AFBytes Quarter Rundown β€” Wednesday, June 24, 7:00 AM ET

Jun 24, 2026 2 min watch 6 stories covered

Summary

Here's the 24-hour recap! πŸŒπŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ US Congress demands Trump halt Iran war. Trump criticizes Senate on Iran. See the full story stack + source links: afbytes.com

Stories covered

Transcript
Folks. Here are today's top stories from the last 24 hours. Congress approved a measure requiring President Trump to stop military action against Iran or obtain congressional approval first. This could limit the risk of broader conflict affecting energy prices and defense spending. It's a move that reinforces congressional role in committing U.S. forces abroad. President Trump criticized the Senate after it passed bipartisan legislation directing limits on U.S. military action against Iran. This could affect the speed and scope of potential U.S. responses, impacting fuel prices for American drivers. Bipartisan limits reinforce congressional authority over use of force abroad. The European Union Aviation Safety Agency advised continued caution for flights over Iran, Iraq, and Lebanon airspace. This could raise fuel costs and delay international flights connecting U.S. carriers to Europe and Asia. Stable overflight access supports U.S. military logistics and commercial supply chains through key global chokepoints. Crude oil prices dropped to fresh four-month lows due to improved tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz and a softer outlook on Iranian supply. This could reduce household energy costs and transportation expenses for American drivers and businesses. Lower oil prices can ease pressure on inflation and affect gasoline prices at the pump. Classified intelligence reports describe an Iranian doctoral candidate in Ottawa as a security threat due to research potentially helpful to Iran's weapons program. This highlights research security issues affecting civil liberties around academic freedom and online privacy for researchers and institutions. Allied nations tightening research controls support broader efforts to protect sensitive technology from foreign exploitation. That's the day from where we sit β€” thanks for spending part of it with us. Stay with us at AFBytes for what's next.