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Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Korva Coleman. President Trump claims Iran has informed the White House that Iran is in a state of collapse. Writing online last hour, Trump says that Iran wants the US to open the Strait of Hormuz while Iran tries to figure out its leadership situation. Trump says he believes Iran can do this. He offered no evidence to support his claim. Trump's comments come as he and his security team reviewed an Iranian plan to end the war. It calls for the Strait of Hormuz to open and for the US to drop its naval blockade. But the plan puts talks on nuclear negotiations on hold for later. The United Arab Emirates says it is planning to leave the world oil cartel OPEC by next month. And the UAE says it will gradually boost oil production. NPR Scott Horsley reports. The move comes as crude oil prices are just under $100 a barrel.
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The UAE's desire to increase oil production has been a source of friction within opec. The cartel often limits how much its members can pump in an effort to maintain a floor under crude oil prices. Those prices have spiked as a result of the US War with Iran, which has stalled tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz. AAA says the average price of regular gasoline now tops $4.17 a gallon. That's up 15 cents in the last week and more than a dollar higher than this time last year. Rising gas prices are tough on consumers, but good for energy companies. BP says its first quarter profits were more than double what it earned in the same period last year. Scott Horsley, NPR News, Washington.
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This is the second day of Britain's King Charles state visit to the US to honor the country's 250th birthday. The King will address a joint meeting of Congress this afternoon. He and Queen Camilla met President Trump and first Lady Melania Trump at the White House yesterday. Trump will hold a state dinner for them tonight. Hundreds of employees at Google say they are concerned about how the Pentagon might use its powerful artificial intelligence systems. NPR's Bobby Allen reports. They've sent a letter to the company's chief executive.
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More than 600 Google employees wrote to CEO Sundar Pichai that, quote, we want to see AI benefit humanity, not see it being used in inhumane or extremely harmful ways. The demand comes as Pentagon leaders have pressed tech companies to harness AI for all lawful uses, a category Google work fear will mean its tools will be deployed for autonomous weapons and mass surveillance. Anthropic, the maker of Claude, has been locked in a legal standoff with the Trump administration over the company's refusal to give defense officials access to its technology without guardrails. The Google letter urges the company to reject any contracts that involve classified work, which the employees say could violate human rights. Google and the Pentagon did not return requests for comment. Bobby Allen, NPR News.
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Google is a financial supporter of npr. You're listening to NPR News from Washington. Federal prosecutors have charged a California man with the attempted assassination of President Trump last weekend at the White House Correspondents Dinner. Cole Allen also faces two firearms counts. Prosecutors allege Allen traveled across country by train with two guns and knives. Allen's next court appearance is set for Thursday. It appears the Department of Education may leave money unspent that is normally set aside for research into special education. NPR's Janaki Mehta reports. Tens of millions of dollars are typically spent on such research.
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The Education department has until September 30 to spend $77 million on special education research and evaluation programs. An advocacy group called Knowledge alliance analyzed department data and found that about 84% of that money is staged, still unspent by this point in the year. There would normally be federal notices or plans to launch grant competitions to use the money, but none exist. The Knowledge alliance and other advocacy groups have expressed concern that if the money expires, important research about students with disabilities could be lost. Yet a spokesperson told NPR the ED Department is committed to using the funds on high quality research on issues affecting students with or at risk of a disability. Janaki Mehta, NPR News.
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The ITTF World team table tennis finals are getting started today in London. As noted by the International Olympic Committee, China has dominated world table tennis events for years and is looking to hold its titles. This is npr.
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This five-minute newscast delivers rapid updates on global and national headlines, including developments in US-Iran relations, oil markets and OPEC, the British monarchy’s US visit, concerns over AI in tech, an attempted presidential assassination, issues in special education funding, and the world table tennis finals.
Trump’s Iran Statement:
“President Trump claims Iran has informed the White House that Iran is in a state of collapse... Trump says he believes Iran can do this. He offered no evidence to support his claim.”
— Korva Coleman, 00:00
UAE & OPEC:
“The UAE’s desire to increase oil production has been a source of friction within OPEC.”
— Scott Horsley, 00:57
Google Employee Letter:
“We want to see AI benefit humanity, not see it being used in inhumane or extremely harmful ways.”
— Excerpt from employee letter, Bobby Allen reporting, 02:10
Special Education Research Funding Lapse:
“About 84% of that money is still unspent by this point in the year… if the money expires, important research about students with disabilities could be lost.”
— Janaki Mehta, 03:43
| Time | Segment Description | |---------|-----------------------------------------------------------| | 00:00 | US-Iran crisis; Trump’s new claims, diplomacy context | | 00:57 | UAE to leave OPEC; global oil market ramifications | | 01:37 | King Charles’ state visit to the US details | | 02:10 | Google employee protest over AI and military use | | 02:51 | Attempted assassination charges against Cole Allen | | 03:36 | Unspent special education research funds concern | | 04:24 | ITTF World Team Table Tennis Finals in London |
Maintains the concise, factual, and measured tone characteristic of NPR newscasts, providing balanced, precise reporting with relevant context and multiple perspectives where available.
For listeners seeking quick, trustworthy news coverage, this segment offers essential updates on major developments across politics, world affairs, tech, education, and sports.