World views from the author of First with the News, a memoir of life on the front line
Monday, 6 July 2026
Will Trump intervene over England's red card player?
It is pretty extraordinary that President Trump felt he was entitled to ring the head of FIFA and suggest that the red card handed to the US football team's number one striker should not disqualify him from playing in the World Cup game tonight against Belgium.. What I liked most was when Trump said he knew about these things and didn't think the player had caused a foul. Well, we all have views abouyt fouls on football pitches and it's rare for anyone to agree with the referee. So Trump is like one of us. But to pick up the phone and ring FIFA to get the suspension delayed for a year, that is a privilege we don't have. So, if you're Belgian, it all looks like a bit of corrupt inside dealing. The FIFA boss was very happy to do what Trump wanted, and I expect he called him Donald. Now that the England team have lost a player for the next match vecause of a red card, perhaps Trump can make a phone call for him as well. That would be more even-handed. But I don't expect Trump will do that. He doesn't care about the England team. He just wants the US to win the World Cup. It's a bigger scandal than doping.
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Sunday, 5 July 2026
Nato at yet another crossroads
Nato has had a pretty disastrous period in recent years and now, with its next summit due this coming week, there will no doubt be a call for resurgence and more spending and closer ties and a united front against Russia. But will it mean anything? Alliance members are still struggling to find the money for all the new equipment and expertise required to fight the next war, or, hopefully, deter the next war, and it could be years before the whole organisation is, as it were, fighting fit for the future. Donald Trump has been scathing about Nato for so long, one wonders whether he will ever become a fan again. He will be at the Nato summit and will no doubt barge his way through the various leaders and chat up the only people he still seems to like, such as President Erdogan of Turkey and, for some odd reason, President Macron of France. I say odd, because the two are as unalike as you could imagine but Trump likes Macron. I think he's also fascinated by his much older wife. I doubt he will bother with poor Keir Starmer who is on his way out and whatever he says at the summit won't count, especially after the very modest amount of extra money he has agreed to spend on defence, as outlined by the Defence Investment Plan. Andy Burnham will be prime minister a week or so after Starmer returns from the summit, so no one will be interested in what Starmer says, apart from goodbye. Cruel, but true. Whether Nato will survive will depend on whether Trump has had a rethink and feels the alliance isn't such a bad thing after all. That just may happen, especially if everyone flatters him like he's some sort of Hollywood icon or whatever.
Saturday, 4 July 2026
The political disasters looming for Trump over Iran
The confrontation with Iran has gone quiet. The bombing has stopped, oil tankers are once again going through the Strait of Hormuz. Is it peace at last? There is still a huge amount to negotiate during the 60-day phase of the peace discussions in Switzerland. But can President Trump now feel he has done enough to appease his critics who still claim the war with Iran achieved very little. Trump says he can always revert to bombing Iran if the peace negotiations fail. But it’s not in anyone’s interests, least of all the president’s, for the war to be restarted. If the Republicans are to retain their majority in the Senate and House of Representatives in the midterm elections in November, the president will need to demonstrate that the war is over and the benefits for the United States and for the whole world are tangible and longlasting. Oil prices have gone down substantially since the Strait of Hormuz was reopened but every time there is a spate of attacks and retaliatory strikes between the US and Iran, the price goes up. What Trump needs is a period of stability to allow the negotiations with Iran to continue without angry clashes between the US and Iranian military. However, even if the war is finally over, there are still potential politically negative repercussions for the Republicans and for the president. If Trump loses this argument about the Strait of Hormuz and his negotiators concede to Tehran’s demands to charge a service fee, it will be viewed as a major failure, not just by Republicans in general but by his MAGA supporters. If Trump were to give in to Tehran on this issue, it could have a disastrous impact politically for the Republican party in November.
Friday, 3 July 2026
Will the funeral of Ali Khamenei finally end the war or revive it?
