Global News Podcast - US, Iran exchange fire in Strait of Hormuz

Episode Date: May 8, 2026

The US says it struck Iranian military facilities after Iran targeted American warships crossing the Strait of Hormuz. Tehran claims the US was violating the ceasefire. President Trump says the ceasef...ire is still intact. Also: Russia prepares to celebrate Victory Day amid fears Ukraine may launch a drone attack. Fashion companies prepare for the introduction of strict new sustainability laws in Europe. We take a closer look at the US immigration crackdown. Protests in Japan over the lifting of restrictions on arms exports. And the British wildlife film maker, David Attenborough, celebrates his 100th birthday.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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Starting point is 00:00:00 This is the Global News podcast from the BBC World Service. Hello, I'm Ankreda Say, and in the early hours of Friday, the 8th of May, these are our main stories. The US says it struck Iranian military facilities after Iran tried to attack three American warships crossing the Strait of Hormuz. Iran says it was retaliating for U.S. violations of the ceasefire. There are nerves in Moscow ahead of Russia's annual Victory Day celebration. and some are questioning the political future of Vladimir Putin. Also in this podcast. That crucial moment when our far distant ancestors took a step away from being apes
Starting point is 00:00:45 and a step towards humanity. One of the most recognizable broadcast voices of all time. The naturalist and broadcaster David Attenborough celebrates his 100th birthday. We hear from some of his. closest friends and colleagues. We begin with a major development in the Strait of Hormuz, where the U.S. and Iran have exchanged fire. The U.S. military says it struck Iranian military facilities after Iran tried to attack three
Starting point is 00:01:21 American warships crossing the strait. Iran says it was retaliating for U.S. violations of the ceasefire. President Trump has described the American strikes as a love tap and insisted the ceasefire is still in effect. Iranians, we took our three destroyers, and we rammed them through some pretty big stuff today, and we knocked the hell out of them. The destroyers weren't hurt in any way.
Starting point is 00:01:48 The people weren't hurt, but they were firing at us, and we were firing back at them, and our firepower was a hell of a lot stronger than theirs, and they knocked the hell out of them. Is the ceasefire with Iran still on? Yeah, it is. They trifled with us today. I'll let you know when there's no ceasefire.
Starting point is 00:02:05 You won't have to know. If there's no ceasefire, you're not going to have to know. You're just going to have to look at one big glow coming out of Iran. And they better sign their agreement fast. I've been speaking to our North America correspondent, David Willis. It's the most serious test yet, anchor, isn't it, of the month-long ceasefire between the United States and Iran involving three U.S. guided missile destroyers that are forming part of the U.S.
Starting point is 00:02:33 US naval blockade of Iranian ports at both sides saying the other fired first. The US says that its destroyers were not hit, claiming that it acted in self-defense in response to what it called unprovoked hostilities on the part of Iran. And in a post on social media, President Trump claimed the US Navy had inflicted great damage on what he called the Iranian attackers, whose boats, he said, went to the bottom of the sea quickly and efficiently. Missiles were shot at our destroyers and were easily knocked down. Likewise, drones came and were incinerated whilst in the air. And he added with another rhetorical flourish,
Starting point is 00:03:19 they dropped ever so beautifully down to the ocean, very much like a butterfly dropping to its grave. Well, Iran, for its part, says that it fired drones and missiles in response to US aggression, as it put. put it, in the Strait of Hormuz, involving two of its vessels, and also claims that the US response included attacks on Iranian military facilities in the region. Indeed, there were reports of explosions on Iran's Quessam Island. That's an oil port at the entrance to the Strait of Hormuz. David, could this exchange of fire jeopardize any negotiations between the U.S.
Starting point is 00:03:59 and Iran or impact this ceasefire? It's a very good question. Of course, all this comes as Iran is reported to be reviewing a U.S. proposal to end the war, and that proposal is thought to include a moratorium on Iran's nuclear enrichment, the lifting of U.S. sanctions, release of billions of dollars in frozen Iranian funds, and both sides lifting restrictions on transit through the Strait of Hormuz. Now, according to Iran, today's exchange of fire constitutions. a violation of the very fragile ceasefire, according to President Trump, however, it does not. The Trump administration is seeking to play down this matter. It doesn't want to escalate the crisis. But this is not the first time the two sides have exchanged fire in the strait of homers since the ceasefire began. And the question is, how many more such skirmishes can that fragile truce endure? David Willis. Saturday is Victory Day in Russia,
Starting point is 00:05:05 marking the defeat of Nazi Germany in the Second World War. Traditionally, the focus of celebrations is at the annual Red Square parade in Moscow. But this year, the event is being scaled back over concerns that Ukraine might target it with a drone attack. A Russia editor, Steve Rosenberg, reports from Moscow. These are Russian soldiers marching near the Kremlin. But Saturday's parade will be different from previous years. There'll be no tanks, no ballistic missiles, no military hardware on display in the center of Moscow.
