samedi 21 mars 2026

Trump promised peace. He delivered chaos

Plus: Is public prayer un-British? | Sienna Miller talks to Lisa Armstrong about being pregnant at 44
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Saturday, 21 March 2026

Issue No. 391

Good morning.

Donald Trump promised to be the “president of peace”, but then he took office. In this outstanding piece of visual journalism, we map the hundreds of strikes the US has launched over the past 13 months, and analyse why this global instability risks alienating Americans.

Elsewhere, we have the best of our Saturday interviews with Sienna Miller and Ian Rush, there are two brilliant competitions for you to enter and we answer the question: Is it time to leave Hargreaves Lansdown?

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Try a year of The Telegraph for £25, including all the articles in this newsletter. If you’re already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

Is public prayer un-British?

Sienna Miller talks to Lisa Armstrong about being pregnant at 44

Plus, is it finally time to leave Hargreaves Lansdown?

Spring Sale: Enjoy one year for £25

Unlock full access to our free-thinking journalism for less than 50p per week.

 

Trump promised to end wars. Here are all the ones he started

Memphis Barker and Mariana Hallal

 

During his 2024 presidential campaign, Donald Trump promised “no new wars”.

Even in office, he has been relentless in his pursuit of the Nobel Peace Prize.

The reality of his second term couldn’t be starker.

He has ordered attacks across 13 countries in as many months, with operations spanning three continents, covering the Americas, Africa and Asia.

This visual feast of journalism plots the journey from Trump’s broken pre-election promise of peace to the seismic war he started in Iran.

 

Opinion

Hamish de Bretton-Gordon Headshot

Hamish de Bretton-Gordon

A long-ago covert operation shows how special forces could reopen Hormuz

The US and UK need to replicate a daring 1980s mission

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Camilla Tominey  </span> Headshot

Camilla Tominey

If Ed Miliband is Labour’s answer, then truly we are doomed

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">James Le Fanu  </span> Headshot

James Le Fanu

What does the Covid inquiry tell us? Nothing

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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In other news

weekend reads

Members of the Muslim community joined for an ‘open iftar’ Ramadan dinner event at Trafalgar Square on Monday

Is public prayer un-British?

When several hundred Muslim men, including Sadiq Khan, the Mayor of London, conducted a mass prayer in Trafalgar Square this week, it ignited a fierce debate. Nick Timothy, the Conservative shadow justice secretary, labelled it “an act of domination... straight from the Islamist playbook”. In response, Sir Keir Starmer told Tory leader Kemi Badenoch that Timothy should be sacked, while Reform’s Nigel Farage gave the MP his support. Ed Cumming, Senior Features Writer, reports.
Continue reading

Plus, Charles Moore: Public prayer isn’t just a matter of devotion, for Islamists it’s about domination

 
Sienna Miller

Sienna Miller in the new Charlotte Tilbury advert

Motherhood with Sienna Miller: parenting a 13-year-old while having a baby at 44

Sienna Miller was 31 weeks pregnant when we met in a very luxurious suite at London’s Corinthia hotel to discuss her latest collaboration with Charlotte Tilbury, writes Lisa Armstrong, Head of Fashion. Glam or not, it was the end of a long day of interviews and, with her third baby due imminently, she was tired. I expected our chat to primarily be about the new Tilbury tinted lip balms. However, it roamed widely: the challenges of raising children in the glare of social media, her own battles with intrusion, unreal beauty standards in Hollywood, how she wants to be like her new friend Celia Imrie and what she’s reading.

She even told me the sex of her unborn child, although later – understandably – asked me not to reveal it. For all her early battles with scrutiny, she’s still one of the least guarded, most natural people I’ve interviewed, which makes her a joy of a subject.

Continue reading

 

Is it finally time to leave Hargreaves Lansdown?

