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NPR News: 03-26-2026 10AM EDT

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"Live from NPR news in Washington, on core of a coalman, Pakistan's foreign m...

says that indirect talks are taking place through messages between the U.S. and Iran

about the war, writing online the Pakistani Foreign Minister says his country is relaying

the messages. As Iran and the U.S. lay out their demands to stop the war, Israel is speeding up its military strikes in Iran ahead of a possible ceasefire. That's according to a person briefed on the matter, whose book within PR's Daniel Eastern, in Tel Aviv. The person who did not have authorization to speak publicly, says the Israeli

military is speeding up its targeting in Iran over the next 48 hours, focusing on trying to hit Iran's arms factories as much as possible in case a ceasefire is declared. While the U.S. and Iran both want a deal to end the war, there are wide gaps between their demands. Pakistan is emerging as a potential host for talks, an official in Islamabad not authorized to speak publicly,

tells NPR Pakistan's interior minister held a secret meeting with Iran's ambassador today.

Israel wants to keep pressing on in the war, and Iran continues targeting Israel with missile fire towards central Israel and the Jerusalem area. Daniel, Eastern NPR News, Tel Aviv. Senate talks appear stalled in an effort to end the partial shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security. TSA agents still aren't getting paid, nearly 500 of quit, and that's also increased wait times for air passengers trying to clear security. Pasqual contrasts as a TSA officer and

union leader in Phoenix, he and colleagues are not going to work. That's because they can no longer afford to work without pay. I already feel shame because I can't afford to pay my bills, and I can't afford to go to work. And now I now I feel the burden of leaving my my co-workers. Some airport security lines range up to 30 minutes, but the weight to clear security at Bush

intercontinental airport in Houston is now four hours. Stocks open mixed this morning as the

EPA relaxes summer fuel regulations in a bid to keep gasoline prices in check. And PR Scott Horsley reports, the Dow Jones industrial average rose about 60 points in early trading. The EPA will allow gas stations to keep selling fuel with a higher ethanol content this summer. The move is likely to cause some additional air pollution. It's intended to keep a lid on gas prices, which are currently averaging just under $4 a gallon. Critics aren't convinced it will be

much help. Gas prices have jumped about $1 a gallon since the US and Israel launched their war

against Iran. No breakthrough in Congress yet on funding for TSA agents Delta Airlines said this week

it's suspending the special treatment it normally offers lawmakers, so they'll be treated just like everyone else. New applications for unemployment benefits rose only slightly last week, 210,000 people applied for jobless aid. Scott Horsley and PR News Washington. On Wall Street, the Dow Jones industrials are now up 64 points. You're listening to NPR. Austed Venezuelan leader Nicholas Maduro is scheduled to appear in US district court in Manhattan

today. He and his wife Celia Fodoris want to have their federal drug trafficking charges thrown out. US troops seized them in Caracas in early January and brought them to New York. The conservative political action conference or CPAC use underway in the Dallas Fort Worth area of Texas. It is an influential conservative gathering. The Texas Newsrooms blaze Gany reports it can be an indicator of the direction of the Republican Party. The Republican Party has been

successful for decades, right here in Texas, more recently thanks to the Latino population. Orlando Rodriguez takes some of that credit. He formed Latinos for Trump in 2016 and believes that support helped the president turn South Texas border counties red for the first time in a century. He says the reason why is because they believe in Trump's plans for the economy. What they want is job for the economy to flow and it is working. I mean, not as fast as we

would like for it to happen, but it's working. Earlier this month, Trump visited South Texas

and announced a $300 billion project to build the first oil refinery in the US in 50 years.

For NPR News, I'm Blaze Gany in Great Buy. Award-winning author Tracy Kitter is died of lung cancer at his daughter's home in Boston. He was 80. Kitter won the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award for his 1981 narrative work, the soul of a new machine. It explored the new field of computers. I'm Corva Coleman, NPR News.

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