Global News Podcast - Oil price drops after Trump hints at short Iran war
Episode Date: March 10, 2026Oil price falls and stock markets rally after President Trump hints that war with Iran could be shorter than he'd previously said. But he also says America hasn't yet won enough. We also look at how t...he war is continuing to affect Lebanon, and how the Iranian women's football team has been dragged into the conflict fallout at a tournament in Australia. In other news, the AI firm Anthropic sues the US government. And Russia wins its first gold medal at a Winter Paralympics in more than a decade.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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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 technologies
actually doing to your work and your politics, your everyday life.
And all the bizarre ways people are using the internet.
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This is the Global News podcast from the BBC World Service.
I'm Celia Hatton, and in the early hours of Tuesday, the 10th of March,
these are our main stories.
President Trump says the war in around will end soon, but not this.
this week. Global oil prices fall in response to Mr. Trump's comments. Israel continues to strike
targets across Lebanon with links to the Iran-backed group Hezbollah. Also in this podcast,
Russia wins its first winter Paralympic gold medal under its own flag since 2014, starting with the
U.S.-Israel war with Iran. Over the last week or so, President Trump has said many things about his
objectives for the war and how long it will take to achieve them. Before, he said the military campaign
could take some time and the biggest strikes in the war were still to come. Those comments led to a surge
in the price of oil and a drop in stock markets across the world. Mr. Trump now appears to have
changed his tune. In a media briefing, he suggested the U.S. had nearly completed its military plan
for Iran. We're achieving major strides toward completing our military objective. And some people
could say they're pretty well complete. We've wiped every single force in Iran out very completely.
Most of Iran's naval power has been sunk. It's on the bottom of the sea. It's almost 50 ships.
I was just notified as 51 ships. He also addressed concerns about.
Iran's chokehold over oil supplies.
Tehran has an effect closed the Strait of Hormuz
by making it too dangerous for ships to pass through.
The U.S. president threatened to bomb targets in Iran
that the U.S. has so far avoided,
such as electricity infrastructure,
if tankers could not pass through the waterway.
We're also focused on keeping energy and oil flowing to the world,
and I will not allow a terrorist regime to hold the world hostage
an attempt to stop the Globes oil supply and if Iran does anything to do that,
they'll get hit at a much, much harder level.
I will take out those targets that were easy and that I mentioned just before.
We'll take them out so quickly.
They'll never be able to recover, ever.
So is this change of tone by Mr. Trump driven by the rise and the price of oil
and the disruption to stock markets?
Our North America correspondent is David Willis.
Donald Trump claims Celia that he needs.
oil prices would go up if he launched this attack on Iran.
They've gone up less than he thought they would, he added at that news conference today.
But he is clearly determined to limit the disruption to global trade that could result from a long-term blockage of the Strait of Hormuz.
And he's offering U.S. naval escorts for shipping in the area, the deployment of U.S. mine sweepers,
even US underwritten political risk insurance for those vessels that are wary of navigating that vital waterway.
And he made the point that because the United States now has access to Venezuelan oil,
following the capture of Venezuela's former leader, Nicolas Maduro,
and is now the US almost self-sufficient when it comes to oil and gas,
any such blockade would affect other countries such as China,
more than it would the United States of America.
But he does want this war to end, does Donald Trump.
And at the press conference today,
he almost seemed to me to be willing its conclusion
because this is a man, after all,
elected on a promise to keep America out of so-called forever wars
in remote corners of the world.
He doesn't want to see prices go up
in the run-up to the mid-term elections in November.
but there are a lot of mixed messages coming from the administration over this conflict with Iran.
And President Trump told CBS News that the war was pretty much complete before telling journalists later in the day
that the U.S. was winning decisively but hadn't won enough and was still looking to achieve what he, the president,
called the ultimate victory, Celia.
David, I mean, we've heard a lot of different messages about the U.S. military.
objectives. Did the president lay out a vision for Iran's political future?
