Global News Podcast

US and Israel hit Iranian oil depot

27 min
Mar 8, 2026about 1 month ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

The BBC Global News Podcast covers the escalating US-Israel military campaign against Iran, including strikes on oil infrastructure, while examining broader Middle East tensions involving Lebanon, the UAE, and Saudi Arabia. The episode also features reporting on Nepal's political shift, seagrass restoration science, and NASA's successful asteroid deflection test.

Insights
  • US-Israel military strategy has shifted from targeting military infrastructure to economic targets (oil depots), signaling intent to pressure Iran through revenue disruption rather than immediate regime collapse
  • Iranian defiance and continued regional strikes despite military losses suggest the conflict may extend beyond short-term military objectives, risking casualty escalation that could fracture Trump's political base
  • Genetic adaptation in seagrass species demonstrates nature's capacity to evolve heat resistance, offering a template for active ecosystem management in climate change scenarios
  • UK-US alliance tensions over military commitment reveal divergent strategic priorities and highlight Trump's transactional approach to traditional alliances
  • Regional powers (UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar) face unprecedented dual threats from both Israeli operations and Iranian retaliation, destabilizing Gulf economic zones
Trends
Economic warfare integration: Military campaigns now explicitly target energy infrastructure and revenue sources alongside kinetic operationsCasualty sensitivity in modern conflicts: Political viability of extended military campaigns increasingly dependent on domestic casualty tolerance thresholdsGenetic selection in ecosystem restoration: Climate adaptation strategies shifting from passive conservation to active genomic interventionAlliance recalibration: Traditional NATO-aligned partnerships being tested by unilateral military decision-making and transactional diplomacyRegional proxy escalation: Non-state actors (Hezbollah) drawing sovereign nations into broader conflicts through coordinated strikesCritical infrastructure vulnerability: Civilian airports and commercial zones becoming active conflict zones in modern regional warfarePolitical generationalism: Youth-led anti-establishment movements successfully challenging entrenched political systems (Nepal case study)Planetary defense operationalization: Space-based kinetic interventions moving from theoretical to proven capability for existential risk mitigation
Topics
US-Israel Military Campaign Against IranIranian Oil Infrastructure StrikesHezbollah-Israel Conflict in LebanonMiddle East Regional EscalationUS Military Casualties and Domestic PoliticsUK-US Strategic Alliance TensionsIranian Air Defense CapabilitiesGulf State Missile Defense SystemsSeagrass Ecosystem RestorationGenetic Adaptation to Climate ChangeHeat-Resistant Plant BreedingNASA DART Asteroid Deflection MissionNepal Political TransitionGen Z Political MovementsPlanetary Defense Technology
Companies
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People
Benjamin Netanyahu
Israeli Prime Minister directing military operations against Iran and vowing to destabilize the regime
Donald Trump
US President overseeing military campaign, criticizing UK commitment, and attending Dover ceremony for fallen service...
Keir Starmer
UK Prime Minister criticized by Trump for late military support and initially denying US base access for offensive op...
Ali Larijani
Head of Iran's Supreme National Security Council and Ayatollah Khamenei confidant asserting Iran's defiant response t...
Masoud Pazeshkian
Iranian President who claimed Iran would cease regional strikes unless attacked first, later contradicted by continue...
Bolendra Saha
Former rapper and Kathmandu mayor on course to become Nepal's youngest prime minister at age 35
Stephen J. Tomasetti
University of Maryland professor leading eelgrass restoration project using genetic selection for heat-resistant vari...
Stephanie Kamel
UNC Wilmington genomics researcher identifying heat-shock gene mutations in seagrass for climate adaptation
Raheel Makadia
Planetary defense researcher at University of Illinois analyzing NASA's DART asteroid deflection mission results
Quotes
"We will, in any case, do whatever is necessary to protect our communities and our citizens. As for the next step in Iran, we have a well-organized plan, with many surprises, to destabilize the regime and enable change."
Benjamin NetanyahuEarly in episode
"The strikes carried out by the Islamic Republic will continue. We will not let them go. They should not think that we will allow the Americans to quickly bring this matter to an end."
