SEATTLE World football in Seattle: Belgium-Egypt draw unites diasporas
The World Cup group-stage match between Belgium and Egypt ended 1-1 on Monday in Seattle. The game itself was thrilling only in spots, but as an event it extended far beyond sport: socially and culturally it drew the world’s attention to this American city. Nearly 70,000 people filled the stadium, temporarily renamed from “Lumen Field” to “Seattle” — FIFA requires that stadiums carry no advertising from companies that are not its official sponsors during the tournament, so the...
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SEATTLE News Digest: Star Returns, Roster Moves and Tragedy
In this edition: Mariners' star catcher Cal Raleigh returns from injury, an unconventional roster move to keep Jhonny Pereda is discussed, and...

REACTIONS How the World Debates America: Russia, China and Turkey on US Foreign Policy
In mid‑June 2026, discussion of the United States in international media again reminds us that Washington remains the main "distribution center" of...

WEATHER 🌤️ 10-Day Weather Forecast: Seattle, Washington
Today, 6/16, Seattle will have variable clouds with a high near 75°F. Winds light, southwest, about 3 mph. Humidity low, around 40%. UV index high...

WORLD Strait agreement: mines delay resumption of shipping
The agreement reached to resume navigation through the Strait of Hormuz raised short-term hopes of easing the energy crisis, but realities on the...

SEATTLE Heat didn't stop fans: Seattle's first World Cup match ends 1-1
At Lumen Field in Seattle, the city hosted its first World Cup match, in which Belgium and Egypt played to a 1-1 draw. Despite the sweltering heat,...

NEIGHBORS Incidents in Vancouver: investigations and infrastructure issues
Today's news touches on several key events in Metro Vancouver: an independent probe into the death of a man in police custody, a large power outage...

SEATTLE Sunny Seattle at World Cup Center: Record Heat
The first match of the men's World Cup in Seattle on Monday surprised visitors and locals with real summer heat rather than the usual rain and fog...

SEATTLE ICE Protests in Spokane: Three Activists Convicted of Conspiracy
Exactly one year ago, as the nation’s attention was fixed on Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) raids in Los Angeles, a less visible but no...

EVENTS Seattle Events: June 16–23, 2026
The week of June 16–23 in the Seattle area promises to be loud and varied: from big concerts at the Paramount Theatre and outdoors (Madison Beer,...
Seattle

Seattle protesters oppose ICE presence at World Cup
The World Cup will bring a lot to Seattle: visitors from around the globe, international attention and six matches at Lumen Field — and federal...

Fans unbothered by heat: Seattle's first World Cup match ends in draw
The first-ever World Cup match in Seattle — between Belgium and Egypt — finished 1-1 at Seattle Stadium (better known as Lumen Field). Despite heat...
Summer in Seattle: record heat and alarming incidents in the city
Seattle is experiencing anomalous heat with new temperature records, but cooling is expected by Tuesday. Meanwhile, a double stabbing occurred in the...
Seattle's first World Cup match to face abnormal heat
The U.S. National Weather Service is warning of extreme heat on Monday as Seattle hosts the first World Cup match between Belgium and Egypt....

World Cup: A Celebration That Unites Humanity
There are only 211 teams on the planet competing for a spot in the men's World Cup, more than the number of U.N. member states (193). Places like...

Washington ferries start summer schedule with increased capacity
On Sunday the Washington State ferry system switched to its summer schedule, adding extra sailings on popular routes. A third vessel will now operate...

Susan Bird: Secret Seattle Artist Gives NYC Subway a Fairy Tale
New York's subway, long used to ads for startups, lawyers and dermatologists, suddenly filled with bright and strange images. Drawings of sailboats,...

North Cascades Highway opens early after repairs
Summer has officially arrived in the North Cascades: the Washington State Department of Transportation announced the early completion of repairs on...

