WSJ What’s News - Four U.S. Troops Killed in Iraq Plane Crash
Episode Date: March 13, 2026A.M. Edition for Mar. 13. The U.S. military confirms that four U.S. servicemembers were killed yesterday when a refueling plane crashed in Iraq. The deaths mark the first U.S. Air Force losses since t...he start of the war. Plus, TikTok parent company ByteDance secures access to top Nvidia chips in its bid to compete with the world’s most popular AI apps. And WSJ’s Jennifer Williams explains how U.S. employers plan to cope with the biggest annual jump in health-insurance costs in 15 years. Luke Vargas hosts. Check out what WSJ critics had to say about this year’s Best Picture nominees. Sign up for the WSJ’s free What’s News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Iran and the U.S. intensify their war rhetoric yet again.
Plus, TikTok's parent company gets access to NVIDIA's top AI chips as it pushes a global expansion.
They've struggled to acquire the amount of compute they need in order to push at the frontiers of AI,
and Nivodea's Blackwells are top chips, and they're after them.
And U.S. employers stare down the biggest annual jump in health insurance costs in a decade and a half,
We'll look at how they plan to cope.
It's Friday, March 13th.
I'm Luke Vargas for the Wall Street Journal,
and here is the AM edition of What's News,
the top headlines and business stories, moving your world today.
The U.S. is easing sanctions on Russian oil.
In a move that's designed to boost supply and ease price pressures,
countries will be allowed to purchase Russian oil that's already at sea until April 11th.
I asked journal correspondent Thomas Grove what to make of the policy shift.
Treasury Secretary Scott Besant said in a post on X that the sanctions exemption is a narrowly tailored short-term measure.
And he says that it shouldn't provide a lot of economic benefit to Russia in the long term.
This certainly shows us that the priority in Washington is to make sure that there's enough oil on the market to keep prices low.
And that's more important, I think, to Washington right now than preventing Russia from gaining additional revenues that are feeding its war right now in Ukraine.
But with that in mind, of course, there is a whole universe of sanctions on Russia.
Russian oil, and that goes from the banks to the companies involved to the people as well.
And those aren't being lifted. But of course, if the war drags on, prices continue to rise,
we have to look at those as well and see if those could be lifted too.
Four U.S. service members have been confirmed dead after a U.S. Air Force refueling plane
crashed in Iraq yesterday. Initial reports suggest that the KC. 135 strato tanker was involved
in a mid-air collision with a second plane that landed safely. The fatality.
These mark the first U.S. Air Force losses during the war. Meanwhile, as the war approaches the two-week mark,
President Trump and Iranian officials are continuing to dial up their rhetoric. Posting on
True Social, Trump warned that the U.S. has, quote, unparalleled firepower, unlimited ammunition,
and plenty of time. And speaking of the Iranian regime, Trump added, watch what happens to these
deranged scumbags today. For their part, officials in Iran believe that Trump is feeling the heat
from global markets and say their leaders aren't interested in surrendering.
National security official Ali Larajani said yesterday that, quote, starting a war is easy,
but ending it won't happen with a few tweets.
We will not let off you until you accept your mistake and pay the price for it, end quote.
Well, as the U.S. and Iran appear to be sticking to their war goals, the journals Annat Pellet told us
that Israel is for the first time publicly acknowledging that regime change in Iran
may be unlikely. So President Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu began this conflict,
calling on Iranians to take control of their country in speeches on the very first day. But since then,
we've seen changing messaging. We've seen that in the U.S. when U.S. officials have increasingly
focused on narrow goals of destroying the country's military capabilities. Now we're seeing
a shifting tone in Israel. I think that was most clear in a speech that Netanyahu gave yesterday.
It was his first press conference where he took questions since the start of the war.
when he basically said that he couldn't commit to the idea that Iranians would be able to topple the regime.
And what we understand now is that Israeli officials basically think that the conditions are not ripe on the ground yet for regime change.
We understand also that people are very scared in Iran.
The security forces are present on the streets.
There's threats.
There's just a lot of fear.
So it doesn't seem like this is the moment to go for that.
Anad, if Israel is sort of backing off of that immediate regime change goal and,
protesters aren't flooding the streets just yet. Is there a risk that Israel and the U.S.
kind of begin to break rank and their desire to press the fight here? We are seeing differences
that are emerging between the two countries. So we saw this very clearly in a set of strikes
on oil depots that Israel conducted. And even though the U.S. was not a fight in advance,
it told Israel not to do this again unless it was approved by Washington. And that made it
very clear that there are differences despite very close military coordination.
However, what I'm being told from Israeli officials is that it's very likely that Trump could end this war at any moment.
He can be unpredictable, as we know.
And Israel is fighting as if every day is the last.
And, yeah, they do have plans, at least on the Israeli side, to continue to kind of go and degrade the regime even after the war is over through other means, such as economic means and covert operations.
Anat, thank you, as always for the update.
Thanks for having me.
In markets news today, investors looking for safety have driven the U.S. dollar to a more than three-month high, and analysts are expecting further strengthening. The euro, meanwhile, is at a seven-month low. The U.K. economy stalled unexpectedly in January. A worrying sign as the global energy crisis threatens to strain household budgets. The country's budget watchdog earlier this month forecast yearly growth of just 1.1 percent, a slowdown from 2025.
