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Politics

Former Sharon Graham election organiser tells Unite members: “Vote Dubbins”

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Unite

Unite, Graham

Unite official Matt Smith played an extensive role in Sharon Graham’s 2021 election campaign to become the union’s general secretary. But in the current general secretary election he is calling on members to back her rival Simon Dubbins for the job.

Smith’s commitment to a Graham win was so great that he said “we will all work so hard to get Graham elected as Unite’s next general secretary”:

Smith was then promoted in 2022 to Unite’s head of Member Relations:

Changed tune

But now, after five years of Graham running Unite, Smith has changed his mind completely. Now he has published a lengthy Facebook post telling members to vote for Graham’s challenger Simon Dubbins. The reason is simple: a second Graham term will be an “utter disaster”:

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Smith is straightforward in his reasoning. Having experienced five years of Graham’s rule, he believes she has increased corruption instead of fighting it. Jobs for ill-qualified allies, secrecy over Unite’s finances, failure to address blacklisting of Unite activists, even creating a fake job to silence a potential rival. And Graham’s insecurity and paranoia working against members’ interests:

I believe that another five years of Sharon as Gen Sec would be an utter disaster for our union.

She has failed to deliver on her manifesto promises, wasting five years that should have been used to turn this union around. Now we’re told she needs another five years to finish the job. Sharon faced no effective opposition preventing her from delivering her manifesto, yet she still failed.

There always seems to be an excuse as to why Sharon can’t publish our accounts, conclude an investigation into blacklisting or even disclose her own salary. She hasn’t cleaned up any reported corruption quite the opposite.

In my view, appointing people to long term acting roles, promoting some of the least capable people industrially in our movement without any member led process, creating a “ghost organiser” job, where one individual was reportedly paid for two years without actually working for Unite, while also receiving a second salary, is just as unacceptable as allowing the union to be ripped off over a hotel.

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As a leader, in my opinion, she has shown all the signs of being insecure, paranoid, and suffering from imposter syndrome from the very start of her term. Now Unite needs a serious adult as GS, backed by a principled industrial team, to get this union back on track and deliver the real change our members were promised.

Unite and Graham’s anti-union record

Matt Smith has become the latest in a string of former die-hard supporters to call on members to vote Graham out. But he could have gone far further in his criticisms.

Despite running Unite, Graham has repeatedly been accused of using appalling, anti-union tactics against workers employed by Unite, leading to several strikes. In many cases, these tactics have been seen as Unite’s attempts to protect her husband, Jack Clarke. Clarke is the target of much of the industrial unrest among Unite staff.

Soon after her accession in 2021, Graham created a new Bargaining and Disputes Support Unit (BDSU). Outside of the union’s usual procedures, Clarke was appointed to run it. The appointment was made despite Clarke being on a final warning for bullying and misogyny. As striking workers picketed against Clarke, Graham’s faction staged counter-demonstrations against them and attacked their reps.

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Most recently, Graham’s plan to shut down the union’s popular ‘Community’ section has been exposed. And she has been accused of letting odious Labour right-winger Wes Streeting and his team write an attack in her name on potential next chancellor Ed Miliband, to boost Streeting’s prospects under Andy Burnham.

Unite lawyer’s explosive admission

Explosively, Unite’s lawyers admitted to Skwawkbox that the union had destroyed evidence that workers had gathered against him. This did not stop further complaints and strike action from workers in his new fiefdom, with almost all the women working under him quitting and 90% of Unite’s HQ staff backing strike action.

The challenger and the hide-and-seek

Dubbins, by contrast, has spoken out consistently against Israel’s genocide and against Unite’s disengagement from wider politics to suit Graham’s narrow ‘workplace only’ agenda. He was suspended as Unite’s international director after refusing to cancel a pro-Palestine fringe event at a Labour conference.

Graham hid from union branches and declined to debate Dubbins at any hustings event during the nominations phase, angering many, including allies, by sending weak proxies instead. Last week, Dubbins publicly challenged Graham to stop hiding and face him in an open debate in front of members.

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Any of these issues could and should be decisive in a union election with a history of low turn-outs. Based on recent history, Graham’s paid organiser team will be working hard to secure support for her – but members need to hear the voices of those who used to be prominent in campaigning for her and now see her as an ongoing disaster.

Featured image via the Canary

By Skwawkbox

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Matt Damon Shares Ben Affleck’s Reaction To The Odyssey

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Matt Damon as Odysseus in Christopher Nolan’s The Odyssey

Matt Damon has claimed that Ben Affleck’s reaction to his performance in The Odyssey came in the form of a phone call he’d been waiting decades for.

The two actors are close friends as well as frequent collaborators, having co-written the Oscar-winning Good Will Hunting, as well as sharing the screen in the likes of Dogma, Air and The Rip.

During a new interview with MTV UK to promote The Odyssey, Matt opened up about his friendship with Ben, recalling how they’d been through “a whole hell of a lot together”.

“He’s one of the great loves of my life, I will say about Ben,” he enthused.

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Matt then shared that after Ben watched The Odyssey for the first time, he “got a phone call from him that I think I’ve been waiting 45 years to get”.

“He didn’t stop talking for an hour,” the Bourne Identity star said. “It was like he’d seen the movie 20 times. He got absolutely everything, every detail, he somehow soaked it all in in one viewing.”

But Ben isn’t the only tough critic in Matt’s life who was won over by The Odyssey.

Matt Damon as Odysseus in Christopher Nolan’s The Odyssey
Matt Damon as Odysseus in Christopher Nolan’s The Odyssey

Matt revealed how his 20-year-old daughter Isabella (who refers to his film The Great Wall as just The Wall, claiming there’s “nothing great about that movie”) had called him after watching the Christopher Nolan epic just to tell him how “proud” she was of her dad.

