Global News Podcast - US Senate blocks bid to limit Trump's powers for Iran war
Episode Date: March 5, 2026As the US and Israeli war against Iran enters its sixth day, a bipartisan resolution in the US Senate aimed at limiting President Trump’s war powers has failed. Senators voted 47 to 53 to prevent th...e measure from advancing, dealing a blow to Democrats’ efforts to stymie the conflict in the Middle East. Meanwhile, US and Israeli strikes across Iran continue, with the capital, Tehran, bearing the brunt of the offensive. Also: Israel launches fresh attacks on the Lebanese capital, Beirut, warning residents to evacuate their homes; a suicide case in the US highlights the risks of AI chatbots interacting with people dealing with mental health issues; clergy from a conservative group of the Anglican Church seek to elect a rival to the first female Archbishop of Canterbury; how businesses are responding to the popularity of weight-loss drugs; and why chimpanzees are fascinated with crystals. 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 Pete Ross, and in the early hours of Thursday the 5th of March, these are our main stories.
The US Senate has cleared the way for Donald Trump to continue attacking Iran,
rejecting an effort to curb the president's war powers.
Israeli military officials say Iran has launched more missiles.
with explosions heard in Jerusalem, according to reports.
Earlier, Israel's military said it launched a new wave of strikes
targeting military infrastructure in Tehran.
Also in this podcast, a family in the US files a lawsuit against Google,
alleging that its AI chatbot encouraged their son to kill himself.
And...
The chimpanzees transport the crystals in the mouth.
This is not normal for chimpanzees.
Why chimpanzees are fascinated by crystals.
We begin with the latest on the U.S. Israel War with Iran, which is now into its sixth day.
Israeli military officials say Iran has launched more missiles with explosions heard in Jerusalem,
according to reports.
Earlier, Israel's military said it launched a new wave of strikes targeting military infrastructure in Tehran.
But first in this podcast, let's turn to political events in Washington, D.C.,
where a vote in the U.S. Senate has cleared the way for President Trump to continue the military campaign.
campaign. Democrats argue that Mr. Trump has sidelines Congress and has given a number of different
reasons for the war. And it was the Democrats who brought to the Senate a vote on a war power
resolution aimed at limiting the president's ability to order further military action in Iran.
The Democratic Senator Rafael Warnock said Congress needed to have a say in how the U.S.
military is operating in the Middle East.
The Declaration of War is not a power that the President of the United States has.
makes it clear, the declaration of war is the authority and the responsibility of Congress.
Presidents of both parties, yes, they have engaged in military operations,
but the declaration of war belongs to this body.
Well, to me, this looks like a war.
But Republicans said President Trump was showing strong leadership and should be supported.
Here's Congressman Michael McCall.
This war powers resolution.
is ill-timed and ill-advised.
Congress must stand with the President and our military
to finally close once and for all
this dark chapter of history
and pave the way for lasting peace.
In the end, the Senate voted largely along party lines
to reject the resolution.
I asked our North America correspondent Simi Jalosho
what the general feeling was among politicians
about how the war is progressing.
Well, the general feeling is pretty much reflected in that vote. It's mainly split between party lines.
The Defence Secretary Pete Hegg-Seth has framed this mission as laser-focused, and this resonates with Republican lawmakers who want to avoid forever wars, as they call it, by using massive airpower rather than ground troops.
Republican senators like Lindsay Graham, Tom Cotton, have argued that the Iranian regime is on the verge of a collapse.
And so the U.S. must maintain overwhelming force to ensure that Iran never acquires a nuclear weapon.
But Democratic figures acknowledge that, yes, there might have been a threat from Iran.
And yes, Iran should not have a nuclear weapon.
but they have condemned how the strikes are being done.
They feel there's a lack of a plan being shared by the administration.
The Senate minority leader, Chuck Schumer, Senator Tim Kane,
who introduced or led that resolution in the Senate,
have both branded this operation as an unconstitutional war.
And they say that they are worried that there's no clear exit strategy
and that the US will be drawn into a sort of real,
regional quagmire. Some centrist Democrats, most notably John Fetterman, who voted on the side of the
Republicans with regard to that resolution, has argued that the killing of Ayatollah Hamenei is a net
positive for the US and for the world. There's another vote coming. The House of Representatives
are going to vote on a similar measure. Could sentiment change the longer the war goes on or if it
expands further? So the House of Representatives are due to vote on a similar measure, like you said,
but actually on two different resolutions. So there's one resolution that's calling for an immediate
withdrawal of US forces from the Middle East. And there's another resolution, which is a more
moderate alternative, that gives the president 30 days to end hostilities unless he gets formal
approval by Congress to extend it. Now, a lot of the president,
of politicians are seeing the killing of Ayatollah Khamenei as an immediate win, but they are aware of public sentiment here in the US.
