Global News Podcast - US military launches wave of attacks against Iran
Episode Date: July 15, 2026US Central Command says its latest barrage of strikes against Iran is designed to degrade Tehran's military capacity to attack commercial shipping in the Strait of Hormuz. President Trump warns milita...ry strikes will intensify if Iran does not cooperate in peace talks, and both sides threaten further escalation to gain control over the key shipping lane.Also: prosecutors in Bolivia investigate reports that Bolivian citizens are being tricked into fighting for Russia in Ukraine. The Australian government announces plans to regulate the growing AI sector. Tensions escalate in Pakistani-administered Kashmir as security forces try to stop protesters marching on the main city of Muzaffarabad to demand more political representation. Border checks between Spain and Gibraltar are permanently lifted, after London and Brussels sign a free movement treaty affecting the British territory. And a pen, that helped save the Apollo 11 mission in July 1969 after Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin became the first men on the moon, has been sold at auction in New York for more than $850,000. 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.ukPhoto: a screengrab from a video obtained from social media on July 15 shows a view shortly before what U.S. Central Command say was a U.S. strike on Iran. Location and date not verified. Credit: U.S. Central Command/via REUTERS
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Hello, I'm Oliver Conway.
We're recording this at 15 hours GMT on Wednesday the 15th of July.
The US says it's launched another wave of strikes against Iran
as they battle for control of the Strait of Hormuz.
Australia announces wide-ranging plans to regulate AI,
including restrictions on data centers.
And Bolivia investigates the alleged recruitment of Bolivian men to fight for Russia.
Also in the podcast?
By some kind of miracle, the diameter of that plastic tip fit perfectly in that hole and arm the engine and save their lives.
The pen that helped rescue the Apollo Moon mission.
Are the US and Iran getting closer to a resumption of all-out war in their battle for?
control of the Strait of Hormuz. The American military says it's launched another wave of
daytime strikes today after a fourth night of attacks. The Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps
said it had targeted American military sites in Bahrain, Kuwait and Jordan. Media tally suggests
35 people have been killed in Iran in the past week. The U.S. says Iran has attacked seven
ships, leaving nearly a dozen crew dead, injured or missing. At the same time, the two nations
are stepping up their rhetoric. President Trump,
renewed his threats to destroy Iran's bridges and power plants,
while Iran says it could cut off other transit routes beyond the Strait of Hormuz.
So what happens now?
Hossam Zaki is a veteran Arab diplomat.
We often condemn the Iranians, rightly so,
but we also need to understand where the US is going with all of this.
It is understood that the US does not want to have the Iranians dictate any terms,
not related to the trait of hormones, but also not related to the region in general.
But Kirsten-Fon-Rose, a Gulf expert in the first Trump administration,
says the memorandum of understanding between the two countries is not yet dead.
You've seen rhetoric about this is over, or the Deputy Foreign Minister of Iran said yesterday
that we hold ourselves to no commitments on the MOU, but they have not formally exited,
and neither has the U.S.
And you also see the mediating countries really active.
They've been meeting in Malskette.
They've been talking to both sides.
So the mediation is still alive.
I spoke to our chief international correspondent, Lee's Ducet,
and asked her first what Iran is referring to
when it says it could cut off other export corridors.
It would mean the other choke point close by in the Red Sea,
Babel Mendeb.
And the world has seen that before when one of Iran's
allies in the region, the Houthis of Yemen, also disrupted commercial traffic through that
vital waterway that went on for many, many months. And that threat has been hanging over this
war where the focus is the other choke point, the Strait of Formuzer, many months. But the Houthis
have been reluctant to get drawn into this war. They suffered significant military damage during the
last one and in some ways Iran seemed to want to keep them for the moment when they would have to
escalate. And I should emphasize that Iran's relationship with the Houthis is not the same as it is
with with Hizbollah in Lebanon, the relationship between Iran, in particular, the Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps and Hizvah goes right back to its creation in 1982. The ties between the Houthis
and Iran are very close. Iran has provided them with absolutely critical training and equipment.
but the Houthis also have their own agency.
President Trump has also threatened to destroy Iran's bridges and power plants before in comments that were widely condemned at the time.
Mighty do it this time?
He has used this phrase many times to destroy every last bridge, every last power plant.
This, of course, is a potential war crime.
A similar kind of phrasing has been used by Israel before.
