Global News Podcast - Israel hits Tehran and Beirut with 'simultaneous strikes'
Episode Date: March 3, 2026The Israeli defence minister says he has told troops to "take control" of new positions in Lebanon. The IDF says it's targeting Hezbollah. Israel says it's bombed Iran's presidential office and the US... claims to have destroyed command facilities and missile launch sites across the country. The Iranian response has included missile and drone attacks on several Gulf states. The international price of oil and gas have risen again, as concerns grow that supplies could be hit by the conflict - we hear how South Korea has been affected. Also, we go to Nigeria to look at deep divisions within the Anglican church over the appointment of the first female Archbishop of Canterbury. The Global News Podcast brings you the breaking news you need to hear, as it happens. Listen for the latest headlines and current affairs from around the world. Politics, economics, climate, business, technology, health – we cover it all with expert analysis and insight. Get the news that matters, delivered twice a day on weekdays and daily at weekends, plus special bonus episodes reacting to urgent breaking stories. Follow or subscribe now and never miss a moment. Get in touch: globalpodcast@bbc.co.uk
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This is the Global News podcast from the BBC World Service.
I'm Celia Hatton, and at 1600 GMT on Tuesday, the 3rd of March, these are our main stories.
Israel says it's carrying out simultaneous strikes in Tehran and Beirut.
With the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran threatening the oil and gas supply,
chain, it's not only Middle Eastern countries facing an uncertain future.
South Korea needs oil and gas to run its power generators and also to feed its enormous
petrochemical industry. It's a huge part of South Korean economy.
And we go to Nigeria to look at deep divisions within the Anglican Church over the appointment
of the first female Archbishop of Canterbury.
Day four of the U.S. Israeli War with Iran and day four, two, of the fallout front.
that conflict. We're focusing this edition on what's happening in the region, but also how the
war is being viewed far away from its original Iranian targets. Israel has launched a new wave
of airstrikes on Tehran and on the Lebanese capital, Beirut. The Israeli military has held a
briefing. Nadav Shoshani is a spokesperson. Our forces, along with the U.S. armed forces,
continue degrading the Iranian regime's military capabilities. We have focused on targeting ballistic
missile launchers, command and control centers, underground bunkers, and of course, key Iranian regime
leadership figures.
Overnight, IDF troops were positioned in southern Lebanon at several points near the border area as part
of an enhanced forward defense posture.
Let me be clear.
This is not a ground maneuver into Lebanon.
It is a tactical step to create an additional layer of security for the residents of northern
Israel.
Hundreds of people have fled their homes in Beirut, and Israel has won.
warned that thousands of people in villages near the border must also go.
The Lebanese armies reported to be pulling back from positions in the south.
Our correspondent, Lena Sinjab, is in Beirut.
I've just come down to the promenade on the seaside of Beirut.
This is an area that's normally known for people enjoying the seaside,
but now it's filled with families that fled.
from southern Beirut.
You can see them lining up with their cars,
with their clothes, with their bags.
They fled from the bombing.
We're not far from south of Beirut.
In fact, you can hear the bombing here by the seaside.
And sometimes you can even hear the drones,
the Israeli drones that are roving over the city
and attacking targets.
in south of Beirut.
People here are angry,
are frustrated.
They've lived through this in
2024 when Israel
launched its full-fledged attack
on Hezbollah,
eliminating its top leaders
and crippling the group.
And now they're living it again.
Their homes that have been destroyed
in 2024 are still in rubbles
and now they have to flee again.
The Nasinjab in Beirut, our Middle East correspondent Yolanel, is in Jerusalem.
She too took us back to 2024.
You have to go back to the 2024 ceasefire deal that was supposed to have ended a year of intense cross-border fighting between Israel and Hasbunla, the Lebanese armed group.
That went on in parallel to the war in Gaza.
Now, that really only saw a partial withdrawal of Israeli forces.
