
Brisbane teenager allegedly plotted terror attacks after being influenced by Unabomber, court hears
Brisbane teenager allegedly plotted terror attacks after Unabomber influence

Donald Trump announced that a deal with Iran is complete, signaling an end to the ongoing war. Iranian officials and Pakistan confirmed the agreement, which has been welcomed by world leaders.
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Good morning. A war which had no clear objectives and no obvious endgame, but unleashed havoc across the globe, looks to be on the brink of coming to a close. As he prepared to mark his 80th birthday with a cage fight on the historic White House lawn, Donald Trump announced via social media that “the Deal with the Islamic Republic of Iran is now complete”.
The US president has been claiming a deal is close since very early on in the conflict, but this time his words have been backed up by Iranian officials and Pakistan, which has been acting as mediator. Iran’s deputy foreign minister Kazem Gharibabadi said the agreement puts an “immediate end” to the war, including the conflict in Lebanon. World leaders, including Keir Starmer, have welcomed the news.
For many, especially those whose lives have been thrown into chaos, there will be a sense of relief – even if it is tempered by doubts. Key questions remain – over the nuclear deal, the vital strait of Hormuz, of Israel’s role, and whether peace can hold.
A quick piece of housekeeping first. This summer, we will be experimenting with the format of your Monday First Edition. Today, you will notice some minor tweaks that we hope will help set you up for the week. We will also be trying out more substantial changes. We want to know what you think – the good and bad, honestly – so do let us know by replying.
Before that, a roundup of this weekend’s news.
The deal reportedly puts an immediate end to the war, including the conflict in Lebanon.
World leaders, including Keir Starmer, have welcomed the news of the deal with Iran.
Key concerns include the nuclear deal, the vital strait of Hormuz, Israel's role, and the sustainability of peace.
Pakistan has been acting as a mediator in the negotiations between the US and Iran.