Ali LarijaniMid-episode
"This is not necessarily just some faraway conflict, but this is something that has very real consequences for Americans. There are, after all, now six families across the country whose loved ones won't be coming home this year."
Bernd de Boosman, BBC Washington CorrespondentEarly-mid episode
"We need to take a much more active role in managing our ecosystems. We're really not sitting back. We're like, OK, we're going to try these things because the absence of that is just let seagrass loss continue."
Professor Stephanie KamelLate episode
"Not only did the DART impact shift the motion of the secondary asteroid around the primary asteroid, but it also changed both of the asteroids around the sun. And that's exactly what we need to do if we find an asteroid that's headed to the Earth."
Raheel MakadiaFinal segment
Full Transcript
This BBC podcast is supported by ads outside the UK. It's time to see what you can accomplish with Shopify by your side. This is not the future we were promised. Like, how about that for a tagline for the show? From the BBC, this is The Interface, the show that explores how tech is rewiring your week and your world. This isn't about quarterly earnings or about tech reviews. It's about what technology is actually doing to your work and your politics, your everyday life. and all the bizarre ways people are using the internet. Listen on bbc.com or wherever you get your podcasts. This is the Global News Podcast from the BBC World Service. I'm Alex Ritson, and in the early hours of Sunday, the 8th of March, these are our main stories. The military campaign against Iran broadens as America and Israel's latest strikes target oil depots. Iran has continued to hit its neighbors, including the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and Qatar, despite Iranian President Masoud Pazeshkian claiming they would no longer target them unless they were attacked first. And President Trump criticizes the British government, accusing Prime Minister Keir Starmer of joining wars after we've already won. Also in this podcast, a special report on Lebanon's role in the war with Israel and the US. I'm standing in front of one of the biggest bomb craters I have ever seen. It has destroyed everything. There are cars blown up onto the roofs of nearby houses. And Iran remains defiant. The strikes carried out by the Islamic Republic will continue. We will not let them go. This disgraceful act they have created on the international stage carries a heavy cost. We begin in Iran. After a week of pounding the Islamic Republic's military machine and security apparatus, the United States and Israel are now bombing one of Iran's biggest sources of revenue, oil. Huge fireballs which reached into the night sky were seen across Tehran when an oil depot was hit by airstrikes. It's the first reported attack on Iran's oil infrastructure since the start of the war. Israel said the depot was being used by the military. Earlier, Israel's Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, said that Iran would be attacked with all of our force and vowed to wipe out the country's leaders in order to safeguard the Jewish state. We will, in any case, do whatever is necessary to protect our communities and our citizens. As for the next step in Iran, we have a well-organized plan, with many surprises, to destabilize the regime and enable change. In the US, President Trump was at Dover Air Force Base in the state of Delaware for the return of six American service members who were killed in a drone strike. Wearing a white USA baseball cap, he saluted the flag-draped cases that contained the bodies. I asked our Washington correspondent, Bernd de Boosman, how Americans will react to this somber ceremony. It's still very early days in the conflict, and this is certainly a possibility that Trump had mentioned from the outset that the U.S. would very likely take casualties. And in the grand scheme of things, as far as military operations go, those casualties have still been light. But today and watching the transfer cases, as they're called them, of the fallen being transported to Dover and being paraded in front of the president and Secretary of Defense Pete Hexeth and General Dan Cain, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs. I think it really brings home to Americans that this is not necessarily just some faraway conflict, but this is something that has very real consequences for Americans. There are, after all, now six families across the country whose loved ones won't be coming home this year. And I think if this war drags on over time and those casualties begin to mount, then you begin to see a lot more public conversation about this. This is a scene that would have been very familiar to Americans of my generation, for example, who grew up in the era of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. But this is something that we haven't seen as much recently, although there have been several other incidents since those wars were over. But particularly among Trump's MAGA base, there is a significant chunk of that base that is very weary of long, messy foreign entanglements or regime change exercises in the Middle East, having seen what happened in Iraq and then in Afghanistan over 20 years of war. And the more