Summary

  1. 'That's ridiculous': Netanyahu rubbishes view that Israel 'dragged' US into warpublished at 02:54 GMT

    More now from Netanyahu's interview with Fox News.

    When asked by presenter Sean Hannity if Israel "dragged Donald Trump" into the conflict, the prime minister laughed.

    "That’s ridiculous. Donald Trump is the strongest leader in the world. He does what he thinks is right for America," Netanyahu responded.

    "I know the cost of war," he went on to say. "But I know that sometimes war is necessary to protect us from the people who would destroy us."

    Earlier US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the US attacked Iran "pre-emptively" on Saturday because "we knew there was going to be Israeli action".

    "We knew that if we didn't pre-emptively go after them before they launched those attacks, we would suffer higher casualties," Rubio had said.

  2. Amazon says its data centres affected by drone strikespublished at 02:34 GMT

    Osmond Chia
    Business reporter

    Amazon Web Services (AWS) says two of its data centres in the United Arab Emirates were "directly struck" by drone strikes in the region.

    Another facility in Bahrain was hit by drone strikes nearby, said AWS on Monday in a list of alerts, external on its services in the region.

    The company, which operates data centres and digital services worldwide, said the strikes have caused "structural damage" and "disrupted power" to its infrastructure.

    Data centres store and process information for a wide range of businesses and internet services like websites and online applications in a region. Any damage to such facilities could be seriously disruptive.

    AWS urged its customers in the Middle East to immediately backup their data and move their systems to AWS platforms in the US, Asia, Europe or elsewhere, given the "unpredictable" situation in the Middle East.

  3. Netanyahu claims Iran nuclear build up would be 'immune within months'published at 02:20 GMT

    Israel's prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu has defended the Israeli military strikes on Iran, claiming Tehran's recent nuclear build-up would have been "immune within months" before Israel's intervention.

    Despite the joint Israeli-US air raids targeting three nuclear sites during the 12-day war in June, Netanyahu says Iranian soldiers and technicians started building new sites, including "underground bunkers", where they could develop ballistic missiles and atomic bombs.

    "If no action was taken now, no action could be taken in the future," Netanyahu told Fox News.

    Israel has long opposed Iran's nuclear enrichment, warning it could be used to develop nuclear weapons, instead of being harnessed for peaceful purposes as the Iranian government claims.

    Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu reacts during the funeral of Israeli hostage Ran GviliImage source, Getty Images
  4. Watch: BBC questions Marco Rubio over reported school strikepublished at 01:57 GMT

    The BBC's Tom Bateman questioned US Secretary of State Marco Rubio about Iranian reports that a school had been struck, which reportedly killed dozens of civilians, including children.

    "The US would not deliberately target a school," Rubio repeatedly said.

    Media caption,

    BBC questions Marco Rubio over reported strike on Iranian school

  5. US will not enter another multi-year conflict, says Vance in Fox interviewpublished at 01:42 GMT

    JD VanceImage source, Getty Images

    The US is not going to get into a conflict that will drag on for years, Vice President JD Vance said in an interview with Fox News, adding that the president had one clear objective: to make sure Iran could "never have a nuclear weapon".

    "What the president determined is he didn't want to just keep the country safe from an Iranian nuclear weapon for the first three, four years of his second term - he wanted to make sure that Iran could never have a nuclear weapon, and that would require fundamentally a change in mindset from the Iranian regime," Vance says.

    He added that this would not go on long-term, adding: "There's no way that Donald Trump is going to allow this country to get into a multi-year conflict... we're not going to get into the problems that we've had with Iraq and Afghanistan."

    Vance also added that Iran's nuclear facilities are not built just for civilian enrichment purposes, as the regime has claimed, but are built to develop nuclear weapons.

  6. UNESCO World Heritage Site damaged in Tehranpublished at 01:14 GMT

    Ghoncheh Habibiazad
    Senior reporter, BBC Persian

    A building covered in intricate tiling and colourful mosaics is seen against a clear blue sky.Image source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Golestan Palace, pictured in 2018

    Tehran’s historic Golestan Palace, which is listed as a United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) World Heritage Site, has been damaged following strikes on the capital, according to Iranian state media.

    UNESCO has expressed concern over the protection of heritage sites, external following reports that the palace was damaged.

    Local news outlets had reported on an explosion in Tehran’s Arg Square, near the palace.

    Golestan Palace served as the royal residence of Iranian monarchs during the Qajar dynasty and later became the official seat of the Pahlavi dynasty.

