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Middle East crisis live: Fire engulfs Kuwait city tower as Iranian strikes hit the Gulf; Trump says Iran being ‘decimated’

The Guardian’s diplomatic editor, Patrick Wintour, has written an interesting analysis piece looking at the backlash to the Iranian president’s comments, which took many observers by surprise. Here is an extract: The surprise offer by the president of Iran, Masoud Pezeshkian, not to attack countries in the neighbourhood so long as their airspace and US bases within their territories are not used to attack Iran has provoked a storm inside the country as the military appeared to contradict him, if not outright overrule him. There were also calls for a new supreme leader to be installed as quickly as possible, as a means of marginalising the president. Attacks on facilities in Bahrain and elsewhere have continued, and there were unconfirmed reports that Bahrain had become the first Gulf country to fire back at Iran … The backlash over Pezeshkian’s offer was made worse by him including an apology to the region on behalf of himself and the nation in his pre-recorded address on state TV. He also implied that after the US attack on its top command, rudderless armed forces may have been forced to make targeting decisions on their own.

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Time for a change: British Columbia decides to keep daylight saving time permanently

Since 1918, the clocks in Creston, a town in eastern British Columbia, ran an hour ahead of nearby communities for half the year. For the other six months, they slipped back into sync. Not because they town changed them but because its neighbours changed back and forth from daylight saving time. Creston was an outlier: a community that effectively created its own time zone. But when residents in most parts of the province shift their clocks forward on Sunday, they will be doing it for the last time – and permanently joining Creston for the first time in nearly 70 years. Last week, British Columbia announced plans to create the Pacific time zone, a decision that reflects both a broad dislike in the province of changing clocks – and an increasingly tense relationship with the United States. But the province then said that while it will create the new Pacific time zone, municipalities will be free to choose their own time zones, raising the possibility of more “time zone islands” like Creston. “We are done waiting. British Columbia is going to change our clocks just one more time – and then never again,” BC’s premier, David Eby, told reporters, adding he hoped “our American neighbours” will adopt a similar change. The move puts BC in line with the Yukon territory to its north. In 2019, public consultations revealed that 93% of residents surveyed said they wanted permanent daylight saving time. But despite that strength of feeling, BC has kept switching in order to match the US and facilitate cross-border trade and travel. Announcing the new policy, however, the province cited “recent actions” from its southern neighbour, in what was likely a reference to the sustained trade war and threats to Canadian sovereignty from the Trump administration. According to provincial authorities, the changes will lead to “more usable light in the evenings in winter” and a “reduced administrative burden” for swaths of the province. The Peace region in northern BC, which previously observed mountain standard time year-round, will now be on the same time as most other places in British Columbia with the new time zone. Previously, the region spent its winters aligned with Alberta and then one hour behind in the summer. The new time zone means that other mountain communities that observe mountain time, but switch between standard and daylight saving times, will be aligned with the rest of the province during the winter months, but will be one hour ahead in the summer. But those towns could shift – either as a group or on their own, like Creston did. “Just as they can today, local governments will retain the power to determine what time zone they observe,” the government said. “They can choose to shift to permanent daylight time and Pacific time, along with the rest of BC, if they prefer.” “The feedback we’ve received from the public … is [that] people want to be on the same time as the rest of British Columbia,” Cranbrook’s mayor, Wayne Price, told CBC News. Industry groups expressed frustration with the move. “The unilateral change in time is an unwelcome distraction that will make it more difficult to attract and retain businesses in British Columbia,” Bridgitte Anderson, president and CEO of the Greater Vancouver Board of Trade, said in a statement. “The choice to change the time unilaterally will create an additional headache for businesses operating on both sides of the border.” The Vancouver airport authority said it would “work with industry to better understand the potential schedule and passenger implications” of shifting time zones without neighbouring jurisdictions doing the same.

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China’s foreign minister says Iran war ‘should never have happened’

