The Headlines - U.S. Intelligence Undercuts Trump’s War Claims, and the Cost of ‘Alligator Alcatraz’
Episode Date: May 13, 2026Plus, the controversy engulfing Eurovision. Here’s what we’re covering: U.S. Intelligence Shows Iran Retains Substantial Missile Capabilities, by Adam Entous, Maggie Haberman and Jonathan Swan I...nflation Accelerates After Weeks of War in Iran, by Lydia DePillis Florida Plans to Close ‘Alligator Alcatraz,’ Vendors Are Reportedly Told, by Patricia Mazzei and Hamed Aleaziz Wildfires Strike Florida, Georgia and America’s ‘Wood Basket,’ by Sachi Kitajima Mulkey How Israel Turned Eurovision’s Stage Into a Soft Power Tool, by Mara Hvistendahl and Alex Marshall 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.
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From the New York Times, it's the headlines.
I'm Will Jarvis in for Tracy Mumford.
Today's Wednesday, May 13th.
Here's what we're covering.
The Times has learned that secret U.S. intelligence assessments show Iran's military remains much stronger than the Trump administration has claimed.
By any measure, Epic Fury decimated Iran's military and rendered it combat ineffective for years to come.
Defense Secretary Pete Higsef has said that the joint U.S. Israeli campaign obliterated Iran's military.
military capabilities, and President Trump has claimed that Iran has, quote,
nothing left in a military sense. But the classified intelligence sharply undercuts that.
It shows Iran still has roughly 70 percent of its pre-war missile stockpile. The country has also
restored access to almost all of its missile sites along the Strait of Hormuz, and Iran has
access to roughly 90 percent of its underground missile storage and launch facilities.
Officials the Times talked to said that's in part because of
a tactical trade-off made by the U.S. military early in the war. It only had a limited supply
of bunker-busting bombs, so it decided to try and just seal off the entrances to many of Iran's
missile facilities instead of destroying them completely. Overall, the assessments suggest
the U.S. underestimated Iran's resilience and its ability to bounce back. In response to
questions about the intelligence, a White House spokesman repeated Trump's previous claims
that Iran's military has been crushed, and the acting Pentagon Press Secretary accused the Times
and other media outlets of acting as, quote, public relations agents for the Iranian regime.
Meanwhile, new federal data shows that inflation has accelerated as the war continues. Consumer prices
in the U.S. rose last month at the fastest rate in three years. The increase was driven largely by
energy prices. People are feeling that not just at the pump and with airline tickets, but with any goods that have to be
transported by a diesel-fueled truck or on a boat, which is a lot of things.
When President Trump was asked yesterday about whether American's economic pain was motivating
him to wrap up the war, he had a blunt answer.
Not even a little bit.
The only thing that matters without talking about Iran, they can't have a nuclear weapon.
I don't think about American financial situation.
I don't think about anybody.
Facing the rise in prices for gas, groceries, and other staples, more and more American
households are borrowing money to get by and signing up for new credit cards. That trend was
already in the works even before these latest spikes. As of a couple months ago, credit card
balances in the U.S. had reached a record $1.3 trillion. The Times has learned that Alligator
Alcatraz, the controversial detention center in the middle of the Florida Everglades,
is shutting down. We're surrounded by miles of treacherous swamp land, and the only way out is
really deportation. The facility opened last year with tents spread across an old airfield and was
billed as one of a kind, given its isolation and harsh surroundings. President Trump and Florida Governor
Ron DeSantis played up the site's nickname and said its very existence would encourage undocumented
immigrants to self-deport. Why would you want to come through alligator Alcatraz if you can
just go home on your own? The center was also intended to be a symbol of federal state cooperation
with Florida operating the facility and the federal government paying the state back.
But now the Department of Homeland Security has determined that the remote site was too expensive,
and Florida is going to close it down, according to multiple people familiar with the plans.
Florida has been spending more than a million dollars a day to run the center,
and it's still waiting to get back more than $600 million from the federal government.
In the short time that it was open, the center faced criticism for conditions there.
Detainees described it as unsanitary and in-futable.
humane, rain leaking into tents, infrequent showers, lack of access to medication. Florida
officials have dismissed those claims as completely false. As of last month, there were about
1,400 detainees held at the center. It's not clear where they will go now, but they're
expected to be moved out by the beginning of next month.
Firefighters on the front lines urgently racing to put out several blazes from the ground
to the air. In the southeastern U.S., states are seeing an unusually early
and unusually intense start to wildfire season.
The embers spread by high winds and the smoke now draped over Atlanta, making the air.
Large fires in Georgia and Florida are being driven by severe widespread drought that's been gripping the region.
We have not seen the proper amount of rain for months and months on end.
The dry conditions have made the blazes stronger and harder to contain,
with one Georgia forestry official describing flames dozens of feet high.
So far, the fires have destroyed at least 100,
120 homes and one firefighter has been killed.
The southeast is known as the nation's wood basket due to the sprawling timber plantations there,
some of which are now burning.
Overall, research has shown that fires in the region are becoming more frequent, which
scientists suspect is a result of climate change.
Even areas that haven't traditionally burned in the past, like wetlands, are now catching
on fire.
And finally,
Let the Eurovision Song Contest begin!
Eurovision kicked off last night.
Wow.
I can't hear you!
The campy, glittery spectacle is the most watched cultural events on the planet,
with singers from more than 30 countries competing and millions of viewers voting for their favorite.
You, you, you and you at home, all of you can vote and decide how this evening unfolds.
It's supposed to just be about who has the best song, and the competition is adamant that it has nothing to do with politics.
a controversy over Israel's involvement
and what the country has done
to try and influence the contest
has engulfed Eurovision.
So when Israel came in second last year
and won the popular vote,
it was surprising. I was at a watch party
at the time. I remember people gasped
audibly. You know,
some of these countries where
Israel won, anti-Israel sentiment
was actually quite high at the time.
And so we sit out to understand
how that could happen.
My colleagues Mara Vistendal and Alex Marshall
have been looking at how the Israeli government
tried to use Eurovision basically as a PR campaign,
a way to try and shore up the country's public image
amid outcry over the war in Gaza.
Last year, that included throwing money into marketing
the Israeli contestant.
We found that some of that money came from an office
under Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
that's essentially kind of tasked with overseas propaganda.
It definitely broke norms at the time.
And, you know, you could ask, well, why spend
this much on social media ads and do those ads really have an effect.
But we learned, because we were able to attain vote data from some countries,
that it's actually surprisingly easy to influence Eurovision results.
And, you know, other governments have gotten involved in Eurovision in the past to some degree,
but nothing to the extent of what we saw with Israel in our reporting.
In response to questions, the director of Eurovision told the times
that Israel's actions were excessive, but denied that they affected the outcome.
This year, five countries are boycotting Eurovision entirely over Israel's involvement,
including Spain, Ireland, and Iceland.
Mara says Eurovision is taking a hit with all of this, losing money, struggling with sponsors,
and it's possible that viewership, which usually numbers over 160 million people, could see a dip.
Those are the headlines.
Today on the Daily, what to know about President Trump's visit to China,
where he's set to land this morning.
You can listen to that in the New York Times app or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Will Jarvis.
The show will be back tomorrow with Tracy Mumford.
