. Some people feel dizzy, unwell,â said Soni Pande, a 27-year-old worker and single mother. Like most other parts of the country, Surat is witnessing rising day and nighttime temperatures and longer summer months in part due to climate change, and workers say the heat inside factories is unbearable at times. The problem has proved stubborn, because even when factories install cooling equipment, the effects can be limited. And faced with losses due to United States tariffs and supply disruptions caused by the Iran war, factory owners seem less willing or able to invest the thousands of dollars needed to install and maintain cooling systems.
JD Vance tells Israel âyou canât kill your way outâ of security problems (Al Jazeera) United States Vice President JD Vance has been defending the memorandum of understanding to end the US-Israeli war with Iran, responding to criticism of the deal from members of the opposing Democratic Party and Republicans alike. But Vance reserved some of his harshest criticism for Israel, whose leaders have continually pushed Washington to continue the war. He pointed to criticism of the deal from Israeli officials, including far-right ministers Bezalel Smotrich and Itamar Ben-Gvir. âAnd I guess my response to them would be: What is your exact proposal? Youâre a country of nine million people. You canât just kill your way out of solving every single national security problem that you have,â he said. âToo many people have been killed,â Trump said from the G7 Summit in France. Speaking of Lebanon, he said, âYou donât have to knock down an apartment house every time youâre looking for somebody, because there are a lot of people in those apartment houses, and theyâre not all Hezbollah.â
Israeli military strikes in southern Lebanon in intense fighting as US-Iran talks postponed (AP) Israelâs military said Friday its forces struck targets throughout southern Lebanon overnight as Hezbollah reported intense fighting in the area, threatening the nascent agreement between Iran and the United States to end their war. Talks planned for Friday in Switzerland between Iran and the United States, which Vice President JD Vance had been scheduled to attend, found themselves postponed as the fighting intensified. Meanwhile, the death toll in Lebanon rose sharply. Lebanonâs state-run National News Agency reported at least 18 people were killed in Israeli airstrikes, which the Israeli military said were ongoing. Israel, meantime, said four of its soldiers had been killed in fighting in southern Lebanon, including a lieutenant colonel. An explosive drone attack hurt another five, it added.
Israel seized more land from neighbors since 2023 than it has in decades (AP) Over the past two and a half years, Israel has taken control of swaths of Gaza, Lebanon and Syria that amount to its biggest expansion of militarily occupied lands in decades. It is an area larger than many major citiesâroughly 1,000 square kilometers (386 square miles)âand Israel has said it plans to stay indefinitely. The land seizures began in the aftermath of Hamasâ 2023 cross-border attack, which ignited wars on multiple fronts. The Israeli military took over large portions of Gaza as part of a broad invasion, and later seized control of chunks of Lebanon and Syria. Israel calls these areas âbuffer zonesâ and says they are needed to prevent future attacks by militant groups. In Gaza and Lebanon, Israeli land seizures and evacuation warnings have pushed out more than 3 million people, and troops have demolished towns and neighborhoods, creating large depopulated zones.
The peril of mailing paper checks (Washington Post) Weâve become so used to high-tech cybercrime that we may sometimes forget about the vulnerability of our mailboxes. But an old-school, low-tech scam is surging and is more than enough reason to avoid or limit writing paper checks altogether. According to a joint warning from the FBI and the U.S. Postal Service, check fraud is skyrocketing. Federal data shows that reports of check fraud nearly doubled from 350,000 in 2021 to 680,000 in 2022. Itâs gotten so bad that the agencies recommend considering e-checks, ACH automatic payments and other electronic or mobile payments. In 2010, there were just over 2,200 high-volume mail theft attacks, and by 2023, that number had skyrocketed to over 49,000, a â2,000 percent explosion,â Frank Albergo, president of the Postal Police Officers Association, said last summer during testimony before a House subcommittee. âThis is not about lost birthday cards anymore,â Albergo said. âWeâve entered an era of organized postal crime.â
















