After report about Iran's increasing uranium stockpiles, Iranian FM stresses Iran's cooperationNew Foto - After report about Iran's increasing uranium stockpiles, Iranian FM stresses Iran's cooperation

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — The Iranian Foreign Minister spoke by phone with the director of the U.N.'s nuclear watchdog agency early Sunday morning after a report from the agency said Iran isfurther increasing its stockpileof uranium enriched to near weapons-grade levels. Writing on Telegram, Abbas Araghchi said he stressed Iran's "continuous cooperation" in his conversation withRafael Mariano Grossi, the head of the Vienna-based International Atomic Energy Agency. The IAEA did not immediately return a request for comment about the phone call. The confidential IAEA report, which was seen by the Associated Press on Saturday, raised a stern warning, saying that Iran is now "the only non-nuclear-weapon state to produce such material" — something the agency said was of "serious concern." Araghchi emphasized to Grossi that all of Iran's nuclear activities are within the framework of agreements and being monitored by the IAEA. The IAEA said in a separate report that Iran's cooperation with the agency has been "less than satisfactory" when it comes to uranium traces discovered by IAEA inspectors at several locations in Iran that Tehran has failed to declare as nuclear sites. Araghchi also asked Grossi to ensure "that certain parties do not exploit the agency for political agendas against the Iranian people." European nations could take further steps against Iran based on the comprehensive report, leading to a potential escalation in tensions between Iran and the West. Iran's deputy foreign minister on Sunday published a detailed response, rejecting many of the report's findings. Kazem Gharibabadi noted that out of the IAEA's 682 inspections of 32 states, 493 were carried out in Iran alone. "So long as a country's nuclear activities are under the IAEA's monitoring, there is no cause for concern," he said. "The Islamic Republic of Iran is neither pursuing nuclear weapons nor does it possess any undeclared nuclear materials or activities." The IAEA report said that as of May 17, Iran has amassed 408.6 kilograms (900.8 pounds) of uranium enriched up to 60%. That's an increase of almost 50% since the IAEA's last report in February. The 60% enriched material is a short, technical step away from weapons-grade levels of 90%. The phone conversation between Araghchi and Grossi came hours after Omani Foreign Minister Badr al-Busaidi, who is mediating the U.S.-Iran talks, visited Tehran on Saturday to present the latest U.S. proposal for ongoing talks. The U.S.-Iran talks are attempting to limit Iran's nuclear program in exchange for the lifting of some of the crushing economic sanctions the U.S. has imposed on the Islamic Republic,which have strained relations for almost 50 years. Thefifth round of talksbetween the U.S. and Iran concluded in Rome last week with "some but not conclusive progress," al-Busaidi said at the time.

After report about Iran's increasing uranium stockpiles, Iranian FM stresses Iran's cooperation

After report about Iran's increasing uranium stockpiles, Iranian FM stresses Iran's cooperation DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — T...
Explosions caused 2 bridges in western Russia to collapse, officials say. Seven people were killedNew Foto - Explosions caused 2 bridges in western Russia to collapse, officials say. Seven people were killed

