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Middle East crisis live: Israel says it has launched ‘extensive strikes’ on Iran as Trump says US ‘not ready’ to make a deal to end war

Gaza’s main gateway, the Rafah crossing with Egypt that was shut at the start of the Iran war, will open on Wednesday for limited movement of people in both directions, Israel’s COGAT, the military body in charge of humanitarian matters, said on Sunday in a statement. The crossing had reopened in early February after being largely shut since May 2024, in the early months of Israel’s war against Hamas in Gaza. Its reopening offered some relief to Palestinians who want to leave Gaza for medical care or those who want to return after fleeing the fighting.

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US not ready to seek deal to end war with Iran, Donald Trump says

Donald Trump has warned he is not ready to seek a deal to end the US-Israeli offensive against Iran, saying that though he thought Tehran was keen to negotiate a ceasefire, the US would fight on for better terms. Trump’s comments came as Iran launched fresh missile and drone attacks on countries in the Gulf and on Israel, and Israeli and US warplanes launched new waves of strikes on Iran. The conflict has plunged the Middle East into chaos, upended global air travel and disrupted oil exports from the region, sending fuel prices rising around the world. Neither Tehran nor Washington appeared ready to moderate their rhetoric despite the mounting death toll and soaring oil prices after the virtual closure of the strait of Hormuz sea lane. Trump, speaking on Saturday to NBC News, said the US may bomb targets on Kharg Island, which is the site of Iran’s principal oil export facility, once more “just for fun”, after US warplanes targeted military installations there on Friday. “Iran wants to make a deal, and I don’t want to make it because the terms aren’t good enough yet,” Trump said, adding that US forces would step up attacks on the Iranian coast north of the strait to clear a path for oil shipments. Experts say it will be extremely difficult for the US to reopen the strait through military means alone as long as Iran retains the ability to hit or harass shipping with missiles, drones or small boats. Trump has called for other countries’ warships to help protect tankers passing through the strait, which usually carries about a fifth of the world’s oil and gas supplies. More than 600 ships are trapped in the Red Sea. On Sunday, Iran’s foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, urged other countries to refrain from any action that “could lead to escalation and expansion of the conflict”, in a conversation with his French counterpart, Jean-Noël Barrot, according to an Iranian foreign ministry statement. Iran’s new supreme leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, has – in a written statement – vowed to keep the strait of Hormuz closed. But Trump dismissed this and suggested Khamenei may not even be in control, saying: “I don’t know if he’s even alive. So far, nobody has been able to show him.” Iran has admitted that Khamenei, 56, was injured in the strike that opened the war on 28 February and killed his predecessor, his father, but has described the injuries as light. The Israeli military announced a wave of strikes against targets in western Iran, after Iran’s Revolutionary Guards called Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel’s prime minister, a criminal and vowed that they would pursue and kill him. In Tehran, people were able to go about their work week in the most normal atmosphere since the start of the war, witnesses said. Traffic was busier than last week and some cafes and restaurants had reopened. More than a third of stalls in the Tajrish bazaar, a popular shopping hub in the north of the capital, were open, five days before Nowruz, the Persian new year. Some shoppers queued at ATMs to withdraw cash. Online operations at Bank Melli, one of the country’s largest, had been paralysed in recent days. In some places, passengers were waiting at bus stops, which had been largely deserted since the beginning of the war. More than 1,300 people have been killed by US and Israeli strikes on Iran, according to the International Committee of the Red Cross. That includes 223 women and 202 children, according to Iranian health ministry figures reported by Mizan, the judiciary’s official news agency. The UN refugee agency says up to 3.2 million people have been displaced in Iran, most of them fleeing the capital and other cities to seek safety. In a rare reference to diplomacy taking place, Araghchi told the London-based news outlet Al-Araby Al-Jadeed on Sunday that Iran was ready to consider any proposal that included “a complete end” to the war and said mediation efforts were continuing between Iran and its neighbours to de-escalate. He gave no indication of whether progress had been made, and there was no independent confirmation of his claim, though Turkish officials have said they have made efforts to bring the conflict quickly to an end. Violence has continued to flare elsewhere in the region. The US has urged its citizens to leave Iraq, where pro-Iranian groups have launched attacks on the US embassy and bases hosting western military units, and there were reports of new strikes against potential US allies among Kurdish factions in the north of the country. Bahrain and Saudi Arabia said separately on Sunday they had intercepted renewed barrages of projectiles launched by Iran. Dubai has also been targeted. Iran has accused the US of using “ports, docks and hideouts” in the United Arab Emirates to launch strikes on Kharg Island, without providing evidence. The UAE and other Gulf countries that host US bases have denied allowing their land or airspace to be used for military operations against Iran. In Israel, 12 people are reported to have been killed by Iranian missile fire. On Sunday, two people were lightly injured in the latest attack, medics said. Loud booms rattled windows in Jerusalem as interceptors brought down missiles. Israel has accused Iran of using cluster munitions in its targeting of civilian areas. More than 800 people have been reported to have been killed in Israel’s latest offensive against Hezbollah, the Iran-backed militant Islamist movement in Lebanon that joined the conflict by launching missiles and drones into Israel to avenge the killing of Iran’s previous supreme leader, Ali Khamenei. Overnight strikes in southern Lebanon killed at least four people, Lebanese state media and the government said on Sunday. Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency said Israel had struck “an apartment in a residential building” in a northern district of the coastal city of Sidon, killing one person and causing a fire. To the south-east of Sidon, in the village of al-Qatrani, three people were killed in an overnight Israeli strike, according to Lebanon’s health ministry. Israeli military officials said their strikes aimed to degrade Hezbollah’s military capabilities. On Sunday, Israel’s foreign minister, Gideon Sa’ar, denied reports that Israel could soon hold direct talks with Lebanon and rejected claims it had told the US it was running low on interceptors. Sa’ar also said Israel saw “eye to eye” with the US over the war with Iran and that the two allies were determined to continue until their goals were achieved. “We want to remove the existential threats from Iran for the long term. We don’t want to go every year to another war,” he told reporters. At least 13 members of the US military have been killed since the war began, including six who died in a plane crash over Iraq last week. The director of the US National Economic Council, Kevin Hassert, said US strikes had so far cost $12 billion.

