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EDP reports 12% increase in output for 2025, driven by EDPR
“The Voice of Hind Rajab,” a Gaza War docudrama, nominated for Academy Award in the midst of Israel-Palestine conflict turmoil
The film draws on real audio from the five-year-old’s call with emergency services as her family came under Israeli fire.
A haunting docudrama about Israel’s killing of five-year-old Palestinian girl Hind Rajab during its genocidal war on Gaza has been nominated for an Academy Award.
The Voice of Hind Rajab, by French-Tunisian director Kaouther Ben Hania, was shortlisted for the Oscar for Best International Feature Film on Thursday.
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The film tells the true story of Hind, who was killed by Israeli forces in 2024 as she and her family tried to evacuate Gaza City, blending recordings of real emergency calls with dramatic re-enactments.
It draws on harrowing audio from Hind Rajab’s call to the Palestine Red Crescent Society, in which rescuers tried to reassure her as she lay trapped in a bullet-ridden car with the bodies of her aunt, uncle and three cousins, who had all been killed by Israeli fire.
The girl was then also killed, as were the two ambulance workers who went to the scene to try to rescue her.
A recording of the phone call was widely shared on social media after her death, causing renewed international outrage over Israel’s attacks on civilians.
At least 71,551 Palestinians have been killed and 171,372 wounded in Israeli attacks since the war began, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry, many of them children.
UNICEF, the UN’s agency for children, said earlier this month that more than 100 Palestinian children had been killed in Gaza, even since the start of the ceasefire that began in October last year.
‘Make her voice echo’
Responding to the nomination, filmmaker Ben Hania said her motivation for the film had been to amplify Hind Rajab’s voice around the world, The Associated Press news agency reported.
“When I started making this movie, my main obsession or idea, because the voice of this little girl wasn’t heard when it was needed, was how to make her voice echo all over the world,” she said.
“So the fact that we are nominated today, it’s a spotlight that the voice of Hind Rajab needs.”
She said she was grateful that members of the academy who had voted for her film had recognised “that cinema is not always an escape”.
“It can be confrontational. It can be something about truth, and about what is happening and something that we should not look away from.”
No evidence of exchange of fire
The Israeli government initially claimed that none of its forces were present when the Rajab family was killed, later asserting that the 335 bullet holes found in the family’s car were the result of an exchange of fire between Israeli troops and armed Palestinian fighters.
However, a subsequent investigation of satellite imagery and audio from that day by the London-based research group Forensic Architecture identified only the presence of several Israeli Merkava tanks in the vicinity of the Rajab family’s car and no evidence of any exchange of fire.
The overall commander of the tanks present during the family’s killing was Colonel Beni Aharon of Israel’s 401 Armoured Brigade.
Colonel Aharon is already the subject of a criminal complaint at the International Criminal Court (ICC) filed by the Hind Rajab Foundation, which uses social media footage captured by Israeli soldiers during operations in Gaza as the basis for war crimes prosecutions.
Third-time nominated
The Oscar nod is not the first industry recognition for Ben Hania or her film.
The director has twice been nominated for Academy Awards, for her 2020 film, The Man Who Sold His Skin and her 2023 documentary, Four Daughters.
The Voice of Hind Rajab won the Grand Jury Prize Silver Lion at the Venice International Film Festival in September, where it received a 23-minute standing ovation at its premiere.
The 98th Academy Awards will take place on March 15 in Los Angeles, hosted by Conan O’Brien.
Bybit CEO Ben Zhou says Traditional Finance firms are becoming more open to cryptocurrencies
When Ben Zhou founded Bybit in 2018, he first had to convince his team that Bitcoin wasn’t a scam.
Eight years later, digital assets are now mainstream. Governments and traditional finance institutions are warming to cryptocurrencies, perhaps most dramatically shown by the U.S.’s passage of the GENIUS Act last year.
“The traditional world is embracing crypto,” Zhou, who leads the world’s second-largest crypto exchange by trading volume, tells Fortune. “If they don’t embrace it, they will be obsolete, especially with crypto wallet adoption growing 20 to 30% each year.”
Currencies like stablecoins are becoming increasingly regulated, and can now be used for things like remittances and payments, Zhou adds. In 2025, over $18 trillion in transactions was settled in stablecoins, eclipsing total transactions on traditional payment platforms like Visa and Mastercard, according to crypto research firm Delphi Digital.
