Category: Wires

  • Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce marry in front of famous friends at Madison Square Garden

    Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce marry in front of famous friends at Madison Square Garden

    NEW YORK — Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce married Friday night at Madison Square Garden, where actor Adam Sandler was the surprising officiant at the ceremony and Stevie Nicks performed among a crowd packed with stars of sports and entertainment. The deep secrecy that surrounded the buildup to the nuptials lifted when a marquee outside the Midtown Manhattan arena proclaimed “JUST&T MARRIED” once the deed was done.

    The couple did not have bridesmaids or groomsmen, instead having Swift’s younger brother Austin Swift serve as her man of honor with Kelce’s big brother and podcast co-host Jason Kelce his best man, Swift’s publicist Tree Paine said in an email.

    The bride and groom’s outfits came from Christian Dior Haute Couture and its designer Jonathan Anderson, with shoes custom-made by Christian Louboutin. She wore Cartier jewelry.

    An almost-royal wedding

    The long anticipated union of sports and song brought hype to new heights at a venue made more for historic NBA games and bucket-list concerts. The Kansas City Chiefs’ superstar tight end and the music megastar married as fans and spectators gathered outside in blistering heat, eager to be part of the occasion, even though the event was almost entirely hidden.

    Actors Bradley Cooper, Zoë Kravitz, Hugh Grant and Ethan Hawke; models Gigi Hadid and Karlie Kloss; comic Chris Rock; director Steven Spielberg; singer Camila Cabello; and author Jenny Han were among the guests from the world of arts and entertainment. Kelce’s coach Andy Reid and Chiefs teammates including running back Kareem Hunt were among the sports figures in the arena, along with retired NFL superstar Tom Brady, Seattle Seahawks receiver and recent Super Bowl champ Cooper Kupp, New York Giants receiver JuJu Smith-Schuster, and ESPN personalities Joe Buck and Stephen A. Smith.

    In a culture obsessed with famous couplings it may have been the apex celebrity wedding, with perhaps only royal unions getting more attention. Holding such a ceremony in a huge, iconic space that sits at the center of the U.S. media universe while keeping all the details secret made for a surreal scene, but it was a mix of hype and hush that is not out of character for Swift.

    A shrouded ceremony headed by Happy Gilmore

    An Associated Press camera outside the arena showed a long line of black SUVs dropping off wedding-goers in tuxedos and evening gowns, surrounded by New Yorkers in shorts and Swifties amassing for the occasion. Rain briefly cut the heat shortly after the marriage was announced.

    There was a seemingly total lack of social media posts from guests once they had entered the arena, with phones apparently banned.

    However, on Saturday, hosts of Good Morning America who had been invited to the wedding confirmed that Nicks performed and described the space as “intimate.”

    “As intimate as it could possibly be given it was Madison Square Garden. Really this garden inside the garden, just so beautiful,” said George Stephanopoulos. “It’s hard to imagine a place that big and a wedding with such stars could feel so personal and so intimate.”

    Robin Roberts added that both Swift and Kelce wrote their own vows.

    Weddings have been a constant subject in Swift’s songs since she was a teenager, and her actually walking the aisle for the first time at age 36 added to the drama. It was also the first marriage for the 36-year-old three-time Super Bowl champ Kelce, who could have been one of the jock characters in Swift’s early hits.

    Sandler, star of The Wedding Singer and many other hit comedies, can’t have been high on anyone’s betting list for who would marry the couple, though he’s become an increasingly warm and paternal cultural figure with age. The email announcing the marriage described him as “a friend” of the couple. Kelce was one of the many athletes who appeared in Happy Gilmore 2, Sandler’s 2025 sequel to one of his first hits, and Sandler appeared last year on the Kelce brothers’ New Heights podcast.

    Welcome to New York — Taylor’s version

    The Swift-Kelce relationship has thrilled and fascinated millions around the world — particularly the Swifties, the pop star’s enormous and ardent fan base — ever since the pair first started dating in 2023 after he showed up at her Eras Tour concert at the Chiefs stadium.

    Happy fans mixed with frazzled tourists outside the arena.

    Lori Powers, who lives an hour north of Manhattan and rode the train in to be near the nuptials, said Swift’s “music is the soundtrack behind so many amazing moments in my life. Relationships, friends, like my husband and my kids.”

    She stood outside the arena before the marriage was announced with her friend Cecily Hall.

    “Just being here and witnessing all the energy and the excitement, it’s so much fun,” Hall said. “The combination of sports and music makes perfect sense as to why they’re at Madison Square Garden today.”

  • Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce say ‘I do’ in elaborate Madison Square Garden ceremony

    Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce say ‘I do’ in elaborate Madison Square Garden ceremony

    NEW YORK — Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce married Friday night at Madison Square Garden, where actor Adam Sandler was the surprising officiant at a star-packed ceremony.

    The super-secretive buildup to the nuptials culminated when a marquee outside the Midtown Manhattan arena proclaimed “JUST&T MARRIED” once the deed was done.

    Taylor Swift fans hold signs outside Madison Square Garden ahead of the Taylor Swift-Travis Kelce wedding on Friday.

    The couple did not have bridesmaids or groomsmen, instead opting for Swift’s brother to serve as her man of honor and Kelce’s brother, longtime Eagles great Jason Kelce, serving as his best man, Swift’s publicist Tree Paine said in an email.

    The bride and groom’s outfits were designed by Christian Dior Haute Couture and its designer Jonathan Anderson with shoes custom-made by Christian Louboutin. She wore Cartier jewelry.

    The wedding between the superstar singer and NFL star took place as fans and spectators gathered outside MSG in the blistering heat, eager to be part of the occasion, even though the event was almost entirely hidden.

    The long anticipated union of sports and song brought hype to new heights at a venue made more for historic NBA games and bucket-list concerts.

    Singer Camila Cabello, actors Hugh Grant, Ethan Hawke, and Jason Sudeikis, and model Karlie Kloss were among those who arrived. Running back Kareem Hunt was among Kelce’s Chiefs teammates in attendance. Seattle Seahawks receiver and recent Super Bowl champ Cooper Kupp, New York Giants receiver JuJu Smith-Schuster, NFL announcer Joe Buck, and Jenny Han, author of the The Summer I Turned Pretty series, also entered the arena.