Watch the full interview below:

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He has also spoken candidly about the gruelling shoot, which took the cast and crew to a series of locations around the globe over a three-month period of filming.

“The joke on the crew was we didn’t have a single easy location,” Matt recalled to GQ earlier this year.

“Every time we’d go somewhere, we’d be like, ‘Well, Iceland will be easier’. And then it’s raining sideways and it’s fucking freezing. Iceland was like, ‘Yeah, easy? Hey, hold my beer.’ ”

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The Odyssey is in cinemas now.

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Women who alleged abuse from ICC prosecutor sidelined in fierce debate

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ICC

ICC

For the last two years, the international criminal court (ICC) has been struggling to navigate serious allegations levelled at its chief prosecutor, Karim Khan. Two women, who previously worked with Khan in varying capacities, came forward in 2024 with claims of sexual abuse, harassment, and coercion. He denies all allegations.

Khan was suspended whilst the ICC undertook two investigations. Both have since concluded, albeit with differing outcomes. The first found that the women’s claims had merit; the second found that the evidence was insufficient. Now, the two women have spoken publicly about their experiences, as well as addressing counter-claims that they are “state agents” looking only to discredit Khan.

It is undoubtedly a complex situation. But as various forms of power joust to maintain their crumbling legitimacy, it is the most vulnerable who continuously become fodder for inane debates where accountability is sacrificed to maintain a semblance of order. What we are confronted by, at every turn, is layer upon layer of hypocrisy.

ICC prosecutor Khan’s warrants

On the whole, reporting on the women’s allegations has been depressingly muddled. Given that the women came forward shortly after Khan applied for arrest warrants against Benjamin Netanyahu and Yoav Gallant for war crimes and crimes against humanity, many have questioned the timing of the investigations against him.

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It is clear that the situation has broader implications. However, amidst all of the uncertainty one uncomfortable possibility is persistently ignored: numerous things can be true at once. The question, however, is how do we navigate these truths in order to hold the powerful to account, irrespective of who they might be trying to hold to account elsewhere?

Consider the fact that Khan did not only issue arrest warrants for Israel’s prime minister and defence minister. In fact, these warrants were secondary to those issued for three Hamas leaders – Yahya Sinwar, Mohammed Diab Ibrahim Al-Masri, and Ismail Haniyeh. If this fact has since been elided, it is because Israel murdered all three in the course of its genocidal assault on the Gaza Strip. What should have been a matter for the ICC was instead dealt with by Israeli vigilantism.

ICC handling under question

Whilst many on the left have entertained the possibility that the allegations are opportunistic, it is also entirely plausible that they followed Khan’s announcement because there was another clear hypocrisy on display. What sort of faith should anyone have an institution tasked with holding states to account for allegations of criminality if it cannot keep its own house in order?

The Trump administration only added to the chaos by announcing it would ‘disable’ the ICC and place international sanctions on Khan. In so doing, they did not mention the allegations against him, although some speculated their timing was opportunistic as well. Speaking to Al Jazeera, Professor William Schabas, of Middlesex University London, said:

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Maybe they’re just feeling they’ll kick it some more, and that’ll do a death blow to it.

Trump, of course, is in no position to condemn another man for sexual abuse. Just this week, E. Jean Carroll collected over $5.6 million in damages following a civil case she brought against Trump for sexual abuse. But Trump has never let hypocrisy stop him before.

There are countless other examples of hypocrisy that we could point to. But to map out every instance of hypocrisy clouding international politics today always results in the same outcome: a regrettable ‘whataboutery’ that sidelines victims of abuse as men jostle to maintain their powerful appearances. Or, indeed, as other men jostle to debate state power whilst trampling over the experiences of women.

Wider issues

The allegations against Khan thus highlight an even more uncomfortable truth. While the left rightly disavows the ‘Epstein class’ for its skirting of accountability, this only risks deflecting from a much broader and more complex issue: abuse of power and position is not a problem exclusive to the political right. Instead, it is a problem of patriarchy overall. The title of a 1953 novel by Flannery O’Connor proves perennial: a good man is hard to find.

The degeneration of sexual abuse allegations into supposedly unprovable ‘he said, she said’ gossip makes a mockery of all processes of accountability we might hope to rely on. Such a degeneration also represents the sharpest end of a problem that affects contemporary politics as a whole. These allegations are notoriously difficult to prove in a court of law, but what isn’t difficult to prove right now?

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Israel has undoubtedly perpetrated a genocide. And, multiple forms of state power – governments, monitoring bodies, the media – have all colluded to deny that genocide. And, Khan has been central in whatever piecemeal attempts exist to hold Israel to account for its atrocities.

But, his attempted prosecution of genocidal actors does not preclude him from committing abuse. We must be able to hold multiple potentially uncomfortable scenarios at once. To fail to do so is to fail to hold power to account.

Erosion of trust widespread

There are grey areas here; there is complexity. But that complexity needn’t be seen as a smokescreen. With regards to allegations of sexual abuse specifically, there is an understanding that even the appearance of misconduct warrants investigation and accountability.

That someone’s actions might even be mistaken for misconduct is enough on its own to suggest that the person or persons concerned have acted improperly. This baseline is essential because it is one way in which we might avoid an exploitation of any ‘plausible deniability’ to maintain a status quo that is more generically unjust. Whether any misconduct is proven or not, it is clear that practices must change so that not even the appearance of misconduct is tolerated.

