vendredi 13 mars 2026

Familiar foe behind attack on British base

Plus: The jobs AI can’t replace | How to get the most from your 10-minute GP appointment
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Friday, 13 March 2026

Issue No. 383

Good morning.

A British airbase was hit by a swarm of Iranian drones on Wednesday, and the tactics used to target British troops feel worryingly familiar. Sophia Yan, our Senior Foreign Correspondent, is in Ebril, northern Iraq, to bring you the definitive account through the eyes of those who witnessed it.

Elsewhere, the US has lifted sanctions on Russian oil and for the first time we heard from Iran’s new supreme leader, although not in his own voice. This has fuelled speculation he may be injured or even dead.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Try four months of The Telegraph for £1, including all the articles in this newsletter. If you are already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

Michael Wolff: Everyone’s missing the real story on Epstein

Cheltenham Gold Cup: Full list of runners and riders to help you pick who to back

Plus, how to get the most from your 10-minute GP appointment

Email-exclusive offer

Get four months of free-thinking journalism for just £1. Billed as 25p per month.

 

Shahed swarm came in low and fast. The British troops couldn’t stop it

Explosions were seen around Erbil, where drones hit a base used by UK and US forces

Sophia Yan

Sophia Yan

Senior Foreign Correspondent

 

I was a mile away from the explosions. Ahmad was even closer, seeing and hearing the sound of the drone swarm as it slammed into the joint UK-US airbase in Erbil, northern Iraq, from his apartment window.

“I heard big explosions eight or nine times,” he told me. “There were drones, and then I saw a huge black smoke cloud rising over the base and on streets nearby. From what I saw, there was some fire; it was not normal.”

The loud bangs that Ahmad heard began at around 11.45pm (8.45pm GMT) on Wednesday night, and lasted for nearly three hours as British and American troops came under attack in the Kurdish capital.

British air defences destroyed two drones, though other munitions got through and struck the base.

Despite Erbil being subjected to intense bombardment, Ahmad was right that this was indeed not a normal strike.

The Shaheds didn’t come from the sky like they have across the Gulf this past two weeks. Instead, they flew low, barely above sea level, just below the radar, less than 50m above the ground.

It is a tactic Iran has learned from another foe, Britain believes. As John Healey, the Defence Secretary, put it: Vladimir Putin’s “hidden hand” is behind these Iranian drone strikes.

This exclusive dispatch is available to subscribers only. Click below and sign up to read it.
Continue reading

 

US lifts sanctions on Russian oil

A damaged tanker carrying Iraqi fuel oil

The United States has temporarily lifted sanctions on Russian oil already at sea as crude prices surge amid the Iran war.

The treasury department issued the exemptions last night, with the measure set to remain in place until April 11.

The decision is expected to add hundreds of millions of barrels of crude to global markets, easing prices that have hovered near $100 a barrel as a result of the conflict.

In a post on Truth Social overnight, Donald Trump claimed the US is “totally destroying the terrorist regime of Iran” as the war in the Middle East continues.

A US military plane crashed in western Iraq yesterday, with a rescue mission under way to locate the crew of six and recover the KC-135 tanker.

A KC-135 Stratotanker refuels a F/A-18F Super Hornet

Elsewhere, a French soldier has been killed in a drone attack in Iraq, Emmanuel Macron, the French president confirmed.
Follow the latest updates here

Go deeper with our full coverage of the Iran war:

US military plane crashes in Iraq

The battle tactics that show Trump has smashed Iran’s defences

The miscalculation keeping Trump at war with Iran

• Plus, sign up to our new-look business newsletter here

 

Iran must-read

Mojtaba Khamenei is uniting Iran against Trump – but he may not be alive

A written statement by Mojtaba Khamenei was broadcast on Iranian state TV

Iran has a new supreme leader. There’s just one problem: no one knows whether he’s alive. Mojtaba Khamenei was appointed a week after his father died in a US air strike that killed most of his immediate family. He has released one statement since. It was read by a TV announcer and he still hasn’t been seen. His own military commanders say they haven’t received a single order from him.