Seeing the thousands of people gathering in Tehran to follow the funeral of the former Iranian supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, one wonders whether the tears being shed for him will provoke demands for revenge or whether there will be an acceptance of peace. Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was one of the first victims of the US/Israel bombing that began at the end of February. He was deliberately targeted and was, therefore, assassinated as part of Donald Trump's and Benjamin Netanyahu's plan to bring down the regime he led. If there is to be peace it won't be out of love for Trump and Netanyahu. They will remain the enemy in the minds of Iranians. Indeed, when Iranian negotiators talk about developments in the peace talks, they always refer to negotiating with the enemy. The killing of their former supreme leader, and the severe injuries suffered by his successor, his son Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei, will always remain the yardstick for Tehran's demands for a settlement. They will want revenge for their loss. This is a dangerous ingredient for Washington. If Trump wants a deal which makes it look like he has won the war, he will still have to make concessions as a quid pro quo for the death of the leader now being mourned in the streets of Iran's cities.
Thursday, 2 July 2026
Putin is surely getting more and more desperate
Vladimir Putin is a wounded lion, growling and in pain but refusing to admit that his world is collapsing around him. He is ruining his country, destroying his people, wrecking the economy, sending more and more young men to their deaths in Ukraine, and yet still he hangs on in the belief that if he keeps launching drones and ballistic missiles at Kyiv, his hated enemy Zelensky, will cave in. But there is absolutely no sign of that happening. Zelensky is increasing the number of attacks on Russia itself and bringing the war to the Russian people. It is now a common event for Ukrainian drones to fly over Russian territory. It wasn't that long ago, a year or so back, when Putin hinted that if Russia faced an existential threat, he would have to resort to other sorts of weapons of weapons. Thank God, he hasn't done so. But at what point does he decide Ukraine is going too far? Hopefully this will never happen. But it is extraordinary that Russia is facing almost daily attacks. Why is there not an outcry in Russia, why is no one turning to their president and accusing him of putting the country at such risk? Putin survives however bad it is getting. Can this go on for ever?
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Wednesday, 1 July 2026
The Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps will never give up the Strait of Hormuz
It is perfectly obvious that the regime in Tehran, and in psrticular the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps, is going to hang onto some sort of control of the Strait of Hormuz whatever Donald Trump says. Tehran has been helped by Oman which sits on the southern side of the strait, which is also keen on having management (money-making) control of shipping going through the narrow channel. I don't see how Trump is going to stop it happening. Returning to war is not going to change Tehran's determination to maintain the leverage it now has, with or without Oman. This is a disaster for Trump, a disaster for the world's shipping industry, and probably a disaster for keeping oil prices down. If every ship going through the strait has to pay, say $1,000 or maybe $1 million, when using the strait, it's going to have a huge impact on oil prices and shipping insurance. It will deal a massive blow to Trump who has said publicly on numerous occasions that the Strait of Hormuz is an international channel and that fees can therefore never be charged. As the talks continue in Switzerland on this issue and the Iranian nuclear programme, I can envisage a settlement in which Iran is granted the right to charge some sort of fee for ensuring safety for all shipping in exchange for a deal over Iran's uranium-enrichment programme. I reckon Iran will go for that, and Trump will be forced to accept it so that he can boast he has stopped Iran from building a nuclear bomb.
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Tuesday, 30 June 2026
Starmer boosts defence spending but is it enough?
Keir Starmer has only got another 20 days or so as British prime minister before he "voluntarily" steps down and hands over to Andy Burnham. But he has managed to find the time to publish, at last, the defence investment plan to fund the armed forces and modernise their equipment for future wars. It has taken a long time and he has persuaded the Treasury to hand over an extra £15 billion to help build a new class of warship which will be a mother ship for drones, plus some additional vessels for the Royal Marines and a fancy new combat aircraft that will fly alongside unmanned air veihcles. Yes, more drones. The Ukraine war has taught the whole world that warfare is now different. Forget tanks and traditional warships, the requirement is for drones, drones, drones, whether in the air, on land or on the water or under the water. Thousands of them are needed to fight off Russia in the future. The problem is that drones are not the answer to everything. When it comes to big military powers like Russia, they have hypersonic ballistic and cruise missiles and if the UK doesn't have the most advanced air-defence systems, we would be crushed in a war. The UK should be buying US Patriot missiles and parking them around the country if we want to be safe from Russian missile attack. Drones are great, they are more potent than in the past, they have longer ranges and can be guided to hit targets spot on. But we need so much more than drones to stay ahead of our enemies. And this is where the extra money is going to seem paltry by the time it has been spent on new fancy drones. With the UK economy drifting like a slow-moving barge, it's difficult to see where all the money for defence is going to come from.
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