Not much. He did make plain, though, that his view of the Iran of the future, if you like,
does not include the newly elected Supreme Leader, Motaba Khomeini, as head of state.
He, of course, is the son of the previous Iranian leader. And Mr. Trump has called his
appointment disappointing. He said he would like to see someone more amenable to the United States
in place in Iran and asked at today's news conference if the administration had plans to take
Mutaba Khomeini out. He said he didn't want to get into that, but he did add that he was disappointed
because we think it's going to lead to just more of the same problem for the country,
said Mr. Trump. David Willis. If President Trump was concerned about the rising price of oil
and wanted to bring it down with his words,
then that plan seems to have worked.
I spoke to our business correspondent, Nick Marsh in Singapore,
and began by asking him if oil traders had been reassured
that the war won't disrupt oil supplies.
Yes, I think they have to a certain extent, at least temporarily.
But I'm just taking a look here now, Celia.
The price of Brent crude does seem to be climbing up again.
It drops significantly after President's,
Trump made those comments and markets on Wall Street, for example, and out here in Asia in the morning responded pretty positively.
But it's climbing up. It's around $94 a barrel, which is still significantly higher, by the way, than before this war, this campaign was launched by the US and Israel.
But it just goes to show, doesn't it?
Words can move markets, but also the facts on the ground can also influence markets as well.
And in spite of the fact that Donald Trump made those assurances that the war would come to an end very soon,
he talked about naval escorts, getting ships through the straits of Hormuz, things like that.
The facts on the ground haven't actually changed.
The war as it stands is still continuing.
Neither side looks like it wants to back down.
And nothing is going through the strait of Hormuz.
The war could go on for some time, couldn't it?
Are countries prepared for this if it does happen?
Ordinary people in real life are already feeling the effect.
effect outside of the Middle East. Petal prices are up pretty much everywhere you look. Out here in
Asia, governments are already looking at things like price caps. Thailand's brought one in,
South Korea's brought one in. There has been some panic buying in parts of Indonesia, saw some in
Pakistan as well, where schools are closed. The president of the Philippines, I saw, has told
civil servants to switch to a four-day working week to try and save fuel. So,
governments out here are looking at the here and the now. They're trying to bring in temporary
measures. No one really knows what's going to happen long term, but the real effects are
starting to be felt in an area, let's not forget, where the vast majority of that oil and gas
is supposed to be headed. 90% of what goes to the Straits of Hormuz comes to economies
out here in Asia. So it's no surprise that people are feeling the effect on the ground,
even after 10 days of this war having been launched.
And just briefly, Nick, I mean, what about stock markets? How have they
been doing so far? So we saw big losses yesterday in Japan, for example, in South Korea. They are
regaining some of those losses. They were up quite sharply at the beginning of the morning.
The Cosby was up about 6%. The NICA around 4%. That's been scaled back a little bit. I'm looking
at 2% in Japan and 3% in South Korea. So a rise, definitely. But again, you know, every day
something different changes and even within the day, things can change.
change quite quickly.
Nick Marsh.
Staying with the war, the United States and Israel have continued their bombardment of Iran
with powerful explosions echoing across the capital, Tehran, at the very start of the 11th day
of hostilities.
Iran has again been retaliating, firing missiles and drone against its Gulf neighbors,
including Bahrain, which has reported another fatality.
Israel has also experienced further attacks.
Meanwhile, the Israeli military has continued.
to strike targets across Lebanon, including financial institutions with links to the Iran-backed
group, Hezbollah. Tens of thousands of people have now fled the fighting. Many of them have been
arriving in the capital Beirut. Our correspondent Wira Davis is there and sent this report.
This is the Renee Mowad State School in Beirut. You can probably hear children playing, kicking
balls in the background, but they're not pupils here. These are children who've come here with
their families from southern Beirut and from southern.
southern Lebanon, they've been displaced by the war.
Now, there are five, one to three, four, five stories in this building.
Every single classroom is full of children, full of families.
So they've had to, on the ground floor down here, they've had to put up tents to
accommodate the families.