Seattle Faces Record Heat and Says Goodbye to an Era of Buses
Seattle has been hit by anomalous June heat, breaking temperature records and coinciding with the city’s first World Cup match. Meanwhile, Community...
Events

Advance Planner: Events June 16–August 15, 2026
For advance planning: the coming weeks in Seattle and the surrounding area feature many notable concerts, sporting events, and special happenings — from large arenas and stadiums to intimate winery stages and concert halls. Note key dates and venues: Ella Mai at WaMu Theater at Lumen Field (July 16), the San Francisco Giants series vs. the Seattle Mariners at T‑Mobile Park (July 17–19), Joji at Climate Pledge Arena (July 19), Evanescence at White River Amphitheatre (July 23), Ed Sheeran at...
Neighbors

Canada Riding a Wave of Events: World Cup, Strikes and Heat in Vancouver
The spotlight is on three key topics: a successful World Cup kickoff in Vancouver on natural turf, a large-scale strike by Metro Vancouver infrastructure workers, and a forecast of potentially record heat in the region.
Australia Praises BC Place Pitch: "Perfect Playing Conditions"
The natural grass pitch installed at BC Place in Vancouver for the FIFA World Cup received high marks from world-class players after passing its first test in a group-stage match. On Saturday Australia earned a...

Strike and Heat: What Awaits Vancouver
Vancouver faces a triple challenge: a municipal workers' strike is disrupting infrastructure services, an extreme heat wave is forcing water conservation due to critical repair work, and at the same time cross-border rail service to the U.S. is improving with new measures on the train route.
The route from Vancouver to Seattle is shorter: what's changed on the Amtrak route
The train trip from Canadian Vancouver to American Seattle has become slightly faster, which is especially important now as...

Vancouver: Bankruptcy, World Cup and Pet Rescue
In the latest Vancouver news roundup: developer Helen Chan Sun declared bankrupt while in jail; the 2026 FIFA World Cup kicked off with Australia vs. Turkey and Science World was transformed; and a touching story of stolen dogs and cats reunited with their owners after a suspect was arrested in British Columbia.
Vancouver developer Helen Chan Sun declared bankrupt while jailed for contempt of court
Recent weeks have been a true ordeal for Helen Chan Sun, once a multimillionaire and a notable...

Vancouver: from a "forgotten" conference to a football boom
Digest of news on three vivid events in the life of Vancouver and British Columbia: the historic UN housing conference, an influx of Australian fans for the World Cup, and a slowdown in the housing market.
The "Woodstock" of housing conferences: how Vancouver tried 50 years ago to save the world from urban chaos
In 1976, when the world faced a population explosion, rapid urbanization and the rise of "megacities," an event took place in Vancouver that journalists dubbed the "Woodstock" of...

Lights and Shelter: Vancouver News
Vancouver unveiled a free summer fireworks event, Summer Lights, on July 31, and the premier of British Columbia offered refuge to a Somali referee who was denied entry to the World Cup by the U.S.
Vancouver solved the fireworks problem: new show replaces cancelled celebration of light
Residents and visitors of Vancouver can breathe a sigh of relief: city officials announced a free fireworks display in English Bay this summer. The event, called Summer Lights in English Bay, will take place on...

Vancouver police fatally shot hostage-taker
Lasqueti Island is being sold for the price of a Vancouver condo. A police watchdog is investigating the fatal shooting of a suspect in a home invasion.
Vancouver police fatally shot a hostage-taker during a failed attempt to storm a home
The incident occurred Monday evening on Commercial Drive in Vancouver, when police were forced to use lethal force against a suspect in a reported armed break-in at a private residence. According to an official statement from the Vancouver Police Department...

British Columbia news: weather, rentals and drugs
Rains have reduced wildfire risk in British Columbia, but experts remain cautious. Vancouver led rent declines in Canada, yet remains the second-most expensive city. The province is calling for a unified policy to remediate homes contaminated by drugs after the opioid crisis.
Rains have reduced wildfire risk in British Columbia, but experts remain cautious
This past weekend brought not only disappointment for those planning outdoor recreation in British Columbia, but also a long-awaited...

