The Headlines - Oil Prices Jump as U.S. and Iran Resume Strikes, and Big Tobacco Makes a Big New Bet
Episode Date: July 8, 2026Plus, using drones to watch for sharks. Here’s what we’re covering: Iran Live Updates: Trump Casts Doubt on Future of Cease-Fire After Latest Strikes, by The New York Times Le Pen Says She Will ...Run for Presidency After Court Lifts Ban, by Mark Landler and Ségolène Le Stradic I.O.C. Lifts Russia’s Olympic Suspension, Clearing the Way for 2028, by Ephrat Livni Tobacco Companies Are Cashing In on Zyn’s Unstoppable Popularity, by Murray Carpenter Spate of Shark Attacks Means More Drones for Australia’s Beaches, by Laura Chung Tune in every weekday morning, and tell us what you think at: theheadlines@nytimes.com. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. You can also subscribe via your favorite podcast app here https://www.nytimes.com/activate-access/audio?source=podcatcher. For more podcasts and narrated articles, download The New York Times app at nytimes.com/app. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
From the New York Times, it's the headlines.
I'm Tracy Mumford.
Today's Wednesday, July 8th, here's what we're covering.
In the last 24 hours, the U.S. and Iran have started trading attacks again,
launching the first major strikes in nearly two weeks.
According to the Pentagon, it began when Iran attacked three commercial ships
passing through the Strait of Hormuz, including an oil tanker and a ship carrying natural gas.
In response, the U.S. military said it carried out strikes against more than 80
targets inside Iran. The U.S. also reimposed sanctions on Iranian oil sales. Iran has not claimed
responsibility for the attacks on the ships, but this morning Iran's armed forces said they were
retaliating by targeting dozens of U.S. military sites in Bahrain and Kuwait. At the center of the
new flare-up is the continuing question of who controls the strait. The U.S. and Iran signed a
preliminary agreement a few weeks ago that was designed in part to get traffic going in the
again through the crucial waterway. But it didn't say how that should happen. And Iran has insisted
that all ships must take the route closest to its shores, in waters it controls. The renewed
hostilities put extreme pressure on negotiations between Washington and Tehran, which have been
trying to reach a long-term peace deal. This morning at the NATO summit, President Trump faced
questions about what is next. Is this he fired down? Is the MOU dead?
It's a very interesting question.
To me, I think it's over.
And he cast doubt on what will happen to those talks.
Frankly, I don't want to waste my time with them.
Now, I'll let our wonderful negotiators keep talking if they want, but I don't see it.
I don't like these people, you know that?
Meanwhile, following Trump's remarks and the latest attacks, oil prices rose sharply.
They are far below their peak at the...
height of the war, but the average price of a gallon of gas across the U.S. is still almost
30 percent higher than it was before the fighting started.
So, this is you're going to candidate at election presidential.
In France yesterday, the far-right populist leader, Marine Le Pen, announced she's running
for president, right after a court lifted a ban on her from seeking public office.
It's a stunning reversal for Le Pen, who is one of the most prominent far-right figures.
in Europe. She had faced the ban after being convicted on corruption charges. This will be her
fourth presidential campaign, and she has moved closer to victory each time.
Marie-Lupin's party presents a very classic populist agenda with a major emphasis on cutting back
immigration and a real assertion of France's national sovereignty. And this has proven to be
a very effective pitch to voters in France. Mark Landler is the Times' paris.
Bureau Chief. He says several polls show Le Pen is the frontrunner.
Le Pen's political survival this week has huge implications for French politics.
She is the undisputed leader of the far-right movement in France and a very familiar face in
French politics. The idea she's pushing have, of course, taken root in other European countries
and even in the United States. And so for the next 12 months, this French campaign is going
to draw attention from all over the world as perhaps the most important contest between populism
and centrism that we've seen in a Western democracy in the last few years.
Le Pen's first rally is today, and Mark says it's possible, due to her corruption conviction,
that she may have to campaign while wearing an ankle monitor, which would be an unprecedented
site.