Virtually every school in Beirut now is full of families just like these.
The UN Children's Agency, UNICEF, says that 700,000 people, including 200,000 children,
have been forced to leave their homes under the threat of Israeli evacuation orders.
Ahmad al-Halabi, a technician and father of two from the Daha'ia area of South Peru,
had to flee here with his extended family in the middle of the night as missiles were hitting nearby.
We were running away from the bombing. There is no safety.
I have little kids and the living conditions were already bad.
You can only imagine how it is during.
war time. I just want to keep my kids safe. Israel is expanding the scale and the scope of its
campaign in Lebanon, not only targeting Hezbollah's leaders and fighters. Later, we went on to the
site of an airstrike against a bank, a financial institution called Al-Qar al-Hassan in South
Beirut. At least five of the bank's offices in the capital have been destroyed today. Hizbollah says
it's a bank that provides financial and social services to clients across the country.
But Israel accuses it of directly financing and funding Hezbollah's military activities in Lebanon and beyond.
We're a Davis.
Still to come in this podcast, the AI firm Anthropic says it's suing the US government
after the Trump administration designated the company a supply chain risk.
This is not the future we were promised.
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.
To Australia now, after days of speculation about their safety,
five members of Iran's women's football team have been granted humanitarian visas by Australia.
The team had been accused of treason by supporters of the Iranian regime,
after all the players refused to sing the national anthem
before their opening match at the Asian Cup last week.
They were eliminated from the tournament on Sunday and were due to fly home.
But as they continued to gather attention, supporters grew up.
increasingly worried they'd face punishments from Tehran when they arrived home.
The BBC's Katie Watson is on the Gold Coast.
She actually saw the five women leaving the oversight of their handlers
and crossing over to take refuge with the Australian authorities.
When I spoke to Katie, she told me how this all began.
When they remained silent in their opening match against South Korea,
it was a bit of a statement.
Certainly certain people I've spoken to since then were very surprised in the Iranian community
that they did that because they knew it would be a big step.
But what was interesting, the subsequent two matches,
they then did take part in the national anthem.
So there were concerns from people here in the Iranian-Australian community
that they had perhaps been forced to comply
and there was pressure on them from the delegation.
And in that delegation, there are people within the regime.
So there were huge fears about their safety if they went back to Iran,
but also if they felt that they might want to seek asylum here in Australia,
what would that mean for their families back in Iran?
So this whole conversation, it kind of snowballed over the course of a week.
And then, I mean, I'm at the hotel now where the women's team is.
The majority of them are still here.
But those five did escape the hotel.
In fact, I saw it happen.
But it was a very odd situation where there were some activists talking to some players.
It was all very informal.
But it was such a.
kind of engineered process. They then walked out of the lobby and at that point that was the
Australian Federal Police who then took them to a safe location. But within, it didn't take long
for suddenly, I saw several people from the delegation run across the lobby, go down a stairwell,
trying to get hold and try and find these players who had disappeared but to no avail because
they were taken to a safe place. Their visas have been issued and the Australian government
has said that they am sure that the women are safe and offered.
that support to any remaining players who wanted.
Katie Watson on the Gold Coast.
While the other Iranian team members have now boarded a bus,
they're thought to be heading for the airport
the start of their journey back to Iran.
As their coach departed the hotel,
local Iranian activists chanted,
Save Our Girls,
with some of the players seen putting their hands over their ears.
The Iran women's football team
are not the first Iranian athletes
to get caught up in a controversy
after protesting against the regime.
Sarder Pachet is a former world youth wrestling champion
and national wrestling coach.
He fled around in 2009 after criticizing the government.
He's now based in the U.S.
and is the head of a human rights organization called Hewa.
He spoke to Leila Nassu
and began by giving his reaction to the women's decision
to stay in Australia.
This is a very good news,
and I'm proud of this brave woman
because that's not an easy decision, especially when you are in that situation.
