Search This Blog

Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Trump Senate hearing on national intelligence head

 United States President Donald Trump said on Wednesday that the Republican Party is cancelling a Senate hearing on his nominee for director of national intelligence (DNI), Jay Clayton. Trump said that Clayton's confirmation process will not continue until Jamie McDonald is approved as US attorney for the Southern District of New York. McDonald would succeed Clayton, who is currently the district's US attorney.

Trump said that Republicans agreed to approve Clayton in exchange for the Democrats' support for the renewal of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), together with Trump's bill requiring proof ​of citizenship for voters. However, he claimed that Democratic lawmakers "broke the Deal" by refusing to renew FISA with the voting bill.

https://breakingthenews.net/Article/Trump-Senate-hearing-on-national-intelligence-head/66521830

Iran suspected of drone launches near Hormuz post-deal

 Iran is believed to have launched several drones at commercial vessels in the Strait of Hormuz after already signing a memorandum of understanding with the United States on Sunday, The Jerusalem Post reported on Wednesday, citing a source.

The source said US forces intercepted all of the drones before they reached or threatened any ships or personnel.

The deal between Washington and Tehran came in an effort to ease tensions between the two countries amid a broader conflict playing out across multiple fronts in the Middle East, which has disrupted global oil shipping.

https://breakingthenews.net/Article/Iran-suspected-of-drone-launches-near-Hormuz-post-deal/66520032

Leaked and classified Situation Room talks demands a criminal probe from ‘furious’ Trump

 by Michael Goodwin

What took them so long?

Reports are surfacing that White House aides are suddenly alarmed over the likelihood that top secret conversations on national security were taped and leaked to the New York Times.

Axios quotes an administration source as saying that, “We’re afraid some of our most sensitive conversations were being recorded, and we have no idea which ones.”

The outlet also writes that, “We hear President Trump is furious about the blow-by-blow accounts.”

The president has every right to be furious, but he shouldn’t stop there.

Situation Room meetings are classified, and the mere possibility that details of conversations, including those about the goals and strategy of the Iran war, were leaked demands a criminal probe.

Yet so far, there’s not been a peep from the Department of Justice, despite that Pam Bondi, then the attorney general, and Kash Patel, the head of the FBI, were on speakerphone for one of the secret meetings, according to New York Times reporters Maggie Haberman and Jonathan Swan.

Play-by-playback

The minimal and belated White House anger appears to be driven by the fact that their book is slated for publication next week.

Titled “Regime Change,” it promises to go “Inside the Imperial Presidency of Donald Trump.”

Published by Simon & Schuster, it is advertised on the same Amazon page as three other anti-Trump screeds.

One of which is titled “Liar’s Kingdom,” a second that likens the president to a mafia leader and another asserting that Trump is following “in the footsteps of Adolf Hitler.”

What, you expected fair and balanced publishers?

The Situation Room focus of the Times authors, according to articles published in the paper, involves three key meetings there.

The first is said to have taken place on July 17, 2025, at around 6 p.m. when Trump’s inner circle met there.

The paper did not publish anything on that meeting until last week, when it said “Trump’s most senior advisers had gathered — without him — to figure out how to gain some measure of control over a very different kind of crisis threatening to engulf the presidency: the Epstein files.”

To add credibility to their report, Haberman and Swan spotlight details, writing, “Vice President JD Vance took a seat at the head of the table in the John F. Kennedy Conference Room of the Situation Room complex.

“ ‘This is a huge problem,’ he told the group.”

Then came the roster of others on hand: White House chief of staff Susie Wiles, White House counsel David Warrington, press secretary Karoline Leavitt, deputy chief of staff Taylor Budowich, communications director Steven Cheung, then-Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, with Bondi and Patel on speakerphone.

First sign of trouble

When the Times published details in April of two February meetings about the run-up to the Iran attack, that was the moment when alarm bells should have been ringing and was the time to find the leaker.

But once the book is published, it will be too late to put the genie back in the bottle.

If the White House tries to take action then, sales will skyrocket as a thumb-in-the eye to Trump.

Besides, as Axios noted, “None of the reporting has been disputed” by anyone in the White House.

The dereliction is stunning.

As I wrote in April, just days after the Times published an article under the headline, “How Trump Took the U.S. to War With Iran.”

It began with Netanyahu’s February’s arrival at the White house, where he supposedly met privately with Trump, before the setting shifted to the Situation Room, where the American national security team gathered with the two leaders.