casualties, the more politically difficult it is for the administration to make the case for war to those who really don't want to see this turn into a long running stream of U.S. casualties as we saw in the 2000 and 2010s. And yet President Trump seems to think the campaign is going well. He certainly does. We spoke to him on Air Force One on the flight from Dover to Miami, where he's spending the weekend. And he seems to think that from a military standpoint, this is going extremely well, that Iran is being decimated, that their capacity to manufacture and then launch drones and missiles has been very, very much diminished. And he certainly thinks that this is going extremely well. What he didn't answer was what he thinks necessarily comes after. He did say that the U.S. would, in his mind, have to choose another Iranian leader that is perhaps more cooperative than the Islamic regime in the hopes that the U.S. doesn't have to return militarily to the region again in five years or 10 years. But he's certainly, at least in the short term, very optimistic about how this is going and the impact that these strikes from the U.S. and Israel are having on Iran's military capacity. Bernd Deboosman. President Trump thinks the bombing campaign is going well, but the Iranian government remains defiant. Ali Larijani is the head of Iran's Supreme National Security Council, as well as a close confidant of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who was killed last week. The strikes carried out by the Islamic Republic will continue. We will not let them go. They should not think that we will allow the Americans to quickly bring this matter to an end and say, we struck them. Now let's wrap it up. This can only be wrapped up when they understand that they no longer have the right to attack Iran and when they compensate the Iranian nation for the damages. This disgraceful act they have created on the international stage carries a heavy cost. They assassinated the leader of Iran The price for it will not be small So have the air attacks undermined the Iranian authorities Kashayan Janadi is from the BBC Persian service in Washington It's very difficult to say because actually air defences are not working that much. The Americans and the Israelis have hit most of the air defences. And Tehran is like an open sky for American and Israeli planes. Tonight, Tehran's oil refineries and oil depots, fuel depots, were heavily bombarded in several parts of the city. And the pictures we see on social media is like huge, big fires all around the city. So that shows that actually there's no air defense and they could easily come and attack wherever they want. But Iran is a big country, a country of 90 million, and it has relatively strong armed forces. So, so far they've managed to avoid collapse. President Trump is expecting Iran a total surrender, but they're keeping on fighting and they're defiant. What's your sense of how the war is being viewed by the Iranian people? Well, it depends who you ask. Let's not forget the government brutally crushed protests all around the country. Thousands of people were killed and many people were upset and they want the regime to go. So they were supportive of military action against this regime. And when Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was killed last Saturday on the first day of the war, many people were joyful and cheered. And of course, not the entire nation is supportive of the war. The government's supporters, the government's loyalists, they're against this war. They see this as a war of aggression. At the same time, there are other parts of the Iranian society who don't like to see their country being attacked and civilians killed, infrastructure damaged. and as this war continues, people are saying that these are civilian infrastructure that are being destroyed and of course as this carries on, the number of people who oppose the war will increase as well. Kashayan Janadi from BBC Persian. Israel has warned Lebanon that it will pay a very heavy price if it does not rein in attacks by Hezbollah. Lebanon was drawn into the broader Middle East war on Monday when Hezbollah, based in Lebanon, but backed by Iran, fired at Israel, which responded with overwhelming force. The Lebanese government says around half a million people have registered as displaced and more than 300 have been killed since the Israeli attacks began. Our correspondent Wirra Davis reports from the Beqar Valley in western Lebanon, which saw a major incursion by Israeli forces on Friday night. This is the town, quite large town of Nabi Sheet up in the Beqar Valley and I'm standing in front of one of the biggest bomb craters I have ever seen. There's a huge hole in the ground damaging obviously dozens of houses around it. The hole is about 10 meters deep, I'd say. It has destroyed everything. There are cars blown up onto the roofs of nearby houses. Now, this is clearly an Israeli bomb strike. People are trying to clear up the rubble from this huge bomb crater. And I've been speaking to the head of the local municipality to find out exactly what happened. At midnight, we felt a strange movement on one side of the village. It turned out to be an Israeli commander's unit deployed for some mission. The resistance then surrounded them and heavy