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Trump and Netanyahu have clashed over Israel’s military operations in Lebanon. Photograph: Marwan Naamani/ZUMA Press Wire/Shutterstock
On the morning of Saturday 28 February, the US and Israel launched a major military offensive against Iran, hitting the country with hundreds of air strikes. By 9.45am local time, Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, was killed at his compound in Tehran in a mission that took just one minute.
Trump claimed the sudden offensive, dubbed Operation Epic Fury, would give Iranians a chance to “rise up” against their rulers while Benjamin Netanyahu told Iranians to “flood the streets and finish the job”.
However, things did not go according to plan - if there was indeed a plan. Iran was able to conduct a sustained, and damaging, wave of retaliatory strikes across the region, hitting critical energy infrastucture. Crucially, it closed the strait of Hormuz, sending oil prices rocketing and sparking global shortage fears.
Thousands of people have been killed, primarily in Iran and Lebanon, but also in Israel and in Gulf states.
Trump, meanwhile, has insisted the end of the conflict was near almost ever since it began (at least 38 times for those keeping track). He claimed his “short-term excursion” to “get rid of some evil” was – just over a week in – “very complete, pretty much”. By late March, he declared “regime change” had been achieved.
A fragile ceasefire that came into effect in April broke down earlier this month when the US launched strikes across Iran, and Trump threatened further action. But the US leader suddenly changed course at the end of last week, insisting a deal was imminent.
Global leaders are already reacting positively to the news of an agreement, with G7 leaders expected to discuss it in depth as they meet in France today and Tuesday. But the knock-on effects of this conflict are still likely to reverberate beyond any peace deal.
What has been announced?
Despite Trump’s grand announcement, and the flow of hopeful messages from world leaders, details of the deal are – perhaps unsurprisingly – unclear. A memorandum of understanding is due to be officially signed on Friday in Switzerland, but the precise terms have not been published.
Iran’s deputy foreign minister Kazem Gharibabadi said a more expansive agreement would be negotiated during a 60-day ceasefire period.
So far Pakistan and Iran have asserted that Lebanon, which has been a sticking point throughout talks, would be included in the scope of the agreement. Pakistan’s prime minister, Shehbaz Sharif, said the deal called for “the immediate and permanent termination of military operations on all fronts, including in Lebanon”.
However another thorny issue – Iran’s nuclear programme – appears to still be under discussion. While Trump insisted on Sunday that “Iran will never have a nuclear weapons”, reports suggest that talks over its uranium enrichment plans would continue in this 60-day period.
The lack of movement on the nuclear issue has led to skepticism over whether a deal will hold.
Republican senator Lindsey Graham said he would be “watching closely” on the upcoming negotiations and added he was “somewhat concerned that Iran’s view of the agreement seems different than what the American negotiating team is claiming”.
Iranian hardliners have also objected to the terms of the deal with the US, with Meysam Nili, brother-in-law of the hardline former president Ebrahim Raisi, calling the deal on the table a catastrophic capitulation.
Will oil flow again?
Trump initially said he had “authorised” the “toll free opening” of the strait of Hormuz, writing: “Ships of the World, start your engines. Let the oil flow!” But he later added that the waterway would be opened upon the signing of the deal, and “for purposes of mine removal”.
That may be an indication things are not yet set in stone, but it also raises the complicated logistics of reopening the strait, which usually sees more than a fifth of the world’s oil supply pass through each day. In April, it was reported that Iran was unable to find the mines it laid in the shipping channel, and an inability to monitor operations meant the US was unable to be clear about their location.
“Iranian authorities themselves don’t know [where the mines are], because mines can float away from where they were originally placed,” Pavel Molchanov, analyst at investment bank Raymond James, told Politico, adding that while some sections will be safe, “for a full recovery of shipping traffic, the mine issue will need to be addressed.”
The early response to the announcement has been largely positive. Keir Starmer joined France, Germany and Italy in calling for a “toll-free freedom of navigation” to be restored in the waterway after the deal was announced. Markets also bounced on the news – overnight oil prices fell and stock markets jumped.
But uncertainty remains. Earlier reports had suggested the agreement would see Iran reopen the strait and the US lift its own blockade of Iran, allowing it to sell oil. However Mehr, Iran’s state media, reported that the memorandum due to be signed this Friday says that the strait will be managed under “Iranian arrangements”.
If the waterway does reopen, it could still take months for oil prices to stabilise, and experts have previously warned it could take months for global oil and gas supplies to return to normal. Last week the World Bank said the war would see global economic growth slow to 2.5%, and downgraded forecasts for two-thirds of countries. It predicted that even if the strait reopened next month, global inflation would still hit 4%, up from 3.3% last year.
What happens now?
Friday, when the MoU is supposed to be signed, is still a long way away. The volatile nature of the conflict, and the characters involved – not least Trump – make this an uneasy wait.
But perhaps one of the more unusual characteristics of this conflict has been that hostilities have not just flared between sworn enemies, but allies too.
Donald Trump has lashed out at a range of western leaders including Keir Starmer for failing to support him, saying of the British PM “he’s no Winston Churchill”. But his most spectacular fallout has been with the man who took him into this war: Benjamin Netanyahu.
At the start of this month Trump reportedly called the Israeli prime minister “fucking crazy” for launching a strike on Beirut, adding “you’d be in prison if it weren’t for me. I’m saving your ass. Everybody hates you now. Everybody hates Israel because of this.” More recently, according to Axios, the president said Netanyahu has “no fucking judgment” and that Israeli strikes had delayed the signing of a deal.
Notably, Israel has not yet commented on the deal, which it says it was not party to.
As the Guardian’s senior international correspondent, Julian Borger, recently wrote, both Trump and Netanyahu have found “common remedy for their domestic predicament by going to war”.
But now both find themselves playing a different game, with a US-Iran deal potentially threatening Netanyahu’s premiership, while at home, Trump desperately needs a solution to his unpopular war.

