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NPR News: 07-11-2026 1PM EDT

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"Live from NPR news in Washington, I'm Dan Roman.

There could be additional peace talks between the U.S. and Iran despite the Iranian

health ministries claim that American air strikes this week killed 17 people and injured

more than 100 others, as Willamarks reports the status of the state of Hormoods will remain central to any potential negotiations." Iran's Foreign Minister arrived in the Omanic App to the Muscat on Saturday with the possibility of further talks involving U.S. officials not yet publicly confirmed by either side.

The Iranian state backed far's news agencies said Iran will not enter into talks with American negotiators until the United States reverses its positions, as foreign minister Abbas Iraqi criticised the Trump administration for failing to uphold its side of a previous agreement. Earlier this week, Iranian forces fired on several commercial tankers in the state of Hormoods, precipitating retaliatory U.S. air strikes across Iran.

On truth-social Friday, President Trump promised to decimate and destroy all areas of Iran

should there attempt to follow through on reported threats to assassinate him. For NPR news, on Willamarks. In California, the number of evacuation orders is increasing as firefighters battled the summit fire, which is damaged at least 2,600 acres of land. Several fires are burning north in east of Los Angeles.

But horse-mire lives in Pinyan Hills, he says he's optimistic things will be okay. They've just kind of got out of hand, but they'll get it out of that. These guys are the best. Cruiser using helicopters and fixed wing aircraft to attack the fires from above. The U.S. Justice Department has subpoenaed at least four journalists from the New York Times

over the paper's recent reporting about potential security concerns involving Air Force

One and aircraft donated by the Cotauri government.

The Times had reported that President Trump left Turkey this week on the old Air Force

One after the U.S. Secret Service intervened.

NPR's David Folk and Frick reports the subpoena's height in the ongoing clashes between the White House and the media. The Times says an FBI official initially asked the paper to hold off on publishing and then asked for its sources. The Times refused.

On Friday after publication, federal agents went to the homes of several of the journalists involved to deliver the subpoenas, the Justice Department and the FBI did not return requests for comment. David McCraw, a senior lawyer for the New York Times, called it a "brazen attempt to intimidate reporters and the Times" and to prevent the public from knowing how the government operates.

The journalists have been instructed to appear before a grand jury next week. David Folk and Frick and PR News. Apple is suing its artificial intelligence rival, Open AI, accusing the company of stealing its trade secrets as it seeks additional hardware for its chatGPT program.

Apple called Open AI's actions part of a coordinated pattern of misconduct at an institutional

level. You're listening to NPR News. Government health workers responding to the Ebola outbreak in eastern Congo say they have not been paid and summer walking off the job and protest more than 600 people have died so far during the outbreak according to the country's health ministry.

NPR's Dury Biscurron has more. The hardest hit area in this outbreak is BUNIA in theatory province. On S4BENGENZA is the Ebola response team leader for Mercy Corp. He says the strike is concentrated among government employees, working in disease surveillance and people who handle bodies for burial.

But most are still working, while they negotiate with Congo's government. Those are people who are in France, in France. If they can't make a deal, Benganza says the outbreak could spread out of control. He fears more people would lose their lives as a result. The World Health Organization says 4 out of 5 new Ebola cases in the DRC have no known link

to an existing patient, a sign that the true scale of the outbreak is already larger than the official number suggest, Dury Biscurron and Pair News, Washington. In Maine, Graham Platner is now officially out of the U.S. Senate race. He submitted his paperwork Friday ending his candidacy. Democrats now have a little more than two weeks to select a replacement to challenge

the incumbent Republican Senator Susan Collins. The family of former NFL defensive end, Marsha Nielin says the 24-year-old Nielin had early-stage CTE at the time of his death. The Dallas Cowboys Player committed suicide last November this after a high-speed police chase in the Dallas suburbs.

From Washington, this is NPR. This week on Wayway.com, we talked to legendary musician Jason Nerducey about being in a punk band when he was just 11 years old. We broke up when I was 12. And yeah, I just felt like I needed to go through puberty without Banderon.

Don't miss our full conversation and the rest of our game. Listen to the wait wait don't tell me podcasts in the NPR app or wherever.

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