Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Corva Coleman, the Trump administration...
a 15-point ceasefire plan to halt the war with Iran.
“At the same time, Israeli and Iranian attacks continue, and beer's general Eastern reports”
from Tel Aviv.
A draft 15-point ceasefire proposal, as first reported by the New York Times and Israel's
channel 12, includes calls for Iran to commit to dismantle existing nuclear capabilities and its support for militias in the Middle East and limit its missile program. NPR has not seen a copy of the proposal. A person briefed on it, told NPR, a summary published by Israeli channel 12, reflected an early version of the proposal and said there have been changes made since then, though
it wasn't clear what those changes were. The person requested anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly. Israel says it launched new attacks on Iranian government infrastructure. Iran launched more missiles at Israel, one striking near a major power plant. Israel's electorate company says it caused no major infrastructure damage.
Daniel Estrin NPR News, Tel Aviv. A deal to fund at least part of the Department of Homeland Security may be near. This comes as U.S. airports are clogged with long security lines, many TSA officers are calling out, or quit, and beer's Barbara Sprunt has more. Congressional Democrats have refused to fund DHS without implementing restraints on immigration
enforcement after federal agents killed two U.S. citizens earlier this year. Republicans and Democrats have been trading offers back and forth with little progress. President Trump acknowledged the ongoing negotiations without much optimism.
“"I think any deal they make, I'm pretty much not happy with it."”
One proposal is to use a budget tool to fund the rest of ICE later, along with another priority of the President's in-election overhaul bill. But some Republicans are skeptical that that will work. Barbara Sprunt and Pyrenees, the capital. Trump's federal judge is casting doubt on the federal government's ban of the artificial
intelligence company, Anthropoc. NPR's John Browitch reports on the legal battle over the Pentagon's designation of the AI company as a supply chain risk. "Judged Rita F. Lynn of the U.S. District Court from Northern California says the government's ban on Anthropoc looks like punishment and an attempt to cripple the company.
Anthropoc sued the Pentagon after it labelled the company a supply chain risk amid a contract disagreement over how the company's AI model clawed can be used.
“Anthropoc does not want its AI used in autonomous weapons or for mass surveillance of U.S.”
citizens. The Pentagon argues it's not up to companies to decide how the military uses their products. President Trump has also ordered all government agencies to stop using clawed. Anthropoc asked for a preliminary injunction against the government action. Judge Lynn heard arguments from both sides in court in San Francisco and said she expects
to make a ruling in the next few days. On Rewitch NPR News, on Wall Street in pre-market trading, Dow futures are up more than 400 points. You're listening to NPR. The U.S. Supreme Court heard arguments yesterday on the Trump administration's push
to prevent migrants from seeking asylum in the U.S. The Justice Department wants to reinstate what's known as a metering policy. This blocks migrants at the Mexico border before they cross into the U.S. Federal law allows migrants who arrive in the U.S. or are physically present to apply for asylum.
Former President Barack Obama first introduced the metering policy in 2016.
The Trump administration expanded the practice, but it was then rescinded during former President Joe Biden's term. The head of NASA says the agency will pause its effort to build a small, orbiting space station around the moon. There's no greenfield voice reports, it will instead focus on the lunar surface.
Since private astronaut and wealthy entrepreneur Jared Isaacman became NASA's administrator a few months ago, he's been shaking up its Artemis moon program. In a speech at NASA headquarters in Washington, DC, he said work on the lunar space station known as Gateway would stop so that all efforts can go towards constructing a permanent moon base.
The moon base will not appear overnight. We will invest approximately 20 billion dollars
over the next seven years and build it through dozens of missions. NASA is on the verge of launching four astronauts on a mission to circle the moon and return for the first time since the 1970s with a launch opportunity coming in about a week, landing astronauts on the lunar surface is targeted for 2028. Nell Greenfield Voice NPR News again on Wall Street, down futures are higher.
listening to NPR.


