Tom Hanks is celebrating the launch of NASA's Artemis II mission, and the four astronauts that make up its crew.

Entertainment Weekly Tom Hanks (center) with the crew of NASA's Artemis II missionCredit: Max Cisotti/Dave Benett/Getty

Key Points

  • "Did you know that no humans have traveled beyond the gravitational pull of the Earth since December 1972?" he wrote on social media, before thanking each astronaut by name.

  • The Artemis II launch represents NASA's first mission bound beyond low Earth orbit in over 50 years.

In keeping with his continued,Forrest Gump-impelled cultural duties,Tom Hankswas present at the site of American history today.

The veteran actor and star of interstellar classicApollo 13congratulated the four astronauts bound for the moon on NASA's historic Artemis II mission, which launched on Wednesday.

"Did you know that no humans have traveled beyond the gravitational pull of the Earth since December 1972?" Hanks wrote in anInstagrampost hours after the Orion CM-003 Integrity achieved liftoff. "That changes today, when the crew of Artemis lifts off from the Cape... Reid Wiseman. Victor Glover. Jeremy Hansen. Christina Koch. On a voyage around the Moon. Godspeed, Artemis... And thank you."

Wednesday's Artemis II launch achieves several historic milestones at once.

The 10-day mission manned by American astronauts Weisman, Glover, and Koch, along with Canadian astronaut Hansen, may take them further than humanity has ever traveled. The Orion CM-003 Integrity,so namedby the Artemis II crew because it "embodies the foundation of trust, respect, candor, and humility across the crew," is on a free-return trajectory. That means it will loop the moon, and return to Earth purely utilizing gravitational forces, and without any additional propulsion.

The Artemis II lifts off from the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Fla., on April 1Credit: Gregg Newton / AFP via Getty

The lunar fly-around is likely to push past the record set in 1970 by the crew of the Apollo 13 — the very same mission dramatized in the 1995 film of the same name starring Hanks. The Artemis II also represents the first crewed flight of NASA's Orion reusable spacecraft, and the first crewed mission beyond low Earth orbit since Apollo 17 in 1972.

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"Artemis II is the start of something bigger than any one mission. It marks our return to the Moon, not just to visit, but to eventually stay on our Moon Base, and lays the foundation for the next giant leaps ahead," NASA Administrator Jared Isaacmanshared in a releaseannouncing the Artemis II launch on Wednesday.

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Hanks has a special attachment to the Artemis II mission and its crew. The actor recently co-wrote and narrated the filmThe Moonwalkers: A Journey with Tom Hanks, which treks back through NASA's history of lunar voyages, and features interviews between Hanks and the Artemis II astronauts.

Tom Hanks in 'Apollo 13'Credit: Universal/courtesy Everett

Back in February, Hanks reflected on the importance of the Artemis II mission, not just to science, but for a sense of hope.

"If we can figure out how to land a man on the moon and get him safely back, we can figure out everything," he told the Houston Public Media programHouston Matters. "There's a degree of hopeless, of willing to throw your hands up, because life is one damn thing after another... but everything that comes after [the Apollo 11 mission] is like, 'No, this can be solved.'"

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“Apollo 13” star Tom Hanks celebrates historic Artemis II launch, NASA's first crewed lunar mission in over 50 years

Tom Hanks is celebrating the launch of NASA's Artemis II mission, and the four astronauts that make up its crew. ...
Jamie Lee Curtis explains why she revealed the birth of her first grandchild on Michelle Obama's podcast

It's not every day you can make an important family announcement on a former first lady's podcast.

Entertainment Weekly Jamie Lee Curtis; Michelle ObamaCredit: Steve Jennings/Getty; Todd Owyoung/NBC via Getty

Jamie Lee Curtisrevealed that she became a grandmother in December during a conversation withMichelle Obamaon her podcastIMOon Wednesday.

"I never thought I would have children," theHalloweenactress said. "I never thought in my wildest dreams I would be a grandma. A granny. I want to be Granny."

The actress, who adopted two daughters with her husband, Christopher Guest, said that her eldest daughter, Annie Guest, and son-in-law Jason Wolf welcomed their first child together just a week after the deaths of her friends Rob Reiner and Michele Reiner, who were Annie's godparents. "Life on life's harshest terms and life on life's most beautiful terms," she said of the emotional week in December.