War in the Middle East “should never have happened”, China’s foreign minister Wang Yi has declared, even as he struck a more conciliatory tone with the US ahead of a highly anticipated visit by Donald Trump. Regime change, a key stated aim of the US president as the US and Israel continue to attack Iran, “will find no popular support”, Wang said on Sunday. “A strong fist does not mean strong reason. The world cannot return to the law of the jungle,” he added. Speaking on the sidelines of China’s annual parliamentary and political gatherings, known as the Two Sessions, the country’s top diplomat and foreign affairs official notably avoided directly criticising the US. Instead, Wang stressed that China was “committed to a spirit of mutual respect” in US-China relations. Recent talks between Trump and Xi Jinping, China’s president, were “heartening”, he said. Wang said that 2026 was a “big year for China-US relations” and that the two sides should “treat each other with sincerity and good faith”. It was a markedly different tone to last year’s press conference, in which Wang accused the US of “two-faced” behaviour in relation to tariffs that the US president had imposed on Chinese goods. This year Wang said that “sliding into conflict or confrontation could bring the whole world down” and that “neither side can remodel the other”. The US and China agreed a temporary truce to the trade war last October. The White House has said that Trump will travel to China between 31 March and 2 April, nearly a decade after his last visit to China in 2017, the most recent by a US president. Further trade negotiations will be high on the agenda. Both sides seem to be focused on keeping the relationship on an even keel ahead of the trip, despite Trump launching a number of destabilising foreign policy moves in the first two months of the year. In January, the US captured Nicolás Maduro hours after the Venezuelan leader met with a visiting Chinese delegation. In February, the US launched joint strikes with Israel on Iran, a Chinese partner in the Middle East, starting a war that looks likely to spread into a regional conflict that will disrupt global trade routes. Both Venezuela and Iran are Chinese oil suppliers and part of Beijing’s latticework of global south partner countries. But despite condemning the US operations inside both countries, China has stopped short of directly criticising Trump, or delaying his trip to Beijing. Similarly, save for a brief dig at Chinese and Russian military technology, Trump made no mention of China in his sprawling state of the union speech last month, despite it being the longest in modern history. “Given the ongoing turmoil in the Middle East, including the impact on global energy prices, China likely sees even more importance in having a chance to address a wide range of difficult issues, including bilateral trade relations, the Taiwan question, and other ongoing global conflicts and their impact, with Trump in person,” said William Yang, a senior analyst at the International Crisis Group. Beijing “believes that a face-to-face meeting will allow them to better gauge Trump’s position on these issues and present the Chinese perspective more straightforwardly”, he added. Furthermore, China “doesn’t see much benefit to stick its neck out for Iran at this point”. Addressing reporters’ questions, Wang struck a typically fiery tone on Taiwan. He said that “reunification” between China and Taiwan “is a historical process that cannot be stopped” and that “those who defy it shall perish”. Beijing claims Taiwan, a self-ruled island, as part of its territory and has vowed to “reunify” it with China if necessary. Wang also lashed out at Japan, whose relations with Beijing have nosedived since Japan’s prime minister Sanae Takaichi said an attack on Taiwan could trigger a deployment of her country’s self-defence forces. Wang suggested that Takaichi was using the argument of self-defence to “hollow out its pacifist constitution”. “Recalling that the Japanese militarists used the excuse of a ‘survival crisis’ to launch wars of aggression, people in China and in other Asian countries cannot but ask with great vigilance and concern: where exactly is Japan heading?” said Wang, referring to Japan’s historic military ventures in Asia. Additional research by Lillian Yang

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Survivors of Ireland’s mother and baby homes start to have benefits cut in UK after accepting compensation