But analysts say she may try to use that to her advantage and embrace it, like how President Trump
has a framed photo of his mugshot in the West Wing.
We wanted to ensure all athletes have the possibility to compete at the Olympic Games
and not be held responsible for their government's actions.
Yesterday, the International Olympic Committee announced that it has lifted its suspension of Russia,
clearing the way for the country to send a team to the summer games in Los Angeles in 2008.
Russian athletes have been largely exiled from global sports for years,
starting in 2016 over doping scandals, and they then faced a new wave of suspensions after Russia's
full-scale invasion of Ukraine. That meant that in the last summer and winter Olympics, only a
handful of Russians competed, and they did so as so-called neutral athletes, not representing Russia.
In explaining the decision, the head of the IOC said the committee was not condoning the war
and that there will still be some restrictions in place, including that Russian
officials will not be invited to Olympic events. On social media, Ukraine's foreign ministry
called the change deeply concerning and added that sports should never be used to, quote,
whitewash the actions of a state that continues to wage war. For years, cigarette sales in the U.S.
have been on a steep decline, and it's left big tobacco corporations trying to find a way to offset
that. They embraced vaping, which helped their bottom line, and now they're going to
going all in on flavored nicotine pouches that you talk between your cheek and your gums.
The pouches are becoming more and more popular.
The tobacco companies are offering these as safer alternatives for the 25 million Americans
who still smoke cigarettes.
But what we're hearing from public health advocates is they're very concerned about developing
a whole new generation of nicotine-addicted Americans and particularly young people.
Murray Carpenter's been looking at the rise of pouches for the times.
He says the American Lung Association, the World Health Organization, and others have raised concerns,
but that pouches have found support from the Trump administration.
Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has been photographed carrying Zinn, the most popular pouch brand.
And earlier this year, the FDA relaxed regulations on nicotine pouches and vapes, a week after a tobacco company donated $5 million to a Trump-back superpack.
Murray says several states are also welcoming the industry.
industry's growth, handing out tax credits for companies to invest in factories.
There's a lot of these new tobacco factories popping up. The biggest, the most ambitious,
is in Aurora, Colorado. It's a $600 million plant. They're finishing up construction right now.
They're going to have hundreds of employees there. So that's the exemplar of this trend.
But additionally, there are companies that are either having new or expanded plants in North
Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Kentucky.
and Florida. Probably over a billion dollars in investment so far in these factories all across
the country. And I think what you're seeing from this investment from the tobacco companies is the
industry is poised for dramatic growth. And finally, there are the classic sounds of summer at the beach,
waves, lifeguard whistles, the ice cream truck, and now increasingly the whir of drones out there
looking for sharks. New York State announced this month it now has almost 30 drones for that,
and many other places have their own fleets too. They zoom out over the waves, and in some cases,
if there's a confirmed shark sighting, swimmers can be ordered out of the water for an hour.
Shark attacks, of course, are exceedingly rare, and experts say the threat is minimal, but more
places are investing in this tech, which can also do things like drop life jackets down to
struggling swimmers. Near Sydney, Australia, where there's been an uptick in shark activity
recently, officials there have now arranged for a year-round drone surveillance at about 70 beaches.
One drone pilot in Australia the Times talk with said the key is that people reviewing the
footage learned to identify different species, so they don't set off the shark siren for a
shark that's not a danger to humans. An ocean swimmer told the times that he was a little torn about
the increased surveillance. On the one hand, he appreciates.
appreciates getting a heads up, but on the other, seeing all the drone videos that have been popping up of the dark shapes lurking near the shoreline can be a lot.
He said, quote, sometimes I'd rather not know.
Those are the headlines.
Today on the Daily, how a new accusation of sexual assault has upended the high-stake Senate campaign in Maine.
And what could happen next?
You can listen to that in the New York Times app or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Tracy Mumford. We'll be back tomorrow.