Both of them have talked about bombing Iran back to the stone age.
which is Israel, particular Prime Minister Netanyahu,
would like to have another military go.
And there is an argument in some circles that you have to go in
and you have to really, really make Iran suffer.
But the question is whether even that would make Iran capitulate.
And it's whether or not President Trump has the stomach to engage in that kind of a war.
He's months away from the absolutely crucial November midterm elections.
He knows the war is not popular, even among his supporters.
He knows that oil prices go up every time there is this kinetic activity in the strait of Hormuz.
It's just that he doesn't have any good options.
Yeah, very hard to see a way out of this.
Might we just see this sort of low-level attacks continuing without the two sides resulting to all-out war?
A whole new lexicon has developed with this war.
A ceasefire became lesser fire.
A memorandum of understanding became a memorandum of misunderstanding,
last month, which has a paragraph, which has allowed Iran and the United States to read whatever
they want into it concerning the future management of the strait of Hormuz. The best solution
will lie in regional management of that strait, but what they need most of all both sides is an
off-ram. Lees Doucette, our chief international correspondent. And we have more on the economic
impact of the conflict on the BBC News YouTube channel. You'll find the global
News podcast in the podcast section there.
As it struggles with manpower shortages for its war on Ukraine, Russia has recruited
fighters from many different parts of the world, many by dubious means.
Now prosecutors in Bolivia are investigating reports that Bolivian citizens are being tricked
into joining Russian forces. Our global affairs reporter Mimi Swaybi told me more about
the alleged trafficking. So this investigation follows reports that individuals were lured abroad
with false job advertisements.
Now, the Foreign Ministry, Bolivia's Foreign Ministry,
has activated assistance protocol
after receiving reports from family members
concerned about their loved ones.
They believe that 16 Bolivian nationals
are still fighting on the front lines in Russia.
Now, this inquiry also comes after footage
circulated online, showing Bolivians
in Russian military uniforms
describing life on the front line.
In one video, you can see a 29-year-old
Bolivian describing what he is witnessed
and what he's experiencing
again on that front line. There are also lots of testimonies in place with one mother from
Santa Cruz saying that her son told her that they were made to sign a contract in Russian for a
year before they lost contact in May. So lots of testimonies coming together, building evidence
and prosecutors in Bolivia, putting it forward to Russia. However, the Russian embassy in
Bolivia has denied any wrongdoing and any connection between its diplomatic mission and the
alleged recruitment.
And is this different from people just going to act as mercenaries in other countries?
It is. It's very different. This is deceptive recruitment. It is a form of trafficking.
So individuals are lured in with promises of well-paid jobs, private security contracts,
or possibly even getting residency in Europe. However, they find themselves in very different situations.
In this case, on the front lines. It is not what they're signed up to.
And like we heard from that testimony, they could be forced to sign.
contract. It could be in language they don't understand. They might not know what exactly
they're getting themselves into. But the key thing here is they are deceived. They do not
wish and do not know in many cases that they will end up fighting for, in this case, allegedly
Russia against Ukraine. And is this happening in other Latin American countries as well?
It is. Latin America is reportedly one of the main regions where its citizens are being
known to fight in this war between Russia and Ukraine. And it's one of the newer ones. A
The report by the International Federation for Human Rights said that up to 27 foreign fighters may be fighting in the Russian army.
Now, those include Peru, Cuba, Colombia and now more recently Bolivia, around 600 citizens in Peru, but nearly 10,000 Cubans, it's thought.
So a lot of disparity between numbers, but yet an area which the Russians are seemingly trying to delve more into and recruit more heavily from.
Mimi Swayby.
The Australian government has announced plans.
to regulate the growing AI sector, particularly the impact of data centres and abuse of copyright.
Both issues have caused controversy in other parts of the world too,
with New York on Tuesday becoming the first US state to impose a ban on the construction of large data centres.
The Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said data centres there would be made
to minimise their use of water and to safeguard power supplies.
Our government will establish a set of Australian standards for AI.
In March this year, we announced a set of expectations for large AI data centers.
This will bring them into one regulatory framework, clear, consistent and mandatory.
James Menendez spoke to Rita Matiloni-T, Associate Professor in Law at Macquarie University in Sydney.
We have seen in Australia very strong growth of data centres.
We have them in hundreds and more are planned in a few years.
and a lot of them are growing in big cities like Sydney and Melbourne.
And people really start getting concerned about the fact that they're taking space, of course,
using electricity, which would likely to increase prices, using water resources.
