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NPR News: 05-21-2026 10PM EDT

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EN

Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Ryland Barton.

President Trump is again threatening a U.S. military intervention in Cuba.

He said past presidents have considered intervening in Cuba for decades, but that quote,

"It looks like I'll be the one that does it." Yesterday, the Trump administration announced criminal charges against former Cuban president Raul Castro and many believe Trump is following the same playbook as when he ousted Venezuela and leader of Nicolas Maduro, as NPR's Ryan Lucas reports. The Trump administration also has ramped up pressure on the island squeezed it economically

and now we have the Castro indictment, which some people certainly see as a prelude to potential military action. Cuba's president, in fact, yesterday accused the U.S. of trying to create a pretext to attack the country. Now, potentially U.S. military action could target just Castro or it could target Cuba more

generally, but either way, experts say it's unclear that the Cuban government would respond the same way that Venezuela's did in Piers' Ryan Lucas reporting. Federal law enforcement officials announced charges today against 15 people in Minnesota

for allegedly stealing more than $90 million of federal funds, Minnesota Public Radio's

Kyra Miles reports.

Charges included submitting bills for healthcare services never rendered and defrauding child care

assistance programs and autism service centers. Federal officials say this is the largest autism fraud scheme ever charged by the Department of Justice. While in McDonald's who leads the DOJ's National Fraud Enforcement Division says this is the beginning of a renewed effort to eradicate fraud across the country.

Our cases today involve seven different state-managed Medicaid programs that have been systematically pilfered by fraudsters who treated Minnesota run programs as their personal piggy bank. The DOJ also announced a new expansion of the health care fraud Midwest strike force in Minnesota. They're hiring 15 more prosecutors. For NPR News, I'm Keremiles and St. Paul.

Government weather forecasters expect eight to 14 named storms will form in the Atlantic this hurricane season, and Piers were back a HRSA report so that's a slightly smaller number than average. The main reason for the relatively small number of storms is El Niño, the cyclic weather pattern that makes it harder for hurricanes to form in the Atlantic.

But that doesn't mean people in hurricane prone parts of the U.S. can rest easy, says Neal Jacobs, who leads the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

Even though we're expecting a below average season in the Atlantic, it's very important

to understand that it only takes one. We have had category five make landfall in the past during below average seasons. And he says it's not just people on the coast who are at risk. Hurricanes and tropical storms have caused deadly flooding thousands of miles inland. Rebecca Hershire and Pier News.

The Atlantic hurricane season is June 1 through November 30th. You're listening to NPR News from Washington. Some lucky New York City residents will get a chance to snag cheap seats this summer. This summer's high-priced world cup mayors Iran, Maldani announced that 1,000 tickets costing $50 will be made available to residents of the city.

It'll be available for all games, played at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey, except for the final. Aid groups are ramping up their response to the Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo, but they face many challenges from supply shortages to funding cuts and Piers fought maintenance reports.

The virus is spreading in the northeast province of Iturri.

It's a rural area with densely populated towns of over 4 million people.

Many of them are displaced because of the ongoing conflict there. Attacks on clinics and health workers have left the overall infrastructure weak. Aid groups say is a challenging environment to mount a response most areas don't have roads. There are also needs for medical supplies for testing, in sanitizing, and treating patients. But with borders shut and funding shortages, it's difficult to get large shipments in.

A global medical supply shortage further complicates things due to the constraints on shipping routes from the Iran war. Fatmitanis and PR news. A calendar featuring close-ups of handsome priests has been a popular Rome souvenir for two decades, but many of those photographs aren't actually priests.

A now 39-year-old flight attendant has been the cover model for most of the last 23 additions.

Rome's LaRepublica called it a fake priest calendar, the photographer says at least one third

of the 2027 calendar subjects are real priests. This is NPR News from Washington. New shows, new music, new movies, keeping up with pop culture sometimes feels like a full-time job. Thankfully, over at pop culture happy-hour, it's literally our job.

We break down what's actually worth watching, listening to, and pretending you already knew about. Next time someone says, "Did you see that?" you can say, "Yeah, obviously." Follow NPR's pop culture happy-hour wherever you get your podcasts.

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