    In a culture obsessed with famous couplings, it may be the apex celebrity wedding, with perhaps only royal unions getting more attention. Holding such a ceremony in a huge, iconic space that sits at the center of the U.S. media universe while keeping all the details secret made for a surreal scene, but it was a mix of hype and hush that is not out of character for Swift.

    An Associated Press camera outside the arena showed a long line of black SUVs dropping off wedding-goers in tuxedos and evening gowns, surrounded by New Yorkers in shorts and Swifties amassing for the occasion.

    Celebrities, athletes, and friends were posting on social media about getting ready or about to leave for a black-tie event, including Brandon Borders, producer of the New Heights podcast starring Kelce and his brother Jason; Beau Allen, a retired defensive lineman for the Eagles; and actress Jessica Chastain.

    There was a notable lack of social media posts from guests once they had entered the arena, after reports that phones would not be allowed. Rain began falling soon after the marriage was announced.

    Weddings have been a constant subject in Swift’s songs since she was a teenager, and her actually walking the aisle for the first time at age 36 adds to the drama. It would also be a first marriage for the 36-year-old three-time Super Bowl champ Kelce, who could have been one of the jock characters in Swift’s early hits.

    Sandler, star of The Wedding Singer and many other hit comedies, can’t have been high on anyone’s betting list for who would marry the couple, though he’s become an increasingly warm and paternal cultural figure with age. The email announcing the marriage described him as “a friend” of the couple. Kelce was one of the many athletes who appeared in Sandler’s recent sequel Happy Gilmore 2.

    Outside the arena, some frazzled tourists joked that it was a bad weekend to visit as they navigated strict road and sidewalk closures, but others appeared happy to sneak a peak at the spectacle. Police cut off most access where guests were being dropped off, but a few patrons gathered in nearby businesses and peered out windows.

    Diana Warshavsky, who lives in New York, decided to head over to MSG on Friday to celebrate Swift and Kelce’s wedding with fellow Swifties and “send her good vibes.”

    “We’re relatively the same age, I’m a year older than her and I just got married this year as well,” Warshavsky said. “I’m just so happy for her.”

    The relationship of the pop star and the football player has continued to thrill and fascinate millions around the world — particularly the Swifties, the pop star’s enormous and ardent fan base — ever since the pair first started dating in 2023.

  • Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce marry in elaborate Madison Square Garden ceremony

    Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce marry in elaborate Madison Square Garden ceremony

    NEW YORK — Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce are married. Swift’s publicist confirmed the marriage took place Friday evening inside Madison Square Garden at a star-packed ceremony.

    The couple did not have bridesmaids or groomsmen, instead opting for Swift’s brother to serve as her man of honor and Kelce’s brother Jason serving as his best man.

    The wedding between the superstar singer and football player took place as fans and spectators gathered outside MSG in the blistering heat, eager to be part of the occasion, even though the event was almost entirely hidden away from the public.

    Very few details were disclosed in the buildup to the wedding weekend. Yet a permit obtained by the Associated Press this week and other sources helped confirm that the high-profile event would indeed take place at MSG over the July Fourth weekend, packed with its own set of festivities amid a massive heatwave.

    The long anticipated union of sports and song brought hype to new heights at a venue made more for historic NBA games and bucket-list concerts.

    Singer Camila Cabello, actors Hugh Grant, Ethan Hawke, and Jason Sudeikis, and model Karlie Kloss were among those who arrived. Running back Kareem Hunt was among Kelce’s Chiefs teammates in attendance. Seattle Seahawks receiver and recent Super Bowl champ Cooper Kupp, New York Giants receiver JuJu Smith-Schuster, NFL announcer Joe Buck, and Jenny Han, author of the The Summer I Turned Pretty series, also entered the arena.

    In a culture obsessed with famous couplings it may be the apex celebrity wedding, with perhaps only royal unions getting more attention. Holding such a ceremony in a huge, iconic space that sits at the center of the U.S. media universe while keeping all the details secret made for a surreal scene, but it was a mix of hype and hush that is not out of character for Swift.

    An Associated Press camera outside the arena showed a long line of black SUVs dropping off wedding-goers in tuxedos and evening gowns, surrounded by New Yorkers in shorts and Swifties amassing for the occasion.

    Celebrities, athletes, and friends were posting on social media about getting ready or being about to leave for a black-tie event, including Brandon Borders, producer of the New Heights podcast starring Kelce and his brother Jason; Beau Allen, retired defensive lineman for the Philadelphia Eagles; and Jessica Chastain.

    There was a notable lack of social media posts from guests once they had entered the arena, after reports that phones would not be allowed.

    A city permit obtained by the AP shows that the ceremony and its celebration could last until 4 a.m. Guests appeared as though they were coming to a big awards show, but their arrivals were obscured by tents and gazebos. There is a decent chance of rain hitting the area before the night is over.

    Weddings have been a constant subject in Swift’s songs since she was a teenager, and her actually walking the aisle for the first time at age 36 adds to the drama. It is also a first marriage for the 36-year-old three-time Super Bowl champ Kelce, who could have been one of the jock characters in Swift’s early hits.

    Outside the arena, some frazzled tourists joked that it was a bad weekend to visit as they navigated strict road and sidewalk closures, but others appeared happy to sneak a peak at the spectacle. Police cut off most access where guests were being dropped off, but a few patrons gathered in nearby businesses and peered out windows.

    Diana Warshavsky, who lives in New York, decided to head over to MSG on Friday to celebrate Swift and Kelce’s wedding with fellow Swifties and “send her good vibes.”

    “We’re relatively the same age, I’m a year older than her and I just got married this year as well,” Warshavsky said. “I’m just so happy for her.”

    The relationship of the pop star and the football player has continued to thrill and fascinate millions around the world — particularly the Swifties, the pop star’s enormous and ardent fan base — ever since the pair first started dating in 2023.

    The weekend is jam-packed even by New York’s standards. The city is celebrating the nation’s 250th birthday, a parade of dozens of tall ships will sail the Hudson River, and a World Cup game is scheduled in New Jersey.