Starting point is 00:05:46 Yvgeny Popov is a Russian MP. Our tanks are busy right now. We need them more on the battlefield than on the Red Square right now. With the war in its fifth year, not only has Russia not yet secured victory, but under pressure from Ukraine, you're now scaling back the parade. Some people would say that's embarrassing. And what are the choice we have? We are fighting for our security guarantees.
Starting point is 00:06:19 Vladimir Putin chose to invade Ukraine, and chooses to keep. fighting there. But over time, the front line has moved closer to home. Ukrainian drones have been reaching deep into Russia. Earlier this week, a drone struck a luxury residential block in Moscow, just four miles from the Kremlin. There were no casualties, but extensive damage to one of the upper floors. Moscow has threatened a massive retaliatory strike on the centre of Kiev if Ukraine tries to. target Saturday's parade.
Starting point is 00:06:59 Russia's foreign ministry spokesperson warned diplomatic missions to evacuate staff promptly from Kiev in the event of a mass strike by Moscow. Here in the Russian capital, the Russians I spoke to near the Kremlin, were nervous. It's a worrying time, Vladimir says. But what can you do? We live and we worry. There is a safety issue, concedes Sergei, but parading our military hardware, shows our strength on the world stage.
Starting point is 00:07:29 Perhaps we should be displaying something. In current circumstances, it would be foolish to showcase hardware, Yulia tells me. On the other hand, this means that we're scared of something. That's also not great. To protect the parade and the public, the Russian authorities say that mobile internet in Moscow will be restricted on Victory Day.
Starting point is 00:07:53 They claim that digital shutdowns, which have become common across Russia, Russia prevent drone attacks and acts of sabotage. They're deeply unpopular, though, with the public, but MP Evgeny Papov doesn't mind that. It would be better to be with no internet than to be killed by Ukrainian missile or drone. Under Vladimir Putin, victory in World War II has become such a key part of Russia's national idea. And the Red Square parade, normally an opportunity to project Russian military power to the world. In a village on the edge of Moscow,
Starting point is 00:08:34 they're holding a minute's silence for Russians killed in World War II, what's known here as the Great Patriotic War. But here, too, as special guests, are two men who've been fighting in Ukraine. They're wearing military fatigues and masks to hide their identities. After the ceremony, one of the men tells me that Russia is a country of victors and always will be. The Kremlin would like Russians to view the Ukraine war as a continuation of the Great Patriotic, as a just war. But they are very different.
Starting point is 00:09:12 In 1941, Nazi Germany invaded Russia. In 2022, the Kremlin invaded Ukraine. The war there has already lasted longer than World War II for Russia. And for Moscow, victory remains elusive. That report by Steve Rosenberg. Catherine Belton is a reporter on Russia for the Washington Post, an author of Putin's people. She's been telling Evan Davis how life in Moscow has been impacted by the war.
Starting point is 00:09:48 For many years of the war, somehow it looked like the Russian economy was defying gravity. It was defying the sanctions. But now it's like a cumulative effect of Putin's wartime spending spree, the sanctions biting, which caused massive inflation. People are talking about food prices, doubling, tripling. And then the central bank moved into yank up interest rates to try to cool down the inflation. Now businesses can't pay off their loans. They can't pay higher taxes. We hear of a record number of restaurants in Moscow closing.
Starting point is 00:10:26 People are saying now the shops are empty. People are starting to economise on just basic everyday goods. They're really feeling the pinch. What do you make of reports? There was quite a long account in the Financial Times of Putin increasingly spending his time in bunkers, worried for his safety. Where is he at the moment? Ever since the war began, he has been spending a lot of his time in bunkers.