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Iranians embrace anthem by AI singer created by UK-based, Iran-born artist

A stirring song – sung, apparently, by a young woman, with lyrics expressing the hope that sacrifice will lead to a better future – has become a soundtrack for Iranians in the first part of 2026, as the country experienced the brutal crackdown on anti-regime protests and then the US-Israeli air assault, now in its third week. However, the singer, called Nava, is a product of artificial intelligence, created by a London-based artist of Iranian origin, Farbod Mehr. Nava cannot be arrested, unlike the Iranian singer Shervin Hajipour, who was jailed after his song Baraye became the unofficial anthem for the 2022 protest movement. The character represented Iranian women, who cannot sing in public, Mehr said. “I did it for the people, and I loved how they reacted to it,” he said. “From the blood of the youth, tulips have bloomed,” Nava sings. The song, Javanan-e Vatane (Youth of the Homeland), features lyrics by the 20th-century poet Aref Qazvini, whose work called for resistance to authoritarianism and imperialism. It has been viewed 13m times on Instagram alone. Nava has released an album worth of tracks over the last few months. But it was a song put out at the end of January, at the height of a brutal crackdown by the authorities on protesters in Iran, that resonated most, first with the bloodshed on the streets, and even more so now with the bombardment by US and Israeli air forces. In online comments posted on Nava’s songs there was some debate over whether the singer was real, but for others it made no difference. “People want to see themselves in this character. The brain tries to find a connection with the character,” said Mehr. “It has become the voice of the times we are experiencing.” He said the blend of a classical Iranian song with a modern French folk melody had hooked Iranians everywhere, with more than 70% of the views coming from within Iran, despite an internet blackout there. Mehr, 34, a graduate of London’s Central Saint Martins College of Art whose visual art combines geometric forms with Iranian mysticism, moved with his family from Iran to the UK as a teenager. He said he felt hope and sadness as he watched the war from afar. Nava’s social media persona shows a life well beyond music, as she walks around London and travels to other countries. Blurring the virtual and real worlds further, Nava has collaborated with a real-life musician, the Iranian singer Mehrad Hidden, and in April will make an appearance on stage as a hologram at gigs in Washington and Toronto, alongside human DJs.

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Decriminalising abortion: how could the House of Lords amend the legislation?