Explosions caused two bridges to collapse and derailed two trains in western Russia overnight, officials said Sunday, without saying what had caused the blasts. In one of the incidents, seven people were killed and dozens were injured. The firstbridge, in the Bryansk region on the border with Ukraine, collapsedon top of a passenger train on Saturday, causing the casualties. Hours later, officials said a second train was derailed when the bridge beneath it collapsed in the nearby Kursk region, which also borders Ukraine. In that collapse, a freight train was thrown off its rails onto the road below as the explosion collapsed the bridge, local acting Gov. Alexander Khinshtein said Sunday. The crash sparked a fire, but there were no casualties, he said. Russia's Investigative Committee, the country's top criminal investigation agency, said in a statement that explosions had caused the two bridges to collapse, but did not give further details. Photos posted by government agencies from the scene in the Bryansk region appeared to show train carriages ripped apart and lying amid fallen concrete from the collapsed bridge. Other footage on social media were apparently taken from inside vehicles on the road that had managed to avoid driving onto the bridge before it collapsed. In the past, some officials haveaccused pro-Ukrainian saboteurs of attacking Russia's railway infrastructure. The details surrounding such incidents, however, are limited and cannot be independently verified. In a statement Sunday, Ukraine's military intelligence, known by the Ukrainian abbreviation GUR, said a Russian military freight train carrying food and fuel had been blown up on its way to Crimea. It did not claim the attack was carried out by GUR or mention the bridge collapses. The statement said Moscow's key "artery" with the Russian-occupied Zaporizhzhia region and Crimea has been destroyed." Russia forces have been pushing into the region of Zaporizhzhia in eastern Ukraine since Moscow's invasion in February 2022. They took Crimea and annexed it in 2014.

Explosions caused 2 bridges in western Russia to collapse, officials say. Seven people were killed

Explosions caused 2 bridges in western Russia to collapse, officials say. Seven people were killed Explosions caused two bridges to collapse...
LAFC claims final spot in Club World Cup with 2-1 victory over Club América in play-in matchNew Foto - LAFC claims final spot in Club World Cup with 2-1 victory over Club América in play-in match

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Denis Bouanga has scored countless big goals during his four prolific seasons with Los Angeles FC, celebrating nearly all of them with his signature front flip. None of those goals was bigger — or more lucrative — than the blast that beat a Liga MX powerhouse and sent LAFC into the FIFA Club World Cup. Bouanga scored late in extra time and LAFC dramatically secured the final spot in the 32-team tournament with a 2-1 victory over Club América in a play-in match Saturday night. "It's simply one of the best moments of my career," Bouanga said. "I love this team, and I love this game." LAFC trailed in the waning moments of regulation before Igor Jesus tied it in the 89th minute, slipping through traffic and converting a header for his first goal with his new club. And after 24 tense minutes of extra time, Bouanga found his moment, just as the Frenchman has done so many times in black and gold. Bouanga jumped into the play alongside Olivier Giroud and fired home a deflected shot from the top of the penalty area in the 115th minute, setting off a wild party at BMO Stadium and