Sunday, 22 March 2026

Phoning It In

Boris Johnson could not remember his pin number, and no one in MI5, MI6, GCHQ or Special Branch could crack it.

Now Morgan McSweeney has had his phone nicked.

They take us for fools. And as ever, if you let someone take you for a fool, then you are one.

Defending Development, Developing Defence

Aid is fundamental to conflict prevention and resolution, and thus to defence. That said, we need to specify in the Statute Law that the United Kingdom's aid to any given country be reduced by the exact cost of any space programme, or of any nuclear weapons programme, or of any nuclear submarine programme, or of any foreign aid budget of that country's own, but with the money thus saved remaining within the Overseas Aid budget, and with the 0.7 per cent target resolutely intact.

At the same time, an extra £70 billion should be given to each of the Royal Navy, the British Army, and the Royal Air Force, instead of Trident. This would not entail depriving anything else of funding. As a sovereign state with its own free-floating, fiat currency, the United Kingdom has as much of that currency as it chooses to issue to itself, with the fiscal and monetary means to control inflation, means that therefore need to be under democratic political control in both cases.

Britain is not at war with Iran because Iran or its proxy had attacked RAF Akrotiri, and that only to the barest possible extent. Rather, that attack was launched because Britain was already at war with Iran. The only function of the British Sovereign Base Area on Cyprus is to drag us into wars in the Middle East, since otherwise that territory "might" be bombed. Its only permanent residents are people who could not move to the new Republic of Cyprus because we refused to compensate them properly. They are Cypriot rather than British citizens. Everyone knows what would be the result of a referendum among them, so let it be held and give us the opportunity to cut our losses. That would make British citizens safer, since while they were unarmed and delivering humanitarian aid, the IDF bombed the British veterans James Kirby, James Henderson and John Chapman three times to make sure that they were dead, using British-made Elbit Hermes 450 drones, and using intelligence from the over 600 nightly reconnaissance missions flown for the Israelis, yet free of charge to them, from RAF Akrotiri.

There is no evidence that Iran has tried to bomb Diego Garcia, and not even any suggestion that it had succeeded, which would be the basis for any claim that Iranian ballistic missiles could hit London. But even if that were true, then it would be an argument for Chagossian self-determination and for Britain to avoid conflict with Iran. As for the execution of Saleh Mohammadi, I am always opposed to capital punishment, and I do not doubt that he and his companions were tortured and were denied a fair trial. They do seem to have attacked the Police with knives and swords, and how much mercy would our foghorns advocate for a 19-year-old British sports star who had done that? How much could anyone who had done that expect in any of the Gulf monarchies that, as the social media posts of the British commanders in them proudly proclaimed, we were at war to defend?

The strongest support for war always comes from the liberal bourgeoisie. That is the class least likely to join the Armed Forces voluntarily, or to see combat even in periods of conscription. Operationally, that is of course just as well. But by closing the Strait of Hormuz, this war is imperilling the lifestyle of that class in Europe, North America, East Asia, Australia and New Zealand. De facto American withdrawal means that NATO has already effectively ceased to exist. Donald Trump is cutting out the spine of political consent for anything remotely like it, anywhere in the world. The free world is defining itself as the world free of the United States. The only British party with a  member on Trump's Board of Peace is the one in government, and which is seeking to name new towns after politicians, as ought not to happen in a monarchy, which also ought not to have politicians on its banknotes. If that governing party wanted to name a town after Tony Blair, then it should call it Trumpton. Think on.

No Order As To Costs

Consider under what circumstances it could have become impossible overnight to convince an employee of the British State, sitting alone but in open court, that the role of Gerry Adams in the IRA had been merely more likely than not. When it all comes out about Adams, probably after his death, then Stakeknife will look like Fishwife.

People who think that Britain took up the slave trade purely to end it will always eventually argue that slavery was good for the slaves, or just correct in itself. To Holocaust deniers, the only thing wrong with the Holocaust was that it never happened. And defenders of a figure such as this invariably regret that he was not exactly as his accusers alleged.

Saturday, 21 March 2026

The Unanimous Conclusion

Sondos Asem writes:

Karim Khan, the chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, has been cleared of all wrongdoing by a panel of judges appointed to review the findings of a United Nations investigation into sexual misconduct allegations against him, Middle East Eye can exclusively reveal.

