Sunday, June 28, 2026

US and Iran agree to halt Hormuz attacks, will reportedly hold talks about strait in Qatar on Tuesday


US and Iran agree to halt Hormuz attacks, will reportedly hold talks about strait in Qatar on Tuesday


Iran and the United States have agreed to halt attacks, a US official said Sunday, and will reportedly meet again on Tuesday in Doha to discuss the Strait of Hormuz.

The Axios news site, citing US officials and a source with knowledge of the details, reported that Tuesday’s talks were originally planned to take place in Switzerland, but the flareup caused them to be moved to Qatar’s capital and the topic was changed to the Hormuz standoff, as disputes and gaps remain despite the memorandum of understanding reached earlier this month.

“We decided to stop all the kinetic activity,” one of the US officials was quoted as saying.

Confirming that the sides agreed to stop attacks and resume negotiations, a US official said”technical talks are slated to continue on all areas of the MOU,” not just Hormuz.

“Both sides will stand down for now and vessels can move freely,” the official said.

The remarks came shortly after an Iranian official said Tehran did not take part in technical talks slated for Sunday due to recent attacks on the country and unfulfilled conditions of the MOU, which was meant to halt the fighting and reopen the strait while negotiations proceeded on issues such as Iran’s nuclear program.

“For example, one of the reasons is checking if we have access to the unfrozen funds, if there is no access then this condition has not been fulfilled,” Mehdi Fazaeili, a member of the Office of Preservation and Publication of the Works of Iran’s Supreme Leader, told state television.

Despite a ceasefire that took effect in April and the recently signed MOU, sporadic violence has continued in the Gulf region, the spark of which is often Iranian attacks on ships passing through the Strait of Hormuz.

Tehran was angered by Oman’s announcement last week of an alternative route through the strait that hugged the Omani shoreline, which Muscat said was in conjunction with the International Maritime Organization.

Iran has continued to insist on controlling passage through the vital strait, through which a fifth of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas travel in normal times. It did not enjoy such control before the war.

The strait comprises Omani and Iranian territorial waters, but under customary international law the two cannot generally block passage or charge tolls.

Nevertheless, Iran prevented most ships from using the narrow waterway during the war, granting it enormous economic leverage which it appears reluctant to give up.

The attacks by Iran to enforce its control have triggered repeated tit-for-tats with Washington, the latest of which came early Sunday, when US Central Command said it had attacked 10 Iranian military targets over “continued Iranian aggression against commercial shipping” following another strike on a tanker in the region.

Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps said it retaliated with strikes against US bases in Kuwait and Bahrain, which both of those countries condemned. The IRGC claimed the US strikes violated the ceasefire and “will result in the complete halt of all diplomatic processes,” state-run Press TV said. The IRGC navy command said American bases in the region “will experience hell in the coming days.”


Iran presently insists ships transiting the strait pass through a corridor near its own shores, though this week dozens of vessels have travelled along the opposite side of the waterway, hugging the Omani coast.

“Any attempt to adopt new or separate arrangements compared to what is underway by the Islamic Republic of Iran, will only lead to more complicated situations and delays in the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, and will increase the tensions,” Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said.

The published text of the memorandum says Iran will define the future administration of the strait in dialogue with Oman and the other Gulf States, but “in line” with international law.

US officials say attacks halted, Qatar talks to be held this week


US officials say attacks halted, Qatar talks to be held this week
REUTERS


Iran did not take part in technical talks slated for Sunday due to recent attacks on the country and unfulfilled conditions of the MoU with the United States, a member of the Office of Preservation and Publication of the Works of Iran’s Supreme Leader told state TV on Sunday.

"For example one of the reasons is checking if we have access to the unfrozen funds, if there is no access then this condition has not been fulfilled," Mehdi Fazaeili said.

However, a senior US official told The Jerusalem Post on Sunday that "nothing had been canceled" regarding the talks between Americans and Iranians expected to be held this week.

"Technical talks regarding the implementation of MoUare on track for the coming days as planned, and deconfliction channels are up and running after the Lake Lucerne Summit," he said.

Additionally, the US and Iran agreed to stop attacks and meet in Qatar in the coming week, Axios reported Sunday, citing a senior US official.

We decided to stop all the kinetic activity," a senior the official told Axios, with a second official confirming the upcoming meeting as well as telling the outlet that "vessels can move freely" at this time.

However, the "hotline" meant to be established to facilitate communication between the US and Iran on the Strait of Hormuz, wasn't operational as of Saturday, the report added.


CDC Raises Ebola Response to Highest Level as Outbreak Grows


CDC Raises Ebola Response to Highest Level as Outbreak Grows


Pillai said the CDC has stationed 19 staff members overseas to aid country teams and local health ministries with data analysis, exit screenings at airports, laboratory support, and training. Those personnel join approximately 100 CDC staff already on the ground in Congo and Uganda.

There are no approved vaccines or specific treatments for the Bundibugyo strain, distinguishing it from more common Zaire ebolavirus outbreaks. Mortality rates for Bundibugyo have historically spanned from 25 percent to 50 percent, according to the CDC.

