It is understood that the UK was not involved in the US-Israeli strikes.
Christopher McKeon Press Association Political Correspondent
10:21, 28 Feb 2026Updated 10:23, 28 Feb 2026
Donald Trump claimed Iran was developing weapons that could target “our very good friends and allies in Europe” and US troops overseas as he confirmed US involvement in strikes on Tehran.
Israel and the US launched attacks on the Iranian capital and other parts of the country early on Saturday morning.
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In a video posted on his Truth Social platform, Mr Trump said the Iranian regime had “attempted to rebuild their nuclear programme and to continue developing long-range missiles that can now threaten our very good friends and allies in Europe, our troops stationed overseas and could soon reach the American homeland”.
Sir Keir Starmer has convened the Government’s emergency Cobra committee as missile strikes continue to rock the Middle East. It is understood that the UK was not involved in the US-Israeli strikes.
A Government spokesperson said the UK did not want to see “further escalation into a wider regional conflict” and reiterated Britain’s support for a negotiated solution to Iran’s nuclear ambitions.
Iran has previously warned that it would retaliate against US personnel across the Middle East if attacked.
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At around 8.10am UK time, the Israeli military said it had “identified missiles launched from Iran” towards Israel “a short while ago”, adding: “Defensive systems are operating to intercept the threat.”
Following the strikes, the Foreign Office has warned against all travel to Israel while embassies in Bahrain, Qatar and the UAE have advised British nationals to shelter in place.
The spokesperson added: “Iran must never be allowed to develop a nuclear weapon and that is why we have continually supported efforts to reach a negotiated solution.
“Our immediate priority is the safety of UK nationals in the region and we will provide them with consular assistance, available 24/7.”
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Saturday’s attack follows mounting tension in the region, with the US deploying a vast fleet of warships and aircraft to try to pressure Iran into a deal over its nuclear programme.
Israeli defence minister Israel Katz said the attack had been carried out to “remove threats”, and the strikes are reported to have targeted a range of government and military sites.
One of the first is reported to have landed near the office of Iran’s supreme leader, the 86-year-old Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
The US president has repeatedly said that Iran can’t be allowed to develop a nuclear weapon. The United Nations nuclear watchdog has reported that, because Iran has denied access to key sites hit during last year’s conflict, it cannot verify whether Iran has suspended all uranium enrichment or determine the current size and composition of its enriched uranium stockpile. However, Iran’s foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, said after the latest round of talks that “good progress” was being made on a deal to limit Iran’s nuclear programme in return for sanctions relief.
Now, from everything that the US president is saying, the goalposts have shifted from a nuclear deal to an attempt to force regime change.
So bombs are falling on various cities in Iran, family members are hiding, tragedies will inevitably happen and the innocent will suffer. This is the endpoint of a longstanding campaign by the US and Israeli right-wing to reshape the Middle East and the wider Muslim world at the barrel of a gun. This is yet another intervention in a long history of disastrous foreign moves that have destabilised the country since Britain and the Soviet Union deposed Reza Shah Pahlavi in 1941 and the CIA and MI6 orchestrated a coup to depose Iran’s democratically elected prime minister, Mohammad Mossadegh, in 1953.
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The consequences of this attack are likely to be dire for the region and the world. Already, Iran has retaliated by targeting US bases in Kuwait, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain and the first reports of casualties are emerging. Iran is unlikely to hold back. It’s clear that the Islamic Republic is viewing this as an existential threat.
Tehran will call on its allies in the region, the Houthis in Yemen, the Popular Mobilisation Forces in Iraq and Hezbollah in Lebanon which – despite being weakened over two years of attacks by Israel aided and abetted by the United States – have the capacity to expand the conflict throughout the region.
Iran has already indicated in recent drills with the Russian Navy that it may be capable of closing off the Strait of Hormuz, through which around one-quarter of the world’s oil and one-third of its liquefied natural gas travel. As a consequence, oil prices will explode and the world economy will suffer.
