
Global news wrap: Israel-Iran conflict, US student visas, global growth, rising temperature
Every month, Mint's Plain Facts section brings out an update on key global developments. The accompanying analysis and charts explain how each story is creating ripples on the global stage, where it is headed in the coming weeks, and whether it can impact India.
Oil's well
Global crude oil prices are sensitive to global economic and geopolitical events. However, the recent conflict between Israel and Iran, despite heightened fears, did not cause crude oil prices to shoot up to a worrying level.
Also Read: In charts: Why West Asia is important for India beyond trade
The two previous geopolitical disruptions—the Russia-Ukraine war and the Arab Spring—led to spikes in oil prices, which lasted a few months. While Brent crude oil futures jumped 7% on the day the conflict broke out, it remained largely range-bound even as Iran threatened to close the Strait of Hormuz, a key sea passage for trade. Two key factors explain this market reaction. First, traders have become less reactive to geopolitical risks unless disruptions materialize. Second, the US's increased oil production offers a buffer against supply disruptions from crises in West Asia. Now, with a ceasefire in place, although fragile, the oil market has seen some correction.
Visa vex
In a sweeping move that raises serious privacy concerns, the US has made it mandatory for all applicants of F, M, and J visas (including international students and exchange visitors) to make their personal social media accounts public. Effective immediately, this rule allows US visa officers full access to an applicant's online activity across platforms like Facebook, Instagram, X, and TikTok, among others.
While social media handles have been collected since 2019, this drastic expansion of scrutiny marks a new level of surveillance. A slew of restrictions under the Donald Trump administration is likely to impact the US's status as the top education hub and its offer of the 'American dream'. The US is home to the largest number of international students, with 1.1 million enrolled in its universities in 2024. Stricter visa rules are also being implemented in Canada and the UK, the other top choices, making foreign education harder.
Pruned projections
The World Bank has sharply lowered its 2025 global growth forecast to 2.3% from the 2.7% forecast given in January. This would be the weakest pace of growth since 2008 outside of recession periods. The cut reflects a sharp deterioration in economic conditions as trade wars, policy gridlocks, and geopolitical unrest disrupt economies. Nearly 70% of countries have seen a downgrade in their outlooks compared to the January edition.
Also Read: Missing from India's population narrative: Unmet family goals, financial barriers, coercion
India's growth forecast has also been lowered by 0.4 percentage points to 6.3% for 2025-26, even though it continues to remain the world's fastest-growing major economy. Globally, growth in developing economies has dropped steadily over the past two decades, from 6% annually in the first 10 years of the century to below 4% in the 2020s. A rebound is possible if major economies strike meaningful trade deals, potentially lifting growth by 0.2 percentage points over the next two years, the World Bank said.
Scorching spring
Heat has scorched its way into the UK's spring months, with the country having recorded a 43% increase in sunshine hours in March-May 2025. Sunshine hours, which typically last four to six hours per day during spring in the UK, shot up to 7.1 hours per day, beating the previous record of 6.8 hours per day in 2020. Longer sunshine hours are directly proportional to rising temperatures in the country. All four nations in the UK—England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland—recorded their warmest spring, with some regions seeing temperatures up to 1.6 degrees Celsius above average.
Also Read: The salary concern running through female employment
A marine heatwave added to the anomaly, with coastal waters 4 degrees Celsius warmer than normal. Other European countries are also witnessing rising heat, with temperatures reaching 38 degrees Celsius in southern France and 40 degrees Celsius in parts of Spain. Experts warn that the extreme spring and early-summer heat is a stark reminder of a warming planet.