clashes ensued. The enemy air force increased their airstrikes to allow the extraction of their unit, which caused tremendous damage, like this one here. This is crazy. You look how much? 10 meters. Well, there's still a lot of confusion about exactly what happened here. I've been speaking to Ali Shoukou. He's an architect, He's a mayor and he also teaches in the local university. how to leave them. How? I don't know. After half hour, they began. After a half hour. Well, while many younger families perhaps did heed Israeli warnings to leave, the elderly and those who couldn't have stayed here, including one very angry woman we've been speaking to who lives around the corner from this huge bombsite. Israel is attacking us unjustly. What do they want from us? They want to fool us? No one fools us. We are Hezbollah and we will prevail. A few people were killed at this site. We're not sure how many. But this area has been the subject of loads, many, many Israeli bomb strikes in recent days. What is particularly interesting about this one, as we're trying to put together exactly what happened, is that a few hundred metres to my left, at the same time, there was an Israeli military incursion by helicopter. Those Israeli fighters apparently engaged in a gunfight with Hezbollah fighters. There were casualties. We don't know exactly how many from the gunfight. Details are still scarce, but this has been one of the biggest incidents so far of this particular episode of the war in Lebanon. We're a Davis in Lebanon's Beqar Valley. Donald Trump has again sharply criticised the British government over its apparent lack of military support for the US-Israeli war in Iran. At the start of the conflict, the UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer denied the US permission to use its military bases. Donald Trump responded by questioning the so-called special relationship between Washington and London. And now, in the last few hours, Donald Trump has further criticised the British PM, accusing him of joining wars after we've already won, following the news that one of Britain's two aircraft carriers has been placed on advanced readiness to sail to the Middle East. The BBC's Simi Jola Osho in Washington has more. President Donald Trump has mocked the UK's response to the ongoing conflict with Iran. He has suggested that the UK has come too late to the fight. In a post on Truth Social, President Trump said the UK was once a great ally, maybe the greatest of them all, but that the UK is now finally giving serious thought to sending two aircraft carriers to the Middle East. He then makes an apparent jab at Sir Keir Starmer, the prime minister, saying, that's OK, prime minister. We don't need them any longer, but we will remember. He goes on to say, we don't need people that join wars after we've already won. Now, this isn't the first time that President Trump has criticized the British government during this military campaign against Iran. He has previously said that the prime minister was not very helpful. He said that Sir Keir Starmer is no Winston Churchill and then went on to praise other allies such as France Now the UK initially refused to allow the US to use its bases such as Diego Garcia on the Chagos Islands for offensive strikes against Iran citing international law concerns But Sakhir Starmer reversed that decision and has now allowed the US to use bases such as RAF Fairford, but for defensive actions against Iranian missiles and drones. Simi Jolla Osho in Washington. Iran has continued to launch strikes across the Middle East, despite President Masoud Padeshgian earlier apologising for attacks on neighbouring Arab countries and promising to only target them if they attack first. The United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and Qatar have all reported incoming threats from Iran. UAE officials say their air defence systems have intercepted ballistic missiles, while fighter jets are targeting drones. Nick Beak has more from Doha. A glistening Dubai skyscraper smouldering. The tower in the Marina area, the latest neighbourhood to be hit by Iran from the air. This the fallout of an interception during a missile and drone attack. One UK expat telling the BBC his experience. We've heard booms and interceptions through the week, but this has been definitely the most prominent one, the window shook. and we're just trying to work out what's going on. Authorities confirmed a Pakistani national driving his car had been killed by falling debris. Tonight's attack has shattered any hope people here may have had that Iran was prepared to stop firing at its neighbours in the Gulf. In fact, the UAE said it intercepted five missiles and more than 100 drones. And the day had started with an Iranian attack on the main airport here in Dubai that could have been catastrophic. It's coming to the airport, to the airport again, yeah. Yeah, straight to the airport. Oh, my God. The drone crashed down right next to a terminal building, planes on the tarmac nearby. This at the world's busiest airport for international passenger traffic. Without even acknowledging the strike, Dubai authorities announced they were halting flights to protect the safety of passengers, they said. But services quickly resumed. More people able to escape a crisis that has