In the U.S. and the Middle East
President Trump used a high-stakes call about the Iran war to press Arab and Muslim leaders to recognize Israel, abruptly widening what was supposed to be a discussion about ceasefire terms and regional security. The message was less diplomacy and more instruction.
In Washington, the Secret Service says the man killed in Saturday night’s shooting at the White House had previously tried to get into the complex since 2025. Authorities identified him as Nasire Best and said the confrontation ended in a gun battle at the gates.
In Britain
British Airways is facing criticism after refusing to let a teenage boy with Tourette’s board a flight because he shouted the word “bomb.” The case has sharpened questions about how airlines apply safety rules to passengers with neurological conditions.
UK university leaders are warning that worsening finances could force them to cut hardship support for low-income students and scale back outreach to disadvantaged groups. In a Universities UK poll, more than two-thirds said they were considering compulsory redundancies, and nearly 90% said hiring freezes or voluntary redundancies were on the table.
Police and border agencies say arrests, convictions, and seizures linked to people smugglers have risen by nearly 46%, with more than 6,600 disruptions since the general election. The National Crime Agency says smuggling now takes up about a quarter of its workload.
In tech and science
Google’s latest AI push is drawing fresh concern over how much of the web it wants to absorb into itself. AI Overviews, a deeper AI Mode, and new ad placements inside AI results could push users away from regular links, while the company’s move from the open-source Gemini CLI to a closed-source replacement is being read by developers as another step away from openness and control.
A Scottish charity says the Scottish government’s “green datacentres” policy may be missing a big chunk of the emissions tied to modern AI systems. The complaint is simple enough: the definition was written in 2022, before ChatGPT and the current boom rewired the scale of the industry.