Lambs to the slaughter … algorithms are profoundly influencing the concept of personal taste. Illustration: Elia Barbieri/The Guardian

Japan’s Daichi Kamada celebrates scoring their late equaliser past Netherlands goalkeeper Bart Verbruggen. Photograph: Hannah McKay/Reuters
On the pitch
Netherlands 2-2 Japan | Daichi Kamada’s 88th-minute equaliser stole a point from the Dutch, who led through Virgil van Dijk and Crysencio Summerville.
Germany 7-1 Curaçao| A brave World Cup debut for the Caribbean nation ended in defeat to a sharp-looking German side. Livano Comenencia’s goal to tie the game 1-1 in the 21st minute will be one of the moments of the tournament.
And the rest … | And in last night’s two late games, Sweden had an easy win over error-prone Tunisia and substitute Amad Diallo struck in the 90th minute to give Côte d’Ivoire a 1-0 win over Ecuador in their Group E opener.
Off the pitch
DR Congo | Reporting from Houston, Nick Ames writes on how the African nationhas a “brutally tough” tournament ahead … and their world-class fashion sense.
Houston| Nick also spoke to a number of very unenthused Republicans at a political convention in Texas. “I’m a fan of the sport but I don’t really understand it,” said one.
‘The big one’| Matthew Engel has a lovely column on how World Cups, more than any other sporting event “invades” the public conscience – we all remember where we were David Beckham kicked Diego Simeone, right?
Today’s fixtures
Spain v Cape Verde, 5pm on ITV
Belgium v Egypt, 8pm on BBC
Saudi Arabia v Uruguay, 11pm on ITV
Iran v New Zealand, 0200 on BBC

Photograph: The Guardian
“PM to announce ‘Australia plus’ social media ban for under-16s”, is the Guardian’s front page today. On the same topic Metro writes “Starmer is ‘gambling with young lives’”.
The Telegraph says “Starmer: No more money for defence”. The i Paper goes with “Burnham: I’ll keep triple lock and look at tax cut for pensioners if I become PM” and the Express says “Stop treating pensioners as an easy target”.
The Times runs with “Raid on Russian shadow vessel ‘just the beginning’”. The FT has “Trump expects deal with Iran despite Israeli hit on Beirut”. The Mirror, on its water safety campaign, says “I don’t want anyone else to go through this”. And the Sun, on the World Cup, leads with “3 Lions on alert”.

Makerfield is hosting what is surely the most consequential byelection in memory. Photograph: Rod Harbinson/ZUMA Press Wire/Shutterstock
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Helen Pidd goes to Makerfield where the Labour candidate and would-be prime minister Andy Burnham faces Reform UK in a crucial byelection, and talks to the Guardian’s north of England editor, Josh Halliday, about how British politics could look very different on Friday morning.

Illustration: Ella Baron/The Guardian
A bit of good news to remind you that the world’s not all bad

The millionth parkrun event at Bushy Park in Hampton, England, on 13 June 2026. Photograph: Peter Nicholls/Getty Images for parkrun
It was once a totter round a park in the south-west suburbs of London; now it’s a global sensation that has 12 million participants at 2,800 locations worldwide. Parkrun celebrated its millionth event this weekend, with Olympic champion Dame Kelly Holmes in attendance as thousands celebrated together at the place that started it all: Bushy Park in Hampton.
In this lovely piece, Aneesa Ahmed and Sundus Abdi report on how the free weekly 5km fun run’s modest ambitions grew over two decades into a global sensation, speaking to its founders and the runners to whom it means so much.
“It is like a spiritual home for some people, some have likened it to a church,” says Parkrun chief executive Elizabeth Duggan. “It’s somewhere that you go, you know people, it calms and connects. It plays a role in community, and people are keen to support and protect it.”
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And finally, the Guardian’s puzzles are here to keep you entertained throughout the day. Until tomorrow.