They did remain in some positions in the Umbudsman.
very south of Lebanon, but gradually the Lebanese army was supposed to be taking over there
and pushing out any remnants of Hezbollah, stopping them from regrouping there. But now, you know,
what the Israeli military is basically saying is that it's trying to present this not as a new
ground incursion, but creating a buffer zone to protect the Israeli citizens who live in the north
of the country from Hezbollah attacks. Remember that some 60s,
thousand people had to leave their homes in the north of Israel. And some of them have only,
you know, recently gone back because of that fighting that went on there previously. And there
are concerns the Israeli military has said about a kind of cross-border raid, attempts by
Hezbollah to conduct such a raid, or indeed, you know, that they could get closer to the border
to continue with their rocket fire because they have already been in the north of Israel since Hezbollah
really sort of announced that it was entering into this new conflict.
And of course, you take into consideration here that that had been in many ways anticipated.
Because Hezbollah is so financially and ideologically linked to Iran,
there have been these rocket and drone attacks that have been going on,
affecting people in the north of Israel.
Some people, you know, suffering minor injuries there today,
people rushing into their air raid shelters once again.
Yoland, just to focus on the wider conflict for a moment, there's been a lot of talk about the strategic objectives of this war.
What do you think the Israelis really want to achieve?
What they have been saying consistently when they've been laying out the case for war is that they want to target all aspects of the threat that they see as very sort of real and immediate to them from Iran.
And so that is why they talk about, you know, not just Iran,
nuclear program, as much of the world has been talking about the potential threat from that,
but also its ballistic missile program and also the proxies, including Hezbollah, including
Hamas and Islamic jihad in Gaza, including Iraqi Shiap militia, that Iran has all around this region.
And the case has really very much been sort of laid out that Iran after, you know, what's happened
with the war that's gone on in Gaza, where Hamas and Islamic Jihad have been so weakened.
After the 12-day war that Israel started with Iran last summer, with the US joining in at the end,
where nuclear and military sites were really attacked,
that this was a moment of weakness for Iran.
And then the fact that, you know, the US, Israel's closest ally came so fully on board with these attacks,
That is what really sort of, you know, strengthened the position.
And you see in Israel strong support among Israelis, despite all the disruption that there is to their daily lives at the moment.
Yolan Nel.
In Iran, the United States says its forces have destroyed Revolutionary Guard command and control facilities,
as well as air defense capabilities and missile and drone launch sites.
The Israeli military says it has bombed the presidential office in,
Tehran. Iran's Red Crescent says 787 people have been killed in the country since the
airstrikes began on Saturday. The authorities in Tehran are staying defiant and they say
the gates of hell will open more and more on the U.S. and Israel.
Gonche Habibia Zad from BBC Persian spoke to Clive Myrie about the messages the service had
been receiving from people inside Iran. Clive is reporting from Israel at the moment.
It's very difficult to know exactly what's going on inside Iran because of the internet outage,
but some people manage to connect momentarily to tell the outside war about what's going on.
From what I've heard today, Isfahan has been the centre of the attacks.
Tehran has been calmer than yesterday, and it seems like the strikes weren't that much as yesterday.
I've heard that children are really afraid of what's going on,
and how the situation is unfolding,
but some people, some anti-establishment ones that I've been talking to,
are cheerful about some of the strikes.
And so far, Iran's Red Crescent Society has said
that 787 people have been killed.
They haven't made a distinction between civilians
and the officials and military officials that have been killed during the strikes.
And I've also heard from Tehran that the prices
for some essentials have increased,
and people are some of them are stocking up
because they don't know how long the war is going to continue.
We've actually been trying to put together a film
looking at how civilians on this side of the border, Gonche,
are coping with the continual air strikes
and air raid sirens and so on.
That was something that so many that I talked to
before the war were complaining about,
about not having any bunkers or anything that they could shelter in.
Iranian officials had said that some parking lots were ready for people to take shelter in,
but we didn't see any reports or anything of it.
They have asked people to stay at home and just be there,
but at the same time, like some of these infrastructures,
like the bases are located near by people's houses as well.
We have seen some distractions to the hospitals.
We have verified videos of that,
although Israel's defense forces has said that they have also seen reports of a partial damage to a hospital and Tehran Gandhi Hospital,
but they said that they're not targeting hospitals.
And this is a situation right now.
People are staying at home and watching to see what will happen.
I have seen that some people have said that their windows were shattered,
that their walls have been rattling and their houses have been rattling.
And this has been the situation, and they can hear fighter jets just possibly.
through their heads like when they're at home.
Gonche Habibazad from BBC Persian speaking to Clive Myrie.
Now we're going to leave the U.S.-Israel war with around four a few minutes.