sending LAFC to its first Club World Cup. Even LAFC coach Steve Cherundolo ran all the way to the corner to celebrate with his players. "It's kind of a culmination of 3 1/2 years of hard work and dedication that just explodes in that moment," said Cherundolo, who has announcedhe will leave LAFCafter the current season. LAFC will join English club Chelsea, Brazil's Flamengo and Tunisia's ES Tunis when group play begins in two weeks across the U.S. South. LAFC's victory is extraordinarily lucrative for the Major League Soccer power,guaranteeing at least $9.55 millionin prize money for making the tournament field. The club also has a chance at nearly $100 million more in prize money from FIFA's nearly $1 billion pool. "It's a great achievement and the opportunity of a lifetime," Bouanga said. "It really opens up some doors for our club." Brian Rodríguez put América ahead midway through the second half by converting a penalty kick against his former team, but Las Águilas fell short in front of thousands of supporters. The loss added to a week of heartache for América, which missed the chance to win four straight league titles by losing the Clausura final to Toluca last weekend. "I can imagine the frustration everyone feels," coach André Jardine said through a translator. "The team feels the same. … The group is clearly fatigued from the long stretch, but we'll find a way to come back stronger." One spot in the Club World Cup field was open because FIFA disqualified León under its rules against participation by multiple clubs owned by the same entity. León and Pachuca are owned by the same group, and León lost its appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport four weeks ago after attempting to change its ownership structure. With a stadium full of raucous fans supporting both teams, LAFC and América were cautious in the first half, putting just one shot on target apiece. Rodríguez beat Hugo Lloris from the spot in the 64th minute, capitalizing on a penalty awarded following a video review of Mark Delgado's risky, spikes-up challenge on Erick Sánchez. Rodríguez, who came on as a halftime substitute after recently recovering from injury, spent parts of four seasons with LAFC from 2019-22 before the Uruguayan winger moved to América for a hefty transfer fee. LAFC got moving offensively when Giroud came on as a second-half substitute. The French star nearly tipped home a pass in the box in the 81st minute, but Luis Malagón thwarted him. Bouanga also applied pressure before Jesus, the 22-year-old Brazilian midfielder, finally beat Malagón with a header in the box. "It feels great to make a contribution," Jesus said through a translator. "We never lost faith that we could score." Lloris stopped a point-blank chance for Javairô Dilrosun in the second half of extra time shortly before Bouanga's winner. "This was probably the most gratifying moment for me personally since joining LAFC," said Cherundolo, who won an MLS Cup title in 2022. "I couldn't be prouder." Tickets for the match were distributed equally between the clubs' supporters — and América has a large fan base in Los Angeles, where Mexican teams and players are greeted with massive support whenever they visit. América fans mobbed the south stands at BMO Stadium 90 minutes before kickoff, while LAFC's famed North End crowd was packed. The largest Club World Cup to date will be held across the U.S. as a precursor to the FIFA World Cup's return to North America in 2026. Inter Miami and the Seattle Sounders already qualified from MLS, while Pachuca and Monterrey are in from Liga MX. ___ AP soccer:https://apnews.com/soccer