Starting point is 00:10:50 But over the last two months, he has pretty much disappeared from view. he's cut down the number of public visits. And I think there was this real sense of disquiet when the Kremlin saw what happened to the Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khomeini. And they feared that the US-Israeli coalition had used the internet to survey and then attack and kill the Iranian leader. And I think this is one of the reasons why, one, Putin has been taking increased security measures and two, why they've started shutting down the internet because they fear Putin could be victim to a drone attack or something else. It's a really interesting picture. And it obviously is a very significant shift from what was seen as Russia making great advances in the war. Are people contemplating life
Starting point is 00:11:40 beyond Putin in Russia? Yes, it's really a big sea change. People have begun speaking out against Putin. And this we have not seen for a very, very long time. There was a very prominent social media influencer called Victoria Bonja, who launched a diatribe against government failings and internet restrictions. And then there was a lawyer who used to work for the Kremlin. He basically said Putin should resign and be brought to justice as a war criminal and a thief. And we haven't heard rhetoric like that really since before the beginning of the war. This lawyer was carted off to a psychiatric hospital, but then after 30 days he was released.
Starting point is 00:12:21 and people are saying that the fact that he could get away with it and he's continuing his criticism is a sign that really the Russian elite is now dividing into two camps. There are hardliners who just want to crack down, and there is an increasingly large and vocal progressive camp who are saying, hang on, things really aren't going well, why are we still fighting this war? And they're really beginning to chafe away at Putin's rule. And it's definitely the case that we see people really are starting to think about Russia without Putin. Washington Post reporter Catherine Belton.
Starting point is 00:13:00 The Great and the Good from the top tier of fashion are in Copenhagen for the Global Fashion Summit. And they've got a lot to talk about. The European Union is slapping major new regulations on the industry that will force brands to put sustainability first and change the way they operate forever. Wendy Erkart has a deal. details. When our favourite brands go on sale, most of us hit the shops in the hope of finding that ultimate bargain. But trends change like the wind, which means fashion companies are constantly producing high volume, low quality, cheap clothing just to keep up with the fashionistas.
Starting point is 00:13:38 Fast fashion is responsible for around 8 to 10% of global carbon emissions. That's more than all international flights and maritime shipping combined. The industry also uses around 93 cubic metres of water, which could meet the needs of 5 million people. And it generates 12.6 million tons of textile waste in Europe alone. On top of that, what's not sold eventually ends up in landfill, usually in Africa or South America, where it can take up to 200 years to decompose. But there are big changes coming that will stop all that and prevent what's called greenwashing, where companies use fake labels like eco-friendly, green or natural to full consumers. From mid-July, it will be illegal for fashion brands in the European Union to destroy unsold clothes, footwear and accessories.
Starting point is 00:14:33 And from September, all garments must have a QR code with details of where they were made and what chemicals are embedded in them. That's Manor from Heaven for resale companies like eBay, Vintet and Brand Alley, which are already well established. Here's eBay's general manager of European fashion and luxury, Kirsty Keegan. If retailers choose to list that excess in the industry, then hopefully it means we can very easily find that stock another home and it doesn't end up in landfill. That's exactly what eBay is here to do.
Starting point is 00:15:05 That's all very well, but for high-end brands, finding a home for what doesn't sell is a much more sensitive issue. They don't produce as much as cheaper brands, but they don't want to be seen ditching stuff either. So to protect their luxury image, some are using invite-only resale platforms and private archive sales to sell excess stock. Mary Claire DeVoe, whose Chief Sustainability and Institutional Affairs Officer at Keering, which is the parent company of Gucci, Yves Saint-Laurenta, Botega Veneta, Balhancia and others, says younger fashionistas are checking the sustainability credentials of fashion companies before they splash their cash.
Starting point is 00:15:47 When you buy a luxury product from Gucci, from Botega Veneta, what we speak about sustainability is really inherent to the quality. So even if they don't ask any questions about which kind of processes we implemented, the new generation and above all, the Gen Z, are asking more and more very concrete questions. They want more detail. These new rules will be costly. but it's just possible that the fashion industry is tailor-made to promote sustainability and drive home the need to protect the environment. Wendy Urquhart's reporting.
