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June 30 1200 UTC Brief

In U.S. security

An investigation says several federal websites rebuilt under the Trump administration’s National Design Studio included visitor-tracking tools that privacy advocates say may not have met federal transparency rules. It is, once again, a reminder that government likes to collect data and then act surprised when people notice.

Separately, the Trump administration is demanding that U.S. intelligence officials turn over the names of all foreign espionage targets, including suspected spies and possible recruits, to create a master list. Current and former officials worry that kind of inventory could be misused and could expose active operations. In Texas, ICE briefly detained Catholic nun Sister Leticia Ugboaja on her way to Mass in McAllen, then released her quickly, prompting new criticism of the agency’s tactics.

On Iran

Talks between U.S. and Iranian negotiators may resume in Doha, but the two sides are not describing the meeting the same way. Trump has said Iran wants to meet after the recent attacks, while Tehran says it is only sending a delegation to discuss frozen funds, not broader negotiations. Iranian hard-liners are still resisting major concessions, which leaves the whole thing in its familiar state of fragile, tense, and only partly real.

In Ukraine and Russia

Russian military bloggers say troops sent into some of the most dangerous parts of the front line are surviving for only 20 to 35 minutes after reaching combat positions, as Ukrainian drones hit quickly. The reports underline how punishing those sectors of the war have become for Russian forces.

Meanwhile, Vladimir Putin has acknowledged there was no prior deal with Trump in Alaska, after Russian officials spent months claiming the Anchorage meeting had set a path to end the war on Moscow’s terms. That story has now collapsed, much like the rest of the fantasy.

In Europe

Authorities in Monaco say Ukrainian businessman Vadym Yermolaiev was likely the target of a mail bomb that exploded at his home. Yermolaiev, his wife, and his son were all injured in the blast.

In business

A battery industry executive says building gigafactories in the UK can take three to four times longer and cost far more than in China, citing high energy prices, slow grid connections, and weak project integration. Agratas says it is building its India plant first, then applying those lessons to its Somerset site.

In aviation, Scandinavian Airlines has placed its biggest-ever order, agreeing to buy up to 40 Airbus widebody jets in a deal worth more than $10 billion. It is a sizable vote of confidence from a carrier that came out of bankruptcy two years ago.

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