LAFC claims final spot in Club World Cup with 2-1 victory over Club América in play-in match

LAFC claims final spot in Club World Cup with 2-1 victory over Club América in play-in match LOS ANGELES (AP) — Denis Bouanga has scored cou...
Knicks vs. Pacers: Indiana stays true to itself to punch ticket to NBA FinalsNew Foto - Knicks vs. Pacers: Indiana stays true to itself to punch ticket to NBA Finals

INDIANAPOLIS — The temptation, after Tyrese Haliburton scored just eight points on seven shots in adisappointing Game 5 loss, was to call for the Indiana Pacers to adjust the sliders for Game 6 by overindexing on the kind of aggression that's easy to see in the box score — to counteract the New York Knicks'stepped-up ball pressurewith hunted shots and hero ball. That's not what Indiana head coach Rick Carlisle called for, though. "As a team, we have to be aggressive, and we have to have a level of balance," he said after Game 5. Which is to say: They needed to play Pacers basketball. The many-hands-make-light-work approach that has produced one of the NBA's most potent offenses. The insistence on pipe-bursting full-court ball pressure that has made the Pacers one of the NBA's most improved defenses. The commitment to running 12 deep — and to all 12 of 'emrunning, off makes and misses — that makes them tough to handle on the second night of a back-to-back in February, but that makes them an absolute nightmare to deal with every other night for two weeks in late May. It's a play style that elevates collective effect over individual impact — one thatmakes the Pacers different and special, has made them one of the best teams in the NBA for nearly six months … and now, has made themEastern Conference champions. Eleven Pacers played before garbage time inSaturday's 125-108 Game 6 win, and seven of them scored in double figures. Andrew Nembhard changed the game with his defense on Knicks star Jalen Brunson, snatching six steals and getting his offensive game unstuck with 14 points on 6-for-12 shooting. Backup center Thomas Bryant, who'd seen his minutes dwindle in favor of Tony Bradley's superior ability to battle Knicks center Mitchell Robinson on the glass, got an opportunity to return to the fold with Bradley nursing an injured hip; he made the most of it, drilling three huge 3-pointers, blocking a shot and finishing with 11 points in 13 minutes. Obi Toppin provided his trademark irrepressible energy and above-the-rim finishing against the team that drafted and then traded him, chipping in 18 points, six rebounds and three blocks. (That last stat drew a surprised smile after the game from Haliburton, who chided Toppin for having "all that athleticism, but just [not using] it on the defensive end sometimes.") "We've preached depth this whole year," said Haliburton, who didn't need to dominate the ball or the shots to bounce back from his quiet Game 5, tallying 21 points, 13 assists, six rebounds, three steals and a block. "We keep talking about it, and it's not just a word we use for fun. This is our identity, and this is who we are, and I thought we did a great job of utilizing that. We had many different people step up." Including, of course, Indiana's superstars, who knew they had to turn in more forceful and productive outings back home in Game 6 than they had at Madison Square Garden in Game 5, and who answered the call. Pascal Siakam kept the offense afloat early, scoring 16 first-half points to stake Indiana to leads after the first and second quarters of a tight, tense elimination-game first half contested entirely within two possessions, with neither team able to gain more than six points of separation. He tilted the run of play in the Pacers' favor shortly after intermission, having a hand in three straight buckets — apick-and-pop 3, asetup for an Aaron Nesmith 3 in transitionand a transition leak-out andbeautiful reverse finishthrough contact — that amounted to a 9-0 run to put Indiana up 13 early in the third and giving it the separation it needed to push the Knicks past their breaking point. Siakam would finish with a game-high 31 points, five rebounds, three assists, three blocks and a steal — another monster performance in an Eastern Conference finals where the Knicks never really found a great answer for him, where he made abundantly clear why Pacers brass felthe was the missing piecethey had to go all out to get at the 2024 trade deadline and of which he wasvoted the Most Valuable Player. "It's cool," Siakam said of the Larry Bird Trophy, which he brought with him to his postgame news conference. "I didn't know they had a trophy for that, but I'm excited." Not as excited, though, as he is to get another chance to play for a much bigger gold trophy, six years after he hoisted it with the 2019 Toronto Raptors. "I was telling the guys — I mean, like, for me, you know, I got there when I was in Year 3, and I thought I would get back there a lot. And it didn't happen," Siakam said. "So it's a hell of an opportunity, and you don't know when you're gonna get it again. So I think we have to have a mindset of going out there and, at the end of the day, just giving everything we've got and knowing that this is a once in a lifetime opportunity." Haliburton didn't get many good shots early, going without a field goal until hesprinted into a pull-up 3four and a half minutes into the second quarter. But he kept reading the game, kept moving the ball and his body, and kept trusting that the deposits that he and the Pacers had put in over the course of the game and the series — all those miles they put on the Knicks' legs, all the mental and physical strain they'd put on New York's players with their frenetic, relentless motion — would eventually pay off. And then, in