So who is actually running Iran’s war effort right now? Spoiler: it’s not the man with the title.

Iran is fighting a war, closing the Strait of Hormuz, and striking US military bases – all without a functioning commander-in-chief. Akhtar Makoii digs into how Mojtaba spent two decades quietly building power from the shadows, and why the IRGC might not need him to show up at all.
Continue reading

 

Opinion

Sherelle Jacobs Headshot

Sherelle Jacobs

There’s only one thing that can stop Nigel Farage now

The Reform leader is misunderstood. His hatred of confrontation is the greatest impediment to achieving his vaulting ambitions

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Judith Woods</span> Headshot

Judith Woods

The glaring typos in the Mandelson files show how far Whitehall’s standards have fallen

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">David Frost</span> Headshot

David Frost

Labour knows national cohesion is collapsing, but it’s chosen cowardice

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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In other news

Zara Tindall at the Cheltenham Festival

Zara Tindall was in attendance for day three of the Cheltenham Festival

Your Essential Reads

Michael Wolff says it would ‘be bliss’ if he could go a day without thinking about Donald Trump

Michael Wolff: Everyone’s missing the real story on Epstein

Michael Wolff has been Donald Trump’s chronicler-in-chief for more than a decade, writes Ed Cumming, Senior Features Writer. I first met him in New York last spring, around the publication of the fourth of his explosive books about the Trump presidencies, but a year is a long time in Trumpland. Since that interview, Wolff has sued the First Lady, been mentioned in the Epstein Files and been criticised for his closeness to his subjects. When I caught up with him earlier this week, he had much to say on Epstein, the lawsuit, and the likely outcomes in Iran.

Continue reading

 

Difficult people are ageing you faster. Here’s what to do about it

A new study has revealed that “hasslers” (people in your life who cause stress) can add nine months to your biological age, with your closest kin causing the most damage and, interestingly, spouses causing the least. From overbearing parents to demanding friends, here’s how to minimise the impact, according to a sociology professor.

For subscribers only

 

The jobs AI can’t replace (and could make even better)

As AI continues to evolve, few workplaces will remain untouched by the technology. For some workers, this means their roles being replaced. For others, AI could become a powerful ally, making them more efficient so they can focus on the human skills machines can’t replace. Here, Telegraph Money identifies the most, and least, future-proof careers.

Continue reading

 

Dr Aseem Malhotra: ‘You do not rebuild trust by shutting down debate’

‘I’m fighting for my medical licence after blowing the whistle on Covid jabs’

Writing exclusively for The Telegraph, consultant cardiologist Aseem Malhotra describes how the medical establishment has moved against him after he suggested possible links between the Covid mRNA vaccine and serious disease. He has been suspended by the Royal College of Physicians and now fears he may be struck off by the General Medical Council. The charge? Undermining trust in vaccination. However, says Dr Malhotra, everything he has said has been grounded in peer-reviewed evidence; it is the silence surrounding the dangers that is damaging trust.

Continue reading

 

The woodland was ‘horrifically’ damaged during timber harvesting

The bluebell massacre tearing the New Forest apart

Standing amid a barren woodland of hacked tree stumps, log piles and warning signs, a runner asked two officials: “What has gone wrong here?” Forestry England has launched an investigation after a pocket of woodland in the New Forest – renowned for its bluebells – was turned into a “battlefield” by truck tyres and tree felling in the exceptionally wet start to the year.

