Global News Podcast - Trump urges nations to secure Strait of Hormuz
Episode Date: March 15, 2026President Trump calls on other nations to send warships to help secure the Strait of Hormuz which Iran has largely blocked, driving up global energy prices. Mr Trump has told a US television channel t...hat while Tehran appears ready to make a deal to end the war, its "terms aren’t good enough yet". The head of the United Nations calls for an end to the fighting between Israel and Hezbollah as Israeli strikes continue in the Lebanese capital. Also: in Cuba, peaceful anti-government protesters turned violent as a Communist Party Office in the centre of the country was attacked; and we hear about the Razzies, the awards actors and film makers would much rather they hadn't won. 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 Charlotte Gallagher, and in the early hours of Sunday, the 15th of March, these are our main stories.
Donald Trump urges China, Britain and others to send warships to help secure the Strait of Hormuz,
the shipping lane which Iran has largely blocked.
Israel continues to batter Lebanon and claims it's wiped out over 100 Hezbollah
command centers in Beirut. And more of the female Iranian footballers who sought asylum in Australia
decide to go home. Also in this podcast, many people can't use the most basic services like
taxi or delivery or banking apps and in some cases bank terminals and ATMs were also affected by
the outages. The internet stops working in some major Russian cities. We ask why and what impact it's
having. President Trump has told NBC television channel in the US that while Tehran appears ready to make a
deal to end the war, its terms aren't good enough yet. He didn't specify what he meant by that, but perhaps
a major stumbling block has to do with the narrow but strategically vital stretch of water called
the Strait of Hormuz. Tankers carrying about 20% of the world's liquefied natural gas and even more
of its oil passed through it. But Iran has carried out attacks on ships there. Traffic is dramatically
down and energy prices are up. Donald Trump wants Iran to let the tankers pass through unhindered.
Until that happens, he's asking countries like China and Britain to help the US keep it open.
Our Washington correspondent, Cemi Jolla Oso, told me more.
President Trump has urged allies, including the UK, France and other countries like Japan,
South Korea and even China to send naval ships to help secure the Strait of Hormuz.
He says that the U.S. will secure it one way or the other and that the U.S. will get the straight
open, safe and free by means of continued strikes on Iranian ships and boats in the region.
But in the same post, he did warn that Iran could still threaten the waterway by using drones,
mines and short-range missiles.
And this is really different to what President Trump was saying only a few days ago.
He was attacking the UK and saying that when Kirstearn was considering sending warships,
he said, you want to join a war after we've already won.
Essentially, we don't need your help.
And now he's making this direct appeal for help.
Yeah, this is the first time he's sort of taken a firm stance when it comes to the Strait of Hormuz
and even appealing to other countries.
As you mentioned previously, he's sort of dismissed.
questions when he's been asked about the strait saying that things will get better
when he's asked whether the US will provide military escorts.
He said, well, if they need to, even when he's been asked about soaring oil prices,
he's called it a glitch.
So this is the first time he's made a very firm stance with regards to US military action
to sort out the situation at the strait of Hormuz.
Has the Pentagon said any more about the next moves by the US military?
Because of course there have been lots of reports that Donald Trump's considering sending thousands of Marines to the region.
The US media has been saying that an American naval task force is currently on its way from Japan to the Gulf.
And that task force includes several warships, up to 5,000 Marines and sailors.
But when the Pentagon has been asked about this, they've declined to comment citing operational security.
But this deployment would back to Trump's latest truth social post, right?
It shows that the US is considering a range of options now in the war,
potentially to protect commercial shipping in the region.
Number two, potentially increasing action on Haag Island.
And what is the US mood about this conflict?
The mood here or the response, can I say from the public here, has been very mixed.
We've seen rallies in Boston, LA, New York, even here in Washington, just outside the White House.
Some of them have been calling for an end to the war and some of them have been pro-Trump rallies.
Democrats have called this the war of choice and said that they want the end goals of the war to be clearly laid out.
And Republicans have said that for them, okay, they might support President Trump through this war, but they have a red line.