MPs voted last year to end the criminalisation of women who terminate pregnancies outside the legal framework. It was hailed as the biggest step forward for reproductive rights in England and Wales in six decades. On Wednesday evening, abortion law will again come under the parliamentary spotlight when members of the House of Lords put forward their proposed amendments to the legislation. What happened in the House of Commons in June? Last summer, MPs voted to decriminalise abortion, with an amendment to the crime and policing bill – now adopted as a clause – put forward by Tonia Antoniazzi, a Labour backbencher. Support was overwhelming, with 379 in favour and 137 against. Under the legislation, which is yet to be enacted, women who end their pregnancies outside the legal framework will not be prosecuted. That framework – which includes the need for two doctors’ signatures and has time limits at which terminations can be carried out – remains the same, and doctors who act outside the law still face prosecution. Women are still being arrested. Do police have any discretion in this? Harriet Wistrich, a solicitor and chief executive of the Centre for Women’s Justice, said police did have discretion over whether to make an arrest. Even if they believed a case may require investigation, they could instead invite a suspect to the police station for a voluntary interview. How will the Lords decide which amendments go to a vote? Amendments can be laid in the House of Lords until Tuesday, the day before they will be considered. The member who lays the amendment can choose to call a division – or put it to a vote. It is anticipated that there will be multiple votes on abortion proposals on Wednesday. What are the main amendments? Nine amendments have been laid on abortion so far, including proposals to have a police investigation of every girl under 16 who accesses a legal abortion and a proposal for the first new abortion offence in nearly 100 years. The key amendments are two broadly pro-choice and two broadly anti-abortion proposals. What is the strikethrough amendment? One amendment, proposed by Rosa Monckton, a prominent “pro-life” Conservative peer, is known as a “strikethrough” amendment, which seeks to delete the decriminalisation clause from the bill. What are the amendments being proposed to telemedicine? In an emergency measure passed during the pandemic, and later made permanent in legislation in 2022, women can access remote consultations for pregnancies up to nine weeks and six days. An amendment put forward by the Conservative peer Philippa Stroud seeks to end telemedicine and return to in-person consultations in all cases. A similar amendment put before the Commons in June was unsuccessful. What is the pardon amendment? Abortion offences are classed as violent crimes, meaning they will permanently be disclosed as part of a DBS check. Put forward by Glenys Thornton, a Labour peer and former health minister, this amendment would legislate to pardon women who have convictions or cautions for abortion offences and remove affected women’s details from police systems. What does the cease and desist amendment seek to do? Women who are under investigation now by police still face prosecution, even though the law may have changed by the time their cases come to court. An amendment put forward by Liz Barker, a Liberal Democrat peer, would expand the legislation to include women whose alleged offences were committed before the change in law, ensuring that any current investigations and prosecutions against women under abortion law are discontinued. When is the crime and policing bill expected to become law? The bill is expected to finish its passage through parliament in the coming weeks. If parliament votes to retain decriminalisation of abortion, it will become law on the day it receives royal assent.

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Vulnerable women in England still being arrested over suspected illegal abortions

Vulnerable women in England are still being arrested and facing police investigations over suspected illegal pregnancy terminations, despite parliament backing changes to the law to decriminalise abortion. Responding to a freedom of information request, Nottinghamshire police and the Metropolitan police confirmed they had arrested women suspected of illegal terminations between June last year and this January. Abortion providers have said they are aware of several cases that do not show up in the data, with the relevant police forces having either refused the request, or reported they had recorded no arrests of women under the relevant legislation. Last June, MPs voted overwhelmingly in favour of a change in the law that will mean women procuring a pregnancy termination outside the legal framework cannot be prosecuted in England and Wales. However, the legislation is still passing through parliament and yet to become law. In one case, which happened after the parliamentary vote last year, a woman went to hospital and shortly afterwards miscarried at about 17 weeks. When she was examined, tablets were found in her vagina and police were called. Officers arrested the woman in the hospital’s delivery suite, and her home was searched while she remained on the labour ward. The woman, who denied seeking an abortion, had unstable diabetes, which can be especially problematic to control after delivery. Police officers confiscated her electronic devices, through which she used software to monitor her condition and control her insulin pump. The woman said she felt betrayed by the NHS and police, and no longer felt safe engaging with