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U.S.-Iran Talks Collapse Before They Start in High-Stakes Standoff
A diplomatic breakthrough with Iran fell apart Tuesday before it even got off the ground — and the fallout is raising serious questions about what comes next.
Vice President JD Vance was supposed to fly to Islamabad, Pakistan to meet with Iranian negotiators and try to lock in a deal. Air Force Two sat on the tarmac at Joint Base Andrews for most of the day, waiting. Pakistani mediators said Iran's leadership had agreed to send their own team. Then — at the last minute — Tehran reversed course.
By afternoon, Vance's trip was on hold. By evening, it was canceled indefinitely.
Inside the White House, the mood shifted fast. Trump huddled with Vance, top security advisors, Jared Kushner, and special envoy Steve Witkoff. At one point, the president asked aides whether the U.S. should resume military strikes on Iran. Officials say he seemed wary of restarting the fighting — but he's keeping that option on the table.
For now, the strategy is to hold the pressure. Trump extended the cease-fire Tuesday, saying it will stay in place as long as talks continue. The blockade of Iranian ports — which Tehran calls an act of war — stays in place too. U.S. forces have already turned back 28 vessels since the blockade began earlier this month.
Iran's hardliners are the sticking point. They've publicly said they won't negotiate under pressure — and with American warships bottling up their ports, they couldn't easily agree to talks without looking like they were giving in. Some analysts say Tehran is also trying to extract the highest possible price before any deal gets done.
The two sides aren't starting from zero. Mediators say they've been quietly working toward a framework on Iran's nuclear program and the Strait of Hormuz. But the gaps are still large, and the mistrust runs deep.
The cease-fire is holding for now. Markets have stabilized. But with the deadline extended and Vance's trip in limbo, the standoff is far from over.
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Mobile City Council Tackles Shelter Budget, Ambulance Rules, and Panhandling in Busy Tuesday Session
Mobile's City Council had a full plate Tuesday — and the biggest headline coming out of that meeting may be one that surprises you.
The city's long-awaited new animal shelter is shaping up to come in well under budget. A proposed contract with Rogers and Willard Incorporated puts the price tag at around six-point-three million dollars — against an original budget of ten million. That's nearly four million dollars in cushion. Mayor Spiro Cheriogotis says he's keeping that money in reserve for now, in case costs change — but he hinted some features that were cut to save money could eventually come back into the project. The shelter would renovate a building off the I-65 West Service Road and would include an on-site clinic, a surgical suite, expanded kennels, and improved sanitation. District 4 Councilman Ben Reynolds called it a major upgrade — and said he especially likes where it's going. The council could vote on the contract as early as next week.
Also Tuesday — the council pumped the brakes on a new set of rules for private ambulance companies in Mobile. The Fire-Rescue Department has been working for months on an updated ordinance that would require any private ambulance operator to hold a certificate of necessity. That's drawn pushback from Newman's Ambulance — a company that's operated in Mobile for nearly ninety years under a grandfather clause. Councilman Reynolds said he'll be offering several amendments, and Councilman Cory Penn agreed the council needs another week to get it right. Fire Chief Barry Glisson says both private companies are currently answering nearly all their calls — but the department wants better tools to track the overall load on the city's EMS system.
And before the public meeting even started, council members were already talking about a new approach to panhandling. Mayor Cheriogotis and District 4's Reynolds are floating the idea of posting signs at major intersections asking people not to give cash to roadside solicitors — and instead scanning a QR code to donate directly to homeless outreach organizations. The mayor says he wants to move on it quickly. Council members noted that not everyone panhandling in Mobile is homeless — some, they said, simply treat it as a regular source of income. No vote has been scheduled yet.
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AG may opine on Stockton solar
The Baldwin County Commission will ask the Alabama Attorney General’s Office to decide if it can issue a moratorium on solar development while it looks for a third-party engineering firm to review an unzoned 2,000-acre solar farm being built in Stockton.
Last week, the Friends of the Tensaw River (FTR), a local nonprofit in north Baldwin County established to oppose the solar developer Silicon Ranch, sent a letter to commissioners last week requesting the moratorium.
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