The Headlines - Trump Calls Iran Strikes a ‘Trifle,’ and the Latest on the Hantavirus Outbreak

Episode Date: May 8, 2026

Plus, the Friday news quiz.  Here’s what we’re covering: The Latest on the War in Iran, by The New York Times House Republican Proposes Bill to Wind Down the Iran War, by Robert Jimison Israel Sa...ys It Killed a Hezbollah Chief Near Beirut, Testing the Truce, by Euan Ward Hantavirus Response Shows How Trump Cuts Have Compromised U.S. Preparedness, by Apoorva Mandavilli As U.S. Debt Hits a Worrying Milestone, Washington Barely Notices, by Tony Romm The Ultimate ‘It’ Spot in Caracas? A Marriott That’s Seen Better Days., by Simon Romero This Pulitzer-Winning Novel Traps You in One Sentence Forever, hosted by Gilbert Cruz 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)
Starting point is 00:00:02 From the New York Times, it's the headlines. I'm Tracy Mumford. Today's Friday, May 8th. Here's what we're covering. Iran's still on. Yeah, it is. It's a, they trifled with us today. We blew them away.
Starting point is 00:00:24 They trifled. I call that a trifle. President Trump says that the ceasefire between the U.S. and Iran is still in effect, even after the two countries exchanged fire in the Strait of Hormuz yesterday. If there's no ceasefire, you're not going to have to have to know. You're just going to have to look at one big glow coming out of Iran. The president followed his comments up with the threat of more attacks, saying Iran, quote, better sign their agreement fast. He was referring to a new deal that's on the table.
Starting point is 00:00:51 It's a proposal from the U.S. that would reopen the Strait of Hormuz and end fighting for 30 days, while the countries work toward a more comprehensive long-term agreement. They want to sign it. I will tell you. They want to sign it a lot more than I do. The temporary deal does not address the key points of the conflict that have stalled all the the previous negotiations, like the future of Iran's nuclear program. Recently, President Trump has been making efforts to minimize the ongoing hostilities, calling them a trifle, a skirmish, and a mini-war, as the conflict has proved to be deeply
Starting point is 00:01:26 unpopular with the American public and increasingly expensive. Even some Republicans in Congress have been growing impatient. Yesterday, Representative Tom Barrett of Michigan, who is facing a tough re-election race this year, proposed a bill to wind down the war. Barrett, who is an army veteran, said the president has sole authority to lead troops during wartime, but, quote,
Starting point is 00:01:49 I've lost too many friends on the battlefield to allow that to happen without Congress exercising its constitutional role, saying he wanted safeguards and a clear deadline. Meanwhile, there's also been continued fighting in Lebanon, despite the ceasefire there.
Starting point is 00:02:06 The agreement has curbed the violence somewhat, but Israel and Hezbollah have been exchanging daily attacks in the southern part of the country, and this week, Israel launched an airstrike in the suburbs of Beirut. It hit an apartment building in a densely populated area where Hezbollah holds sway. The Israeli military said it was targeting and killed a commander of the Iran-backed militia. But the attack risked further destabilizing the already shaky temporary truce. The Trump administration is watching closely, as renewed fighting there could complicate any U.S. agreement with Iran, which has insisted that Israeli strikes in Lebanon end.
Starting point is 00:02:48 Now, two quick updates on the federal government. First, infectious disease experts are warning that the U.S. response to the hauntavirus outbreak shows the country is ill-prepared to deal with future public health crises. The current outbreak on a cruise ship has left three people dead and at least five sick. Some passengers have scattered around the world, though, requiring them to be monitored elsewhere. There are six in the U.S. And experts say the CDC has been sluggish to respond. The agency has been largely silent, and it didn't set up a response team until nearly a month after the first death. That timing is what worries some experts more than the virus itself, which they note rarely spreads among people. Some former public health officials say the Trump administration's
Starting point is 00:03:39 deep staffing and budget cuts at the CDC have hamstrung the agency. And new federal data shows the U.S. government appears to have reached a worrying new milestone, with the country's debt growing larger than its total economic output. Now, that doesn't mean the country is facing an imminent fiscal crisis, but experts say the rising debt will make it more expensive for the country to borrow money in the future. And it does need to borrow money, since tax revenue doesn't fully cover the U.S. U.S.'s expenses. My colleague Tony Rahm says economists have been warning about this milestone for years, but in Washington, the response has been largely muted.
Starting point is 00:04:20 You didn't hear the chorus of criticism from Democrats and Republicans about the need to do something swiftly to fix the debt. And that just sort of reflects the hard political reality here, which is that Republicans under President Trump have added considerably to the debt. The nation's debt solely stands to worsen in the years to come, and policymakers don't seem particularly interested in the kind of grand compromise that might be needed to bring things back into balance. It's now been four months since U.S. Special Forces swept into Venezuela in the middle of the night and seized the country's president, Nicholas Maduro. Since then, there's been a flood of questions about the country's future, what will happen politically, economically, with a lot of forces jockeying for power and influence. And oddly, one place to see that playing out is a Marriott Hotel in Caracas.
Starting point is 00:05:14 You can see U.S. diplomats here. There are oilmen coming down from Houston and Dallas. There are finance types from New York and London. You see these U.S. security guys with these tattoos, you know, really muscle-bound types. It's like something out of a movie set almost. My colleague Simone Romero covers Venezuela, and he's been staying at the hotel, which he says has definitely seen better days. The whole thing is kind of run down, but it's become the person.