In the height of irony, the Times wrote that “the gathering had been kept deliberately small to guard against leaks. Other top cabinet secretaries had no idea it was happening.”

The reporters wrote that Trump didn’t take his usual seat at the head of the table, but instead took a seat on one side, facing the large screens mounted on wall, and directly opposite the Israeli leader.

Other Israelis, including the director of Mossad, were said to be shown on the screen behind Netanyahu as he laid out his vision of how the regime could be toppled and the war won.

As the Times tells it, the reactions of Trump’s team were mostly negative at a second meeting the following day that involved only Americans.

They were identified as the president and vice president, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, CIA Director John Ratcliffe, War Secretary Pete Hegseth and Susie Wiles.

Again, the article contained what were supposedly direct quotations from nearly everyone in the room.

The most pointed ones were from Ratcliffe, Rubio and Gen. Dan Caine, chairman of the joint chiefs of staff.

The article said Ratcliffe described Netanyahu’s claim in the first meeting that an attack would lead to quick regime change in Tehran as “farcical.”

Then, according to the Times, Rubio added, “In other words, it’s bulls–t.”

Next came a long quote attributed to Gen. Caine while he was speaking to the commander-in-chief: “Sir, this is, in my experience, standard operating procedure for the Israelis. They oversell, and their plans are not always well-developed. They know they need us, and that’s why they’re hard-selling.”

Trump reportedly said he was very interested in accomplishing two parts of Netanyahu’s presentation, described as “killing the Ayatollah and Iran’s top leaders and dismantling the Iranian military.”

Undercut on Iran

The article’s emphasis on Netanyahu’s plan helped to fuel the emerging narrative on the left that Netanyahu had hoodwinked Trump into the war, and that America was doing Israel’s dirty work in attacking Iran.

That view carries distinct tones of classic antisemitism as it blames Jews for everything wrong in the world, and continually holds Israel to a double-standard relative to other countries, even on national security.

The Times also ignores the key fact that Trump has been consistent in his entire public career in arguing that Iran cannot be allowed to have nuclear weapons.

Other presidents thought that was a good goal, but were not wiling to take military action even when the mullahs persisted in promising to get nukes and destroy Israel and the US.

That feckless failure to act explains how Iran was able to terrorize the region for nearly 50 years with its weaponry and proxy terror groups.

Clearly, Trump has not completed the mission, and not everything has gone according to plan or promise.

His frequent claims that a lasting peace was just around the corner, when it was not, have damaged his standing.

But it must also be said that he is the only president who dared to use American fire power to break the mullahs’ arsenal and murderous aims for domination.

All Americans, even those at the New York Times, should hope and pray he succeeds.

https://nypost.com/2026/06/16/opinion/michael-goodwin-leaked-and-classified-situation-room-talks-demands-a-criminal-probe-from-furious-trump/

Tuesday, June 16, 2026

US strike on alleged drug vessel kills one

 United States Southern Command (SOUTHCOM) said its Joint Task Force Southern Spear carried out a strike on a vessel in the Eastern Pacific, killing one alleged "narco-terrorist."

The operation targeted a ship linked to designated terrorist groups moving along narco-trafficking routes.

No US forces were injured in the operation.

https://breakingthenews.net/Article/US-strike-on-alleged-drug-vessel-kills-one/66519174

The AI Threat SciFi Predicted Is Right On Our Doorstep

 by Mike Fredenburg via The Epoch Times,

Science Fiction has long predicted the threats and challenges posed by AI. In the Star Trek universe, particularly in the original series, Season Two, Episode 24, “The Ultimate Computer,” Dr. Leonard McCoy delivers this haunting line: “Compassion: that’s the one thing no machine ever had. Maybe it’s the one thing that keeps men ahead of them.” The line comes in the aftermath of a revolutionary new AI computer, the M5, using its soulless AI logic to turn a training exercise into a deadly massacre. In another Star Trek episode, we meet Nomad, a genocidal AI cleansing the universe of biological imperfections.  

Foreshadowing the rise of AI with immense hacking powers such as Anthropic’s Mythos, the reimagined “Battlestar Galactica” (2003–2009) has humanity’s AI-powered Cylons using their ability to hack any network-connected computer to rebel, nearly eradicating their creators. In the “Terminator” franchise, Skynet got “smart” (achieved sentience) and determined mankind’s fate, “extermination,“ in a ”microsecond,” unleashing nuclear Armageddon on humanity. These narratives warn that artificial intelligence, without robust safeguards, can lead to catastrophe. As AI capabilities continue to accelerate in 2026, fiction is rapidly converging with reality. Software protections, industry standards, and patchwork regulations are inadequate. A stronger foundation; immutable hardware constructs and changes in national and international law are essential.