engulfed the Middle East. The reality here in Dubai tonight, a far cry from the polished picture so often uploaded to social media. Iran continues to lash out at Gulf states with links to the US. The reach of the embattled neighbour across the water felt more than ever. Nick Beak with that report. still to come in this podcast a report from one of the world's most important underwater habitats this water is at zero degrees celsius the eel grass what kind of depth does that normally grow in anywhere from like a couple inches to six feet maybe and nasa's experiment to deflect any asteroid that might be on a collision course with Earth. one euro per month trial and start selling today at shopify.nl that's shopify.nl it's time to see what you can accomplish with shopify by your side this is not the future we were promised like how about that for a tagline for the show from the bbc this is the interface the show that explores how tech is rewiring your week and your world this isn't about quarterly earnings or about tech reviews. It's about what technology is actually doing to your work and your politics, your everyday life, and all the bizarre ways people are using the internet. Listen on bbc.com or wherever you get your podcasts. Starting a business can be overwhelming. You're juggling multiple roles, designer, marketer, logistics manager, all while bringing your vision to life. Shopify helps millions of business sell online. Build fast with templates and AI descriptions and photos, inventory and shipping. Sign up for your one euro per month trial and start selling today at shopify.nl. That's shopify.nl. It's time to see what you can accomplish with Shopify by your side. This is the Global News Podcast. The US and Israeli war with Iran has dominated the news agenda over the last week, but of course major events have been taking place elsewhere in the world, including in Nepal. Six months after it was rocked by Gen Z protests, the country is set to get a new prime minister, a 35-year-old former rapper. Bolendra Sarra is on course to win a landslide in the general election which pitted the establishment against a new generation of politicians. He easily defeated the four-time Prime Minister K.P. Sharma Oli in his own constituency. Mr. Oli had already been forced out of office in last year's protests which left at least 77 people dead. For more on the rise of Balendra Sara, from Rapa to the first independent mayor of Kathmandu, and now likely Prime Minister, here's Fanindra Dahal from the BBC Nepali service. Many are describing this as the watershed movement in the Nepali politics. It was a kind of political gamble for the former mayor of Kathmandu, Balendra Saha. It was around 2012-13 he was a rap singer. He had just started a career on that. His songs were the critique of the political elites. They talk about the problems that majority of Nepalese, they complain about mainly corruption, the pain suffered by Nepalese who work in Gulf and Middle East countries and send remittance so that Nepali economy is survived and Nepali households live. He used to say that he wanted to see all Nepalese smile and live happily. It was just a few years ago that he contested as a memorial candidate of Kathmandu. Nobody anticipated or expected that he would win because he was an independent candidate and many perceived that there were mainstream parties who had a strong political base. But he won the election. and while in office, he did some exemplary works on traffic management, heritage conservation. He also forced private schools to provide scholarship quotas and private hospitals to provide health facilities to poor and needy Fanindra Dahal in the Nepali capital Kathmandu Seagrass meadows are among the world most valuable underwater habitats As well as providing food and shelter to thousands of species, the plants play a vital role in tackling climate change by absorbing carbon dioxide. But seagrass is also under threat from global warming, with most species unable to tolerate temperatures of more than 25 degrees Celsius, although scientists have now discovered that some plants are evolving to survive at higher temperatures. Ben Wyatt reports from the east coast of the United States. Given the recent snowstorms, it's an icy path that leads to the Paul Serbain's Coastal Ecology Centre in the Asseteague National Park of Maryland. The team here are preparing to take me across the lagoon of the Sinopuxan Bay so we can get up close to the seagrass meadows they've been working so hard to restore. I sit down with leader of the Seagrass Project, Professor Stephen J. Tomasetti, of the University of Maryland Eastern Shore, to learn more about its focus. We're, as a team, working on eelgrass. It's the foundational seagrass species of the U.S. East Coast, essentially. Here in Maryland, we're near to the southern edge of its range. They're not the flashy coral reefs, but they serve a lot of the same function. This is Katie Tanner, a PhD student working on the project under Stephen's guidance. These vegetated ecosystems provide the physical structure for a lot of biodiversity. We have seahorses, I've seen sharks out in the eelgrass meadows, shellfish, but also a lot of culturally important fish species. It's a very useful plant to have around, only it's fast disappearing. Stephen's