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In the course of our day-to-day lives, we will recognise that this is now the standard position of HR departments in various sectors. But more must be done to ensure that similar processes can take place on a much grander scale. In our age of rampant misinformation, trust is at an all-time low – trust in politics, in justice, and in our institutions. Whether the women’s allegations are eventually proven or not becomes irrelevant. Processes of accountability have already failed. They are failing everywhere.

Featured image via the Canary

By Em Colquhoun

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Finger Clubbing: The Lung Cancer Sign On Your Hands

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Digital Clubbing

Though they’re usually nothing to worry about, small details – like changes to your fingernails and little yellow bumps around your eyes – can sometimes point to more serious conditions.

And according to Dr Jiri Kubes, a radiation oncologist at the Proton Therapy Centre, a lesser-known symptom of lung cancer can sometimes show up on your hands rather than your chest.

“Finger clubbing” can be linked to “many serious, long-term conditions,” the NHS agreed – lung cancer among them.

In fact, the symptom appears in 35% of people with non-small cell lung cancer and 4% of people with small cell lung cancer.

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What is finger clubbing?

It’s a condition in which a person’s fingertips become larger and more curved over time.

Digital Clubbing

Dmytro Bosnak via Getty Images

Digital Clubbing

Finger clubbing is also called “digital clubbing” or “Hippocratic nails”. And because it can happen really gradually, Dr Kubes said “it can be difficult to notice the difference early on.

“It typically progresses in stages, meaning knowing how to spot initial signs is crucial in potentially securing an early diagnosis.”

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One of the first early indicators is softening of the nail bed, accompanied by redness around the skin of the nail.

This can develop into a steeper curve and eventually means patients’ fingertips take on a clubbed, enlarged appearance.

In the early stages, you might also want to look out for the “Lovibond angle” – the small dent at the bottom of your nail that you can see from the side.

Per the Cleveland Clinic, “In the early stages of nail clubbing, your nail and nail bed look flat from the side”.

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normal Loviband's angle vs clubbed nail

Amy Glover / HuffPost UK / Getty

normal Loviband’s angle vs clubbed nail

The Schamroth window test, which is related, involves putting the nails of different hands together back-to-back to see if there’s a diamond-shaped space between your cuticles.

If there isn’t one, you might have finger clubbing.

When should I see a doctor about finger clubbing?

“Any unexplained changes to the fingers should be taken seriously and assessed by a medical professional as soon as possible,” said Dr Kubes.

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“While finger clubbing does not always mean cancer, it is still linked to other lung, heart or inflammatory conditions, meaning any unexplained changes should be checked by a doctor. They can examine you and any other symptoms you have, as well as send you for tests if deemed necessary.”

Non-finger-clubbing signs of lung cancer include:
  • a cough that doesn’t go away,
  • coughing up blood,
  • often being breathless,
  • unexplained tiredness,
  • unexplained weight loss,
  • pain when breathing or coughing.

If you’re experiencing any of these signs, regardless of whether or not you’ve got signs of finger clubbing, speak to your GP.

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Upgrade Your Travel Game With These 7 Best Check In Suitcases To Buy Now

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Upgrade Your Travel Game With These 7 Best Check In Suitcases To Buy Now

We hope you love the products we recommend! All of them were independently selected by our editors. Just so you know, HuffPost UK may collect a share of sales or other compensation from the links on this page if you decide to shop from them. Oh, and FYI — prices are accurate and items in stock as of time of publication.

We’ve all been there: you wait hours at the bag carousel, only to discover that your suitcase has been bashed around in transit.

Maybe a wheel has fallen off, the zips have broken, or (god forbid) your belongings have been damaged.

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If there’s one thing to not mess around with when you’re travelling, it’s a good checked bag.

Having one that glides seamlessly through the airport (and pavements of whatever city or town you’ve descended upon) and can withstand the rough and tumble of getting on and off the plane can really make the difference between a great start to your holiday, and a shit one.

Luckily, in 2026, we’re blessed with new technology that means we’re spoiled for choice with all the great suitcases that are out there.

Not only do we have hard shell suitcases that protect our most prized possessions, but most wheels are 360 spinners now, so you barely have to lift a finger to roll your luggage along.

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The only problem with that is it can be tricky to figure out which brands are actually worth your money – and they ask for a lot of it.

To help you find your next travel companion, we’ve found seven of the best check-in suitcases to shop right now.

7 stylish and practical check-in suitcases to shop now

Best colourful case

Sometimes a checked bag is a necessary evil. If you’re at that awkward in between where you’re just over the carry on limit, and don’t want to take a whopping great suitcase, this medium-sized bag from Away is a happy medium (uh, literally).

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With enough space for one to two weeks, it’s ideal for your summer holiday. Inside, you’ll find one zipped and one hanging pocket to keep your things snug, with the zipped compartment doubling as extra storage.

So you don’t have to worry about your things going missing, it has a TSA-approved lock, and the handle, zips, and wheels are all standard tested so they won’t irritate the shit out of you by breaking mid-vacay.

Dimensions: 66 x 47 x 28cm
Weight: 4.7kg
Capacity: 72L
Warranty: Lifetime.

Best location-tracked suitcase

If you’re anything like me, you’ll be less stressed about the danger of the plane crashing (I don’t claim this energy) than losing your suitcase. Honestly, worst nightmare.

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To quell your nerves, July has included a location tracker inside this suitcase, which can be synced up to Find My Friends on your iPhone.

Of course, it’s also pretty in pink, which means you’ll always be able to travel in style, and the inside is filled with plenty of zippers and compression straps so your clothes can arrive that way, too.

Dimensions: 66 x 47 W x 29cm
Weight: 3.8kg
Capacity: 80L
Warranty: Lifetime.