Clergy from a conservative wing of the Anglican church
have gathered for a meeting in Nigeria
where they'll choose a rival leader for the first female Archbishop of Canterbury,
Sarah Mulali.
Nearly 500 bishops are meeting in the capital, Abuja.
But the appointment of Archbishop Mulali has deepened divisions in the Anglican church.
Sub-conservative Christians insist only men should serve as bishops.
BBC's Lebo de Seko reports from the Nigerian city of Lagos.
Sunday service in Lagos, the same liturgy and prayers as many Anglicans,
but the global church is far from united.
Here in Nigeria, the selection of a woman as Archbishop of Canterbury
defied its opinion.
Ever since I was born and I'm an
agriac and I've never had such before
and I don't think it's
Christianly
despite that because when you look at the gospel in the Bible
where you guys in the apostles of God
and there was no woman there.
That is my own thought about it.
So a woman being the head of
an African church in England
I don't think he's going to go well.
God created us male and female
but the work of God is an
individual thing. If you are called, you can be a man, you can be a woman, you need to
fulfill the call of the Lord.
This week, Conservative clergy from around the world will meet in Nigeria's capital Abuja.
There they'll vote in a rival to lead them in a direct challenge to Sarah Malali. The group,
known as Gafcon, was formed in 2008 following theological differences over the issue of same-sex
unions. Gaffcon says it has not left the Anglican church, rather that it is the true church.
This week's vote will only deepen divisions, as Professor Dermud McCullough, retired professor
of the history of the church at the University of Oxford, explains.
Well, this is a bid for schism. It's a bid for putting substance into the increasingly threatening
noises of the Gafcom group over the last 15 years or however that long they've been in existence.
And they put it in very imperialist, colonialist language.
They want to be the Anglican Communion,
rather than just a bit of it, which is what they are now.
And that's a very aggressive thing to do.
This is a set of leaders, all male,
going to a conference in Africa to a certain identity,
which no longer satisfies many Anglican children.
churches, that is, an all-male episcopate calling the shots.
Perhaps the solution lies with the youth.
34-year-old Alexander Olosinde explains that the connection to Canterbury is important to him,
in spite of its sometimes more liberal theological stance.
The connection to the European, and yes, it's matters to me.
I very much forward to time whereby, like I said, we have an economic company.
No church of England, should have been able to be in general.
For me, best, I look forward to that.
Common ground might be hard to find.
The relationship between the first Anglican church and the rest of the world
is looking increasingly precarious.
Lebo de Seko.
Still to come in this podcast.
These are really unimaginable images that are about as shocking
for people living and doing business here,
as it would be to see a city like Miami.
being bombed.
The emotional effects of war.
This is not the future we were promised.
Like, how about that for a tagline for the show?
From the BBC, this is the interface, the show that explores how tech is rewiring your week and your world.
This isn't about quarterly earnings or about tech reviews.
It's about what technology is actually doing to your work and your politics, your everyday life.
And all the bizarre ways people are using the internet.
Listen on BBC.com or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is the Global News podcast.
Back to our top story now, the fourth day of U.S. and Israeli airstrikes on Iran.
Globally, oil and gas prices have continued to rise.
The price of a barrel of crude oil hit $85 for the first time since 2024,
while the price of gas in Europe has more than doubled since Friday.
Iran has blocked the strapped the strait.
of Hormuz. That's the narrow strip between the Gulf and the Indian Ocean, through which
about a fifth of global oil and gas travels. Several tankers passing through have come under
fire and there have been attacks on oil and gas installations in neighboring countries,
including Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and the UAE. Over night, the U.S. Embassy in the Saudi capital,
Riyadh, was hit by drones. The news was announced on state TV.
The authorities say an Iranian missile strike on Hamad International Airport in Doha
was foiled by its missile defense system.
On Monday, Qatar shot down two Iranian fighter planes.
Our correspondent in Doha, Barbara Plet-Ushar told me more about what's been happening across the Gulf.
There was a drone strike on the U.S. embassy essentially overnight.
Two drones, the Defense Ministry in Saudi Arabia said,
not very much damage.
A fire started, but it was limited,
and the Saudis said that there were no injuries.
We do know that the embassy there put out an alert to its citizens,
telling them to stay away from the building
and to shelter in place, as they say,
which is what happened in Kuwait when we heard that the embassy had been hit.