Clash of civilisations
There is a cultural component to this war, too. Israel and the US are conducting this war during the month of Ramadan. Muslims all over the world are fasting. For billions of them, this is the month of spirituality, peace and solidarity. Images of Iranian Muslims being killed by Israeli and US bombs threaten to further a clash of civilisations narrative which pits the Judeo-Christian world against Islam.
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Iran has threatened retaliation across the Middle East. EPA/Abedin Taherkenareh
Muslims in European capitals, together with anti-war activists, will see this war as a clear aggression on the part of the US and Israel. Global public opinion will not be easily swayed into the direction Trump and Netanyahu would like.
And it must be asked, what will the leaders in Moscow and Beijing be thinking as they watch this illegal war and what might this mean for Ukraine and Taiwan? Vladimir Putin and Xi Jinping are close to the government of Iran and will condemn this war. At the same time, they must feel emboldened to pursue their own agendas with military might.
So Trump and Netanyahu’s attack on Iran has the potential to plunge the world into deep crisis. Expect more refugees, more economic turmoil, more trauma, death and destruction. The only hope now is that cooler heads among world leaders can prevail to contain this conflict and to limit the actions of Trump and Netanyahu.
Diplomacy has to be prioritised. Attempting to force regime change by launching an illegal war is foolhardy. If Iran is further destabilised, the entire Middle East and beyond will be plunged into utter turmoil. From there the outcome for the whole world is dangerously uncertain.
US and Iranian negotiators met in Geneva earlier this week in what mediators described as the most serious and constructive talks in years. Oman’s foreign minister, Badr Albusaidi, spoke publicly of “unprecedented openness,” signalling that both sides were exploring creative formulations rather than repeating entrenched positions. Discussions showed flexibility on nuclear limits and sanctions relief, and mediators indicated that a principles agreement could have been reached within days, with detailed verification mechanisms to follow within months.
These were not hollow gestures. Real diplomatic capital was being spent. Iranian officials floated proposals designed to meet US political realities – including potential access to energy sectors and economic cooperation. These were gestures calibrated to allow Donald Trump to present any deal as tougher and more advantageous than the 2015 agreement he withdrew the US from in May 2018. Tehran appeared to understand the optics Washington required, even if contentious issues such as ballistic missiles and regional proxy networks remained outside the immediate framework. Then, in the middle of these talks, the bridge was shattered.
Sensing how close the negotiations were — and how imminent military escalation had become — Oman’s foreign minister, Badr Albusaidi, made an emergency dash to Washington in a last-ditch effort to preserve the diplomatic track.
In an unusually public move for a mediator, he appeared on CBS to outline just how far the talks had progressed. He described a deal that would eliminate Iranian stockpiles of highly enriched uranium, down-blend existing material inside Iran, and allow full verification by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) — with the possibility of US inspectors participating alongside them. Iran, he suggested, would enrich only for civilian purposes. A principles agreement, he indicated, could be signed within days. It was a remarkable disclosure — effectively revealing the contours of a near-breakthrough in an attempt to prevent imminent war.
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But rather than allowing diplomacy to conclude, the US and Israel have launched coordinated strikes across Iran. Explosions were reported in Tehran and other cities. Trump announced “major combat operations,”, framing them as necessary to eliminate nuclear and missile threats while urging Iranians to seize the moment and overthrow their leadership. Iran responded with missile and drone attacks targeting US bases and allied states across the region.
What is most striking is not merely that diplomacy failed, but that it failed amid visible progress. Mediators were openly discussing a viable framework; both sides had demonstrated flexibility – a pathway to constrain nuclear escalation appeared tangible. Choosing military escalation at that moment undermines the premise that negotiation is a genuine alternative to war. It signals that even active diplomacy offers no guarantee of restraint. Peace was not naïve. It was plausible.