The highly confidential report by the panel of three judges was submitted to the ICC’s executive oversight body, the Bureau of the Assembly of States Parties (ASP), on 9 March. It will not be made publicly available, and has not been seen by the majority of the court’s 125 member states.

Since December, the judges, who were appointed by the ASP, have been examining an external fact-finding report conducted by the UN Office of Internal Oversight Services (OIOS) into the allegations against Khan, which have unfolded in parallel with his office's efforts to pursue a war crimes investigation against Israeli officials over the war in Gaza.

The role of the panel has been to provide independent legal advice to the bureau, based on the facts presented in the OIOS report, on whether Khan, who has strenuously denied all allegations, has committed serious misconduct, less serious misconduct, or no misconduct at all.

The unanimous conclusion of the judges is that the findings of the report “do not establish any misconduct or breach of duty,” according to two diplomatic sources who read the report and two other diplomatic sources briefed about it.

“The Panel is unanimously of the opinion that the factual findings by OIOS do not establish misconduct or breach of duty under the relevant framework,” the panel’s report concluded, according to the sources.

The panel’s conclusions are a significant development in the sexual misconduct investigation, which has left the court in an unprecedented state of limbo since Khan took voluntary leave last year amid uncertainty surrounding his future and leaks to the media about the allegations that he faced.

The bureau met on Monday to discuss its response to the judicial report but has yet to reach consensus on the issue. According to the ICC’s own rules, if the bureau agrees that no misconduct has been committed, the investigation should be closed.

The OIOS investigation was commissioned by the presidency of the ASP in November 2024 following media reports that a member of Khan’s office had accused him of sexual assault, and after the complainant had refused to cooperate with the ICC’s own investigative body.

Khan has been on leave since last May pending the outcome of the probe. His deputy prosecutors have been in charge of his office in his absence.

For three months, the panel of judges examined the 150-page OIOS report along with over 5,000 pages of underlying evidence. They were initially given 30 days to deliver their report. But they have been granted multiple extensions by the bureau due to the large volume of evidence.

The judges have followed the standard of “beyond reasonable doubt”, the highest standard of proof in criminal law.

The bureau has 30 days from the delivery of the panel report to indicate its preliminary assessment of the alleged misconduct. Then Khan has 30 days to respond. Then the bureau has another 30 days to make a final decision.

Karim Khan declined to comment. MEE has contacted the ASP for comment. 

Sanctions and threats

The allegations of misconduct against Khan have unfolded against the backdrop of the prosecutor’s efforts to pursue an investigation against Israeli officials over alleged war crimes committed by Israeli forces in Gaza and other occupied Palestinian territories.

Khan sought arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and then defence minister Yoav Gallant in May 2024, and the court has faced a ferocious campaign by Israel and its allies, primarily the US, attempting to pressure him to drop the investigation.

Since February 2025, US President Donald Trump’s administration has imposed financial and visa sanctions on Khan, his two deputy prosecutors, six judges, the UN’s special rapporteur on Palestine, and three Palestinian NGOs in connection with the Israel-Palestine investigation.

The US has also threatened sanctions against the court itself, which ICC officials consider a “doomsday scenario”.

ICC judges are currently examining an Israeli challenge to its jurisdiction over the Palestine situation, and a separate Israeli complaint, filed on 17 November, which seeks to disqualify the prosecutor over alleged lack of impartiality.

MEE revealed last summer that on 23 April 2024, as Khan was preparing to apply for warrants for Netanyahu and Gallant, the then British foreign secretary David Cameron threatened in a phone call with the prosecutor that the UK would defund and withdraw from the ICC if the court issued the warrants.

The UK’s foreign office in January confirmed a call between Cameron and Khan took place but it has declined to comment further.

In his first comment on the matter, Khan in December filed a submission to the ICC’s appeal chamber in response to an Israeli request for him to be removed from the investigation and for the warrants to be dropped, corroborating MEE’s previous reporting, which uncovered many details of efforts to undermine Khan, including Cameron’s explosive phone call.

His statement set out in detail the chronology of events that led his office to apply for warrants against the two Israelis, as well as Hamas leaders, on 20 May 2024, after months of what he described as “a meticulous process” by his office.

The allegations of sexual misconduct were first revealed to Khan in person by members of his team on 2 May 2024, the same day he was planning to announce the Netanyahu and Gallant arrest warrants, according to the timeline of events outlined in the document.