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

‘I’m a GP. Here’s how to get the most from your 10-minute appointment’

Dr Nighat Arif is a GP in Buckinghamshire, an author and a medical broadcaster

Dr Nighat Arif knows just how stressful patients feel trying to get an appointment with their doctor. Then, after days or weeks of waiting, they only have 10 minutes to get what they need from their GP. Here she shares her six tips to optimise your appointment, from the best way to track your symptoms to when to use AI.
Continue reading

Here is another helpful article for you this morning:

 

Reviews of the week

Brenda Blethyn is wonderfully hammy in Channel 4’s sexed-up A Woman of Substance

Brenda Blethyn plays the older Emma Harte as a character straight out of Dynasty

TV

A Woman of Substance, Channel 4

★★★★☆

One of the funniest facts about Channel 4 is that, for all its desire to be subversive and daring, its highest-rated show of all time is the 1985 period drama A Woman of Substance. Forty years on, they’ve remade it starring Brenda Blethyn. Instead of doing it with postmodern irony, they’ve turned out a loving homage to Barbara Taylor Bradford and her rags-to-riches tale, albeit with a raging libido.
Read Anita Singh’s review

Film

How to Make a Killing

★★☆☆☆

How should one go about updating Kind Hearts and Coronets, the jewel of Ealing Studios’ post-war output and one of the greatest comedies ever made? The answer is that one really shouldn’t. In this contemporary second take on the 1907 Roy Horniman novel, Glen Powell plays a disinherited young aristo who serial-kills his way back up the line of succession. It’s exactly as unnecessary and uninspiring as you might fear.
Read Robbie Collin’s review

Books

Archbishop Sarah Mullally, by Andrew Atherstone

★★★☆☆

Can this trailblazer save the Church of England? Andrew Atherstone has written a helpful account of the first female Archbishop of Canterbury, framing Sarah Mullally as the ordinary rendered extraordinary. She has tough tasks ahead. Mullally has always demonstrated an aversion to risk – and reconciliation between the Church’s warring evangelical, Catholic traditionalist and liberal-progressive factions may prove impossible. She must deal with the continuing issues of sexual abuse and safeguarding, as well as the lingering rows over same-sex relationships.
Read Catherine Pepinster’s review

Plus, sign up to our Culture newsletter here

 

Your say

A Tale of Small Cities

Every weekday, Orlando Bird, our loyal reader correspondent, shares an off-piste topic that has brought out the best of your opinions and stories.

Orlando writes...
Having ranked Britain’s largest urban centres, incurring the wrath of both Southampton and Watford in the process, The Telegraph’s Chris Moss has now turned his attention to the smallest cities in the country. As ever, it’s fair to say that his assessments haven’t been met with unanimous agreement, though I had to concede that Truro, for which I have a soft spot, and which seemed such a heady metropolis when I was growing up in Cornwall, probably got the score it deserved, languishing at the bottom of the table with 4/10.


 

The top spot proved more controversial. “I’m afraid I am baffled by the choice of Canterbury,” wrote Neil Owen. “I have lived near this city for many years now and have been saddened to see its not-so-slow decline. The high street is a shadow of its former self, with several large department stores now gone, while small, privately run shops have also suffered. It’s trying to improve, but the council doesn’t seem to know how to regenerate it.”


 

I enjoyed Canterbury when I went there almost a decade ago, but for me the runner-up, Bath, would have been a worthier winner. Lorraine Shelley wasn’t sure it even deserved that accolade, however: “When I visited a couple of years ago, I was disappointed. It looked a bit neglected to me.”


 

Mike Price was pleased to see Lincoln recognised: “I went for a day, not expecting much. How wrong I was. It is a fantastic place, and a photographer’s dream. Lovely cathedral, fascinating little independent shops, a great waterfront and lovely restaurants.” He also put in a word for Worcester, “which is always nice to walk around. I went to The King’s School there, so have fond memories. Rik Mayall in my class produced a few laughs”.


 

Al Davidson, meanwhile, felt Dunfermline merited a more favourable write-up, as “the ancient capital of Scotland and birthplace of Charles I”. Also in the credit column: “The abbey and palace burnt by Edward I are magnificent. The body of Robert the Bruce is buried in the abbey. And Jock Stein was the manager of the Scottish cup-winning team, with Alex Ferguson as centre forward.”

How did your favourite small cities fare? Send your responses here, and the best of the bunch will feature in a future edition of From the Editor PM, for which you can sign up here.