Jamie Lee Curtis at the 'Ella McCay' premiere in HollywoodCredit: Frederic J. BROWN/AFP via Getty

TheEverything Everywhere All at Oncestar said she checked in with Annie before revealing the birth of her child to the public. "I called my daughter to say, 'Hey, I'm about to do this [podcast],'" she remembered. "We have never talked about it. It's been a private matter. But we live in a world, many people know, in our circle. Many, many people know that we're grandparents. One of these days, somebody's gonna say something."

Curtis shared her daughter's reaction to learning that Obama's podcast would break the news. "[I] said, 'I'm about to do this thing, I think it's gonna come up. How would you feel about me talking about it?'" Curtis said as she teared up. "She said, 'Tell her I love her.' My daughter Annie said, 'Tell her I love her.'"

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TheKnives Outstar explained why her daughter has such an affection for the former FLOTUS. "You are loved and so respected that she would say, 'Yes, Mom, you can talk about it to Michelle Obama, 'cause she's a G" Curtis told her. "Because she loves you, because you represented love in the world and you brought love to the White House and beyond. And so it's really thrilling to me that the first time I'm going to say to the universe that I became a granny is here with you."

Ruby Guest, Christopher Guest, Jamie Lee Curtis, and Annie Guest in 2022Credit: Axelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic

Curtis also shared her memory of learning about Barack Obama's first presidential victory in 2008.

"I remember where I was the day your husband was elected president because my daughter called me from a party that she and her friends were at," the actress recalled. "My daughter was in college. And I remember where I was sitting in a hotel talking on the phone with my daughter about the possibility that the world was gonna change because of the election and because of you and your husband stepping up, saying, 'We're here to help you.'"

She added, "Now that daughter has brought a little grandson into our lives."

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Watch Curtis and Obama's full conversation above.

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

Jamie Lee Curtis explains why she revealed the birth of her first grandchild on Michelle Obama's podcast

It's not every day you can make an important family announcement on a former first lady's podcast. ...
Megan Thee Stallion discharged from hospital after health scare during Broadway show

Megan Thee Stallion has been discharged from the hospital after falling "very ill" during a Broadway performance on Tuesday.

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The rapper and songwriter was hospitalized Tuesday night after "experiencing concerning symptoms" during a performance of "Moulin Rouge!", a spokesperson told ABC News in a statement Wednesday.

Megan is currently starring in the Broadway show as Zidler.

"Doctors ultimately identified extreme exhaustion, dehydration, vasoconstriction and low metabolic levels as the cause of her symptoms," the statement continued. "Megan has since been treated, discharged and is now resting."

The statement thanked the star's supporters and noted Megan would resume her role in "Moulin Rouge!" on Thursday.

The "Savage" artist took to social media on Wednesday to reflect on the incident, calling it a "wake-up call."

Theo Wargo/Getty Images - PHOTO: Megan Thee Stallion makes her Broadway debut in Moulin Rouge! The Musical at Al Hirschfeld Theatre on March 24, 2026 in New York City.

"I've been pushing myself past my limits lately, running on empty, and my body finally said enough. It honestly scared me," she wrote in the caption of anInstagram post. "I thought I was gonna faint on stage, I really tried to push through my performance but I just couldn't."

Megan wrote that she would take one day to "rest, reset, and take care of myself," adding that she would return to the show "stronger, clearer, and ready to give you 100% the way you deserve."

A previous statement shared with ABC News on behalf of Megan's spokesperson read, "During Tuesday night's production, Megan started feeling very ill and was promptly transported to a local hospital, where her symptoms are currently being evaluated."

Cast of 'Moulin Rouge! The Musical' performs on 'GMA'

The statement added, "We will share additional updates as more information becomes available."

A prompt that appears on the show's ticket purchase page states that Megan will not be performing in Wednesday night's show.

Breakfast Club morning show host Loren Lorosaposted on Xthat was in attendance at Tuesday night's show, where Megan fell ill.

"Announcement just came on in the theatre .. they have removed Meg Thee Stallion from the show as Zidler for the rest of the night," Lorosa wrote at the time.

She added that Megan was eventually replaced by "a black male actor," and that the show continued.

Megankicked off her eight-week run asZidlerin late March, with plans to conclude the role on May 17.

Last week, the "Savage" rappertook to social mediato share clips from her Broadway debut, writing, "So grateful for this incredible cast & crew & everyone who worked so hard to make opening night a success!!"