Israel alleges that Khan rushed the warrants after he was made aware of sexual misconduct allegations against him. But Khan’s statement rejected Israel’s case, describing it as being based on “a haze of ends-oriented conjecture and misleading or false assertions”, and “a miasma of speculative reporting”.

What Hope?

Yesterday, the convicted paedophile Liron Woodcock-Velleman was given eight months, suspended for 15 months. His past service” as a councillor, and the ruination of his promising” political career, were accepted in mitigation. No wonder he and his parents were celebrating. Like you, I have never met a paedophile. I mean, we may have done, in the way that we may have met a Muggletonian. But we are wholly unaware of having done so, you and I both. I apologise to any Muggletonian reading this. Yet this country’s cultural and political elite cannot get out of bed, if that, without tripping over one or more nonces. And every single time, our betters had had no idea. Or so we are invariably expected to believe. Last May, the supposedly hard-as-nails Shabana Mahmood tried to give nonces “chemical castration” instead of prison, where that proposal was received, not only by the inmates, as well as one might have expected. As an old lag, the word “nonce” is part of my culture. In that culture’s citadels, nonces are given the suspended sentences that we were not, or they are given the cushiest jobs inside, they are housed in the newest or the most recently refurbished wings, they have gym when ours has been cancelled, and so on. Why?

At committee stage of what has become the Online Safety Act, Woodcock-Velleman gave the evidence of Hope Not Hate. When Labour returned to office in 2024, then Anna Turley was both a Director and a Trustee of Hope Not Hate. As an ultimately successful parliamentary candidate in 2015, the then Ruth Smeeth described herself as the Deputy Director of Hope Not Hate. The American Embassy classified her as strictly protect”. As Baroness Anderson of Stoke-on-Trent, she was recently made a Parliamentary Secretary in the Cabinet Office while remaining a Whip. Not bad for having lost her Commons seat to Jonathan Gullis. Even with the departure of Josh Simons, there are now four Parliamentary Secretaries under Darren Jones, and three Ministers of State. That amounts to a Prime Ministers Department with, including Keir Starmer, nine Ministers, the most of any Department. They must do something. What is it?

Woodcock-Velleman’s offences were strikingly similar to those of another Labour councillor in London, Sam Gould, who offended while on the staff Wes Streeting. Streeting would have become Leader when, as expected in 2019, the Conservative majority had been much reduced in 2024 but Boris Johnson had remained Prime Minister. Yes, that was not much more than six years ago. But in 2015, Streeting had chaired the Leadership campaign of Jess Phillips. On Tuesday 2 September last year, Phillips told the House of Commons that, “South Yorkshire police should never have been left to investigate themselves in this matter, and moving those investigations to the NCA is absolutely the right thing to do. I would be lying if I said that over the years I had not met girls who talked to me about how police were part of not just the cover-up but the perpetration.” Read again those words of the Minister who refused a statutory inquiry, an inquiry that had been, and still is, demanded by the Muslim candidate whom she had beaten by only 693 votes at Birmingham Yardley, which he intends to contest again, the wonderful investigative journalist Jody McIntyre. Then read the Epstein Files and worry about inferior cultures with no respect for women and with endemic predation on young girls.

Phillips had been supported for Leader by Hilary Armstrong and by Armstrong’s erstwhile staffer, Peter Kyle. Both Joe Docherty and Matthew Doyle were introduced to the House of Lords by Armstrong, whose Whips’ Office in the Commons had included all three of Phil Woolas, Ivor Caplin and Dan Norris. All three were made Ministers soon after the vote for the Iraq War. Norris does not turn up to Parliament, but he has one of the best voting records, because despite his own suspension from the Labour whip, his proxy vote is cast every single time by the Labour Whips; there was a blip on 10 March, but normal service was restored from the next day. Armstrong was the political patroness, both of Turley, and of Caplin’s close friend, closest ally, former lover, and constituency successor, Kyle. Armstrong remains an active Labour member of the Lords, giving it as her institutional affiliation when she endorsed a mercifully ignored book that claimed that the accused of the Cleveland child abuse scandal had been guilty all along. Every accusation is a confession.

Precedent Against The President


The leaders of the West are not doing their duty. It may already be too late, but everyone with an ounce of clout or influence must now use it to end the US-Israel attack on Iran. And let us not forget that those two countries started this war. They attacked, an action which all through history has put the attacker in the wrong.

If the war is not soon stopped, then an economic and political crisis worse than anything since 1945 may well be triggered. It will be accompanied by yet another mass movement of countless refugees into Western Europe. And for what?