    Earlier this week, Swift and Kelce donated $26 million to 20 local and national charities across the U.S. Many of the organizations were located in areas where the couple has deep ties, including Nashville, Tenn.; Los Angeles; Kansas City, Mo.; and New York.

  • Fallout from Venezuela’s earthquakes turns political as opposition leader seeks return

    Fallout from Venezuela’s earthquakes turns political as opposition leader seeks return

    CARACAS, Venezuela — The fallout from Venezuela’s powerful twin quakes has evolved into a major test for acting President Delcy Rodríguez, sending her scrambling to prevent the humanitarian disaster from becoming a political one as her mandate as interim leader expired Friday.

    A day after Rodríguez angrily defended the competence of her government’s relief effort at her first news conference since the June 24 disaster, her main rival, exiled Venezuelan Nobel Peace Prize laureate María Corina Machado, issued her own appeal.

    Speaking Friday from Panama, Machado argued that the government’s quake response exposed its critical weaknesses and that her return to Venezuela “contributes to facilitating the transition process, especially after the tragedy.”

    “My presence stabilizes the situation; it is part of the organizing forces that the country needs at a time when the total absence of the state has become evident,” Machado said, referring to widespread criticism of the government’s earthquake response as slow and disorganized. “The country needs figures it can trust.”

    The quakes have killed more than 2,295 people and injured over 11,000 others, according to the government, which has not offered updates on the number of dead and injured since Wednesday. Machado’s opposition movement has set up a digital database to locate the missing that currently lists over 36,000 people unaccounted for. Her party has mobilized volunteers to collect donations in Venezuela and solicited aid from the country’s vast diaspora.

    “My presence … seeks to bring people together, to unify, not only to address an emergency, but also to heal the wound,” said the opposition leader, who was barred from running in a 2024 presidential election in which President Nicolás Maduro claimed victory. An independently verified vote count carried out by the opposition found that the candidate that Machado endorsed, Edmundo González, was the real winner.

    U.S. praises Rodríguez, blocks Machado

    When the earthquakes hit, Machado saw a critical opportunity to return home for the first time since fleeing last December to accept a Nobel Peace Prize in Norway. Ever since the United States captured Maduro in a brazen military operation in January, Machado has been seeking a comeback and calling for a democratic transition.

    But the Trump administration has thrown its support behind Rodríguez since Maduro’s ouster, praising her business-friendly reforms of the country’s lucrative oil sector and giving no timetable on when elections might be held.

    Two senior U.S. officials familiar with the matter, speaking on condition of anonymity to disclose private diplomatic discussions, told the Associated Press that the Trump administration has grown frustrated with Machado and dissuaded her from returning to Venezuela in the aftermath of the earthquakes.

    One official said that Machado had sought assistance from Washington for ferrying her to Venezuela from the Dutch Caribbean territory of Curaçao and also from Panama, where she is now.

    The second official said the U.S. suspected she wanted to return to lead protests against Rodríguez and push for political change at a time when the focus should be on quake recovery. This official added that the Trump administration could not prevent Machado’s return but was not in a position to facilitate it.

    Earthquake fallout becomes political

    Upon learning of Machado’s imminent plans to return, Rodríguez shut down commercial air traffic into Caracas, the U.S. official said. Those canceled flights had been due to bring in hundreds of relief workers to assist with earthquake recovery efforts, the official said.

    On Monday, Machado claimed that the government had closed its airspace to prevent her return, without offering evidence. The government did not respond to a request for comment on the alleged closure.

    Seemingly concerned that anger over the earthquake response could jeopardize her authority, Rodríguez on Thursday blamed any criticism on what she called “narratives manufactured in propaganda laboratories.” She claimed that rescue crews deployed immediately with adequate equipment to disaster zones — contrary to widespread complaints by residents that they were left alone to search for their loved ones without official teams or heavy machinery for the first 48 hours.

    “Those propaganda operations, driven by partisan political interests, are despicable,” she said. “We did not wait one day, two days, or three days. We activated immediately.”

    She went on to say that thousands of civil and military rescue workers as well as 11 international field hospitals had been deployed to quake-affected areas, adding that the government had approved the creation of a fund to receive donations for reconstruction.

    On Friday, state-run media broadcast her paying a visit in the hospital to Hernán Alberto Gil Flores, a 43-year-old security guard pried from a collapsed basement after surviving nearly eight days under the rubble. His dramatic rescue Thursday served as a rare bright spot in one of the bleakest periods in memory for Venezuela.

    Unclear what happens when mandate expires

    Under Venezuela’s constitution, temporary absences are to be filled by the vice president — which was Rodríguez’s former role — for up to 90 days, after which they can be extended by the national assembly for an additional 90 days.

    On Friday, that 180-day interim period expired. There was no immediate comment from authorities on what, if anything, they would do in response to the expiration of Rodríguez’s mandate.

    The National Assembly, controlled by Rodríguez’s party, can trigger a snap election if lawmakers declare the post permanently vacant.

  • Conservative candidate Keiko Fujimori wins Peru’s presidential election in a runoff

    Conservative candidate Keiko Fujimori wins Peru’s presidential election in a runoff

    LIMA, Peru — Conservative politician Keiko Fujimori on Friday was declared the winner of the presidential runoff election in Peru, which was dominated by people’s concerns over surging crime.

    Fujimori, 51, the daughter of a disgraced former president, was running for the presidency for the fourth time. She will be Peru’s ninth president in 10 years when she takes office later this month.

    The election win was certified Friday by the country’s top election authority. Figures released by election officials earlier in the week showed that with 100% of ballots tallied, Fujimori received 9,223,000 votes, or 50.135% of the total, while nationalist congressman Roberto Sánchez earned over 9,173,000 votes, or 49.865%.

    Fujimori and Sánchez made it to the June 7 runoff election after defeating 33 other candidates in an April vote.

    Voters were primarily concerned with increasing levels of crime, especially extortion by violent organized crime gangs, and Fujimori pledged to combat crime with an iron fist.

    The winner is the daughter of the late Alberto Fujimori, the former president whose government in the 1990s defeated the Shining Path extremist rebel group but also took an authoritarian turn. He was convicted in 2009 of human rights abuses in the fight against the rebels, and later of corruption charges.