"HOTTIES IM ON BROADWAY!!" she added.

Megan Thee Stallion discharged from hospital after health scare during Broadway show

Megan Thee Stallion has been discharged from the hospital after falling "very ill" during a Broadway performanc...
Mexico appoints Roberto Velasco as new foreign minister at critical moment for US ties

MEXICO CITY (AP) —Mexico'spresident on Wednesday designated Roberto Velasco, the foreign ministry's subsecretary for North America and a leading expert in bilateral relations with the U.S., as the country's new foreign minister during a critical time for Mexico-U.S. relations.

Associated Press

The previous minister, Juan Ramón de la Fuente, a 74-year-old psychiatrist who has been a key member ofMexican President Claudia Sheinbaum'sadministration, requested to step down for health reasons, the president's office announced Wednesday on social platform X.

Velasco, a 38-year-old lawyer with a master's degree in Public Policy from the University of Chicago, has been involved in Mexico's foreign relations with the U.S. and Canada for six years, first as North America general director and then as subsecretary. He stepped in for De la Fuente for a few weeks after a surgery last year. His appointment must be ratified by the Senate.

He is considered one of the foremost experts on the technical intricacies of bilateral relations during the end of U.S. President Donald Trump's first administration and in this second term. He has led numerous bilateral and trilateral negotiations on security, migration, the economy, the border and the management of shared waters.

When Trump returned to power, Velasco became De la Fuente's right-hand man during a period of turbulent relations between the two countries, which are now at one of their most critical points. It remains to be seen whether the young official has the necessary political clout at such a difficult times.

Velasco will be in charge of leading Mexican diplomacy amid negotiations to revise the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Free Trade Agreement, and Trump's continuedpressure in the fight against the cartelsat a time when the U.S. president has shown willingness tolaunch military operationsagainst those he considers his enemies, including Mexico'sally Cuba.

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Previously, Velasco had served as spokesperson for Marcelo Ebrard, the current economy secretary, when Ebrard was Mexico's foreign minister during the first part of former Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador's administration.

Outgoing minister De la Fuente, who served in the role since October 2024, was known for his discretion and negotiating skills. He accompanied Sheinbaum throughout the transition period, received envoys from then-U.S. President Joe Biden, and was responsible for preparing the entire U.S. consular network for the deportations announced by Trump.

When the Republican returned to the White House in January 2025, De la Fuente became a key figure in the negotiations with his administration, always maintaining a low profile and fully aligned with Sheinbaum in exercising caution in the face of Trump's impulsive social media posts. In September, hehosted U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubioin Mexico City.

Arturo Sarukhan, Mexico's former ambassador to the U.S., said "the reshuffle in the foreign ministry was long overdue" but he didn't want to comment about Velasco and wished him good luck.

Follow AP's Latin America coverage athttps://apnews.com/hub/latin-america

Mexico appoints Roberto Velasco as new foreign minister at critical moment for US ties

MEXICO CITY (AP) —Mexico'spresident on Wednesday designated Roberto Velasco, the foreign ministry's subsecretary ...
Despite Trump's claims, there's no indication Iran's regime has lost power, Western officials and experts say

President Donald Trump has claimedrepeatedly in recent daysthat the air war on Iran hasousted the regime, but there is no indication that the authoritarian government has lost its grip on power or that successors to assassinated leaders have made a break with the Islamic Republic's ideology, according to multiple Western officials, U.S. intelligence assessments and regional analysts.

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The U.S. and Israel say they have killed numerous senior figures in the clerical regime since they launched their campaign against Iran on Feb. 28, including the former supreme leader,Ali Khamenei.

Airstrikes have killed Ali Larijani, secretary of the Supreme National Security Council and one of the country's most powerful officials; Mohammad Pakpour, the head of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps; the ministers of intelligence and defense; and a slew of other senior commanders, according to Israeli officials.

But the regime shows no sign of unraveling, and the people who have replaced senior leaders are known as equally hard-line or arguably even more militant than their predecessors, according to Western officials and experts on Iran.

"Iran's new leaders have the same ideology. All are committed to the principles of the 1979 revolution and will rule with greater brutality given their lack of legitimacy. They fear normalization with the U.S. more than conflict with the U.S.," Karim Sajadpour, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace,wrote on social media.

