Good morning.
Donald Trump said he had sealed an agreement with Nato allies that would lead to large-scale arms deliveries to Ukraine, including Patriot missiles, and warned Russia that it would face severe sanctions if it did not make peace within 50 days.
After a meeting with the Nato secretary general, Mark Rutte, Trump said they had agreed âa very big dealâ under which âbillions of dollarsâ worth of military equipment is going to be purchased from the United States, going to Nato ⊠And thatâs going to be quickly distributed to the battlefieldâ.
The Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, said he was âgrateful to President Trumpâ in his nightly video address.

Trump confirms Ukraine weapons deal and threatens Russia with severe tariffs â video
What does it mean for the war? The US will sell weapons to Ukraine, the president said, with other Nato countries paying the bill. Otherwise, specifics were scant. No sums of money were mentioned, making it hard to calibrate how much of a difference the proposed weapon supply would make to Kyiv.
What about sanctions? Nothing new right now. Trump did promise to levy a 100% tariff on Russia if Putin did not agree a deal to halt the fighting within 50 days.
So whatâs the significance? Make no mistake: tonally, Trumpâs statements are a significant U-turn on his approach to the war. âWeâre very unhappy â I am â with Russia,â he said.
Israeli government and military clash over proposed âconcentration campâ for Palestinians

Palestinians mourn people killed while waiting for food near Rafah aid centre â video
A feud has broken out between the Israeli government and the military over the cost and impact of a planned camp for Palestinians in southern Gaza, as politicians criticized the former prime minister Ehud Olmert for warning that the project would create a âconcentration campâ if it went ahead.
The row came as Israeli strikes across Gaza killed at least 31 people, according to local hospitals. Twelve people were killed by strikes in southern Gaza, including three who were waiting at an aid distribution point, according to Nasser hospital in Khan Younis, which received the bodies.
Meanwhile, Francesca Albanese, the UN special rapporteur for the occupied Palestinian territories, hailed a 30-nation conference aimed at ending Israelâs occupation of Palestine as âthe most significant political development in the past 20 monthsâ.
How have Hamas negotiators reacted to the news? It has become a sticking point in ceasefire talks with Hamas, which is pushing for a more comprehensive withdrawal. Husam Badran, a senior member of the group, said the camp plans were a âdeliberatively obstructive demandâ that would complicate talks, the New York Times reported.
Undocumented farm workers feel âhunted like animalsâ amid Trumpâs immigration raidsFederal agents standing guard next to a road leading to an agricultural facility in Camarillo, California, last week. Photograph: Daniel Cole/Reuters
Undocumented farm workers feel they are being âhunted like animalsâ, they told the Guardian, as Donald Trumpâs administration ramps up its crackdown on immigration.
Raids by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) have caused workers to lose hours and income and forced them into hiding at home, according to interviews.
An Ice raid at a cannabis farm in the county last week resulted in a worker suffering fatal injuries after falling from a greenhouse.
What did workers tell the Guardian? An undocumented farm worker in Ventura County, California, said: âYou canât go out peacefully to do things, or go to work with any peace of mind any more. Weâre stressed out and our kids are stressed out. No one is the same since these raids started.â
Who was the man who died after an Ice raid? Jaime AlanĂs died a day after a frenzied immigration raid of Glass House Farms in Ventura County where authorities arrested at least 200 workers. The 57-year-old, who was from the town of HuajĂșmbaro in MichoacĂĄn, Mexico, was described as a âhard-working, innocent farmerâ.
In other news âŠAndrew Cuomo resigned as New York governor in 2021 after facing sexual harassment allegations. Photograph: Lev Radin/Rex/Shutterstock
The former New York governor Andrew Cuomo will run independently for New York City mayor, after losing in the Democratic primary to Zohran Mamdani.
Sudanâs paramilitary Rapid Support Forces killed nearly 300 people in attacks in North Kordofan state that began on Saturday, according to Sudanese activists.
The French government has signalled a willingness to discuss reparations for colonial massacres in Niger, more than a century after French troops burned villages and looted cultural artefacts.
Stat of the day: xAI announces $200m military deal after Grok chatbotâs Nazi postsElon Musk at the White House in May. Photograph: Allison Robbert/AFP via Getty Images
The week after its Grok chatbot identified itself as âMechaHitlerâ and generated antisemitic posts, Elon Muskâs xAI firm announced a contract with the Department of Defense worth nearly $200m. The deal is for developing and implementing artificial intelligence tools for the agency.
Donât miss this: Zohran Mamdaniâs campaign proposes free childcare. Is it finally a winning policy?Zohran Mamdani speaks in support of universal childcare in New York last November. Photograph: Michael M Santiago/Getty Images
Zohran Mamdani, the 33-year-old state assembly member who won the Democratic primary for New York City mayor last month, campaigned on a platform of affordability, including proposals for free childcare for children aged six weeks and older. He plans to fund it by raising taxes on corporations and the cityâs richest residents. How would it work?
Climate check: A deadly 1987 flood foreshadowed the Texas disaster. Survivors ask: why didnât we learn?The Guadalupe River in flood on 17 July 1987. Photograph: National Weather Service
In July 1987, the Guadalupe River in Texas rose nearly 30ft during a ferocious rainstorm, leading to 10 children drowning. On 4 July this year, another flash flood hit the Guadalupe: the death toll is now nearly 130 people. One survivor asked: âWhy didnât they learn from this?â
Last Thing: First glimpse of HBOâs Harry Potter TV seriesDominic McLaughlin as Harry Potter. Photograph: Aidan Monaghan/AP
Cameras have started rolling for HBOâs Harry Potter TV series at Warner Bros Studios Leavesden in the UK. HBO has provided a first glimpse of the new series, which promises to be a âfaithful adaptationâ of JK Rowlingâs novels â âfull of the fantastic detail, much-loved characters and dramatic locations that Harry Potter fans have loved for over 25 yearsâ, according to HBOâs announcement in 2023.
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