World Cup Economy and Life in Vancouver
In today's digest: experts question the economic benefits of the 2026 World Cup in Vancouver, a touching squirrel rescue in British Columbia, and approval of a reduced transit pass for low-income residents in the city.
Myths and Reality: Is the World Cup Good for Canada?
The Government of British Columbia has presented an optimistic forecast of the economic benefits from hosting seven matches of the 2026 FIFA World Cup in Vancouver. According to their calculations, the tournament will bring the...
USA

The Fragility of Modern Infrastructure and the Cost in Human Lives
Three seemingly unrelated news items — the death of musician Oliver Tree in a helicopter crash in Brazil, a serious road accident in Nashua, and a large-scale dredging project at the Port of Santos — actually form a single story. It is a story about how the modern world pushes for speed, volume, and scale in the movement of people and goods, while the price of an error or technical failure remains invariably high. The same systems that bring economic growth and global mobility also create new...
Power, Risk and Trust: How Different Crises Expose a Single Problem
Stories about the crash of a strategic bomber, the president’s frenetic trading activity on the stock market, and a regional TV station winning an Emmy for coverage of a church shooting may at first seem unrelated. Together, however, they form a cohesive picture of how society today tests and rethinks trust in those who manage risk: the military, politicians, financial managers and journalists. In all three accounts the central question becomes: who controls the danger, who controls information...

Fragility of Security: From Missouri Skies to the Strait of Hormuz
Three news items that at first glance seem completely different actually tell a single story about how fragile security remains in the modern world and how unbearably high the price of mistakes can be. A skydiving plane disaster in Missouri near a small airfield, and almost simultaneously — reports about the end of the U.S. and Israeli war with Iran and an agreement to cease fire and reopen the Strait of Hormuz in pieces from NBC News and Al Jazeera — are different scales of the same dramatic...
Media, Power and Reputation: How Public Stories Become "Narratives"
When you read news items that at first glance seem unrelated — a local shooting at a mall in South Carolina, Tyra Banks’ lawsuit against Netflix, and a political dispute over Donald Trump’s name at the Kennedy Center — it appears to be just a chaotic stream of events. But viewing them as parts of a single picture reveals an important theme: how the modern media environment turns incidents and people into "narratives," shapes reputation and politics, and influences public perception far more...

A World Living in Extremes
The American agenda these days looks, at first glance, fragmented: destructive storms and record heat, a tense fight for control of the Senate, a pause in the career of a legendary ice dance duo. But on closer inspection, all three stories are connected by a common theme: life under constant stress and rising extremes — climatic, political, human. The country, and individual people within it, are forced to learn to exist under permanent pressure, to find footholds and make decisions in...

Risk, adrenaline and control: how we manage danger
In three very different storylines — from a water slide with a record drop, through a stolen SUV in the ocean off a quiet suburb, to behind-the-scenes talks between the US and Iran about a nuclear deal and the security of the Strait of Hormuz — a single common theme unexpectedly emerges. It is the human relationship to risk and attempts to put it under control: in the entertainment industry risk is turned into safe adrenaline; in the criminal story uncontrolled risk creates a threat to the...
Crisis of Trust in News: From "60 Minutes" to Street Reports
At first glance disparate stories — an internal revolt at CBS News over the overhaul of "60 Minutes" led by Bari Weiss, a local investigation into towing refunds in Houston on ABC13, mass arrests following Knicks victory celebrations at Madison Square Garden reported by ABC7NY — actually add up to a single larger narrative. It’s a story about how the news business in the U.S. is changing, how media are simultaneously losing and trying to regain trust, and how audiences, authorities,...

