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    Israel’s incursion, cancer breakthrough and Trump’s latest takeover

     
    TODAY’S INTERNATIONAL story

    Israel takes Crusader castle in Lebanon, imperiling talks

    What happened
    Israel yesterday said its military had captured Beaufort Castle, a 900-year-old hilltop fortress in Lebanon that served as an Israeli base from 1982 to 2000. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the seizure of the strategic Crusades-era fortress was a “dramatic step” toward his government’s new goal to “deepen and expand our grip on the places that were under Hezbollah’s control.” 

    Who said what
    Israel made its “deepest incursion inside Lebanon” since its 2000 withdrawal “despite a nominal U.S.-brokered ceasefire” and the first direct Israel-Lebanon talks in decades, The Associated Press said. Israel’s advance is also “complicating negotiations between the U.S. and Iran, which has made an end to fighting” in Lebanon “one of its conditions for a deal,” The Wall Street Journal. Netanyahu “has come under heavy pressure from critics who say he has allowed the U.S. to tie his hands in fighting” Hezbollah. 

    Military experts said capturing Beaufort “was unlikely to protect Israeli forces from Hezbollah’s cable-borne drones,” The New York Times said. And despite the “increasing domestic pressure to ramp up Israeli attacks in Lebanon,” Netanyahu’s options appear “limited to avoid totally derailing the talks with Iran,” a “higher priority” for President Donald Trump.

    What next?
    France requested an emergency meeting of the U.N. Security Council today. “Nothing can justify the prolongation of Israeli military operations in Lebanon and its increasingly deep occupation of Lebanese territory,” French Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot said yesterday.

     
     
    TODAY’S MEDICAL SCIENCE story

    Pill offers hope in treating deadly pancreatic cancer

    What happened
    A cancer drug decades in the making significantly extended the life and improved the quality of life of patients whose metastatic pancreatic cancer had stopped responding to previous treatments, researchers reported yesterday in The New England Journal of Medicine and at an American Society for Clinical Oncology meeting in Chicago. People assigned Revolution Medicine’s daraxonrasib pill in a study of 500 last-stage pancreatic patients lived an average of 13.2 months, versus 6.7 months for those on chemotherapy, and experienced fewer side effects.

    Who said what
    The “hotly anticipated” findings suggest researchers have “cracked one of the most stubbornly lethal cancers” by blocking mutated KRAS genes responsible for most pancreatic tumors, The Washington Post said. Daraxonrasib “ticks all of the boxes,” said Dr. Rachna Shroff of the University of Arizona Cancer Center, who wasn’t involved in the study. “Having treated pancreatic cancer for 16 years, I actually started crying” at the results. 

    What next?
    “Dozens of experimental drugs” targeting cancer-causing gene mutations are in development, stoking “optimism that this may be a turning point in the quest” for new treatment options, The Associated Press said. Revolution Medicine is now testing daraxonrasib in earlier-stage cancer and in combination with other treatments. 

     
     
    TODAY’S WHITE HOUSE Story

    Trump to headline US 250th event after artists bail

    What happened
    President Donald Trump will headline the “Great American State Fair,” a 16-day event on the National Mall to celebrate America’s 250th birthday, event organizers said Saturday. Freedom 250 — the public-private group the president created to run semiquincentennial activities — said Trump “will personally kick off this historic celebration,” hours after he suggested he replace the “highly paid, Third Rate ‘Artists’” who dropped out due to the event’s partisan overtones.

    Who said what
    Trump early Saturday said he wanted to hold “an AMERICA IS BACK Rally” where he — the “Number One Attraction anywhere in the World, the man who gets much larger audiences than Elvis in his prime,” and “THE GOAT!” — would give a “major speech” to rally the country. He then posted that Freedom 250 should hold a “giant MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN RALLY, for 250, instead of having overpriced singers, who nobody wants to hear, whose music is boring, and yet who do nothing but complain.”

