European leaders push for diplomacy with Iran. Representatives from Germany, France, and the United Kingdom are set to meet with Iran鈥檚 foreign minister in Geneva today in their first face-to-face meeting with Tehran officials since the conflict began. President Trump said he will decide within two weeks whether the U.S. military will get directly involved in the conflict between Israel and Iran, and said he seeks to keep open the door to diplomacy. 鈥 The Associated Press
Our coverage: On Wednesday we hosted Steve Bannon at a Monitor Breakfast. Why he warns against heavy involvement in Iran.听
President Trump can keep control over National Guard troops in Los Angeles. Thursday鈥檚 decision by an appeals court halts a ruling from a lower court judge who found Mr. Trump acted illegally by activating the soldiers over opposition from California Gov. Gavin Newsom. Mr. Trump argued the troops were necessary to restore order following protests over immigration raids, but Gov. Newsom said the move inflamed tensions and usurped local authority. 鈥 AP
Finland voted to withdraw from a landmines treaty. Other European countries that border Russia, including Poland and Baltic nations, are considering doing the same. The Ottawa Treaty, which bans anti-personnel landmines, has been seen as a triumph of human rights, but concern for Russia and a desire to keep all means of deterrence on the table led to overwhelming support for the bill, which passed 157 to 18 on Thursday. Finland has an 800-mile border with Russia. 鈥 Staff
Visas for foreign students resumed.听The U.S. State Department said Wednesday it is restarting the process for foreigners applying for student visas, but all applicants will now be required to unlock their social media accounts for government review. Consular officers will be on the lookout for posts that could be deemed hostile to the U.S., its government, culture, institutions, or founding principles. 鈥 AP
Congo and Rwanda agreed to a peace agreement. The agreement aims to end fighting in eastern Congo and is set to be signed on June 27 in Washington. Congo has accused Rwanda of backing M23 rebels in the east of the country. The decades-long conflict flared in January when the rebels advanced and took the Congolese city of Goma. 鈥 AP
Hungarian police banned the Budapest Pride march. The police are citing recent controversial legislation passed by Prime Minister Viktor Orb谩n鈥檚 conservative government that bans the 鈥渄epiction or promotion鈥 of homosexuality to minors. The mayor of Budapest has promised the June 28 march will go ahead, with politicians from across Europe confirming their attendance. It is the latest tension in a clash over LGBTQ rights in Hungary. 鈥 Staff
Artificial dyes are on their way out. Kraft Heinz will pull them from its U.S. products starting in 2027 and will no longer add new products with such dyes. General Mills will remove artificial dyes from its U.S. cereals and all foods served in schools by next summer, dropping them entirely by the end of 2027. The shift comes after U.S. health officials said they would urge foodmakers to phase out petroleum-based artificial colors. 鈥 AP
One of America鈥檚 oldest Black churches is being rebuilt. Ground was broken on Juneteenth at the Colonial Williamsburg museum in Virginia for the reconstruction of the First Baptist Church of Williamsburg. The church officially established itself in 1776, and its free and enslaved congregants erected their first meetinghouse around 1805. The wooden building was destroyed by a tornado in 1834. The museum uncovered the brick foundation in 2020. 鈥 AP