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July 19 1200 UTC Brief

In the Middle East

The conflict with Iran is widening. The U.S. military says two more service members have been killed, taking the American death toll to 16, and Washington has launched another round of airstrikes in response. The fighting has been mostly in the air, but the human cost is mounting fast.

Inside Iran, the pressure is not just military. Blackouts are spreading as the power grid strains under strikes, years of underinvestment, and a punishing heatwave. That leaves people dealing with war, heat, and no electricity, which is a pretty brutal combination by any standard.

In Britain

Thousands of homes and businesses in Kent are still dealing with low pressure or no water for a second day after an instrument failure at a nearby treatment works. South East Water says around 7,000 properties in the Tunbridge Wells area may be affected.

Separately, Rolls-Royce is asking for UK government backing as it looks toward re-entering the large narrowbody jet market. The company is still working through engine cleaning and repair at its Derby factory, while also trying to position itself for the next big commercial aircraft fight.

In business and energy

Germany is weighing whether to let shops open every day of the week in an effort to support retailers and a sluggish economy. Growth has been flat since 2019, manufacturers have been squeezed by tariffs and Chinese competition, and Sunday shopping still runs into the usual cultural resistance, which in Germany is not exactly a minor detail.

New battery technologies are also being tested as a way to store renewable energy for longer. Projects in Nevada, Manchester, and the UAE are pushing ahead, including a large solar and storage scheme in the Emirates designed to keep power flowing after dark.

In the Americas

Authorities in Guyana are continuing rescue efforts after a ferry carrying 116 people capsized. More than 50 people have been rescued so far, with passengers and crew still being accounted for.

In U.S. courts

Lindsay Clancy’s murder trial is getting under way in Plymouth Superior Court, with her husband expected to testify for her. Clancy, a former nurse, is accused in the 2023 deaths of their three young children, and her defense says medical providers misdiagnosed and overmedicated her before the killings.

In brief

New polling suggests most American voters now link extreme weather to climate change, despite Donald Trump’s repeated dismissal of global warming. And in international security, the Trump administration’s expanded use of the “narco-terrorist” label is blurring the line between drug enforcement and military action, with the promised tough-on-drugs posture proving more ambitious than decisive so far.

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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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