
World leaders gather to discuss defence amid Israel-Iran tensions
In a conversation with the French and German leaders at the summit on Tuesday, Sir Keir 'reflected on the volatile situation in the Middle East,' according to a Downing Street spokeswoman.
The leaders agreed that 'now was the time for diplomacy and for Iran to come to the negotiating table', the spokeswoman added.
It comes as intelligence reports in the US suggested that the American attack on Iran's nuclear programme over the weekend have only set it back by a few months, rather than destroyed it as Donald Trump previously suggested.
The White House pushed back on the reports on Tuesday evening, with press secretary Karoline Leavitt saying it was 'flat out wrong'.
'The leaking of this alleged assessment is a clear attempt to demean President Trump, and discredit the brave fighter pilots who conducted a perfectly executed mission to obliterate Iran's nuclear programme,' she said in a statement.
Mr Trump also condemned the leak in a post on Truth Social, calling the US raid 'one of the most successful military strikes in history'.
'THE NUCLEAR SITES IN IRAN ARE COMPLETELY DESTROYED! BOTH THE TIIMES AND CNN ARE GETTING SLAMMED BY THE PUBLIC!' he wrote.
Earlier on Tuesday, Sir Keir had said that the US had helped in 'alleviating' the threat of nuclear capability for Iran with their strikes on Saturday.
Asked on his visit to The Hague whether he personally felt safe with Mr Trump in the White House and why others should, the Prime Minister told Channel 5 News: 'Look, I think what we've seen over the last few days is the Americans alleviating a threat to nuclear weaponry by the Iranians and bringing about a ceasefire in the early hours of today.
'I think now what needs to happen is that ceasefire needs to be maintained, and that will be the focus of our attention, our engagement, our discussions, because that ceasefire provides the space for the negotiations that need to take place.'
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said on Tuesday the US had helped in 'alleviating' the threat of nuclear capability for Iran (Kin Cheung/PA)
After the ceasefire was initially struck early on Tuesday, Israel claimed Iran had violated the deal by carrying out strikes after it came into force.
Mr Trump called for Israel to withdraw its warplanes, and claimed both it and Iran 'don't know what the f*** they're doing' as he departed for the summit in the Netherlands.
The UK has continued to evacuate Britons out of Israel, and a second flight left Tel Aviv on Tuesday.
The Foreign Office confirmed the plane had left Israel and said further flights would be considered depending on demand.
Meanwhile, the Liberal Democrats have said that MPs should be given a vote in the event of any future deployment of troops.
The party's foreign affairs spokesman Calum Miller said: 'With the Middle East in the throes of an all-out regional war, we are reckoning once again with the prospect of the UK becoming embroiled in foreign conflict.
'No one knows the fragility of peace in that region, or the price paid for our safety, better than our British troops. It's critical that, if they are asked to put their lives on the line for the UK in active conflict zones, this decision is subject to the strongest democratic scrutiny our country can offer.'