A tech outage was the last thing Hargreaves Lansdown needed this week. A fee restructure unveiled earlier this month proved deeply unpopular with customers, and on Thursday and Friday, those who hadn’t yet moved their money elsewhere found that they couldn’t log in to their accounts. One investor estimated this had cost him more than £10,000 in profit from planned trades he was unable to make. Is this the final straw for the investment giant? Joe Wright, Senior Money Writer, investigates.
For subscribers only

 

Jenni Murray interviewing Margaret Thatcher for Woman’s Hour in 1990

Obituary: Dame Jenni Murray, broadcaster who was the distinctive voice of Radio 4’s Woman’s Hour for 30 years

Dame Jenni Murray, who has died aged 75, was the richly reassuring voice of Woman’s Hour on Radio 4 from 1987 to 2020 and she interviewed all the major political figures of her time. From Margaret Thatcher to Gordon Brown, they responded to her gentle probing in a way they would not to more aggressive interviewers. Read her full obituary here.

Continue reading

 

‘I spent a decade in the Civil Service. It’s even worse than you think’

My time in Whitehall gave me a shocking insight into why government in Britain is so ineffective, writes Ameer Kotecha. The departments of state are hamstrung by diversity, equity and inclusion, no one is held accountable for poor performance, a sick-note and working-from-home culture has become endemic, and there is a chronic lack of real-world experience. The worst thing? Union intransigence makes reform almost impossible.

Continue reading

 

The former footballer opens up about his near-death experience

Ian Rush: I told myself ‘I must keep fighting, this cannot be the end’

“I thought I was a goner. It was like I was drowning,” Ian Rush tells Telegraph Sport, describing the ordeal in December when a severe asthma attack left him fighting for life. Now recovered, the Liverpool legend underlines his fresh perspective about his extraordinary achievements and his biggest regret in football. He also names the greatest centre-backs he faced.

Continue reading

 

Your Saturday

The Princess of Wales is known for her timeless smart-casual wear

  • What to wear | Perfectly straddling the smart-casual dress code, the Princess of Wales’s shirt and blazer combination is a fail-safe route to easy elegance. Here’s how to recreate her simple spring style formula.
  • Enter | Nominate your favourite pub in our competition and they could win a £5,000 drinks tab, courtesy of The Telegraph. Enter here.
  • Drink | For many, a caffeine fix is key to starting the day. Here we explain the biological changes that begin with that morning tea or coffee.
  • Plant | Val Bourne, Gardening Writer, reveals how she turned an uninspiring space in her Cotswolds cottage garden into a plant-filled paradise.
  • Write | Tell us about an authentic interaction you’ve experienced while travelling for the chance to win a luxury holiday. Enter the competition here.
 

Diana’s Weekend table

Spring salads to prepare for lunch

‘Crazy’ carrot and grain salad

Diana Henry

Diana Henry

The Telegraph’s award-winning cookery writer

 

I once had a conversation with Nigella Lawson in which she explained the irresistible urge to cook for people. She described herself as a “feeder” and assumed I was too. I was ashamed to admit that I wasn’t. My children were much younger and I often felt that feeding them was something to get through. Now that I cook for them as adults, there has been a definite shift. I feel that cooking is a continuation of my care and that’s very important to me. One of my sons works in a trauma hospital and takes in food – no Pret for him – every day. I can’t cut his hours, but I can feed him. It’s not really lunch al desko, it’s more lunch on the hoof.

Although he protests, I like making this food. Soups or interesting salads with griddled chicken are perfect, and the weekend gives me time to get ahead. The salads need to be sturdy, grain or pulse-based rather than leafy. We both love this “crazy” salad, which can be eaten over several days (just add the leaves and pomegranate seeds daily).

Tuna, roast pepper, tomato and white bean salad

Other salads are assembly jobs and made, mostly, from store-cupboard ingredients. As the weather gets warmer this tuna, tomato and bean combination is perfect.

Spanish lamb with cumin, ginger and honey

Sometimes I make dishes that can be reheated at work – a “proper” meal – which means casseroles and braises or pasta with a sauce. This Spanish lamb cooked with cumin, ginger and honey goes into an airtight container with brown rice. You can replace the broad beans with white beans or chickpeas.

Rather late in life I’m discovering that I am, in fact, a “feeder”.

Find me here every Saturday and in the new Telegraph Recipes Newsletter, which you can sign up to here.

Happy cooking!

 

Andrew Baker’s Saturday Quiz


Gather round for the latest instalment of my Saturday quiz.