It's unclear whether the administration has found a senior leader in the regime who would be willing toshift the country's relationship with the U.S.and accede to Washington's demands, as was the case with thesuccessor to Venezuela's president, Nicolás Maduro, who wascaptured in a U.S. military raidand brought to the U.S. for prosecution.

Siamak Namazi, an American businessman and Iran analyst who was held hostage for nearly eight years by the regime, said gauging the regime's moves is now much more difficult after so many leaders were killed.

"What makes this regime more difficult than ever to predict is the U.S. and Israel just blew up a lot of decision-makers. We don't know who is in charge week to week," Namazi said.

After the supreme leader, Khamenei, was killed on the first day of the war, Iranian government officials announced thathis son, Mojtaba,had taken over. He has earned a reputation as a hard-line loyalist to the regime with close relationships to other senior militant figures.

Trump has said that it's unclear whether Mojtaba is alive or dead.

The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), seen as the most powerful arm of the regime, with both military and economic reach, appears to remain firmly in control and may be in a stronger position than before the conflict, experts say.

"The IRGC's power as an economic and political actor, whether directly or through its veterans, had already been evident — and increasingly seems dominant," said Ali Vaez, Iran Project director for the International Crisis Group think tank.

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And it appears that the senior figures who seem to be in power are from the more hard-line elements of the Revolutionary Guard, some observers say.

"The most security-oriented hard-line group within the Revolutionary Guards are now in power, calling the shots," Namazi said.

As of March 18, U.S. intelligence agencies assessed that the Iranian regime remained "intact but largely degraded due to attacks on its leadership and military capabilities," National Intelligence Director Tulsi Gabbardtold lawmakers.

Two officials in the Middle East region say it is difficult to determine who is in charge in Iran. One of the officials said that a coherent succession process had been in place but that for a country at war with lines of communications disrupted, it is just not clear.

Trump's top diplomat said as recently as Monday it is uncertain who is in charge.

"It's very opaque right now," Secretary of State Rubio toldAl Jazeera in an interview. "It's not quite clear how decisions are being made inside of Iran."

Trump said Wednesday that the "regime president" had asked the U.S. for a ceasefire but did not provide details about whom he was referring to.

"Iran's New Regime President, much less Radicalized and far more intelligent than his predecessors, has just asked the United States of America for a CEASEFIRE!" Trumpwrote on Truth Social.

Parliament Speaker Ghalibaf In Pro-Government Rally (Morteza Nikoubazl / NurPhoto via Getty Images)

A veteran of the regime has emerged as a potentially key figure after the deaths of other leaders: Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, the hard-line speaker of parliament who has deep ties to theRevolutionary Guard. It's unclear whether Ghalibaf is the person Trump has referred to as a more "reasonable" figure passing messages in indirect talks with the U.S. But Trump did indicate that the U.S. is in contact with Ghalibafin a recent interviewwith the New York Post.

Ghalibaf, 64, one of Iran's leading conservative figures, is a former commander who has heldtop political postsfor more than 20 years. He also was the country's chief of police and has overseencrackdowns on protestsand internal dissent. During his 12-year tenure as mayor of Tehran, Ghalibaf was accused of corruption, which he denied.

He once boasted in anaudio recordingthat he was proud that he took part in beatings of unarmed protesters in 1999. "I was among those carrying out beatings on the street level, and I am proud of that. I didn't care I was a high-ranking commander," he said.

Vaez, with the International Crisis Group, said: "Ghalibaf is, above all, ambitious. That means that at various points in his career he has worked with various ideological currents in the system, neither among the regime's most extreme hard-liners nor one of those urging major reforms to the system."

Despite Trump's claims, there's no indication Iran's regime has lost power, Western officials and experts say

President Donald Trump has claimedrepeatedly in recent daysthat the air war on Iran hasousted the regime, but there is no...
The US is waging AI-assisted war on Iran. Here's how.

Hundreds ofIranian civilian deathsin the war have put the U.S. military's new AI systems in the spotlight and raised concerns from lawmakers over whether these systems are making deadly mistakes.

USA TODAY

Experts and former officials say the military's artificial intelligence systems are central to"Operation Epic Fury,"which is seeing AI deployed on the battlefield to a new degree.

"For somebody who spent years talking about how we're moving too slow, I'm now concerned about how fast we're moving," said Jack Shanahan, a retired lieutenant general who led efforts to develop and integrate AI into the military.