    What next?
    After Martina McBride, Young MC, Morris Day and the Time, the Commodores and Poison’s Bret Michaels said they wouldn’t perform, the only confirmed acts are Vanilla ICE, Flo Rida and Milli Vanilli’s Fab Morvan. A senior administration official told The New York Times that someone will likely be fired over the concert rollout “mess.” 

     
     

    It’s not all bad

    A new wearable ultrasound patch could one day help detect pregnancy complications early on and prevent stillbirths. The UPatch, now a proof-of-concept device, continuously monitors fetuses in the womb and tracks blood flow. In a trial of 52 pregnant women, the UPatch found that one woman with preeclampsia, a serious type of high blood pressure, had extreme intrauterine growth restriction. Her baby was then delivered via caesarean to prevent a stillbirth, researchers reported in the journal Nature Biotechnology.

     
     
    Under the radar

    The worst-case climate scenario just got better

    An international team of researchers has pulled a high-emissions climate scenario under which no efforts are made to curb climate change. This model, called RCP8.5, represented what was thought to be the worst climate change could get. But thanks to strides in renewable energy and emissions reductions, it is now largely considered improbable.

    It’s difficult to determine how climate change will affect the future “because how much the planet will warm depends in large part on what humans do,” said Vox. So scientists build “structured guesses about how the next century might unfold under different assumptions about energy use, growth and climate policy.” These scenarios get updated every seven years.

    The “use of RCP8.5 in climate modeling has remained, in part, as a way to study what might happen” if the “world does nothing to tackle climate change,” said The Washington Post. It has also “provided fodder for attacks,” with skeptics like President Donald Trump arguing that “scientists, activists and the media have overstated the risks that actually exist and given outsized attention to the most extreme scenario.”

    These updated predictions are a “sign the expansion of solar, wind, electric vehicles and batteries have slowed emissions growth,” Andrew King, an associate professor of climate science at the University of Melbourne, said at The Conversation. “Taking RCP8.5 off the table is a sign of progress.” But the new worst case is still bad, and scientists also removed the best-case option. Essentially, the scenarios are “becoming less pessimistic but also less optimistic,” said The New York Times.

     
     
    On this day

    June 1, 1980

    CNN debuted, launching the first 24-hour news network. The cable station, which shot to prominence for its coverage of the Gulf War in 1991, was started by Ted Turner, who died last month. The network might soon be combined with CBS News as part of a proposed Paramount-Warner Bros. merger.

     
     
    TODAY’S newspaperS

    ‘Seismic shift’

    Supreme Court’s “voting decision unleashes seismic shift across South,” The New York Times says on Monday’s front page. “California governor contest tightens” to three frontrunners for two runoff slots, says USA Today. “Middle-class costs outpace inflation rate,” The Boston Globe says. “Trump fund leaves ‘J6ers’ elated,” the Los Angeles Times says. “Stiff tax pitched for payoffs” in bid to “stymie $1.8 billion ‘anti-weaponization fund,’” The Washington Post says. “Far right’s ‘tiger’ surges into Colombia runoff,” The Wall Street Journal says. “Arizona grandmother freed from detention” after “more than 10 months,” says the Arizona Republic. 

    ► See the newspaper front pages

     
     
    Tall tale

    Hit and fly

    A paraglider went spiraling out of control after a small sightseeing plane ripped through her parachute. The 44-year-old woman, identified as Sabrina, was soaring over Piesendorf, Austria, when the plane hit her and its propeller cut her canopy. She quickly deployed her reserve parachute and made an emergency landing. Sabrina said on social media that she was shocked she survived the incident and walked away with just a “few nasty bruises and overall contusions.”

     
     

    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: Jalaa Marey / AFP via Getty Images; wildpixel / iStock / Getty Images; Yuri Gripas / Abaca / Bloomberg via Getty Images; Illustration by Stephen P. Kelly / Shutterstock / Getty Images
     

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