Live Updates: U.S. Details Agreement With Iran as Trump Departs G7 Summit
A U.S. official provided what was described as the text of the preliminary agreement, which outlined a $300 billion plan for Iran’s reconstruction and 60 days of talks on its nuclear program.
Read More →By Vivian Nereim and Nazeeha Saeed
Amid the war with Iran, Bahrain has stripped 69 people of their citizenship, including children, accusing them of disloyalty and rendering them stateless.
By Erica L. Green and Zolan Kanno-Youngs
President Trump denied that the United States would be part of a $300 billion rebuilding fund for Iran and argued that his agreement was better than the one Barack Obama struck in 2015.
By Nataliya Vasilyeva
Scores of targeted attacks against supply routes, part of what Kyiv calls a “logistics lockdown,” has caused gasoline shortages.
By José María León Cabrera and Johanna Alarcón
In Ecuador’s highlands, a seamless mix of Kichwa and Spanish creates a language that bends grammar, adds melody and goes unnoticed by many who speak it every day.
By Mark Landler
A peace framework with Iran, and hope for cooperation with Ukraine, softened the tone on Tuesday at a Group of 7 gathering in France.
By Isabel Kershner
Leading figures from Channel 14, a right-wing broadcaster that supports Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, are openly attacking the U.S. president over his Iran deal.
By Amelia Nierenberg and Johanna Lemola
The Nordic country, which shares an 830-mile border with Russia, said the move would strengthen the NATO alliance, which it joined three years ago.
By Amelia Nierenberg, Matthew Mpoke Bigg, Saikou Jammeh and Justin Makangara
The soccer stars’ sharp black suits with leopard-print details are a nod to a long history of “sapeur” fashion.
By John Ismay and Nicholas Kulish
The U.S. Navy will be deploying a new generation of drone-based countermeasures to search the sea floor and surface for any mines Iran laid.
By Javier C. Hernández and Hisako Ueno
The Fair Trade Commission said that it suspected six leading ice cream manufacturers fixed the prices of popular frozen treats.
By Lynsey Chutel and Henrik Pryser Libell
Princess Mette-Marit was placed on a waiting list for organ donation this month. Thousands of Norwegians signed up as organ donors.
By Michael D. Shear
Britain’s Ministry of Defense said that the Russian vessel appeared to be trying to avoid a collision in the English Channel.
By Anupreeta Das
Despite mutual praise between the two leaders, there has been a series of setbacks to U.S. relations with India since they last met more than a year ago.
By David E. Sanger
While the Iranians suffered substantial losses in the war, they emerged from a confrontation with the world’s most powerful military having proved they can use economic chaos as a weapon.
By Ephrat Livni
The two agreements are difficult to compare, because the current memorandum of understanding is an interim arrangement meant to outline a negotiating path to a fuller deal.
By Saikou Jammeh
Many see the rivalry between France and Senegal as a result of colonial heritage. But at the same time, European teams are more African than ever.
By Erica L. Green, Zolan Kanno-Youngs, Farnaz Fassihi and Michael Levenson
President Trump lashed out at critics who say the agreement achieves less than the one President Barack Obama signed in 2015, and he threatened to bomb Iran again if it violated the deal.
By Pranav Baskar
The agreement outlines a $300 billion plan to rebuild Iran, and says sanctions would be lifted in the future.
By Katrin Bennhold
Australia barred children from social media in December. Since then, young people have found plenty of ways to skirt the measure.
By Rebecca F. Elliott
The preliminary U.S.-Iran deal temporarily waives restrictions that have limited the country’s oil sales and how much money it has been able to make from those exports.
By Apoorva Mandavilli
The State Department is taking over much of the control of global health initiatives, for which critics say the department does not have the expertise.
By Zane Irwin
It was the latest in a slate of deals the Trump administration has pursued to expel migrants to countries to which they may have no personal ties.
By Tyler Pager
The document leaves complicated issues like Iran’s nuclear program still to be decided and a 60-day window to determine them.
By Max Bearak and Zolan Kanno-Youngs
More than 100 days after U.S. airstrikes demolished an elementary school in the southern Iranian city of Minab, the president said the episode was still under investigation.
By Mark Landler
At the Group of 7 gathering in France, President Trump’s oscillations on his Iran deal and Ukraine left European leaders racing to catch up.
By Jack Ewing and Ryan Mac
Some shareholders might object, but there is little they could do, legal experts say.
By William B. Davis, Madison Dong, Judson Jones, John Keefe, Joey K. Lee and Bea Malsky
View the location of the quake’s epicenter and shake area.
By Carl Zimmer
The oldest known cases, discovered among hunter-gatherers in Siberian graves, contradict the theory that the disease once was mild.
By Mark Landler
Snippets of conversations picked up on microphones at the annual Group of 7 summit in France offered a glimpse behind the scenes, as leaders chatted about issues great and small.
By Jeanna Smialek
Executives from Anthropic, OpenAI and Mistral will be among those attending a lunch meeting with leaders from many of the world’s richest nations.
By Claire Moses
The 66-year-old gave few details of his diagnosis but said the disease was “aggressive.”
By Leo Sands, Erica L. Green, Zolan Kanno-Youngs and Jeanna Smialek
Group of 7 leaders will discuss Artificial Intelligence and global imbalances on Wednesday, even as questions over Iran linger.
By Alan Cowell
A Labour Party deputy who spent years in opposition, he criticized Conservatives and members of his own party, and was at the heart of major political moments.
By Zane Irwin
Two Belarusian men were in custody as part of an investigation into the killing of the exiled painter Robert Kuzovkov.