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How AI is transforming the US military

The US Defense Department has publicly allocated at least $75 billion to AI-driven programs since 2016, funding drone footage analysis, autonomous targeting and weapons systems. At the center of it all is Project Maven, a public-private effort launched in 2017 that brought Silicon Valley into the Pentagon's war-fighting apparatus.

There is evidence Anthropic's Claude was used in the military raid that captured Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro. The Pentagon is also reportedly using AI to generate hundreds of strike options in Iran. But the tech is already showing real limits and raising ethical questions.

AI helps identify targets and speed up strike decisions, but algorithms fail when the battlefield changes. The more humans are removed from the process, the harder it becomes to catch mistakes before they become casualties. How far will the Pentagon go, and at what cost?

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US-Iran ceasefire in doubt, Venezuelans adjust to a new normal, EU blocks funding for Chinese solar tech

Burst of violence tests Iran ceasefire

Both the United States and Iran accused the other of violating the truce on Thursday. The US said it thwarted attacks on three Navy ships in the Strait of Hormuz, while Iran accused the US of firing on an oil tanker attempting to pass a US blockade. But US President Donald Trump dismissed the exchanges as a “trifle,” and Iran’s foreign minister suggested today that Tehran does not believe the ceasefire is dead. The two sides are still debating a proposal to reopen the waterway and negotiate a longer-term deal. Will diplomacy work? As Eurasia Group’s Head of Research Jon Lieber argued in a recent episode of “The Debrief,” both Washington and Tehran have strong incentives to negotiate. The war is unpopular for Trump at home, while Iran’s economy is in shambles, and the country is eager to move toward a new status quo.

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US labor market holds steady despite Iran war

Employers in the world’s largest economy are shrugging off the uncertainty brought on by the Iran war and higher energy prices – at least for now. Experts expected roughly 65,000 jobs to be added last month, a significant slide from the 185,000 in March. But if higher gas prices persist, and Americans pair back spending, economists say that could weaken job creation and lift the unemployment rate down the line.

When mothers shook the world

Some of the world’s most famous protest movements are remembered as being led by students, dissidents, and ordinary citizens rallying against corruption, repression, and economic collapse — from the fall of the Berlin Wall to the massive unrest that erupted earlier this year in Tehran.

Yet some of the most pivotal movements of the modern era have also begun with mothers standing in public squares, refusing to stop asking where their children had gone and demanding an end to violence and war. In honor of Mother’s Day this Sunday, we’re highlighting three political protests led by mothers from around the world.

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You vs. the News: A Weekly News Quiz - May 8, 2026

Think you know what's going on around the world? Here's your chance to prove it.

The Iran war has caused unexpected supply chain chaos around the world. In India, it is also sparking a new craze. What is it?

  • A) Cricket bat fashion shows
  • B) Diet Coke parties
  • C) Turmeric powder baths

Take the quiz to see if you guessed correctly!

How the UAE is keeping global trade moving during the Strait of Hormuz crisis

As missiles and drones flew over the Gulf region, global shipping companies faced a new reality: the Strait of Hormuz, a chokepoint for more than a quarter of the world’s oil and countless consumer goods, was suddenly at risk.

In this Global Stage interview, GZERO's Tony Maciulis speaks with Gulftainer Group CEO Farid Belbouab about how the UAE rapidly transformed its eastern coast into a critical alternative logistics corridor, keeping food, pharmaceuticals, and essential goods flowing throughout the Gulf region.

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An oil tanker carrying nearly Russian fuel intended for Cuba has reportedly stalled 1,000 miles off the coast, per Bloomberg. It’s unclear why the ship, which has been en route since mid-April, stopped its journey to the island after Russia vowed to deliver fuel to the island while it’s in dire need. Multiple ships have diverted away from Cuba out of concern of seizure by the US Navy amid a de facto blockade of the island. Only one ship, also Russian, was able to dock in Cuba after receiving a temporary green light from the Trump administration.
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Trump hosts Brazil’s Lula at White House today

