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For no other countries have publicly committed to helping.
Trump says, quote, numerous countries have told him they're on the way to help the
U.S. police the street of Hormuz, but he didn't specify which countries.
Despite the president insisting that U.S. attacks on Iran have been successful so far,
the street still poses a concern.
Literally, a single terrorist can put something in the water, or shoot something, or shoot
a missile, a small missile, and it's fairly close range because it is a tight area.
And which is one of the reasons they've always used that as a weapon.
Iran's ability to threaten slow-moving oil tankers in the street has become a headache
for the Trump administration.
Twenty percent of the world's oil supply relies on the passage, and prices have increased
since the war began.
Deep Ashivaram and PR News, the White House.
In the head of a meeting in Brussels, Tuesday, European Union foreign ministers appear
cool to President Trump's call for help to protect shipping through the straight-of-hormuz.
A number of U.S. allies, including Germany, Spain, and Italy, say they have no immediate
plans to send warships to reopen the street.
A judge has blocked key parts of the Trump administration's controversial changes to
federal vaccine policies, here's in PR's Rob Stein.
District Court Judge Brian Murphy in Boston issued a preliminary ruling in a lawsuit filed
by the American Academy of Pediatrics and other medical groups.
It puts a hold on a series of changes made by Health Secretary Robert of Kennedy Jr.
And an influential CDC Vaccine Advisory Committee that is stocked with members who share
his anti-vaccine views.
That includes a decision to slash the number of vaccines that the federal government
recommends that children receive routinely.
The Health and Human Services Department says the government plans to appeal the ruling.
Rob Stein and PR News.
America's democracy rating has plunged by nearly 25 percent since President Trump's
return to office that's according to a leading report on global democracy as in PR's
Frank Langford reports.
The report by the V-Dem Institute, which is based in Sweden, so the U.S. fell in its
annual democracy ranking from 20th to 51st out of 179 countries.
V-Dem scholars downgraded America based on everything from Trump's concentration of presidential
power to his attacks on the media.
Staffan Lindberg is the institute's founding director.
Under the Trump administration, democracy has been rolled back as much during just one
year as it took Modi in India and Erdogan in Turkey ten years to accomplish.
Lindberg is referring to Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Turkish President
Recep Tayyip Erdogan who have undermined democracy in their countries over time.
NPR reached out to the White House for comment but is yet to hear back.
Frank Langford and PR News.
This is NPR.
The energy crisis in Cuba is deepening, officials say millions are without power amid the third
major black outing Cuba over the past few months.
On Friday, Cuba's President warned that his country had not received oil shipments
in more than three months.
In January, President Trump warned of tariffs on any country that sells or provides oil
to Cuba.
A Utah woman who wrote a children's book about coping with grief following her husband's
death has been convicted of murdering him.
Prosecutors say Curie Richens poisoned her husband Eric with fentanyl, Jersey Park City
also found Curie Richens guilty of fraudulently claiming insurance benefits.
Visits to the country's national parks, dips slightly last year from the record-breaking
crowds a year before the Mountain West News Bureau's Rachel Cohen reports.
National parks' historic sites and monuments and recreation areas saw 323 million visits
in 2025, about 3% less than 2024.
But the National Park Service says visits were made high despite the longest-ever government
shutdown last fall, which lasted 43 days.
During the shutdown, the Trump administration kept parks mostly open, but with sparse
staff and services.
Great Smoky Mountains National Parks, traveling North Carolina and Tennessee, remained the
most popular with 11.5 million visits.
Ryan National Park Yellowstone, the Grand Canyon and Yosemite, rounded out the top five.
The Grand Canyon fell one spot in the rankings as a wildfire destroyed a historic lodge and
forced closures.
For NPR News, I'm Rachel Cohen.
And I'm Dryall Snyder.
You're listening to NPR News.
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