"At some point it may become increasingly difficult to define what an advanced AI system must not do, as opposed to humans defining what they want it to do."

<p style=The Pentagon is moving to deploy thousands of soldiers from the Army's 82nd Airborne Division to the Middle East, The New York Times, Wall Street Journal and Reuters reported. The reported deployment from the army division known for its elite paratroopers bolsters a force that already consists of thousands of Marines, sailors and an amphibious assault ship

See photos of other moments in U.S. history the 82nd Airborne Division has been deployed.

American soldiers watch as men of the 504th Parachute Infantry of the 82nd Airborne Division descend on Tempelhof Airport, Berlin, Sept. 6, 1945. The jump from a height of only 750 ft was in honour of Marshall Zhukov of the Soviet Union who captured Berlin and at the end of the WW II became commander-in-chief of the Russian zone of Germany.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> American general James M Gavin (1907 - 1990) of the 82nd Airborne Division on a battlefield where US troops of the 508th Infantry Regiment clashed with German forces, Belgium, circa 1944. Gavin later served as the US Ambassador to France from 1961 to 1962. German civilians from the town of Ludwigslust are forced by soldiers from the 8th Infantry Division and the 82nd Airborne Division United States Ninth Army to exhume and transport the bodies of the victims of Nazi Germany's effort to exterminate the Jewish population, political and social dissidents, homosexuals, gysies and prisoners of war amongst many others at the Wobbelin concentration camp, a subcamp of the Neuengamme concentration camp near the city of Ludwigslust for reburial on 6th May 1945 near Ludwigslust, Germany. Baghdad, IRAQ: A US soldier from Bravo Company 5-20 Infantry Regiment barks an order as his squad engages in a sustained gunfight with unidentified gunmen after their combat outpost came under attack, at the Adamiyah neighborhood of northern Baghdad during day five of Operation Arrowhead Strike VI, 10 February 2007. The regiment combined with the 82nd Airborne division U.S. soldiers from Charlie Company, 3rd Bat., 505th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 82nd Airborne Division, carry out Corporal Brian R. Kresic who injured his ankle during Operation Mountain Sweep in Afghanistan. Exact dates or location not made available by the army. The shadow of a U.S. Army soldier from the 82nd Airborne Division, A U.S. Army soldier with the 82nd Airborne First Infantry Division patrols along a road November 8, 2003 in Fallujah, Iraq. Two soldiers were killed and one injured when their Bradley fighting vehicle struck an improvised explosive device (IED). U.S. Army soldiers from the 82nd Airborne 1st Battalion 505th Regiment secure a an Iraqi detainee during an October 31, 2003 cordon and search operation through three houses in the town of Fallujah, Iraq. The raid yielded hidden rifles, rocket propelled grenade launchers and remote bomb detonation equipment in the houses and resulted in the detention of three individuals for questioning, including one believed to be a former Iraqi special forces soldier and explosives detonation expert. A paratrooper in 1st Brigade of the 505th Parachute Infantry Regiment of the 82nd Airborne Division stands guard December 30, 2003 at the entrance to the base near Fallujah, Iraq. A paratrooper from the 82nd Airborne Division's 1st Battalion, 325th Infantry Regiment looks through helmet-mounted night vision goggles during a night patrol on June 25, 2007 in the Hurriyah neighborhood of Baghdad, Iraq. The 82nd Airborne conducts night patrols almost every night in the Shia neighborhood in west Baghdad to enforce a 10 pm curfew. Staff Sgt. Jeremiyah Britton of Hart, Michigan, of the 82nd Airborne Division's 1st Battalion, 325th Infantry Regiment tries to restore order during handouts of humanitarian relief June 26, 2007 in the Hurriyah neighborhood of Baghdad, Iraq. The 82nd Airborne tried to keep the distribution of boxes of food staples and blankets orderly, but surging crowds soon turned chaotic, with many forced to leave without receiving any aid. U.S. Army medic Sgt. Tad Myers from Jersey Shore, PA walks past a group of Iraqi civilians on September 11, 2007 in the Hurriyah neighbourhood of Baghdad, Iraq. Troops from Alpha Company 1-325 Infantry of the 82nd Airborne were searching for an illegal weapons cache in the area. 1-325th were some of the first troops to arrive in late January as part of the American troop Helicopter Crew Chief SPC John Slay of Moultrie, GA from C Company Dustoff 3rd Battalion of the 82nd Combat Aviation Brigade 82nd Airborne Division watches out the window of a MEDEVAC helicopter after picking up an unjured Marine December 16, 2009 near Delhi, Afghanistan. The MEDIVAC unit is tasked with evacuating wounded coalition forces and local nationals throughout Helmand Province. Flight medic Sgt. Aaron Burrows (L) of Amarillo, TX with C Company Dustoff 3rd Battalion of the 82nd Combat Aviation Brigade 82nd Airborne Division directs a U.S. Marine (C) and a soldier with the Afghan National Army to a MEDEVAC helicopter December 20, 2009 near Delhi, Afghanistan. The MEDEVAC unit evacuates sick and wounded coalition forces and local nationals in Helmand Province. US paratroopers of the 82nd Airborne division, 1st battalion 325 airborne infantry arrive to install a new US Army base with food and water outside of Port au Prince on January 18, 2010, six days after an earthquake majoring 7.0 only open-ended Richter scale hit the Haitian capital. US paratroopers of the 82nd Airborne division, 1st battalion 325 airborne infantry arrive to secure and install a US base with food and water outside of Port au Prince on January 18, 2010, six days after an earthquake majoring 7.0 only open-ended Richter scale hit the Haitian capital. Engineers of Bravo Company, 2nd Battalion, 504th Parachute Infantry Regiment of the US Army's 82nd Airborne set explosives inside a suspected terrorists' cache during a cave clearing operation 01 February, 2003 about 29 miles north of Spinboldak, about 24 miles from the Pakistani border, Afghanistan. Operation Mongoose started January 27 after US and coalition forces came under attack by terrorists and soldiers continue cave clearing missions in the area.

