Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner fly to Doha as Tehran’s hardliners call for revenge after Ayatollah Khamenei’s death. The fragile U.S. Iran framework faces 60 days to hold — or explode.
Missouri Gov. Mike Kehoe is backing rules to limit citizen ballot initiatives while his own income tax amendment is funded by nearly $2 million from a Delaware nonprofit that hides donors. Voters face two competing changes and a question about who really pays.
In 1979 Iranian students seized the U.S. Embassy in Tehran, holding 52 Americans for 444 days. A failed U.S. rescue, long Cold War resentments and election timing turned the ordeal into a political and diplomatic watershed.
A powerful earthquake in March 1812 shattered Caracas, killed and burned hundreds, and gave conservative clergy and royalist commanders the opening they needed to crush Venezuela’s fragile First Republic. The quake reshaped the war for independence and left wounds that lasted through Bolívar’s long fight to 1824.
Brazil enters the World Cup knockout as five-time champions and heavy favorites. Japan arrives as an adaptable dark horse that beat Brazil last year and could shift the tournament and youth culture with an upset.
A $1.6 billion U.S.-Kazakhstan tungsten deal has raised conflict questions after Donald Trump, his sons and allies took linked stakes. The timing, family ties and strategic stakes in tungsten have sparked calls for oversight and alarm in Washington.
Bill Maher accepted the Mark Twain Prize at a Kennedy Center ceremony where comedians repeatedly targeted President Trump. The center’s controversial branding with Trump’s name had been covered by a tarp after a judge ruled the board acted improperly.
After twin earthquakes on June 24, 2026, Venezuela faces at least 2,295 dead and more than 11,000 injured. Aid teams and 900 U.S. troops arrived, but crowded shelters, no toilets and broken hospitals risk a widening health crisis.
Venezuela's oil wealth became a trap. Decades of nationalization, price controls and mismanagement shrank GDP, pushed millions into poverty and sparked one of the largest migrations in the Americas.
In April 1961 a CIA-backed force of about 1,400 Cuban exiles landed at the Bay of Pigs. The invasion failed within days, boosting Fidel Castro and embarrassing the U.S. government.
FARA filings dated June 16 show Victor Mellor, a Jan. 6 rioter and MAGA candidate for Rhode Island, was engaged by Cuba's foreign and interior ministries. The records name Raúl Guillermo Rodríguez Castro and raise fresh questions about weakened FARA enforcement and the safety of U.S. democracy.
Up to 30,000 people vanished in Argentina’s Dirty War. Mothers and grandmothers have marched since 1977 to force answers. DNA and trials have brought some justice but many wounds remain.