Best budget check-in suitcase

Plane tickets cost a small fortune; you shouldn’t have to pay even more to have some clothes on your back.

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This case from M&S comes in pretty cheap considering its 88L capacity, and it’s also accompanied by a 10 year warranty – which makes it real bang for its buck.

Dimensions: 75 x 49 x 29cm
Weight: 4.3kg
Capacity: 88L
Warranty: 10 years

Best value for money check-in suitcase

If you’re buying a checked suitcase for the first time, you want to know what you’re spending your money on is worth it.

This Bondi suitcase tows the line between being damn effective and great value for money.

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As well as coming with 360 spinner wheels, it has an expansion zip that leaves you with a 156 litre suitcase – woah.

If that’s not enough to automatically justify the £149, the zips are also self-repairing (okay, magic) and it also has a TSA lock to keep your belongings safe and sound.

Dimensions: 80 x 55 x 35cm + 5cm
Weight: 4.7kg
Capacity: 156L
Warranty: 10 years.

Best expandable suitcase

The joy of holiday is having new experiences: no one knows what awaits you. It could be a new dress; a new collection of trinkets. There’s really no saying.

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Whatever it is, you want to be prepared, which is why this expandable suitcase from Antler means you won’t be caught unawares.

The expansion zip provides an extra 3cm when unravelled, which leaves you with a total capacity of 128 litres, and like all Antler cases it’s filled with tons of zip pockets to keep your new keepsakes in, as well as a compression strap to keep it all in place.

Dimensions: 78 x 52 x 31.5 cm
Weight: 4.6kg
Capacity: 128L
Warranty: Lifetime.

Best for organisation

Honestly, I’m sick and tired of spending hours meticulously packing only to find all of my belongings have been tousled on the journey.

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To eliminate as much chance of that happening as is possible on a piece of metal hurtling through the air at hundreds of miles per hour, this case from HORIZN is organised into two compartments secured with mesh zips.

As well as using 360 spinner wheels, the lining is water-resistant, and you can also get it monogrammed for an extra £10, so you won’t have any awkward run ins with someone who has the same case as you at the airport. Unless they happen to have the same initials as you…

Dimensions: 64 x 46 x 24cm
Weight: 3.7kg
Capacity: 61L
Warranty: Lifetime.

Best trunk

You’ve never even heard of travelling ‘light’, have you? Well, good news: this is as big a case as you can get.

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While you’ll probs have to pay an extra fee to take this case with you, it’s all worth it, because it comes with a whopping 105 litre capacity so you won’t have to, err, leave anything behind.

It has enough space to pack for a whole three weeks, and it’s easy to do, too, because the 80/20 partition leaves a deep enough well to hold even your bulkiest of items – we’re thinking chunky platforms and all the guitar pedals you can muster for your world tour.

Dimensions: 73 x 49 x 37cm
Weight: 6.3kg
Capacity: 105L
Warranty: Lifetime.

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The Real Reasons Cats Lick One Another

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The Real Reasons Cats Lick One Another

We’ve written before at HuffPost UK about the heartwarming reason cats might lick their owners, as well as the pretty cute meaning behind a feline headbutt.

So perhaps it’s overdue for us to look at some of the furry friends’ less pure intentions.

According to a new study published in the journal Applied Animal Behaviour Science, it turns out that cats’ “allogrooming” – including licking one another – isn’t always as wholesome as it looks.

Instead, the research, led by Morgane Van Belle, a cat behavioural scientist at Ghent University in Belgium, found the action has “multiple social functions”.

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Allogrooming should therefore “not be used on its own to infer that the cats are socially bonded,” the study – which involved analysing 106 videos of feline pairs from 53 households – reads.

What does it mean when cats lick one another?

1) To show escalating tension

Sometimes, cats seem to lick each other as a kind of pre-conflict warning sign – like when one cat is annoyed by another pet stealing their favourite sunbathing spot.

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This type of licking has been described as “passive-aggressive”.

In this case, the recipient of the lick might flatten their ears to show they’re not exactly loving the interaction.

Allogrooming in this case might be a “subtle agonistic signal to covertly solve conflict,” the paper reads. This type of licking might come alongside head shaking and even striking and biting.

2) To de-escalate a possible fight

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Other times, the researchers said, licking can be “used as a form of appeasement to avoid escalation”.

Before a fight gets too serious, one cat might lick another as a way of re-establishing the peace.

“For me, [this] shows that they are quite elegant in the way they resolve conflict,” Van Belle told The New York Times.

“They could walk over and swat another cat in the face to get the blanket it is lying on. Instead, they lick it a little and fuss around. They have these very subtle ways of resolving conflict… that shows they are intelligent and flexible in their behavior, rather than simply being jerks.”

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3) To intimidate each other

Some cases involved one cat “leaning over the other one” while licking them, which might be an intimidation or even bullying tactic.

Whatever the reason, the cat being licked in these cases typically shows signs of displeasure.

4) To clean one another

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87% of the time, cats licked one another in the head and neck area.

That’s a hard spot for cats to reach by themselves, though it just so happens to be a very enjoyable place for most cats to be groomed, too.

5) To bond

Some licking is used for the adorable reason we assume it is: strengthening social bonds.

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This is likely to be true if the cats are also playing together and have synchronised body posture.

Seeking physical contact with another cat, including snuggling, was followed by allogrooming in 41% of cases, for instance.

Licking was also sometimes used to initiate play.

6) To help one another relax

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Lastly, licking may help the recipient relax.

Previous research showed that in various animals, “The behaviour has an immediate relaxing effect for the groomee, as it leads to a reduction in heart rate… and a release of beta-endorphins [natural pain and stress relievers].