And as you might know, Australia is the driest continent.
So we don't have that much water.
And also actually taking builders, taking away from building houses,
they then occupied building data centers.
So there was a bit of increasing concern among communities.
and actually even suggestions to establish moratorium,
but the Prime Minister took a different position
and said we will keep building them,
but we will legislate.
We will require them to feed electricity back into the grid.
He talked about that we have a lot of solar energy,
which should be using it.
We have a lot of space across our big Australia,
so we maybe have to think about developing them outside the cities and so on.
And what about the issue of copyright?
Because, I mean, countries are really struggling with this,
aren't they, that AI companies are using, you know, music books and so on to train their models,
but the artists aren't getting the compensation they want. I mean, how would that work under law?
I mean, would it work just simply by enforcing existing copyright laws, do you think?
That's indeed another very controversial question in Australia.
So government so far was actually quite strong on this.
And despite of a lot of lobbying from AI industry, to introduce,
use an exception like text and data mining that exists in UK and Europe, the government said,
no, last year we're not going to do that. You will have to essentially license the content.
And the prime minister today again reiterated that, that they will respect copyright industry's
choices. And it's not only about remineration. It's sort of asking their permission as well,
but they didn't provide no details how it's going to work. So I think the government doesn't yet know
how to make it happen. There have been proposals by Anthropic, for instance, that there could be a
single fund to sort of where some compensation could be paid to right holders in exchange of
tax and data mine exception, but the government said we won't introduce such exceptions. So I think
they see licensing as a way to go, but we did don't know how this exactly licensing will look like.
Rita Matulonity. A pen that helped save the Apollo 11 Moon mission in 1969 has sold at
for more than $850,000. It helped bring Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin home safely after they
became the first men to walk on the lunar surface. Richard Hamilton takes up the story.
This is the first moon landing in July 1969 when Neil Armstrong famously said, that's one
small step for man, one giant leap for mankind. And on that day, the 20th July,
Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin were collecting rock and dust samples from the surface of the moon for about three hours.
And after that, they made their way back to the lunar module, which had landed with a large engine for its descent.
And then it had a smaller engine for them to lift off and return to the moon's orbit.
And as they were climbing back into this lunar module, Buzz Aldrin bumped into a circuit breaker with his backpack.
and he bumped into this circuit breaker
which controls the engine of the lunar module
and broke the switch.
So effectively they were stranded on the moon
and it would have taken months for another crew
to come and rescue them.
But Buzz Aldrin had a felt-tip pen in his pocket
and at that moment he made an instinctive
and what many people would say
as an inspired act of improvisation.
Now this pen last went up
for auction with Sotheby's back in 2022.
And Cassandra Hatton from Sothebyes
explained the dilemma that Buzz Aldrin was facing.
Buzz is looking at the circuit breaker panel and he thinks,
yeah, okay, maybe I could put my little finger in there,
but I might get electrocuted.
And maybe I'll take a little piece of metal,
but maybe I'll blow out the entire circuit breaker panel.
And then we're really dead, right?
And then he realizes he's got this pen in his pocket
that has a plastic tip at the end.
And by some kind of miracle,
the diameter of that plastic tip
was the same as the diameter of the switch.
And it fit perfectly in that hole
and arm the engine and save their lives.
That was Cassandra Hatton.
And the pen itself costs 69 cents.
And the story behind the pen is that one of the astronauts
had bought a felt-tip marker pen on his way to work.
And then NASA fan.
found out that these pens actually worked when there's no gravity,
which would enable astronauts to write in space.
So NASA bought several hundred of these marker pens.
And one article that I've found said,
it was one small writing instrument for man,
one giant life-saving marker pen for Apollo.
Yeah, very good.
But looking back, history would have been very different
if Buzz Aldrin hadn't intervened.
Exactly.
So the success of Apollo 11,
demonstrated that America had won the space race
and that US technological advances were superior to the Soviets.
And the pen then got placed in the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum.
And after Apollo 11, there were further six missions with crews,
although, of course, Apollo 13 was aborted after an explosion.
And then in April this year, we had the Artemis II mission,
which completed a successful lunar flyby going around the far side of the moon.
But if it wasn't for that pen, many historians of space would say that a lot of this would never have happened.
And effectively, the astronauts might still be on the surface of the moon.
Richard Hamilton.
Still to come on the podcast.
