
The MAGA Fight Over Iran, and a Critical Ruling on Transgender Youth Care
Hosted by Michael Simon Johnson
Produced and edited by Will JarvisMichael Simon Johnson and Jessica Metzger
Featuring Jess Bidgood and Abbie VanSickle
Israel Says Iranian Missile Strikes Hospital and Vows to Intensify Attacks, by Adam Rasgon, Ephrat Livni and David E. Sanger
Trump's Base in Uproar Over His Openness to Joining Iran Fight, by Jess Bidgood
The Court Upheld a State Ban on Transgender Care for Minors. Here's What We Know, by Abbie VanSickle
What Has Medical Research Found on Gender Treatments for Trans Youth?, by Azeen Ghorayshi
Trump Administration Will End L.G.B.T.Q. Suicide Prevention Service, by Maggie Astor
Justice Dept. to Cut Two-Thirds of Inspectors Monitoring Gun Sales, by Glenn Thrush
Austria Moves to Tighten Gun Laws After Deadly School Shooting, by Christopher F. Schuetze
David Lynch's Director's Chair Sells for $70,000 at Los Angeles Auction, by Derrick Bryson Taylor and Pamela Chelin
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Washington Post
22 minutes ago
- Washington Post
Israel-Iran live updates: Trump warns Iran not to retaliate after U.S. strikes nuclear sites
President Donald Trump warned Tehran not to retaliate after a sweeping U.S. attack that he said 'totally obliterated' key Iranian nuclear enrichment facilities. Iranian officials acknowledged the strikes, but the extent of the damage was not immediately clear. Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi condemned the U.S. attack, calling it 'outrageous' and saying it would have 'everlasting consequences.' Addressing the nation late Saturday night, Trump called the operation — which he said hit the heavily fortified Fordow plant, as well as Iran's main uranium enrichment site, Natanz, and the Isfahan facility — a 'spectacular military success,' while several Democrats criticized Trump's decision to enter the conflict without the approval of Congress. President Donald Trump said Saturday that U.S. warplanes had carried out strikes on three nuclear sites in Iran, escalating the most intense face-off in the history of the Israel-Iran conflict. President Donald Trump said Saturday that U.S. warplanes had carried out strikes on three nuclear sites in Iran, escalating the most intense face-off in the history of the Israel-Iran conflict. Iran's Atomic Energy Organization on Sunday described the U.S. strikes on nuclear sites in Fordow, Natanz and Isfahan as an act of 'lawlessness based on the rules of the jungle' in a defiant statement that vowed the Iranian nuclear program would continue. The U.S. military carried out sweeping strikes against Iranian nuclear facilities, President Donald Trump said late Saturday, marking a major escalation for his administration that tethers the United States directly to a conflict with no clear outcome or end in sight. A U.S. official familiar with the American military operation in Iran said it included B-2 bombers, as widely anticipated, but also other aircraft such as fighter jets. Numerous 30,000-pound, bunker-busting bombs known in the Air Force as Massive Ordnance Penetrators were dropped, the official said, speaking on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue.