And that's number one, boots on the ground and number two for this war to last longer than a few weeks.
Simi Jolla Oso. Let's take a closer look now at President Trump's call to other nations to send warships to secure the Strait of Hormuz.
How likely are they to do that? Jonathan Beale is our defence correspondent.
He wants countries, including the UK, China which opposes the war, to send warships to the region to keep the Strait of Hormuz open.
He's clearly worried about the rising price of oil.
The point I'd make is that there aren't any US warships at the moment
that are escorting tankers through the Strait of Almuz
because a number of tankers have been hit,
and it is clearly a dangerous thing to do.
We've heard from President Macron recently
that he's thinking about sending warships,
but again, only he says when the fighting has subsided.
Britain says it's looking at options,
discussing that with allies. But at the moment, I think most countries will conclude. It's just too
dangerous to put sailors, warships in harm's way, because even though in that same tweet, President Trump said
Iran's military capability had been destroyed 100%. We are still seeing Iran using drones and missile.
So the Iranians still probably have capabilities, even though a lot of what they have may have been destroyed.
but I think most countries will conclude at the moment
that putting warships in that narrow stretch of water,
which is only just over 20 kilometres wide,
with Iran on one side
and what they used to have quite a lot of defensive capabilities,
will be a very risky operation that many publics wouldn't swallow.
Jonathan Beale.
Smoke was seen rising over the Lebanese capital, Bay route on Saturday evening
as Israeli strikes continued.
The Iranian-backed military-backed military.
Group Hezbollah said it had been involved in direct clashes with Israeli forces in southern Lebanon,
while Israel says it struck more than 100 Hezbollah command centers in Beirut during the course of the war.
Uri Davis reports from the Lebanese capital.
Israeli air strikes in Lebanon, which began after Hezbollah began firing rockets towards northern Israel in support of Iran,
have killed more than 800 people, says the Lebanese health ministry,
and more than 800,000 have been displaced from their homes.
homes. Thus far, there have been few serious diplomatic efforts to end the conflict. But after
launching a 230 million-pound humanitarian appeal for Lebanon, the UN Secretary-General Antonio
Gutierrez said an expansion of the war would be good for no one.
The Lebanese people did not choose this war. They were dragged into it. And my message to
the warring partners is clear. Stop the fighting. Stop the bombing. There is no military
only diplomacy, dialogue and full implementation of the UN Charter and Security Council resolutions.
Israel is striking several parts of Lebanon, including the eastern Becker Valley,
where it accuses Hezbollah of organizing campaigns and storing weapons.
We saw the aftermath of an airstrike on a house that had been completely destroyed.
Eight people were killed, including several children.
Yellow flags and pictures of Iran's Ayatollah Khomeini,
indicated it was clearly a Hezbollah supporting home
and where Israel later said there were Hezbollah operatives present.
But a surviving uncle, Hassan Tahan,
said that nothing could justify such an action without apparent warning.
Israel is wrong if they think that killing children and civilians
will separate us from the resistance.
On the contrary, it makes us more loyal to them.
I'm even more steadfast in my support now than I was before.
Previous full-scale invasions of Lebanon have ended in disaster for Israel.
And if it were to try and create a big buffer zone in southern Lebanon,
there's no indication for how long an Israeli occupation would last.
There is pressure for direct talks between the Israeli and Lebanese governments.
But if they happen, they won't include Hezbollah,
which says it is determined to carry on its fight against Israel,
which it says had also repeatedly breached a previous ceasefire agreement.
Wiry Davis. The impact of this war has been felt in some unexpected places.
Last week, seven Iranian footballers sought asylum in Australia
after staying silent for their national anthem at a football game there.
A number of the women were granted humanitarian visas to remain.
Now a total of four of them say they will return home to Iran.
Katie Watson is our correspondent in Sydney.
So do we know why?
We don't.
I first got wind of this by speaking to some activists overnight who were concerned that there was been pressure put on them by the Iranian regime pressure, perhaps on their families.
But of course, we don't know, you know, the actual ins and outs of this.
There's been no communication.