That was never confirmed,
although there was smoke in the area as well as emergency vehicles.
They also, the Americans put out such an alert.
So it seems that the Iranians are targeting when it comes to U.S. targets, not just military bases, but also civilian ones.
Barbara, should we be surprised that so many drone strikes are heading key U.S. targets in the region?
Is it precisely because the Iranians are using drones successfully?
Well, there hasn't actually been a lot of damage.
So the missiles that are being sent, the ballistic missiles, are mostly intercepted.
by air defense systems in the Gulf states. The drones are much less sophisticated,
and they do get around air defenses much more easily than the missiles. And the impact that they
have physically is some damage, but psychologically it's the greater damage, I think,
because the Iranians can create this sense of insecurity in the region. In fact, that is their
goal, it seems, to create a sense of chaos and also economic disruption. So, for example,
they targeted for the first time energy infrastructure yesterday on Monday,
hitting the Saudi main refinery, oil refinery in Saudi Arabia,
and also liquid natural gas targets here in Qatar.
I should say they targeted them.
They didn't necessarily hit them because, again, some of them were blown out of the sky.
But the result of that, even though the facilities themselves were not that much damage,
the result was that production stopped,
and that has had a huge impact on the market.
So in a way, their biggest weapon when it comes to the idea of,
creating instability in the region is its location because they can disrupt things quite easily
because it's a transport hub, you know, sending drones to hit the airports,
doesn't take the airports out of function, but it means that they stop for security reasons.
And that has a huge impact on travel and also on the energy industry.
And tourism, I should add, you know, because tourism is another big thing here in the Gulf.
What about the political impact of all of this?
I mean, it's been said that the Iranians have been targeting
the Gulf states in an effort to drive a wedge between those states and the Americans to put
pressure on the U.S. to stop the war. But is that happening? Or are we seeing more unity between
those targeted countries and the Americans? It's a risky calculation because the Arab countries
have from the beginning been against the war. They very much lobbied the U.S. not to go to war,
saying exactly this kind of scenario could happen. So they knew that it.
it could happen, something like this.
At the moment, they are very much focused on defense.
It can escalate, as we can see, quite quickly over the last four days.
But at this point, the Gulf countries, although they're issuing very strong condemnations and warnings,
they are very much in a defensive mode.
Barbara Pledasher in Doha.
And we have more from Barbara on our YouTube channel today.
Search for BBC News on YouTube, and you'll find the Global News podcast in the podcast section.
There's a new story available.
every weekday. For more on what it's like for those living in the UAE, let's hear from Monica
Marx. She's a professor of Middle East politics at New York University, Abu Dhabi. She spoke to Rob Young.
The images that we've seen since Saturday of missiles actually making contact with both airports,
the one in Dubai, the one in Abu Dhabi, with residential buildings like Etihad Tower and
Abu Dhabi where the Israel embassy was located and even hotels like the Fairmont and Dubai, which
was a flame. These are really unimaginable images that are about as shocking for people living and
doing business here as it would be to see a city like Miami being bombed because these cities are
so almost preternaturally calm. You can leave your purse down without worrying about it being
stolen. Typically, you don't even see a homeless person on the street. There's a lot of
almost like a sterile quality about how safe these cities typically feel to live in.
And so what is the mood at the moment then among the many foreigners who've made to buy their home?
Most people seem to be feeling a combination of trepidation and gratitude to the government for doing its best to strike everything out of the sky.
They're seeing incoming hardware from Iran that could land and could kill quite a lot of.
of people if it wasn't being shot down.
So I think that the government here has been trying to project calm and competence just
yesterday at Dubai Mall.
The top brass leadership was making a point of walking around and chilling out together
and greeting random people, including people like a child from Asia, a man from Ghana
that came up and greeted them at the mall.
And they really wanted to show these images to project calm and to project strength.
We've heard that Amazon's cloud competing business said that drones have hit three of its facilities in the United Arab Emirates, as well as in Bahrain as well.
So foreign global businesses are also being affected.
Do you see a situation in which companies decide to pull their operations, to pull their people out of places like Dubai?