Iran’s approach in Geneva was strategic, not submissive. Proposals involving economic incentives – including energy cooperation – were not unilateral concessions but calculated compromises designed to structure a politically survivable agreement in Washington. The core objective was clear: constrain Iran’s nuclear programme through enforceable limits and intrusive verification, thereby addressing the very proliferation risks that sanctions and threats of force were meant to prevent.
Talks had moved beyond rhetorical posturing toward concrete proposals. For the first time in years, there was credible movement toward stabilising the nuclear issue. By attacking during that negotiation window, Washington and its allies have not only derailed a diplomatic opening but have cast doubt on the durability of American commitments to negotiated solutions. The message to Tehran – and to other adversaries weighing diplomacy – is stark: even when talks appear to work, they can be overtaken by force.
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Iran is not Iraq or Libya
Advocates of escalation often invoke Iraq in 2003 or Libya in 2011 as precedents for rapid regime collapse under pressure. Those analogies are misleading. Iraq and Libya were highly personalised systems, overly dependent on narrow patronage networks and individual rulers. Remove the centre, and the structure imploded.
Iran is structurally different. It is not a dynastic dictatorship but an ideologically entrenched state with layered institutions, doctrinal legitimacy and a deeply embedded security apparatus, including the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. Its authority is intertwined with religious, political and strategic narratives cultivated over decades. It has endured sanctions, regional isolation and sustained external pressure without fracturing.
Even a previous US-Israeli campaign in 2025 that lasted 12 days failed to eliminate Tehran’s retaliatory capacity. Far from collapsing, the state absorbed pressure and responded. Hitting such a system with maximum force does not guarantee implosion; it may instead consolidate internal cohesion and reinforce narratives of external aggression that the leadership has long leveraged.
Rhetoric surrounding the strikes has already shifted from tactical objectives to the language of regime change. US and Israeli leaders framed military action not solely as neutralising missile or nuclear capabilities, but as an opportunity for Iranians to overthrow their government. That calculus – regime change by force – is historically fraught with risk.
An incoming missile crashes into the sea off the port of Haifa in Israel as Iran retaliates. AP Photo/Leo Correa
The Iraq invasion should be a cautionary tale. The US spent more than a decade cultivating multiple Iraqi opposition groups – yet dismantling the centralised state apparatus still produced chaos, insurgency and fragmentation. The vacuum gave rise to extremist organisations such as IS, drawing the US into years of renewed conflict.
Approaching Iran with similar assumptions ignores both its institutional resilience and the complexity of regional geopolitics. Sectarian divisions, entrenched alliances and proxy networks mean that destabilisation in Tehran would not remain contained. It could rapidly spill across borders and harden into prolonged confrontation.
A region wired for escalation
Iran has invested heavily in asymmetric capabilities precisely to deter and complicate external intervention. Its missile, drone and naval systems are embedded along the Strait of Hormuz — a chokepoint for global energy — and linked into a network of regional allies and militias.
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In the current escalation, Tehran has already launched retaliatory missile and drone strikes against US military bases and allied territories in the Gulf, hitting locations in Iraq, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates (including Abu Dhabi), Kuwait and Qatar in direct response to US and Israeli strikes on Iran’s cities, including Tehran, Qom and Isfahan. Explosions have been reported in Bahrain and the UAE, with at least one confirmed fatality in Abu Dhabi, and several bases housing US personnel have been struck or targeted, underscoring how the conflict has already spread beyond Iran’s borders
A full-scale regional war is now more likely than it was a week ago. Miscalculation could draw multiple states into conflict, inflame sectarian fault lines and disrupt global energy markets. What might have remained a contained nuclear dispute now risks expanding into a wider geopolitical confrontation.
What about Trump’s promise of no more forever wars?
Trump built his political brand opposing “endless wars” and criticising the Iraq invasion. “America First” promised strategic restraint, hard bargaining and an aversion to open-ended intervention. Escalating militarily at the very moment diplomacy was advancing sits uneasily with that doctrine and revives questions about the true objectives of US strategy in the Middle East.
