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Chapter 1: What is the main topic discussed in this episode?
Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Janine Herbst.
Chapter 2: What recent threats has President Trump made regarding Iran?
President Trump is again threatening Iran over the Strait of Hormuz, saying on social media today it has 48 hours to open the strait or, quote, all hell will rain down and glory to God. This as the search for a missing U.S. service member in Iran continues. Tehran shot down two U.S. military planes yesterday, but two other crew members were rescued. Earlier, Trump said the U.S.
would pound Iran back to, quote, the Stone Age. Aaron David Miller, a senior fellow with the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and former State Department official, says it shows Iran remains a threat.
It's extraordinary, frankly, in the thousands of sorties that both the Americans and Israelis have flown that this is the first time that you had a downed aircraft. But it is, I think, tremendously symbolic. It suggests that the Americans don't have total escalation dominance of the airspace.
Iranians still have capacity, not to mention the propaganda value of this, assuming the Iranians find the airmen.
speaking there on NPR's weekend edition. Iranian media reports that for the fourth time since the start of the war, a nuclear power plant has been struck and the plant remains functioning. But NPR's Deep Harvez reports a possible radiation leak wouldn't be limited to just Iran.
The nuclear power plant in Bushehr, which is on the country's coastline on the Persian Gulf, was struck by a projectile from a strike to its perimeter on Saturday, killing one of the plant's security personnel. The International Atomic Energy Agency says that no increase in radiation levels have been detected in the area.
But in a statement posted on X, the agency's director general, Rafael Grossi, said that the nuclear power plants and surrounding areas must never be attacked. Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Al-Archi noted on X that any radioactive fallout from the plant will, quote, end life in neighboring Gulf Arab countries.
Radioactive material from the damaged plant could leak into the Gulf, contaminating waters vital to states like Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates. Deep Harvaz, NPR News, Van, Turkey.
The Trump administration wants to privatize airport security operations run by the TSA, and Pierce Joel Rose reports.
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Chapter 3: What are the implications of the U.S. military presence in Iran?
Joel Rose, NPR News, Washington.
And you're listening to NPR News. Evacuation orders and warnings are up in Riverside County, east of the Moreno Valley in Southern California, as a fast-growing wildfire now stands at more than 4,100 acres. Fire officials say the cause of the fire is under investigation. This amid very windy, dry conditions and high temperatures.
The National Weather Service has issued a wind advisory for the area through this afternoon, with wind gusts up to 50 miles an hour possible. Women's college basketball is set for its national championship game. It will be South Carolina and UCLA battling for the title after both won their semifinal matches. Steve Futterman has more from Phoenix.
In the first semifinal, South Carolina handed undefeated UConn its first loss of the season, 62-48. In the other semi, UCLA beat Texas 51-44. The most memorable moment on semifinal night came just off the court when UConn coach Gino Auriemma and South Carolina coach Dawn Staley exchanged angry words just as the game was ending.
Afterwards, Auriemma said it stemmed from Staley refusing to shake hands just before the game. The protocol is before the game, you meet that half-court and shake hands. And I waited there for like three minutes. At one point, the exchange became so heated, both coaches had to be held back by their assistants. For NPR News, I'm Steve Futterman in Phoenix.
And the men's Final Four takes place tonight. UConn takes on Illinois, and then Michigan plays Arizona. I'm Janine Herbst, and you're listening to NPR News from Washington.
This week on the NPR Politics Podcast. In Iran, President Trump is both escalating and de-escalating, pausing strikes on energy sites, claiming Iran wants to make a deal, but also moving troops to the region. We unpack what we know about where those troops are headed and how talks are playing out behind closed doors. This week on the NPR Politics Podcast.
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