Survivors of Ireland’s mother and baby homes have started to have benefits cut in Britain because they accepted compensation from the Irish government. The cuts to the means-tested benefits of survivors in Britain come as campaigners including the actors Siobhán McSweeney and Steve Coogan called on Keir Starmer to back a bill known as Philomena’s Law, which would ringfence survivors’ benefits. Up to 13,000 of the survivors who are living in Britain risk losing access to essential means-tested benefits if they accept compensation, which can range from €5,000 to €125,000 (£4,230 to £105,000) depending on the length of time people were resident. The Irish government’s redress scheme was introduced after an inquiry detailed the horrific experiences of about 56,000 women and about 57,000 children who were placed or born in homes, mostly run by nuns, between 1922 and 1998. A 2021 report detailed an alarming number of deaths of babies in the homes and documented cruelty and neglect. Women were forced to take part in work and were separated from their babies, who were fostered or adopted. The Irish government’s Mother and Baby Institutions Payment Scheme started making payments in 2024. But because it is considered a recipient’s savings it can result in losing means-tested benefits in Britain, such as universal credit or pension credit, and have an impact on financial support for social care. As feared, councils have begun sending letters to notify people who received payments that they will lose support such as housing benefit. Some survivors of the homes have decided not to accept offers of compensation because of fears of losing benefits. After a period of six months this is considered a rejection, while some have since died. One woman in her late 70s – who had experienced physical and psychological abuse from nuns in a mother and baby home – said she had initially been delighted when her eligibility for a payment was confirmed and she had hoped to use the money to visit a recently discovered half-brother in the US. However, should she receive payment, she would face losing her pension credit and housing benefit, which she relies on for day-to-day expenses and rent. “He had been born less than 16 miles away, but I did not know that he or his other brothers and sister existed until we did some family tracing,” she said. “It would have been lovely to meet him, but I do not feel that I can use the money for this as my benefits would be affected. The payment was meant to be a token of an apology from the Irish government for all the misery of the institutions, but now it’s become a rope around my neck.” A bill known as Philomena’s Law has been introduced in parliament by Labour MP Liam Conlon and is due for a second reading on 28 March, but he and others are hoping the government will back the bill as it will struggle to get time as the clock runs out on the current parliament. “Sometimes the system at Whitehall says no, and this has come about because a blanket rule has been applied. What Whitehall often misses is the human-sized picture. In this case, that is thousands and thousands of survivors of these cruel institutions living in Britain today, who are being denied the compensation they’re entitled to,” said Conlon, the MP for Beckenham and Penge. The bill is named after Philomena Lee, whose story of forced separation from, and her later search for, her lost son inspired the Oscar-nominated film Philomena starring Coogan and Judi Dench. Survivors living in Britain were being forced to revisit their most traumatic experiences and faced a financial penalty for doing so, according to an open letter to the British and Irish governments. Signatories of the letter include Coogan and McSweeney, an actor known for her role in Derry Girls and as host of the Great Pottery Throwdown, comedian Dara Ó Briain and broadcaster Emma Dabiri. “We’re backing Philomena’s Law to stand with survivors and help ensure that redress does not bring more hardship,” it reads. “It is a practical change that would make a profound difference in survivors’ lives. We are asking the British and Irish governments to find a way to pass Philomena’s Law.” While a ringfencing approach has been taken for other compensation schemes in the past, including to support Windrush families, the bill would mark the first time in history that the same approach has been applied to a foreign compensation scheme. The Department for Work and Pensions has been approached for comment.

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From Bush Sr to Trump: the risks, lessons and legacy of US interference in the Middle East