Violence, security and trust in institutions: three stories of one America
Three seemingly unrelated stories — the conviction for the killing of a high school student at a Texas stadium, the search for a suspect who struck a police officer in Massachusetts, and a record tax override in the small town of Marblehead — describe the same nervous system of contemporary America. The same themes keep surfacing: fear and violence, the role of police and courts, racial and social fault lines, and above all the question of whether people trust the institutions that are supposed...

How Resilience Works: From a Player Injury to Green Fuel and a Change in NIAID Leadership
At first glance, the three pieces have nothing in common: the injury to New York Giants pass rusher Abdul Carter at practice, American Airlines’ record deal with Google on sustainable aviation fuel, and the appointment of a new acting director at the U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID). But viewed more broadly, they share a single theme: how complex systems — sports, the aviation industry, the national health system — learn to survive under pressure, manage risk,...
Reactions

America in the Crosshairs: Germany, Ukraine and Japan Debate the US Role
Today, outside the United States, discussions are not about one or two headline episodes but about a knot of issues in which Washington has become...
![US President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meet at Mar-a-Lago, Trump's resort, in Palm Beach, Florida, on December 29, 2025 [Jonathan Ernst/Reuters]](https://www.aljazeera.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/2025-12-29T223347Z_1840689475_RC2KQIAV30GG_RTRMADP_3_ISRAEL-PALESTINIANS-TRUMP-NETANYAHU-1772474025.jpg?resize=770%2C513&quality=80)
How the world reads Washington: Israel, Australia and Ukraine on a new phase of American power
In mid‑June 2026 the United States again finds itself at the epicenter of global debate — but this time not only as a "hegemon," rather as the...

How the World Sees America Now: Germany, Japan and Israel Debate Trump
The American agenda is once again dominating the planet’s information airwaves, but the set of questions being asked in Berlin, Tokyo and Tel Aviv...

How the World Argues with America: Brazil, Saudi Arabia and Australia
In June 2026, discussion of the United States in the foreign press and among experts noticeably shifted: the foreground is no longer the abstract...

How the World Sees America Today: Germany, Brazil and Australia
In mid‑June 2026, debates about the United States in Germany, Brazil and Australia are rarely abstract; they almost always come through the prism of...

How the World Argues with America: Iran War, the Crisis of Unipolarity and "Fatigue with the US" Seen by...
In early summer 2026 the United States again found itself at the center of global debates — but the tone of those conversations has noticeably...

The World Watches Washington: Turkey, Russia and Germany Rethink the US in the Trump Era
What was once described as "predictable American leadership" is today discussed in three very different countries — Turkey, Russia and Germany — in...

The World Eyes Washington: How Australia, Germany and China Debate the US Today
In early June 2026, America again became the central nerve of global politics — but not in the familiar role of a “unipolar leader,” rather as a...
Tariffs, War and Distrust: How Brazil, India and France View the U.S. Today
From the outside it may seem that the U.S. still sets the world's agenda and the rest of the world merely reacts. But if you look at how people in...
World

Diosdado Cabello: 12,000 Venezuelans Await Trial
The secretary general of the ruling United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV), Diosdado Cabello, stated that more than 12,000 people in the country are awaiting trial. He noted that the cases of these people are currently being reviewed to correct procedural violations and to organize judicial procedures. According to Cabello, 70% of the detainees use the assistance of public defenders, which indicates that most of them cannot afford private lawyers.

G7 Summit: Ukraine and Iran at Center of Agenda
Today in Évian, France, the G7 summit began, with the war in Ukraine and the nuclear deal with Iran taking center stage. Leaders of the world’s major industrial democracies are holding intensive consultations ahead of a meeting with Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky. Against the backdrop of international efforts to resolve the conflict, U.S. President Donald Trump made remarks that injected cautious optimism: he hinted at the possibility of reaching a compromise in the protracted standoff,...

