2026-06-04
14 分钟Good morning.
Israel and Lebanon agree to a tentative ceasefire, even as Iran launches heavy bombardments into nearby countries.
The Wall Street Journal goes behind Trump's attempts to contain the fighting.
He doesn't want to keep bombing Iran.
He doesn't want more escalation in the Middle East.
In his mind, he is the great peacemaker.
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And NPR takes us inside the chaos engulfing 60 Minutes.
It's Thursday, June 4th.
I'm Yasmeen Khan in for Shamita Basu.
This is Apple News Today.
As the talks continued, so did the fighting.
Yesterday, Iran struck missiles at its neighbors, Bahrain and Kuwait, attacks that killed one person and injured
at least 63. And Israel continued to target Iran's proxy Hezbollah in Lebanon, with strikes that killed at least nine.
Yesterday, the two countries agreed to implement a ceasefire, contingent on Hezbollah stopping its attacks.
Whether that holds will be crucial to unlocking any progress in negotiations, which appear to have stalled again.
Iran, for legitimate and non-legitimate reasons,
is trying to connect the Israel-Hezbollah fight to the U.S.-Iran ceasefire.
Alex Ward is a national security reporter with The Wall Street Journal.
Basically saying, if that fight goes on, then the ceasefire between the U.S. and Iran is over.