Trump news at a glance: President says of Israel-Iran conflict ‘sometimes they have to fight it out’ as G7 leaders gather

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"Trump Faces Pressure on Iran Strategy Amid Ongoing Israel-Iran Conflict"

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TruthLens AI Summary

As the conflict between Israel and Iran escalates, European leaders are seeking clarity from President Donald Trump regarding his strategy toward Iran and whether he will leverage his relationship with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to encourage a ceasefire. With missile exchanges intensifying and casualties rising, Trump's prediction of imminent peace appears overly optimistic, drawing parallels to his previous claims about resolving the Russia-Ukraine war quickly. The urgency for a ceasefire is accentuated by the cancellation of upcoming U.S. talks with Iran concerning its civil nuclear program, which were scheduled before the recent outbreak of violence. Trump expressed hope for a deal, stating, 'sometimes they have to fight it out,' as he prepared to attend the G7 summit in Canada, where he is expected to face scrutiny regarding his confidence in achieving peace between the two nations.

At the G7 summit, European leaders plan to challenge Trump on his assertions that a resolution between Israel and Iran is achievable. They will likely press him for a more concrete plan to de-escalate the situation, especially in light of his recent veto of an Israeli plan to target Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. The summit will also address broader issues, including Trump's contentious remarks about Greenland, which drew criticism from French President Emmanuel Macron. Amidst these geopolitical discussions, other significant events in the U.S. include the tragic shooting of a demonstrator in Salt Lake City during a protest and the apprehension of a suspect in the fatal shooting of Minnesota legislators, highlighting a week marked by both international tensions and domestic violence. These developments underscore the complexities facing the Trump administration on multiple fronts, as it navigates both foreign policy and internal challenges.

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As heavy exchanges of missile fire continue and the death toll mounts on both sides, European leaders want to pin downDonald Trumpon his Iran strategy – including getting a definitive response on whether he will use his influence over Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, to have the warring parties call a ceasefire or instead let them continue fighting.

Predicting “peace soon” between Israel and Iran, Trump appeared to have learned little from his 2024 election boast that he could stop the Russia-Ukraine war in “24 hours”. If Israel and Iran can be convinced to call a ceasefire, it might allow the rescheduling of US talks withIranon its civil nuclear programme that had been set for Sunday but were cancelled after Israel launched its assault on Thursday night.

Before leaving for the G7 summit in Canada on Sunday, Trump was asked what he was doing to de-escalate the situation. “I hope there’s going to be a deal. I think it’s time for a deal,” he told reporters, adding “sometimes they have to fight it out.”

European leaders gathering for a G7 summit withDonald Trumpin the Canadian Rockies plan to spend the opening day asking him to justify his confidence and largely unsubstantiated remarks that Israel and Iran will make a deal that will mean “peace soon”.

The president has boasted that “we can easily get a deal done between Iran and Israel, and end this bloody conflict”.

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Donald Trump vetoed an Israeli plan in recent days to kill Iran’s supreme leaderAyatollah Ali Khamenei, two anonymous US officials told Reuters on Sunday.

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Emmanuel Macroncriticised Donald Trump’s threats to take over Greenland as he became the first foreign head of state to visit the vast, mineral-rich Arctic territory since the US president began making explicit threats to annex it.

“I don’t think that’s what allies do,” Macron said as he arrived in the Danish autonomous territory for a highly symbolic visit aimed at conveying “France’s and the EU’s solidarity” withGreenlandon his way to the G7 in Canada.

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A demonstrator died after being shot on Saturday during Salt Lake City’s “No Kings” protest,Utahpolice said. Arthur Folasa Ah Loo, 39, was apparently shot by a man who was part of the event’s peacekeeping team.

Brian Redd, the Salt Lake City police chief, called the victim “an innocent bystander participating in the demonstration.”

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The man suspected ofopening fire on two Minnesota legislatorsand their spouses on 14 June, killing one legislator and her husband, was apprehended late on Sunday night, officials told the Associated Press and New York Times.

Vance Boelter, 57, stands accused of fatally shooting the Democratic state representative Melissa Hortman and her husband, Mark, at their residence. Boelter is also suspected of shooting the state senator John Hoffman and his wife, Yvette, at their home, seriously injuring them.

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Donald Trump’s army parade was neither the totalitarian North Korean spectacle that critics had grimly predicted, nor the triumph of Maga nationalism fans craved,J Oliver Conroy writes.

Trump has absorbed the accusations of authoritarianism for usurping the powers of California’s government by deploying the national guard and marines in Los Angeles – but Stephen Miller – the modestly titled White House deputy chief of staff –may have been the true catalystfor those volatile scenes.

The administration’s cuts to scientific research andattacks on higher educationhave soured the US as an academic sowing ground – and as a direct consequence thebest and brightest minds are leaving to carve out a career overseas.

Catching up?Here’s what happened on14 June.

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Source: The Guardian