Please confirm in your reply that you are happy to be featured and that we have your permission to use your name.

 

Puzzles

Panagram

Find as many words as you can in today’s Panagram, including the nine-letter solution. Visit Telegraph Puzzles to play a range of head-scratching games, including PlusWord, Sorted, and Quick, Mini or Cryptic Crosswords.


 

Yesterday’s Panagram was EMOLLIENT. Come back tomorrow for the solution to today’s puzzle.

 

Please let me know what you think of this newsletter. You can email me your feedback here.

Thank you for reading. Have a fulfilling day and I hope to see you tomorrow.

Chris Evans, Editor

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jeudi 12 mars 2026

Hope fading on the Iraq-Iran border

Inside Britain’s spiralling master’s degree crisis | ‘Is it worth having a car in a city any more?’
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Thursday, 12 March 2026

Issue No. 382

Good morning.

Perched on the mountainous border dividing Iraq and Iran, residents of Halabja have endured decades of violence. Five thousand of them were killed by Saddam Hussein in what remains the world’s worst chemical attack. War has returned to these brutalised people. Sophia Yan, our Senior Foreign Correspondent, visits the tiny Iraqi governorate and finds that, despite talk of the US arming militias ready to cross the border into Iran, hopes for an uprising are dwindling.

Elsewhere, the Mandelson files were released yesterday afternoon, and they show Sir Keir Starmer ignored warnings before appointing him as US ambassador. You can find our best coverage on this below.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Try 4 months of The Telegraph for £1, including all the articles in this newsletter. If you are already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

Allister Heath: This is a turning point in history, the moment the West could be lost

Inside Britain’s spiralling master’s degree crisis

Plus, hits and misses from Marks & Spencer’s new collection

Email-exclusive offer

Get 4 months of free-thinking journalism for just £1. Billed as 25p per month.

 

In the scarred border mountains of Iran, hopes of an uprising fade

Old men in a Halabja market reflect on the previous Iran-Iraq conflict

Sophia Yan

Sophia Yan

Senior Foreign Correspondent, in Halabja, Iraq

 

The soaring, snow-dappled peaks of the Zagros mountain range dividing Iraq and Iran offer little comfort or defence to the people of Halabja as war strikes yet again.

Residents in this corner of northern Iraq, right next to Iran, have lived through decades of conflict – even being gassed by the late dictator Saddam Hussein in what remains the world’s worst chemical weapons attack, which killed at least 5,000 people.

Now, many fear they’ll be forced to relive the horrors as US and Israeli warplanes buzz in the skies to drop bombs over the Zagros ridgeline, and Iranian missiles spear overhead toward targets far and near, often within Iraq itself.

What’s even more worrying is the possibility that a ground invasion will be launched from here – an operation that would drag Halabja into the heart of war.

Sophia’s dispatch from the frontier between Iraq and Iran is available to subscribers only.
Continue reading

 

Oil tankers struck in suspected Iranian attack

Fuel tanker erupts in flames after attack in Gulf

Fuel tanker erupts in flames after attack in Gulf

Ben Farmer

Ben Farmer

Foreign Correspondent, in Dubai

 

Six ships have been struck in the Gulf in 24 hours, setting tankers ablaze and killing at least one crewman.

Whatever Donald Trump may have said earlier in the week, in the Straits of Hormuz, the war does not appear to be “pretty much” over. Instead Tehran is escalating its campaign to choke the hairpin oil artery to increase its leverage.

The Thai cargo ship Mayuree Naree was hit in the Strait of Hormuz yesterday

The International Energy Agency has agreed to release 400 million barrels of oil from its strategic reserves to ease shortages. The release of emergency stocks is more than twice that conducted in the aftermath of Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine.

Despite this, the announcement did not stop oil prices going back over $100 per barrel. Sir Keir Starmer said the Government would “step in” if companies profiteered to exploit rising heating oil prices. The FBI meanwhile warned Iran could launch a drone attack on California.

