Signal packet/Home/Wire/Diplomacy
DiplomacyUSHighScore 7.0

Trump departs Washington for France to attend G7 summit.

Trump leaves Washington for France to attend the G7 summit.

Quick reaction

One tap helps tune what we surface next.

Reader discussion

Public comments
0/1000

No comments yet. Start the discussion around this signal.

Follow this signal

Get updates on this story

We will email you if this changes materially. No spam. Daily brief optional.

Map context

Open map near US

Keep the story in context with nearby live signals, countries, and category movement.

Open live map

Related coverage

More story pages

US and Iran offer conflicting accounts of peace deal, with Washington demanding nuclear dismantlement and Tehran denying new obligations; formal signing set for June 19 in Geneva.

The US and Iran are presenting sharply different interpretations of a newly announced peace deal aimed at ending months of conflict. The main disagreement centers on Tehran's nuclear program, with Washington saying the deal requires its dismantlement while Tehran insists it has accepted no new nuclear obligations. The future of Lebanon also remains uncertain, with questions over whether the agreement covers Hezbollah and the Lebanese front. Washington portrays the deal as finalized, while Tehran says it still requires implementation, verification and formal signing in Geneva on June 19.

Putin and Zelensky each hold separate calls with Trump as US president marks 80th birthday, in a rare dual diplomatic outreach.

Putin and Zelensky hold calls with Trump as US president marks 80th birthday.

US denies unfreezing $12 billion in Iranian assets, Axios reporter Barak Ravid says citing sources.

The US has denied information about the unfreezing of $12 billion in Iranian assets. This was reported by Axios journalist Barak Ravid, citing his own sources.

Senior US official denies Iran claim of $12B in frozen funds before talks, calls it 'a spin' — says deal is pay-for-performance, no unconditional release.

A senior U.S. official denied Iran's claim that it will get $12 billion from its frozen funds unconditionally before the 60-day negotiations start and called it 'a spin.' The official said the deal is pay-for-performance and no frozen funds will be released unconditionally.

More live signals

Continue with the live feed.

The fastest nearby updates load from the public feed, not the enriched story endpoint.

Continue with live feed

Monitor

Track follow-ups in Monitor

Turn this public story into a watchlist seed for matching future signals, team alerts, and operational routing.

Signals API

Use these signals via API

Evaluate structured event payloads, canonical URLs, categories, geo fields, and confidence metadata for your own workflows.