Will we never grow out of the Utopian fantasy that we can go stomping round the world, telling other countries what to do? It is as if we have been hypnotised. All someone needs to do is to talk of Winston Churchill or of ‘appeasement’, and grown men and women lose their minds and start howling for war. Some seem to long for it.

In the early moments of Donald Trump’s current spasm, the leaders of Reform UK and the Tory Party instantly piled in to endorse the Trump-Netanyahu assault. They had time to think before they spoke. But they couldn’t be bothered. Like so many modern ‘conservatives’ and ‘patriots’, they have fallen in love with foreign war, quite unaware that war is the enemy of conservatism and the ally of the Left. [News to the Left. Did the old International Socialists support the Vietnam War when he was in them?]

For instance, has it still not sunk in that the vast waves of migration from Africa and the Middle East are the direct results of the wars we kept starting or fuelling, in Iraq, Libya, Afghanistan and Syria? Even now, there are people amid the ruins of their former homes, in their demolished cities, all over Iran, preparing for the long trudge westwards that ends with them struggling aboard a rubber dinghy on the French coast, headed for Kent or Sussex.

You may meet them, sooner than you think, in an English suburb. If you do, it will be a poorer, bleaker place than it is now. The rising price of oil and gas is hugely dangerous to our tottering economy, threatening the same deadly combination of inflation and unemployment that hit us after the 1973 Arab-Israeli war, only much worse, for we are so much weaker and so much more indebted now./ Those politicians who began by backing this attack, and urging closer British involvement in it, must have known that the war was an act of aggression.

Nobody has ever come up with any serious evidence that Iran was preparing its own attack. On the contrary. Informed Americans admit that there was no urgent threat. One key Trump aide, Joseph Kent, last week resigned from his job as the director of the President’s National Counterterrorism Centre. He said he had done so because Iran was not an imminent threat to the United States and that the US ‘entered the war amid pressure from Israel and its powerful American lobby’.

The President, a small man, always tries to belittle his critics. And he did so again, saying he ‘always thought [Kent] was weak on security, very weak on security’. But it will be hard for him to brush aside this criticism. Mr Kent is more Trumpist than Mr Trump. He is an ultra-loyalist who has defended some of the President’s most questionable actions. But he still holds to what used to be Mr Trump’s position – of opposition to stupid foreign wars. He has an impressive record of military service, and of sacrifice for his country. His wife was killed while serving with the US Navy in Iraq. Let them try to say his word does not count.

And if Mr Kent, all alone, can now stand up to the most powerful man on the planet and say that he is wrong, so can the leaders of what is left of the civilised world. It may not work, though it may. Mr Trump has a long record of chickening out if his blustering aggressions turn bad on him. For certain, there is no point in doing nothing, or muttering among ourselves. It is positive folly to flatter Mr Trump with obedience and praise. The attack on Iran is an outrage against common sense as well as a breach of all civilised rules of behaviour.

It won’t do to justify it by saying what a vile regime Iran has. This is a pretext. Lots of countries have vile regimes. Many of them are our allies. Mr Trump is not attacking Iran because he can’t stand despots or leaders who kill their own people. He’s fine with Egypt, which has a military junta that massacres pro-democracy demonstrators on its streets. He gets on well with Saudi Arabia, which actually cut up one of its dissidents with bone saws. He’s cool with Nato Turkey, which is rapidly turning into a rather nasty dictatorship.

There is certainly a good precedent from history, which gives Britain a special right to tell Mr Trump to grow up and behave. In the midst of the Suez crisis in 1956, when Sir Anthony Eden was equally madly invading Egypt, the phone in his office in Downing Street began to ring insistently. Eden was elsewhere, so a civil servant, William Clark, lifted the receiver, only to hear the infuriated tones of President Dwight D. Eisenhower yelling across the Atlantic ‘Anthony, you must have gone out of your mind!’ The President was enraged. ‘It was some time before I was able to persuade him that I was not Anthony,’ Clark recalled.

There is little doubt that Ike got through to Eden later. The US threatened us with economic ruin if we did not call off the invasion. In the meantime, the US Navy were sent to harass and obstruct British ships in the Mediterranean, fouling our radar and sonar and flying their aircraft aggressively low over our fleet. The US Navy’s then chief, Admiral Arleigh Burke, explicitly discussed opening fire on the Royal Navy with Secretary of State John Foster Dulles. So Mr Trump can keep his sentimental appeals to a non-existent soppy relationship between London and Washington. And we can feel free to tell him to stop before he wrecks the world.