I know a lot of athletes have been in that place and they debate themselves that what is the right decision
because you leave your country behind, your family behind, and it's very difficult.
But I'm proud of them.
I think this is a good thing.
And the whole point was Australian government give this opportunity to this athlete so they make
decision about their future.
either they want to stay there or they want to go back.
I'm sure both cases are very stressful.
You really don't know what the right decision is,
but I think those five athletes who decided to stay,
that was a very courageous decision,
and I'm very proud of them.
And I just want to send this message to them if they hear me.
You know, people are proud of you.
Your people look at you like you're a hero,
and this is a whole new world in front of you.
So keep continuing and you're champion for your whole people.
You yourself have had some experience of making a decision to leave Iran
after being under pressure for speaking out against the government.
Does this take you back to when you had that choice before you?
Oh, absolutely.
You know, each time you ask yourself when you go back,
it was it the right decision not because you don't see your family,
me, myself, my Bo's parents passed away two years ago. I could not go back to their funeral because
I would be arrested. So these are like difficult times in your life that you face or, you know,
you miss all of your city, your hometown, your people, you want to be there. But when your government
forced you to go in that situation to make a difficult decision, leave every single.
behind, that's kind of like affect all of your life. But when I go back and so with all of the
pain, all of the wound, I still proud of my decision. I think I could make a platform for my people,
for those athletes that don't have a voice and outside of the world to tell the people this is what
kind of regime we are facing. This is what look like even as an athlete and nothing is normal. And this is
why the world should support those brave women, brave people, and also stand against that
barbaric regime. It seems like from some of the reports that were getting from Australia,
that the women had to actively escape their handlers or the people that were with them
in order to get to a safe place before making this decision and having that confirmed by
the Australian government. Can you just give us a sense of how difficult that might have been,
the sort of structures and restrictions that are in place on athletes competing internationally for Iran.
Yeah, before, you know, talking to you just a few minutes ago,
I saw the picture of one of the members of either intelligence agency or Revolutionary Guard.
With this team in Australia, it again remind me their face,
how they talk and speak to these people, they break their dignity,
humiliate them and also controlling them as an athlete you're not allowed to go out to dance to
drink you know and you have been watched I remember they were walking behind our doors
overnight so no athlete go out and so they treat you like a slave and especially for women
it's worse so when there are situations athlete make decision because of all of that pressure
it's very difficult because you have to find a time
at the midnight or like these athletes to just sneak away and find a safety place to be safe,
you know, to go introduce themselves to police. So not an easy situation, but as I said,
I'm proud of these brave athletes. Sarder Pache, Iran's former world youth wrestling champion,
a national wrestling coach who fled around in 2009 after criticizing the government.
Let's bring you the latest chapter in the ongoing battle between
the AI developer Anthropic and the Trump administration. In a first for an American firm,
Anthropic has announced it's suing the U.S. government for calling it a supply chain risk.
That's after the company refused to update its contract with the U.S. Department of Defense.
The Pentagon wanted to use Anthropics technology without any restrictions for things like
mass domestic surveillance and fully autonomous weapons. Our North America technology correspondent,
Lily Jamali told me more.
Well, this case is significant because it could really affect the way that artificial intelligence
models are used on the battlefield in these very sensitive military contexts.
So you mentioned Anthropic refused to update this contract that it had with the U.S.
Department of Defense and that Anthropic refused to grant unfettered access to its AI models.
So about two weeks ago, Pete Higset, the Secretary of Defense told Anthropic it needed to
remove any restrictions by a deadline that he gave.
them if it wanted to keep doing business with the military, that deadline passed.
Anthropic did not capitulate.
And right around the time of the deadline, President Trump accused Anthropic of being what he
called a radical left woke company, saying you wouldn't let it dictate how military
operations are done.
Anthropics lawsuit today accuses the administration basically of blackballing them, trying to
destroy its economic value as an enterprise and that it did so in Anthropics' telling of
things on ideological grounds because the administration just doesn't like this company.
So if we heard any response from the government?
