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June 26 2000 UTC Brief

In Washington and the courts

Congress once again discovered that its war powers are mostly advisory. The Senate briefly backed a resolution to pull U.S. forces out of hostilities with Iran, then lost the next vote, a neat demonstration of how the 1973 War Powers Resolution has aged into something close to constitutional wallpaper. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, after months of keeping lawmakers at arm’s length, is now back on Capitol Hill courting Republican support for Trump’s spending plan.

Texas education officials also approved a statewide reading list that will require Bible passages for more than 5 million public school students, a move critics say pushes church and state into the same classroom chair. And a federal appeals roundup covered everything from monopolies and policing to online therapy, including a ruling striking down a D.C. rule that had blocked out-of-state therapists from counseling local clients.

In defense and national security

The Space Force has given Orbital Composites a $1.9 million contract to develop AI-driven manufacturing for heat-resistant parts used in rockets, hypersonic vehicles, missile defense systems, and nuclear reactors. The pitch is faster production and fewer supply bottlenecks, which in defense procurement counts as almost revolutionary.

Separately, a case involving a U.S. serviceman accused of strangling a British woman has resurfaced the question of how much jurisdiction U.S. troops actually face abroad. Under the NATO status agreement, some cases can be handled by American military authorities instead of UK courts, which is convenient if you like your justice with a passport.

In the Middle East

A drone strike on a cargo ship off Oman has renewed pressure on the fragile U.S.-Iran ceasefire. President Trump blamed Iran and warned against what he called a foolish attack, putting another hard test in front of a truce that was already looking thin.

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This podcast is a fully automated experiment in AI-generated content. Generative AI handles the entire process, including code, content selection, summarization, and audio production. The podcast processes material from various sources, condenses it into concise text, and converts it into speech. No human intervention is involved in the production process.

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