The Impossible To Justify The Indefensible

Paul Knaggs writes:

Are we being asked, once again, to believe in the impossible to justify the indefensible? In 2003, it was the infamous “45-minute” claim, a dossier-driven fiction that dragged Britain into the graveyard of Iraq. Today, as the smoke clears over the Indian Ocean, a new number is being etched into the public consciousness: 4,000 kilometres.

On Friday, the world was told that Iran launched two ballistic missiles at the joint UK-US base on Diego Garcia. This claim does not merely signal an escalation; it shatters the known laws of Iranian physics. For years, Tehran has maintained a 2,000-kilometre ceiling on its missile programme. Suddenly, at the precise moment Prime Minister Keir Starmer authorises the use of British soil for ‘Operation Epic Fury’, the enemy develops a reach that is exactly, conveniently, double its previous limit.

In 2003, a single number, forty-five minutes, was used to take Britain to war on a lie. The man who challenged it was found dead on a hillside nine days after he was named. This week, a new number has arrived: 4,000 kilometres. The mechanism is identical. Only the theatre has changed.

From 45 Minutes to 4,000 Kilometres: How the Same War Machine Keeps Selling Lies

There is a template. It was not invented in Washington in 2003, though it was refined there to a lethal precision. It does not require fabrication in the crude sense of the word. It requires only three things: a number, a conveyor belt of unnamed officials to deliver it, and a press corps too timid, too embedded, or too captured to ask whether the number has been verified by anyone who has put their name to the claim.

The number in 2003 was forty-five minutes. Saddam Hussein, Britain’s public was told, could deploy weapons of mass destruction against British forces within forty-five minutes of an order. The claim was in a government dossier. It made headlines. It silenced doubters. It helped take this country into the worst foreign policy catastrophe since Suez, at the cost of hundreds of thousands of lives. And the man who knew the claim was, at minimum, profoundly misleading was found dead on Harrowdown Hill on 17 July 2003, nine days after he was named, having appeared before the Foreign Affairs Select Committee two days prior.

The number in 2026 is 4,000 kilometres. We are told that Iran fired two intermediate-range ballistic missiles toward Diego Garcia. We are told neither struck the island. We are told one failed in flight, that a US warship fired an interceptor at the other, and that it remains unconfirmed whether that interceptor made contact. We are told all of this by unnamed American officials whose claims were first published in the Wall Street Journal. There has been no on-the-record Pentagon statement. There has been no acknowledgement from Tehran. There is, however, a geopolitical gift of almost indecent precision.

The template has been activated. The question is whether, this time, we are capable of noticing.

MANUFACTURING CONSENT: HOW THE MACHINE WORKS

In 1988, Edward Herman and Noam Chomsky published a study of how democratic societies manage public opinion without resort to overt coercion. They called it Manufacturing Consent. Their central argument was not that governments forge documents or invent events wholesale. It was subtler and, for that reason, more disturbing: that the flow of information through a media ecosystem structurally dependent on official sources will, without conscious conspiracy, produce a propaganda function indistinguishable from state direction.

The third of their five filters was sourcing. Governments, military establishments, and large corporations are what Herman and Chomsky called ‘primary definers.’ They produce information in volume, on schedule, with the imprimatur of authority. A defence reporter on deadline does not have time to independently verify a missile’s range. He has time to call a ministry press officer, receive a briefing from unnamed officials, and file. The claim arrives in print dressed in the authority of its origin, never stripped of that authority by the qualifier it deserves: unverified, unattributable, and serving an identifiable political purpose.

When we ask how the forty-five minute claim survived so long without mainstream challenge, this is the answer. When we ask how the 4,000-kilometre figure passed through Friday’s news cycle essentially unexamined, this is the answer. The machine does not require malice. It requires only the path of least institutional resistance.

The forty-five minutes did not need to be a lie in the strict sense. It needed only to be unverified, amplified, and delivered at the moment a government required the public’s consent for something the public had not been asked about. Sound familiar?

DAVID KELLY AND THE PRICE OF DISSENT 

To understand why the 4,000-kilometre claim matters beyond its technical merits, you must understand what happened to the last British expert who applied professional scrutiny to a government’s convenient numbers.