Starting point is 00:16:31 So to come in this podcast. A question I have been asked throughout my lifetime with BBC was, is David Attenborough really as nice as he appears to be on the television? We'll have the answer to that question, as the great man celebrates his 100th birthday. This is the Global News Podcast. One of the issues that has defined President Trump's second term domestically is immigration. Among his boldest pledges was a mass deportation drive
Starting point is 00:17:11 to send anyone who'd entered the U.S. illegally back to their home countries. The policy has been hugely controversial, particularly in Democrat-run states. In Maryland, on America's East Coast, coast. One in six people were born overseas. Its largest city, Baltimore, is one of the U.S.'s major ports. In 2024, the route into the port was partially blocked after a container ship, the Dali, struck the Francis Scott Key Bridge, causing the bridge to collapse. Regini Vardinathin has been talking to one family, caught up in that disaster, and now caught in Maryland's deportation net.
Starting point is 00:17:51 You can see some posts, scaffolding of where the bridge was. Rachel Giraud's a lawyer in Baltimore. From the full-length glass windows of her 21st floor offices, she has a distant view of the tragic sight. Rachel still remembers the day the Dali container ship struck the city's iconic bridge. Eight construction workers ran out of the water when the bridge fell. Six lost their lives. Most were immigrants, but all were Maryland.
Starting point is 00:18:19 hardworking, strong and selfless. In the aftermath, President Biden encouraged around 30 of the relatives of those who died to apply for humanitarian immigration relief. With assurances, their applications would be approved. One of the victims was 37-year-old Jose Minor Lopez, originally from Guatemala. And it's in Rachel's office where we meet Zoila Sandoval Guerrera, his former partner and co-parent, to their seven-year-old. daughter, Dainee.
Starting point is 00:18:50 Zoyla remembers their last conversation. I was cooking. I was white beans with pork. He loved that meal. And he told me to save some for him. And that was our last conversation that day. Oh, when they told me the news, it was devastating. We shed many tears that day.
Starting point is 00:19:10 And mixed in with her grief, uncertainty. The Trump administration's reversed President Biden's reprieve. It means Zoila, who crossed into the U.S. illegally from Guatemala two decades ago, is facing deportation with a hearing in July. In the corner of Rachel's office, Dany's drawing and coloring with felt pens. What would this mean for your daughter, who was obviously born here? She would stay alone. I couldn't take her with me to Guatemala because she will lose all her benefits. And she's doing well in school here. so she will probably have to stay with my brother.
Starting point is 00:19:48 The Trump administration pledged to deport the worst of the worst from America. But Zoyler is keen to point out that she's not a threat to national security and that she's built a life in America over years. Sometimes it's the most hardworking people who are being deported, while there are so many lazy people on the streets hanging around without working, without anything. We asked the U.S. government, about Zoil's case, the Department of Homeland Security
Starting point is 00:20:17 sent us a statement saying that while any loss of life is tragic, immigration relief schemes, like all immigration benefits, are granted on a case-by-case basis according to the law. Do you ever feel like you just want to go home? I have thought about it. I have thought about going back, but my daughter was born here. She goes to school here, and her future is here. That report by Regina Varyanardin.
Starting point is 00:20:47 Japan basically wrote never go to war again in its post-second World War Constitution. But now it's debating whether to change that. The Asian nation has taken a major step away from its pacifist stance, lifting decades-long restrictions on arms exports and expanding its military role abroad. The government says it's necessary in an increasingly tense region. with Prime Minister Sanaii Takahichi, who took office in October, hoping to revise the constitution.
Starting point is 00:21:19 But for many Japanese residents, it's raising alarm. As fears grow that the country is becoming a war-capable nation, protests are gaining momentum. This report from a Japan correspondent, Kurumi Mori. On a Tokyo street corner under pouring rain, a crowd gathers, holding up drenched posters and flags. Stamped on them in big, bold Japanese. these characters, a simple message. No war. It's a scene that's becoming increasingly common across Japan, which is currently witnessing its largest anti-war protests in decades. Japan basically wrote never go to war again into its constitution. But now it's debating
Starting point is 00:22:04 whether to change that, and these people are not happy about it. They're saying we are a peaceful nation and the current pacifist Constitution is Japan's treasure. Among them, Akari Maizono, a woman in her 30s holding brightly painted lanterns calling for peace. She thinks the public isn't being heard. I'm angry that these changes could be made without properly listening to us, the public. I don't want the LDP to touch the Constitution anymore. Nearby stands Hidehiro I,jima, a 79-year-old resident gripping a bright red banner who says
Starting point is 00:22:43 he shares a similar sentiment. The Japanese constitution, Article 9 in particular, must be protected at all cost. It kept Japan from being drawn into past conflicts like the U.S.-Iran war. Without it, surely we would have entered the war by now. Anti-war protests like this one have been gaining traction over the past few months nationwide.