For those that don't know the venue, it's a really great way to promote these unique concert halls
and really blend the heritage with the technology.
The new tool that allows you to hear
how a concert will sound in different parts of a music venue.
Is the American Dream still possible?
I'm Asma Khaled, one of the hosts of the Global Story podcast from the BBC.
One of the most successful exports to the United States has ever sold the world
is the American Dream, that tantalizing promise of a better, freer, richer life.
But is it still attainable?
I feel like the American...
dream is alive but not well.
For more, listen to The Global Story on BBC.com or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is the Global News podcast.
Tensions are escalating in Pakistani-administered Kashmir as security forces try to stop protesters
marching on the main city of Mazafrabad to demand more political representation.
More than 4,000 personnel have been deployed after clashes left 10 people dead, including
two police officers.
Here's our global affairs reporter, Anbarasan Etirajan.
This is the region controlled by Pakistan.
About 4.5 million people live here in the Kashmir region.
Now, various civil society groups have been protesting for weeks
asking for reforms in the regional legislative assembly,
for the regional assembly, saying 12 seats allocated for those who migrated from the Indian side.
And they should not be given to them because these people live outside the Kashmir region
in other parts of Pakistan.
and it gives them overwhelming influence in the affairs of the running of the legislative assembly
and also being exploited by the mainstream Pakistan political party.
So the region is scheduled to go for elections end of the month.
So they want more local representation.
Basically, they want reforms to the legislative assembly.
They can be better represented.
But this is now become a big political issue.
All these groups are operating under the name of Joint Awami Action,
And this group was banned by the Pakistani government in June.
And more than 25 people have been killed in the violence.
And the latest round was last evening.
As we speak now, thousands of people are gathering near the town of Ravla Kote in Kashmir.
They want to conduct a march towards the regional capital of Mossafarabad.
And there is a tense situation.
More than 4,000 police officers and paramilitary soldiers have been deployed there.
Yeah.
So what happens next?
Can the tensions be reduced?
Now, the supporters or the protesters, they are saying that they cannot withdraw this agitation.
They have conducting this blockade that has resulted in a shortage of food and medicine in that particular region.
But the government says they are quoting a court order which says that this changes to the assembly composition cannot be done without a constitutional amendment.
That was the court's decision.
But what it shows the continuing security issues being faced by Pakistan.
On the one side they have on the northwestern side you have
Islamist militants targeting Pakistani security forces
on Balochistan in the southwestern province
where there is an insurgency going on with separatist
Baloch rebels attacking Pakistani forces
and now this is another protest.
It is a huge headache for Pakistani officials
and they are trying to stop these people
from marching towards the Mosavarabad city.
Amrasan Etirajan.
Hundreds of people crossed from Spain
into Gibraltar overnight as border checks ended after more than a century. It followed the
signing of a UK-EU treaty on the status of the British Overseas Territory. The deal is designed to
facilitate the movement of people and goods and avoid lengthy delays for the roughly 15,000 workers
who crossed the border each day. There was excitement as the last remaining stretch of fence came down.
Gibraltar's business minister is Gemma Arias Vasquez.
What the frontier has done is on occasion made lives very, very difficult
because you've had to queue for three, four, five hours on occasions.
So it means that businesses for the first time know exactly what to expect when to move to Gibraltar.
So I think that the Gibraltar economy will go from strength to strength as a result of this treaty.
Our Madrid correspondent Guy Hedgeco told us about the significance
of this moment. This is something which had to be resolved in the wake of the UK's exit from the
European Union because Gibraltar has had a land border with the EU and somehow that had to be
resolved. Gibraltar also has very close economic relations with the EU and financial
services and online gaming and so on. So this new arrangement, which is seen as a massive change,
is a way of keeping Gibraltar aligned with the EU,
but maintaining British sovereignty over Gibraltar.
And it means that people will now, as of today,
be able to walk back and forth into Gibraltar and out of Gibraltar completely freely.
Until midnight last night, there was a border check there between the two.
And you mentioned those workers, there are 15,000 Spanish workers
who have been crossing over from nearby Spanish towns into Gibraltar each day
to go and work for Gibraltarian businesses.
Now things are much easier for them because they don't have to go through border checks.
They can simply walk or cycle or drive into Gibraltar as they wish.
People arriving from outside the Schengen Free Travel Zone into Gibraltar
will face a border check which has been moved to Gibraltar's airport.
There's also a border check at the port,
but most people would be arriving at the airport.