“More research is needed to further explore and confirm the suggested functions for allogrooming in cats,” the paper ended.

“Ultimately, this knowledge can contribute to the recognition, resolution and prevention of social stress between cats in multi-cat households.”

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Liz Truss Predicts Andy Burnham Will Cause ‘Financial Crisis’

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Liz Truss Predicts Andy Burnham Will Cause 'Financial Crisis'

Liz Truss has predicted that Andy Burnham will lead Britain into a “financial crisis” in a moment which feels like pure satire.

The former Conservative prime minister famously planned to implement £45 billion of unfunded tax cuts which sent the pound into decline and the markets into turmoil.

The Bank of England even had to step in and buy £65 billion worth of government bonds to prevent disaster.

The chaos unleashed by her mini-Budget meant Tory MPs quickly pushed Truss out of office after just 49 days – making her the UK’s shortest-serving prime minister in history.

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However, speaking at CPAC GB – a right-wing conference which is a spin-off of its American counterpart – Truss has predicted that the incoming PM Burnham would send the UK into “financial crisis”.

According to the Mirror, she said: “The money’s going to run out. I think the problems with migration are going to get worse and the general decay and stagnation of Britain is going to continue.

“I think the question is how long the pro-progressive authorities can continue.

“My prediction is that there will be another prime minister before 2029.”

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Burnham was announced as the Labour leader on Friday and is set to become the next prime minister on Monday when Keir Starmer hands over the keys.

There is some trepidation about his plans for the economy amid fears he could push public spending hikes.

Truss’s words also come after the International Monetary Fund (IMF) warned Burnham this week that the UK is still struggling with the scars left behind by Truss’s mini-budget of 2022.

Four years on, and gilt markets are still nervous about the UK fiscal policy than previously, and according to the IMF, there has been a “regime change” on bond markets as a result.

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Truss also told the conference: “We’ve had seven prime ministers in ten years.”

She added: “That’s the equivalent of a crap football team changing its manager all the time but not changing what happens on the pitch.”

It seems to have escaped her attention that five of those seven prime ministers have been Conservative – and she was one of them.

Truss also tried to call for right-wing figures to join her “counter-revolution” rather than going for jobs outside of politics.

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“It’s time for successful people in Britain who actually care about the future of our country to step up. To stop being such cowards because at the moment they’re being cowards,” she said.

Truss lost her seat to the Labour Party at the 2024 general election.

According to the Mirror, barely a third of the 500-seat hall was occupied for her appearance at CPAC GB.

Burnham’s team has been approached for comment.

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Listen to Commons People, the podcast that makes politics easy. Every week, Kevin Schofield and Kate Nicholson unpack the week’s biggest stories to keep you informed. Join us for straightforward analysis of what’s going on at Westminster.

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Trump scared of midterm elections goes back to 2020 fraud, far-left extremism claims

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President Trump

President Trump

On Thursday, Donald Trump stood before the cameras in the White House and delivered a prime-time address claiming that the 2020 election had been stolen.

Wall Street Journal defined it as:

In his prime-time address, Trump alleged that the U.S. election system had been compromised, ramping up efforts to sow doubts about his 2020 election loss, raise skepticism about the midterms and pressure Congress into passing sweeping voter-ID legislation

CODEPINK’s co-founder Medea Benjamin said that Trump was trying to revive false claims of past stolen elections and Chinese interference to delegitimize the 2026 midterm elections.

Bloomberg pointed out the irony: prime-time presidential addresses are reserved for major national events or somber occasions. Instead, Trump used it for a grievance tour while the nation dealt with extreme heat, deadly flooding, and the ongoing fallout from the war on Iran. 

It said:

Televised, prime-time presidential addresses are typically reserved for major national events or somber occasions. Instead, Trump delivered a speech that appeared designed to redirect public attention at a time when Americans are questioning his decision to continue to prosecute an unpopular war against Iran, as well as his stewardship of the economy, as inflation remains elevated. The nation is also grappling with the outbreak of foodborne illness, extreme heat and deadly flooding in Texas.

Democracy Defenders Action said that:

Trump and his fellow election deniers are not trying to prove anything about the last elections. They’re trying to fool us into doubting the next one.

Senate Democrats said that the speech was part of Trump’s plan not to lose the midterms.

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Democratic Senator Sheldon Whitehouse said that with his MAGA base disheartened, Trump was planning to interfere in November elections.

Little Rubio goes after Trump critics

While Trump was scaremongering about election interference, Trump’s minions – Marco Rubio, Scott Bessent and Stephen Miller- were, in parallel, setting up grounds to persecute Trump’s detractors.

Rubio has spent the earlier part of the week attacking international law and the ICC.

In an event on Thursday, Rubio invited ministers from more than 60 countries to a meeting about what the Trump administration views as a major peril: the “resurgence of transnational far-left terrorism.”

In a speech, he said that “far-left extremism will be treated with the same seriousness and ferocity the world has long reserved for jihadist terrorism.”  He said that left-wing terrorism has surged to levels not seen in decades.

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He said that there will be more terrorist designations of left-wing groups “soon.”

Bessent said:

We will identify illicit funding, however artfully it is concealed. We will dismantle the networks that sustain political terrorism, however respectable their fronts may be.

Meanwhile, Miller said National Security Presidential Memorandum-7 will lead to the debanking, defunding and disruption of left-wing “political terrorists that are operating in our country.”

Vocal Politics said that the Trump administration announced an escalation of its crackdown on protest movements Thursday, building upon the National Security Presidential Memorandum-7 and designation of “Antifa” as a “domestic terrorist” group.

Journalist Jasper Nathaniel said that Trump’s team’s so-called fight against the far-left sounded like drone strikes on Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) meetings.

