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    Israel-Lebanon ceasefire, ICE charges and FISA revolt

     
    TODAY’S IRAN WAR story

    Israel and Lebanon begin tentative 10-day ceasefire

    What happened
    A 10-day ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon took effect at midnight local time, though Hezbollah has not committed to the truce. President Donald Trump announced the ceasefire yesterday after a flurry of diplomatic wrangling. The pause in fighting, if it holds, would remove one of the sticking points in U.S. peace talks with Iran, Hezbollah’s main backer.

    Who said what
    The State Department said Israel, as a “gesture of goodwill,” had agreed to pause “offensive operations” against Lebanese targets while reserving the “right to take all necessary measures in self-defense.” Lebanon was expected to take “meaningful steps” to prevent Hezbollah from attacking Israel. 

    Trump’s ceasefire pressure put Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu “in an awkward position,” The New York Times said. His “goal to gut Hezbollah is far from fulfilled, and he was swiftly assailed by his allies and critics” for agreeing to the truce. Israel’s security cabinet “heard about Trump’s announcement several minutes into” an “urgent conference call” Netanyahu had convened “to discuss the ceasefire and vote on it,” Axios said. 

    Netanyahu said in a subsequent statement that Israeli forces would remain in a 6-mile-deep “security zone” spanning southern Lebanon, “and we are not leaving.” Hezbollah said “Israeli occupation of our land” gave them “the right to resist it,” and it will act “based on how developments unfold.”

    What next?
    The temporary truce “will bring immediate relief” to war-ravaged Lebanon, The Wall Street Journal said. But “without Hezbollah at the negotiating table,” peace is “on shaky ground.” 

     
     
    TODAY’S IMMIGRATION story

    Minnesota charges ICE agent with felony assault

    What happened
    Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty yesterday announced criminal charges against an ICE agent for allegedly pointing his gun at two people in another car in a road rage incident during President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown in Minnesota. She said a nationwide arrest warrant had been issued for the agent, Gregory Donnell Morgan Jr., on two felony counts of second-degree assault. 

    Who said what
    Minnesota has “no such thing as absolute immunity for federal agents who violate the law,” Moriarty (pictured above) said at a news conference. This is a “rare instance” of local law enforcement charging a federal official for “on-duty actions,” The New York Times said. It’s also the “first criminal charge to be levied against a federal agent” from Operation Metro Surge, The Minnesota Star Tribune said. Moriarty said the charges were filed before more high-profile ongoing investigations, like the killing of Renée Good, because this case was straightforward, with ICE cooperation and ample evidence. 

    What next?
    If convicted, Morgan “faces up to seven years in prison for each assault charge,” The Associated Press said.

     
     
    TODAY’S POLITICS Story

    House punts on spying law after late-night revolt

    What happened
    The House early this morning approved a 10-day extension of a controversial surveillance law after a rebellion by libertarian-leaning Republicans. President Donald Trump had urged Republicans to “UNIFY” and pass an 18-month extension of Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act without any changes. House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) (pictured above) called an overnight session to pass either that bill or a five-year extension with some changes to win over GOP holdouts. Some 20 Republicans joined all but four Democrats to vote both down, and the 10-day extension was passed by voice vote. 

    Who said what
    Section 702 allows the CIA, FBI and other intelligence agencies to surveil foreigners overseas — and any Americans they are communicating with — without a warrant. Debate over its reauthorization “has scrambled the usual polarized party lines,” The New York Times said. “Privacy and civil liberties-focused lawmakers in both parties have allied to press for greater limits, while centrists and national security hawks” want it renewed without changes.

    What next?
    Section 702 expires on Monday, and the Senate is “gaveling for a rare Friday session, as Congress races to keep the surveillance program running,” The Associated Press said. 

     
     

    It’s not all bad

    An engineering doctoral student from Northern Ireland has created a lightweight, shatter-resistant window that could help Ukrainians repair war-damaged homes. Harry Blakiston Houston designed the $27 windows after learning that people were living in freezing conditions because of shattered panes. His solution uses triple-layered plastic that offers insulation comparable to double glazing. It takes about 15 minutes to put in the windows, which can arrive faster than traditional glass replacements.

     
     
    Under the radar

    This garbage patch is now a thriving ecosystem

    It may be an island of trash, but the Great Pacific Garbage Patch is home to dozens of species. The detritus is floating within the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre, a “huge rotating current system between California and Hawaii” where “objects tend to get trapped,” said Earth.com. The gyre has amassed tens of thousands of tons of plastic trash, about 80% of which originated on land.

    Over time, much of this plastic has gained living inhabitants, according to a 2023 study published in the journal Nature Ecology & Evolution. Scientists found 484 animals from 46 species on plastic debris from the gyre. Inhabitants were not “merely riding the debris to a new location,” said IFL Science. Researchers found “animals at all life stages, including juveniles and adults.” This range indicates that the organisms are there for the long haul. 

    Perhaps counterintuitively, the plastic is key to this ecosystem. “Unlike natural floating substrates such as driftwood or pumice, plastic can persist for decades, providing a continuous surface for attachment,” said The Economic Times. The plastic allows “coastal species that once would have died long before reaching remote islands” to survive, said Econews.

    But this migration “comes with serious risks,” said Econews. It introduces new invasive species to areas where they “compete with native corals, algae and invertebrates on reefs that are already stressed by warming, pollution and overfishing.” So even though there is life on the Patch, it “does not diminish the urgency of reducing plastic production and improving waste management,” said The Economic Times.

     
     
    On this day

    April 17, 1970

    Apollo 13 splashed down in the Pacific after a failed mission to land on the moon. An oxygen tank explosion early in the flight imperiled the astronauts and precluded their lunar touchdown. Earlier this month, a posthumous message from Apollo 13 commander Jim Lovell was played for the crew of NASA’s Artemis II moon mission.

     
     
    TODAY’S newspaperS

    ‘Reality won’t comply’

    “As a 10-day ceasefire begins, Israel and Lebanon agree to more talks,” The Philadelphia Inquirer says on Friday’s front page. “Trump casts Iran war as won and done. Reality won’t comply,” The New York Times says. “Former Lt. Gov. Fairfax kills wife, self,” The Washington Times says. “Judge imposes new restrictions on ballroom work” at White House, “drawing Trump’s scorn,” The Washington Post says. “Pope condemns using God for political gain,” The Palm Beach Post says. “Companies drop the scalpel, pick up a big ax for layoffs,” The Wall Street Journal says. “Sailors are not receiving their care packages,” says USA Today.

    ► See the newspaper front pages

     
     
    Tall tale

    Swiping wrong

    A California sheriff’s deputy is under investigation for scrolling on what “appeared to be a dating app” during a tense stand-off with an armed suspect, said CBS News. Video captured by a news crew showed the Riverside County deputy swiping through what looked like dating profiles while crouched behind a police car, a few feet from the suspect’s vehicle. The deputy’s behavior “does not reflect the standards, expectations or policies of our department,” the sheriff’s office said in a statement.

     
     

    Morning Report was written and edited by Nadia Croes, Catherine Garcia, Scott Hocker, Anya Jaremko-Greenwold, Justin Klawans, Rafi Schwartz, Peter Weber and Kari Wilkin, with illustrations by Stephen Kelly and Julia Wytrazek.

    Image credits, from top: Mahmoud Zayyat / AFP via Getty Images; George Walker IV / AP Photo; Alex Wong / Getty Images; Illustration by Stephen P. Kelly / Shutterstock / Getty Images
     

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