these services. A clinician involved in her care said: “When I called the police, I really thought they would offer her support and protection. What happened was horrifying.” The amendment to the crime and policing bill, put forward by the Labour backbencher Tonia Antoniazzi and passed with 379 votes in favour and 137 against, came after an outcry about an increase in prosecutions of women over illegal abortions. The vote was hailed as the biggest step forward for reproductive rights in England and Wales in 60 years. The framework under which abortion is accessed – including the need for two doctors’ signatures, and the time limits at which terminations can be carried out – remains the same, and doctors who act outside the law still face the threat of prosecution. In another case involving a different police force, a woman in her 40s was arrested over Christmas. She had thought she was very early in pregnancy, but delivered a foetus in its gestation sac, which was later determined to be around 24 weeks. She called an ambulance, and paramedics reported they found her hyperventilating and panicking. Professionals said there were significant safeguarding concerns, and the woman had a history of being a victim of domestic abuse. Her children, who witnessed the police intervention, had to leave their home over Christmas while the house was searched. “The search may well have included opening their Christmas presents,” one professional said. Antoniazzi said: “The dystopian treatment of women continues under this Victorian-era law despite the House of Commons being clear that this has no place in modern society. The police and wider criminal justice system cannot be trusted with abortion law. “Women have been targeted, vilified and imprisoned following complications in their abortion treatment, miscarriage, stillbirth or premature labour. Forced to endure acute trauma at the worst moments of their lives for absolutely no reason, because criminalisation is completely unnecessary for upholding abortion law and safeguards.” There have also been further instances of women being reported to police since June, where investigations may be continuing. In one case a young mother with a small child was referred to police. The woman lived in a deprived area, and was described as “vulnerable” and at “high risk of being in an abusive relationship”. She sought an abortion from the NHS over Christmas in 2025, and delivered a foetus, which was initially estimated to be around 16 weeks. Although the foetus was “definitely under 24 weeks”, which is the legal time limit for abortion, except in certain circumstances to which limits do not apply, the NHS called the police. The case was also referred to the coroner for a postmortem to be carried out. “It is the investigations that cause most harm; few progress to charging and fewer still to prosecutions,” said Jonathan Lord, the co-chair of the RCOG (Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists) abortion taskforce. “The police and CPS have shown consistently – in multiple areas and in numerous cases – that they do not act appropriately or with sensitivity. In several cases they have only targeted the woman, and not investigated potential abuse by a coercive partner.” Harriet Wistrich, a solicitor and chief executive of the Centre for Women’s Justice, said: “In some of the cases we have seen women being arrested from hospital shortly after the abortion when they may be extremely traumatised and certainly there is no need to arrest them then and there. “But arrest, investigation and charging will be determined by two tests – is there sufficient evidence that an offence has been committed and if so is it in the public interest,” she added. “There is a strong argument to make that in circumstances where the House of Commons have voted by a large majority to stop criminalisation, that discretion should be exercised in the public interest not to arrest.” On Wednesday, amendments to abortion law will again be debated in the House of Lords. Peers have proposed a number of changes to the bill, ranging from striking out Antoniazzi’s decriminalisation clause, to pardoning women who have already been convicted, and putting a stop to all ongoing police investigations. “We know from providing reproductive healthcare across six continents that criminalisation harms women and makes abortion less safe,” said Louise McCudden, MSI Reproductive Choices UK’s head of external affairs. “The House of Lords now has a historic opportunity to end the threat of prosecution once and for all, pardon women who have been previously convicted and drop ongoing investigations. “At a time when we are seeing rollbacks in reproductive rights around the world, most notably in the US, it’s encouraging that our parliament is standing up for women.” A National Police Chiefs’ Council spokesperson said: “Police do not routinely investigate unexpected pregnancy loss. An investigation is only initiated where there is credible information to suggest criminal activity, and this would often be because of concerns raised from medical professionals. “Each case would have a set of unique factors to be assessed and investigated depending on its individual circumstances. “It would be at the discretion of the senior investigating officer leading the case to determine which reasonable lines of enquiry to follow, again depending on the merits of the specific case. “We recognise how traumatic the experience of losing a child is, with many complexities involved, and any investigation of this nature and individuals will always be treated with the utmost sensitivity and compassion.”