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The Independent
a minute ago
- The Independent
Exclusive: Aspiring CBP officer sues after being rejected over ‘religious' ayahuasca tea use
An aspiring U.S. Customs and Border Protection officer is suing after getting rejected for the job by admitting she consumes ayahuasca during biweekly religious ceremonies. Juliana Reis, a Brazilian-American member of União do Vegetal, a Christian reincarnationist sect that regularly drinks a sacramental ayahuasca tea to, the group contends, 'heighten spiritual understanding and perception, and bring the practitioners closer to God.' The tea contains various compounds and often produces a hallucinogenic experience. 'Religious practitioners ritually prepare the tea and consider it sacred, much as Catholics believe the wine and host they take at communion to be holy,' according to União do Vegetal, otherwise known as UDV. But when Reis revealed this during the pre-employment polygraph exam that all CBP applicants undergo, the job offer was withdrawn, according to a federal religious discrimination lawsuit filed Tuesday. DHS policy disqualifies any job-seekers who have used a substance classified as a Schedule I drug – which the tea contains – within the three years preceding their submission of an employment application. In 2006, the Supreme Court unanimously upheld the right of UDV members to import and use ayahuasca, which contains the powerful hallucinogen DMT, ending a years-long dispute between the church and the federal government. The UDV uses a tea called hoasca, or, ayahuasca, as a religious sacrament, Reis' complaint explains. Ayahuasca tea is prepared by brewing two plants together with water, one of which contains dimethyltryptamine – DMT – a drug regulated under the Controlled Substances Act. However, the Department of Homeland Security, of which CBP is a component agency, still considers the drug's use to be disqualifying, even though Reis emphasized that she did so 'for spiritual purposes only,' according to her suit, which names Homeland Secretary Kristi Noem as the sole defendant. 'Her religious practice is recognized as something very similar to Native Americans with peyote,' attorney Kevin Owen, one of the lawyers representing Reis, told The Independent. 'We think that DHS has made a wrong decision here, and that our client shouldn't have been denied a job with CBP just because of her religious observance.' Owen said that UDV's ayahuasca use is a 'bona fide' spiritual custom, and that the Trump administration has professed a strong commitment to religious accommodation – which is what Reis, who was turned down by CBP under the Biden administration, is now seeking. In May, President Donald Trump issued an Executive Order establishing a so-called Religious Liberty Commission, intended to guard against 'threats' to unfettered religious practice. 'It shall be the policy of the executive branch to vigorously enforce the historic and robust protections for religious liberty enshrined in Federal law,' Trump's EO read. 'The Founders envisioned a Nation in which religious voices and views are integral to a vibrant public square and human flourishing and in which religious people and institutions are free to practice their faith without fear of discrimination or hostility from the Government.' According to Owen, there are very few cases that are as clear-cut as the one he and co-counsel Gary Gilbert and Brian Sutherland are bringing on behalf of Reis. 'A lot of times, it's muddier, or a bit grey,' he said. 'I don't think the facts here will be in dispute.' CBP and a spokesperson from Noem's office did not respond to requests for comment. Reis was born in Espirito Santo, Brazil and became a naturalized American citizen in 2009. She became a devoted follower of UDV, which was founded in Brazil in 1961 and now includes more than 21,000 adherents in 11 countries, about 10 years ago, according to her complaint. Reis' congregation in Boca Raton, Florida, meets biweekly, usually on the first and third Saturdays of the month, although it 'sometimes holds extra services,' the complaint goes on. 'Like the other members of the UDV, Ms. Reis participates in the sacramental use of ayahuasca when she attends UDV services,' it says. 'When she drinks ayahuasca tea, she feels the effect of DMT, the active psychotropic ingredient, but she drinks it only for sacramental purposes.' The UDV's use of ayahuasca is legal under federal law, which provides an exemption under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993, according to the complaint. In October 2018, some three years after Reis joined the UDV, Reis applied for a position as a CBP officer. On December 4, 2018, the complaint says she received a provisional employment offer from CBP at the GS-7 pay rate, which comes with a starting salary of just over $40,000. To complete the process, Reis would be required to undergo a pre-employment procedure consisting of a medical exam, fitness exam, drug test, structured interview, polygraph exam and background investigation, the complaint states, noting that Reis successfully passed the medical and fitness exams, along with the interview. Next, Reis was scheduled to sit for the polygraph, known colloquially as a 'lie detector test,' which she did in March 2021, according to the complaint. 