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Why are Trump and his team stepping up their aggression?

Well, his approval rating hovers near record lows in a new Economist/YouGov poll, with just 37% of Americans saying they approve of his job performance.

In a historic first, China is now viewed more positively than the US in many countries around the world, according to a new study by the Pew Research Center. It is the first time the organisation has recorded such results.

 Bhaskar Sunkara noted in the Guardian recently that the left still struggles to win rural voters in the USA; the DSA was sweeping primaries in New York City.  The “DSA now has chapters in 47 states across the country and a few wins in the heart of Trump country,” he said.

Trump’s team is scared and increasingly fascist — which explains things like the restarting of bombing on Iran by the Trump regime, the extradition of pro-Palestine donor Fergie Chambers from Spain, handing out outrageous sentences to anti-ICE protestors, and now setting up the scene for crying about election fraud in the midterms and persecuting any threats from progressives.

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Count Binface: A serious electoral profile for a deeply un-serious country

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Nigel Farage and Count Binface

Nigel Farage and Count Binface

The race for the Clacton parliamentary by-election looks as though it will come down to just two candidates. One is a sad caricature of a fascist who’s making a vicious mockery of democracy in the UK. The other wears a bin on his head (AKA Count Binface).

Nigel Farage triggered the by-election after dramatically quitting his seat on 7 July. The far-right leader was facing multiple investigations and scandals at the time, including:

The official investigation, at the very least, has to halt whilst Farage is no longer an MP. However, it will resume if he’s ‘successful’ in the by-election, landing the Reform leading straight back in the shit. Oh, and it just so happens that all of the major political parties are boycotting the contest.

Cue Count Binface, Clacton’s most prominent alternative to re-electing a racist grifter by default. But just who is Binface? What are his policies on waste collection? Did anybody care who he was until he put on the bin?

Join us, the Canary, as we take a trip through the genesis of one of the top-twenty most ridiculous figures in UK politics.

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We promise to remain serious. Mostly.

It’s about democracy, probably

Count Binface is part of a mostly-proud UK tradition of standing novelty candidates in elections. Often, the candidates run as a form of protest, satire, or an exercise in democratic rights. Sometimes they even win, as in the case of the election of Raving Loony Jolly Green Giant Party’s Stuart Basil Fawlty Hughes to East Devon District Council.

The origins of Count Binface begin with the 1976 release of the novelisation of Star Wars, and helmeted and be-caped space fascist Darth Vader along with it. (Yes, 1976 – the novelisation preceded its own 1977 movie counterpart due to release delays. Fight me.)

Next up, in 1984, Star Wars parody Hyperspace hit our screens. In place of the iconic Vader, Hyperspace (aka Gremloids in the UK release) featured one Lord Buckethead. He wore a bucket on his head.

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In a bizarre 1887 promotional stunt, the film’s UK distributor — Mike Lee — ran against Margaret Thatcher in her Finchley constituency whilst roleplaying as Lord Buckethead, for the Gremloids Party. Free publicity is, after all, free publicity. Lee also ran as Buckethead against John Major in 1992.

Later, in 2017, PM Theresa May subjected the UK to a general election in an attempt to ram through her bogus Brexit deal. Jon Harvey, a comic writer who worked on shows like The Thick of It and Have I Got News for You, decided to resurrect the Buckethead character to run against May.

Harvey said of that first election contest:

The election happened and it went viral around the world. So much so that, Thursday night, I was in a sports hall in Maidenhead, standing next to Theresa May as she self-detonated her majority and three days later, I was being flown first class to New York by John Oliver to be on his HBO show as the sort of star surprise guest.

Buckethead vs Count Binface (vs Johnson)

However, that publicity also drew the attention of the owners of Gremloids, who began a copyright dispute. So, in place of Buckethead, Harvey instead took up the now-familiar mantle of Count Binface. But, as the Guardian recounted:

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the Hollywood director of Gremloids, Todd Durham, made contact with David Hughes, a former press officer to the original 1987 Buckethead. Durham persuaded Hughes to stand as Buckethead in Boris Johnson’s Uxbridge constituency.

Following the 2019 contest, in which both Buckethead and Binface ran against Johnson, Buckethead posted to Twitter:

I’m an impostor. The true heir to the Buckethead throne is Count Binface, and I hereby endorse him.

Binface has since stood in six different elections, first as an independent and later for the Count Binface Party. He was unsuccessful in each, making him only marginally less successful than seven-times loser Nigel Farage himself. As such, the Canary expects Binface to begin calling himself ‘prime-minister-in-waiting’ any day now.

And what of the policies?

In Makerfield, Binface’s most recent outing prior to Clacton, the intergalactic space warrior’s manifesto (Makerfield Great Again) contained a grab bag of satirical policies. These included:

  •  I will cut your taxes, and raise everyone else’s.

  • People who use speakers on public transport to be conscripted.

  • All 99 Flake ice-creams to cost no more than 99p, and Wigan Kebabs to be price-capped at £2.

The first of that lot, at the very least, looks roughly on par with mainstream political parties’ offerings. However, the manifesto also had some policies we could genuinely get behind:

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  • MPs to lose their subsidy for cheap food and drink in Parliament.

  • Auto-renew on all online subscriptions to be abolished immediately.

  • Wifi on trains that works. Also trains that work.

There are ups and downs here, sure. However, they also represent a distinct leftward shift compared to predecessor Lord Buckethead’s policies, which centered on a pledge to “demolish Birmingham to make way for a spaceport”.

Count Binface for Clacton

IPSOS polling suggests that more UK voters currently favour Binface to win than Farage himself. The man with a bin on his head holds 33% support, whilst the man who belongs in a bin trails with 21%. Notably, Binface is also winning out against the ‘neither’ option, which stands at 32%.