This is the third Gulf war and umpteenth outbreak of conflict since the United States took over as the dominant power and influence in the Middle East at the end of the cold war. And it is arguably the most dangerous, consequential and confused of them all. The destruction and chaos spreading across the region confirms the Middle East’s status as the world’s pre-eminent crisis factory, but it also raises questions as to how US presidents so often declare they are ending US interference in the region, only to be lured back in. Since the second world war the US has set out to oust a government in the Middle East on average once a decade, and on almost every occasion it has left the country, and the US, worse off as unexpected consequences eventually emerge. As Donald Trump embarks on yet another regime change – this time in Iran, a country of 90 million people – the sense of foreboding is profound. Already the timelines are extending, and the sense is growing by the day that Trump is gambling with the fate of a country about which he knows next to nothing. The first Gulf war The first Gulf war, in 1990-91, at least had the advantage of being of a containable scope, purpose and duration. Once Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait in a warped blow for pan-Arabism, George HW Bush pushed the Iraqi leader’s forces back with relative ease, maintaining a broad supportive Arab coalition, partly by ensuring Israel did not respond to Saddam’s provocations to become involved. Famously respecting the UN security council mandate to liberate Kuwait, but not invade Iraq, Bush decided not to pursue the routed Iraqi army to Baghdad. The ground campaign took only 100 hours. The onesidedness of that war has parallels with what is happening in Iran. Azmi Bishara, the Arab intellectual, called the former a model of war that meant one side waging it without risk, the other without hope; “one side accidentally losing a half dozen people, the other losing a few hundred thousand by force of arms”. But the war did leave a legacy. Kurds and Shia Muslims learnt the risk of being used by a US president, having been encouraged to rise up against Saddam and “take matters into their own hands”, only to discover Bush would stand aside as they were crushed. It is a lesson the Kurds of Iran may have studied. Secondly, the war brought half a million US troops to the Middle East and, as Marc Lynch writes in his book The Ruination of a Region, those troops “in a symbolic sense, never went home, instead moving out into an archipelago of US bases across the Gulf, the Levant and southern Turkey designed to implement the dual containment of both Iraq and Iran”. Those bases, now under attack by Iran, became “the infrastructural foundation of American primacy”. The second Gulf war In the second Gulf war, known as the Iraq war, from 2003-11, George W Bush determined Saddam must go because of his presumed possession of weapons of mass destruction. It meant the US at least possessed an identifiable war aim, albeit one based on a gargantuan intelligence failure for which no one took the blame. Whether Washington went to war on a lie or a misapprehension, it went in not knowing enough about the country it was invading or the forces it would uncork once Saddam’s authoritarian rule was ended. The optimism bias about the war’s aftermath was so deep because the desire to go to war was so deep. In Congressional testimony, the then deputy defense secretary, Paul Wolfowitz, told members of the house armed services committee in February 2003 that the Iraqis were “23 million of the most educated people in the Arab world who are going to welcome us as liberators … The notion that we’re going to earn more enemies by going in and getting rid of what every Arab knows is one of the worst tyrants … is just nonsense.” Wolfowitz dismissed comparisons with the Balkans and said Iraq had no record of “ethnic militias fighting one another”, so large postwar peacekeeping forces would not be required. He was also confident free Iraqis would reject Islamist extremism or theocratic rule. He admitted he based his arguments in part on his personal contacts. Another advocate for war was an Israeli opposition leader called Benjamin Netanyahu. He advised: “If you take out Saddam, I guarantee you that it will have enormous positive reverberations across the region. And I think the people sitting right next door in Iran, young people and many others, will say the time of such regimes, of such despots, is gone.” The opposite happened. Iran became stronger, including inside Iraq. More recently, John Sawers, the former head of MI6 and the UK special representative in Baghdad in 2003, described the aftermath of the invasion as “total chaos”. “No real planning had gone into the aftermath,” he said. “The Americans were sitting hunkered down in their tanks and armoured vehicles with reflective sunglasses and heavy helmets on with no engagement with the Iraqi people at all. They just assumed that once American forces had toppled Saddam then the Iraqi exiles would come in, take over and everything would be hunky-dory. Well, it turned out to be completely different from that.” Philip Gordon, who was a national security adviser to the former US vice-president Kamala Harris, argued in 2015 that there was something fundamentally wrong about the US concept of regime change. He wrote: “When implying the US can fix Middle Eastern problems if only it ‘gets it right’, it is worth considering that in Iraq the US intervened and occupied and the result was a costly disaster. In Libya the US intervened and did not occupy and the result was a costly disaster. In Syria the US neither intervened nor occupied and the result was a costly disaster”. Indeed, he wrote a whole book citing examples of how the US fails to anticipate the chaos that inevitably ensues after regime collapse. War can end a regime, but not install a cohesive society. Yet the striking aspect of the pre-Iraq war debate was the extent to which there was one. By comparison, in the run-up to the attack on Iran the Trump administration has prized deceit and