the fourth quarter, the dam burst, with Haliburton slicing the Knicks' pick-and-roll coverage to ribbons, repeatedly getting into the paint to either finish for himself or set up a rolling Obi Toppin for a layup or dunk. Haliburton scored or assisted on 19 points in the fourth, capping it with a32-foot bombin the final minute to push the lead to 20 — acoup de grâceto pack up the Knicks and send them back to New York and to send the Pacers to the NBA Finals. Nah, was to pack y'all uphttps://t.co/hhgo9fp8ib — Tyrese Haliburton (@TyHaliburton22)June 1, 2025 "I'm so proud of Tyrese, bro. For real, man," Pacers center Myles Turner said. "Y'all seen — you know, when it comes to being a superstar, bro, you got to take everything that comes with it. The highs and the lows, the good and the bad. And you know, from how the season started, to how he was getting trashed, and everybody was basically trying to turn their heads to him, he just kept his head down and kept working, man. Even going into this playoffs, the whole 'overrated' thing — I mean, obviously, we know that's dead now. There's not much you can say now." Haliburton's playmaking and pace, Siakam's ceaseless sprinting and gap-filling offensive play, and the strength-in-numbers approach carried the offense. What killed the Knicks, though, was Indiana repeatedly forcing them into costly mistakes — 17 turnovers leading to 34 Pacer points, as the team's season-long commitment to cranking up the tempo and maintaining vise-grip pressure eventually claimed yet another victim. "Our defense is something we've been working on steadfastly for over a year and a half," Carlisle said. "I mean, really. The year started last year with, really, a different set of rules. We were playing small and even faster. It wasn't a team that had great defenders. But we've gotten better defenders, we've gotten bigger, we got Pascal, and the guys co-signed on the importance of defense, and everybody has participated in the growth." For Turner, the growth started in the summer of 2015, when he came to Indiana as a reedy 19-year-old. A decade full of ups, downs, trade rumors, frontcourt partners and frustrations later, the longest-tenured Pacer is on his way to his first NBA Finals. "When the buzzer was sounding, it was just … nothing but joy, man," Turner said. "Just pure excitement. Just pure validation. Just all the years, all the hate, all the love — everything in between, bro. It just made so much sense in that moment. To be honest, man, I don't know what I was thinking. It was just pure exuberance and joy." The Pacers get to feel that exuberance and joy for a night. And, if their coach has anything to say about it, maybe not eventhatmuch exuberance. "This is no time to be popping champagne," said Carlisle, who will participate in his sixth NBA Finals — three as a player on the mid-1980s Boston Celtics, one as an assistant on Larry Bird's staff with the 2000 Pacers, and now two as a head coach after winning the 2011 title with the Dallas Mavericks. "You know, when you get to this point of the season, you know, it's two teams and it's one goal. It becomes an all-or-nothing thing, and we understand the magnitude of the opponent." That opponent — the Oklahoma City Thunder — has been nothing short of the best team in the NBA since the season's opening tip. They feature the MVP of the league in point guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, an All-Star running buddy in Jalen Williams, a fearsome two-headed monster on the inside in Chet Holmgren and Isaiah Hartenstein, and the NBA's most ferocious core of perimeter defenders. They're young, they're fast, they play with relentless intensity and apply incredible pressure. Sounds familiar. "I think it's a new blueprint for the league, man," Turner said. "I think the years of the superteams and stacking is just not as effective as it once was, you know? I mean, since I've been in the league, this NBA is very trendy. It just shifts. But the new trend now is just kind of what we're doing. OKC does the same thing. You know: young guys, get out and run, defend, and you know, use the power of friendship." Whether that power will be enough to get the Pacers past the 68-win juggernaut they're about to face remains to be seen;they'll enter the series as serious underdogs. That's just fine by them, though. They're used to it. From last year's run to the Eastern Conference finals being dismissed as a fluke born of injuries to the teams along its path, to a brutal injury-marred 10-15 start to this season, to largely being viewed by national pundits as merely the foil to the Cavaliers and Knicks in this postseason, the Pacers have plenty of practice being overlooked. They've learned not to concern themselves with the paltry predictions of others; they're not afraid to dream bigger. "I thought we just did a great job of staying together as a group and not worrying about outside noise," Haliburton said. "Internally, we had expectations to be here. This isn't a surprise to any of us, because of what we wanted to do … I just thought we did a great job, like I mentioned earlier, just being as present as possible — not living in the past, not worrying about what's next. Just worrying about what's now." What's now, for Indiana, for the first time in a quarter-century, is the NBA Finals. They won't win it on the strength of overwhelming star power. Keep on maximizing the output of a group that's proven to be greater than the sum of its more-impressive-than-you-might-think parts, though — keep on playing Pacer basketball — and they've got a shot. "You know, we're a team that is an ecosystem," Carlisle said. "We're very dependent on the collective ingredients for the whole team to function at its best."