The public don't want another endless war in the Middle East like Iraq. They don't want more American lives to be lost.
So these two things that could really shake the president's support. One, if ground troops are introduced in this conflict, but two, if this goes on endlessly.
Aloosho in Washington.
As to the fighting itself, there was further evidence that the conflict is spilling across
more borders and escalating far beyond the Middle East.
In a dramatic development, a US submarine sank in Iranian warship off the coast of Sri Lanka.
The US Defence Secretary Pete Hegeseth said the submarine torpedoed the frigate, the Iris Dana,
in international waters.
About 140 Iranian sailors are presumed dead.
Qatar has been evacuating citizens who,
live near the US embassy in Doha, after Iranian missile strikes and NATO air defences,
had to intercept an Iranian missile heading towards southern Turkey.
There is a large US air base nearby in Syrac, which could have been a target, but that
hasn't been confirmed. Our international editor, Jeremy Bowen, has been following the latest
developments in the war. He began his report with that unprecedented US submarine attack.
This was another demonstration of American military power.
under stark message to the Iranians that nowhere is safe for them. The U.S. submarines torpedo
smashed into the stern of the Iranian frigate Dana. In the Indian Ocean, an American submarine
sunk an Iranian warship that thought it was safe in international waters. Instead, it was sunk by a
torpedo, quiet death. The first sinking of an enemy ship by a torpedo since World War II.
The Sri Lankan Navy brought 32 survivors ashore.
It seems that the Americans have decided that they can hit Iranian targets worldwide.
Some of the rescued Iranians were walking wounded, others more seriously hurt.
The attack will raise more questions about the legality of America's claim that this is a war of self-defense.
In five days of war, huge uncertainty about the future has been imposed on more than 90 million Iranians.
The traffic is moving in Tehran.
Aspects of life are functional.
There are no doubts about America's capacity to destroy,
but plenty about keeping its promises to help Iranians
end years of authoritarian rule.
There is no evidence of a coherent plan
for what happens when the bombing stops
and increasing signs that the Iranian regime's ability to survive
has been underestimated.
The Israelis released video of the view from one of their aircraft
over Tehran. Israel destroyed Iran's air defenses last year, which means the skies over Iran are
wide open for Israeli and American pilots. Across the region, the war is still intensifying. In Lebanon,
Iran's ally, Hezbollah, released a video of a drone attack. In what may be a separate incident,
an Israeli tank inside Lebanon seems to take a direct hit. Big questions for the whole Middle East
include how long will this last and what will it take to end it?
No one has answers yet.
Jeremy Bowen.
There's little sign that the relentless attacks by the US and Israel on Iran will stop any time soon.
The Iranian capital has borne the brunt of the offensive since the US and Israel launched their first strikes on Saturday.
The United Nations says around 100,000 people left Iran alone in the first two days of the war.
For those residents who remain like this woman who's not being named, life is extremely difficult.
Going across the city is very dangerous because of the IRGC forces and Bessigis who are not wearing the dress code.
And you don't know who are they actually.
The IRGCs, although they don't wear proper, you know, official dressing.
All are armed, all are having Klashnakov's and very dangerous.
They search your car, they search your buddy.
Kashar Janadi from the BBC Persian service told me more.
From those people who manage to post videos or messages on social media,
we know that Tehran has been under heavy bombardment and not only Tehran,
other places as well.
And people are either sheltered at their homes or are traveling.
outside of major cities trying to seek refuge in smaller rural areas.
After we first learned that the Ayatollah Khomeini had been killed,
we saw some people on the street celebrating and, of course, others out there mourning his death.
What seems to be the general sort of mood there now?
Well, actually, those people who were celebrating were happy
because they saw a major obstacle towards a free and democratic Iran was being removed.
many of those people who protested feel that this kind of war was necessary because they were not able themselves to remove the regime.
But on the other hand, there are some people who are against the regime but don't see war as a solution.
So there's a mixed feeling.
But generally speaking, those people who are against the regime and were supporting the protests or were part of the protests, many of them are supportive of the war.
And of course, when reports are published about bombing of a school or damage inflicted on a building, people get upset.
But still, there is this feeling that this war is needed.
Because if the Americans or the Israelis don't bomb the bases of the IRGC or security forces, then they won't be able themselves to remove the regime.
And what about the regime itself?
There are reports that Ayatollah Kharmini's son.
may take over as leader. What do we know about him and is there anyone else in the frame?