team turned to genetic science for help. My name is Stephanie Kamel, professor in the Department of Biology and Marine Biology at the University of North Carolina, Wilmington, and I'm the genomics lead on this project. So in some meadows challenged by higher temperatures, a small number of plants have been mutating or changing genomically. When we're talking about genomic change, at the very basic level, we're asking, have there been changes to that DNA sequence? Does that change enable me to be taller, live longer, be more heat resistant? So when I go out and sample seagrasses, I sequence the genome and I will find change has occurred in a gene that regulates heat shock. By comparing the DNA of the variants with that of normal eelgrass, the team using Stephanie's data can now focus their attention on harvesting just the seeds that contain heat-resistant genes before replanting them in dying meadows. It was this technique that Katie used to seed her new eelgrass meadows last year. Around March, when all the pollination has occurred and seeds are developing, we then go out and we pluck these reproductive shoots and then hold on to them until they're ready to germinate. Then it's just a matter of moving them to where they need to be. It's really just moving seeds around at the right time. And to find out how those meadows were coming along, it was time to put on some wafers. This water is at zero degrees Celsius. The eelgrass, what kind of depth does that normally grow in? Anywhere from like a couple inches to six feet maybe. The water today is too murky to see the sprouting grass, but Katie hopes the meadow will not only have regrown, but will then also flourish in the hot temperatures of the summer. If it does, the team are that bit closer to securing the future of eelgrass meadows in Maryland. We need to take a much more active role in managing our ecosystems. We're really not sitting back. We're like, OK, we're going to try these things because the absence of that is just let seagrass loss continue. I mean, we can't let that happen. Professor Stephanie Kamel ending that report from Ben Wyatt in Maryland. And for more on that story, just search for People Fixing the World wherever you get your BBC podcasts. Four years ago, NASA set out to determine whether it could deflect an asteroid if it was hurtling towards the Earth. To do this, they smashed a spacecraft into Dimorphos, the moon of an asteroid called Didymos. The good news is that fresh analysis of that mission, known as DART, has now shown that it is possible to change an asteroid's orbit. Rakil Makadia, a planetary defense researcher at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, told us more about this unique experiment. The name of the mission was the Double Asteroid Redirection Test, or DART for short. It was a spacecraft that NASA launched in November of 2021. And the basic idea there is that if we can take something really fast and smash it into an asteroid that might be headed towards the Earth early enough, that we would be able to push it clear off the Earth to avoid any asteroid impacts. So the target of the mission was the binary asteroid system Didymos, and the primary asteroid Didymos has a smaller moonlet called Dimorphos orbiting around it, similar to the Earth-Moon system where the Moon is orbiting the Earth. Before the dart impact, the smaller asteroid used to take 12 hours to complete one full revolution around the primary. And after the dart impact, it now takes around 11 and a half hours, so 30 minute or so reduction in the time it takes the secondary to move around the primary. We know that we can actually go ahead and hit an asteroid when we're moving at very fast speeds and the morphos is around 160 meters in diameter. So it was a test to make sure that we can go ahead and hit an asteroid and making sure that we're not doing it for the first time if we ever find an asteroid that's headed towards the Earth. What this new study found is that not only did the DART impact shift the motion of the secondary asteroid around the primary asteroid, but it also changed both of the asteroids around the sun. And that's exactly what we need to do if we find an asteroid that's headed to the Earth. We need to change its motion around the sun to make sure that we've pushed it clear away from the Earth. That was the big result from this new study. Planetary Defence Researcher at the University of Illinois at Urbana Champagne, Raheel Makadia. And that's all from us for now. If you want to get in touch, you can email us at globalpodcast at bbc.co.uk. You can also find us on X at BBC World Service. Use the hashtag Global News Pod. And don't forget our sister podcast, The Global Story, which goes in-depth and beyond the headlines on one big story. This edition of the Global News Podcast was mixed by Joe McCartney and the producers were Mickey Bristow and Ira Khan. The editor is Karen Martin. I'm Alex Ritson. Until next time, goodbye. all while bringing your vision to life. Shopify helps millions of business sell online. Build fast with templates and AI descriptions and photos, inventory and shipping. Sign up for your one euro per month trial and start selling today at shopify.nl. That's shopify.nl. It's time to see what you can accomplish with Shopify by your side.