The Islamic Republic has spent decades preparing to close the Strait using swarms of fast attack speedboats, sea mines and missile batteries. Trump said the waterway was now his priority. He said: “Now we’re going to look ⁠very strongly at the straits. The ⁠straits are in great shape.”

Trump speaking to reporters after landing at Joint Base Andrews

Chris Murphy, a Democrat senator for Connecticut, had earlier painted a different picture. After a two-hour classified briefing on America’s military campaign, he said the administration’s plans were “incoherent and incomplete”.

He said: “On the Strait of Hormuz, they had no plan.”
Follow the latest updates here

Go deeper with our full coverage of the Iran war:

US takes on Iran’s British-inspired minelayers in fight for Hormuz

Iran ‘planning drone attack on California’, warns FBI

 

Iran must-reads

Sir Jim Ratcliffe: Iran war is a wake-up call for Miliband

“If ever there was a time to talk about energy security then surely it is now,” writes Sir Jim Ratcliffe. The Ineos boss calls the crisis in Iran a “wake-up call” that should prompt Labour to end its North Sea drilling ban and scrap windfall taxes. He is now calling on Ed Miliband, the Energy Secretary, to approve two new gas developments and allow further exploration.
Continue reading

P.S. Our To Business newsletter has a new look. For an expert guide to the people and events shaping economies, markets and industries, sign up here.

 

After Cyprus was targeted by an Iranian drone, Emmanuel Macron has proclaimed himself the island’s European saviour

Britain spends billions more than France on defence, so why is the French military superior?

When an Iranian drone attacked Cyprus, it was a French warship, not a British one, that swooped in to help. Despite the UK boasting a £60bn defence budget, outspending France by a cool £7bn, Emmanuel Macron is being hailed as Europe’s protector. It turns out our cross-Channel rivals are getting much more bang for their buck, leaving Britain’s floundering forces a laughing stock.

Continue reading

 

Opinion

Allister Heath Headshot

Allister Heath

This is a turning point in history, the moment the West could be lost

If Trump declares a premature victory, he will embolden our enemies and leave the Iranian regime unbowed

For subscribers only

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Tom Harris</span> Headshot

Tom Harris

The Mandelson files lay bare the depths of Starmer’s poor judgment

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Allison Pearson</span> Headshot

Allison Pearson

The BBC is not living up to the ‘British’ part of its name

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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In other news

Your sport briefing

Your essential reads

Britain’s spiralling master’s degree crisis – and the jobless graduates who have no other option

Percentage of graduates in employment or further study five years after graduating, 2022-23 | Source: Department of Education

Graduates are returning to university in a desperate attempt to stand out in the toughest jobs market for a decade. However, as their debts mount, and with a number of master’s degrees not leading to higher salaries, many are realising they have made a costly mistake. Ruby Cline investigates whether graduates have been sold a lie.

Continue reading

 

Internet personality and high-stakes boxer Ed Matthews meets Louis Theroux in the new Netflix documentary

‘As a father of teenage boys, Louis Theroux’s film had me quivering behind the sofa’

★★★★★
Louis Theroux’s Netflix debut is a look inside the troubling “manosphere”, which has left Benji Wilson, our TV critic, profoundly unsettled. The documentary sees Theroux meeting “a succession of cigar-smoking gym bros revving their Lamborghinis and overclocking their lives”. When challenged on their flagrant misogyny, homophobia and shadowy-cabal-running-the-world hokum, one replies: “I don’t give a f--- what people think, and I’m really rich.”

Continue reading

 

Miranda Levy is forced to question whether to keep her Fiat 500 in London

‘I’ve been fined £700 in nine months. Is it worth having a car in a city any more?’

Between my latest speeding fine, a parking ticket and a no-through road violation, I’ve amassed a hefty bill for keeping my car in London over the last few months. So hefty, in fact, I’m considering giving it up altogether, writes Miranda Levy. I’m not alone. Motorists across the country are being heavily penalised for minor driving infractions to bolster the purse of the councils. In the words of one motoring expert, “the whole thing is a scam”.