Starting point is 00:05:44 place to be to try and talk deals over a $32 breakfast buffet with soggy scrambled eggs. It's just been bizarre to see this hotel become a kind of nerve center for decision making in Venezuela, and it's all about proximity to power. People want to be close to the de facto U.S. Embassy, which is operating out of the hotel's top floor. U.S. diplomats are camping out at the hotel because the actual U.S. Embassy is not functional right now. For many Venezuelans in the country, they've been left waiting to see what all of the negotiations and deal-making will mean for their daily lives, with one political advisor telling the times, quote, much of the awaited transformation is being guided from the Marriott.
Starting point is 00:06:29 And finally, the Pulitzer Prizes were announced this week, and the fiction prize went to the novel Angel Down by Daniel Krause. It's about a soldier in World War I who encounters an angel knocked down on the battlefield, stuck in barbed wire. It blends history, magical realism, science fiction, and the whole book is written as a single sentence. One sentence, almost 300 pages. Krause explained how he got to that approach on the New York Times Book Review podcast.
Starting point is 00:07:03 I started writing the book in a more or less traditional format. I had gotten about 20 pages in, maybe, and it was going well, but I remember saying to somebody, not every book has to be great, you know, because I was like, this may not be firing on all cylinders, but it's sort of working. But I was frustrated with it. It didn't seem like I had chosen the right approach. Krauss explained how he stopped Mid-Project, racked his brain, and honed it on the book's theme, how the war began a cycle of violence. And so I had the thought that, what if I wrote it all in one sentence
Starting point is 00:07:37 and the end of the book circles back to the beginning of the book so that once you start reading it, in a fact you're trapped in the book forever. And it's this ongoing wheel. You can check out the book review podcast for more of that interview and more reading recommendations. Those are the headlines. If you'd like to play the Friday News Quiz, stick around. It's just after these credits.
Starting point is 00:08:03 This show is made by Will Jarvis, Margaret Kedifa, Jake Lucas, Jan Stewart, and me, Tracy Mumford. Original theme by Dan Powell. Special thanks to Isabella Anderson, Larissa Anderson, Sam Dolnick, Miles McKinley, and Zoe Murphy. Now, time for the quiz. Every week, we ask you a few questions about stories the Times has been covering. Can you get them all?
Starting point is 00:08:29 First up. Can you kind of clarify these reports of kamikaze dolphins that we've heard about? I haven't heard the kamikaze dolphin thing. It's like sharks with laser beams, right? U.S. officials have been getting a lot of questions about the war with Iran over the last few months, but this week, one line of questioning really stood out. And I can't confirm or deny whether we have kamikaze dolphins, but I can confirm they don't. The chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Dan Cain, and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth,
Starting point is 00:08:58 were put on the spot about whether dolphins were being weaponized in the Strait of Hormuz. They kind of laughed it off, but there is actually precedent for the U.S. Navy using sea creatures. In 1962, the Navy started a training program for dolphins and all but one of these ocean dwellers. Which animal was not in the Navy program? Octopus, porpoise, seal, whale. Octopus, porpoise, seal, whale. The answer? Octopus. While the animal is exceptionally intelligent, as far as we know, they have yet to be recruited. Dolphins, though, were sent to the Persian Gulf back in the 1980s to help with underwater surveillance. Next question.
Starting point is 00:09:56 So it turns out that customer service snafus hit all of us, even if you're famous and powerful. He calls his bank to change his phone number, and I think his address. Recently, a man giving a speech in the Chicago area shared a story about how a good friend of his, who is definitely famous, but not by his birth name, hit a dead end trying to update his address on record at the bank. Oh, I'm sorry, sir. It says here you have to come in person. And he said, well, that's not going to, I'm not going to be able to do that.
Starting point is 00:10:31 The clip has been going viral thanks to the big reveal, which we have dinged out here. Would it matter to you if I told you I'm... She hung up on him. Your question, who got hung up on? The answer? Could you imagine being known? as the woman who hung up on the Pope. Pope Leo.
Starting point is 00:11:01 Lucky for him, another priest sorted out the banking issues since Leo was busy, you know, being in charge of more than a billion Catholics. Today is actually the one-year anniversary of him being named Pope. So far, the customer service agent from this story hasn't been identified.
Starting point is 00:11:18 Though, to be fair, getting a call from his holiness probably is not in the training materials. And last question. The top movie at the box office this past week was the Devil Wares Prada 2, a sequel that came storming in 20 years after the original. By all means, move at a glacial pace.
Starting point is 00:11:42 You know how that thrills me. So, in honor of long, long-awaited sequels, can you guess these franchises that waited even longer to put out the second film? We're not going to make it easy. We're going to do a little wordplay puzzling here. As an example, if the clue was Lucifer Sports Gucci, that would be a lot of it. B, Devil Wars Prada. Get it?
Starting point is 00:12:05 First one. The clue is Elite Firearm, as in there were 36 years between the movies in the Elite Firearm franchise. That is, I feel the need
Starting point is 00:12:20 for a speed. Top Gun. Next, the clue is Knife Jogger. There were 35 years between the original and the sequel for Knife Jogger. That is... I've seen things you people wouldn't believe.
Starting point is 00:12:42 Blade Runner. And last one, insect liquid. Another three plus decades passed between the first and the second movie for insect liquid. The answer? It's your time. Beetlejuice, beetle juice. As for why studios keep going back to the well, even decades and decades later, seems audiences have an insatiable appetite for sequels.
Starting point is 00:13:10 Not only is Devil Wears Prada 2 doing well, but nine of the 10 top grossing films in North America in 2024 were sequels. That's it for this week's news quiz. If you want to tell us how you did, our email is The Headlines at NYTimes.com. I'm Tracy Mumford, and you do not have to wait three decades for the next episode. We will be back on Monday. Thank you.

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