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Latest Episode

June 11 1600 UTC Brief

In Europe

EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas is defending the bloc’s diplomatic service as capitals, led by Paris, talk up a possible overhaul of the EEAS. The proposals range from trimming the High Representative’s powers to expanding them, which is a neat way for governments to describe a fight over who gets to run the shop.

Britain’s Hinkley Point C nuclear project could slip by as much as five years in a dispute over fish protections in the Severn Estuary, while Portugal has triggered the EU’s budget safeguard clause to help cover energy-related costs from the crisis. Different problems, same continent, and both involve the familiar European habit of discovering that major plans are harder once they meet the real world.

In the Middle East

Israel has expanded ground operations in southern Lebanon even as ceasefire talks remain stalled. The fighting continues while diplomats keep pushing for a halt, slowly and under fire.

India says three of its mariners were killed when U.S. forces struck the Palau-flagged tanker MT Settebello after Washington said the ship had violated its blockade on the Strait of Hormuz. New Delhi called it a tragic incident.

In business and tech

Reuters says the Trump family has added at least $2.3 billion to its fortune through crypto ventures, while risking relatively little of its own money and leaving investors with the losses. The modern financial innovation here is mostly the transfer of enthusiasm from one balance sheet to another.

SpaceX is preparing for what could be the biggest stock market debut ever, with a reported valuation of $1.78 trillion and at least $75 billion in shares on offer. Analysts are already warning that the price may have outrun the underlying business, which is never a thrilling sign, even in markets.

In U.S. politics and policy

A top election forecaster has shifted three Senate races toward Democrats, moving Alaska to toss-up and North Carolina to lean Democratic, as the party tries to improve its map for November. It is a modest change, but in a tight Senate year, modest changes matter.

An ACLU lawsuit says Florida police wrongly arrested Robert Dillon for attempted child abduction after a facial recognition match from grainy surveillance images. Prosecutors later dropped the charge once his attorney produced work records showing he was elsewhere, and the suit seeks damages and tighter limits on police use of facial recognition.

Weather and science

The Climate Prediction Center says El Niño has officially begun, and this one could rank among the strongest on record. It may affect weather across every state, with the full impacts still building.

Other news

Three people were killed when a car hit a school cycling group near Vogelwaarde in the Netherlands, close to the Belgian border. Authorities have not yet released the children’s ages.

Philadelphia has opened the largest World Cup fan festival site among the host cities, with a setup in Fairmount Park for fans to watch and celebrate the tournament.

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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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