David Kelly was not a dissident. He was not a radical. He was a civil servant, a biological warfare expert of international reputation, a former UN weapons inspector who had led ten missions into Iraq between 1991 and 1998. He had proofreaded sections of the September 2002 dossier and he was, in the words of those who knew his work, one of the few people in Whitehall actually qualified to assess what it claimed. He believed Iraq retained some biological weapons capability. He was not opposed to the war in principle. What he was opposed to was the specific claim that Saddam Hussein could deploy chemical and biological weapons within forty-five minutes of an order.

Kelly told the BBC’s Andrew Gilligan at the Charing Cross Hotel on 22 May 2003 that the forty-five minute claim had been, in his words, ‘a mistake to put in.’ He described it as single-sourced, uncorroborated, and transformed in the week before publication to make the dossier, in Gilligan’s notes, ‘sexier.’ The intelligence, as later established, related to battlefield delivery systems within Iraq, not ballistic weapons capable of reaching the West. The claim had been dressed up to suggest something it did not mean, at the moment a government needed the public to feel personally threatened.

When Gilligan’s report aired, the government did not correct the record. It went to war with the BBC. Kelly was named. He appeared before the Foreign Affairs Select Committee on 15 July, questioned aggressively about his own credibility. Two days later he was found on Harrowdown Hill. His wrist had been cut. A packet of painkillers was near the body with one of thirty tablets remaining. Lord Hutton was appointed to inquire into the circumstances, delivered a report that cleared the government entirely, and was condemned by critics across the political spectrum as one of the more thorough institutional whitewashes in modern British history. The BBC’s chairman resigned. Its director-general was fired. Alastair Campbell was exonerated.

Several medical doctors wrote to The Guardian raising doubts about whether the injuries were consistent with the official verdict. Norman Baker, the Liberal Democrat MP, spent years investigating the case and published his findings in a book whose title, The Strange Death of David Kelly, says more than its pages were able to prove. No further inquest was ever ordered. The case was officially closed.

This article makes no allegation about how David Kelly died. What it does observe is the effect of how he died. In the twenty-three years since Harrowdown Hill, no British government weapons expert has publicly contradicted a ministerial narrative about an adversary’s military capabilities. The silencing that requires no directive is the most effective silencing of all.

You do not need to threaten every scientist in Whitehall. You need only to make an example of one. The lesson of David Kelly was not lost on those who came after him. It was, perhaps, the point.

CYPRUS: THE DRESS REHEARSAL

The Diego Garcia narrative did not arrive without a preceding act. On the night of 1-2 March, a drone struck the runway at RAF Akrotiri, Britain’s sovereign base on the southern tip of Cyprus. Cypriot President Nikos Christodoulides initially identified it as Iranian. The British Ministry of Defence confirmed an attack. The story ran as Iranian aggression against a British base. The political consequence was immediate: Keir Starmer announced that the United States could use British bases for strikes against Iranian missile sites.

Within days, quietly, the MoD issued a correction. The drone had not been launched from Iran at all. It had been fired, they believed, by a pro-Iranian militia in Lebanon or western Iraq. The investigation, they added with careful imprecision, had been unable to conclusively establish the origin. No party ever claimed responsibility. The launch point was never confirmed. The event had done its political work before the correction arrived.

There was a further detail that received rather less attention than it warranted. The drone struck Akrotiri within one hour of Starmer’s announcement allowing US base access. Yvette Cooper, pressed on the coincidence of timing, offered an explanation that should have provoked more forensic scrutiny than it received: drones, she observed, are often launched a long time before they hit their targets. Quite so. But if the drone was already in flight before London had publicly committed to the conflict, someone had anticipated the announcement and launched against a British base before Britain had officially taken sides. That is either a remarkable coincidence or evidence of foreknowledge that demands a proper accounting.

Instead, it was absorbed into the general narrative of Iranian aggression and forgotten by the following week’s news cycle. This is the Cyprus template: an attack attributed to Iran, used to justify British escalation, subsequently complicated by evidence that the attribution was wrong, by which point the political decision it enabled could not be reversed.

THE OVERNIGHT MIRACLE OF THE DOUBLED RANGE 

Against this background, examine the Diego Garcia claim with the rigour it has not so far received. Iran’s foreign minister Abbas Araghchi stated publicly last month that Tehran maintains a self-imposed ceiling of 2,000 kilometres on its ballistic missile programme. That ceiling, formalised in 2015, was a deliberate policy choice: precision and accuracy were prioritised over range, partly as a signal to European capitals that they were not in Tehran’s sights.

