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At the moment’s agenda: Suicide bombing in Damascus; Spain’s Nato goal opt-out; Revolut CEO in line for windfall; and Tesla’s robotaxis
Good morning, and welcome again to FirstFT. The US has been drawn into one other Center East conflict, bombing three nuclear websites in Iran yesterday. Right here’s what occurred, and what to anticipate.
The state of affairs now: US B-2 stealth bombers led an assault on Fordow, Natanz and Isfahan utilizing what defence secretary Pete Hegseth known as “misdirection”. US President Donald Trump claimed the websites have been “fully and completely obliterated”, however the extent of the damage remains to be being assessed. A lot is determined by the whereabouts of Iran’s 408kg stockpile of uranium, enriched to ranges simply in need of weapons-grade. Israel and Iran traded extra air strikes this morning.
The worldwide fallout: Oil costs hit a five-month high over fears Tehran would retaliate by attacking vitality infrastructure within the area or closing the essential Strait of Hormuz. Gold costs rose throughout early buying and selling in Asia earlier than paring again good points, whereas the US greenback additionally rallied. Greater than 150 airways have suspended or diverted flights as a result of battle, with British Airways and Singapore Airways cancelling flights to Dubai yesterday.
What’s subsequent? US officers mentioned there have been no plans for additional assaults until Iran hits again, however Trump has raised the potential of “regime change”. He’ll chair a nationwide safety assembly at present. Tehran is weighing whether or not to retaliate or heed European nations’ and the UN’s calls to hunt a diplomatic answer. Iran’s overseas minister Abbas Araghchi is assembly Russian President Vladimir Putin, one in all Tehran’s closest allies, at present. Israel has signalled it should press on with its bombing raids in opposition to Iran.
Follow our live blog for the newest updates, and we have now extra evaluation on the battle:
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Gideon Rachman: Tehran’s grand technique has failed, however that’s no guarantee Israel and the US can succeed, writes our chief overseas affairs commentator.
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Trump’s gamble: The US strike may backfire on a president who had vowed not to attract America into new international conflicts.
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A deal is feasible: Iran wants to point out flexibility and the US should shift away from maximalist demands, writes Ellie Geranmayeh of the European Council on International Relations.
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The FT View: Trump’s step into the dark makes the world a extra harmful place, writes our editorial board.
Be part of our subscriber-only webinar on Wednesday with FT journalists and visitors and put your questions in regards to the battle to our panel. Register here. And right here’s what else I’m preserving tabs on at present:
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UK: Sir Keir Starmer will make investments £2bn over 4 years to cut energy prices for 1000’s of companies. Learn the prime minister’s op-ed within the FT as he unveils a long-awaited industrial strategy.
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Brussels: EU overseas ministers meet to debate Ukraine with sanctions on Russia as a result of expire, whereas the bloc holds a summit with Canada. European Central Financial institution chief Christine Lagarde addresses the European parliament.
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Macron in Norway: King Harald V and Queen Sonja welcome the French president and his spouse Brigitte in the beginning of a two-day state go to.
5 extra high tales
1. At the least 20 individuals have been killed in a suicide bombing at a church in Damascus yesterday night, the primary main safety incident in Syria’s capital for the reason that Assad regime was toppled final December. The Syrian authorities mentioned jihadi group Isis was responsible for the attack.
2. Spain has secured an opt-out from a Nato defence spending goal demanded by Trump, the nation’s prime minister mentioned. Pedro Sánchez introduced the deal forward of the army alliance’s summit this week, the place allies are anticipated to agree to spend 5 per cent of GDP on defence.
3. Unique: Revolut’s chief government is in line for a multibillion-dollar windfall if he greater than triples its present valuation to about $150bn. Folks acquainted with the matter say Nik Storonsky, who based the fintech in 2015, would see his stake improve considerably under a long-standing Elon Musk-style pay deal.
4. European nations face paying extra for medicines as a result of Trump’s plans to chop drug costs within the US, business specialists have warned. European nations are probably to withstand vital worth rises as a result of budgets are stretched and lots of contracts with firms are lengthy. This might additionally imply drugmakers find yourself not launching new medicines in these markets.
5. Tesla’s robotaxi service launched within the firm’s house metropolis of Austin yesterday with about 10 autos and a human security driver on board amid regulatory scrutiny of its self-driving expertise. CEO Elon Musk has touted the self-driving taxis as the future of his flagging electric-car maker.
Information in-depth
Mark Zuckerberg is betting greater than $14bn {that a} well-connected 28-year-old is the catalyst his firm must meet up with rivals racing to develop and commercialise synthetic intelligence. The Meta boss struck a deal just lately to purchase 49 per cent of Scale AI — however the real prize was the data labelling business’s head, Alexandr Wang.
We’re additionally studying . . .
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Return to workplace: When top executives work remotely, it turns into tougher to pull everybody else to their desks, writes Pilita Clark.
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Serial CEOs: Greater strain and extra scrutiny imply leaders are sometimes taking a “one and done” approach to the highest company job, writes Anjli Raval.
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Fred Smith: The person who founded FedEx in 1973, and stepped down as chief government solely three years in the past, died on Saturday. He was 80.
Chart of the day
Germany and Italy are going through calls to move their gold out of New York following Trump’s repeated assaults on the Federal Reserve and rising geopolitical turbulence.

Take a break from the information
Is F1 the final hope for originality in summer season blockbusters? Hollywood is counting on sequels and reboots greater than ever, writes FT movie critic Danny Leigh. If Apple’s motor racing film fails, it might be the end of the road for new ideas.