New York Times
25 minutes ago
- New York Times
U.S. Bombing of Iran Keeps Oil Markets on Edge
If the United States had acted a couple of decades ago to bomb Iran's nuclear weapons program, as it did on Saturday, oil prices would have soared. But even though prices might jump when trading resumes this week, the longer-term effect is far less clear. Oil traders must weigh whether the American attack will lead to wider fighting that harms exports from the Persian Gulf, said Muyu Xu, senior Asia crude oil analyst at Kpler, a global commodities and shipping data firm. Wider fighting could drive up prices if oil-loading facilities are damaged or tanker traffic is interrupted. There have been no major disruptions so far since the Israel-Iran conflict escalated this month, though Israel's air attacks did set fire to a refinery and refined products depot supplying Tehran. 'Until now, we haven't seen a single barrel removed from the market,' Ms. Xu said. Military action by Iran to interrupt the flow of oil would mostly harm China, which is closely aligned with Iran and buys nearly all of Iran's oil exports. Oil prices have risen about 10 percent since the recent eruption of hostilities, which began with a surprise attack on Iran by Israel on June 13. They fell on Friday after President Trump said he would decide within two weeks whether to enter the war against Iran. Ever since the Iranian Revolution in 1979, American policymakers worried that Iran might act against the United States by using mines or missiles to block tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz. The strait is the entrance to the Persian Gulf, through which a sixth of the world's oil moves on tankers, and the northern side of the strait is Iran's coastline. China buys a third of all oil coming out of the gulf, according to Kpler's data, and helped broker a rapprochement two years ago between Iran and Saudi Arabia, another big exporter of oil from the Persian Gulf. By contrast, the United States buys less than 3 percent of the oil coming out of the Persian Gulf, notably from northern Saudi Arabia. The United States became an overall net exporter of oil in 2020 as fracking technologies enabled a big increase in domestic oil production. Iran's oil exports have declined steeply in recent years, although there was a partial rebound last year as China stepped up purchases from Iran following the rapprochement with Saudi Arabia. The United States and Europe have imposed broad prohibitions on the purchases of Iran's oil so as to pressure Tehran to abandon its nuclear weapons program. China has bought Iran's exports at a deep discount to world prices. Beijing leaders have long contended that the sanctions against Iran are not binding on China because the United Nations has not endorsed them. Even more unclear is what could happen to Iran's oil long-term oil exports. The sanctions that have curtailed much of Iran's exports were aimed at forcing it to stop developing nuclear weapons.


Washington Post
28 minutes ago
- Washington Post
D.C. region leaders criticize, endorse U.S. attack on Iran
Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Virginia) called President Donald Trump's attack on Iranian nuclear sites a reckless display of 'horrible judgment' as elected leaders from the Washington region swiftly responded to Saturday night's news. After the U.S. strikes on the sites became known, responses came quickly, and appeared to split along party lines. Democrats suggested that the U.S. was being drawn into war, while Republicans praised the president, as someone who, in the words of Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin, 'meant what he has said, over and over again.' In a message posted on social media, Youngkin added: 'Iran must never have a nuclear weapon. Promises made, promises kept.' Support for Trump also came from Virginia's attorney general, Jason Miyares (R), who said the U.S. had responded to what he called the longtime rallying cry of Iran's theocratic regime: 'Death to America.' Rep. Jane Kiggans (R-Virginia) said she supported the bombing 'because Iran cannot have nuclear weapons.' Our goal remained 'peace through strength,' she said, and urged Iran to heed Trump's warning not to retaliate against U.S. forces or citizens. Both of Virginia's Democratic Senators, Kaine and Mark R. Warner, voiced objections to Trump's actions. Warner said Trump had taken office pledging to stop unending foreign wars. But Warner added, 'Tonight he took steps that could drag the United States into another one.' Kaine, in a message posted like many of the others on the platform X, formerly Twitter, appeared particularly vehement in his objections to the decision to attack. Quoting an Israeli official as saying that his country's bombing had set back Iran's nuclear program at least two or three years, Kaine asked: 'So what made Trump recklessly decide to rush and bomb today?' He said the president had displayed 'horrible judgment,' adding that he would try to allow all senators 'to vote on whether they are for this third idiotic Middle East war.' His opposition appeared similar to that of Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-Maryland) who asserted that Trump had 'dragged us into' war, violating the Constitution. He said Trump's attack 'endangers American lives and risks unleashing dangerous forces we can't control.' Meanwhile, D.C. Mayor Muriel E. Bowser (D) addressed the possible security implications of the attack for Washington as the nation's capital. Following the strikes on Iran, she said, consultations had been held with federal security officials to assess possible threats and protect the city. 'Together, we are monitoring intelligence and, as always, ask everyone to stay vigilant. If you see something, say something.'