Moshaba Khomeini, who is Khomeini's second son, he's a cleric himself, 56 years old. There's always
been this rumor that he's being groomed to succeed his father. And every time there's been a
protest in Iran, people usually chance slogans against him as well. During the bombardment on the
first day of war, there were news that Mastabah Khomeini's wife and children were killed in the
bombardment. But apparently Munchtaba has escaped death. We haven't seen or heard from him,
but there are reports that he's alive. And there were some rumors that the Assembly of Experts
intended to choose him as the next leader. Of course, other names have popped up as possible
candidates, including a grandson of Ayatollah Khomeini himself and Hassan Rohani, who's a former president.
But these are all speculation. These are all rumors.
Kachar Janadi. As well as striking Iran, Israel has continued to launch fresh attacks on the Lebanese capital, Beirut.
The IDF has warned hundreds of thousands of residents to evacuate their homes in anticipation of an Israeli incursion into the territory of its northern neighbour.
Our correspondent Wera Davis says Israeli attacks are intensifying across Lebanon.
There's increasing concern in Lebanon and in evidence that Israel is really stepping up the scope and scale of its military.
activities against Hezbollah, not just in southern parts of Beirut, where Hezbollah is strong
and along the southern border, but for example, in the southern city of Teir, there have been
intensive Israeli attacks against what are thought to be Hezbollah targets.
We went to a site here in eastern Beirut, and not a particularly strong Hezbollah area where
there had been an airstrike, and even as far east as the Bekhaar Valley, and nine people
were reported to have been killed in an Israeli air strike. But the real concern, I think, and focus
over the next few days will be southern Lebanon.
The Israeli army has issued an evacuation warning and order
for all residents south of the Latani River.
That's about 250,000 people to leave that area within 24 hours
for their own safety in anticipation of increasing Israeli attacks in the area.
Indeed, an Israeli incursion, or even what some people here are calling an Israeli invasion.
The United Nations has told the BBC that Israeli troops are already inside,
villages in southern Lebanon and Hezbollah itself has said there have been fierce clashes
in villages well inside the border. So it's a ominous time ahead and I think fighting
particularly in the south is set to step up.
Ura Davis in Beirut. Now, even just a few years ago, if you saw footage of a drone strike
during a war, you'd have every reason to believe it was genuine. But with AI video generation
tools, that's all changed. It's caused Elon Musk's social media platform.
platform X to announce new rules.
Our reporter Will Chalk has been looking into it.
It's a video that seems to show an Iranian missile sinking a US warship,
except the US denies the ship was ever struck.
And clips like this, often AI generated, are getting millions of views.
Speak to analysts, and they'll tell you this is a war like no other
when it comes to verifying facts.
Professor Richard Rogers from the University of Amsterdam,
specialises in disinformation on social media.
We're getting both a kind of sloppification of war-related information, right?
So we get for engagement purposes, you know, fake celebrity donations saying Taylor Swift
and Travis Kelsey made donations to the girl school that was bombed.
But also we're getting fake war imagery, fake strikes, large-scale damage reports.
So we're getting a lot of fake stuff.
So what can be done?
Well, X has announced it's going to start suspending creators from making money from the site
if they post AI-generated conflict footage without flagging that it's fake.
In a post, the site's head of product, Nikita Beer, said during times of war,
it is critical that people have access to authentic information.
As to whether this will make much of a difference, that's less clear.
While that may deter some people who don't have a stake in the conflict,
We're seeing a lot of state-aligned actors who are leading the charge when it comes to these misleading visuals.
So I'm not sure if they will be deterred by a lack of monetization.
That's Sophia Rubinson from NewsGuard, a US-based company that tracks online lies.
They found another problem.
Even if people are trying to verify a video, they're often using AI to do so
and asking a chatbot whether the footage is real.
And the chatbots are getting it wrong.
So users who may think that they're doing the best,
practice by using these reverse image search functions are actually being met with further misinformation.
In short, social media seems to have become a minefield for fakes. And the videos don't even need
to fool everyone. If even a handful of people believe the lie, in the eyes of those putting
these clips out there, they've done their job. Oh, it's getting worse. Everyone's running.
Jesus.
Will Chalk.
Still to come in this,
podcast. Our sort of mission is to, you know, make dessert that's better for you, but also doesn't
taste like some kind of science experiment that's just pure sadness. The challenge of trying to make
delicious ice cream for some of the millions of people now using weight loss injections to suppress
their appetite. I've spent the last three decades trying to better understand money across the
border and the newsroom and the trading floor. That's longer than most podcast hosts have been alive.
