[MUSIC]
The United States launched new strikes on Iran. This, as the U.S. has also tried to negotiate and enter the war. We hear from Israel where the Prime Minister insists that his military campaign in Lebanon will continue.
I'm Steve Inskeep with Leyla Fadl, and this is up first from NPR News.
[MUSIC] Ukraine keeps hitting Russia's oil infrastructure. Russia responded over the weekend with heavy attacks on Keep. Ukraine says it needs more air defense systems, which are in short supply because of the war with Iran. And voters in Texas choose their Republican candidate for Senate today, incumbent Senator John Cornin says
if President Trump's candidate can Pakistan wins, it could benefit Democrats and the midterms. This would be the first chance they've had in 30 or 40 years to pick up a statewide office.
“Stay with us, we'll give you the news you need to start your day.”
[MUSIC] The Trump administration is back tracking on federal efforts to fight climate change. So city and state governments are stepping in. We think we are standing what can be the future of energy and Denver. On the Sunday Story, climate solutions on the local level.
Listen now on the up first podcast on the NPR app.
[MUSIC] The United States launched new attacks on Iran in the midst of a ceasefire. The U.S. Central Command says it targeted missile launch sites and boats trying to lay minds. The U.S. describes this strike as self defense while the U.S. tries to negotiate and end to the war with Iran.
President Trump raised expectations for peace with the claim over the weekend that an agreement was largely negotiated. Trump and other officials have since said they need more negotiation. Israeli officials have insisted they will continue attacking in one of the fronts of the war in Lebanon, where there is also supposed to be a ceasefire.
And here's Daniel Estrin is following all of this from Tel Aviv and joins me now. Good morning, Daniel. Good morning, Leila.
“So what were these U.S. attacks on Iran trying to achieve?”
U.S. Central Command says it attacked targets including Iranian boats trying to place minds. And Iran named at least four Navy officers killed. Iranian State TV also reported big explosions around the city on the straight of Hormuz. We know that Iran laid minds in the straight of Hormuz during the war, blocking oil and gas chips from passing through.
And that's the main issue in these talks to reopen the straight of Hormuz. That's where fifth of the world's oil and gas exports passed through before the war. So these new U.S. attacks may be an attempt to pressure Iran on that. Iran says it shot down a U.S. drone overnight. So we don't know how all of this will impact the talks.
But we do know that trust between the U.S. and Iran is very low. Yeah, where do the negotiations stand right now? The deal is being negotiated in Qatar. Iran's semi-efficient state media says that this would be a deal to reopen the straight of Hormuz within one month.
And then within two months to try to reach an agreement on Iran's nuclear program. One main sticking point here is about U.S. sanctions. Iran wants a deal to unfreeze Iranian money that's being held abroad. And also President Trump says Iran's enriched uranium should be destroyed. In Israel, Israeli officials think this is a bad deal.
They say it would reopen the straight of Hormuz, but it would not guarantee any progress on preventing Iran from creating a nuclear weapon. I want you to hear what the Israeli opposition leader Yerla Pied said on Monday to reporters. The deal is bad for Israel, bad for the region.
This deal means two things first that this will not be the last round of four.
Second, that Netanyahu has failed to achieve every single one of the wars objectives as he himself defined them. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had said the war would eliminate the Iranian threat against Israel, but Iran still has missiles. It still has proxy militias like Hezbollah and Lebanon.
And many people in Israel say they think it's just a matter of time before there's another round of war with Iran. You mentioned Lebanon. Iran wants that to be part of any deal. What is the latest there?
Yeah, there's a ceasefire there, but fire has not ceased. It actually has increased. Netanyahu said yesterday Israel would increase its attacks against Hezbollah because Hezbollah has been firing attack drones that have killed several Israeli soldiers in recent days and weeks.
And so Israel last night attacks scores of targets throughout Lebanon. Lebanese state TV says one strike killed at least 12 people. Israel is expected to increase its strikes despite this declared ceasefire and the U.S. is fully backing Israel.
“So the question is, will the U.S. were strained Israel?”
So it doesn't spark a new war and jeopardize the Iran deal.
Pierre's Daniel Ostrin and Tel Aviv, thank you, Daniel.
You're welcome.
“Russia is warning that it will continue mass strikes on Ukraine after we get to tax hit”
every district of the Ukrainian capital.
The renewed Russian targeting of Kiev is seen as a response to Ukrainian strikes. Ukraine has been striking deep into Russia. These are the attacks hit Russian military targets and also Russian oil facilities. Joining us now is NPR's Joanna Kakasis who is in Kiev. Hi, Joanna.
Hey, Leyla. So the strikes this weekend targeted all over the capital where you live. How bad is the damage? Well, Leyla the strikes sounded really bad even while they were happening. We heard hours of very, very loud explosions like these.
And you know, by dawn, the air smelt burned and fires were all over the city. Ukraine's emergency services, at least four people were killed and dozens wounded. One of Kiev's oldest markets was incinerated in a subway station where people actually seek shelter from these attacks was hit and damaged. And did Moscow use more weapons in these strikes?
Well, this was one of the biggest attacks of the war. Ukraine's military says Russia launched 600 drones and 90 missiles. Ukraine has developed weapons to shoot down drones, but ballistic missiles remain a challenge. Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky said Ukraine needs air defense systems to target these missiles, like the US made Patriot.
And this is now in short supply due to the US's role war on Iran. Here's Zelensky. So he's saying Ukraine is looking for options, like accelerating the production of advanced air defense systems in Europe.