Cryptocurrency transactions are “faster and cheaper” than traditional bank transfers, Zhou argues. “If you rely on the existing infrastructure and transfer via SWIFT, it’s just too slow.”
Investment banks like Goldman Sachs are working to integrate tokenized assets in their trading and advisory operations, while payment providers like Visa and Mastercard are building partnerships with crypto exchanges like Bybit to issue payment cards which enable users to spend crypto holdings as fiat in real-time.
Crypto is going to be the “main driving force” behind traditional financial instruments like stocks and credit-default swaps within the next decade, Zhou argues. “Accessibility, connectivity and unification is really the beauty of this technology.”
Building Bybit
Before entering the crypto industry, Zhou worked as a Forex trader at financial brokerage XM, where he spent seven years as its China general manager. Back then, crypto was still niche. Many investors viewed it as a “pump and dump” scam, he recalls.
Zhou had an early interest in crypto, but found that platforms at the time were often overloaded whenever Bitcoin moved. He started Bybit in Shanghai, recruiting a team of about 15 software engineers from major Chinese tech firms like Tencent and Alibaba.
After China banned crypto mining and trading in 2021, Zhou relocated his team to Singapore; a year later, he moved again to Dubai, drawn by the UAE’s crypto-friendly regulations, including no taxation on crypto income or capital gains, and a clear regulatory framework for digital assets.
Today, Bybit operates globally in over 180 countries, though the platform doesn’t offer services in several others, including the U.S., Canada, China and Singapore.
Yet, safety challenges remain
Despite the finance industry’s overall optimism on cryptocurrency, challenges in ensuring safe transactions remain.
On Feb. 21, 2025, North Korean hackers stole $1.4 billion worth of Ethereum from Bybit in the largest crypto theft in history. The hack spooked Bybit’s customers, leading to “massive withdrawals,” Zhou said at the time.
The exchange launched an industry-first “Recovery Bounty Program,” which called on the global cybersecurity community to help trace and recover the stolen currency, offering 10% of the stolen funds as a reward. Bybit wasn’t able to recover the stolen funds, but it was able to secure financing to effectively restore its reserves.
Zhou says that, since the hack, Bybit has tightened its security measures, including using hardware security modules (HSMs), tamper-resistant physical devices that securely generate, stores, and manages cryptographic keys. “Unless there’s a physical break-in, no one will be able to touch tokens,” Zhou explains.
Still, the Bybit CEO admits that the fast pace of cryptocurrency transactions means that it’s hard to stop scams and thefts from happening. “If you lose money or get scammed, and are a customer of a bank, you can call the bank and they will be able to trace it,” he explains. Tracing stolen funds is still possible in crypto, but “everything moves so fast that by the time you get to it, the money is already gone.”
He remains upbeat, however, about the future of safety in the crypto industry. “Crypto infrastructure and technology are only increasing in abundance, and many more cybersecurity companies are joining the space.”
More countries have laid out regulatory frameworks for crypto companies like Bybit. For example, the EU rolled out the Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) license in late 2024, which allows certified crypto providers to operate legally across the whole continent, instead of forcing companies to seek separate licenses from each individual country.
Zhou believes that enhanced regulation will pave the way for mainstream crypto adoption. He’s focused on European markets this year, as well as developing markets like Argentina, Brazil, Nigeria, Turkey and India, where demand for crypto is booming due to weak local currencies.
Eight unexpected revelations from the nominations
Steven McIntoshEntertainment reporter
Awards pundits were taken by surprise from the first two words spoken at the Oscar nominations on Thursday.
“Elle Fanning, for Sentimental Value,” said hosts Danielle Brooks and Lewis Pullman, as they kicked off the nominations with the best supporting actress category.
Fanning’s appearance got things off to a spicy start from the earliest possible moment – she had received praise for her performance in the Norwegian family drama but few had predicted a nomination.
The opening category set the tone for a string of snubs and surprises, which started coming thick and fast. Here are eight of the big takeaways.
1. Some hot favourites missed out
Getty ImagesAlthough Hamnet and One Battle After Another did well, both had a slightly softer showing than expected in the acting categories.
Paul Mescal missed out on a supporting actor nod for Hamnet – a surprising omission, although we’re confident it won’t have much impact on his co-star Jessie Buckley’s frontrunner status for best actress.
Meanwhile, four big actors from One Battle After Another were recognised, but its break-out star Chase Infiniti missed best actress despite being a red-hot contender.
