The Evening: U.S. strikes Iran in retaliation
Also, meet NASA’s Artemis III crew.
The Evening
June 9, 2026

Good evening. Here’s the latest at the end of Tuesday.

  • Trump says Iran downed U.S. helicopter
  • Meet NASA’s Artemis III crew
  • Plus, Sting never gave up on his musical
A wide body of water with numerous dark boats. An orange and yellow sun glows over a mountain range, illuminating the sky.
The Strait of Hormuz last week.  Reuters

The U.S. attacks Iran after Trump vowed to retaliate

American forces launched strikes on Iran this afternoon in response to the downing of an Army attack helicopter near the Strait of Hormuz. “The mission is a proportional response to unjustified Iranian aggression,” the U.S. military said in a statement. Here’s the latest.

Hours before the attacks, President Trump accused Iran of shooting down the American aircraft and promised to strike back. Both of the U.S. crew members, the pilot and the gunner, were rescued within two hours of the crash by a remotely piloted aquatic drone, a military spokesman said. The advanced helicopter had been taken down by an Iranian one-way attack drone, a U.S. official said.

The strikes came after Israeli forces pounded southern Lebanon in their fight against Hezbollah, the Iranian-backed militia, despite a new U.S.-brokered cease-fire.

For more: American and Iranian negotiators have zeroed in on four major elements of a nuclear agreement that U.S. officials say would grind the program to a halt for 15 years or so.

A hand holding locked metal ballot boxes.
The Lewiston Armory in Lewiston, Maine, today. John Tully for The New York Times

Maine voters weigh in on a crucial race

As this newsletter hits your inbox, voting is still underway in the four states holding primary elections. But there is little doubt in today’s highest-profile contest. In Maine, Graham Platner is widely expected to win the Democratic primary and become a key part of his party’s efforts to regain control of the Senate. He would face Susan Collins, a veteran Republican.

Still, it will be interesting to see how broadly voters embrace Platner after a series of damaging reports about his personal history. My colleagues on the ground there talked to Mainers, and we’ll follow the results here as they come in.

In other races:

Four men in blue flight suits in a row with their arms on each other’s shoulders, in front of an American flag, a Texas flag and the NASA logo.
Randy Bresnick, Luca Parmitano, Frank Rubio and Andre Douglas. Ronaldo Schemidt/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Meet the Artemis III astronauts

NASA announced the four astronauts that it plans to send into space next year as part of its effort to return humans to the moon. The rare all-male crew includes Randy Bresnik, Luca Parmitano, Frank Rubio and Andre Douglas. Here’s what to know about them.

The Artemis III mission is expected to orbit Earth and test rendezvous and docking maneuvers with one or two lunar landers. Experts are still hopeful that NASA will reach the lunar surface by 2028, but that could be largely at the whims of Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos.

For more: The Artemis III astronauts will be getting a new look, courtesy of Prada.

A shirtless man in a group on a dock applies sunscreen.
Victor J. Blue for The New York Times

The F.D.A. clears a sunscreen ingredient long used abroad

The Food and Drug Administration paved the way for American companies to begin using a compound that has long been a part of popular sunscreens in Europe and Asia.

Dermatologists said the ingredient, bemotrizinol, offers advantages over other sunscreen compounds currently on the market: It is better for sensitive skin than some other ingredients, and sunscreens with it are more “cosmetically elegant.”

In other health news, a federal government study found that the health risks of alcohol accelerate after one drink a day.

More top news

N.B.A. FINALS

A person holds up a shirt that says “Bacon Egg and Threes” and “New York Knicks” with the New York skyline, a breakfast sandwich, and a hoop.
Victor J. Blue for The New York Times

Many New Yorkers are bummed after the Knicks lost last night to the Spurs. But the latest postcard from my colleague Jessica Testa, a Knicks fan, points me to something worth smiling about:

Recently I paid $30 for an airbrushed “New York Knicks” T-shirt, spotted on a sidewalk rack. I have no regrets. The dot of the “i” was a tiny basketball!

But that’s how finals fever works: It is deeply intertwined with consumerism. Suddenly I’m contemplating a Karl-Anthony Towns charm key chain ($98). Or a sticker of a pigeon in Knicks gear ($3). My colleague Jonah Bromwich owns an “I Hart NY” shirt, and his toddler has a Josh Hart tee.

With apologies to the official N.B.A. store, the best merch is bootleg and primitive. It comes from the heart. See: “Brunson, egg & cheese,” or “Please win before I die.”

TIME TO UNWIND

A man in a black coat stands amid foliage.
Pete Kiehart for The New York Times

Sting never gave up on his musical

In 2014, Sting couldn’t save “The Last Ship,” his Broadway musical inspired by his childhood in an English shipbuilding town. It closed after 105 performances and lost some $15 million. But Sting still loved the show, so he refused to leave it in the past.

After a recent run of performances in Europe and Australia, a revised version of “The Last Ship” is back in New York tonight for the start of its limited run at the Metropolitan Opera. “My entire life has gone into this work,” said Sting, who is again starring in the show.

A woman in a bodysuit swimming with the Golden Gate Bridge in the background.
Gabriela Bhaskar/The New York Times

She plans to swim the entire California coast

Catherine Breed will step into the ocean next month just north of the California-Oregon border and begin swimming along the rugged Pacific coastline. Between 80 and 126 days later, she aims to reach the California-Mexico border and become the first human to accomplish such a feat. Along the way, she will be vulnerable to sharks, venomous jellyfish and storms.

Breed, 33, is attempting the 900-mile swim to promote ocean conservation, inspire others, set a record and have an extraordinary adventure. “It would be the equivalent of somebody running a marathon every day for months,” one of her mentors said.

The top portion of a duplex with a wraparound couch, glass coffee table and a sloped skylight. To the right are stairs.
The penthouse was redesigned by the architect Michael Graves. Yoo Jean Han

Dinner table topics

WHAT TO DO TONIGHT

Light-green meatballs on a plate with a light green dipping sauce.
Christopher Simpson for The New York Times

Cook: These chicken meatballs are full of flavor from the green goddess dressing mixed in.

Read Trash!,” a raffish memoir about the highs and lows of hauling garbage.

Find a great city to bike in.

Wear a crop top as an adult with tips from our fashion critic.

Take our quiz to test your knowledge of classic lines from science fiction.