  7. Oil shipment rates hit all-time highpublished at 01:00 GMT

    Osmond Chia
    Business reporter

    The cost of hiring a supertanker to ship oil from the Middle East to China has reached an all-time high of more than $400,000 (£298,300), according to data from the London Stock Exchange Group.

    That value is almost double of what it was last week when the US threatened to attack Iran.

    Iran has targeted ships passing through the Strait of Hormuz, a crucial waterway in the south of the country, through which about a fifth of the world's oil and gas is shipped.

    The record fees are for the biggest oil-carrying vessels that can haul up to two-million barrels of crude.

    These values are just one of the ways we are seeing prices surge since the Israeli and US attacks on Iran over the weekend.

    A crude oil tanker at seaImage source, Getty Images
  8. US embassy in Riyadh hit by drone attackpublished at 00:45 GMT

    Saudi Arabia's Ministry of Defense has confirmed that the US embassy in Riyadh was attacked by two drones, according to initial estimates.

    In a statement shared to X, the ministry said this resulted "in a limited fire and minor material damage to the building".

    The US Mission to Saudi Arabia has issued a shelter in place notification for Jeddah, Riyadh and Dhahran, and says it will limit non-essential travel to any military installations in the region.

    It is currently just after 03:00 local time (00:44 GMT) in Riyadh.

  9. 'The US struck in a defensive posture', says House Speaker Mike Johnsonpublished at 00:31 GMT

    US House Speaker Mike Johnson has described the attacks on Iran as being "defensive in nature".

    "The US struck in a defensive posture," Johnson said on the operation, adding that he believes the current military operation will be "limited in scope" and "short in duration".

    Johnson made the remarks to journalists following a defence and intelligence briefing of the so-called "Gang of Eight", a congressional leadership team made up of Democrats and Republicans.

    Mike Johnson speaks to the media after a classified briefing with lawmakers at the US CapitolImage source, EPA
  10. Explosions reported in Saudi capital Riyadhpublished at 00:16 GMT
    Breaking

    We are now getting reports of explosions in the diplomatic quarter of Riyadh, Saudi Arabia's capital city.

    According to Reuters quoting sources, a fire has broken out at the US embassy, which is located in that area.

  11. Air base used by Australian forces near Dubai hit by drone at weekendpublished at 23:57 GMT 2 March

    Helen Livingstone
    Reporting from Sydney

    Australia's defence minister has confirmed that an air base used by Australian forces near Dubai was hit by a drone at the weekend, adding that no Australians were injured in the attack.

    "On the first night there was a strike at the Al Minhad Air Base, but all the Australians who are there are safe and accounted for," Richard Marles has told reporters.

    The UAE air base is used by multiple western militaries, and is the Australian Defence Force's Middle East headquarters. Marles says Australia has 100 personnel in the Middle East, with most stationed in the UAE.

    Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has previously said his country backs the US and Israel "acting to prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon and to prevent Iran continuing to threaten international peace and security".

  12. BBC Verify

    How the US-Israel war with Iran is jeopardising shippingpublished at 23:38 GMT 2 March

    The Strait of Hormuz is a crucial artery for the movement of global energy supplies.

    Iran has warned it will "set fire" to ships passing through strait - only about 50km (31 miles) wide at its entrance and exit - threatening key supply chains.

    BBC Verify's Ben Chu takes a look at what's been happening to marine traffic in the strait since the US-Israel war with Iran broke out.

    Media caption,

    How the US-Israel war with Iran is jeopardising shipping

  13. Iran fires missiles towards Israel, IDF sayspublished at 23:15 GMT 2 March

    Iran has launched missiles towards several areas of Israel, the Israeli military warns, after sending out phone alerts across the country for people to take shelter.

    Anti-air defence systems are "operating to intercept the threat", the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) says.

    An Iranian missile flies towards Israel as Israeli air defence operates, amid the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran, as seen from Hebron, in the Israeli-occupied West BankImage source, Reuters
    Image caption,

    Israeli defences intercept Iranian missiles as seen from Hebron, in the occupied West Bank

  14. State Department urges Americans to depart much of Middle Eastpublished at 23:10 GMT 2 March

    The US State Department is now urging Americans in much of the Middle East to depart now via commercial means due to "serious safety risks".

    The advisory applies to citizens in Bahrain, Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Israel, the West Bank, Gaza, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Syria, the United Arab Emirates and Yemen.

  15. Israel attacks Iranian state broadcasterpublished at 22:54 GMT 2 March

    Ghoncheh Habibiazad
    BBC Persian

    Head of Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting (IRIB), Peyman Jebeli, says parts of the internal premises of the broadcaster in Tehran have been hit.

    The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) also says it has targeted the IRIB’s complex.