Starting point is 00:23:06 The backstory? After World War II, Japan adopted Article 9 known as the pacifist clause, instead of traditional military. But Prime Minister Sanaai Takaiichi took office in October, the Constitution, saying times have changed and there are intense geopolitical risks. In today's incredibly challenging security environment,
Starting point is 00:23:30 I believe that no country can protect its own peace and security alone. I think it is important to have partners who support each other, even in terms of defense equipment. She argues that Japan sits right next to China, North Korea, and Russia, while the U.S. has been pushing for a more active military role. For many Japanese, especially those with living memory of conflict or of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki atomic bombings, any move away from pacifism can ignite a big fear.
Starting point is 00:24:06 And that anxiety is now spilling onto the streets. So Japan is facing a choice, hold on to its pacifist identity, or adapt to a more uncertain world. Karumi Mori with that report. The world-famous British wildlife filmmaker David Attenborough says he has been overwhelmed by the thousands of messages that he's received on his 100th birthday, including one from the British Prime Minister Kirstama. To mark the event, a concert is being held at London's Royal Hour,
Starting point is 00:24:42 Albert Hall. A new song has been composed for him and he's even had a wasp named after him. Sir David first gained worldwide attention following the release of his groundbreaking BBC Natural History series called Life on Earth back in 1979. A culture correspondent David Silito has been talking to some of his closest friends and colleagues about what makes him so special. Rattlesnakes. This is the Western Diamondback. No animal alive. can excel these creatures when it comes to finding, stalking and dispatching their victims. Sir David Attenborough. I'm in Iceland. This fantastic fountain of fire rising 200 feet or so into the air. Behind me is molten rock.
Starting point is 00:25:32 He talks with his body. He doesn't just stand and present with the microphone. He's animated. He's interesting. He's engaging. Camerman Gavin Thurston has been part of the Attenborough team for nearly 40 years. to be back to a moment in Africa. We're both kind of nipple deep in water, and as this chimpanzee went into the water, it stands up and they don't like getting the hands wet, stands up and puts his arms in the air to wade through the water.
Starting point is 00:25:58 Suddenly, an image from our remote past comes vivid little light. The time when our distant ancestors, in order to keep up with the changing environment, had to wade and keep their heads above water in order to find food. Even though he's kind of got his back to the chimpanzee, he's totally aware of that, he's totally aware of the camera, the eyeline, and he nails that piece in one. That crucial moment when our far distant ancestors took the step away from being apes and a step towards humanity.
Starting point is 00:26:31 And the hairs on the back of my neck stood up when you deliver that piece. And Pam Jackson's working relationship goes back to life on earth in the 70s. We'd nip him with a comb. He didn't like it. Try and comb his hair very quickly and get out of the way again. So he wasn't a prima donna about his appearance? Not at all, no. A question I have been asked throughout my lifetime of the BBC was, is David Attenborough really as nice as he appears to be on the television?
Starting point is 00:27:07 And I always say to people, if it's possible, he's even nicer. What makes him truly special? is what he's experienced over his hundred years on the planets. A killer whale. These young pups have never seen anything like it before. For honest a father kill, who's worked with him for some 40 years. He is unique. He started travelling in the early 50s when the planet was pristine.
Starting point is 00:27:40 But at that same time, international air travel was just starting. David has seen more of the natural world than any human being that's ever lived on our planet. but in that same time he's seen more change than it's ever happened in our planet. But even now, on his 100th birthday. He's just got better and better and better through his whole career. Gavin wanted to show me this. Even though there are more wild foxes in London than almost any other big city,
Starting point is 00:28:11 it's still a huge thrill to see one suddenly emerging from the bushes. Totally wild creature. You know, David sat there on the deck chair, and his little fox cubs came out. Hello. It's just a really sweet moment where you see David's passion for the wildlife in one simple shot.
Starting point is 00:28:35 The boyish joy is there, isn't there? And here it is. It's a harvest. Welcome to your new home. There you go. He doesn't want to leave. David Silito with that report. And that's all from us for now.
Starting point is 00:28:59 If you want to get in touch, you can email us at Global Podcast at BBC.co. And 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 Masud, Ibrahim Kael and the producer was Helena Burke. The editor is Karen Martin and I'm Ankara Dissai.
Starting point is 00:29:27 Until next time, goodbye.

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