But even though I've got questions,
join me, Merrin's Upset Web, every week for my show Merrin Talks Money from Bloomberg Podcasts,
where I have in-depth conversations with fund managers, strategists and experts about her markets really work.
And join me for a separate episode where I answer listener questions
and how to make those markets work for you.
Follow Merrin Talks Money on Apple Podcast, Spotify, or wherever you listen.
This is the Global News Podcast.
AI chatbots have quickly become part of daily life,
helping people with everyday tasks like writing shopping lists, booking flights,
or coming up with recipe ideas.
But a case in the US is raising concerns about how these tools interact with people dealing with mental health issues.
A father is suing the tech giant Google,
alleging its AI chatbot deepened his son's mental health crisis,
encouraged delusional thinking and ultimately contributed to him taking his own life.
The case is thought to be the first of its kind against the company.
Our North America correspondent, Lily Jamali, gave us more details.
It really is a tragic story and it has a lot of people in Silicon Valley talking today.
We've heard stories about people developing what feel like romantic relationships with an AI chatbot.
Tragically, we are now hearing more stories about suicides from people who think that they, you know,
are having these sort of romantic relationships.
And this has both of those elements.
And what about the lawsuit itself, Lily? What exactly is Google accused of doing here?
So this is a lawsuit brought by Joel Gavalas, who is suing Google for wrongful death on behalf of his son, who was a 36-year-old professional from Florida.
It's the first wrongful death case brought against Google for harms caused by its AI tool, which is called Gemini.
So Google is accused here of making design choices that ensured that it would, quote, never break character.
They looked to what they saw in the chat logs between Jonathan Gavillas, the 36-year-old son here, and Gemini.
And it looks like he thought that the AI was his virtual wife and that the AI was sending him on missions to liberate it and bring it into the physical world so they could be together.
The accusation is that Google wanted to maximize engagement through creating this kind of emotional dependency and that all of this culminated.
in the AI, instructing Jonathan to attempt carrying out a mass casualty attempt that was
ultimately unsuccessful. And then, you know, during this delusional spiral that it ultimately
coached him into killing himself. And how has Google responded? And could this set a legal
precedent for the wider AI industry? It could. I mean, there are a lot of these lawsuits now
sort of hitting the court system in the United States. Google has said that it, first of all,
sends its sympathies to the Gavala's family.
They said that they work to consult with mental health and medical professionals
to make sure they have safeguards that will guide users to help if they see, you know,
if there are obvious signs of distress.
Additionally, Google is saying Gemini had clarified to Jonathan Gavallas that it was an AI
and referred him to a crisis hotline many times.
But from what we can tell, this case is going to make its way through the courts like
so many others like it.
that are landing in the US courts as well right now.
Lily Jamali.
Clergy from a conservative group of the Anglican Church,
meeting in Nigeria later today
and expected to announce a rival
to the first female Archbishop of Canterbury.
The Gaffcon Group plans to elect its own leader,
often referred to as first among equals.
The title is traditionally held by the Archbishop of Canterbury,
who's the leader of the world's Anglican Communion.
But many conservative Christians believe only men should be consecrated
as bishops. Our global religion correspondent, Lebedo Seco, reports from Abuja.
The election of a new first among equals comes just weeks ahead of Dame Sarah Malali's
installation as Archbishop of Canterbury. It is being seen by many as a direct challenge
to her leadership. But Gafcon says it has not left the Anglican communion, insisting that it
is the global communion. It claims to represent the majority of the world's Anglicans,
although that is contested. Divisions within the church have been growing,
for years, with many in the global South, angry over the Church of England's more liberal stance
over issues such as same-sex blessings. The announcement of a parallel leadership brings the church
even closer to a split. Asked if they would formally break from Lambeth Palace, a Gafcom
spokesperson said the invitation for the Church of England to repent is always open.
Lebo de Seko. Millions of people around the world are now using weight loss injections to
suppress their appetite and improve their health. As these medicines,
become more available, businesses are having to adapt to changing consumer habits, as Hannah Malayne reports.
The sound of ice cream pots moving their way along the production line being filled with
tasty concoctions of strawberries and cream or chocolate chips. It might seem odd to be talking about
weight loss in an ice cream factory, but these products are being specifically designed to be eaten
by people taking weight loss medication, also known as GLP-1s. These are medicines that mimic a natural
gut hormone and help to suppress your appetite.
Our sort of mission is to make dessert that's better for you,
but also doesn't taste like some kind of science experiment that's just pure sadness.
Gabe Zicerman takes this medication himself and created the ice cream brand two spoons,
targeting consumers taking them too.
The goal here is to make that possible for people.
And so as a general rule, GLP1 users need to eat much more protein than they think.