Brazil’s pugnacious left-wing Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva will sit down with US President Donald Trump today at the White House, and ties between the two leaders have been fraught, to say the least. Last year, Trump imposed sanctions and tariffs on Brazil over its content moderation policies and the legal prosecution of ex-president Jair Bolsonaro, a Trump pal, for trying to overturn the 2022 election. But Lula refused to back down (a popular move among Brazilians), and Trump eventually walked back some tariffs. The two have also clashed over US action in Venezuela and Iran. What’s on the agenda today? Lula, currently polling neck-and-neck with Bolsonaro’s son ahead of this fall’s presidential election, wants to avoid a US trade probe that could result in more tariffs and to keep Trump from designating Brazilian criminal groups as terrorists, which could open the way for US military intervention. Trump, meanwhile, wants preferential US access to Brazil’s vast reserves of critical minerals. Both men are populists with a strong nationalist streak, but they also have had moments of unexpected “chemistry” — what will today’s encounter deliver?

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Israel’s right-wing government has overseen a record expansion of settlements in the West Bank in recent years. The settlements, which are illegal under international law, are driving the displacement of Palestinians. One proposal the government is now advancing is the controversial E1 settlement plan, which would effectively slice the West Bank in two and severely undermine Palestinian aspirations for a contiguous state.

This spring, the World Bank launched a new initiative to tackle a growing problem plaguing the world’s most fundamental resource: water. The program, dubbed Water Forward, is aiming to improve water access for 1 billion people over the next four years, as the resource comes under strain.

More than 70% of the earth’s surface is covered in good old H2O, so it would seem there’s plenty to go around. But the vast majority, at least 97%, is contained in the oceans as saltwater. The growing scarcity of freshwater for drinking, cooking, industrial, and agricultural uses is quickly moving water up as a global risk. In fact, our parent company, Eurasia Group, added it to its Top Risks list for 2026 as “The water weapon.”

As Nick Kraft, Eurasia Group’s Senior Analyst for Agriculture and Water, put it, “Chronic water stress is now the baseline reality we live in."
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Robotaxis, autonomous trucks, and drone networks are moving closer to reality. As costs fall and infrastructure grows, physical AI is unlocking new markets and business models.

See what's driving the next era of mobility by subscribing to Bank of America Institute.

Well, that didn’t last long. President Trump unveiled “Project Freedom,” an initiative to escort ships and restore traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, on Sunday. By Tuesday evening, he had unceremoniously suspended it by Truth Social post, shortly after Secretary of State Marco Rubio told reporters how committed the administration was to it.

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Watch: BEEF on Netflix. For those enjoyed the Emmy-winning, rage-filled first season, you’re in luck! BEEF is back with an all-new plot and cast, this time including Oscar Isaac, Carey Mulligan, and Charles Melton. While the show does feel like one prolonged anxiety spiral, it’s also deeply entertaining and the plot is….rich. – Natalie J.

Watch: Rooster. A wholesome-ish show starring The Office’s Michael Scott, Ted Lasso’s Jamie Tartt, and Scrubs’ Perry Cox? Sign me up for 6 seasons and a movie! Rooster follows the messy relationship between an awkward novelist (Steve Carell) and his professor daughter (Charly Clive) on a college campus full of ego and dysfunction, supported by an eccentric crowd. It’s slightly cringe, sentimental, and unhinged, which means you’ll laugh and then feel a bit bad about it. The writing is sharp, the cast is game, and Robby Hoffman steals scenes in her brief appearances. If you want a replacement for Shrinking, Rooster might be worth a look! — Suhani

Watch: Should I Marry a Murderer? This new Netflix docuseries has quickly become a top-watched show on the platform, and for good reason. When Glasgow mortician Dr. Caroline Muirhead announced her engagement to her farmworker boyfriend (whom she met on Tinder) after only a few months of dating, she raised a few eyebrows. But the couple would go on to capture national attention for another, more shocking scandal before they ever made it down the aisle. What first appears as an open-and-shut case soon spirals into a chaotic saga that blurs the line between victim and perpetrator.

Do you trust us?

A recent Pew Research Center poll found that fewer than half of Americans have trust in journalists to act in the public’s best interests — a share that has been falling for years. At the same time, partisanship is surging, and generative AI is challenging the very notion of truth.

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