Tehran and other Iranian cities have come under heavy bombardment from Israel and the US. AP Photo
If a workable nuclear framework was genuinely emerging, abandoning it in favour of escalation invites a deeper question: does sustained tension serve certain strategic preferences more comfortably than durable peace?
Trump’s Mar-a-Lago address announcing the strikes carried unmistakable echoes of George W. Bush before the 2003 invasion of Iraq. Military action was framed as reluctant yet necessary – a pre-emptive move to eliminate gathering threats and secure peace through strength. The rhetoric of patience exhausted and danger confronted before it fully materialises closely mirrors the language Bush used to justify the march into Baghdad.
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The parallel extends beyond tone. Bush cast the Iraq war as liberation as well as disarmament, promising Iraqis freedom from dictatorship. Trump similarly urged Iranians to reclaim their country, implicitly linking force to regime change. In Iraq, that fusion of shock and salvation produced not swift democratic renewal but prolonged instability. The assumption that military force can reorder political systems from the outside has already been tested – and its costs remain visible.
The central challenge now facing the US is not simply Iran’s military capability. It is credibility. Abandoning negotiations mid-course signals that diplomacy can be overridden by force even when progress is visible. That perception will resonate far beyond Tehran.
Peace was never guaranteed. It was limited and imperfect, focused primarily on nuclear constraints rather than human rights or regional proxy networks. But it was plausible – and closer than many assumed. Breaking the bridge while building it does more than halt a single agreement – it risks convincing both sides that negotiation itself is futile.
In that world, trust erodes, deterrence hardens and aggression – not agreement – becomes the default language of international power. What we are witnessing is yet another clear indication that the rules-based order has been consigned to the history books.
Motorists will not be able to drive, park or wait along a stretch of Micklegate, between its junctions with Priory Street and Bar Lane from 12am on Monday (March 9) until 11.59pm on Monday (March 23).
It comes after City of York Council announced that the street would be closed for sewer works to be carried out safely.
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The road will be closed for motorists from Monday (March 9) (Image: Newsquest)
A council spokesperson said: “It is envisaged that access will be maintained for cyclists and pedestrians throughout the works period.
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“An alternative route for diverted vehicles will be signed during the works period via Nunnery Lane, Bishopgate Street, Skeldergate Bridge, Tower Street, Clifford Street, Nessgate, Low Ousegate, Bridge Street.”
The stretch of road may be re-opened at an earlier date if sewer works are completed before the scheduled finishing time.
Traffic signs and barriers will be in place to re-direct motorists, and residents will maintain access to their homes.
Emergency services will be still able to proceed down Micklegate.
Bridgerton series 4 has released its four remaining episodes on Netflix, and one major development has puzzled fans.
Penelope Bridgerton (née Featherington), who is played by Nicola Coughlan, had been the individual behind the gossip column persona.
However, in series 4, she decided to put down her pen, but a new anonymous person has seemingly decided to take up the mantle.
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In the finale, Penelope and her husband, Colin Bridgerton (Luke Newton), are left shocked as a new column is distributed across Mayfair.
Showrunner Jess Brownell shared she was excited about this new story thread as it wasn’t a part of the Bridgerton books the series is adapted from.
“Penelope was Julia Quinn’s Whistledown, so we knew we couldn’t really play with that reveal for too long because people could just Google it,” she said to Tudum.
“But now, we get to play with audience expectations.”
Who is the new Lady Whistledown?
Fans have brought up a few ideas on the identity of the new Lady Whistledown, with some thinking it will be Hyacinth.
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In a post on the r/Bridgerton Reddit page, a user shared: “I wanna know who everybody thinks is the new Lady Whistledown is now that Penelope is retired because I personally think it’s Hyacinth, but who knows.”
Some agreed as one wrote: “She mentioned wanting to find herself before looking for a husband, and now has the idea to sneak into balls.”
Another concurred, adding: “I think it’s Hyacinth too – that or maybe Varley is airing out everyone’s dirty laundry after hearing so much.”