So, for example, if you're arriving from the UK to Gibraltar,
you will show your passport to Gibraltarian officials or police
and also to Spanish officials as well
before you arrive at the territory.
So now this Schengen and EU border has been moved to the airport.
Guy Hedggeco in Madrid.
England and Argentina have a bitter footballing rivalry
made worse by the 1982 Falklands War,
which left more than 900 people dead.
Ahead of their World Cup semi-final later on Wednesday,
the Argentine manager sought to play down the politics,
saying it's no more than a football match.
But locker room video showed his players chanting
they would win for Las Malvinas,
the Argentine name for the Falklands,
Diego Maradonna and Lionel Messi in probably his last World Cup.
Tension ahead of the match was ramped up
by Argentina's vice president,
directly linking it to the war, branding the English pirates and usurpers.
But how relevant is the history today?
Martin Mazur is an Argentine journalist.
Malvinas is a national cause in Argentina,
but that doesn't mean that the game itself is about Malvinas.
The national cause is there.
It's one of the reasons why the popularity of the candidate for president
that in the end won the presidency
almost was put in risk because he said he admired Margaret Tuss.
I think the game is, of course, part of this generation,
but what Scaloni said, I think it's very important.
He said, well, hold on, this is a football game.
Don't try to bring everything on the table.
Well, the US authorities have increased security in Atlanta ahead of the game,
which was classed as the highest risk match of the World Cup.
Paul Hayward is a sports writer at The Observer.
There is a particular friction and tension and animosity about these games
And not just because of the Falkland War, I don't actually think that infects the game itself.
But there is a current and there's a feeling about these games,
going back to the, mainly to the Hand of Godgoal in Mexico in 1986, Diego Maradonna, of course.
These are modern teams and these players know each other from the Champions League.
They're not carrying the baggage of history on their shoulders.
But nevertheless, some games have a particular flavour.
and this one is true to that tradition.
It's also, I think, embellished by the fact that this will probably be
Neil Lemaes' last international game if Argentina lose, possibly the greatest player we've ever seen.
And I think that adds a great deal of sort of sporting energy to it.
Sports writer Paul Hayward.
Finally, when booking tickets for a play or musical,
you might have come across one of those websites that helps identify the best seats
with photos of the view of the stage.
Now there's something similar coming
for how musical performances sound in different parts of a venue.
Nimrod by Edward Elgar, as heard at Halle St Peter's in Manchester here in the UK.
It is now developing a digital tool to help conductors, musicians and even punters
see how music sounds in different locations,
as the venue's head of development, Kath Russell, explained.
We've been working very closely with our partners, Siemens.
We're trying to create a really useful tool for conductors, for musicians,
but also for concert halls to create really effective rehearsals
so that you can listen to the music before you actually reach a concert hall
if you're on tour or if you've not been to that concert hall before.
And you can decide where you might place sections of the orchestra
for the best possible sound.
And that was save time and money on rehearsals.
Our assistant conductor UN Shields was talking to me about how
different that experiences if you're stood on the stage
and also different parts of the stage for different members of the orchestra.
So being able to understand what that sound would be like
for people in different seats around a concert hall that you don't know.
But we also are working with Siemens on how it also could create more access
to certain concert halls, particularly working with our international partners
on how you could experience a concert in different concert halls,
but experience it as if you were sat.
there. And then of course, Halle St. Peter's, it's a deconsecrated church that we've converted
into this wonderful rehearsal space. So it's a beautiful place to sit and has a natural
acoustic because it was originally a church. But for those that don't know the venue,
it's a really great way to promote these unique concert halls and really blend the sort of
of heritage with the technology. And none of this is to stop you going to the concerts. The
Concerts are still the primary aim of all of this technology to make the whole experience even better.
Kath Russell of Halle St. Peter's.
And that is all from us for now, but the Global News podcast will be back very soon.
This edition was mixed by Holly Smith and produced by Alice Adely.
Our editor is Karen Martin.
I'm Oliver Conway.
Until next time, goodbye.
Is the American dream still possible?
I'm Asma Khalid, one of the hosts of the Global Story Podcast from the Beard.
One of the most successful exports of the United States has ever sold the world is the American Dream,
that tantalizing promise of a better, freer, richer life.
But is it still attainable?
I feel like the American Dream is alive, but not well.
For more, listen to The Global Story on BBC.com or wherever you get your podcasts.