surprise. In February 2003, the US defense secretary, Colin Powell, thought it necessary to go to the UN to make an hour-long multimedia presentation showing trucks and train carriages allegedly “serving as mobile production facilities for biological agents in Iraq”. It later emerged this intelligence was wrong, but Powell believed it was necessary to make the case and garner global support for the invasion. Now, by contrast, the halls of the UN security council are silent, or filled with Melania Trump lecturing the world on the rights of the child in wartime, while the Department of Defense simultaneously investigates whether the US was responsible for the bombing of a girls’ primary school in southern Iran which killed scores of children. In 2002, many Department of State officials warned of the likely cost, and the length of the occupation, and of the possibility that the beneficiary would be Iran and the Shias inside Iraq. They were right. The estimates vary, but the war probably cost the US $2tn, spawned the Islamic State terrorist organisation and led to the deaths of 150,000 to 1 million people, according to different estimates. Tony Blair’s insistence that the invasion should be accompanied by a new push on the Palestinian question bore no fruit, leaving the issue to be sidelined until 2023. The present Gulf war Fast forward to Trump’s Operation Epic Fury and, compared with 2002, all we have is epic confusion. In a succession of interviews, statements and phone calls, Trump and his team have offered wildly contradictory justifications for the war. Little of it extends beyond assertion. Rotating rationales have been set out in Top Gun-style seminars delivered by the secretary of defense, Pete Hegseth, who uses the title “secretary of war”. “Crazy regimes like Iran, hell bent on prophetic Islamic delusions, cannot have nuclear weapons,” he said. Iran was close to having an intercontinental ballistic missile that could hit America, ran one administration claim. Steve Witkoff, Trump’s all-purpose international envoy, said Iran was one week away from having industrial-grade bomb making material. The vice-president, JD Vance, said the nuclear talks with Iran had not passed the smell test, arguing Iran was building facilities 20 metres (70ft) underground and enriching uranium to 60% purity. As a result, the nuclear sites that were “obliterated” in the attacks last June needed re-obliterating. Trump himself has described the terrorist nature of the regime stretching back 40 years, and spoken of regime change. But it was the secretary of state, Marco Rubio, who presented the most startling rationale. “We knew that there was going to be an Israeli action,” he told reporters. “We knew that that would precipitate an attack against American forces, and we knew that if we didn’t preemptively go after them before they launched those attacks, we would suffer higher casualties.” It seems no one in the White House thought an alternative solution to this risk might be to tell Israel not to attack Iran. Yet again, people ask: “Who is the fucking superpower around here?” – the question raised by Bill Clinton in 1996 after a bruising first encounter with Netanyahu. Some of the mess may be because the Israeli and US political objectives are not fully aligned. The fear of the Iraq quagmire leads Trump to say he is looking for an elusive Iranian equivalent of the person who replaced Nicolás Maduro as leader in Venezuela, Delcy Rodríguez, a figure who, while rooted in the regime, could pivot policy pragmatically to Washington’s expectations. It is similar to the intention of the then secretary of state, Condoleezza Rice, that “the army would be defeated, but the institutions would hold” in Iraq. Trump said this week he had found some likely candidates, but then admitted that unfortunately they were now lying dead in the rubble of a bombed government building. “Most of the people we had in mind are dead. Now, we have another group. They may be dead also, based on reports. So I guess you have a third wave coming in. Pretty sure we’re not going to know anybody.” At times, however, Trump does not sound like a man who only wants to “blow off the bloody doors” in Iran; he wants to engineer the building’s complete collapse, and is willing to open Pandora’s box by asking Iranian Kurdish rebels to help make this happen. Sawers, drawing on his experiences across the Middle East, warned of “the dangerous possibility that the regime could corrode or collapse and lose control of parts of the country, and then the country could fragment into several different parts where you have local administrations crop up, often on an ethnic basis. If the country dissolves into component parts it will be basically a failed state. We know from the last 40 years they become a centre for terrorism, smuggling, gun running, drugs and criminality of all sorts.” Iran’s sizeable ethnic minorities – Kurds, Balochs, Ahwazi Arabs, Azerbaijanis – forcing Iran to disintegrate has always been one of the leadership’s greatest fears, and their complaint of exploitation has been longstanding. The vast majority of Iran’s natural resources – oil, gas, and major water sources – are found outside the central plateau, in areas with non-Persian communities and a sizeable Sunni Muslim population. By contrast, the Shia-Persian majority is concentrated on the central plateau, an arid region bounded to the west by the Zagros mountains, to the north by the Alborz range, and to the east by Iran’s central desert. The parallels between the Gulf wars are not perfect. Israel was not the driving force that it is in this conflict, and the likelihood of a Sunni-Shia split is smaller. No western ground troops are involved. But the danger is that this has been a US project rigidly focused on the destruction of the threat posed by Iran. The harbingers of shock and awe know little about the forces that could emerge from the Islamic republic’s destruction. On the way to Baghdad in 2003 the commander of the US forces, Gen David Petraeus asked a famous question: “Tell me how this ends?” It remains as pertinent now as it did then.