See the army division known for its elite paratroopers throughout history

ThePentagon is movingtodeploy thousands of soldiersfrom the Army's 82nd Airborne Division to the Middle East,The New York Times,Wall Street JournalandReutersreported. The reported deployment from the army divisionknown for its elite paratroopersbolsters a force that already consists of thousands ofMarines, sailors and an amphibious assault ship.See photos of other moments in U.S. history the 82nd Airborne Division has been deployed.American soldiers watch as men of the 504th Parachute Infantry of the 82nd Airborne Division descend on Tempelhof Airport, Berlin, Sept. 6, 1945. The jump from a height of only 750 ft was in honour of Marshall Zhukov of the Soviet Union who captured Berlin and at the end of the WW II became commander-in-chief of the Russian zone of Germany.

At a closed door House Armed Services Committee briefing on March 25, Pentagon officials told lawmakers AI was used in data management, but not final target selection, according to a person with knowledge of the briefing.

U.S. soldiers are "leveraging a variety of advanced AI tools," Adm. Brad Cooper, the commander of U.S. Central Command, said in a March 11video updateon the war. "Humans will always make final decisions on what to shoot and what not to shoot and when to shoot but advanced AI tools can turn processes that used to take hours, and sometimes even days, into seconds."

The military has hit tens of thousands of targets in the monthlong Iran war, including more than 1,000 in the first 24 hours after the war launched on Feb. 28. One of the sitesbombed that day was an Iranian school, leading to at least 175 deaths, most of them children.

Experts and former officials say the military's artificial intelligence systems are central to 'Operation Epic Fury.'

In the early days of the war, the U.S. military fired more long-range, expensive missiles to hit Iran from far away, but has sinceshiftedto using more short-range, gravity bombs that can be dropped from aircraft, now that Iran's air defenses are degraded, according to Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Dan Caine and other officials.

The first targets struck likely came from longstanding Pentagon plans for an Iran attack, said Emelia Probasco, a senior fellow at Georgetown University's Center for Security and Emerging Technology who studies military uses of AI.

More:Who attacked a girls' school in Iran, and will there be accountability?

But as the war drags on, AI could play an increasing role, Probasco said, including in "prioritization" of targets – telling soldiers where to hit first.

"We are now entering the phase where those targets have been attacked and now you could potentially start to see an even greater impact of AI," she said. "You're looking for time critical targets, targets that move, targets that we didn't know about before."