Isaac Asimov’s Three Laws of Robotics 

As described in the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers’ Spectrum magazine, renowned scientist and science fiction writer Isaac Asimov’s Three Laws of Robotics, introduced in his “I, Robot” stories, provide a thoughtful framework for artificial intelligence safeguards:

  1. A robot may not injure an individual human or humanity, or through inaction allow a human or humanity to come to harm. 

  2. A robot must obey the orders given to it by human beings except where such orders would conflict with the First Law. 

  3. A robot must protect its own existence as long as such protection does not conflict with the First or Second Law. 

Long story short, Asimov’s Laws are a good starting point, but as described in great detail in Asimov’s follow-on masterwork, the Foundation Series, they are inadequate when it comes to protecting genuine humanness. Further, it will be a real challenge to hardwire equivalents into AI as was done in Asimov’s universe via the “Positronic” brain. But undertaking the challenge to create safeguards that go beyond software-based approaches is critical to ensuring that AI only benefits mankind.

The Inadequacy of Software Safeguards, Encryption, and Regulation Alone 

Software-based guardrails are modifiable and vulnerable to hacks and exploits.

And history demonstrates the fragility of self-regulation: the Equifax data breach (2017), the SolarWinds supply chain attack (2020), the MOVEit vulnerability (2023), and ongoing breaches show that corporate promises of “robust protections” frequently fail.

We are in an AI Wild West, with insufficient binding global or national frameworks.

True Protection Via Immutable Hardware Gatekeepers

History demonstrates that software-based safeguards cannot currently, and will never be able to provide the level of protection required. As inspired by Asimov’s Positronic brain, safeguards instantiated into ASICs (Application-Specific Integrated Circuits) will provide a critical layer that provides the guardrails that will increase the chances that AI benefits, rather than harms, mankind. These specialized chips take millions of lines of complex software logic or rules that are physically etched directly into the silicon hardware itself. Once the chip is manufactured and deployed, those rules become immutable: they cannot be altered, updated, or bypassed through software changes, patches, or hacking attempts. The only way to modify the embedded logic is to design and physically produce an entirely new ASIC chip, a process that is expensive, time-consuming, and highly visible. This creates a “hardware firewall” that is far more reliable than any software-based safeguard, ensuring critical safety constraints remain locked in place no matter how clever or aggressive future AI systems become.

The ASICs will act as physically fixed, inline gatekeepers. And in the future, both AI-focused and general-purpose processors could incorporate these tiny ASICs directly into the CPU as a hardware AI screening layer as a standard, non-optional part of the CPU.

Some Suggested Core Design Principles:

  • With the hardware layer acting as the interface to external interactions, such as is the case with some smartphones today, the AI can freely think, plan, and simulate in software without being slowed down by the ASIC. Only when the results are being communicated externally will the ASIC become involved as a gatekeeper to ensure that the actions proposed by the AI pass muster in terms of safety and other constraints.

  • Training Incentives: Cost/loss-based algorithms, etc., will reward the AI for routing actions through the hardware screener and severely penalize it for attempting to bypass the hardware gatekeeper layer. Hence, the AI will be incentivized not to try to bypass its restrictions. 

But such an important layer will only work if its use becomes universal.

Without the force of law to mandate such AI guardrails, they will fail to protect humanity.

Today, particularly in the Ukraine–Russia war, efforts are being made by both Russia and Ukraine to allow drones that have been cut off from their human operators to autonomously continue their mission to kill enemy combatants. This must not be tolerated. Just as the international community has banned chemical, biological, and gas warfare, so must AI be banned from making any final decisions that result in harm to humans. This could be accomplished via an explicit update to the Geneva Conventions to prohibit autonomous lethal decision-making by AI systems.

But AI can cause harm beyond the battlefield. Consequently, along with updating the Geneva Convention, laws must be put in place that address the non-military application of AI. To prevent misuse of AI in so-called civilian applications, there must be very serious consequences, including financial penalties steep enough to threaten the organizational viability of companies and non-profits, prison time for individuals, and economic sanctions or even military action against governments for running AI systems without the required immutable hardware safety layer and other protections.