But what we do know is, obviously, on Wednesday, there was one woman who had a change of heart about a day after.
she decided to seek asylum in Australia.
Now, the three women who have had the similar change of heart is one of the technical members of the squad as well as two players.
Now, the technical member of the squad actually sought asylum just before getting on a bus to go to the airport.
Those players who are also returning to Iran, they were the ones who were initially escaped from the hotel on the Monday.
but the reasons for it, Iranian diaspora here, are very concerned that they've come under pressure
and they've had to make a decision on the basis of that.
That said the Iranian Ministry of Sports have said that they will be welcome back with open arms
and have accused Australia's government of playing in Trump's field.
And what kind of reaction has there been in Australia to this?
Because I know lots of people really wanted the team to stay on in Australia
and not go back to Iran?
There was a big push from the Iranian diaspora to encourage the women to stay here.
There were a lot of efforts made.
And I think even before the tournament began,
kind of plans put in place to try and encourage the women to feel confident
and know that they'd be protected here.
And so there will be a lot of disappointment there.
But I think also, you know, a lot of worry on the basis of concerns about why indeed
they've made that decision.
I mean, the authorities here in Australia,
have said that, you know, they provided ample opportunities to, you know, talk to them
and make sure that they were talking about their options and knew what their options were,
but also understood that, you know, even if the opportunities were there,
they couldn't remove the context in which the players are making these difficult decisions.
And that's something that has been repeated, that, you know, weighing up whether it was
better to stay here in Australia or go back to Iran was obviously up to each individual player.
Katie Watson. People living in the Russian cities of Moscow and St. Petersburg have reported strange internet problems over the past week. Some say they can't get websites to load or apps won't work. Others say they can't even make phone calls and have had to rely on pages and even walkie-talkies. Rebecca Kesby asked BBC Russians Liza Focked what was going on.
Those internet blockages in St. Petersburg and especially in Moscow over the past week can only be described.
as unprecedented, because in many neighborhoods, especially the city center, there has been virtually
no mobile internet reception or sometimes even basic phone service. And that means that many people
can't use the most basic services like taxi or delivery or banking apps. And in some cases,
bank terminals and ATMs were also affected by these outages. And so local authorities have been
encouraging people to pay with cash since card payments were unavailable, or even buy
maps to navigate in the city. Of course, Russia has been tightening control over the internet for many
years now, obviously more so after invading Ukraine with many independent media websites, such as
BBC Russian or popular messaging and social network apps like Instagram, WhatsApp, YouTube,
being blocked or slowed down, but this mostly operated under everything that is not
prohibited is permitted rule, which is certainly not the case now. So are people suspicious as to what's
behind it? I mean, could it be Ukrainian involvement, or is it more likely that the Kremlin is behind it?
The Kremlin explained these outages by, quote, systemic safety majors, unquote, but provided
no specific details, but there's little doubts that Russia's security services that have been
the most influential part of the government ever since Russia invaded Ukraine. Many Russian regions
have been already experiencing such cutoffs for months, especially the regions on a border
with Ukraine where drone strikes happen on a daily basis. And Moscow has fade these kind of
strikes too, and some internet outages too, but never on this scale. And it's a very dramatic
shift because ever since invading Ukraine, Russian authorities had been trying to sort of preserve
this image of Moscow being a modern developed capital, which is very stable, not affected by the war.
And some people describe to me their experience as returning back to the Stone Age, and people
are very annoyed by these developments
and you can even see some pro-war pro-Kremlin bloggers
who believe it's a mistake that's going to anger people.
And I've heard from some people that they haven't been this scared or anxious
since Russia invaded Ukraine
and they compared the situation to the events in Iran or North Korea.
And have the authorities said when normal service will be resumed?
No, they made no promises whatsoever.
Liza Focked from BBC Russia.
Still to come in this podcast.
The Razzie for the worst picture of the year goes to War of the Worlds, 2025.
The prize no one in Hollywood wants to receive.
Welcome to the Interface, the show that decodes the tech that's rewiring your week and your world.