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Hindustan Times
36 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
US to hit Iran again? Trump makes major one word statement as he likens recent strikes to atomic bombing of Hiroshima
'Sure', stated President Donald Trump in response to a question about whether the US would launch another attack if Iran resumed its nuclear enrichment program. US' President Donald Trump meets with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte (not pictured) during the NATO summit of heads of state and government in The Hague on June 25, 2025. (Photo by Piroschka Van De Wouw / POOL / AFP)(AFP) Following the US airstrikes on Iranian nuclear installations, Trump stated on Wednesday that the information was ambiguous but that the damage caused may have been significant. 'The intelligence was very inconclusive. The intelligence says we don't know. It could've been very severe. That's what the intelligence suggests,' Trump told reporters before he spoke with global leaders at a NATO Summit. 'It was very severe. There was obliteration. Iran's nuclear program has been put back decades,' he continued. He went on to say that the Iran-Israel truce is proceeding well and that it was great win for everyone. Also Read: Laura Loomer claps back at Tucker Carlson for calling her 'world's creepiest human', mocks his 'Demon' attack claims Trump's strikes on Iran In his Saturday night speech to the nation following the operation, Trump declared that the United States fully demolished Iran's enrichment installations at Isfahan, Natanz and Fordow. 'The strikes were a spectacular military success. Iran's key nuclear enrichment facilities have been completely and totally obliterated. Iran, the bully of the Middle East, must now make peace,' Trump asserted in his address from White House. In the US strikes on Iran's nuclear installations, B2 bombers dropped two GBU-57s on Natanz and twelve GBU-57s on Fordow. During a press briefing on Sunday, US military officials reported that a US naval submarine fired about 30 Tomahawk missiles on Isfahan. Trump compares US airstrikes on Iran with atomic bombing of Hiroshima Meanwhile, Trump compared the US attack on Iran to his nation's move to unleash atomic bombs on Japan during World War II. "They spent trillions of dollars trying to do this thing, and they didn't come up with it, and we're actually getting along with them very well right now," Trump stated during his speech in The Hague. 'But had we not succeeded with that hit? That hit ended the war. That hit ended the war. I don't want to use an example of Hiroshima, I don't want to use an example of Nagasaki, but that was essentially the same thing that ended that war. This ended that, this ended that war. If we didn't take that out, they would have been they'd be fighting right now.'


News18
41 minutes ago
- News18
Iran Passes Bill To Suspend Cooperation With International Atomic Energy Agency: Reports
Last Updated: The legislation aims to halt IAEA inspections and limit access to Iran's nuclear sites, signaling a significant step back from international nuclear oversight. Iran's parliament has reportedly approved a bill to suspend cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), several reports mentioned. The move comes amid escalating tensions following the recent conflict with Israel. The legislation aims to halt IAEA inspections and limit access to Iran's nuclear sites, signaling a significant step back from international nuclear oversight. This decision is seen as a direct response to the recent airstrikes targeting Iran's nuclear facilities and is likely to further strain relations with Western powers, raising concerns over the future of Iran's nuclear program and regional stability. US media reported on Tuesday that a classified intelligence assessment has concluded that the recent American strikes on Iran did not fully destroy the country's centrifuges or its stockpile of enriched uranium. According to reports, B-2 bombers targeted two of Iran's nuclear facilities using massive GBU-57 bunker-buster bombs, while a guided missile submarine launched Tomahawk cruise missiles at a third site. Following the strikes, President Donald Trump declared that the attacks had 'obliterated" the nuclear sites, and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth asserted that the US military had 'devastated the Iranian nuclear program." However, a preliminary assessment by the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) suggests that while the bombings sealed off entrances to some of the facilities, they failed to destroy the underground structures themselves, US media reported, citing sources familiar with the classified findings. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt has confirmed the assessment was authentic but said it was 'flat-out wrong and was classified as 'top secret' but was still leaked." 'The leaking of this alleged assessment is a clear attempt to demean President Trump and discredit the brave fighter pilots who conducted a perfectly executed mission to obliterate Iran's nuclear programme," Leavitt posted on X.

The Hindu
42 minutes ago
- The Hindu
Kremlin says it is too early to assess damage to Iranian nuclear facilities from U.S. bombs
The Kremlin said on Wednesday (June 25, 2025) that it thought it was too early for anyone to have a realistic picture of damage inflicted on Iran's nuclear facilities by U.S. airstrikes. Israel-Iran conflict highlights: Shaky ceasefire between Israel and Iran appears to hold Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov was responding to a question about damage assessments offered by President Donald Trump who has suggested that the U.S. attack obliterated Tehran's nuclear programme. Mr. Peskov said Moscow viewed the attacks on Iran as unprovoked and the situation as concerning. Russia had indications that Washington and Tehran had open communications channels though, he said, and Moscow was closely monitoring developments and still talking to Iran itself.