It was an admittedly competitive category. But at 25 years old and with rave reviews for her performance in the film, we’re pretty sure we haven’t heard the last of her.
Other actors who had momentum but ended up missing included Jesse Plemons for Bugonia and Joel Edgerton for Train Dreams. But both of those movies made it into best picture – so the Academy clearly liked them overall.
2. F1 is a comfort-food movie
Getty ImagesF1, which stars Brad Pitt as a racing driver brought out of retirement, was the biggest surprise in the best picture category.
It wasn’t exactly an outsider – many awards pundits expected it to pick up several below-the-line nominations for its impressive technical achievements (we recommend watching the film in a cinema or with surround sound if you can).
But the fact that it had enough momentum to propel it into best picture was a real show of strength – especially without other major nominations in best director or the acting categories.
It shows the old guard of the Academy still appreciates traditional, well-made films that can simply be enjoyed with a bucket of popcorn.
3. Sinners were the big winners
Getty ImagesSinners scored a record-breaking 16 nominations, flying way past the previous joint record holders La La Land, Titanic and All About Eve, which got 14 each.
Ryan Coogler’s vampire horror has done particularly well to maintain its momentum with voters, considering it was released last spring.
But it’s exactly the kind of film the Academy would want to recognise. Although vampire movies might not be traditional Oscars bait, Sinners was a real artistic achievement, blending genre horror with 1930s blues music against a backdrop of the Mississippi Delta.
Coogler also made headlines in the Hollywood trade publications last year for the deal he negotiated with Warner Brothers, which will see the film’s ownership rights return to him after 25 years.
4. Wicked did not bewitch the Academy
Getty ImagesThe first Wicked film received 10 Oscar nominations and went on to win two. So it’s an extraordinary fall from grace for its sequel to have got zero.
This was largely expected, however. Wicked: For Good was far less well received than its predecessor – something it shares with the original musical.
The second act of the stage show is widely considered weaker than the first, partly because all the big hits appear before the interval.
But it was still thought that Wicked: For Good could get into some categories, with many predicting a best original song nomination for The Girl in the Bubble, a track performed by Ariana Grande that was newly added for the film adaptation.
There was better news for another blockbuster, Avatar: Fire and Ash, which at least managed a couple of technical nominations for visual effects and costume design.
Some of the most mainstream films can instead be found in the animated category. That’s where we find the $1.7bn-grossing Zootopia 2 (known as Zootropolis 2 in the UK) and viral streaming hit KPop Demon Hunters.
5. The Brits showed up
Getty ImagesSinners didn’t just score the highest number of nominations, it also delivered the only two Brits to be nominated in the acting categories.
Wunmi Mosaku and Delroy Lindo made it into best supporting actress and actor respectively.
While Mosaku’s was broadly expected, Lindo’s was more of a surprise, and his inclusion is perhaps one of the biggest indicators of how much love there clearly is for Sinners across the Academy.
Lindo narrowly missed a best actor nomination a few years ago for Spike Lee’s Da 5 Bloods. The 73-year-old’s first ever Oscar nomination feels long overdue.
6. Several actresses carried their films to a nomination
Getty ImagesThree of the actresses nominated on Thursday ended up being the only recognition their film received.
Rose Byrne was the sole representation for motherhood drama If I Had Legs I’d Kick You, while Kate Hudson made it in on her own for the touching musical love story Song Sung Blue.
Meanwhile, Weapons star Amy Madigan was nominated for her role as an eccentric aunt who shows up in a US town just before the local school children go missing.
Madigan’s nomination is perhaps the most impressive, given that jump-scare horror movies aren’t traditional Oscars fodder.
But the 75-year-old was a passion pick for many pundits and voters, and her fans have been campaigning hard for her to be recognised for her memorable (and slightly terrifying) performance.
7. New category is a mixed bag
Getty ImagesThe newly introduced casting category overlapped with many of the general frontrunners, with nominations for Marty Supreme, One Battle After Another, Hamnet, Sinners and The Secret Agent.
We can’t help but feel slightly bemused, however, that one other film in particular missed out.
Sentimental Value failed to score a casting nomination despite all four of its lead stars scoring individual nods – Stellan Skarsgård, Elle Fanning, Renate Reinsve and Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas.
If that quartet was impressive enough to be nominated individually, you might’ve thought there was a good chance of recognition for the casting directors who put them together – Avy Kaufman and Yngvill Kolset Haga.