  1. Which Bach, born on this date in 1685, according to the pre-Gregorian calendar, composed (among many other things) the Goldberg Variations, The Well-tempered Clavier and the St Matthew Passion?
  2. Passion fruit grows naturally in which region?
  3. Juniper berries are the traditional flavouring in gin. Which plant family does juniper belong to?
  4. What is the name of the youngest child in the cartoon Simpson family?
  5. What title did Wallis Simpson take when she married into the Royal family as the wife of the former King Edward VIII?
 

You can find the answers at the end of the newsletter.

 

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 NUTRITION. 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. Please send me your thoughts on this newsletter. You can email me here.

Quiz answers:

  1. Johann Sebastian Bach
  2. South America
  3. Cypress
  4. Maggie
  5. Duchess of Windsor
 

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Telegraph Media Group Holdings Limited or its group companies - 111 Buckingham Palace Road, London SW1W 0DT. Registered in England under No 14551860.

vendredi 20 mars 2026

‘We are heading for a global energy disaster’

Plus: Inside the ‘devastating’ decline in London’s flat market | The proof that Radio 3 has dumbed down
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Friday, 20 March 2026

Issue No. 390

Good morning.

Donald Trump has long insisted that the removal of Iran’s nuclear capabilities was necessary for the survival of the West. However, with the closure of one of the world’s most vulnerable trade choke points – the Strait of Hormuz – the US president has unwittingly signed a death warrant for the global economy. As gas and oil prices surge, Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, our World Economy Editor, has the full analysis on the impending energy disaster.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Try one year of The Telegraph for £25, including all the articles in this newsletter. If you’re already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

Inside the ‘devastating’ decline in London’s flat market

‘I’m a GP who knowingly signs healthy people off work’

Plus, ‘how we moved our family to the US’

Spring Sale: Enjoy one year for £25

Unlock full access to our free-thinking journalism for less than 50p per week.

 

‘The 2022 Russia shock was a picnic compared with this global energy disaster’

Israel struck Iran’s South Pars gas field – the world’s largest – on Wednesday

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard

World Economy Editor

 

It is hard to decide which is the bigger disaster: the unfolding car crash in the global gas market or the mounting danger that entire countries will run out of oil.

The benchmark Title Transfer Facility (TTF) contract for gas in Europe was €29 (£25) per megawatt hour (MWh) in mid-February. Bank of America says it could reach €500 (£431) this winter if the Strait of Hormuz remains closed for 10 weeks, as it may well do.

That would blow through the record high that occurred after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and amount to a full-blown economic emergency for Europe, the UK, Japan, South Korea and South Asia.

The picture is dramatically worse after Israel attacked Iran’s South Pars gas field, adding upstream gas and oil infrastructure to the menu of targets on both sides of the Gulf.

Iran’s missile retaliation on Qatar’s Ras Laffan has inflicted serious damage to the giant complex, which alone produces a fifth of the world’s liquefied natural gas (LNG).

It will be months before shipments start again. Qatar Energy says 17 per cent of production is lost for three to five years. It will have to declare force majeure on LNG supplies to Italy, Korea, China and Belgium.

It is just as bad for oil. The paper market that we all follow does not capture the drama. Physical deliveries are under far greater stress than Brent futures, at about $113, would suggest.

Actual barrels of the Dubai basket and Oman’s Murban are fetching close to $170 a barrel as Asian refiners scramble to buy anything they can. Jet fuel deliveries have hit $210 in Rotterdam and $240 in Singapore.

As one oil veteran tells me: the Russia shock in 2022 was a picnic compared to what is now happening. The world will hit a brick wall within two months.

This expert piece of analysis is available only to subscribers. Sign up to read the full article.
Continue reading

See more of our coverage below:

Saudi Arabia threatens strikes on Iran

The missile strike that changed the war

• Live updates | IEA urges people to work from home as energy prices soar

 

How Iran is bringing the war to Britain’s streets

Anti-Iranian regime protesters rally outside Downing Street earlier this month

Colin Freeman

Colin Freeman

 

The sharp end of the Iran conflict might be playing out 3,000 miles away, but here in Britain a shadow war is being waged on the streets, as Tehran mounts a campaign of retaliation.