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Jürgen Habermas obituary

The philosopher, social theorist and defender of humane Enlightenment values Jürgen Habermas, who has died aged 96, spent the last months of the second world war helping to protect the Third Reich. He was 15 and a member of the Hitler Youth. Too young to fight and too old to be exempted from war service, he was sent to the western front to man anti-aircraft defences. He later described his father, the director of the local seminary, as a “passive sympathiser” with the Nazis and young Habermas shared that mindset. But he was soon shaken out of his and his family’s complacency by the Nuremberg trials and documentaries of Nazi concentration camps. “All at once we saw that we had been living in a politically criminal system,” he later wrote. His horrified reaction to what he called his fellow Germans’ “collectively realised inhumanity” constituted what he described as “that first rupture, which still gapes”. His great leftist, Jewish teachers Theodor Adorno and Max Horkheimer philosophised in that rupture. Their student would follow suit. Adorno and Horkheimer had returned from American exile after the war to re-establish the Institute of Social Research at the University of Frankfurt, and were developing an interdisciplinary way of thinking called critical theory. Adorno, in particular, whose assistant Habermas became in 1956, mused on whether “one who escaped [Auschwitz] by accident, one who by rights should have been killed, may go on living”. Habermas, perhaps because he was young and perhaps because he was not Jewish, went beyond his teacher’s guilt and despair. Where Adorno had developed a philosophical anti-method called negative dialectics, Habermas sought, like the titans of German philosophy – Kant, Hegel and Marx – to develop system and method. He did so in order to work out how, as he once wrote, “citizens could still exercise collective influence over their social destiny through the democratic process”. He took from Adorno the need to create a “new categorical imperative that Hitler has imposed on mankind: namely, to order their thought and actions such that Auschwitz never reoccurs”. As social theorist, legal theorist, social critic and philosopher, he advocated a new direction for German thought after the Nazi period. Born in Düsseldorf, Jürgen grew up in Gummersbach, to the east of Cologne. When the second world war ended he had two years of rearguard action against the allied advance behind him. He thus became part of the so-called “Flakhelfer-Generation” (anti-aircraft generation) of postwar intellectuals such as the novelist Günter Grass and sociologists Ralf Dahrendorf and Niklas Luhmann, intellectuals who had, as teenagers, helped to defend Hitler. In 1946, he enrolled at the University of Bonn, later also studying philosophy at Göttingen and Zurich. He was hardly a radical: indeed, he spent four years between 1949 and 1953 studying the philosopher and one-time Nazi party member Martin Heidegger. But Habermas challenged Heidegger in 1953 to explain what he meant in his 1935 Introduction to Metaphysics by the “inner truth and greatness” of National Socialism. Heidegger never replied, confirming for Habermas that German philosophy had failed in its moment of reckoning. Heidegger’s silence seemed to him symptomatic of the repressive, silencing anti-discourse prevalent in the new Federal Republic. Just as Heidegger refused to acknowledge his support for the Nazis, so Konrad Adenauer’s government, mired in anti-communist jeremiads against its East German neighbour, refused to acknowledge or definitively break with Germany’s recent past. By the time Habermas was appointed Adorno’s assistant at the institute in 1956, he had already obtained his PhD on the idealist philosopher Friedrich von Schelling. At Frankfurt he was exposed to Adorno and Horkheimer’s project of unmasking the so-called “positivist illusion” in natural and social sciences, whereby a theory is a correct mirroring of facts. Instead, following Hegel and Marx, Adorno and Horkheimer insisted that facts and theories are part of an unfolding historical process. However, Adorno and Horkheimer’s so-called Dialectic of Enlightenment turned Hegel on its head: much influenced by the German sociologist Max Weber, they argued that the process of Enlightenment, which involved extending control over human beings, was not a historical progress to freedom and absolute knowledge but an extension of domination of power over people, an unwitting march that had led to the death camps. Habermas shared in some of his teachers’ diagnosis. But he was unwilling to concede that the Enlightenment itself was caught in a bad dialectic that sabotaged human striving for emancipation. He argued in his habilitation thesis – the postdoctoral work required for a professorship – that there was another form of rationality, geared to understanding rather than means-and-ends success, that was not the cause of but the possible solution to our ills. Horkheimer demanded changes to this thesis, and this, plus Habermas’s growing worries over his teachers’ contempt for modern culture, led him to quit Frankfurt in 1961 to finish his thesis at Marburg University, under the Marxist jurist Wolfgang Abendroth. The following year he became professor of philosophy at Heidelberg University and his habilitation thesis, The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere: An Investigation of a Category of Bourgeois Society (1962), was published. “By the ‘public sphere’, we mean first of all the realm of our social life in which something approaching public opinion can be formed,” wrote Habermas. “Citizens behave as a public body when they confer in an unrestricted fashion – that is, with the guarantee of freedom of assembly and association and the freedom to express their opinions – about matters of general interest.” In the revivification of the public sphere, the role of intellectuals such as Habermas was key – they must guide debate towards a rational consensus, rather than allowing media manipulators to stifle freedom of expression. Habermas argued that rationally achieved consensus, which Adorno’s negative dialectics implacably refused, was possible for human flourishing post Auschwitz. The barriers preventing the exercise of reason could be identified and reduced. Adorno lured Habermas back to Frankfurt in 1964, when he took over Horkheimer’s job as professor of philosophy and sociology. However, his developing philosophy was derided as politically tame by the student radicals of the late 1960s. In June 1967, he shared a platform in Hanover with the student leaders Rudi Dutschke and Hans-Jürgen Krahl to discuss The University and Democracy: Conditions and Organisation of Resistance. Habermas spoke in support of the student radicals’ programme, but not their means. He rounded on Dutschke for pursuing revolution by “any means necessary”, arguing: “In my opinion, he has presented a voluntarist ideology which was called utopian socialism in 1848, but which in today’s context ... has to be called left fascism.” Reason, Habermas maintained, was crucial to clear communication and such communication was a bulwark against fascism. Violence could have no role in that. The Enlightenment, Habermas concluded, continued to have “a sound core”. But in accepting the Enlightenment legacy Habermas was a man out of time – opposed not just by student radicals but by postmodernist thinkers. The