8. Timothée is even closer to greatness
Getty ImagesAt the SAG Awards last year, Timothée Chalamet spoke about his desire to eventually be considered “one of the Hollywood greats”.
He’s a big step closer to that with the likelihood that he will win his first Oscar this year, as the clear frontrunner in best actor for table-tennis drama Marty Supreme.
Although he’s only been nominated twice before, Chalamet is popular with the Academy, having starred in a whopping eight best picture-nominated films.
He is also the youngest actor since Marlon Brando to receive three nominations for best leading actor. Brando was 30, the same age as Chalamet, when he got his third in 1954.
Timothée came close to a win last year for playing Bob Dylan in A Complete Unknown, but we’re confident that 2026 will be his time to reign supreme.
Drake challenges rejection of ‘Not Like Us’ lawsuit against UMG, claims court established risky precedent for rap diss songs
Three months ago, a federal judge dismissed Drake’s defamation lawsuit against Universal Music Group over Kendrick Lamar’s Not Like Us.
Now, the superstar rapper is appealing the decision.
Drake filed a 117-page appellate brief on January 21 in the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, seeking to overturn Judge Jeannette Vargas’s October ruling that dismissed all of his claims.
He originally filed the lawsuit in January 2025, about eight months after Not Like Us was released in May 2024. Drake alleged that UMG “intentionally published and promoted” the song, while knowing that the song’s lyrics “were false and defamatory”.
Lamar’s Not Like Us was part of what Judge Jeannette Vargas described as “perhaps the most infamous rap battle in the genre’s history.”
Over 16 days, Drake and Lamar released eight diss tracks with increasingly inflammatory rhetoric.
Not Like Us achieved extraordinary commercial success, accumulating over 1.8 billion streams on Spotify alone to date, and winning Record of the Year at the 2025 Grammys. It was performed during the 2025 Super Bowl Halftime Show to 133.5 million viewers.
Judge Vargas ruled that the diss track “constitutes protected opinion rather than actionable defamation”.
Drake’s appeal directly challenges that conclusion.
The brief argues that “The District Court Created a Dangerous Categorical Rule that rap diss tracks can never be actionable.”
It also claims that “millions of people understood the Recording and Image to convey factual information, causing countless individuals around the globe to believe that Drake was a pedophile.”
Drake’s brief filed this week contends that Judge Vargas made an error by considering the song only within the context of the entire rap battle between Drake and Kendrick Lamar.
His lawyers argue that “of all the songs published during the rap beef, the Recording is the only one that ‘broke through the noise’ and achieved cultural ubiquity.”
By contrast, the next-most-popular song in the feud, Euphoria, had “just 4.1%” of the streams and views achieved by Not Like Us, according to data cited in the filing.
The brief argues the song was repeatedly “republished” to massive new audiences who had no knowledge of any rap battle, including at the Democratic National Convention and the Grammy Awards, where it won Record of the Year.
“Millions who tuned in to the ‘Big Game’ – including young children and people whose religious or cultural beliefs, or simply their taste in music, leave them with no interest in or exposure to rap battles – were unaware of the feud and ‘had never before heard the [Recording] or any of the songs that preceded it,’” the filing states.
Drake’s lawyers argue that the district court “effectively created an unprecedented and overbroad categorical rule that statements in rap diss tracks can never constitute statements of fact.”
The appeal also revives Drake’s claim that UMG used deceptive business practices to artificially boost the song’s success.
The brief alleges that “notwithstanding its knowledge of the falsity of the allegations and the threats to Drake and his family’s safety, UMG waged an unrelenting campaign to spread the Recording as widely as possible.”
Following the dismissal in October, a UMG spokesperson said: “From the outset, this suit was an affront to all artists and their creative expression and never should have seen the light of day. We’re pleased with the court’s dismissal and look forward to continuing our work successfully promoting Drake’s music and investing in his career.”
In May, when the company filed its motion to dismiss, UMG characterized Drake’s allegations as “wild conspiracies” and described the lawsuit as “Drake’s attempt to save face for his unsuccessful rap battle with Lamar.”
MBW has reached out to UMG for a response to the most recent filing.Music Business Worldwide
National All-American Teams for High School in 2025
Congratulations to MAX Field Hockey’s 2025 High School National All-American Teams!
[View the 2025 High School All-Region First and Second Teams]
FIRST TEAM
ELLA BEACH
Glenbrook North High School (IL)
Senior – Midfield

