Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Windsor Johnston.
U.S.
and Israeli airstrikes continue against Iran, marking one week since the war broke out.
Tehran has responded with missile and drone attacks, raising fears of a wider Middle East conflict.
NPR's Michelle Kellerman reports the U.N.'s top humanitarian official says the war is costing about a billion dollars a day.
President Trump says there will be no deal with Iran but only in his words unconditional surrender and he says in the aftermath partners and allies will bring Iran back from the brink.
The UN's humanitarian chief Tom Fletcher is calling for de-escalation now saying he's worried about the knock-on effects.
War doesn't stay neatly within borders or on desktop military plans.
It tears through markets.
supply chains, food prices.
And he says when that happens, the world's most vulnerable people tend to suffer the consequences.
Michelle Kellerman, NPR News, the State Department.
President Trump will travel to Dover Air Force Base in Delaware today to attend the dignified transfer of six U.S.
service members killed in the conflict with Iran.
The ceremony marks the return of the flag-draped transfer cases of troops killed overseas,
a solemn military tradition honoring those who died in service.
A routine court filing in an immigration case in Texas has revealed what appears to be a nationwide government policy.
Mark Betancourt reports the filing suggests undocumented family members who try to remove their children from immigration detention could themselves be detained.
Migrant advocates say it's the first hard evidence of a formal Department of Homeland Security policy to arrest and deport the relatives of detained migrant children.
The DHS document says, quote,