Security experts warn that Iran is increasingly turning to “asymmetric warfare” within the UK. This ranges from violence at protests and trolling on social media through to plots against opposition activists and the Jewish community, who fear that Tehran may even have “lone wolf” attackers ready to carry out terror attacks.

With the Islamic Republic outgunned by its foes in conventional terms, the worry is that this different form of aggression may escalate as the regime’s options narrow.

Ominously, intelligence officials also warn that while Tehran lacks the capabilities of powers like China or Russia, it has a notably higher “risk appetite”. Their hope is that, with the regime under increasing pressure, its priority will be simply survival. However, it may equally go down fighting on all fronts, hiring any foot soldier willing to do its bidding.
Continue reading

Go deeper with our full coverage of the Iran war:

• Latest updates | US launches offensive to reopen Strait of Hormuz

Tehran’s most powerful weapon is not a drone, missile or mine

French sailor’s Strava exposes location of aircraft carrier

 

Opinion

Sherelle Jacobs Headshot

Sherelle Jacobs

The Midlands valley that may hold the secret to a national Tory revival

Kemi Badenoch is told that grassroots campaigning matters more than grand visions in the battle against Reform

Continue reading

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

David Blair

The war has escalated into a dangerous new phase

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Jamie Blackett</span> Headshot

Jamie Blackett

Starmer would be a better man if he shot pheasants

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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In other news

Your Essential Reads

Is meningitis airborne and can masks stop it spreading?

The meningitis outbreak has led people to wonder whether they should be wearing masks, writes Sarah Knapton, our Science Editor. The problem lies in whether the disease is truly airborne, and there are some mixed opinions among scientists. Bristol University is carrying out research into how far meningitis bacteria can travel in the air. Until the results are back, masks look set to be a common sight in our lives again.

Continue reading

 

Inside the ‘devastating’ decline in London’s flat market

Ten years ago, the market for new-build flats in London was flying. Fuelled by rock-bottom interest rates and Help to Buy, the capital’s shiny new-builds commanded a 65 per cent premium. Now, in an over-saturated market plagued by rising service charges, flat sellers are discovering that no one wants to invest in them.

For subscribers only

 

Adrian Gillan, 54, estimates that around 90 per cent of his work is entirely unclothed

‘I make £30k a year taking my clothes off as a full-time life model’

Adrian Gillan estimates that half a million people have made three million drawings of his naked body over the years. He’s one of the few self-confessed “exhibitionists” who has managed to turn this trait into a full-time job, earning £30,000 a year and standing out from his peers with his “dynamic and theatrical poses”.

Continue reading

 

Radio 3 once showcased live classical music, satire and readings of Shakespeare

Radio 3 has dumbed down over the years. Here’s the proof

Radio 3 has undergone significant changes since its conception. Ivan Hewett, our Classical Music Critic, has examined the station’s schedules from across the decades to discover whether those griping about its abandonment of the high-brow have a point. As he charts its evolution from the Isaiah Berlin series to the “quirky” and the “personal”, it turns out the case for its “dumbing down” proves quite strong.

Continue reading

 

‘I’m a GP who knowingly signs healthy people off work’

I regularly face pushy patients demanding extended sick notes for minor complaints, writes one anonymous London doctor. When refusing them stretches a 10-minute appointment into a 30-minute confrontation, it is far easier to simply sign them off. With 2.8 million people now classed as “long-term sick”, it’s time someone did something about this backwards, broken system.

Continue reading

 

Kelly has become one of the most recognisable faces in women’s football

Chloe Kelly interview: You don’t have to be a tomboy or girly girl – you can be both

Chloe Kelly was in great spirits when we met at Arsenal’s training ground to discuss everything from the Euros to Barbie dolls, writes Kathryn Batte, Women’s Football Correspondent. She explained how she has matured since scoring the Lionesses’ winning goal at Euro 2022, why she enjoyed last summer’s tournament so much and her plans to bring more trophies to Arsenal before the end of the season.