REBECCA BLOCK
The Episcopal Academy (PA)
Senior – Midfield

KATY CHAPMAN
John Burroughs School (MO)
Senior – Midfield

LILLY CIMAROLI
New Trier High School (IL)
Senior – Midfield

CAITLIN CONNELL
Villa Maria Academy (PA)
Senior – Forward

ADELAIDE COSSE MINNELLA
West Essex High School (NJ)
Senior – Forward

GRACEY CRAWFORD
St. John’s School (TX)
Senior – Midfield

SOFIA FERRI
The Hill School (PA)
Senior – Defense

AIDA IERUBINO
Central Bucks West High School (PA)
Senior – Forward/Midfield

ANNA CLAIRE KOSEK
Sacred Heart Academy (KY)
Senior – Midfield/Forward

MORGAN LALA
Christian Academy of Louisville (KY)
Senior – Goalkeeper

MAEVE MCGINLEY
Academy of Notre Dame de Namur (PA)
Junior – Forward/Midfield

LILLY MCMAHON
Oak Knoll School (NJ)
Senior – Midfield/Forward

REESE MILONE
Academy of Notre Dame de Namur (PA)
Senior – Forward/Midfield

BREE MOFFETT
Smyrna High School (DE)
Senior – Midfield

KIERA SACK
Academy of Notre Dame de Namur (PA)
Senior – Forward/Midfield

JACK SHAW
Villa Maria Academy (PA)
Junior – Midfield

CHASE STROHM
Lower Dauphin High School (PA)
Junior – Forward/Midfield

KIRA TRADER
Tabb High School (VA)
Senior – Forward

MELINA VOLIOTIS
Oak Knoll School (NJ)
Junior – Midfield/Defense

SECOND TEAM
AMELIA BLOOD
Uxbridge High School (MA)
Senior – Midfield

SOPHIA BORGHESE
Thomas Worthington High School (OH)
Senior – Forward

ALEXANDRA CURTIS
Collegiate School (VA)
Junior – Forward

HALEY ELLIOTT
The Hill School (VA)
Junior – Midfield

ADRIANA ENSANI
Cardinal Gibbons High School (NC)
Senior – Forward/Midfield

MONTGOMERY FERGUSON
St. John’s School (TX)
Senior – Midfield

ELLA GANDY
Clearview Regional High School (NJ)
Senior – Midfield/Forward

KENDALL GILMORE
Uxbridge High School (MA)
Senior – Midfield

PHOEBE LAFERRIERE
Oak Knoll School (NJ)
Junior – Forward

LILAH-GRACE LOGAN
Trinity Episcopal School (VA)
Senior – Midfield

CAMILLA LUTTE
Academy of Notre Dame de Namur (PA)
Sophomore – Forward/Midfield
JOSEFINA MOLINARI
Connelly School of the Holy Child (MD)
Junior – Forward/Midfield

MOLLY NUSSBAUMER
Cardinal Gibbons High School (NC)
Senior – Forward

JACKIE O’DONNELL
The Kinkaid School (TX)
Senior – Midfield/Defense

MORGAN O’DONNELL
Avon Grove High School (PA)
Senior – Midfield

ANNA RIESSER
Trinity Episcopal School (VA)
Senior – Defense

EMERSON ROSS
Notre Dame Prep (MD)
Senior – Defense

CATHERINE ROSSER
The Kinkaid School (TX)
Senior – Goalkeeper

SOPHIA STAZI
Camden Catholic High School (NJ)
Junior – Forward/Midfield

MARIN STEFANELLI
Shore Regional High School (NJ)
Junior – Defense

THIRD TEAM
ANNA ARNOLD
St. John’s College High School (DC)
Senior – Midfield/Forward

AVA BOLAND
St. Mary’s Annapolis (MD)
Junior – Midfield/Forward

MAREN BOYLE
Phillips Academy Andover (MA)
Senior – Forward

LOLA CONWAY
The Bishop’s School (CA)
Sophomore – Midfield
KARYS CRAVER
Warwick High School (PA)
Senior – Forward/Midfield