Iran and the US Reach Historic Ceasefire Agreement
US President Donald Trump announced a comprehensive agreement with Iran after months of military escalation and indirect talks. The agreement provides for an immediate and permanent cessation of hostilities on all fronts, the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz to international shipping, and the lifting of the maritime blockade on Iran. Agreements were also reached on Iran's nuclear program and other regional issues. The final text will be signed in Geneva on June 19, after which all details will...

Hegseth: US to Maintain Military Presence in Venezuela
US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth said in an interview on CBS News' Face The Nation on Sunday that the United States will continue an active military presence in Venezuela and other Latin American countries as part of joint operations against criminal organizations. Hegseth emphasized that American forces were invited by the Venezuelan government to assist in an operation in the state of Bolívar, during which the leader of "Tren de Aragua," Héctor Rustenford Guerrero Flores, known as Niño...

Iran–US Deal: A Path Through Crises and Mediators
Agreement on a memorandum of understanding between Iran and the US became a complex and unpredictable process that nearly collapsed after an Israeli strike on a southern suburb of Beirut. An unofficial signing took place on Wednesday in the presence of a Qatari mediator; the formal announcement was postponed until Sunday evening. After the attack, Tehran considered a military response that could have destroyed all the agreements reached.
Qatari and American diplomacy played a decisive role in...

Trump's age in the crosshairs: trying to appear as a fighter
Approaching his 80th birthday, Donald Trump is trying to craft an image of a "fighter-president" who defies age, but public opinion polls and journalistic investigations are once again raising questions about how his age affects his ability to carry out presidential duties. Trump supporters, in turn, insist that he still performs his job successfully and that any doubts on the matter are merely political games.

Delcy Rodríguez urged Venezuelans to take part in the popular consultation on July 12
Acting President of Venezuela Delcy Rodríguez appealed to citizens to take part in the upcoming popular consultation scheduled for July 12. In her statement she emphasized that the communes are already organized and holding meetings, and that housing associations are also joining the process. Rodríguez noted that an organized community best understands the country's real problems, and she called on the people to remain united, acting as a single force within the framework of a "participatory...

Dispute over the signing date of the US‑Iran deal intensifies
The world is watching with bated breath for the official announcement of the US‑Iran agreement that could end months of war and tensions in the Middle East. However, the signing date has become a new field of political struggle between Washington and Tehran. US President Donald Trump insists on Sunday, June 14 — which coincides with his 80th birthday — a move observers say is part of his strategy to link major achievements to his political image. Tehran, for its part, appears determined to deny...

Qatar breakthrough: how diplomacy prevented a US–Iran war
Qatar's diplomatic mission to Tehran managed to stop a series of reciprocal strikes between the United States and Iran triggered by the downing of an American Apache helicopter. According to The Wall Street Journal, the visit of the Qatari delegation persuaded the US president to cancel “hard” strikes on Iranian infrastructure that Washington had been preparing as retaliation. In response to the threat of American attacks, Tehran struck US bases and their allies in the Persian Gulf, pushing the...
Knowledge
Grandmothers on Bicycles Who Changed the City
Imagine: 1978, a rainy day in Seattle. A group of elderly women on old bicycles stands in front of City Hall. They are soaked through, but they do not leave. In their hands are thick notebooks with notes and photographs. These women came to demand that the city build safe bike lanes. And you know what? They won. But almost no one remembers that.
This story is rarely told when people talk about Seattle’s bike lanes. Everyone assumes they were built for young environmentalists or athletes. But...