  • Iran begins funeral rites for Ali Khamenei, supreme leader killed in war

    Iran begins funeral rites for Ali Khamenei, supreme leader killed in war

    For four months, Iran feared it was too dangerous to lay to rest Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the country’s supreme leader who was killed in an airstrike on the first day of the joint U.S.-Israeli war.

    Now, shielded by a tentative truce — and perhaps by an America distracted by its 250th July Fourth celebration — millions of Iranians are expected to mourn over several days of funeral rites that will stretch across five cities and into neighboring Iraq.

    For the surviving Iranian regime, the funeral offers an opportunity to project power after withstanding months of war with Israel and the United States, but it will also be a high-profile test of the government’s postwar competence.

    Khamenei’s body was moved to Tehran, the capital, on Thursday for a private ceremony at the place where he was killed — the small compound that served as his office and residence.

    On Friday, his coffin was moved to Grand Mosalla religious complex where it sat beside the coffins of other family members killed in the same strike, including his daughter and her husband. The smallest coffin was that of Khamenei’s granddaughter, who was 14 months old.

    Images distributed by state media showed foreign dignitaries, including leaders from Iraq, Qatar, and Tajikistan, as well as family members of the assassinated Hezbollah commander, Hasan Nasrallah, filing past the coffins as they arrived in Iran ahead of the funeral.

    Also shown paying his respects was the son of anti-Taliban Afghan commander Ahmed Shah Massoud.

    The funeral organizer said no officials were invited from Europe or the United States. Official banners prepared for the event declared “We must rise” and carried the image of a red fist.

    Security was expected to be tight, with sections of the capital Tehran already going into lockdown Friday.

    Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, who has been a key figure in peace talks with the U.S., issued a statement on Thursday calling on the Iranian people to “rise up and convey the nation’s call for bloodshed.”

    “Iran stands on the threshold of creating one of the greatest scenes in its history, a day when a nation, with hearts full of love, loyalty, and the pain of separation, comes to bid farewell to a great man,” Ghalibaf said.

    The cavernous prayer hall where Khamenei’s coffin was put on display Friday to lie in state was named after his predecessor, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, who led the country’s Islamic revolution, took power in 1979, and died a decade later.

    Khamenei led the Islamic Republic for 37 years, through wars and uprisings, and years of enmity and tangled negotiations with Washington over Iran’s nuclear program. Under his leadership, Iran repressed freedoms domestically and expanded its role as the patron of violent proxy militant groups, including Hezbollah and Hamas, which it used to confront the U.S. and Israel.

    Khamenei was killed in the opening hours of a war that has transformed Iran yet again, devastating the country’s infrastructure and leadership ranks, but ultimately seeming to strengthen its position regionally and in ceasefire talks with the U.S. — notably because of its leverage over the Strait of Hormuz.

    As Iranians mourn their assassinated leader, they and observers around the world will be watching the funeral for signals about the surviving regime, which is younger and even more hard-line. Among the top questions is whether Khamenei’s son and successor, Mojtaba, will appear in public for the first time since his father’s death.

    Mojtaba is believed to have been seriously injured in that strike, including serious damage to his face. His wife, Zahra Haddad Adel, was also killed.

    Mojtaba Khamenei has been living under intense security measures given the expectation that he, too, will be a target for assassination.

    Even in peacetime, he kept a low profile. He has only been photographed in public a few times and, before his designation as the new leader, most Iranians had never heard him speak publicly.

    Up until now, Iranians who support their government say they understand why their supreme leader has been unable to appear in public. But the further the country moves away from active war, the more people may demand an appearance.

    “If he doesn’t show up, it does become significant,” said Norman Roule, a former CIA officer who worked on Iran for decades, adding that the move would indicate that he is breaking from the rule of his father in which revolutionary symbolism was critically important.

    If Khamenei does appear — in person or by video — experts will be scouring images for clues about his injuries, officials said, while also searching for broader signs of the regime’s cohesion and capabilities.

    Observers will also be tracking the scale of the event, including whether the government can orchestrate convincing shows of public support beyond the tightly controlled capital. They will also be monitoring how much security is mobilized.

    And as the country shifts away from a war footing, its economic challenges will become more pronounced. Inflation has skyrocketed, and energy exports fell to near zero for weeks. The country’s industrial sector was heavily damaged by U.S. and Israeli strikes.

    Over Ali Khamenei’s decades as supreme leader, public dissatisfaction with the Iranian system grew, triggering repeated waves of protests. And in the past five years, demonstrations seemed to threaten the Islamic Republican at least twice.

    In each instance, Khamenei ordered violent crackdowns with escalating cruelty to clear city streets. The most recent crackdown in January is estimated to have killed thousands of people over just three days, a remarkable scale of brutality.

    After the mourning ceremonies in Tehran, Khamenei’s body will be taken to the holy Iranian city of Qom, then on to neighboring Iraq where crowds will gather in the holy Shiite cities of Najaf and Karbala, before he is finally laid to rest in his hometown, the eastern Iranian city of Mashhad.

    The ceremonies will present a serious logistical challenge for the Iranian regime. Local officials in Tehran say they are expecting crowds of up to 20 million.

    Authorities are keen to avoid the kind of chaotic scenes that marked previous burials. Eight people were trampled to death when Khomeini was buried in 1989. And dozens were killed in 2020 during crowd crushes at the funeral for Maj. Gen. Qasem Soleimani, then Iran’s most powerful military commander, who was killed in a U.S. drone strike ordered by U.S. President Donald Trump.

  • U.S. officials believed Israel was plotting to kill Iranian negotiators

    U.S. officials believed Israel was plotting to kill Iranian negotiators

    WASHINGTON — U.S. officials believed that Israel might have been plotting to kill Iran’s top negotiators while Washington was engaged with Tehran in delicate talks this spring to reach an interim peace deal, according to current and former U.S. officials.

    Killing senior Iranian leaders had been part of Israel’s strategy from the start of the war. But America’s concerns about the targeting of two particular Iranian officials — Abbas Araghchi, Iran’s foreign minister, and Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, the speaker of the parliament — spiked during delicate ceasefire negotiations that began in April.