It is the Canary’s considered opinion that Binface should win the Clacton by-election, for the good of the nation. First, he almost literally can’t be worse than Farage. Second, the fact that he wears a bin suggests that he isn’t in the game just to get his face on TV (*cough*). And third, it would be desperately, desperately funny.

But don’t just take our word for it. Here’s a glowing endorsement from former Farage adviser Raheem Kassam:

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All this Count Binface talk got me looking into who this guy really is. Jonathan David Harvey – who earns his living making comedy shows for the BBC – is an Oxbridge liberal elitist who has screeds of anti-Brexit, anti-Trump and anti-British rants on his Twitter going back over a decade.

We’re not fans of Oxbridge or the BBC, but anti-Brexit, anti-Trump and anti-British, but that’s 2-3 in favour right there.

Featured image via the Canary

By Grace

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Amnesty withdraw report listing anti-rights organisations following Rowling legal threat

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rowling

rowling

Amnesty International UK has referred itself to the Charity Commission after withdrawing its recent report A Growing Threat: the Anti-Rights Movement in the UK following intervention from known bigot JK Rowling. The report listed 117 organisations which work to undermine abortion and LGBTQ+ rights across the country.

The list included anti-abortion groups like Right to Life UK, Both Lives, and Abortion Resistance. It also featured conversion-therapy advocates GENSPECT and Thoughtful Therapists, and anti-trans organisations Gender Critical Greens and Transgender Trend.

Rowling and the ‘women’s fund’

However, famously litigious anti-queer campaigner and sometime author JK Rowling waded in because of the inclusion of her sexual-assault support centre Beira’s Place as an anti-rights actor. Beira’s Place denies support to victims of rape and sexual violence if they are transgender.

Lawyers acting on behalf of Beira’s Place immediately threatened legal action against Amnesty. Rowling also offered to fund other groups’ lawfare against the human rights organisation, stating:

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Should any of the women’s organisations targeted by @AmnestyUK’s recent ‘anti-rights’ blacklist wish to take legal action, applications can be made to the JK Rowling Women’s Fund.

The billionaire author extended the offer after Trans Widows Voices complained that it lacked the funding to defend itself. The organisation is made up of women who refer to themselves as ‘widows’ after their (still living) partners transition.

Rowling set up her ‘women’s fund’ in June 2025, to provide money for legal actions against trans-inclusive organisations. Whilst the fund is exclusively available to cis women, the author also stated that she was “more than happy to donate” to the men’s organisations named on the list.

A Growing Threat

Before Amnesty took down its report, A Growing Threat defined anti-rights actors as seeking to undermine human rights protections “in law and practice”. Its key findings included:

  • An organised anti-rights movement targeting the rights of women and LGBT+ people is growing in the UK. Over 60% of the organisations mapped have emerged since 2017, the vast majority gender critical organisations.
  • Out of the sample of 117 organisations mapped, 37 have spent over £144 million between 2019 and 2024, an increase of 47%.
  • One in three of the organisations mapped are registered charities, this means they can apply for institutional funding and may be eligible for ‘Gift Aid’ – a scheme enabling registered charities to reclaim tax on donations.
  • The biggest spenders are ultra-conservative Christian policy and advocacy organisations (£46.7 million), followed by UK branches of US groups (£43.9 million) and anti-abortion organisations (£35.8 million).

However, following legal threats from the listed organisations’ lawyers, Amnesty took down the list and issued an apology. On 16 July, the Charity Commission confirmed that the human rights group had self-referred by submitting a serious incident report.

A spokesperson for Amnesty stated that:

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We regret that this briefing was uploaded to our website without going through the established, internal review processes that are in place to ensure consistency, accuracy and alignment with Amnesty International UK’s positions.

Anti-rights actor, or just anti-rights?

Beira’s Place is certainly a “gender critical” organisation, as A Growing Threat termed the anti-trans groups on its list. However, it is probably inaccurate to call it an “anti-rights actor” per se. The sexual assault support center doesn’t, to our knowledge, actively campaign actively against trans rights.

Rather, Beira’s Place genuinely does provide support for victims of rape and sexual assault. It just denies service to women who have been victims of rape and sexual assault if its founders don’t believe they are women. Abhorrent, sure, but it’s not a campaigning organisation.

Instead, Beira’s Place board member Susan Smith does her anti-trans campaigning through For Women Scotland, of which she is the director.

That’s the same For Women Scotland which is also named on Amnesty’s list, and whose litigation resulted in the Supreme Court defining ‘women’ as referring to sex-assigned-at-birth under the Equality Act.

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Rowling leading the way on anti-rights lawfare

JK Rowling herself provided £70,000 to For Women Scotland to fuel its anti-trans lawfare. That lawfare resulted in the sharp reduction of trans people’s rights after the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) chose to interpret the court’s ruling in the most transphobic manner possible.

Parliament is overwhelmingly likely to pass the EHRC’s code of conduct on 5 August, effectively segregating trans people and other groups perceived as trans – including gender non-conformists and intersex individuals – as a ‘third sex’.

Before it was taken down, A Growing Threat stated that:

Some of these groups describe themselves as ‘anti-gender’ because they visibly oppose the rights and equality of women and LGBT+ people. However, by targeting women and LGBT+ people, they also challenge a fundamental human rights principle: that human rights belong to everyone equally. Human rights are interconnected and mutually reinforcing. When the rights of one group are restricted, protections for others can also be weakened, even where the effects are not immediately visible.