Not everyone was on the same page, as one shared: “Hyacinth seems unlikely to me: she’s too young and too spooked by John Kilmartin’s death.”
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Some viewers guessed it might be Alfie, due to the accent change in Lady Whistledown’s voiceover towards the end.
One person theorised: “It’s Alfie, the lady’s accent change to his toward the end. He is an avid reader.”
In reply, another said: “The change in voice at the end was bizarre and startling”.
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Meanwhile, one viewer shared: “Alfie might also be a lovely choice.
“A queer(ish) character, a man, a servant: it might continue the theme about inclusion and diversity, right?”
Other characters that were brought up as possible options included Cressida, Varley, Mrs. Mondrich or an entirely new character.
Who do you think the new Lady Whistledown is? Let us know in the comments.
Delivered by York BID in partnership with Indie York, the scheme invites shoppers to spend £50 in 50 days across more than 100 of the city’s retailers.
Locals can log their visits through a Shop York Passport to be in with the chance of winning a wide range of prizes from York businesses.
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With just three weeks still to go, participating businesses are already welcoming a boost in footfall during a traditionally quieter trading period – with shoppers flocking to discover new and previously overlooked spots across the city.
Businesses are welcoming increased footfall during a traditionally quieter February (Image: Supplied)
Speaking about this, Avorium director, Tom Calvert, said: “Our city is a shopping hotspot for residents and visitors, and Shop York is a brilliant initiative to encourage spending at a time when the high street is typically quieter.
“We’re already experiencing the benefits of the promotion and are excited to push York’s independent shopping scene to new heights with Shop York.”
Bettys in York also features in the scheme (Image: Supplied)
Jenny O’Hara, from York Gin, added that the scheme offered something “genuinely exciting” for customers, with the chance to win some “amazing prizes”.
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She added: “It helps keep more spending within the city, and it’s so easy to use in practice – minimum effort, no fuss and a great way to drive February footfall.
“As a business, it’s a win-win.”
The Shop York Passport also unlocks special offers, treats and promotions available only to participants.
More information is available at the Visit York Information Centre in Parliament Street, participating businesses in the city centre and at www.shop-york.co.uk.
What began as childhood anxiety and graphic fears about death soon escalated into relentless, unwanted thoughts that she says ‘changed my life forever’
A young woman says she spent four years believing she was a paedophile before making a discovery that transformed her future.
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Molly Lambert, 22, developed intrusive sexual and violent thoughts as a teenager. It left her convinced she was a danger to others.
What began as childhood anxiety and graphic fears about death soon escalated into relentless, unwanted thoughts.
At 15, while revising for exams, Molly, from Manchester, became consumed by the belief that a single intrusive thought meant she was a ‘monster’.
For six months, she lived in constant fight‑or‑flight mode – barely eating, not sleeping and terrified of being alone. But after seeing a video of a woman talking about paedophile OCD (P-OCD) – a type of OCD in which an individual has unwanted sexual thoughts or images about children – on TikTok, Molly was able to get diagnosed in July 2025.
P-OCD is not paedophilia, and Molly is now speaking out to help others who may be silently suffering with intrusive thoughts. The digital PR worker and mental health advocate, living in Deansgate, said: “I genuinely thought I was a paedophile.
“No matter what you’re worrying about, it’s the same brain process each time, but when it’s that deep, and such a horrid thought, the shame is unbearable.”
Looking back, Molly believes the signs she was actually suffering from a type of obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) were there from childhood. She said: “I always had OCD traits. I had graphic images about death, I was scared of everything.
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“I’d obsess over things like Madeleine McCann and worry I would get kidnapped. If there was a Brownie trip coming up, I’d think about every single thing that could go wrong until my mum had to pick me up.”
But the turning point came when she was 15, during a family trip through an airport. “I saw a little girl wearing a crop top and short skirt and thought, ‘That’s weird for a child to wear that,’” Molly said.