    Fearful that an Israeli assassination effort would doom the negotiations, the United States, according to some of the officials, went so far as to ask other countries in the region to warn Iran about the possibility Israel could target the two officials.

    U.S. officials acknowledged that during the intense phase of the war, Araghchi and Ghalibaf, as senior government officials, could have been legitimate targets for Israel, which was intent on toppling Iran’s hard-line government. But after the negotiations started in earnest in April, U.S. officials believed that any attempt to kill the Iranian leaders would end the talks and reignite the fighting.

    The war began Feb. 28 with an Israeli strike that killed the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and other top officials, based in part on U.S. intelligence.

    While U.S. strikes focused on Iran’s navy and missile forces, Israel prioritized targeting the leadership in the early phase of the war, intent on killing as many high-ranking officials as it could.

    That included killing potentially more pragmatic leaders that the Trump administration had hoped to negotiate with, such as Ali Larijani, Iran’s top national security official, and Kamal Kharazi, a former Iranian foreign minister. Both men were involved in the negotiations with the United States when they were killed in Israeli airstrikes.

    The Trump administration’s suspicions about the possible Israeli plot to kill the two top negotiators show how the U.S. and Israeli war aims, which were close at the very beginning of the war, quickly diverged radically. And while the United States wanted a peace agreement, Israel has been skeptical from the initial cessation of hostilities in April.

    The initial two-week ceasefire in April was met with grudging Israeli official support and broad public concern in Israel that the United States was ending the war too early. Rather than being driven from power, the theocratic government of Iran had become even more hard-line, and Iran’s Revolutionary Guard had only consolidated its control over the country.

    Araghchi and Ghalibaf have been the key officials negotiating with various countries in the region to reach a ceasefire and then a more lasting peace with the United States. In June, the United States and Iran reached a framework agreement that sought to open the Strait of Hormuz and set the outline for follow-on talks on Tehran’s nuclear program.

    Officials and commentators in Israel viewed the initial agreement as a disaster, because it did not accomplish their country’s war aims of forcing regime change, destroying Iran’s proxy forces, and seriously damaging its missile program. Israeli officials also worried the agreement would put billions of dollars into Iran, allowing it to quickly rebuild after the war and without meaningfully restricting its nuclear ambitions.

    A spokesperson for the Israeli Embassy in Washington declined to comment.

    Asked about Israeli plans and the warning to Iran, a U.S. official noted that talks between American and Iranian delegations continue and that Steve Witkoff, a special envoy, and Jared Kushner, the president’s son-in-law, had productive meetings in Qatar. President Donald Trump, the official said, wants the peace process “to play out.”

    The Wall Street Journal reported in March that Israel had Araghchi and Ghalibaf on a target list but temporarily removed them as the United States discussed beginning negotiations with Iran.

    A U.S. official and a Middle East official said that the Trump administration learned around that time that at least Ghalibaf was on an Israeli targeting list and asked Israel to refrain.

    Ghalibaf was nearly killed in both the 12-day war in June 2025 and again in this year’s conflict, when Israel targeted a secret meeting of senior government officials in a bunker under a mountain, according to three senior Iranian officials and public comments by officials. In both incidents, Ghalibaf was rescued from under the rubble, the officials said.

    “Today, Mr. Ghalibaf and Mr. Araghchi and other members of the negotiating team have put their lives on the line, knowing the grave security risks, and this is called a real sacrifice, not political maneuvering,” Mohsen Zanganeh, a lawmaker, told local media in late April after the Islamabad meeting.

    During the negotiations, Iran has taken precautions aimed at making it more difficult for Israel to strike at senior officials.

    In April, Ghalibaf was set to travel to Islamabad to meet with Vice President JD Vance. But Iranian security officials were concerned that Israel would use the opportunity to assassinate Ghalibaf or Araghchi to derail the talks, the officials said.

    Iranians sought guarantees from the United States, through Pakistani and Qatari intermediaries, that Israel would not carry out any covert operations targeting the Iranian delegation, the officials said.

    Pakistani fighter jets escorted the Iranian airplanes carrying a delegation of more than 70 Iranians from the border of Iran to Islamabad and back again when the session was over.

    But on the way back to Tehran, an Israeli security threat emerged.

    Iran’s security forces notified the plane carrying Ghalibaf back to Tehran that they had picked up intelligence that Israel planned to attack the plane and that two Israeli fighter jets had entered Iran’s airspace from its western border near Iraq, the two officials said.

    Mahdi Mohammadi, a senior adviser for Ghalibaf, who accompanied him to Islamabad, confirmed this account on his social media page. The plane made an emergency landing in the city of Mashhad, Iran’s closest airport to the Pakistani border, and the Iranian delegation traveled some eight hours by land back to Tehran, Mohammadi and the two officials said.

    But the officials have continued to travel.

    In late May, Ghalibaf and Araghchi flew to Qatar for talks and then traveled to Switzerland in June for a second in-person meeting with Vance and the American delegation.

    This article originally appeared in the New York Times.

  • Trump wants to ease rules on mailing guns. His son’s company could benefit.

    Trump wants to ease rules on mailing guns. His son’s company could benefit.

    On an earnings call in May, GrabAGun’s chief executive had a hopeful message for investors: The Trump administration’s proposed rollback of gun regulations could be a boon to the company, which hopes to be “the Amazon of guns.”

    “This could be the most significant change to firearms retail distribution in decades,” Marc Nemati said, according to a public recording of the call. “GrabAGun is uniquely positioned for this opportunity.”

    What Nemati did not mention was that the company also had a powerful voice on its side. Donald Trump Jr., the president’s son, is on GrabAGun’s board and is a consultant to the company.

    The younger Trump was present at the New York Stock Exchange in July 2025 when the company went public, with photos showing him making a gesture like holding a gun to celebrate the moment as he helped ring the bell.

    And, with a 1.1% ownership stake in the company, Trump Jr. stands to prosper if the company fulfills its goal of being a dominant seller of firearms online.

    “To be able to come back to the New York Stock Exchange and actually take a gun company public feels like such a vindication of all the insanity, all of the woke nonsense that we’ve been watching and facing for the last decade in America,” Trump Jr. said on Fox Business ahead of GrabAGun going public. “It’s a triumphant return.”