If Iran kept on these attacks for, I think, over a week or two at the current tempo, or if Iran went after really close to the jugular vein of Gulf states, I would say attacking things like power, power plants, attacking data centers even more and more successfully, managing to shut down the internet or water desalination, air conditioning, Gulf states are really uninhabitable without those things, certainly for businesses. And I think you would see a bigger.
movement out. Yesterday, Abu Dhabi, late at night, in the middle of the night, got hit with some very
loud explosions. About 94% of everything coming in is being intercepted by the UAE, but, you know, I was chatting
with my students last night in Abu Dhabi, and they felt the windows in their dorm shake, and they
went down into the basement to find shelter. And the elephants, Iran and Israel, these highly
ideological elephants are fighting, and the grass in the middle of the Arab Gulf states are, that's what's
being trampled underneath, including the civilians in those countries. So, you know, I really just
hope that instead of having a caricatured, almost cartoonish image of a city like Dubai, of being
nothing but rich people in Lamborghinis and kind of having a heartless response to this, that your
listeners understand that many people from all over the world, including war-torn places like Iraq, like
Palestine, like Ukraine, like Sudan, have come to rebuild their lives in the Persian Gulf states.
and for all of their flaws in different ways, including in their foreign policy,
these countries have provided them this ability to do that.
So many people who've seen war before are being affected yet again.
Professor Monica Marx.
Already, the effects of the conflict have spread far beyond the Middle East,
a reminder of the interconnected world we live in.
As we've mentioned earlier in this podcast, Iran has blocked the Strait of Hormuz,
a large proportion of the oil tankers normally passing through that strait
are headed for countries in East Asia.
With oil and gas prices surging, countries like South Korea
are now looking to secure supplies from outside the Middle East.
Our correspondent Jake Kwan is in Seoul, and he told me more.
If you look at the map, South Korea is at the bottom half of the Korean Peninsula
and its road to the land is blocked by North Korea.
So South Korea is practically an island and just like its neighbor Japan.
So nearly all of its energy fuel is imported, whether that's oil, gas, or uranium for the nuclear power.
And in an average year, South Korea imports some 70% of its oil from the Gulf countries like Saudi Arabia and Kuwait and Qatar, which are all embroiled in this conflict.
Now, Saudi Arabian oil, maybe they can buy them from the ports in the Red Sea away from Iran.
but those are coming from Iraq, UAE, Kuwait, Qatar.
These have to pass through the strait of Hormuz.
So what happens if that strait gets shut down?
Now, that's the fear.
And South Korea needs oil and gas to run its power generators
and also to feed its enormous petrochemical industry.
And this is the number three export of all exports in South Korea.
So it's a huge part of South Korean economy.
So, Jake, what will it mean then for South Korea if this war grinds on for weeks
or for months? I mean, how quickly could it pivot to find new energy sources?
Well, it's going to be quite difficult to find these new energy source. I mean, South Korea
said it will find different oil source, but in terms of using different energy source like, you know,
renewables or others, it simply can't be done. That's not what the power generators are designed to do.
You cannot just turn up the nuclear, wind, or hydro, or solar. But South Korean government was trying to
assuage this fear, saying that they have seven months of oil and stock.
half of it in the government stockpile, the other half in the kind of public sector. And there won't be an issue.
But that wasn't enough to quiet down the anxious investors today. And we saw South Korea's main market
index, KOSP, slip 7%. And at one point, they actually had to shut down the trade for five minutes because it was
slipping so fast. And, you know, it was really, it seemed like there was a lot of fear in the market today.
Jake Kwan in Seoul.
And that's all from us for now. If you want to get in touch,
You can email us at global podcast at BBC.co.uk.
You can also find us on X at BBC World Service.
Use the hashtag Global NewsPod.
And don't forget our sister podcast, The Global Story,
which goes in-depth and beyond the headlines on one big story.
This edition of the Global News podcast was mixed by Nick Randall,
and the producer was Adrian White.
The editor is Karen Martin.
I'm Celia Hatton.
Until next time, goodbye.
This is not the future we were promised.
Like, how about that for a tagline for the show?
From the BBC, this is the interface,
the show that explores how tech is rewiring your week and your world.
This isn't about quarterly earnings or about tech reviews.
It's about what technology is actually doing to your work and your politics,
your everyday life.
And all the bizarre ways people are using the internet.
Listen on BBC.com or,
wherever you get your podcasts.