French philosopher Jean-François Lyotard, author of The Postmodern Condition, said: “After the massacres we have experienced, no one can believe in progress, in consensus, in transcendent values. Habermas presupposes such a belief.” Habermas’s book The Philosophical Discourse of Modernity (1985) defended those values against postmodernists – among them Lyotard, Michel Foucault and Jacques Derrida. Postmodernism was never Habermas’s bag. It, like Dutschke’s politics, seemed to him to flirt with nihilism and so reminded him of the Nazi era. Emblematically, after leaving Frankfurt in 1971 to become co-director of the Max Planck Institute for Research Into Conditions of Living in a Scientific and Technological World, in Starnberg, a small lakeside town near Munich, he and his wife, Ute Wesselhoeft, whom he married in 1955, built a house inspired by the Bauhaus architect Adolf Loos. There they raised three children in a house filled with light and books. The Habermases kept that home even after, in 1983, he returned to teach at Frankfurt. Its austere optimism suited him. At the Max Planck Institute, Habermas developed the thoughts that would lead to his magnum opus, the two-volume Theory of Communicative Action (1981). It was in part a retort to his now dead teachers Adorno and Horkheimer in that it argued for the emancipatory power of communicative reason against instrumental reason. He worried that citizens were becoming disenfranchised in the modern system. Against this gloomy diagnosis, he pitted a hopeful “ideal speech situation” in which citizens are able to raise moral and political concerns and defend them by rationality alone. Habermas wrote voluminously in disciplines including social theory, aesthetics, epistemology, sociology, communication studies, psychology and theology. Moreover, he commented in German papers on controversial issues of the day such as European integration, and engaged in public dialogues with figures as various as Derrida and Pope Benedict XVI. Typical of his taste for public interventions was his involvement in the so-called Historikerstreit (historians’ quarrel) which raged for four years from 1986. The German historian Ernst Nolte had recently argued that “Auschwitz ... was above all a reaction born out of the annihilating occurrences of the Russian Revolution ... the so-called annihilation of the Jews during the Third Reich was a reaction or a distorted copy and not a first act or an original.” Nolte argued that the Gulag Archipelago came before Auschwitz and inferred from this that Germany “reasonably” turned to nazism in the face of Bolshevik threat. Four decades after the fall of Hitler, Habermas sensed that Nolte and other rightwing historians were trying to exonerate their nation. In a series of articles attacking this attempt “to make Auschwitz unexceptional”, he wrote of “the obligation incumbent upon us to keep alive ... the memory of the sufferings of those who were murdered by German hands”. Eminent philosopher critics such as Richard Rorty and Slavoj Žižek have argued that the intellectual bulwarks that Habermas built against fascism were inadequate. They contended that the public sphere as a place of purely rational debate never existed, and that his cherished notion of communicative action was a utopian dream. Against such criticisms, Habermas – utopian modernist living in a postmodern dystopia, most engaged of European public intellectuals – retorted in an interview: “If there is any small remnant of utopia that I’ve preserved, then it is surely the idea that democracy is capable of hacking through the Gordian knot of otherwise insoluble problems. I’m not saying we’re going to succeed in this; we don’t even know whether success is possible. But because we don’t know, we still have to try.” Habermas kept trying and remained a public intellectual, always engaged about what his work had achieved. In 2015, for instance, the Guardian asked him about his fellow sociologist Wolfgang Streeck’s view that the Habermasian ideal of a united Europe was at the root of the Greek debt crisis, and that the European Union would not save democracy but abolish it. Habermas agreed. He argued that the united democratic Europe he dreamed of was being perverted by EU institutions such as the council and commission as well as the European Central Bank, “in other words, the very institutions that are either insufficiently legitimated to take such decisions or lack any democratic basis … this technocratic hollowing out of democracy is the result of a neoliberal pattern of market-deregulation policies”. But even as the EU looked to him increasingly like a technocratic cabal, Habermas held firm to his vision of a European-wide democratic community, not least, one might well think, as the best bulwark against the rise of populist movements that so painfully echoed the nazism of his youth – even as Brexit was being plotted: “I do not see how a return to nation states that have to be run like big corporations in a global market can counter the tendency towards de-democratisation and growing inequality – something that we also see in Great Britain, by the way.” In 2023, Habermas was drawn into the question of whether Israel was perpetrating genocide in Gaza following the 7 October Hamas terrorist attacks on Jewish civilians. On 13 November that year, Habermas put his name to a statement called Principles of Solidarity, arguing that Israel’s military retaliation following the 7 October attacks was “justified” and that “Jewish life and Israel’s right to exist are central elements worthy of special protection in light of the mass crimes of the Nazi era”. “Despite all the concern for the fate of the Palestinian population ... the standards of judgment slip completely when genocidal intentions are attributed to Israel’s actions,” said the statement, which was also signed by the political scientist Rainer Forst, the lawyer Klaus Günther and the peace researcher Nicole Deitelhoff. In response, on 22 November, several leading figures influenced by the Frankfurt School published an open letter, appearing in the Guardian, effectively arguing against its most prominent living member. The principle of “never again”, a central tenet of Germany’s political identity since the horrors of the Nazi-led Holocaust of Europe’s Jewish population, must also mean staying alert to the possibility that what was unfolding in Gaza could amount to genocide. Habermas carried on writing well into his 10th decade. Last year saw the publication of the last part of his three-volume Also a History of Philosophy, in which he explored how figures such as Kant, Hume, Marx, Kierkegaard and Peirce spurred the central themes of his philosophical enterprise – his pragmatist theory of meaning, his communicative theories of subjectivity and sociality, and his discursive theory of normativity. His final book of conversations with colleagues, Things Needed to Get Better, appeared in English last November. It was both rebuke to his more defeatist teachers and to the manifold follies of our age. “I view the attempt to make the world even the tiniest bit better,” he said, “or even just to be part of the effort to stave off the constant threats of regression that we face, as an utterly admirable motive.” Ute died last year. He is survived by his children Tilmann and Judith. Another daughter, Rebekka, died in 2023. • Friedrich Ernst Jürgen Habermas, philosopher and social theorist, born 18 June 1929; died 14 March 2026