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

‘We’re better off and have no regrets’: how we moved our family to the US

Alix and Liam Newton say the move, and particularly the warm weather, has ‘transformed’ the way they live

While the East and West Coasts have long been hotspots for British expats, business-friendly cities like Austin, Texas, are attracting a steady stream of overseas nationals keen to take advantage of the tax benefits and outdoor lifestyle. In the latest instalment of our series, a young family explains how they made the move across the pond.

Continue reading

Here is another helpful article for you this morning:

  • From tackling stains to making your windows shine, this 35p product may already be in your kitchen cupboard. Here’s how to use it.
 

Reviews of the week

Snow falls and sparks fly in a spectacular Siegfried

Barrie Kosky’s version of the third chapter of Wagner’s Ring cycle is a triumph

Opera

Siegfried, Royal Opera House

★★★★★

Sparks fly and flowers bloom in the penultimate instalment of Barrie Kosky’s Ring cycle for Covent Garden. In the previous two operas, Das Rheingold and Die Walküre, the Australian director presented an unremittingly bleak picture of tortured relationships. Here, with the arrival of Andreas Schager’s exuberant, naïve Siegfried, there are glimpses of comedy and even hope. The Royal Opera’s production, conducted by Antonio Pappano, is a triumph.
(Until April 6; rbo.org.uk. In cinemas from March 31)
Read Nicholas Kenyon’s full review

TV

The Other Bennet Sister, BBC One

★★★★★

Readers of Pride and Prejudice will know that poor old Mary Bennet never got much of a look-in. The Other Bennet Sister, based on a novel by Janice Hadlow, puts that right. It gives this forgotten character her moment in the spotlight, and it is a pure delight. Ella Bruccoleri is perfect as the bookish, bespectacled Mary, forever trailing unnoticed after her more sparkling sisters. She wins our sympathy entirely as she tries her best to overcome Ugly Duckling syndrome.
(On BBC iPlayer now)
Read Anita Singh’s full review

Film

Project Hail Mary

★★★★☆

With flashy practical effects and a heart-warming story, Project Hail Mary is like a medley of all your favourite sci-fi films. In this adaptation of a 2021 Andy Weir novel, Ryan Gosling teams up with a cute, affable alien to save their respective home planets from an impending ice age. It’s essentially Interstellar recast as a buddy movie – a majestically mounted, existentially inclined space-faring epic. Gosling is enormous fun in his first solo starring role on this scale.
(In cinemas now)
Read Robbie Collin’s full review

 

Your say

Signed, sealed, (not) delivered

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...
Even those of us who weren’t around for the golden age of Royal Mail have a sneaking suspicion that things have gone fairly sharply downhill. There are simply too many stories like this one, from Laurel Middleton: “I am lucky if I get one delivery a week. A fortnight ago, I received so much post that it took me half an hour to sort it out. I recently had a birthday and about half my cards were a week late. I subscribe to a television guide, which does not come until halfway through the week it covers.”


 

For Jonathan Williams, there was one particular irritation: “Royal Mail has failed to deliver my copy of The Spectator two weeks running. If they do arrive, it won’t be the same reading them so long after their sell-by date.”


 

What I hadn’t appreciated, though, was just how formidable the service used to be. Hugh Foster was prompted to recall: “Some years ago I visited Down House, Charles Darwin’s home in Kent. He was a great letter writer and had numerous mail deliveries each day. On one occasion he apparently posted a letter to a friend by first post and received a reply that evening. How times have changed.”


 

Frances Luczyc Wyhowska added: “When I was young there were extra deliveries at Christmas – two in the morning, one in the early afternoon and one in the evening. It was thrilling for a child – and so much jollier than an email. Parcels came wrapped in brown paper and string. If you happened to have friends who went shooting, there were special thick cardboard envelopes that could be used to send pheasants.”


 

Game mail? I confess to a scintilla of scepticism about that one, but the responses put me right. Mary Hill wrote: “Some time in the 1950s, my mother-in-law expressed a desire to taste hare. So my father, a farmer, shot one. My mother tied an addressed label round its neck and posted it. The hare arrived promptly the following morning.”

Do you remember Royal Mail’s better days? 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 PERCEIVED. 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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Telegraph Media Group Holdings Limited or its group companies - 111 Buckingham Palace Road, London SW1W 0DT. Registered in England under No 14551860.