Show key events onlyPlease turn on JavaScript to use this featureFrom 33m agoTrump seeks to delay
China trip because of
Iran warDonald Trump has said his trip to
China this month to meet with the country’s leader,
Xi Jinping, could be delayed by “a month or so”.But a key Trump administration official insisted the move was not to press Beijing to help unblock the
Strait of Hormuz.Trump said: double quotation markWe’re speaking to
China. I would love to, but because of the war, I want to be here. We have requested that we delay it a month or so, and I’m looking forward to meeting with him. We’ve got a war going on. I think it’s important that I be here. So it could be that we delay it a little bit, not much. Trump’s treasury secretary,
Scott Bessent, earlier cast doubt on the trip but insisted this was not to pressure Beijing to help unblock the
Strait of Hormuz, telling CNBC: double quotation markWe will see whether the visit takes place as scheduled. But what I do want to parse, and there’s a false narrative out there that if the meetings are delayed, it wouldn’t be delayed because the president’s demanded that
China police the straits of Hormuz. Key events33m agoTrump seeks to delay
China trip because of
Iran war34m agoWelcome summaryShow key events onlyPlease turn on JavaScript to use this featureThe
United Arab Emirates’ air defences are currently responding to incoming missile and drone attacks from
Iran, the Gulf state’s ministry of defence has just said. It posted on social media that sounds being heard there are from air defences intercepting ballistic missiles and fighter jets intercepting drones and loitering munitions.Trump seeks to delay
China trip because of
Iran warDonald Trump has said his trip to
China this month to meet with the country’s leader,
Xi Jinping, could be delayed by “a month or so”.But a key Trump administration official insisted the move was not to press Beijing to help unblock the
Strait of Hormuz.Trump said: double quotation markWe’re speaking to
China. I would love to, but because of the war, I want to be here. We have requested that we delay it a month or so, and I’m looking forward to meeting with him. We’ve got a war going on. I think it’s important that I be here. So it could be that we delay it a little bit, not much. Trump’s treasury secretary,
Scott Bessent, earlier cast doubt on the trip but insisted this was not to pressure Beijing to help unblock the
Strait of Hormuz, telling CNBC: double quotation markWe will see whether the visit takes place as scheduled. But what I do want to parse, and there’s a false narrative out there that if the meetings are delayed, it wouldn’t be delayed because the president’s demanded that
China police the straits of Hormuz. Welcome summaryHello and welcome to our continuing live coverage of the US-Israel war on
Iran and the repercussions for the region, the world and the global economy.Here are the latest developments: A wave of drone and rocket attacks targeted the US embassy in Baghdad early on Tuesday, Iraqi security sources said. They described it as the most intense assault since the attacks began, with at least five drones used, Reuters reported. It quoted a witness as saying a powerful explosion was heard in the Iraqi capital. Smoke and fire rise during reported strikes at the US embassy, according to Iraqi security sources, in Baghdad, Iraq, in a still taken from social media video. Photograph: Reuters Air traffic operations in the
United Arab Emirates have returned to normal after the temporary closure of its airspace earlier on Tuesday, the Gulf state’s aviation authority has said, quoted by the state news agency. The UAE’s ministry of defence said earlier that the country’s defences were responding to incoming missiles and drones from
Iran.
Donald Trump said he will “soon” announce countries that have agreed to help the US reopen the
Strait of Hormuz, as he criticised his many allies – including Nato and the UK – that have so far declined to get involved. He said South Korea, Japan and
China should be helping the US, also warning that Nato faced a “very bad” future if it didn’t help and saying he was “not happy” with the UK. Allies responded by saying “this is not Nato war”, with the EU insisting it has “no appetite” to expand its naval mission to the
Strait of Hormuz. German chancellor Friedrich Merz earlier said this war “is not a matter for Nato”, while Nato said “allies have already stepped up to provide additional security in the Mediterranean”. UK prime minister Keir Starmer had earlier resisted Trump’s call to send warships to the strait, saying the UK “will not be drawn into a wider war” but was working with allies on a plan to reopen the strait. Trump also said the war would be “wrapped up” soon, and that it wouldn’t be this week but “it won’t be long”. US vice-president JD Vance deflected and attacked the media when asked if he supported Trump’s war on
Iran, given his prior criticisms of open-ended US foreign interventionism. It followed US media reports that he had privately expressed scepticism and counselled Trump against striking
Iran. Vance accused the media of trying to “drive a wedge” between him and his president, and repeated Trump’s claim that Tehran was close to developing a nuclear weapon. “I trust President Trump to get the job done,” he said. Iranian foreign minister Abbas Araghchi denied recent contact with US special envoy Steve Witkoff and said their last contact was before the US-Israel attack on
Iran. Araghchi wrote on X: “My last contact with Mr. Witkoff was prior to his employer’s decision to kill diplomacy with another illegal military attack on
Iran. Any claim to the contrary appears geared solely to mislead oil traders and the public.” It followed an Axios report that a direct communications channel between Witkoff and Araghchi had been reactivated in recent days, with Araghchi attempting to engage with Witkoff about ending the war. The leaders of the UK, France, Germany, Canada and Italy expressed “grave concern” after Israel launched a ground invasion of Lebanon. They called for meaningful engagement by Israeli and Lebanese representatives to negotiate a sustainable political solution. A significant Israeli ground offensive would have devastating humanitarian consequences, they warned in a joint statement, adding that it could lead to a protracted conflict with “devastating humanitarian consequences”. Earlier on Monday, the Israeli Defence Forces said its troops had begun what it described as “limited and targeted” ground operations against Hezbollah strongholds in southern Lebanon, and told hundreds of thousands of Lebanese civilians they could not return to their homes. It came as the latest reports indicate that Israeli strikes have killed at least 850 people in Lebanon, including at least 107 children, and left more than a million displaced. Operations at the UAE’s Shah gas and oil field were suspended after a fire that broke out due to a drone attack. Abu Dhabi authorities said on Monday night that the fire had been brought under control. Qatar said it intercepted a second wave of missiles from
Iran after an attack earlier on Monday.