Iran and U.S. trade strikes and 11 presumed dead in chemical implosion: Morning Rundown – nbcnews.com

Home Latest News Iran and U.S. trade strikes and 11 presumed dead in chemical implosion: Morning Rundown – nbcnews.com
Iran and U.S. trade strikes and 11 presumed dead in chemical implosion: Morning Rundown – nbcnews.com

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A new military clash between the U.S. and Iran. Eleven people are presumed dead after a paper mill implosion in Washington state. Plus, a look at a new sporting competition where doping is encouraged.
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Here’s what to know today.
Iran said it targeted an American airbase in response to new U.S. strikes that it called a “blatant violation” of both the shaky ceasefire between the two countries and international law.
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The new clash began when the U.S. shot down four Iranian one-way attack drones and struck a ground control station around Bandar Abbas, a port city near the Strait of Hormuz, that the military assessed as presenting a direct threat to U.S. forces and commercial shipping, a U.S. official said.
The exchange raised further doubts about diplomatic efforts to end the war and reopen the crucial Strait of Hormuz.
Hours earlier, President Donald Trump signaled an agreement between the two sides wasn’t close, and that he would not be rushed by international economic pressure or the political pressure of upcoming midterm elections.
Here’s what else we know.
A $1.1 billion Drone Dominance Gauntlet program to purchase 300,000 drones aims to address a deficit in the U.S. military’s use of first-person view, or FPV, drones, which are swiftly becoming ubiquitous in modern-day wars.
The program is unlike other Pentagon procurement processes. Rather than manufacturing expensive bespoke systems, companies are invited to apply to compete with FPV drones already on the market. Pilots are given time to learn each machine before using it to complete a series of scenarios. The top-performing systems are guaranteed an order from the Pentagon.
Read the full story here.
🎙 Senior legal correspondent Laura Jarrett will answer your questions about the Supreme Court, major legal cases and more during a live Q&A today at 3 p.m. ET. Submit your questions here.
A chemical tank implosion at a Washington state paper mill is feared to be the deadliest industrial accident in modern history, Gov. Bob Ferguson said, as officials confirmed two deaths and said nine other people are presumed dead. Seven additional employees are hospitalized with injuries, officials said.
The implosion happened Tuesday morning at the Nippon Dynawave plant in Longview and involved a tank built to hold 900,000 gallons of “white liquor,” a noxious chemical used in the paper-pulping process, officials said.
Among the victims killed was 52-year-old Gilbert Bernal, whose son, Eli, also worked at the plant and described the scene after the implosion. “Just that big steam cloud, it was everywhere,” Eli said. “It was so vast, just like a cloud on the floor.”
More about the recovery efforts.
As the dust settles following Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton’s defeat of Sen. John Cornyn for the GOP Senate nomination, some Republicans now worry they’ll have to spend more than anticipated to boost their candidate in the general election.
Paxton’s $7.6 million in fundraising so far pales in comparison to his opponent, Democratic state Rep. James Talarico who has raised more than $40 million. One GOP consultant estimated that Republican groups will most likely have to quadruple their original spending for the race, potentially pulling resources from other key battleground races as the party fights to keep its Senate majority. But as the race in 2018 between Democrat Beto O’Rourke and Republican Sen. Ted Cruz showed, money isn’t everything.
How efforts to boost Paxton are taking shape.
If you didn’t know better, the sporting event that took place last weekend in Las Vegas looked like a regular track, swimming or weightlifting competition. But what made the inaugural Enhanced Games so controversial — and such a spectacle — was under the surface. Thirty-eight of the 42 athletes competed while taking a personalized cocktail of drugs.
Is this the future of sports? The event’s organizers believe so, and have built a supplement business around selling many of the same performance-enhancers used by the athletes. International sporting competitions such as the International Olympic Committee, meanwhile, have condemned the concept as a moral and ethical quagmire. Would the drugs even help? That’s what I went to Vegas to find out. Andrew Greif, sports reporter
It’s not too late to stock up on summer essentials like citronella and deodorant. Plus, NBC Select’s editors found the best cooling shirts (a game changer for family barbecues) and the best spray sunscreens, according to dermatologists.
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Elizabeth Robinson is a newsletter editor for NBC News, based in Los Angeles.
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