Apple is lowering the fees for digital sales in its Chinese app store from 30 to 25%,
a move designed to diffuse a regulatory showdown in its top overseas market.
Despite the change, China remains one of Apple's priciest jurisdictions for consumers and developers.
And TikTok's Chinese parent bite dance is assembling computing power with high-end Nvidia chips outside of China,
circumventing U.S. export restrictions.
We've learned that Baitance is working with a Southeast Asian company called Aeolani Cloud
on plans to use NVIDIA's Blackwell chips in Malaysia at a likely cost of more than $2.5 billion.
The journal's John Emont says the computing power would be used to fuel Bightance's AI research and development.
Central to the American and Chinese geopolitical competition is this contest over AI and who's going to dominate AI in more fields and sectors.
And the challenge that ByteDance has is that the best chips, these super-powerful Navidia chips, cannot be sold directly to China.
So in order to have the best chance of competing Byte-Dance and the other Chinese AI leaders do need to find a way to get this computational power that American export controls make difficult.
But I think as we are showing this article, not impossible.
ByteDance currently operates five of the world's 50 most popular AI consumer apps by monthly active users, according to a recent ranking by venture capital firm and recent Horowitz.
Coming up, rising health insurance costs are forcing companies to get creative as they try to dull the pain for workers, and we'll take a look at the films competing for Best Picture at Sunday's Academy Awards.
That's after the break.
One month into the DHS shutdown and there's still no deal in sight.
Funding remains stalled over democratic demands for new restrictions on ice operations,
and lawmakers have now left Washington for the weekend, making no progress toward resolving the standoff.
U.S. companies are facing a roughly 9.5% surge in health insurance costs this year,
the biggest rise in at least 15 years.
So there are a couple things that are pushing health care costs up for companies.
There are just higher prices for care.
There's expanding use of services and then pricey prescriptions, including GLP1s, used for both weight loss and diabetes.
That's general reporter Jennifer Williams, who says that higher costs could result in reduced coverage.
Companies covering costs themselves instead of using an insurance provider or asking their employees to pay more out of pocket.
Typical tactics used to lower health care costs for employers include like changing plan designs,
negotiating lower costs with vendors and pushing some of those costs onto employees.
But right now, given how high the costs are and that it's expected to stay that way,
experts are saying that executives are considering more significant action like self-insurance
or more aggressively managing their prescription costs.
And that's particularly where the GLP1 consideration comes in.
While health care costs typically rise annually, Jennifer reports that CFOs are now noting an intense shift in how those expenses are appearing.
What I first heard from Costco last December is that their costs had increased more significantly at a faster pace than sales, which was not something they tend to see.
I spoke with someone who works at a nonprofit consumer health care advocacy organization.
about the trade-offs that employees are also having to make, which is as extreme as do I buy my groceries or do I go see a doctor or buy prescriptions for my kids?
And finally, the Academy Awards are this Sunday.
And to preview the biggest night in film, I'm joined by our producer and film buff Hattie Moyer.
Hi, Hattie.
Hi, Luke. It's funny to be on this side of the microphone.
Yeah, I haven't seen you in 10 seconds. It's good to be reunited.
Let's talk about movies.
I'm embarrassed to admit that for the first time since 2012,
I haven't watched a single award-nominated film.
My wife and I used to make a tradition of this.
We watched them all.
But we have a baby now.
Maybe people can relate.
And we got halfway through one battle after another.
It was great, but we had to hit pause for the night.
That was a month ago.
We haven't picked it up.
So you have a lot more to come in one battle after another.
My name is Bob Ferguson.
I don't know if you've ever heard any.
This is director Paul Thomas Anderson's biggest budget.
film that he's ever made.
Ghetto Pat, Rocket Man, stuff like that.
Sinners is a wild ride.
It's a film where Michael B. Jordan plays Twins,
and it's also broken records with 16 Oscar nominations.
So that alone is an excuse to go and give it a watch.
Cause me, open a door.
I thought you said he was dead.
He was.
I checked his pulse.
Okay, so if I have, let's say, tonight and Saturday night to watch two films,
maybe these are good ones to start with.
But let's say we somehow find a little time Sunday afternoon.
Where is my time best spent?
You've just had a kid.
So I'm going to say...
Not Hamnet.
Not Hamnet.
Because that is the saddest film in the world.
That's a trigger warning.
Avoid if you're a young parent.
Yes.
So I would recommend the secret agent,
amazing Brazilian film,
lowest budget film in the best picture category.
One more, Guillermo del Toros, Frankenstein.
Three parts, it follows the book.
So you can stop and start and feed the baby in the middle.
This much, we have a star.
That is my name. My name is Victor. Is there anything else that you can say? Anything at you?
Haddy, thank you very much. Thanks so much for having me.
And to read what journal critics had to say about this year's 10 Best Picture nominees, check out the link we've left in our show notes.
And to convince me and fellow listeners to watch your favorite film of the year, sound off in our Spotify comments.
I'll see you there. And that's it for what's news for this Friday morning.
Today's show was produced by Patty Moyer and Daniel Bach. Our supervising producer is Sandra Kilhoff.
And I'm Luke Vargas for the Wall Street Journal.
We will be back tonight with a new show.
Otherwise, have a great weekend.
Enjoy your movies.
And thanks for listening.