“And then I panicked – ‘why would I even notice that? Why would I think about that? She’s a child’.”
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Though the thought faded at first, it returned months later while she was revising for exams. She said: “I was 15 and I remember thinking, ‘Oh my gosh, I’m a paedophile – I thought, I’m never going to forget this thought. My life is over’.”
From that moment, Molly says she was trapped in her own mind. “It was fight or flight constantly. Every thought was dark, I wasn’t eating properly, I wasn’t sleeping, I was so scared of being alone and going to bed,” Molly said.
“I was lying to my parents saying I was stressed about exams, but I just couldn’t put it into words.”
The intrusive thoughts expanded beyond one fear, and Molly began to question her past. She said: “I was thinking – ‘what if I’ve hurt someone? What if I’ve raped someone? What if I fancy my friends?’
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“I even have a phobia of dogs and I’d think – ‘what if I fancy my dog?’. I knew I didn’t feel anything, but what if I was unsafe to everyone?
“The shame was overwhelming, I felt like a monster. I couldn’t even tell anyone what I was going through.”
Six months after the first thought, Molly started her first job at a café in a swimming pool. She said: “I remember thinking, there are kids here and I honestly thought to myself that I would have to kill myself on my way home.
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“That’s how convinced I was that I was dangerous.”
Despite loving children and describing herself as a “kid person,” she began changing her life choices out of fear. Molly said: “I told my parents I wanted to work in retail instead, I was changing my life because I thought I was unsafe.”
For four years, Molly suffered in silence, even studying psychology at university without realising she had OCD. She said: “I thought OCD was cleaning and tidying, that wasn’t me at all. The more controlling forms of OCD like mine are the ones we don’t talk about.”
But after coming across a TikTok video in 2021 she was able to get diagnosed. Molly said: “It was a girl saying people think OCD is about cleaning, but she thought she fancied her niece, and I realised that there were people like me – and that I think I knew the issue.
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“The weight that lifted off my shoulders was crazy. I thought only freaks had this.”
She began researching intrusive thoughts and confided in a friend at university, who encouraged her to seek therapy. Eventually, after breaking down to her parents, she started professional treatment, and was officially diagnosed in July 2025.
She said: “I was hysterically crying. I couldn’t even talk about the six months I thought I was going to kill myself.
“My therapist said it is an awful thing to go to but that it is way more common than you would ever expect.
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“Getting all of that outside of me was the biggest part of my journey. It felt like I was in a war with myself, but now I knew what I was fighting.”
While Molly still experiences intrusive thoughts daily, her reaction to them has changed. “My brain can still say, ‘You’re a paedophile,’ but now I can tell myself that’s not true,” she said.
“OCD won’t let you move on from intrusive thoughts. Everyone has them, but OCD makes them stick.”
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Therapy helped her move from severe to mild on the diagnostic scale, though she admits recovery is ongoing. “I still have days where I feel consumed but now I can recognise it for what it is; an overly obsessive part of my brain,” she said.
Molly now uses her social media platforms to raise awareness and says she receives both support and hate. She said: “I get a lot of hate, but this conversation is so important for the people suffering in silence.”
She believes the stigma around certain intrusive thoughts makes sufferers feel uniquely evil when in reality, OCD often attacks a person’s core values. Molly said: “The scariest part is how many people might not be here anymore because of this. I remember thinking I’d be 50 and never escape these thoughts, or I would be dead.
“Always talk to someone, once you understand what it is, you realise it’s not you. It’s OCD.”
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To learn more about Molly’s journey, you can follow her TikTok – @mollambert
Only thirty-six hours ago, Trump’s envoys were meeting with a high-level Iranian delegation in Geneva to discuss a diplomatic solution.
The initial noises were positive. Conversations that I had with figures involved in those negotiations were optimistic that the sides were drawing close to a provisional agreement, although some obvious and significant gaps remained.