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Cory Booker calls both parties ‘feckless’ for ceding war powers to Trump

Democratic US senator Cory Booker has criticized both his own political party as well as its Republican counterpart for being “feckless” in ceding congressional war powers to Donald Trump, saying that their decision could embolden the president to unilaterally attack Cuba, North Korea and other countries. “I’m going to be one of those Democrats [who] say I think both parties have been feckless in allowing the growth of the power of the presidency,” Booker said on Sunday on CNN’s State of the Union. The New Jersey senator said nothing Barack Obama did while in the White House – or that even Trump did before his first presidency ended in defeat to Joe Biden – was “in any way related to what we’re seeing right now”. Booker’s comments alluded to US military strikes Trump has ordered in Nigeria, Venezuela and Iran since Christmas. He called the war that the US and Israel started in Iran on 28 February – when a missile strike killed Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei – “the biggest military engagement of our country since the war in Afghanistan”. Meanwhile, during that stretch, Trump has also renewed threats to seize Greenland for the US by military force if necessary. Booker’s fellow Democrats in the US House put forth a measure calling for a stop to US military action in Iran. But without support from members of Trump’s Republican party, the measure failed, and the military campaign in Iran has continued. One day prior, the US Senate rejected a war powers resolution in a 47-53 vote that largely followed party lines. Booker pointed to how the spiraling conflict has not only roiled regional stability but oil markets as well. The strait of Hormuz, a waterway crucial to world trade, has been closed for two weeks as of Sunday. “Literally, you see with what’s going on in the strait of Hormuz right now as the biggest gumming up of the oil markets we have ever seen,” Booker said to CNN. “The consequences strategically for us moving so many assets in the region means that we’re endangering the assets we have necessarily and potentially in other areas.” Booker alluded to the deaths of 13 US military members amid reported as of Sunday amid the Iran conflict, saying: “This is a massive military undertaking, costing American taxpayers billions and billions of dollars and tragically costing 13 lives.” He recognized that previous presidents had strayed from limits on their power to engage in war but maintained Trump’s Iran campaign had exceeded that precedent. “At this magnitude, at this cost, why is Congress just laying down and doing nothing?” Booker said. “Because, if we allow this to happen, then we give Trump the permission to say, ‘OK, finished with Venezuela, I went to Iran, now I’m going to go to Cuba, now I’m going to go to North Korea.’ “It is outrageous and never conceived of that we could have this level of a military engagement without the people’s house, Congress, doing something about it.”

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War on Iran may provoke a terrorist attack in US – and that may be the point

