Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Corva Coleman.
The U.S. Says it is sending representatives to Qatar to talk with Iranian
officials about next steps in a peace agreement.
Both sides have traded attacks in the Gulf region, and the ceasefire remains shaky.
But NPR's Ru Sherlock reports Iran says it's not going to Qatar to meet U.S.
Officials.
Iran says this meeting is with Qatari officials on topics including the release of billions of dollars of frozen assets.
That was in the Memorandum of Understanding, this MOU signed between the U.S.
And Iran.
Iran's president has said he expects around half $6 billion
of these frozen assets in Qatar to be released in this interim phase.
NPR's Ru Sherlock reporting.
Today's the last day of the U.S.
Supreme Court's current session.
The justices are expected to rule on President Trump's challenge to birthright citizenship, part of the 14th Amendment.
It is interpreted to mean every person born on U.S.
Soil receives American citizenship.
Trump argues that it does not.
Michigan's Democratic Governor Gretchen Whitmer is threatening to pull her state's National Guard troops
from Washington, D.C. That's if they're used for President Trump's ongoing anti-crime task force in the U.S.