On Friday night, that ceiling was not merely exceeded. It was exactly doubled, in combat conditions, under the most intensive aerial bombardment in the country’s history, with an estimated 7,000 targets struck in the preceding weeks and Iranian missile production infrastructure severely degraded. No public test programme preceded this debut. No satellite imagery has confirmed the launch point. No on-the-record official has attached their name to the assessment. The source is unnamed US officials, transmitted through a single American newspaper.

The physics are not, in principle, impossible. France, Germany, and the United Kingdom told the UN Security Council in 2019 that a Khorramshahr variant with a lighter nose cone could theoretically reach approximately 3,000 kilometres. Iran Watch, the Wisconsin Project’s monitoring body, has estimated a theoretical ceiling of up to 4,000 kilometres if warhead mass were significantly reduced. Iran’s Khorramshahr-4, known as the Kheibar, carries a warhead of 1,500 to 1,800 kilograms, the heaviest in Tehran’s known inventory. Strip that warhead to a fraction of its weight and the range expands. These are real variables. They are not to be dismissed.

What is to be examined, with professional scepticism rather than credulity, is the gap between a theoretical maximum under laboratory conditions and a successful operational deployment at that maximum, against a specific small island in the middle of the Indian Ocean, in the middle of a war.

WHAT THE GUNNER KNOWS 

Those of us who served in the Royal Artillery understand that range is only the first problem. I spent time in the 50 Missile Regiment RA, Britain’s sole nuclear-capable missile regiment during the Cold War, handling the MGM-52 Lance system. The education in ballistics that service provides is not abstract. It is numerical and unforgiving.

Error in long-range ballistics is measured in milliradians. One mil, roughly 0.057 degrees of deviation, sounds negligible. At 4,000 kilometres it places your warhead four kilometres from the intended target. A single degree of deviation means a miss of nearly seventy kilometres. To hit a specific military installation at that distance requires real-time satellite guidance for mid-course correction, Coriolis compensation, atmospheric density modelling, and a terminal phase accurate enough to matter against a target of any military significance.

Iran’s Khorramshahr-4 incorporates a maneuverable reentry vehicle with small thruster corrections in its terminal phase, and its mid-course navigation uses inertial guidance with possible satellite augmentation. These are genuine advances on older systems, and they deserve to be acknowledged honestly. Guidance technology has improved enormously since my service. I would not pretend otherwise.

But: augmented by whose satellite? The United States operates GPS. Russia operates GLONASS. China operates BeiDou. Iran operates none of them. Without a sovereign global positioning constellation, mid-course correction at 4,000 kilometres is severely constrained. A missile fired at Diego Garcia without that constellation is not a precision instrument. It is a statement of intent aimed at a very large ocean in the hope that the island is somewhere beneath it. Both missiles missed. One failed in flight. This is either the catastrophic combat debut of a weapon system Iran waited until now to reveal, or it is precisely what physics would predict from a system operating at the very outer boundary of its performance envelope.

The laws of physics do not adjust for political convenience. I learned that early. It is a lesson that appears not to have reached the foreign desks of those reporting this story.

When the trajectory does not hold up to trigonometry, the only thing being targeted is the truth. But in modern information warfare, that is often sufficient.

CUI BONO: THE ARCHITECTURE OF A NARRATIVE

Set the technical questions aside and apply the most basic principle of investigative analysis. Examine what the claim does before you examine whether it is true.

Keir Starmer benefits directly. A prime minister who authorised the use of British sovereign territory for what critics, including members of his own backbenches, have argued is an illegal war of choice was facing mounting parliamentary pressure and calls for a Commons vote from the Liberal Democrats and the Greens. An Iranian strike on Diego Garcia, however unsuccessful, transforms Britain from a secondary participant enabling American aggression into a direct victim exercising the inherent right of self-defence. The political manoeuvre is elementary. It has worked before. It is working again.

Donald Trump benefits strategically. He has spent three weeks attempting and failing to bring NATO into a war his allies have refused to legitimise. Germany’s Boris Pistorius said it without diplomatic packaging: this is not our war. The EU’s Kaja Kallas told reporters that nobody is ready to put their people in harm’s way in the Strait of Hormuz, and that European governments had not been consulted before the war began and did not understand its objectives. France, Japan, Australia, South Korea: all declined. The coalition Trump needed to construct before the war, and did not, has proven impossible to assemble after it.