For decades, the US and its allies have painted Iran as the world’s biggest sponsor of state terrorism – invoking its Islamic rulers’ supposed revolutionary fanaticism and determined support for militant proxies. Now a long-standing but mainly latent threat is coalescing, with the war waged on the country by the US and Israel, to raise the risk of an attack on American soil to levels unseen since the murderous al-Qaida assaults of 11 September 2001, experts say. In an election year, opponents of Donald Trump are warning that such an event could rebound to his advantage – providing him with a pretext to crack down on critics by declaring a state of emergency or even cancelling November’s congressional midterm elections. Two attacks on Thursday alone illustrated the heightened dangers. One person was killed and two others wounded when a gunman yelling “Allahu Akbar” opened fire in a classroom at Old Dominion University in Virginia. The shooter was later identified as a former national guardsman who had previously admitted trying to provide material support to the Islamic State. In Michigan, a Lebanese-born US citizen rammed a truck into the Temple Israel synagogue in West Bloomfield Township, before being shot dead by security guards. The attacker, Ayman Mohamad Ghazali, had lost two brothers and a niece and nephew in an Israeli raid on Lebanon this month. This week’s events followed a deadly attack on 1 March in which a man wearing clothes with an Iranian flag design and bearing the words “property of Allah” shot two people dead and wounded 14 in a bar in Austin, Texas, before he was fatally shot by police. While there is no direct evidence linking the incidents directly to Iran, analysts say an “asymmetric” attack ordered or inspired by Tehran in response to the US-Israeli military action is a real and present danger. At the same time, instability at the FBI and Department of Homeland Security has left the US underprepared. Matthew Levitt, a counter-terrorism specialist at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, said threats from Tehran were escalating even before the current campaign began on 28 February – as Iran sought revenge for last June’s 12-day war, which saw US strikes badly damage its nuclear facilities, while Israel killed a spate of senior commanders. US authorities are believed to have discovered and stopped 17 Iranian-inspired plots in the past five years. Some of these had a “Keystone cops” quality, Levitt said, but that did not lessen the threat level. “The fact that many of the plots do not seem particularly capable doesn’t mean that they won’t ultimately succeed,” argued Levitt, the author of a detailed study, entitled Tehran’s Homeland Option. “We need to get it right every time, they need to get it right once.” Iran is likely to “pull out all the stops” not only to raise the costs of the war to the US and preserve the Islamic regime, but also to avenge the killing of its most powerful figure, the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who died in an Israeli strike on the war’s opening day. “Once the war ends, the threat is maybe not as immediately acute, but it’ll hang over us,” Levitt said. “There’ll be a tail to this because from the Iranian perspective, all kinds of lines have been crossed. They will want to exact a cost to try and raise a level of deterrence so that people think two and three times before initiating another round.” The clerical regime is already believed to have plotted to kill Trump and two senior officials from his first administration – Mike Pompeo, the former secretary of state, and the ex-national security adviser, John Bolton – in revenge for the US assassination of Qassem Suleimani, the commander of the Revolutionary Guards’ elite Quds force in January 2020. A Pakistani national, Asif Merchant, was convicted in a court in New York on 6 March of plotting to murder US officials, including Trump, at the direction of the Revolutionary Guards. Last week, Ali Larijani, the secretary of Iran’s supreme national security council and one of the regime’s most powerful surviving figures, appeared to renew the threat against Trump, telling him: “Watch out for yourself – lest you be eliminated!” The comment followed Trump’s threat to intensify strikes on Iran if it blocked the strait of Hormuz, something it now claims to have done. Reports in recent days suggest that Iran may have tried to activate “sleeper cells” in the US. On the day the war started, a Farsi-speaking man was heard on short-wave radio reading out what was believed to be a cipher code, a time-honored method used by spy agencies such as the CIA and KGB to contact undercover agents. Analysts have expressed skepticism about the “sleeper” agent threat, although one man, Ali Kourani, a naturalized US citizen originally from Lebanon, described himself as such to investigators after being accused of plotting to strike targets in New York for Hezbollah, the Lebanese Shia group that is widely seen as Iran’s proxy. “When the FBI asked him, under what circumstances would he expect to be called upon to act on the pre-operational surveillance he’d done all over New York City and elsewhere, he said definitely if the United States was ever in direct conflict with Iran,” said Levitt, who testified in the case. Kourani received a 40-year jail sentence. “He also talked about if the United States was involved in assassinating senior Hezbollah or Iranian leaders, and these are all in the rear-view mirror at this point.” Threats are also likely to take the shape of criminal surrogates – which Iran tried to use in an unsuccessful plot to murder a US-based Iranian journalist, Masih Alinejad, and in the attempts against Bolton and Pompeo – and Iranian-inspired lone actors. John Donohue, a former assistant head of intelligence in the New York police department and a fellow at Rutgers University, said the existential threat posed to the Iranian regime by US and Israeli attacks might drive it to deploy long term assets it has paid to have in place in the US. “The long-term investment of the Iranian regime in building its capabilities externally can’t be underestimated,” said Donohue, who recalled Iranian operatives being arrested for scouting landmarks in New York for possible attacks. “If you look at the history of the attempts of the Iranian regime against American interests, you don’t see small, limited types of events. They’re looking for mass-casualty incidents. “They tend to be very deliberative and strategic in how they do things. [But] now, with great concern over the survivability of the regime, does that cause them to be less strategic? Does that cause them to be more reflexive and ad hoc? That’s the real question.” Observers question the readiness of the FBI and homeland security department to meet a stepped-up Iranian threat. Fledgling agents at the FBI’s training academy have been re-deployed as uniformed police officers in Washington DC on instructions of the bureau’s director, Kash Patel, Donohue said. Meanwhile, vital homeland security surveillance functions have been temporarily mothballed thanks to a partial DHS shutdown after Democrats refused to continue funding the department unless reforms were made to how Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents operate. “Readiness is a huge issue,” said Colin Clarke, executive director of the Soufan Center, a group studying global security. “[The administration] have diverted resources away from counter-terrorism and toward immigration enforcement. We’ve shifted longtime terrorism experts to other portfolios, like China, Russia, emerging tech. This is ramping up at the same time that we’re the least prepared to deal with it.” It is also happening at a time when Trump is desperately seeking to avoid a Republican defeat in November’s congressional midterms, with a series of polls showing sinking approval ratings and low support for the Iran offensive. Writing on Substack, the historian Timothy Snyder warned that a terrorist attack could work in Trump’s favor and might even explain his reasoning for launching the military action. “A purpose of the war on Iran might well be to provoke a terrorist attack inside the United States,” Snyder wrote. “This would provide Donald Trump with a pretext to try to cancel or ‘federalize’ the coming congressional elections. “Self-terrorism might not have been the initial aim; but as time goes by, and failures and atrocities mount, its appeal will grow. Trump could think that he has much to gain; the war itself makes terrorism more likely.” The argument was bolstered by Steven Cash, executive director of the Steady State, a group of retired national security officers concerned about the US’s authoritarian drift under Trump. “We’ve used our technological and economic advantage to kill thousands of Iranians and religious leaders, including the [chief] ayatollah [Khamenei]. We’ve destroyed whatever capability of both defense and deterrence that they would have through what we would consider appropriate military means, and we’ve left them with nothing else,” he said. “Of course there’s going to be retaliation – it’s a rational response on their part. It may be that this is what Trump’s interested in. He has spent a year trying to convince Americans that we are facing a terrible domestic threat. “Suddenly this unprecedented and unprovoked attack on another country – probably in violation of the constitution and international law – is going to create the very conditions that he unsuccessfully tried to convince us would justify extraordinary powers of the presidency.”