    "The Israeli army targeted the Islamic Republic of IRIB complex, the beating heart of the IRGC's machine of lies and repression," a post on the IDF in Persian X account said.

    Iranian outlets reported yesterday that some buildings of the state broadcaster had been targeted.

    The state broadcaster was also targeted by Israel during Iran-Israel 12-day war back in June last year.

  16. Global News Podcast: What comes next?published at 22:39 GMT 2 March

    Global News Podcast logo on red background

    What will happen in Iran now that Supreme Leader Aytollah Ali Khamenei is dead? Will we see regime change? Or a changed regime?

    The Global News Podcast speaks, external to the BBC's chief international correspondent Lyse Doucet, who has covered Iran for years and is one of the few Western journalists to report from inside the country in recent months.

  17. 'I've never been so scared': Exhausted passengers land in London from Abu Dhabipublished at 22:22 GMT 2 March

    Tom Symonds
    Reporting from Heathrow Airport

    Outside Terminal 4, a couple smile at the camera while holding their luggage, with the woman holding her thumbs upImage source, PA Media
    Image caption,

    Jeff and Rebecca Moses, from Manchester

    I'm at Heathrow, where an Etihad Airways Airbus A380 carrying hundreds of passengers from Abu Dhabi has arrived. Exhausted passengers say they watched missiles pass overhead while hoping to get a flight home.

    Penny Harrison, on a trip with friends in Dubai, tells me: "We heard explosions, we heard the hotel shake, we saw columns of black smoke, we saw drone interceptions. While we were having breakfast there was black ash falling on the breakfast table."

    An exhausted Fay McCaul, arriving with her 7-year-old son Moss, says there were a lot of military jets flying over, and little information about what was going on. "They were talking about having to do an evacuation through Saudi Arabia. I was on my own just with my son," she says.

    For Alison Ager, an alarm went off on her phone on the first night, and families with children went to the basement of their hotel. "We just laid there and thought we’ve got to get through this," she tells me.

    "I just wanted to get home to see the family, that's just what we kept thinking. I’ve never been so scared in all my life," Alison says.

    "You go to the Middle East and you think the Emirates are safe but clearly they're not," she adds.

  18. Rubio asked about reports that a school was hit on Saturdaypublished at 22:04 GMT 2 March

    Tom Bateman
    US State Department correspondent

    I just asked Rubio what the administration knows about Iranian reports that a school was struck on Saturday, reportedly killing dozens of civilians including children.

    He said he had seen the reports and the Department of Defense would be investigating "if that was our strike".

    I pressed him whether they knew it was the result of a US strike. He said: "The United States would not deliberately target a school," accusing the Iranians instead of targeting civilians in the region. I asked for his response if children had indeed been killed. He said that would be "a tragic outcome if it’s happened" but said he didn’t have the details about what led to it.

    Iranian officials on Saturday said a girls' school was struck in Minab, while video showed distraught crowds gathered around a destroyed building. The site is near an Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) base which has previously been a target.

    Iranian officials said least 153 people including children were killed. The US military's Central Command (Centcom) said on Sunday it was looking into reports of the incident.

  19. Analysis

    Rubio's justification miles away from Trump's speech on Saturdaypublished at 21:51 GMT 2 March

    Tom Bateman
    US State Department correspondent

    The administration says it struck Iran, when it did, because it was pre-empting Iran’s response to an Israeli attack.

    This is a curious, evolving explanation that is likely to meet heavy scepticism from opposition lawmakers among those being briefed by Rubio here in Congress.

    He just told us gathered reporters that people seemed confused about the offensive and its timing. He offered the justification: The administration knew there was going to be Israeli action against Iran and the US would suffer "much higher casualties" from Iran’s response if the US didn't strike first.

    This is a pre-emptive defence argument that appears to pin the initiative on Israel, not Trump. This is miles away from Trump's combative speech on Saturday, which at least in part framed the US action as timed to draw on popular discontent and bring about regime change.

  20. Rubio: US attacked Iran 'pre-emptively' knowing Israel would strikepublished at 21:46 GMT 2 March

    Secretary of State Marco Rubio says the US attacked Iran "pre-emptively" on Saturday because they knew Israel was going to strike, which he says would have meant Iranian retaliation against US forces.

    Speaking a little earlier, he tells reporters: "We knew that there was going to be an Israeli action. We knew that that would precipitate an attack against American forces.

    "And we knew that if we didn't pre-emptively go after them before they launched those attacks, we would suffer higher casualties and perhaps even higher those killed," Rubio says.

    “I'm not going to give away the details of our tactical efforts, but the hardest hits are yet to come from the US military,” he adds.