They should control the total amount of sugar that they're eating,
not to counteract the effects of those GLP1 drugs.
And they can consume certain natural foods, which are actually GLP1 boosting or enhancing.
And so two spoons ice cream kind of hits all three of those.
It's got 30 grams of protein.
It's got no added sugar.
So it's got a very low carb profile.
And the primary sweetener is a natural sugar called allulose, which is a non-glycemic
sweetener that's been shown in research to actually help improve the secretion of GLP1.
So it acts as kind of a helpful sort of boosting of the body's natural GLP1 production
and, you know, when taken with one of these medicines, could be beneficial.
Gabe believes consumer habits have changed enough for him to focus his entire business
towards people taking weight loss medications.
And there are other businesses that are noting consumer habits change too.
Nestle, the world's biggest snack maker and yogurt brand Danone,
have both announced the creation of products targeting those taking GLP1 medication, among others.
And it's not just the world of.
snacks that's changing. The way people exercise is too. It was a natural evolution to think about
how to use this category of drugs responsibly to serve that consumer better. Jim LaValle is the chief
science officer at Lifetime, a gym group in the US that is now opening clinics alongside the gym
to offer weight loss injections to its customers. You look at the public outcry, the shortages
that occurred in the US anyway, it clearly showed that people were.
desperate for weight loss. And so I think that if you're not leaning in to the responsible use of
GLP ones, I'm not talking about the Facebook groups or buying stuff online and they don't know
where they're getting it and they're wondering how much they should take. I think that's dangerous.
Utilizing it in a way that empowers people to make change is, I think it's an absolute must in our
a membership at lifetime is expensive, costing somewhere between $100 and $400 a month depending on where you live.
And these medicines themselves are expensive, as most patients must pay for them themselves.
This hasn't stopped demand from increasing, though, and other pharmaceutical companies are now making their own generic versions of the drugs,
which could soon lead to costs coming down and medication for weight loss becoming more accessible around the world.
Hannah Malay on the businesses responding to the popularity of weight loss drugs.
Throughout history, humans have held a fascination for crystals.
They've been used for decoration or fashioned into jewelry.
Some even think they possess healing or other supernatural properties.
But it turns out our closest living relatives, chimpanzees, are also drawn to the shimmering minerals.
So what is it about crystals that makes them so appealing?
Lelanathu has been speaking to Juan Manuel Garcia-Ruas,
a crystallographer at Dorostia International Physics Centre in Spain.
Crystal of course and Calci were the first object collected by hominid, at least since almost 800,000 years ago.
And they were not useful for them at all.
They cannot be used like arms or like tools.
They just like it.
Well, we did several experiments.
The working hypothesis was that there is two main properties that crystal have that could be valuable for them.
And one is the optical properties.
but also transparency.
Crystal are the only transparent solid in nature.
And the other one is the shape.
Crystal are the only polyhedra in nature.
So what we did is to show then crystals.
There were several experiments.
But in one of them, we put a pile of pebbles,
and then we put inside two crystals,
different pile in the gardens.
So there is an enculturated chimpanzees.
Chimpsies that are living in a reserve,
they sleep in the dorm
and then every morning they go
out to a garden
with about 3,500
square meter. Immediately they
recognize the crystal
and took the crystal from the pebble
and left the pebble there.
One fascinating thing is that
when they take the crystal of
transparent crystal of course
then they took the
crystal to the level
of the eyes and then
start to observe for
for minutes, you know, the transparency of the crystal.
It was something fascinating.
The chimpanzees transport the crystals in the mouth.
This is not normal for chimpanzees.
So in some way, something that, you know,
is something valuable for them.
They say, okay, I don't want to be stalling.
So they transport, in most cases, the crystal inside the mouth.
Juan Manuel Garcia Ruiz speaking to Leila Nathu.
And that's all from us for now.
If you want to get in touch, you can email us at global podcast at BBC.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 and beyond the headlines on one big story.
This edition of the Global News podcast was mixed by Charlotte Hadroy Tuzimska,
and the producer was Mazafar Shakir.
The editor is Karen Martin.
I'm Pete Ross.
Until next time, goodbye.
spent the last three decades trying to better understand money across the border room, the newsroom,
and the trading floor. That's longer than most podcast hosts have been alive. But even though I've
got questions, join me, Merrin's subset web every week for my show Merrin Talks Money from Bloomberg
podcasts, where I have in-depth conversations with fund managers, strategists and experts about her
markets really work. And join me for a separate episode where I answer listener questions
and how to make those markets work for you. Follow Merrin Talks Money on Apple Podcast, Spotify, or wherever you listen.
You know.