Notably, one issue that wasn’t discussed was Iran’s ballistic missile programme – which alarmed the Israelis because of the threat those missiles pose to them.
On Friday morning, Oman’s foreign minister Badr Albusaidi, who has mediated several rounds of talks, including those in Geneva, flew to Washington at short notice to brief US vice president JD Vance in person.
Albusaidi then gave two extremely rare interviews on US television to explain what was on the table. It was a desperate and honest attempt to keep the sides talking.
But there were already signs that things were unravelling.
Sky’s Middle East correspondent witnesses missile interceptions above the skies of Jerusalem
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Mike Huckabee, the US ambassador to Israel, sent an email to embassy staff on Friday morning warning them that if they wanted to leave the country they “must do so TODAY”.
It had an air of unplanned urgency, rather than a controlled diplomatic evacuation.
Perhaps they had just learnt something was imminent. Maybe Netanyahu, who has always been deeply sceptical of negotiations, had already decided to attack.
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British diplomats were relocated from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, as they were during the 12-Day War last June. Western embassies and military outposts around the region were emptied of non-essential staff.
Then late on Friday evening I started to hear word of a possible attack overnight. From my own experience of multiple Middle East wars, it’s very hard to pick out the truth from a wall of noise, but the signs were clearly bleak.
The cork is now out of the bottle.
Image: People watch as smoke rises after an explosion in Tehran. Pic: AP
President Trump, with the help of Israel, is going for regime change. It’s all or nothing.
Iran’s ability to respond might be limited, following the attack on its ballistic missile sites last summer, but already strikes have been reported across the Middle East, not just Israel.
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The Iranian regime won’t roll over; they will die fighting and will drag the region into a wider conflict if needs be.
Paris Saint-Germain boss Luis Enrique has been linked with the Manchester United manager job
Luis Enrique has been tipped for a potential return to Barcelona despite speculation connecting him with the managerial position at Manchester United. The Reds have already been linked with numerous potential candidates who might assume the role at Old Trafford permanently.
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Michael Carrick was appointed as United’s interim head coach until the end of the season last month, and has enjoyed a remarkable stint in charge thus far, remaining undefeated whilst securing victory in five of his six fixtures in charge.
Enrique, currently managing Paris Saint-Germain, has been mentioned as a possible candidate to take the manager’s job at United in the summer, alongside various other names being discussed as potential alternatives.
However, a report from Catalunya Radio has suggested that Barcelona might view Enrique as a contender to become their next manager. This comes despite Hansi Flick steering the club to the La Liga title last season, whilst they currently sit one point clear of fierce rivals Real Madrid this campaign.
Barcelona’s presidential election is scheduled for next month. It has been reported that Enrique’s name features on the shortlist of several presidential hopefuls for the managerial position going forward, and could be proposed for the role depending on which candidate secures victory, reports the Mirror.
Current Barcelona president Joan Laporta is understood to favour keeping Flick as manager, though that stance could change should a new president be elected. This could prove a significant setback for United, should the speculation prove accurate that Enrique is being considered for the permanent managerial position at Old Trafford.
Carrick himself could be a contender for the full-time role, provided he maintains his impressive run of results through to the end of the campaign and secures Champions League qualification.
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The prospect of United turning to Enrique has already sparked debate, with former Chelsea coach Jody Morris arguing that retaining Carrick would be the wiser option.
“Carrick has been unbelievable,” Morris said on the latest episode of In The Mixer earlier this week. “I was moaning about Ruben Amorim. I just couldn’t have what he was doing. How can you not play Kobbie Mainoo?
“I have a lot of time for Michael Carrick. He was on my Pro Licence course and I’ve been on a few League Managers’ Association things with him.
“He’s an astute student of the game. Straight away, he comes in and Kobbie Mainoo’s in there and he’s been brilliant. It would be criminal not to give him the job if he carries on.
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“I’m always up for young English coaches getting the job. And I think he’s done an outstanding job so far. The fans are loving him as well. There’s a real feel-good factor around Man United which hasn’t been there for a long time.”