What might change that European calculation? Precisely what the 4,000-kilometre claim provides. The Washington Examiner, not a publication given to subversive interpretation, noted without apparent irony that the new range puts nearly all of Europe within Iran’s missile envelope, and could change NATO countries’ calculus on whether to combat Iran. Athens. Rome. Paris. London. These cities enter the theoretical targeting radius not because of a verified Iranian technological breakthrough, but because of an unverified claim by unnamed officials passed through a single newspaper on the same day Starmer expanded British military commitment. The range claim is not primarily a military assessment. It is a political instrument aimed at a European audience that has so far proved resistant to pressure.

Herman and Chomsky called this the manufacture of an existential threat. The fifth of their five filters was anti-communism, later updated by analysts to encompass the fear of a designated enemy. The enemy does not need to be capable of what it is claimed to be capable of. It needs only to appear so, long enough for the political decision to be made. By the time the evidence is interrogated, the decision is irreversible.

THE COST HIDDEN BEHIND THE HEADLINE

While the commentariat debates the theoretical flight path of two missiles that missed an island, the actual cost of this conflict falls, as it always does, on those with least power to resist it. Brent crude has traded above one hundred dollars a barrel since the Strait of Hormuz was effectively closed in early March. Iranian attacks on Qatar’s LNG infrastructure have disrupted nearly a fifth of production at the world’s largest liquefied natural gas facility: the same supply chain Europe scrambled to secure after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The working people of Britain are paying for Operation Epic Fury at the petrol pump and on their heating bills, while a prime minister who won an election on a mandate for economic stability delivers neither stability nor an honest accounting of what he has committed this country to.

More than 3,000 Iranians are reported dead, a significant proportion civilians. Thirteen American service personnel have been killed. The Pentagon seeks two hundred billion dollars in additional funding. Trump is simultaneously declaring that the war is nearly won and demanding that Europe send warships. These are the realities against which the question of whether an unnamed official’s claim about an unverified missile’s range is literally true might appear academic. It is not academic. It is the mechanism by which these realities are extended, legitimised, and placed beyond political challenge.

THE OBLIGATION WE OWE THE DEAD

David Kelly is buried in the churchyard of St Mary the Virgin in Longworth, Oxfordshire. He was fifty-nine years old when he died. He had spent his professional life trying to establish what was and was not true about the weapons programmes of authoritarian states. He was, by every account, meticulous, cautious, and committed to the difference between evidence and assertion. He was destroyed, officially or otherwise, for that commitment.

The obligation his fate places on those of us still doing this work is not to allege what cannot be proved. It is to ask what he asked. It is to apply professional expertise to official claims made in the service of military escalation. It is to notice when a government needs a threat to exist and a new number appears to supply it. It is to say, clearly and on the record, that the burden of proof for claims used to justify war falls on those making the claims, not on those questioning them.

This article does not assert that the Diego Garcia strike was fabricated. The event may have occurred. Iran may have fired two missiles toward the Indian Ocean. The Khorramshahr series may, under specific and so far unverified conditions, reach further than Tehran has publicly acknowledged. The Cyprus drone was real enough; it struck a British base and caused damage. Real events can still serve manufactured narratives. That is, in fact, how the template most effectively operates.

What this article asserts is that none of the claims currently in circulation have been verified by anyone prepared to put their name to the verification; that the timing of each escalation in the British involvement has been preceded by a convenient attack on a British asset; that the range claim serves an identifiable political purpose of the first order; and that the last time a British expert applied rigorous professional scrutiny to the government’s convenient numbers, the institutional weight of the state was brought to bear on him in a manner that ended his career, his freedom, and, by the official account, his life.

The Chilcot Inquiry, published thirteen years after the invasion of Iraq, concluded that the intelligence had been flawed and the case for war had been presented with a certainty that was not justified. Thirteen years. By then, the country had been remade, the casualties were a settled fact, and the men who made the decisions had received their peerages, their directorships, and in one case a role as Middle East peace envoy of sufficient irony to constitute its own condemnation.

We cannot wait thirteen years this time. The war is three weeks old and escalating. The template is operating at speed. The questions must be asked now, by those of us who still have the professional standing and the institutional independence to ask them, before the next set of unnamed officials delivers the next convenient number.

They gave us forty-five minutes to believe a lie that cost a million lives. They are giving us 4,000 kilometres to believe the next one. The only weapon that has ever stopped this machine is the refusal to be counted among the credulous. Use it.