    GrabAGun sells and ships ammunition, and some gun accessories, directly to consumers in some states using its website. But it must rely on middlemen to actually transfer the firearm to the customer.

    That’s because federal regulations prohibit sending handguns to individuals through the mail, and they require that firearms background checks and transfers be conducted in person. The administration has proposed regulatory changes that, for the first time, would let firearms sales take place entirely online, with handguns mailed directly to buyers’ doorsteps.

    Such changes could enormously benefit GrabAGun and the president’s son, creating a potential conflict of interest that has attracted the attention of ethics watchdogs.

    Many Republicans were highly critical of Hunter Biden’s tenure as a board member of the Ukrainian energy company Burisma at a time when his father, Joe Biden, was vice president and a key player on Ukraine. In the Trumps’ case, the president’s son could benefit directly from policies adopted by his father’s administration.

    “There is no question about the company’s ties to the son of the president,” said Jordan Libowitz, a spokesperson for Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, which investigates and litigates matters involving ethics in governance. “It is always going to raise red flags and question how decisions are made within the administration.”

    In a statement, a spokesperson for GrabAGun said, “We appreciate the proposed rulemaking may allow a more streamlined purchase process for firearms for everyone who wishes to legally secure firearms, from enthusiasts to sportsmen. There is a lengthy rulemaking process ahead. GrabAGun has submitted a public comment on one of the proposed rules, and will be participating in the public comment process.”

    A spokesperson for Trump Jr. said he is a longtime promoter of gun rights who is pursuing an attractive business opportunity and has no connection to the ATF rule changes.

    “Don is a lifelong businessperson and vocal advocate of our Second Amendment rights,” the spokesperson said. “He does not interface with the federal government as part of his role with any company that he invests in or advises and had zero involvement in this particular decision.”

    A White House official said the ATF proposals were driven by the administration’s interest in protecting the Second Amendment and had nothing to do with Trump Jr.’s business interests.

    The Trump family’s sprawling business ventures, which have thrived during President Donald Trump’s second term, are facing heightened scrutiny. The president’s latest financial disclosure forms show that his reported income soared to more than $2.2 billion in 2025, as he took in more than $1.4 billion from cryptocurrency, digital tokens, and related partnerships.

    The president has said he is not involved in the day-to-day operation of his businesses while in the White House. But his two oldest sons have continued to manage the family’s eponymous real estate empire and invest in new ventures, often in countries heavily reliant on the goodwill of the U.S. government.

    Trump Jr., for example, has invested in AI-related companies, data centers, and more.

    Trump Jr. became formally involved in GrabAGun in December 2024, shortly after his father was elected to his second term. Under his agreement with the company, Trump Jr. would serve as a consultant in exchange for 300,000 shares of stock, or just over 1% of the company’s value, according to filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

    He would also be responsible for helping to execute the company’s marketing strategy, developing partnerships, and “serving as a spokesperson for the Company to effectively communicate the Company’s mission and initiatives,” the filings say.

    GrabAGun Digital Holdings is a 16-year-old Texas-based company that aims to digitize the gun-buying process, according to SEC filings. It hopes to reach a more youthful cohort of firearms users, who company executives say would be more likely than their older peers to buy firearms online.

    Since going public, the company — which is valued at nearly $70 million — has dropped in value, public records show. On the earnings call, company executives blamed the loss in value on the costs of going public and expanding.

    Trump Jr. has made it clear that the company’s path toward greater profitability is internet sales.

    “Younger people are actually getting into the Second Amendment,” he said on Fox News in January 2025. “They understand the fundamental importance of being able to protect themselves and their freedoms. … This is a way — with an incredible tech site — for them to shop the way they shop for everything else.”

    On the campaign trail, the elder Trump promised to roll back Biden-era firearms regulations, such as a rule that prohibits the sale of stabilizing brace firearm accessories, and received the backing of major gun rights groups. In April, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives — the law enforcement agency within the Justice Department tasked with regulating the nation’s hundreds of millions of firearms — proposed amending or eliminating 34 gun regulations.

    Experts said some of those changes, taken together, would transform the firearms market from one that largely plays out in storefronts across the country into a potentially lucrative digital marketplace.

    Currently, licensed firearms dealers must verify a potential buyer’s identity and run a federally mandated background check in person. That stems from Congress’ move to tighten the rules in 1968, after Lee Harvey Oswald used a fake name on a mail order to buy the gun he used to assassinate President John F. Kennedy in 1963.

    Gun rights groups say the regulations are outdated in the digital era. Under one of the ATF proposals, firearms sellers would be able to verify someone’s identity and check their background online.

    Erich Pratt, senior vice president of Gun Owners of America, said the Gun Control Act of 1968 went beyond the government’s authority in restricting gun purchases, given the Second Amendment right to bear arms. Pratt, the ATF, and other gun rights groups have said that the proposal has ample measures in place to ensure the safe sale of firearms online.

    “The right of Americans to buy guns — even online — is something that is deeply rooted in our nation’s text, history, and tradition,” Pratt said, echoing the language of recent Supreme Court decisions. “It is as American as apple pie.”

    GrabAGun’s business model allows customers to order firearms on the company’s website or mobile app. The guns are shipped not to their homes but to a licensed dealer in their states, and the customers must undergo background checks at the store before they can pick up the firearms.

    As the ATF moves to allow background checks online, a separate proposal would loosen a century-old ban on sending handguns to people’s homes through the U.S. Postal Service. Under the proposed rule, licensed firearms dealers could ship guns to residents of their state. The proposal follows a Justice Department memo in January, authored by lawyers in the department’s Office of Legal Counsel, declaring the gun-mailing ban unconstitutional.

    If the ATF and Postal Service rule changes are enacted, GrabAGun could sell firearms online and ship them directly to consumers, at least in states where the company is licensed. GrabAGun is a licensed dealer in Texas, according to public records, and firearms experts say it would not be difficult for the company to get licensed in many other states.

    The ATF announced its proposals on April 29, beginning a 90-day public comment period that will expire in early August. The public comment period for the Postal Service measure has closed, and those comments are under review. Multiple state attorneys general have said they are against the Postal Service proposal, suggesting that it could face legal challenges if adopted.

