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NPR News: 04-04-2026 4PM EDT

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EN

Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Janine Herbst.

Another threat from President Trump against Iran, saying on social media today, it has 48 hours to open the straight-up or moves are, quote, "all hell will rain down." He's already delayed that threat twice. This is the search for a missing U.S. service member in Iran continues, to U.S. military planes were shot down yesterday, to other crew members were rescued.

Aaron David Miller, a senior fellow with a Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, and former State Department official says, "It shows Iran remains a threat." "It's extraordinary frankly, in the thousands of soared teas that both the Americans

and Israelis have flown that this is the first time that you had a down-dear craft."

But it is, I think, tremendously symbolic.

It suggests that the Americans don't have total escalation, dominance of the Earth's base. Iranians still have capacity. Not to mention the propaganda value of this assuming the Iranians find the airmen. Speaking there on NPR's weekend edition. In Lebanon, at least 23 people were killed in Israeli air strikes yesterday, but a third

of the country is Christian, but the lead up to Easter has been subdued this year, as NPR's law and frayer reports. Holy week's services are mixed with funerals and the sound of explosions. Israel's military says it's striking Hezbollah's infrastructure after killing 1,000 of its members.

Three United Nations peacekeepers have been wounded at their base in the south.

The UN says it doesn't know the origin of the explosion, Israel says it was a Hezbollah rocket.

Three UN peacekeepers were also killed there last week.

Meanwhile, as the U.S. and Israel attack Iran and Iran retaliates against U.S. allies in the Gulf, Lebanon has not been hit by Iranian fire. But the U.S. embassy in Beirut says Iran may now target U.S. universities in Lebanon. The American University of Beirut has shifted some classes online. The embassy is also up to its overall warning telling U.S. citizens to leave Lebanon now.

Lauren Frayer and PR News be root. The Trump administration was warned by the mortgages of the last year, not to kill a program

that was helping military veterans avoid foreclosure, but the VA killed it anyway.

And here's Chris Arnold reports the results show that veterans are losing their homes. More than 10,000 veterans have lost their homes in foreclosure sales since Trump's VA with no warning shut down that safety net program last May. So according to industry data, and it's the highest level in a decade. Also, 90,000 more vets are headed toward foreclosure.

The VA's rolling out a new program that could help, but it won't be up and running for

months, Steve Sharp with the National Consumer Law Center says that's are losing their homes now. And we really shouldn't lose those folks to foreclosure. Those homes, those families, children, neighborhoods, we should have something in place. Sharp and some lawmakers are calling on the VA to stop foreclosures on vets until its new

program is functional. Chris Arnold and PR News. You're listening to NPR News from Washington. Marmalade, that Orange Preserve, favored by Paddington Bear, may have to be renamed, so producers in the UK can sell it in the European Union.

Bikubarker has more from London. Most spritz, the term Orange Marmalade, is a redundancy, the Marmalade on British breakfast tables is invariably Orange flavored. Problem is, the term Marmalade is a more generic term in Europe, with the British government close to striking a post-Brexit trade deal with the European Union.

Well, that cherished Marmalade would have to be sold and labeled as, quote, citrus Marmalade to conform with EU standards. Back in the 1970s, Britain was able to win a special dispensation from Brussels to grant British Marmalade protected status, but with the UK now out of the European Union. It's bargaining power is approximately zero.

For NPR News, I'm Vicky Barker in London. Now, it says the Artemis II lunar mission is on schedule, and that the astronauts will enter the lunar gravitational pull tomorrow. They'll be setting up cameras for close observations of the Moon's craters. Now, it says around 20% of the Moon's surface will be illuminated for them on the far

side. That's when they'll be testing the communication system by connecting to the deep space network to see if it all works. The three Americans and one Canadian astronaut will do a lunar fly-by on the far side of the Moon, and they will lose communication with Earth during that time.

I'm Jeanine Herbst, and you're listening to NPR News from Washington.

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