And so this weekend, Russia launched a very powerful hypersonic missile called the
"Ereshnik." OK, so would a more advanced air defense system be able to shoot this missile down, the one you just mentioned? Well, in 2024, Russian President Vladimir Putin said the "Ereshnik" can bypass any air defense. And that the missile is, quote, "as fast as a meteorite."
A Russia has launched the "Ereshnik 3" times at Ukraine this weekend. It hit a city about 50 miles south of Kiev. The missile has not caused the level of damage that many feared it would. However, the idea of the "Ereshnik" does scare Ukraine's Western partners, because Putin says it can carry a nuclear warhead.
“Why Joanna is Russia escalating its attacks right now?”
Well, Putin says Russia is retaliating for a drone strike. The Russians say killed more than 20 people, many of them teenagers at a college in Russian occupied Eastern Ukraine. Ukraine denies targeting the school and says it hit a Russian elite drone unit nearby. But the Kremlin is also really agitated by Ukraine's use of long-range drones to target
the lifeblood of the Russian economy, which is oil. Ukraine has struck Russian oil refineries and deep-os as well as ports. Are these long-range drone strikes turning things around for Ukraine? Well, it certainly seems that way. Zelensky said that the strikes have reduced Russia's oil refining capacity by 10%.
And the Institute for the Study of War in Washington, D.C., says that these strikes have slowed Russian battlefield gains to almost zero. We recently joined a Ukrainian military team as they launched these long-range drones. And at the request of Ukraine's military, which side security reasons we are identifying soldiers using their military call signs.
A soldier called Yuki watched the drone fly into the night sky. And he said these are Ukraine's versions of sanctions on Russia are a way of forcing the Kremlin into a peace that is fair to Ukraine. That's it, Piers Joanna Kakisas, thank you Joanna, you're welcome. Texas Republicans are voting today in the most expensive Senate primary in history.
Wait a minute, the most expensive anywhere ever? Yep. More than $100 million. Okay. Everything is bigger in Texas.
State Attorney General Ken Paxton, Drew President Trump's endorsement for the U.S. Senate nomination, Senator John Kornin is in danger of losing that nomination, which would be for his fifth term. He says his defeat would help Democrats.
If a Paxton were the nominee, this would be the first chance they've had in 30 or 40
years or longer to pick up a statewide office. NPR congressional correspondent Claudia Gersales traveled to Texas, and she joins me now. Good morning, Claudia. Good morning, Leila. So Texas has long been a reliable and influential state for Republicans.
“How did this Senate primary become such a high-stakes race?”
Well, this race exposed a crack in the red wall of Texas.
It hit the party's populist movement against its establishment wing.
Senator John Kornin, a fixture of the establishment, was already facing a tough reelection fight.
“Now, with President Trump's endorsement of controversial, maga loyalist, Ken Paxton, the”
Kornin campaign is on life support. Here's Paxton at a rally in the Houston suburb of Katie, Texas, the day after that endorsement. We could overwhelmingly send a message. We're not doing this anymore. We're going to change this country and we're going to go help Donald Trump get it done.
How's this playing with Paxton supporters? Well, they see Paxton as a fighter like Trump. So voters were really energized at this rally. That includes Cardo Vidalre, who explained his dislike for Kornin in Spanish. Vidalre says there that voting for Kornin is like voting for a Democrat.
Paxton supporters say Kornin should not have worked on by partisan gun legislation, for example.
“What is this race tell us about the Republican Party writ large?”
Well, I put that question to Brandon, Rodding House, a political science professor at the University of Houston. He says this is part of a bigger national struggle. The Republican Party is polling itself, apart ideologically, this has been a long time coming. The maga movement grew the party more than a decade ago.
Now, the question is, is the party's tent shrinking over Trump administration policies and its falling poll numbers? Do you also attend several Kornin events? What did you hear from supporters there? Well, many feel betrayed by Trump's endorsement and they worry.
The maga wing is cannibalizing the party's establishment wing.
“I talked to supporter Vicky Fullerton at a Kornin event in Houston, and she said a Paxton”
nomination could cost the party dearly. We're going to have to pour so much more money in to protect the seat and to have a less viable candidate. Now, Democrats are laying low during this race. Why is that in what's at stake for them?
Well, I talked to Democratic strategist Chuck Rocha about this.
He noted that Republicans spending more than $100 million at attacking each other has put
them on center stage. One thing you don't do in politics is if your enemy is being a whole, you don't run over and take the shovel out of their hand. So he said Democrats avoided a runoff with their party Senate nominee, James Tolerico, and that means the primaries gave them a playbook for the general election.
In addition, the electorate is angry over rising prices, and Latino voters are coming back to Democrats. He and others argue when in Texas could help Democrats win the Senate in November. That's NPR's Claudia Griselys. Thank you, Claudia.
Thank you.
And that's up first for Tuesday, May 26th.
I'm Leila Faldin. And I'm Steve Inskeve. Today's up first was edited by Miguel Miceus, Tina Crya, and a Yucananoff, Muhammad Albert D.C. and John Stolenes. It was produced by Ziyad Buch and Nia Dumas. Our director is Christopher Thomas, who is trying to be patient with me today, and we
get engineering support from Zo van Genhoven. Our technical director is Carly Strange, even more patient than Christopher. Our supervising senior producer is Vince Pearson, join us tomorrow. NPR's newest podcast is where you can find NPR's biggest interviews. I'm Steve Inskeve.
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