Morris added: “I’d still go with Carrick, because I honestly don’t think Luis Enrique would come to Man United.”
Former Manchester City defender Joleon Lescott echoed Morris’s view. He said: “I don’t know if Enrique goes there now because I don’t think he sees them as genuine contenders.
“I think Carrick should get the job because I don’t know if Enrique helps them to become contenders. I think Carrick definitely does that. I think he has a stronger connection to the club, the fans, everything to help them get to that stage.”
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The pub used to be a hive of activity but has been empty for many years.
Movement spotted at derelict Zebra pub in Cambridge
Cambridge is a city known for its high density of pubs. Whether you are looking for somewhere to soak up the sun next to the River Cam in summer or want a historic pub with a roaring fire in winter, the city has plenty of options for drinking spots.
However, over the years, the city has lost a lot of its popular pubs that many residents might remember. Found on the busy Maids Causeway, the Zebra is one of the lost pubs in the city that has been boarded up for a number of years.
The old Zebra pub building is right next to the Grafton Centre, which is currently being redeveloped into new labs and offices. References to the pub date back to 1861, and it has gone through a range of different landlords.
The pub was known for its “excellent pizzas” and was described as being “always busy and well regarded” by people in the area. The Zebra was briefly closed to allow for it to be refurbished and opened under new management in September 2010.
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The reopening didn’t last long, as the pub closed for good in 2011. It briefly opened as a toy shop with people living in the accommodation upstairs. According to CAMRA, “a string of licensee changes left it somewhat in limbo”.
After the toy shop closed, the building was boarded up and a planning application was approved in 2014 to turn the building into student accommodation for Anglia Ruskin University. A second application was submitted in 2017 to completely demolish the Zebra pub.
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The plan was to build six new two-bedroom apartments. Since the second application was proposed, little to no work has been done to the Zebra pub over the last few years. The building has now been covered by scaffolding and plastic sheets.
If you are walking past the pub any time soon, you might notice some builders going in and out of the area. It is still not known what will happen to the building but it does seem like there have been some developments. Cambridge City Council was approached for more information about the planning process regarding the Zebra.
PSG could have a week off in between their two games against Chelsea (Picture: Getty)
Paris Saint-Germain have asked for their Ligue 1 match before their Champions League clash with Chelsea to be moved, a development that would hand the French side a huge advantage.
The defending European champions progressed into the knockout phase of the Champions League this week after narrowly seeing off Monaco in a play-off.
PSG will host the first leg of the tie at Parc des Princes on Wednesday 11 March with the second leg to follow six days later on Tuesday 17 March.
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The French champions are scheduled to face Nantes on the weekend between those two legs.
PSG have now made a special request for that game to be moved to a later date to ensure Luis Enrique’s side are in the best possible condition for the pivotal second leg at Stamford Bridge.
A statement from the LFP confirmed PSG’s request, also confirming Nantes have already agreed to the fixture being postponed.
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Tempers flared when the two sides met in the summer (Picture: Getty)
‘In order to best prepare for its two Champions League matches against Chelsea, Paris Saint-Germain has approached the LFP Board of Directors, with the agreement of FC Nantes, to request that the match be played the week of April 20, 2026,’ the statement said.
‘The decision of the LFP Board of Directors will be announced as soon as possible.’
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If approved by the league, PSG will have a huge advantage over Chelsea (Picture: Getty)
Nantes and PSG found themselves in an identical position last season with their league match falling between the Champions League quarter-final clash between the French club and Aston Villa.
PSG led 3-1 for the first leg and had a full six days off to recover for the second led at Villa Park where they won 3-2.
Chelsea are unlikely to be given any similar favours from the Premier League.
In between their two games against PSG, the Blues will host Newcastle United at Stamford Bridge on Saturday 14 March in what is expected to be a pivotal game for Liam Rosenior’s side in the race for a top five finish.