Coming up in our latest episode, we look at the hidden chain of human labor that's actually reviewing your sense of,
data, the proposed law that could end the internet as we know it, and the debate about wired versus
wireless headphones, which should you choose? Listen on BBC.com or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is the global news podcast next to Cuba, where in the early hours of Saturday, peaceful
anti-government protest turned violent as a communist party office in the central city of Moron was
attacked.
A video on social media.
showed a large fire and people throwing rocks through the windows of a building as people shouted liberty.
In a post on X, the Cuban president Miguel Diaz Canal said the complaints and demands of the people were legitimate,
providing they were conducted with civic responsibility and respect for public order.
The protest is being seen as a reaction to the power cuts and food shortages Cuba has been experiencing
since the US imposed an oil blockade in January.
Christiana Mosquita works for the AP News Agency.
in Havana. The authorities say that some people have been arrested during that protest.
They are saying for destruction of property, what they call vandalism. Some they accused of being
drunk and causing a public disruption. Using the usual words that the Cuban government
uses on this situation. It wasn't a huge protest.
but is the first one that was somewhat politically oriented.
We had seen before isolated, smaller protests, even here in Havana,
that were more directed against the power outages, people banging pots and pans.
But this certainly looked much more political.
You know, Cuba has been under an embargo from the United States
and different threats from the United States for over 60 years.
And no government has been toppled yet.
Having said that, you know, the president of Cuba admitted that no oil had come to the country
for the last three months.
And this is affecting every aspect of life in Cuba.
So anything can happen.
Christiana Mesquita.
Jürgen Harbemass, one of the most influential philosophers in post-war Germany, has died.
He was 96.
Known for coining the phrase, the public sphere, he was a staunch pacifist and anti-fascist,
believing a united Europe was the only remedy for the rise of nationalism.
Ariankochi looks back at his life.
Often recognised as a public conscious of post-war Germany,
Jürgen Habermas was involved in most of the social and philosophical debates of the 20th and 21st centuries.
He is best remembered for his theory of communicative action,
in which he argued that human societies are sustained not merely by power or economics,
but also by the capacity for rational dialogue and mutual understanding.
He championed democracy as a living process of dialogue,
which ought to take place outside state control in a free and open discussion,
which he called the public sphere.
Throughout his life he did, as he said,
and linked thought and action.
He clashed with the then-German Chancellor Angela Merkel
over her handling of the Eurozone debt crisis in 2010,
describing the austerity policies in Greece as toxic
and designed to appease financial markets
rather than support the Greek people.
Born in 1929, in Dueseldorf,
Habemus was enrolled in the Hitler youth,
but he was too young to have taken an active
part in the Second World War, and in the 1960s, he became the voice of German student protests.
Often suspicious of tradition, all shared ethnic and national identities, Habemus was a strong
proponent of European integration, which he saw as the only remedy for the surge of nationalism.
In a time of rising populism, Habemus's ideas of strengthening democracy through public dialogue
and legitimate political power are perhaps more relevant than ever.
That was Ariane Cotchy.
Now, to a very different sort of job,
a British scientific charity is looking for volunteers from around the world to work in Antarctica.
The job is in Port Lockroy and includes looking after a museum and more than a thousand penguins
and preserving the world's most southerly post office.
If that sounds like your dream come true, you better be quick,
because applications close at midnight GMT on Sunday.
The museum's manager, Amanda Barry, told my colleague Justin Webb,
what it's like to work in Antarctica.
I was there for two months, and my job was to look after the historic base there,
Brandsfield House, and to welcome the visitors who would come to buy a postcard
from the most southern post office in the world, and also to really get a taste of what it was
like for the men who worked down there all those years ago.
What was it like?
Very remote. I mean, it feels remote for us and the team, and it's 9,000 miles away.
from home. It's in Antarctica, for goodness sake. But for the men there, when they wave goodbye to
their ship that had dropped them off, that was it for six months. There would be no more ships
that would be coming by. If there was some problem, they had to deal with it themselves. And the
only communication they had with the outside world would have been via Morse code. So sending
messages to the Falklands, which would be relayed to the UK, or by letter. But the letters could
only be sent and received every six months. So for someone who's thinking of applying, what
What sort of a person do you have to be? You have to like penguins, I'm guessing.