'Ms. Reis was asked several questions about drug use during the exam,' the complaint states. 'When the polygraph examiner asked her about [her] use of psychoactive substances, she disclosed her membership in the UDV and explained her religious use of ayahuasca.' The polygraph examiner asked 'extensive questions' about the UDV, all of which Reis answered fully, and later told her she 'was doing well,' the complaint contends. During a lunch break, the complaint says the examiner contacted an adjudicator at CBP's Personnel Security Division to inquire about Reis' use of ayahuasca. The adjudicator told the polygraph examiner that 'the admission to recent drug use disqualified Ms. Reis,' and when Reis returned from lunch, she was informed that the test was over, the complaint states. 'At this time, Ms. Reis executed a voluntary written statement for the report of the exam, which explained that she was a 'member of the Uniao do Vegetal…' that her church imports the ayahuasca from Brazil, and that she drinks the tea only at church services and 'for spiritual purposes only,'' according to the complaint. Still, it says, on April 1, 2021, DHS officially found Reis 'unsuitable' for employment with CBP, and four days later sent her an email telling her that the tentative job offer had been rescinded over her ayahuasca use. She subsequently appealed to the Equal Opportunity Employment Commission, unsuccessfully, to intervene, with their final decision coming on May 8, 2025. Reis then filed suit. Reis' adherence to 'the precepts of the UDV Church, including the regular consumption of sacramental ayahuasca tea,' has been recognized as lawful by the Supreme Court and is protected by Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964,the complaint maintains. At the same time, it alleges that CBP 'refused to consider [Reis] for employment because of her religious belief and practice,' and wanted to 'avoid providing her with reasonable religious accommodation.' This, the complaint argues, constitutes religious discrimination in violation of Title VII and accuses CBP of acting 'in bad faith and in willful and wanton disregard for [Reis'] federally protected rights.' 'When we went thru the EEOC process and got an administrative decision that wasn't what we had hoped for, we figured we had to go to district court,' Owen, Reis' the attorney, told The Independent. 'She has a sincerely held religious belief, and therefore it's going to be covered by Title VII.' On Monday, one day before Reis filed suit, the Trump administration further expanded religious liberties for government workers, allowing federal personnel to proselytize on the job. 'Federal employees should never have to choose between their faith and their career,' U.S. Office of Personnel Management Director Scott Kupor said in a press release. 'This guidance ensures the federal workplace is not just compliant with the law but welcoming to Americans of all faiths. Under President Trump's leadership, we are restoring constitutional freedoms and making government a place where people of faith are respected, not sidelined.' The federal government 'is supposed to be a model employer,' according to Owen, noting that he hopes Reis' lawsuit will spur wider changes for public-sector workers. 'Our client wants to make this situation a case not only vindicating her rights, but also for other people to make sure their religious practices aren't violated under the law,' Owen said. Reis says in her suit that she has suffered 'emotional distress, inconvenience, humiliation, and other indignities' as a result of the 'discriminatory conduct' by CBP and DHS. She is now seeking damages, to be determined by a jury, for lost wages and benefits, compensatory damages, and punitive damages, plus attorney's fees and court costs.


The Independent
a minute ago
- The Independent
Jamie Dimon is holding secret meetings with Trump on economy as ice thaws between the two
JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon and Donald Trump have reportedly met privately twice in the past two months to discuss the economy, an apparent thawing of relations after years of occasional tensions between the two. Most recently, Dimon was at the White House last week to discuss the economy, affordable housing, and the Trump administration's trade policies, according to The Wall Street Journal. At the meeting, which was attended by Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, Dimon reportedly congratulated the administration on reaching a trade deal with Japan, per the Journal. During the meetings, the first of which occurred in June, Dimon also reportedly defended Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell and the importance of a politically insulated central bank, CNN reports, pushing back against Trump's repeated criticisms of the Fed for not cutting interest rates, a stance the central bank maintained this week. The appeals on that subject only seem to go so far, as Trump has continued to hammer Powell, whom he appointed, for not cutting interest rates. This week, the Federal Reserve Board of Governors elected to hold rates steady, though two Trump appointees voted to bring down the benchmarks, a rare break in the central bank's usual record of unanimity. 