Houses That Sang Jazz: How Buildings Taught Musicians a Distinct Sound
Imagine an ordinary house on an ordinary street. By day there's a shop or a barber. But when evening falls, music starts coming from the basement — music so special people came to hear it from across the city. This is not a fairy tale but the real story of Jackson Street in Seattle's Central District, where ordinary buildings turned into music schools and created a wholly new jazz sound.
In the 1940s and 1950s something remarkable happened on that street. Because of discriminatory rules of the...
![Chief Seattle (Seattle, Chief Noah [born Si?al 178?-1866]) - HistoryLink.org](https://www.historylink.org/Content/Media/Photos/Large/princess-angeline-kikisoblu-1820-1896-daughter-of-chief-seattle-ca1895.jpg)
The Girl Who Refused to Leave: How the Chief’s Daughter Preserved Her People’s Memory
In Seattle there is an extraordinary story about a girl who grew up to be so brave that not even powerful city officials could force her to leave her home. Her name was Kikisoblu, but most people knew her as Princess Angeline. She was the daughter of Chief Seattle — the man the city is named after. And although more than 150 years have passed since those events, her story helps us hear the voices of people whom history textbooks almost forgot.
The little cabin that wouldn’t be moved
Imagine:...

Secret forest that protects Seattle’s water
Imagine turning on the kitchen tap and clean water flows out straight from a forest — no chemicals, no special treatment. Sounds like magic? For Seattle residents it’s a daily reality. But behind this miracle is an extraordinary story about a bold decision made more than a century ago, and about the families who had to give up their homes for the future of the city.
The city that bought an entire forest
In the early 1900s Seattle was growing fast, and the city urgently needed clean water....

Students Who Taught Adults to Use the Internet (and Helped Build a Stadium)
In 1997 a group of kids from a middle school in Seattle did what many adults thought impossible: they surveyed thousands of people across the state of Washington using a strange new technology called "the internet." Their work helped decide what the new stadium for the Seahawks would be like.
When the internet was younger than you
Imagine a world where most people didn’t have computers at home. Where the word "Google" meant nothing yet. Where sending a message to a friend over the internet was...
Windows That Waited a Century: How an Architect's Kindness Saved a Neighborhood
In the American city of Seattle there is an unusual neighborhood called Georgetown. If you visit, you'll see huge brick buildings with so many windows it seems strange. After all, these are old factories! And factories are usually dark and gloomy, right? But in Georgetown everything is different. And behind it is an amazing story about how one kind person, without even knowing it, changed the future a hundred years later.
The architect who thought about people
In 1906, when your...

The Tower That Was Too Beautiful (and Too Small)
Imagine you’re growing very fast, and your mother buys you a new winter coat. But she buys it exactly your size, even though she knows you’ll grow in a month and it will become tight. Strange, right? But that’s exactly what Seattle’s builders did more than a century ago when they built a beautiful water tower in Volunteer Park. They built it too small — and they knew it from the start.
A city that grew faster than its plans
In the early 1900s, Seattle was growing at an astonishing rate. In 1900...

The Monster That Saved a Neighborhood
Imagine there's a place in your neighborhood that everyone is afraid to go to. Dark, dirty, where trash and broken bottles collect. What would you do? Most people would just avoid it. But in one Seattle neighborhood called Fremont, people decided to do something unusual: they built a giant monster there. And you know what? It worked! The scary spot became one of the most beloved places in the whole city. This is the story of how art can change an entire neighborhood, and how people from...

Streets Redesigned by Kids: How Seattle Students Invented Safer Roads
Imagine you live so close to school you could bike there in ten minutes. But your parents drive you every day because the route is too dangerous: big trucks, fast cars, and not a single bike lane. That’s how children in one Seattle neighborhood lived in the 1990s. But they didn’t accept it — and they changed the whole city.
This is the story of how ordinary families who just wanted to get to school safely accidentally invented a new kind of street. Cities across America copy these streets...
Opinions

Seattle's World Cup Week: What's Happening Now and What's Coming Next
Seattle, June 16, 2026 — A guide to FIFA World Cup 2026 in Seattle: how the tournament's opening days unfolded, the matches and watch parties coming...

The Hundred-Thousand-Dollar Question for Washington State
There is a number making the rounds in Olympia this week, and it is doing what big round numbers do: flattering some people, insulting others, and...