Knicks vs. Pacers: Indiana stays true to itself to punch ticket to NBA Finals

Knicks vs. Pacers: Indiana stays true to itself to punch ticket to NBA Finals INDIANAPOLIS — The temptation, after Tyrese Haliburton scored ...
Top defense officials say Ukraine war has blurred lines, exposing global threatsNew Foto - Top defense officials say Ukraine war has blurred lines, exposing global threats

SINGAPORE (AP) — China and North Korea's support for Russia in itswar against Ukrainehas exposed how lines between regions have blurred, and the need for a global approach toward defense, top security officials said Sunday. North Korea has sent troops to fight on the front lines in Ukraine, while China has supported Russia economically and technologically while opposing international sanctions. Lithuanian Defense Minister Dovilė Šakalienė told delegates at the Shangri-La Dialogue, Asia's premiere defense forum, that if Ukraine were to fall, it would have a ripple effect in Asia and suggested it could embolden China in its territorial claims on Taiwan and virtually the entire South China Sea. "If Russia prevails in Ukraine, it's not about Europe. It's not about one region," she said. "It will send a very clear signal also to smaller states here in Indo-Pacific that anyone can ignore their borders, that any fabricated excuse can justify invasion." The comments echoed those fromFrench President Emmanuel Macronas he opened the conference on Friday advocating for greater European engagement in the Indo-Pacific. On Saturday,U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegsethsuggested European countries should focus their defense efforts in their own region andleave the Indo-Pacific more to the U.S.,but Šakalienė said the regions were clearly intertwined. "It's not a secret that when we talk about the main perpetrators in cyber security against Japan it's China, Russia and North Korea," she said. "When we talk about main cyber security perpetrators against Lithuania it's Russia, China and Belarus — two out of the three are absolutely the same." She added that "the convergence of Russia, China, Iran, and North Korea into an increasingly coordinated authoritarian axis," demands a unified response. Iran has been a key supplier of attack drones to Russia for its war effort. "In this context, the United States' strategic focus on Indo-Pacific is both justified and necessary, but this is not America's responsibility alone," she said. Australian Defense Minister Richard Marles told reporters on the sidelines that his main takeaway from the three-day conference, hosted by the International Institute for Strategic Studies, was the "real intent in the way in which European countries have engaged" in the debates. "It reflects the sense of connection, interconnectedness ... between Indo-Pacific on the one hand and the North Atlantic on the other," he said. China sent a lower-level delegation from its National Defense University this year to the conference, but its Foreign Ministry on Sunday responded to comments from Hegseth that Beijing was destabilizing the region and preparing to possibly seize Taiwan by force. "No country in the world deserves to be called a hegemonic power other than the U.S. itself, who is also the primary factor undermining the peace and stability in the Asia-Pacific," it said, while reiterating its stance that the Taiwan issue was an internal Chinese matter. "The U.S. must neve play with fire on this question," the ministry said. Philippines Defense Secretary Gilberto Teodoro Jr, whose country has been involved inincreasingly violent clashes with Chinaover competing claims in the South China Sea, scoffed at the idea that the U.S. was the problem. "What the Chinese government considers fair and just may stand in stark contrast to the norms and values accepted by the rest of the world, especially the smaller countries," he said. "To envision a China-led international order, we only need to look at how they treat their much smaller neighbors in the South China Sea." He also underscored the international implications of the tensions in the Indo-Pacific, noting that the South China Sea was one of several maritime routes that are "arteries of the global economy." "Disruption in any of these maritime corridors triggers ripple effects across continents, impacting trade flows, military deployments, and diplomatic posture," he said. Singapore's Defense Minister Chan Chun Sing said China missed an opportunity to have its voice heard by not sending its own defense minister, but it was still incumbent upon others to reach out to Beijing to try and build bridges and prevent misunderstandings. Singapore has close ties to both the U.S. and China, and is part of the regionally influential Association of Southeast Asian Nations along with the Philippines and others. "It is in the interest of all of us to work with China, and it is also in the interest of China to work with everyone else in the world," he said. "It is in the interest of all of us to have a deeper understanding of China's fears, concerns and aspirations, just as it is important for China to understand how the rest of the world perceives China."

Top defense officials say Ukraine war has blurred lines, exposing global threats

Top defense officials say Ukraine war has blurred lines, exposing global threats SINGAPORE (AP) — China and North Korea's support for Ru...

 

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