President Donald Trump’s proposed $1.8 billion “anti-weaponization fund” is currently stalled, with some allies urging the White House to scrap it altogether amid an unusually intense backlash from multiple Senate Republicans, sources familiar with the matter said. It remains to be seen if the president will agree to end the fund, but the level of pushback — in public and private — is unusual. Trump has defended the fund and feels he has an iron grip on his party, especially after recent primaries where his political foes were ousted from their jobs on Capitol Hill. CNN has reached out to the White House for comment. The urging of the White House to kill the fund was first reported by the Wall Street Journal.
https://edition.cnn.com/2026/05/29/politics/trump-weaponization-fund-pushback
Senior Pentagon leaders are putting together lists of uniformed US service members who will be offered the chance to attend the UFC fight at the White House next month hosted by President Donald Trump, but tickets will only be given to those who meet military body composition standards, according to guidance memos reviewed by CNN and sources familiar with the process. “Ticket recipients are required to meet the DOW waist-to-height ratio standard of less than 0.55, as well as all service specific physical fitness test requirements,” one of the memos sent to service members says, using the Pentagon’s preferred acronym for the agency. That figure is roughly in line with standards for service members that the Defense Department put in place earlier this year when it made waist-to-height ratio the new body composition standard for measuring a service member’s “warfighting readiness.”
https://edition.cnn.com/2026/05/29/politics/us-military-ufc-white-house-weight
A California mom says she was scammed out of thousands of dollars this month after receiving a call that sounded like her daughter in distress. She now suspects it was an artificial intelligence-generated hoax. She’s one of many who have been targeted by so-called “voice cloning” scams as AI tools allow anyone to create a convincing replica of someone’s voice with only a few seconds of real audio. Americans lost more than $893 million to AI-related scams last year, including voice cloning attacks along with AI-generated phishing emails, romance scams and other hoaxes, according to the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
https://edition.cnn.com/2026/05/29/tech/ai-voice-cloning-scams-protect-yourself
As the United States and Iran try to hammer out a deal to start winding down the war, few particulars loom as large as what happens with Iran’s nuclear stockpile. It’s not only a major point of contention — with Iran signaling it won’t turn over its highly enriched uranium — but extracting it could be very complicated. And the fate of these materials will go a long way toward determining just how much President Donald Trump’s war has truly “obliterated” Iran’s nuclear threat. But as with many of its other goals, the Trump administration has been very inconsistent about its demands on this one.
https://edition.cnn.com/2026/05/29/politics/trump-nuclear-iran
When Israeli and American fighter jets struck Iran in unison on February 28, President Donald Trump and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu celebrated each other’s “historic decisions.” The alliance between the two countries, Netanyahu told Israelis, had never been closer. Three months later, what began as a joint military campaign appears to be ending as an American-led diplomatic process in which Netanyahu finds himself largely sidelined. The Israeli prime minister has refrained from openly criticizing Trump, but behind closed doors, Israeli sources say, he has acknowledged Israel has limited influence on the outcome of US-Iran negotiations to end the war.
https://edition.cnn.com/2026/05/29/middleeast/iran-deal-trump-netanyahu-legacy-intl