'He is TOO LATE, and actually, TOO ANGRY, TOO STUPID, & TOO POLITICAL, to have the job of Fed Chair,' Trump wrote on Truth Social on Thursday of Powell. 'He is costing our Country TRILLIONS OF DOLLARS.' The Independent has contacted the White House and JPMorgan for comment. 'We reach out to the administration all the time,' Dimon told CNBC on Thursday of his contacts with the White House. 'They reach out all the time. I think it's a good thing.' The meetings represent the latest evolution in a complicated relationship between Trump and Dimon. Despite skepticism among some economists of Trump's claims regarding his sweeping tariff agenda, Dimon has offered mixed praise for the idea of new levies, though he has warned of a loss in U.S. credibility if the president keeps delaying tariff threats or is unable to reach new deals. 'The tariff stuff … was very big and very large and everybody all at once,' Dimon said in May. 'I think it's very important that they start to show progress in the deal.' That month, Dimon also said the administration's One Big, Beautiful Bill spending package had the potential to ' stabilize things ' concerning the economy. 'These are deals in principle … a real trade deal would be 10 or 20,000 pages long,' he added. 'But any progress is good.' Elsewhere, Dimon has warned about the diplomatic effect of tariffing U.S. allies. 'If the Western world's military and economic alliances were to fragment, America itself would inevitably weaken over time,' Dimon he wrote in his annual letter in April. Still, the two have clashed at other times in recent years. Trump blasted Dimon as a 'highly overrated globalist' in 2023, after the executive urged the public to support Nikki Haley in the GOP presidential primary over Trump. That year, Dimon also said the debt ceiling was 'one more thing [Trump] doesn't know much about.' During the first Trump administration, Dimon was part of a business advisory council that fell apart in the aftermath of the president's ambivalent response to the 2017 white supremacist rally in Charlottesville. 'There is no room for equivocation here: the evil on display by these perpetrators of hate should be condemned and has no place in a country that draws strength from our diversity and humanity,' Dimon said at the time.


Daily Mail
2 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Nancy Pelosi clashes with CNN's Jake Tapper live on air over Trump's 'insider trading' allegations
Jake Tapper, one of CNN 's premiere anchors, pressed former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on Wednesday to respond to President Donald Trump 's menacing attack that she's practiced illegal stock trading. 'Why do you have to read that,' Pelosi protested as Tapper zoned in on her. 'We're here to talk about the 60th anniversary of Medicaid. That's what I agreed to come to talk about.' Tapper pressed on leading Pelosi to tell Tapper Trump's allegation was 'ridiculous.' 'In fact, I very much support the [efforts to] stop the trading of members of Congress,' she continued. 'Not that I think anybody is doing anything wrong. If they are, they are prosecuted, and they go to jail. But because of the confidence it instills in the American people, don't worry about this,' the former speaker continued. At issue is new legislation teed up by Republican Senator Josh Hawley that would ban members of Congress as well as the president and vice president from trading individual stocks. The legislation cleared a key committee hurdle powered by Democrats' support. 'I wonder why [Josh] Hawley would pass a bill that Nancy Pelosi is in absolute love with — He is playing right into the dirty hands of the Democrats,' Trump ripped on Truth Social, referring to Missouri 's senior Republican senator. 'It's a great bill for her, and her 'husband 'but so bad for our country!' That post amounted to a head-snapping U-turn from the president's earlier tacit praise for the new version of Hawley's bill that cleared a key Senate committee on Wednesday. Trump had told a reporter earlier on Wednesday he supported the concept of the legislation, an early signal he was hesitant to fully publicly embrace it following a Punchbowl News report that the White House was lobbying intensely against passage because it could impact the finances of the executive. Pelosi said Trump's attack on her signaled his own exposure on stock trading. 'The president has his own exposure, so he's always projecting,' Pelosi went on. 'Let's not give him any more time on that please.' Hawley's Preventing Elected Leaders from Owning Securities and Investments (PELOSI) Act - named after former Speaker Nancy Pelosi - would ban lawmakers from trading or holding stocks. The timing of some of Pelosi's stock trades have raised eyebrows over the years, including her husband's sale of 30,000 Google shares in December 2022, one month before the company was sued for antitrust violations. Pelosi has never faced any charges for insider trading and her office has maintained that all stock market transactions are maintained by her husband, Paul. As a part of a deal to gain Democratic support, Hawley agreed to change the measure's name from the PELOSI Act to the HONEST Act. The measure, which passed out of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, now includes presidents and vice presidents from stock trading as well.