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Trump vague on Iran’s ‘unconditional surrender’ as he refuses to rule out US troop deployment

Donald Trump on Saturday offered only a vague description of what he meant by his demand for an unconditional surrender by Iran’s current regime, while leaving open the possibility of deploying American troops on the ground but ruling out asking Kurdish forces to mount an invasion. “I said unconditional. It’s where they cry uncle or when they can’t fight any longer and there’s nobody around to cry uncle — that could happen too,” Trump said when pressed by the Guardian aboard Air Force One. The lack of specifics in Trump’s response made it difficult to ascertain his political endgame for the conflict, an issue that has dogged the White House as it faces scrutiny about what the president wants from Iran and how he would play a role in selecting its next leader. Trump has been more consistent with his military objectives and has said for days he could send US troops. Still, he caveated using ground troops to secure the enriched uranium, believed to be stored at Iran’s nuclear sites the US bombed last year, as a possibility for later in the conflict. “We haven’t talked about it,” Trump said. “At some point maybe we will. It would be a great thing. Right now we’re just decimating them. We haven’t gone after it but something we could do later on. We wouldn’t do it now.” It also appeared that Trump had made a final decision on not using the Kurds to mount an invasion, acknowledging that it would complicate a fraught situation despite the idea buzzing around Washington after news outlets reported they had been armed by the CIA. “I don’t want the Kurds going in,” Trump said. “They’re willing to go in, but I’ve told them I don’t want them going in. The war’s complicated enough without getting the Kurds involved.” The president’s extended remarks came hours after he traveled to Dover air force base in Delaware to attend, with JD Vance and defense secretary Pete Hegseth, the so-called dignified transfer of six US service members killed in the opening days of his war against Iran. The dignified transfer took place under a hazy gray sky that enveloped the entirety of the base and the C17 Globemaster transport aircraft that carried the deceased, a scene only punctuated by Trump’s bright white baseball cap emblazoned with the gold letters “USA”. Trump saluted each of the six flag-draped transfer cases as he watched two teams carry them into waiting vans. Afterward, he told reporters the moment had not made him think twice about continuing with the Iran war. “No, we’re winning the war by a lot. We decimated their whole evil empire. It will continue I’m sure for a little while but I’m very proud of the people,” Trump said. Later, he added deaths were “a part of war”. The conflict has only expanded since Trump gave the green light for the US to join Israel in conducting airstrikes against Iran one week ago, including a series of strikes that killed its supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who had been meeting with other top leaders at a compound in Tehran. In the initial days of the war, Trump suggested in interviews that the campaign would last roughly four weeks. But the administration has since shifted its position, and some officials have warned it could last for months. Trump was non-committal on how long he expected the war to continue on Saturday, saying he didn’t know. “Whatever it takes,” Trump answered to reporters, even as he later described the war as a “short excursion”. He also blamed Iran for strikes that destroyed a girl’s elementary school in the south of the country that killed at least 175 people, many of them children. A Pentagon investigation is ongoing but forensic analysis by the New York Times, CNN and the Associated Press gave it a high likelihood it was a precision strike by the US that occurred at the same time as attacks on an adjacent naval base operated by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. “No, in my opinion, based on what I’ve seen, that was done by Iran,” Trump said. After the defense secretary declined to back the president, saying only that the matter was under investigation, Trump repeated his claim. “It was done by Iran. They’re very inaccurate as you know with their munitions. They have no accuracy whatsoever. It was done by Iran,” he insisted.

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Ukraine war briefing: Zelenskyy offers help to Saudi Crown prince on combatting Iranian drones

Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy said on Saturday he had spoken to Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman about the situation in Iran and the Middle East and restated Kyiv’s offer to help deal with Iranian drones. “Ukraine has been fighting against (Iranian-designed) ‘Shaheds’ for years, and everyone acknowledges that no other country in the world has such experience,” Zelenskyy said on Telegram of his conversation. “We are ready to help and expect that our people will also receive the necessary support.” Ukrainian manufacturers of cheap interceptor drones designed to knock out enemy unmanned aerial vehicles say they have the capacity to export in large volumes, amid inquiries from the US and Middle East prompted by the Iran war. Hundreds of drones based on Iran’s Shahed model and now made in Russia fill Ukraine’s skies during frequent attacks, and many are downed by air defences including western missiles, fighter jets, truck-mounted guns and interceptor drones. Reported deaths and casualties from a Russian missile strike on a five-storey residential building in Ukraine’s second-largest city of Kharkiv have risen to at least 10 people, including two children, and 16 others wounded, officials said. Zelenskyy condemned Saturday’s attack and called for an international response. He said Russia struck Ukraine overnight with 29 missiles and 480 drones, targeting energy facilities in Kyiv and other central regions, with damage reported in at least seven other locations. Police in Sweden have seized a false-flagged cargo ship off its southern coast believed to belong to Russia’s shadow fleet and suspected of transporting stolen Ukrainian grain, authorities said Saturday. The 96-metre (315-foot) Caffa left Casablanca in Morocco on 24 February and was headed for St Petersburg when armed Swedish police boarded it on Friday off the southern town of Trelleborg. “The vessel is on the Ukraine sanctions list. Information indicates that it has essentially been used to transport grain that is stolen, as we understand it, from Ukraine,” the coast guard’s acting head of operations, Daniel Stenling, told a press conference. Questions about the America’s weapons stockpiles have grown as the US campaign against Iran escalates, with many Democratic lawmakers arguing that Trump is waging a “war of choice.” Missile defence systems are under the most strain, according to experts, with Patriot and Terminal High Altitude Area Defense, or THAAD, interceptors in high demand in Ukraine and Israel, respectively. “I’m not particularly worried about us actually running out during this conflict,” said Ryan Brobst, a scholar focused on US defense strategy at the Foundation for Defence of Democracies. “It’s about deterring China and Russia the day after this conflict is over.”