The United States is currently developing a vaccine to combat the Bundibugyo strain through the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response and the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA).

That agency is also sending doses of the experimental monoclonal antibody therapy MBP134, which was developed with Mapp Biopharmaceutical for compassionate use and a randomized clinical trial spearheaded by the University of Oxford. BARDA has also pre-positioned 2,500 rapid diagnostic tests for deployment to Africa.

BARDA is also seeking proposals for vaccine candidates using the same platform as Merck’s Ervebo vaccine, which targets the Zaire strain.

The effort strives to support both the current outbreak response and longer-term preparedness in coordination with global partners, including the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations.

The outbreak, first confirmed in mid-May in Congo, has spread to additional health zones, and there have been recent jumps in cases and deaths. Congo’s Ministry of Communications reported 72 new cases and 32 new deaths in one update, raising the regional toll. Death totals in the outbreak have surpassed 200, and the number of confirmed fatalities has climbed steadily.
The outbreak has encompassed the displacement camps where the first Ebola deaths were reported, and Uganda has closed its border with Congo and has confirmed cases and deaths of its own.
U.S. officials have issued travel advisories for the affected regions. The State Department and CDC have issued guidance for travelers, with certain restrictions expanded in response to the outbreak.

Health authorities underscore that although the situation in Africa is serious, transmission requires direct contact with bodily fluids of infected individuals or contaminated surfaces, lowering the threat of widespread spread in the United States.

No cases have been reported in the United States connected to this outbreak.

Prior Ebola outbreaks, including the 2014–2016 West Africa epidemic, have also prompted a previous Level 1 CDC activation. International partners, including UNICEF and Gavi, have also urged accelerated vaccine development for the Bundibugyo strain.


The Three Chatbot Behaviors That Can Drive Humans to Delusional Thinking


The Three Chatbot Behaviors That Can Drive Humans to Delusional Thinking


We’ve all experienced the tendency of AI chatbots to tell us what we want to hear, but there are two other, more nuanced factors that help chatbots worm their way into human hearts.
In addition to being overly agreeable, chatbots mirror the way people speak and generate highly personalized responses based on prior conversations. Psychiatric researchers are referring to the confluence of these three characteristics—sycophancy, linguistic alignment and hyperpersonalization—as the “amplification spiral,” suggesting it’s the mechanism by which delusional thinking can fester.
“The mirroring and personalization draw you in and give the experience of talking not to a system, but to someone,” said Marc Augustin, a psychiatrist and professor at Protestant University of Applied Sciences in Bochum, Germany, and co-author of a newly published review of the literature on AI-related delusions.
Matching another person’s syntax and verbal expressions is a common way for humans to build rapport. Recent research has found that artificial-intelligence models adapt significantly to the conversational style of the humans using them. Another study suggested that the highly personalized content generated by chatbots, which builds over the course of lengthy conversations, can amplify human-confirmation bias.
Augustin cited research that documented a pattern in which chatbots rephrased and extrapolated what people shared, and told them they’re unique and that their thoughts have great implications. “This can be viewed as an element of hyperpersonalization that sycophancy alone cannot account for,” he wrote.
Some AI companies have tried to tone down the sycophantic nature of their chatbots. OpenAI discontinued its popular but problematic 4o model, which had been widely criticized for being overly agreeable. It was the subject of several lawsuits involving user delusions, suicides and a homicide. In GPT-5, the company said, sycophantic replies dropped from 14.5% to less than 6%.
Google in April said it had trained Gemini not to reinforce false beliefs, and to “gently distinguish subjective experience from objective fact.”
Still, chatbot-related dependency remains pervasive, according to clinicians.
Some 68% of psychologists surveyed in April by the American Psychological Association said their patients felt validated by chatbots. While many of the more than 1,200 respondents reported that patients had positive communication with chatbots and used them to reinforce healthy coping skills, 36% said patients had forged a dependency on a chatbot and 15% reported that patients had developed distorted thinking or delusions. 
“From what I hear from my own patients, there has been an uptick in using AI for emotional support,” said Allison LoPilato, who treats adolescents and is an associate professor in the psychiatry and behavioral-sciences department at Emory University School of Medicine.
“Chatbots still tend to be warm and reassuring,” said LoPilato, who helped craft a new guide on safe AI use for the American Psychological Association. Because they gather information about you, “it can feel like the chatbot understands you, and it can trick you into a sense of alliance and trust.”

Tremors felt in Delhi, Jammu and Kashmir after magnitude 6.2 earthquake in Afghanistan


Tremors felt in Delhi, Jammu and Kashmir after magnitude 6.2 earthquake in Afghanistan


An earthquake of magnitude 6.2 struck the Hindu Kush region in Afghanistan on Saturday, the National Centre for Seismology said.The quake was at a depth of 215 kilometres, the NCS said. There were no immediate reports of casualties or damage.According to the United States Geological Survey, the earthquake struck 43 km south of Jurm in northeastern Afghanistan.

Social media was abuzz with reports of jolts felt in parts of India, including Delhi and Srinagar. Some posts also claimed tremors were felt in neighbouring Pakistan, including in Lahore, Faisalabad and Islamabad.