Semafor Flagship-The World Today

"Trump announces Iran deal, WH limits Mythos access, EU push for tech sovereignty."

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Russ Roberts (https://trendsingeopolitics.blogspot.com).



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June 15, 2026
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The World Today

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  1. Trump announces Iran deal
  2. WH limits Mythos access
  3. EU push for tech sovereignty
  4. Japan boosts ties with UK
  5. Kyiv’s defense clout grows
  6. Big Tech vs. billionaire tax
  7. China’s ‘silver economy’ soars
  8. Trump’s UFC birthday fight
  9. A historic Knicks win
  10. FIFA rejects Haiti jerseys

A new book focuses on Iran as a “short-term society.”

1

Trump announces peace deal with Iran

Vessels in the Strait of Hormuz near the beach of Bandar Abbas, Iran
Vessels near Bandar Abbas, Iran. Amirhosein Khorgooi/ISNA/WANA via Reuters

President Donald Trump on Sunday announced that the US and Iran had finalized a deal to extend their ceasefire and reopen the Strait of Hormuz. Pakistan said the agreement would be signed on Friday, and while there was no immediate confirmation from Tehran, Trump struck an optimistic note, saying, “Ships of the World, start your engines. Let the oil flow!” Israel’s strike on Beirut on Sunday morning had threatened to derail Trump’s timeline, and further negotiations to end the war could be complicated by the conflict between Israel and Hezbollah. Another thorn in Trump’s side is the new head of Iran’s powerful Revolutionary Guards who is shaping Tehran’s hardline tactics in negotiations with Washington, The Wall Street Journal reported.

Semafor Exclusive
2

US limits Mythos over China concerns

Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei
Jessica Koscielniak/Reuters

The White House imposed export controls on Anthropic’s most advanced AI model partly over suspicions that a China-linked group had accessed it, Semafor’s Reed Albergotti reported. The Trump administration on Friday directed the AI startup to limit access to Mythos and its consumer version, Fable 5, to US citizens, prompting Anthropic to revoke all access to both models, given the broad sweep of foreign governments, companies, and individuals that fall under the rule. Beijing’s potential access to Mythos could pose huge security risks to the US, and China could attempt to reverse-engineer and copy the model, Albergotti noted. Some AI experts argued, however, that it was unprecedented for the US government to move this aggressively against one of its leading companies.

Subscribe to Semafor Technology for more AI scoops and analysis.  →

3

EU ramps up calls for tech sovereignty

EU flags
Yves Herman/Reuters

The US government’s move to suspend foreign access to Anthropic’s powerful AI models injected fresh urgency into Europe’s plans for tech sovereignty. Washington’s “use of a ‘kill switch,’ long seen as a hypothetical threat, is a wake-up call,” Politico wrote, exposing Europe’s dependence on the US’ cutting-edge AI models. Several nations are advancing efforts toward digital independence and are also teaming up to counter Washington’s and Beijing’s tightening grips over the technology. The sudden US restrictions unified European leaders in calling for the development of the continent’s own frontier AI models: Nations that don’t “will always depend… on the choices of other powers,” a prominent French far-right leader said. The issue will likely loom over this week’s G7 summit in France.

4

Japan deepens defense ties with Europe

Chart showing 2025 defense spending among select nations as share of GDP

Japan and Europe are deepening defense ties amid growing unease over Washington’s security commitments at a time of Russian aggression and China’s surging power. Japan and the UK have reached the level of a “near-alliance,” Japan’s prime minister said after meeting her British counterpart Sunday, pointing to their renewed commitment to a new fighter jet program. Tokyo is also teaming up with Berlin as they race to rebuild their militaries to reduce reliance on what they view as an increasingly volatile US. This week’s G7 summit will likely see them further strengthen relations, as more countries look beyond Washington for military alliances, The New York Times wrote: “There is this justifiable fear that the United States might sell them out,” an academic said.

5

Ukraine’s defense clout grows

Ukrainian servicemen perform drone exercises
Stringer/Reuters

A German arms company is in talks to build Ukraine’s Flamingo cruise missile, a sign of Kyiv’s growing clout in the defense industry as NATO members seek its expertise. The cruise missile has been used in attacks on Russian industry more than 100 miles from the frontline. The rise of Ukraine as a military R&D powerhouse in Europe — it is also a source of cutting-edge anti-air missiles, as well as both drones and drone interceptors — is timely. Berlin is scrambling to find alternatives to US-made Tomahawk missiles after President Donald Trump canceled plans to deploy them; the US will also significantly reduce the aircraft and warships it makes available for NATO operations in Europe, The New York Times reported.

6

Wealthy Californians plot to halt wealth tax

Protester with “Tax the Rich” placard
Eduardo Munoz/Reuters

California’s tech elite are aggressively — and secretly — mobilizing to defeat a state ballot measure that would tax 5% of their total wealth. In a private Signal chat, tech titans and billionaires, including Google co-founder Sergey Brin and venture capitalist Marc Andreessen, plotted to halt the one-time levy. One idea floated was to stop the company being used to collect signatures by simply buying it, The San Francisco Standard reported, reflecting the “unorthodox, expensive, and increasingly desperate” efforts adopted by a “newly activated network of ultrawealthy citizens [that] is poised to change California politics.” Private capital giant Apollo is set to site its second headquarters in Austin, Texas, continuing a trend of firms expanding into states with low tax rates.