We’ve already seen the interconnectedness of human rights in action after the publication of the EHRC’s draft code. TransActual UK reported that:

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Our research has uncovered many stories of cis people, especially gender non-conforming women, being humiliated and excluded by staff or vigilante gender police when using the appropriate facilities and shown that this has already increased since the publication of the EHRC’s draft guidance.

An attack on us all

Anti-trans campaigners seek to create borders between cis and trans women, and cis and trans men for that matter. As with For Women Scotland, they may do this under the guise of ‘protecting women’s rights’, or ‘protecting gay rights’ in the case of the LGB Alliance and their ilk.

However, these arguments are just that – a disguise for anti-rights campaigning. NION (Not In Our Name) Women, a network of trans-inclusive women’s organisations, released an open letter stating that:

As women, we face so many pressing concerns: misogyny, gender inequality, violence and abuse from cis men, difficulties accessing appropriate healthcare and growing threats to our bodily autonomy and reproductive rights. These changes to the interpretation of the Equality Act and updates to the Code of Practice do nothing to address these issues.

Likewise, as the Canary has said before under similar circumstances:

Any border creates an ‘other’, and requires police to protect that border from the ‘other’. And policing, as we have seen time and again, begets violence.

It’s a sign of the severe failure of our democracy that a billionaire like Rowling can simply throw enough money at a cause to make a vulnerable minority’s rights disappear wholesale. That reduction in rights is an attack on us all, cis and trans alike.

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If only somebody were to write a report on the vast sums of money anti-rights actors are ploughing into their legal campaigns.

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By Grace

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Trump underestimated Iran’s resilience, Chatham House hears

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Trump underestimated Iran

Trump underestimated Iran

At Chatham House’s London Conference on 9 July 2026, a panel on “The new geopolitics of the Middle East” noted the failure by Trump to underestimate Iran’s resilience.

The comments were made by Professor Mohsen Milani (University of South Florida), who said his comments were not of a political persuasion but were offered as an academic. The video was published by Chatham House on their YouTube channel.

He said that American policymakers and think tankers have been wrong about Iran for 47 to 48 years, and that one of the primary reasons is that they have “underestimated the resiliency of a revolutionary government.”

Betting on Iran “regime change”

Milani said that Trump and his administration had bet on a quick collapse of the Islamic Republic through military pressure, but that this assumption was flawed.

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He said that the US and Israel wrongly thought that:
individuals play a much bigger role in the Islamic Republic than institutions.
He added that:
This is why they thought by killing the supreme leader of Iran the entire system is going to collapse. Well, we know that didn’t happen because the nature of power in Iran is diverse.
He said that they were also wrong to assume that people’s dissatisfaction and discontent with the Iranian government equals their willingness to stage regime change. 

Iran’s offensive capabilities

He also said that the US and Israel had underestimated Iran’s offensive capabilities.

Finally, we underestimated Iranian offensive capability and its will to fight. I think many people in Washington were surprised when Iran directly attacked the Gulf countries, when Iran weaponized the Strait of Hormuz, and most importantly Iran basically in that war violated its long-established policy of not directly confronting America — never directly attack America. It was always through proxies and indirectly. But this time Iran attacked American bases and American assets.

History of the Strait of Hormuz

Milani noted Iran’s control over the Strait of Hormuz as one of the most significant developments to emerge from the conflict.

He said that while military analysts had long anticipated the possibility of Iran disrupting the strait, few believed Tehran would actually be capable of essentially closing it down. The move, he argued, represents a fundamental shift in the region’s balance of power.

Drawing on historical context, Milani traced the strait’s strategic importance over the centuries. He noted that the Portuguese first captured the waterway, before Iran, with British assistance, expelled them, paving the way for British dominance in the Persian Gulf until 1968. The Shah of Iran then assumed the role of regional enforcer, followed by a period of Pax Americana, during which the United States guaranteed the security of the Gulf’s shipping lanes.

Milani suggested that Iran now seeks to replicate its historic role as the power that expelled the Portuguese, aiming to reshape the regional order to diminish American dominance while allowing China to expand its influence in the Gulf.

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He said:

I think you’re going to see Iran helping China become a much more powerful country in the Persian Gulf.

He said that Iran is “unlikely to accept the status quo” and will insist on maintaining “some degree of control” over the strait in any future arrangement. 

Qatar says “we are all losers”

While Milani described the conflict as being “in the middle of a football game” with no clear winner yet, Qatar’s chief foreign policy adviser, Majid Alansari, also on the panel, painted a more sombre picture, saying:

To comment very slightly on what Professor Milani said, yes, the US did not win this war but that doesn’t mean that the other side would not lose. We are all losers in this war.

 If you look at the region right now, who is going to benefit anything from what’s happening? Who is going to gain the most from any trajectory that this war is going to go into?

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For our countries in the GCC, the economic impact is strategic. On my country, you have in one attack 17% of our ability to produce natural gas was destroyed. We haven’t exported normally since the beginning of the war.

He pointed to the economic impact on Gulf states, noting that a single attack by Iran destroyed 17% of Qatar’s natural gas production capacity.

Alansari said Qatar would not recognise any Iranian claim to sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz, stating that Iran has “no legal claim” to the waterway.

He said that granting Iran any form of control would leave the region “hostages to whatever radical element in Iran that wants to take over the strait at any time.”

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However, Qatar, which has long been firmly in the US camp, said it had to diversify. Alansari stated: 

There is no alternative to our partnership with the United States… But we need to diversify. We need to take back some of our agency.

He added:

Now we need to build defense partnerships that go beyond military acquisitions, weapons acquisitions and defense pacts. There need to be joint investments in defense military industrial complexes as we have done in the region.

So seems jury is still out on who won the war.

Featured image via the Canary

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