    The administration says its proposals would remedy the misinterpretation of the law and Constitution by Biden-era officials.

    “ATF regulation changes reflect President Trump’s commitment to the rule of law, and that includes protecting the Second Amendment rights of all Americans,” a White House official said. “We refuse to bypass Congress and use the regulatory process to harass law-abiding Americans seeking to exercise their rights,” as the administration claims its predecessors did.

    Advocates for stricter gun laws say it is critical that potential buyers have in-person interactions before they acquire handguns. In face-to-face interactions, they say, gun sellers can pick up on any red flags suggesting that it would be unsafe for the potential buyer to possess a firearm.

    Gun-control advocates cite another administration proposal that, they say, could help GrabAGun but threaten public safety.

    Under existing ATF regulations, residents of states with rigorous procedures for obtaining concealed-carry permits can bypass the federal background check. Under the new proposal, more states, including those with laxer procedures, would qualify for the waiver.

    Marianna Mitchem, senior industry adviser for Everytown for Gun Safety, a gun-control advocacy group, said she fears that the administration’s proposals would make it simpler for gun traffickers, criminals, and underage people to get their hands on firearms through online platforms such as GrabAGun.

    Mitchem, who was a senior official at ATF overseeing inspections of gun shops before leaving the agency in 2025, said the agency during the Biden administration never discussed easing regulations to enable online sales.

    “This is going to make it so much easier for dangerous people to get firearms,” Mitchem said. “You are eliminating [gun shops’] ability to be the first line of defense.”

    GrabAGun’s executives disagree, and they submitted a comment to ATF supporting online background checks.

    “The Second Amendment is in our blood,” Jonathan B. Wolens, GrabAGun’s general counsel, wrote in the comment, which is available online. “We support this rule change because we believe it will promote efficiency and support compliance by enabling more timely, accurate confirmation of license validity.”

    ATF said the proposed rule would require a rigorous identification process while updating the gun sales process for the 21st century. “ATF’s proposed rule modernizes and strengthens identity-verification requirements … and reduces burden on consumers,” an ATF spokesperson said in a statement.

    GrabAGun appears poised to move fast if the rule changes are enacted. In October — months before the proposals were introduced — GrabAGun formed a subsidiary called Pew Logistics, with a stated mission of selling software to provide “next-generation, white-label direct-to-consumer fulfillment solutions to modernize the firearms supply chain.”

    That software would be sold to gun manufacturers, helping them sell directly to consumers online.

    Trump Jr. has multiple other financial ties to GrabAGun that could enable him to profit if the company takes off.

    GrabAGun offers a “Shoot Now Pay Later” financing option through a company called Credova Financial. Credova is a subsidiary of Public Square Holdings, where the president’s son is a board member and investor.

    In August, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau dropped an investigation of Credova, which had been accused of wrongly charging fees to customers. It said the inquiry, which started during the Biden administration, was politically biased against companies affiliated with firearms.

    When GrabAGun went public, it merged with Colombier Acquisition Corp. II, a firm designed to combine with other companies and take them public. Colombier is led by Omeed Malik, a major Republican donor who chairs 1789 Capital, a venture capital firm that includes Trump Jr. as a partner.

  • Trump returns to Mount Rushmore after years of hinting he belongs there

    Trump returns to Mount Rushmore after years of hinting he belongs there

    He hasn’t explicitly said that he wants to be added — at least not in public.

    But on the eve of the nation’s 250th anniversary, President Donald Trump was returning to Mount Rushmore after nine years of flirting with the idea of having one more face join the four presidents: his own.

    Ahead of his visit to the national memorial on Friday, his White House said that adding Trump’s face would be a welcome development — even though officials at Mount Rushmore have long said the monument cannot be carved further.

    “There would be no better addition to the iconic Mount Rushmore than the 45th and 47th President of the United States, Donald Trump,” said Taylor Rogers, a White House spokesperson, in a statement to the Washington Post.

    For a president who has had a golden statue of himself erected at his golf resort and his name and image affixed to buildings, government programs, U.S. passports, digital and physical coins, roads, and an airport, the landmark represents a rare limit: No presidential order or act of Congress can create more carvable rock.

    It has been on his mind. As recently as five weeks ago, the president — twice in one evening — posted to Truth Social digital mock-ups of his face next to the mountainside carvings of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Theodore Roosevelt, and Abraham Lincoln.

    Soon after he first took office, Trump told a congresswoman in private that joining them was his dream. When that Republican congresswoman, Kristi L. Noem, became South Dakota governor and gave Trump a sculpture depicting his face on Mount Rushmore next to Lincoln’s, he put it on display at his Mar-a-Lago office.

    He last visited the monument six years ago, delivering a speech on July 3, 2020, that sought to rally supporters around a law-and-order message central to his unsuccessful reelection campaign.

    On Friday, “beneath the towering faces of four of America’s greatest presidents, President Trump will deliver a historic address commemorating the nation’s 250th anniversary and charting a course for America’s next chapter,” Freedom 250, the White House-created organization heading up the semiquincentennial celebrations, wrote in an announcement of Trump’s Mount Rushmore appearance.

    Two people with knowledge of the event planning, including a senior White House official, said there would not be a projection of Trump’s face on Rushmore during the Friday night celebration.

    Trump, as he has danced around the idea of being added to Mount Rushmore since first taking office, has never batted it down.

    “Never suggested it,” he wrote on Twitter in 2020 in response to a New York Times report that said a White House aide had inquired with Noem’s office about the process of carving additional presidents. But Trump continued: “Although, based on all of the many things accomplished during the first 3½ years, perhaps more than any other Presidency, sounds like a good idea to me!”

    A year earlier, when asked by the Hill if he’d like to see his face carved there, Trump replied that he didn’t want to say: “If I answer that question, ‘Yes,’ I will end up with such bad publicity.”

    At a 2017 rally in Youngstown, Ohio, Trump declared that each of the presidents on Mount Rushmore “believed in protecting American industry.” He told the audience that he should “ask whether or not you think I will someday be on Mount Rushmore,” but that he would face blowback for positing such a question.