ABIGAIL GIUSTO
Independence High School (VA)
Junior – Forward/Midfield

GENEVIEVE HUSTON
Whitney Point High School (NY)
Senior – Forward/Midfield

MADISON LENIG
Emmaus High School (PA)
Junior – Midfield

LILY MCCLAY
Fairfield Ludlowe High School (CT)
Sophomore – Midfield
LILLIAN MITCHELL
Dexter High School (MI)
Senior – Midfield

LILY MITCHELL
Leonardtown High School (MD)
Senior – Midfield/Defense

LIBERTY OLIVETTI
Mechanicsburg Area High School (PA)
Junior – Midfield/Forward

MORGANN OROBONO
Emmaus High School (PA)
Senior – Defense

MONICA PICCIOLI
Assumption High School (KY)
Senior – Defense/Midfield

EMILY ROMANO
Emmaus High School (PA)
Junior – Goalkeeper

MADELYNN STAHL
Palmyra Area High School (PA)
Sophomore – Forward/Midfield
LILA STILLEY
Moses Brown School (RI)
Senior – Defense/Midfield

CATE TORTOLANI
Bryn Mawr School (MD)
Junior – Midfield

ELIZABETH TRANT
Poquoson High School (VA)
Senior – Midfield/Forward

HOLLAND WILKINS
Charlotte Country Day School (NC)
Junior – Forward/Midfield

The post 2025 High School National All-American Teams appeared first on MAX Field Hockey.
Trump confirms US monitoring Iran as large fleet moves towards Gulf region | Latest update on Donald Trump’s stance on Iran
US president says ‘big force going towards Iran’, but he would ‘rather not see anything happen’ as tension with Tehran ratchets up.
Published On 23 Jan 2026
United States President Donald Trump said a US naval “armada” was heading towards the Gulf region, with Iran being the focus, as officials said an aircraft carrier strike group and other assets would arrive in the Middle East in the coming days.
“We’re watching Iran,” Trump told reporters on Air Force One on Thursday as he flew back from the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.
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“We have a big force going towards Iran,” Trump said.
“I’d rather not see anything happen, but we’re watching them very closely,” he said.
“And maybe we won’t have to use it … we have a lot of ships going that direction, just in case, we have a big flotilla going in that direction, and we’ll see what happens,” he added.
Trump’s announcement on the US naval buildup comes after he appeared to back-pedal last week on his threats of military action against Iran after, he said, receiving assurances that no executions of protesters would be carried out by Tehran.
Trump’s confirmation of continuing military preparations in the region follows after US media reports in the past week that the USS Abraham Lincoln aircraft carrier and its strike group of vessels were ordered to divert from manoeuvres in the South China Sea to the Middle East.
Speaking on Thursday, Trump reiterated that his earlier threats to use force against Tehran had stopped authorities in Iran from executing more than 800 protesters, and he again said he was open to talking with the country’s leadership.
Iranian officials have denied plans to execute people who had taken part in the widespread antigovernment protests that began in late December and which Iranian state media said left 3,117 people dead, including 2,427 civilians and members of the security forces.
Speaking to US broadcaster CNBC on Wednesday, Trump said he hoped there would not be further US military action against Iran, but also said the US would act if Tehran resumed its nuclear programme.
“They can’t do the nuclear,” Trump told CNBC in an interview in Davos.
“If they do it, it’s going to happen again,” the president said, referring to US air strikes on Iran’s nuclear facilities in June 2025 when Washington joined Israel’s 12-day war on the country.
Washington last ordered a major military build-up in the Middle East in advance of its attacks in June, and officials later boasted about how it had kept its intention to strike Tehran’s nuclear programme a secret at the time.
Writing in the Wall Street Journal newspaper on Tuesday, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi warned the US that Tehran will be “firing back with everything we have” if attacked.
“Our powerful armed forces have no qualms about firing back with everything we have if we come under renewed attack,” the minister wrote.
Araghchi said his warning was not a threat, “but a reality I feel I need to convey explicitly, because as a diplomat and a veteran, I abhor war”.
“An all-out confrontation will certainly be ferocious and drag on far, far longer than the fantasy timelines that Israel and its proxies are trying to peddle to the White House,” he said.
“It will certainly engulf the wider region and have an impact on ordinary people around the globe,” he added.
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Trump’s claim that Nato troops avoided Afghanistan front line ignites controversy and anger
Donald Trump has sparked fresh outrage in the UK after saying Nato troops stayed “a little off the front lines” during the war in Afghanistan.