Oh, but it's so easy to like penguins, Justin. I defy anybody not to really fall in love with them.
I think you've got to be adventurous, open-minded, have a good sense of humour, you've got to get along with people.
It doesn't really matter what you've done before, you know. I mean, having certain skill sets, of course, are great.
We run a small gift shop there, so if you've got retail skills, fantastic, if you've got experience with museums, with wildlife.
but actually I had no real experience with museums before.
You've just got to have an attitude of mind to be open,
to be willing to muck in, to do whatever it takes.
It's such a varied role.
It's full on, so you've got to be healthy and fit.
But oh my goodness, it's worth it.
Honestly, if you're thinking about doing it, I wouldn't hesitate.
Just go for it.
I mean, you know, it's a cliche, but life is short and just do it.
Because Antarctica is worth it.
And apart from the scenery, and obviously the penguins,
I'm interested you say social because obviously there are cruise ships coming and going.
That's who your customers are, presumably.
But it must be a small team.
So you've got to be able to deal with the fact that you are in a quite isolated circumstances with a group of people.
And like it or not, that's your friendship group.
Absolutely.
And where you sleep is a mixed bunk room.
All your privacy is a curtain around your bed.
I always call it a form of extreme camping with a load of strangers.
But again, I think the sort of people that are.
attracted to this sort of role, you just get on with it and you help each other. That's really
important. It doesn't actually matter what your role is. You just muck in. Amanda Barry speaking to
Justin Webb. Finally, the red carpet's in place. The Oscar statues are ready and no doubt some
nerves are jangling ahead of this year's Academy Awards. It's the glitziest day of the year on
the entertainment calendar and success can send careers into orbit. But not all Hollywood gongs are
as coveted as Wendy Urquhart reports.
The Razzie for the worst picture of the year goes to War of the Worlds, 2025.
The Razies or Golden Raspberry Awards are almost as famous as the Oscars,
but for all the wrong reasons,
because they represent the best of the worst in the business in the last year.
The prime video film War of the World starring Ice Cube
swept the board with five raspberries for worst picture,
worst actor, worst director, worst screenplay and worst remake. Ouch!
You'll be safe from the Queen here.
The Queen stole everything from all of us.
Disney's Snow White remake scooped worst supporting actor and worst on-screen combo,
which went to all seven computer-generated dwarfs in the film.
Elsewhere, Rebel Wilson was named Worst Actor for Bridehardt,
and Scarlett Rose Stallone was awarded Worst Supporting Act.
for the Western film Gunslingers, but she's got a long way to go to catch up with her dad
because Sly holds the record for the most worst actor Razies.
There was some good news, though.
Kate Hudson's Oscar nomination for Song Song Blue this year earned her the Razzie Redeemer Award,
which is given to someone whose performance has improved,
which kind of makes up for being handed the Worst Actress Award in 2021 for music.
Kate Hudson isn't the only A-list to be called out for a poor performance, though.
Tom Hanks, Sandra Bullock, Leonardo DiCaprio and even Lawrence Olivier have all been panned at one time or another.
Over the years, the Razies have developed a cult following,
and rather than hide a way to lick their wounds,
some of the world's top actors have actually turned up to collect their gongs.
So it seems the great and the good are not afraid of being made fun of.
if it's only now and again.
Wendy Earcart reporting.
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.
Don't forget our sister podcast, The Global Story.
This edition of the Global News podcast was mixed by Holly Smith
and produced by Stephen Jensen and Wendy Urquhart.
The editor is Karen Martin.
I'm Charlotte Gallagher.
Until next time, goodbye.
Welcome to the interface, the show that decodes the tech that's rewiring your week and your world.
Coming up in our latest episode, we look at the hidden chain of human labor that's actually reviewing your sensitive data,
the proposed law that could end the internet as we know it, and the debate about wired versus wireless headphones.
Which should you choose?
Listen on BBC.com or wherever you get your podcasts.