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

Hits and misses from Marks & Spencer’s new collection

M&S collection

A Bottega Veneta-like jacket, denim culottes and jelly ballerinas are just a handful of the fashion highlights we can expect from M&S in the coming months. At a new collection preview on Tuesday, its designers revealed how carefully they’ve been navigating that balance between value and quality. For the most part they’ve pulled it off, with some hanger appeal to boot. Here is Telegraph Fashion’s verdict.

Continue reading

Here is another helpful article for you this morning:

 

Pints, fights and a pop-up strip club: My day at the Cheltenham Festival

Cheltenham features lots of men and lots of alcohol

Guy Kelly

Guy Kelly

Features Writer

 

When nearly 60,000 punters streamed through the gates of Cheltenham Racecourse on Tuesday morning, it marked the start of the “greatest show on turf” – in which the finest horses and the most talented jump jockeys vie to seal their legacies and enrich their owners in one of sport’s most storied settings.

However, modern Cheltenham is far more than just a horse racing festival: it’s also probably the booziest event in the British calendar, bringing utter chaos (and even a pop-up strip club) to the genteel Regency town for one long, long week every year.

Pop-up strip club Eroticats

Pop-up strip club Eroticats is granted a licence to open for one week each year in the centre of town

In an assignment that was equal parts funny, exhausting and horrific, I joined the 8am beer train out of London Paddington and spent the day with the thirstiest revellers in the land.

It began with red wine for breakfast, went downhill from there, and ended 14 hours later with that chilling question: “Right, where’s still open?”
Continue reading

 

Your say

Pressing concerns

Every weekday, Orlando Bird, our loyal reader correspondent, shares an off-piste topic that has brought out the best of your opinions and stories.

Orlando writes...
“Ironing is going out of fashion,” declared a recent Telegraph article. “But can creases be cool?” If the answer is yes, I will just say for the record that I was way ahead of the curve. Feel free to consult me on other questions of style. Matching socks? Risibly gauche.


 

Not all readers have welcomed the crumpled new world, however. “In the 1970s”, wrote Angela Walters, “a former model stayed with us. One day she came to me in a frightful flap, asking where the iron was. Her white linen pencil skirt had a crease in the back, and she couldn’t possibly appear at our drinks party with that. Ironed clothes were an absolute must for her – as they are for me. My husband is 83 and has never ironed anything in his life. Aged 74, I have never filled in an annual tax return. We have been together for 56 years. When asked what my formula for a long marriage is, I say: I pick up the socks and he picks up the bills.”


 

Julian Bates added: “When I was little, if I was good my mother would let me iron the handkerchiefs. On Tuesday, aged 89, I ironed the latest batch. I take the greatest pleasure in a freshly laundered, perfectly ironed handkerchief.”


 

Others were less convinced of the appeal. Sheila Taylor recalled: “A new bride in 1958, I was working full-time while also studying for professional exams. Once, as I had an essay due the next day, my husband offered to iron his shirts. Afterwards he said there were better things to do in life than ironing, and that he’d never again buy shirts that needed to be ironed. And he didn’t.”

Are you tough on crinkles – or do you leave your clothes fashionably unironed? Send your responses here, and the best of the bunch will feature in a future edition of From the Editor PM, for which you can sign up here.

Please confirm in your reply that you are happy to be featured and that we have your permission to use your name.

 

Puzzles

Panagram

Find as many words as you can in today’s Panagram, including the nine-letter solution. Visit Telegraph Puzzles to play a range of head-scratching games, including PlusWord, Sorted, and Quick, Mini or Cryptic Crosswords.


 

Yesterday’s Panagram was FOOLHARDY. Come back tomorrow for the solution to today’s puzzle.

 


Thank you for reading. Have a fulfilling day and I hope to see you tomorrow.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. I’d love to hear what you think of this newsletter. You can email me your feedback here.

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