20 soldiers with AI match the work of 2,000

For nearly a decade, the military has been integrating an AI tool known as the Maven Smart System into its computer systems. The system, often shortened to "Maven," fuses the military's many, disparate channels of data, intelligence, satellite imagery and asset movements into a single software platform. Military leaders say the system can make decisions in the heat of battle faster and more effective.

The system has already drastically increased the number of targets that a given number of operators can hit. According to Probasco's 2024studyof Army exercises using the system, roughly 20 people using it could match the work of more than 2,000 soldiers in Iraq war-era targeting cells then considered the most efficient in U.S. military history.

And its development in the two years since her study has been "dramatic," she added.

In ademoof the Maven Smart System at a March 12 conference, Cameron Stanley, the Pentagon's chief digital and artificial intelligence officer, showed the ease with which a user could turn a structure into a ball of flame with a "left click, right click, left click."

On the screen behind Cameron, a cursor hovered over an overhead image of lined up cars, showing numbers representing their measurements, locational coordinates and other data. With a few clicks, the "detection" of an object could be moved into a "targeting workflow," Cameron said.

The system offered a choice of "which metrics AI should prioritize," including "time to target," "distance," or "munitions." A sleek graphic appeared to show on a map the circular blast radius that the strike would create, and the arc that the weapons would travel. After a couple clicks on a blue "approve" bar and green "task executed" bar, the dark cloud of an explosion filled the screen.

"When we started this, it literally took hours to do what you just saw there," Cameron said.

Iran school strike raises AI questions

In spite of officials' claims that AI improves the military's accuracy, the civilian death toll in Iran has raised concerns over whether it has contributed to faulty targeting.

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Lawmakers have asked whether AI played a role in the school strike.Investigationsby the New York Times and other outlets found that the United States was likely behind the strike, which used a U.S.-made Tomahawk missile. The school may have been on an outdated list of targets that the military failed to recheck, according to thosereports. The Pentagon has said its own investigation into the strike is ongoing.

Smoke rises following an explosion during a protest marking the annual al-Quds Day (Jerusalem Day) on the last Friday of the holy month of Ramadan, in Tehran, Iran, on March 13.

More than a hundred lawmakers in theHouseandSenatesigned letters sent to Pentagon chiefPete Hegsethin mid-March asking whether the Maven Smart System was involved in the strike on the school, and for more details on how the military is checking the work of AI.

Shanahan said he saw "no indications" that AI was involved in the strike, "but we need to acknowledge that while future AI will be capable of finding more targets than ever before, humans must remain responsible and accountable for the decisions to hit those targets."

In past military exercises, AI has demonstrated far lower accuracy than humans. In the Army exercises that Probasco studied, the Maven Smart System couldcorrectly identifya tank around 60% of the time, as compared to a human soldier's 84% accuracy, and that number dropped to just 30% in snowy weather. An AI targeting system tested by the Air Force in 2021hitjust 25% accuracy when it was tested on imperfect conditions.

The Pentagon in 2023 issued adirectivethat soldiers and commanders using AI systems must be able to "exercise appropriate levels of human judgment over the use of force."

"Our military operates in full compliance with all U.S. laws and established policies, such as ensuring a human is always in the loop for critical operational decisions," the Pentagon said in a statement to USA TODAY.

"The responsibility for the lawful use of any AI tool rests with the human operator and the chain of command, not within the software itself."

Pentagon goes after company behind its AI chatbot

The Trump administration as a whole hasmovedto remove regulations around AI in the name of innovation and cutting bureaucracy, and the Pentagon has followed suit. In a Jan. 9memolaying out the military's AI strategy, Hegseth directed the Pentagon to work towards "unleashing experimentation" with AI models and "aggressively identifying and eliminating bureaucratic barriers to deeper integration" of AI.

"We must accept that the risks of not moving fast enough outweigh the risks of imperfect alignment," the memo read.

Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth directed the Pentagon to work towards 'unleashing experimentation' with AI models and 'aggressively identifying and eliminating bureaucratic barriers to deeper integration' of AI.

In recent months, that approach has put the Pentagon at odds with Anthropic, the Silicon Valley company behind Claude, the only AI chatbot that is currently configured to operate on the Maven Smart System.

Anthropicsought out an agreementfrom the Pentagon that its technology would not be used for mass surveillance, or to hit targets without human signoff. The Pentagon refused to accept those terms, saying Claude must be available to the military for "all lawful uses," as its officials publiclyblastedthe company on social media. The Pentagon moved todeclarethe company a "supply chain risk" – a designationmeant to restrictcompanies vulnerable to sabotage or subversion by U.S. adversaries – but wasblockedfrom the move by a federal judge's ruling on March 26.