Well, the Pentagon are not offering comment right now because this is now in inactive litigation,
but the White House has said that under the Trump administration, you know, the military
will obey the Constitution and a spokesperson actually said and will not abide by any woke AI
companies terms of service. So there again, you have that term woke. There is a real
ideological lexicon being deployed here, pretty clear they're digging in for a fight.
And what about other U.S. tech companies? Are they signing contracts with the Pentagon?
They are. And for, you know, the same kind of work that Anthropic has been doing in these
classified military settings, this is work that is basically done to try to analyze data,
to sort it. You know, intelligence agencies end up collecting a lot of this stuff. So you have
XAI run by Elon Musk, now getting it.
into this type of work as well as OpenAI, the maker of ChatGPT.
Lily Jamali.
At the Winter Paralympics in Italy, Russia has won its first gold medal since its state-sponsored
doping ban came to an end.
Victory for Skier Varvara Voronchikina meant the Russian national anthem was played and its flag
raised at the medal ceremony, a symbolic win for Russia, ending its Paralympics exile.
Oliver Conway heard more from BBC Sports Katie Falkingham.
and Cortina. This was obviously the day that we had been anticipating the first Russian gold
at a Paralympics since 2014. Veronga Kina, she'd won bronze on Saturday for Russia's first
medal of the games and then won the Super G today. It was quite an eerie moment as she was announced
as Paralympic champion. A real silence kind of dropped over the crowd. You could almost hear a
pin drop that type of silence. It was almost as if everyone was anticipating a reaction. But
there wasn't really won. Nothing really happened. There was just some polite applause. And then, yeah,
It was quite surreal hearing that anthem and seeing the flag raised.
And just remind us of why Russia was banned and why it's been allowed back.
Yes, the first after Sochi in 2014, there was the massive state-sponsored doping scandal that came to light.
And then on the eve of the Winter Paralympics in 2022, of course, Russia invaded Ukraine.
And the IPC had no choice but to ban Russia from those games and the games going forward.
But that ban was put in place not because of the invasion itself, but more because of the invasion itself.
but more because the IPC felt Russia was using as athletes
and the games as a bit of a propaganda tool.
Now they don't think that's the case.
And so in September last year,
the General Assembly of the IPC voted to allow them back in.
And yeah, six Russian athletes are here in Italy.
Now, this is the Paralympics, not the Olympics.
But will this win and medal ceremony today,
will it pave the way for Russia to compete in Olympics
and indeed other sports?
It's hard to say really. It kind of feels as if there will be a lot of eyeballs on these games.
It's almost the guinea pig event, seeing how they go, seeing what the reaction's been,
and that might inform decisions going forward. Last month during the Olympics, IOC President
Kirsty Coventry, she said that sport is for neutrals and athletes shouldn't be held back by the politics of their country.
But that would certainly be a huge decision for the IOC to make.
Katie Falkingham. And to end this edition, the White House aide who revealed the existence of
President Nixon's secret recording system in the Watergate scandal has died at his home in San Diego at the age of 99.
Alexander Butterfield oversaw the installation of the secret taping system, which the president ordered for the White House.
When questioned at a televised Senate Watergate hearing in 1973, the president's deputy assistant admitted he was aware of the listening devices.
Mr. Butterfield's testimony was a key factor leading to Nixon's resignation.
I don't have the technical knowledge, but I will tell you what I know about how those devices were triggered.
They were installed, of course, for historical purposes to record the president's business.
And they were installed in his two offices, the Oval Office and the EOB office.
Alexander Butterfield.
In a 1975 interview with People magazine, Mr. Butterfield said Richard Nixon often forgot about the recorders
and disregarded advice to destroy the tapes
because he never thought the Watergate affair would reach a point
where he would have to surrender them.
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.com.
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
than beyond the headlines on one big story.
This edition of the Global News podcast was mixed by Chris Lovelock.
The editor is Karen Martin.
I'm Celia Hatton.
Until next time, goodbye.
