"Lie," from NPR News, I'm Lakshmi Singh.
President Trump is declaring a ceasefire, not in the U.S. war with the rum but between Israel
“and Lebanon, where Iranian proxies are based.”
On social media today, Trump said the truth would take effect in three hours and run for ten days and that he's inviting the Israeli and Lebanese leaders to Washington. He says he spoke with the leaders of both countries today also says ceasefire talks will include Hezbollah, before heading to Las Vegas, President Trump told reporters a short time ago that Iran wants to make a deal as well.
He says no nuclear weapons is a big factor. Office rate of Hormuz, the U.S. is enforcing a naval blockade of Iranian ports and Piers Quilorent says so far, 13 ships have been turned back. At a news conference, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Dan Kane, and Secretary of Defense Pete Hezbollah said since the blockade began on Monday, ships have made what
they called the "wise choice of turning around," when confronted. The U.S. military has been broadcasting this message to any vessel coming from or heading to Iranian ports. "We're not going to have the briefs of the blockade, vessels will be imported from
“the United States or Tunisia, or Tunisia, to Iran or Iranian port, turn around and compare”
to the board. If you don't have to lie with this blockade, it will use the force." Sixth also criticized the U.S. media for coverage of the war, calling reporters unpatriotic and comparing them to the biblical Pharisees who persecuted Jesus Christ. Quilorent's NPR News
"Popilyo the 14th is strongly criticizing war and the act of praying for victory, and Piers Emmanuel can walk to reports on the U.S. foreign pontiffs most recent review of the Trump administration's military action." "Popilyo sharply criticized leaders who used religion to justify war," and said quote. The masters of war pretend not to know that it takes only a moment to destroy, yet often
a lifetime is not enough to rebuild. The remarks from the Pope came in a speech in the Cambrian city of Bermenda, doing his tour of four countries in Africa. The Pope was criticized the war against Iran and urged peace. This week, Trump attacked the Pope as quote, "Weak on crime and soft on foreign policy,
Emmanuel Akimatu, NPR News, Lagos." Well, as for the war, the U.S. and Israel initiated against Iran at the end of February, Washington, Tehran, are far apart on the terms of a peace deal. The U.S. wants Iran to end its blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, limit military capabilities and halt to nuclear development.
Iran says it wants U.S. forces out of the Middle East, war damage compensation, and an end to all sanctions. Mid-Western communities are recovering from yesterday's storm damage and Wisconsin-Multiple cars were stranded in flood waters in NRW Michigan, some public school building sustained structural damage from strong winds, University of Michigan, football stadium reporting
70-mile-per-hour wind gusts yesterday, National Weather Service is trying to determine the "remultiple tornadoes." It's NPR News.
Health Secretary Robert of Kennedy Jr. is defending his record in his first appearance
this year on Capitol Hill. We are cutting red tape, speeding decisions, and demanding transparency. We are also cracking down on ways for odd and abuse. He also side-step criticism on the increase in vaccine-provenable diseases, such as measles on his watch, evident in this exchange with Democratic Representative Linda Sanchez of California.
I can't see in the world that it's wrong. Approve your decision to end the CDC's pro-vaccine public messaging campaign. We've done better at preventing this issue. I don't want to answer the question. A judge in Austin, Texas, is ordering camp mystic to preserve cabin's damage in last
summer's deadly floods. 27 people died in the Texas Hill Country floods, Kaylee Hunt of Member Sation K. U.T. has more. Camp Mystic plans to welcome over 800 campers back this summer, but it will not be able to use cabins or other structures damaged during last July's flooding.
Judge Maya Gaeda Gamble says these sites need to be preserved, so attorneys for more than a dozen families suing the camp can collect evidence. Here's Brad Beckworth, an attorney for the parents of Missine 8-year-old camper Seals Steward. "We don't know what we don't have, but we know a lot of things were destroyed, may not
work, may never be found.
“That makes the duty to preserve what does exist, even more important."”
The Steward's and other families accuse camp mystic of negligent behavior during and leading up to the flood, which the camp denies. That's Kaylee Hunt reporting from Austin. It's NPR. One of here this podcast without sponsor bricks, Amazon Prime members can listen to NPR news
now. Sponsor free through Amazon Music, or you can also support NPR's vital journalism and get [email protected], that's plus.npr.org.