"The military will not allow a vendor to insert itself into the chain of command by restricting the lawful use of a critical capability," the Pentagon said in a statement. "It is the military's sole responsibility to ensure our warfighters have the tools they need to win in a crisis, without interference from corporate policies."

Anthropic has said in statements that it does not believe the Pentagon has yet used Claude in a way that broke its conditions. But the disputereportedly aroseafter Anthropic learned that the military used Claude in its operation to capture Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro. "Anthropic currently does not have confidence," the company maintained in court documents, "that Claude would function reliably or safely if used to support lethal autonomous warfare."

AI built for military purposes "already has a lot of accuracy issues," but language learning models like Claude "are actually even more inaccurate," said Heidy Khlaaf, chief AI scientist at the AI Now Institute.

"They're not very good at solving for tasks outside of what they've been trained on, and that's ok if you're using it in a non critical environment, like writing an email, but that's very different when you're dealing with novel scenarios like a fog of war."

More:FBI Director Kash Patel's emails stolen by Iran-linked hackers

The dispute with Claude is not the first time that the increasing business partnerships between Silicon Valley and the Pentagon to create high tech weapons and military tools have come under criticism from the companies building them. Google was originally contracted to work on the Maven Smart System in its early developmental stages, but dropped the contract in 2018 in response to aprotest movementfrom its workers. Google and Amazon workers have also in recent yearsprotestedthe companies' AI contract with the Israeli military and Google'sworkwith immigration and border enforcement.

"If any tech company caves to the Pentagon's demands," Hegseth "will have the power to build and deploy A.I.-powered drones that kill people without the approval of any human," a group of organizations representing Amazon, Google, and Microsoft workers wrote in astatementon the Anthropic dispute.

Shanahan said human control of AI for military uses is a "nonnegotiable starting point," but it could eventually be confined to the design and development of systems that increasingly operate on their own.

"You're going to be operating under the assumption that at some point an autonomous weapon is released, and no human will have the ability to bring it back."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:How the US is waging AI-assisted war on Iran

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Dan Levy remembers his

Dan Levyis opening up about the "collective loss" we're all experiencing following thedeath of hisSchitt's Creekcostar Catherine O'Hara.

Entertainment Weekly Catherine O'Hara and Dan Levy on 'Schitt's Creek'Credit: Pop TV

Levy, who also co-created the hit Canadian sitcom, was onThe Tonight Showto promote hisSchitt's Creekfollow up, Netflix's upcomingBig Mistakes, but he took the time to reflect on the recent death of O'Hara.

"It's a collective loss,"he told Jimmy Fallon. "She was the greatest. She's irreplaceable. I think the great comfort for me has just been to see how loved she was. The outpouring, everyone felt like they kind of knew her."

O'Hara died on Jan. 30 at the age of 71 following a brief illness. Herdeath certificatecited the main cause as pulmonary embolism and rectal cancer as an underlying cause.

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Known for her roles inBeetlejuice,Home Alone,and the films of Christopher Guest, O'Hara found a career resurgence through playing Moira Rose onSchitt's Creek, reuniting her with her longtime comedic collaborator,Eugene Levy, who co-created the series with his son Dan. O'Hara won an Emmy for her hilarious portrayal of the Rose matriarch and her struggles to adjust to the family's new, modest lifestyle.

"What a gift to have gotten to dance in the warm glow of Catherine O'Hara's brilliance for all those years,"Levy saidat the time of her passing. "Having spent over fifty years collaborating with my Dad, Catherine was extended family before she ever played my family. It's hard to imagine a world without her in it. I will cherish every funny memory I was fortunate enough to make with her."

Shortly after her death,O'Hara posthumously wonthe Actor Award for Outstanding Actress in a Comedy Series for her turn on Apple TV'sThe Studio.

In theirTonight Showconversation, Fallon called O'Hara "One of the funniest comedians I've ever seen." Levy then added, "One of the great, great, great queens."

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

Dan Levy remembers his “Schitt's Creek” costar Catherine O'Hara 2 months after her death: 'A collective loss'

Dan Levyis opening up about the "collective loss" we're all experiencing following thedeath of hisSchitt...

 

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