    “If I did it joking, totally joking, having fun, the fake news media will say, ‘He believes he should be on Mount Rushmore,’” Trump said. “So I won’t say it, OK? I won’t say it.”

    Trump’s allies have kept hope alive, however, even as Mount Rushmore officials and engineers who have long monitored the rocks there say it isn’t possible.

    Days after he was sworn in for a second time, Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R., Fla.) in January 2025 filed a bill directing the Interior Department to begin the process of having Trump’s face carved onto Mount Rushmore. Around the same time, a Fox News panel, including former White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany and former representative Jason Chaffetz (R., Utah), cheered on the idea. McEnany said it would be “epic” to have Trump’s face added for the country’s 250th anniversary — which would have left a year and a half to do so.

    Last July, Rep. Andy Ogles (R., Tenn.) sent a letter to Interior Secretary Doug Burgum asking him to “explore” adding Trump, saying that “past bureaucratic resistance or political discomfort” should not stop the process.

    And Burgum himself, contradicting what past National Park Service officials had said, last year told Trump’s daughter-in-law and Fox News host Lara Trump that it wasn’t out of the question.

    “Well, they certainly have room for it there,” Burgum replied when she asked if the United States would ever see Trump added to Mount Rushmore.

    In 2018, the public information officer at Mount Rushmore, Maureen McGee-Ballinger, told the Sioux Falls Argus Leader that “there is no more carvable space up on the sculpture,” adding that the rock to the left of Washington can’t be carved into, and what appears to be space next to Lincoln is “beyond the sculpture” and an “optical illusion.”

    Staff at Mount Rushmore and the National Park Service did not immediately respond to a request for comment on whether the memorial’s geology had changed since.

  • Belgian diamond group that won tariff relief gifts Trump a lavishly encrusted ring

    Belgian diamond group that won tariff relief gifts Trump a lavishly encrusted ring

    BRUSSELS — Dozens of diamonds spell out two giant letter T’s next to the Stars and Stripes and “1776” and “2026.” Dozens more frame the numbers 45 and 47 in the shape of Superman’s logo. A diamond-winged eagle carries a ruby shield and clutches an olive branch of emeralds, below a radiant “250” and atop the phrase “250 YEARS USA” etched in 18-karat gold.

    All told, 321 diamonds, 56 sapphires, 13 emeralds and six rubies encrust the watch-sized gold ring presented this week to Bill White, the U.S. ambassador to Belgium, to give to President Donald Trump.

    “A very special thank you to my friends from Antwerp for the magnificent Freedom 250 ring,” Trump said in a prerecorded video message during an event marking America’s 250th birthday in Brussels.

    Isidore Mörsel, president of the Antwerp World Diamond Center, or AWDC, gifted the ring on behalf of the centuries-old diamond community in the Belgian port city, a central node in the worldwide trade of the precious stones that found itself struggling last year under the weight of Trump’s sweeping trade war.

    “May this ring serve as a lasting reminder that true partnership like the finest natural diamonds are formed under pressure, endure the test of time, and shine brightest when built on trust,” Mörsel said. The ring’s interior is engraved with the phrase “Crafted in Antwerp for Donald John Trump.”

    In dollar terms, the ring’s value pales beside gifts like the $400 million plane donated by Qatar that Trump ordered converted into a new Air Force One. But it’s a glitzy window into the role that ostentatious – and almost always gilded — gifts are playing for those seeking to curry favor with the U.S. president.

    A White House official, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss the matter, said Thursday that the ring has not been presented to Trump yet.

    Ring is latest in Trump’s break with White House custom

    The gift comes months after Belgium’s diamond industry won the removal of U.S. tariffs on diamond imports. In September, AWDC said it had “succeeded in securing a zero percent import tariff” on Antwerp’s annual export of more than $2 billion of polished diamonds to the U.S. A spokesperson for the group said on Thursday that the AWDC provided “input” to the European Commission as it negotiated with Trump on a broad deal on tariffs in 2025, but did not itself lobby the administration.

    U.S. presidents have considerable discretion to accept gifts from domestic and foreign sources and may determine themselves whether a gift was meant for them personally or the nation. The exception is those from foreign governments, which are prohibited by the foreign emoluments clause of the Constitution without congressional assent, though presidents could use personal funds to reimburse the Treasury for the full value of an official gift if they wish to retain it.

    Personal gifts are also supposed to be registered on the president’s annual financial disclosure. Trump’s 2025 disclosure, released this week, revealed a $250,000 gift of a sculpture depicting his triumphal gesture after surviving a 2024 assassination attempt at a campaign rally in Butler, Pa., and tickets to 10 sporting events, including 10 to the upcoming World Cup final in New Jersey from FIFA’s Gianni Infantino, valued at a collective $15,000.

    Four U.S. ethics experts told the Associated Press that Trump has broken with decades-old custom in the White House to avoid accepting such gifts.

    Ring’s value estimated at $25,000-$35,000

    To forge the ring, the AWDC turned to David Gotlib, an Antwerp-based high-end jeweler whose cufflinks can sell for more than 15,000 euros ($17,000).

    Neither AWDC nor Gotlib would provide a valuation of the ring, but two independent jewelers told AP they estimated the value between $25,000 and $35,000.

    Paris- and London-based jewelry consultant Alexander Levinson calculated the cost at $25,928, while David Saad, a third-generation luxury jeweler in Canada, priced the ring between $33,000 and $35,000. Both said half the cost was in materials, half in labor.

    After the ring was presented on a star-spangled stage in Brussels, musician Alexis Wilkins, the girlfriend of FBI Director Kash Patel, sang the U.S. national anthem to more than 8,000 people drinking Budweiser and bourbon from Tennessee and Kentucky.

    White said he raised more than $5.5 million for the 250th anniversary event from corporate sponsors like defense industry titans Lockheed Martin and Northrop Grumman and tech firms like Intel, Google, and Meta, as well as the European chocolate companies Leonidas and Ferrero. AWDC said it contributed funds, too.

    “The media was asking, ‘Why does it have to be so big?’” White said of the event. “Because we are the United States of America!”

    Meanwhile, the fate of the ring is not currently clear.

    On Wednesday, White posted a photo online of himself wearing the ring and giving a thumbs-up. The post has since been deleted.