World
American economist Scott Morton withdraws from running for key EU post

Fiona Scott Morton, an American economist, has withdrawn from running for a key EU post after controversy.
In a letter made public by Margrethe Vestager, the EU Commissioner in charge of competition, Scott Morton said that “given the political controversy that has arisen because of the selection of a non-European to fill this position, and the importance that the Directorate General has the full backing of the European Union as it enforces, I have determined that the best course of action if for me to withdraw and not take up the Chief Economist position.”
A former competition economist for the US Justice Department who had also previously been involved with Big tech companies including Apple, Amazon and Microsoft, Scott Morton had been picked by the Commission earlier this month to become the new chief economist for the competition department (DG COMP).
The announcement that the high-profile job would be held by a non-European who had previously lobbied for some of the biggest companies in the world against which the Commission has opened cases was met with swift condemnation from members of the European Parliament as well as French ministers which the Commission dismissed ensuring she was the best person for the job.
But French President Emmanuel Macron jumped into the fray on Tuesday, insisting upon being asked on the topic that the European Union needs more strategic independence, and that the appointment implied there were no researchers of her caliber among the union’s 27 member states.
“Is there really no great European researcher with academic qualifications that could do this job?” Macron asked at a summit of EU leaders with their Latin American counterparts.
In a bloc of some 450 million people, “is there no one in the 27 member states that has a researcher good enough to advise the (European) Commission? That is a real question mark,” Macron said.
The EU’s executive commission announced last week that it had appointed Yale economics professor Fiona Scott Morton as chief competition economist in its department tasked with ensuring that “all companies compete equally and fairly on their merits within the single market, to the benefit of consumers, businesses and the European economy as a whole.”
Macron insisted that he has nothing against Scott Morton herself, an economist with multiple diplomas from elite schools.

World
Iran trying to 'save face' following US strike on nuclear sites, expert says

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As the total damage to three Iranian nuclear sites continues to be assessed, one Middle East expert says that Iran’s stated assessment only reinforces U.S. and Israeli views.
Israel, which has said the strikes set the Iranian nuclear program back years, has the greatest resources in place to make a determination and the most incentive to get the facts right, Jacob Olidort, director of the Center of American Security at the America First Policy Institute, told Fox News Digital.
“Both the US and Israel say they achieved their objectives,” Olidort said. “Israel presumably had planned around this for many years, and Israel says it has met its objectives, which is destroying Iran’s ability to enrich uranium.”
The U.S. launched a surprise strike using B-2 stealth bombers and bunker-buster bombs on Iran’s Fordow, Natanz and Isfahan nuclear facilities on Saturday.
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This satellite picture by Planet Labs PBC shows Iran’s underground nuclear enrichment site at Fordow following U.S. airstrikes targeting the facility, on Sunday, June 22, 2025. (Planet Labs PBC via AP)
Some media reports have pushed back on the Trump administration’s claims that the sites were destroyed and set Iran back years in its quest to achieve a nuclear weapon.
Iran’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmail Baghaei on Wednesday told Al Jazeera that “our nuclear installations have been badly damaged, that’s for sure,” though he refused to go into detail.
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Olidort said that “everything Iran is doing now is to save face.”
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“We should never take anything Iran says at face value, but their assessment can only reinforce the views of Israel and the U.S. view,” he said.

Map of US strikes on Iran. (Fox News)
The head of the U.N. nuclear watchdog, International Atomic Energy Agency Director Rafael Grossi, reiterated on Thursday that the damage done by Israeli and U.S. strikes at Iranian nuclear facilities “is very, very, very considerable.”
“I think annihilated is too much, but it suffered enormous damage,” Grossi told French broadcaster RFI.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
World
Protecting children online: The time to act is now
If we are genuinely committed to ensuring that the digital world fosters healthy development, learning, and meaningful connection, then decisive action must be taken now, 21 ministers from 13 EU member states write in a Euronews exclusive.
World
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