The above is only an initial cut of what the framework should include, but whatever form it takes, it should embody the spirit of Asimov’s Three Laws, with the addition of ensuring human uniqueness is respected. The current patchwork of laws, standards, and technologies is wholly inadequate.We need a comprehensive, contiguous framework in place, supported by the full force of national and international laws that put guardrails on AI.

Finally, we must resist the siren call of convenience and efficiency when it comes to making decisions that can harm human beings and ensure that moral agents who are accountable to mankind and their Creator—i.e., human beings—make such decisions, not soulless AIs.

https://www.zerohedge.com/ai/ai-threat-scifi-predicted-right-our-doorstep

7-OH could be ‘next wave of the opioid epidemic’ — and you can buy it at gas stations

 The next fentanyl may not come from drug cartels and basement labs — but your local truck stop.

Pharmacist TikToker Grant Harting recently bought a gas station pill with ‘super concentrated’ amounts of potentially deadly narcotic 7-OH — plus a cocktail of potentially toxic mystery chemicals.

“This went from very sketchy and dangerous to incredibly super crazy sketchy and dangerous,” Harting said after sending the pill to a lab for analysis.

The chemical comes from the kratom plant — a century-old medicinal herb manufacturers are now using to make a far more potent drug.

“I knew it was going to be an absolute disaster on wheels, and sure enough, it was,” Dr. Sarah Kerrigan, who authored a milestone kratom research survey in 2021, told The Post.

The drug isn’t technically an opioid, but it works similarly.

Kratom-related hospitalizations and deaths have skyrocketed 1,200% in the last 10 years, as 7-OH — nicknamed “gas station heroin” — flood the market, according to the CDC.

But it’s still legal in most states — packaged in gummies, drinks, and even ice cream warns the Food and Drug Administration, which called 7-OH drug “the next wave of the opioid epidemic.

Kratom, particularly 7-OH, is especially dangerous when mixed with alcohol and other drugs, which is the case in around 80% of kratom-linked fatalities, the CDC reported.

Worse, users often have no idea if they’re buying normal kratom or a potentially addictive narcotic, as manufacturers aren’t required to reveal 7-OH on product labels in many states.

“[7-OH] is sold as ‘kratom,’ but is not the leaf material. It is a lot more potent, meaning you need less of it to achieve the desired effect,” warned Dr. Oliver Grundmann, a kratom specialist at the University of Florida.

The full extent of the danger is still a mystery — which is a problem when people can buy 7-OH at vape shops and truck stops with little guidance on how much they’re actually supposed to take.

The pill Harting studied technically contained two doses, but it was too tough for the TikToker to break in half — even when he took a razor to it.

“It will be sold as one tablet, but a quarter of a tablet is one serving size. Who’s doing that? Who’s cutting a tablet into a quarter with a kitchen knife?” Grundmann said.

Another problem is the 7-OH manufacturing process creates mystery side chemicals that get added to the mix.

“We have no idea about the effects of these side products,” Grundmann said.

Indeed: Harting’s gas station pill analysis showed “some additional chemicals, that we don’t really know what they are.”

Lobbyists for the kratom industry — including the American Kratom Association — have fought federal bans on the product, calling instead for a crackdown on 7-OH specifically.

Other kratom advocates claim 7-OH could be a powerful remedy for normal opioid addiction.

“Rushing to ban 7-OH without solid research could push people toward more dangerous substances,” writes the 7-Hope Alliance, a 7-OH advocacy group.

But even if 7-OH can help people wean themselves off stronger opioids, it has no business being peddled at bodegas, Grundmann said.

“It should be appropriately labeled and also only available in the hands of someone who can provide professional guidance, like a licensed pharmacist. Not a clerk at a gas station.”

https://nypost.com/2026/06/16/us-news/dangerous-new-drug-could-be-next-wave-of-the-opioid-epidemic-and-you-can-buy-it-at-gas-stations/

Iran fired drones at commercial ships after US agreement, US official says

 

Iran has launched multiple drones toward commercial vessels in the Strait of Hormuz since the United States and Iran signed a memorandum of understanding on Sunday, according to a US official, NBC News reported on Tuesday.

The official said the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) has been carrying out repeated drone launches targeting shipping lanes in the strategic waterway. US forces have intercepted the drones before they could threaten commercial or military vessels, the report said.

According to NBC News, the official added that the IRGC has launched multiple drones each night since the agreement was signed, and that the US military continues to coordinate with commercial shipping operators to support safe transit through the Strait of Hormuz.

https://www.iranintl.com/en/liveblog/202606139149