7

China’s ‘silver economy’ booms

Chart showing median age of population among select countries including China

China’s “silver economy” is soaring as its population ages and its birth rate plummets. A trade show in Shanghai showcased exoskeleton walking aids and other goods tailored to the 400 million people in China who will be 65 or older by the middle of the next decade. Rising costs of living and the legacy of Beijing’s one-child policy have brought China’s fertility rate down to one birth per woman, below the 2.1 replacement rate. Beijing’s efforts to boost birth rates have largely been unsuccessful. The demographic crisis, however, has bolstered the elder-care market: “We are a big brand in the infant formula category… but with newborn babies declining sharply we stepped into the senior category,” one executive told the Financial Times.

Subscribe to Semafor’s China briefing for more insights into the world’s second-largest economy. →

Semafor Cannes
Semafor Cannes graphic

The most powerful people in media are gathering in Cannes this month, and we’re on the ground to cover it all. Starting June 22, Semafor’s Ben Smith and Max Tani will hop between panels, parties, and yachts to bring you the essential guide to marketing and media’s most consequential event.

Whether you’re jetting to Cannes or just want to stay in the loop, subscribe to our pop-up newsletter, Semafor Cannes.

8

Trump’s 80th birthday spectacle

UFC arena on the White House lawn
Evan Vucciu/Reuters

Donald Trump will celebrate his 80th birthday on Sunday with a UFC fight at the White House, as the oldest-ever US president looks to eclipse recent political setbacks with a massive spectacle. The weekend’s pageantry — featuring a motocross competition and “who’s who” of legislators and top executives — reflects a leader “intent on projecting an image of relentless energy,” The New York Times wrote, amid mounting legal defeats, a festering Iran war, higher inflation, and dwindling approval. While the event could energize Trump’s blue-collar male supporters, the government sees it “as a moment to hype America itself,” Semafor’s Shelby Talcott wrote. But even Trump allies fear it could distract from the midterms: “Voters are exhausted of the spectacles,” one said.

For more scoops and stories from Washington’s halls of power, subscribe to Semafor DC.

9

New York Knicks’ historic win

The New York Knicks celebrate with the Larry O’Brien Championship Trophy
Dustin Safranek — Imagn Images via Reuters

The New York Knicks beat the San Antonio Spurs in five games to become NBA champions on Saturday, delivering New York City’s first basketball title in 53 years and ending one of the longest losing streaks in US sports history. In a city where “mass unifying events tend to imply unbearable tragedy,” a wide variety of New Yorkers were united in celebration, The New York Times wrote, from the customary celebrities sitting courtside to the city’s democratic socialist mayor and President Donald Trump; the widespread euphoria was occasionally “marred by mayhem and violence,” the Associated Press noted. The Knicks have long reigned supreme in the US’ largest media market, and their historically dominant playoff run led to the most-watched NBA Finals since 1998.

10

FIFA forces Haiti to change jerseys

Haiti’s Dominique Simon in disallowed jersey
Haiti’s Dominique Simon. Jeff Romance — Imagn Images via Reuters

FIFA made Haiti change its soccer team’s jerseys for the men’s World Cup, saying that an image of revolutionaries raising the country’s flag constituted a political message. The image depicted a scene of victory from the Haitian Revolution, during which enslaved Africans overthrew their French colonizers in 1803. It’s not the first time soccer’s governing bodies have taken umbrage against things that, to the nations involved, symbolize unity: Following Russia’s complaints, UEFA asked Ukraine to change its Euro 2020 kit, which included the slogan “Glory to our heroes.” FIFA was accused of breaching its own political neutrality stance in December when awarding the inaugural FIFA Peace Prize to Donald Trump, The Athletic noted.

Flagging
  • Diplomacy: The G7 summit begins in France, and Myanmar’s president arrives in China for a state visit (Monday). Japan’s emperor begins a state visit to the Netherlands (Wednesday).
  • Key reports: The IEA publishes its monthly Oil Market Report (Wednesday) and The Conference Board publishes its US leading economic index (Thursday).
  • Monetary policy: The Bank of Japan is expected to raise interest rates 25 basis points (Tuesday), and the Bank of England is set to make an interest rate announcement (Thursday), with most economists anticipating a rate hold.
  • Political milestones: China’s leader Xi Jinping celebrates his 73rd birthday (Monday) and the Obama Presidential Center opens to the public (Friday).
  • Elections: Potential Labour Party leader and aspiring UK Prime Minister Andy Burnham faces a by-election to reenter Parliament (Thursday), and Colombia holds its presidential run-off (June 21).
  • Sports: The FIFA men’s World Cup continues, with France facing Senegal and defending champions Argentina competing against Algeria (Tuesday); Portugal will face DR Congo and England plays Croatia (Wednesday). Having soundly beaten Paraguay, the US looks to continue its momentum against Australia (Friday), also coming off of a win against Turkey. The US Open golf tournament begins in Southampton, New York, (Thursday) and will run until Sunday.
Semafor Recommends
Semafor Recommends graphic

Iran and the Revolution, by Homa Katouzian. This new history focuses on the idea of Iran as a “short-term society,” in which change tends to be temporary. Though both shahs succeeded in building new roads, universities, and industries, they failed to build strong public institutions that would guarantee the survival of the order they erected. The Islamic Republic has deeper roots, Katouzian argues, but like the shahs, it “governs across a widening gap between rulers and ruled,” the Financial Times wrote, and “without a trusted relationship between state and society, that brittleness can always give way to further protest.” Buy Iran and the Revolution from your local bookstore.

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