Labour MP Emily Thornberry, the chair of the foreign affairs committee, called it an “absolute insult” to the 457 British service personnel killed in the conflict, while Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey said: “How dare he question their sacrifice?”
Conservative MP Ben Obese-Jecty, who served in Afghanistan, said it was “sad to see our nation’s sacrifice, and that of our Nato partners, held so cheaply”.
The UK was among several allies to join the US in Afghanistan from 2001, after it invoked Nato’s collective security clause following the 9/11 terror attacks.
The US president told Fox News on Thursday that he was “not sure” the military alliance would be there for America “if we ever needed them”.
“We’ve never needed them,” he said, adding: “We have never really asked anything of them.”
“They’ll say they sent some troops to Afghanistan,” he said, “and they did, they stayed a little back, a little off the front lines”.
He said the US had “been very good to Europe and to many other countries”, adding: “It has to be a two-way street.”
Getty ImagesThornberry told the BBC’s Question Time that the remarks were “much more than a mistake”.
“It’s an absolute insult… How dare he say we weren’t on the front line, how dare he?
“We have always been there whenever the Americans have wanted us,” she said, calling Trump “a man who has never seen any action” but was now “commander in chief and knows nothing about how it is that America has been defended”.
She said the US was the UK’s “friend” but its leader had “behaved in a way that is bullying, rude, that has deliberately been trying to undermine us, which has been trying to undermine Nato.”
On the same programme, Conservative shadow cabinet member Stuart Andrew also called the comments “disgraceful” and “appalling”.
“There are many people in this country who served both in Iraq and Afghanistan, many of whom lost their lives, but also many more who came back with life-changing injuries and we should say thank you to them.”
He added that the UK-US special relationship was important for both defence and security, and that in recent weeks Trump had directed conversation to the security of the Arctic – where he said there was a “very serious threat”.
PA MediaSir Ed wrote on social media that Trump had “avoided military service”, adding: “How dare he question their sacrifice?”
Speaking to BBC’s Newsnight programme, Dutch foreign minister David van Weel rejected Trump’s remarks as “false”, saying “Europeans shed blood” in support of US troops in Afghanistan.
He said Nato Secretary General Mark Rutte had rebuffed similar comments Trump made earlier, during a joint press conference the pair held at Davos on Thursday.
Asked about the US president repeating the claim, van Weel, said: “We should speak out for the truth as Mark Rutte did. And if he repeated it, we need to repeat it again because that’s not how history went.”
Meanwhile, former British Army officer Obese-Jecty said it was “sad to see our nation’s sacrifice, and that of our Nato partners, held so cheaply by the president of the United States”.
“I saw first hand the sacrifices made by British soldiers,” he wrote on X.
“I don’t believe US military personnel share the view of President Trump; his words do them a disservice as our closest military allies.”
Calvin Bailey, a Labour MP and former RAF officer who served alongside US special operations units in Afghanistan, said the president’s claim bore “no resemblance to the reality experienced by those of us who served there”.
“As I reminded the US Forces I served with on 4 July 2008, we were there because of a shared belief, articulated at America’s founding, that free people have inalienable rights and should not live under tyranny,” he told the PA news agency.
“That belief underpinned the response to 9/11, and it is worth reflecting on now.”
The BBC approached the Ministry of Defence for comment.
A spokesperson pointed to comments made by Defence Secretary John Healey while visiting Nato ally Denmark on Wednesday – before Trump’s comments.
He said: “In Afghanistan, our forces trained together, they fought together, and on some occasions, they died together, making the ultimate sacrifice.”
The US invaded in October 2001 to oust the Taliban, whom they said were harbouring Osama Bin Laden and other al-Qaeda figures linked to the 9/11 attacks. Nato nations contributed troops and military equipment to the US-led war.
More than 3,500 coalition soldiers had died as of 2021, when the US withdrew from the country – about two-thirds of them Americans.
The UK suffered the second highest number of military deaths in the conflict behind the US, which saw 2,461 deaths.
The US is the only country to have invoked the collective security provisions of Nato’s Article 5, which states that “an armed attack against one Nato member shall be considered an attack against them all”.


