segunda-feira, 9 de março de 2026

With new supreme leader, Iran says 'business back as usual' • FRANCE 24 English

What we know about Mojtaba Khamenei, new supreme leader of Iran

 

Live Updates: Iran’s Choice of Leader Signals Defiance; Oil Price Surge Rattles Markets

 


Live Updates: Iran’s Choice of Leader Signals Defiance; Oil Price Surge Rattles Markets

Top clerics selected Mojtaba Khamenei as Iran’s supreme leader, despite President Trump’s warning that he was “unacceptable.” Oil prices surged to their highest levels since the pandemic, reflecting growing alarm over a prolonged war.

 

Farnaz Fassihi

Yan Zhuang

Updated

March 9, 2026, 7:13 a.m. ET24 minutes ago

Farnaz Fassihi and Yan Zhuang

https://www.nytimes.com/live/2026/03/09/world/iran-war-trump-israel-lebanon

 

Here’s the latest.

Iran projected defiance in the face of expanding U.S.-Israeli attacks on Monday by naming a son of its slain supreme leader as his successor, disregarding warnings from the Trump administration, while a surge in oil prices signaled growing alarm over the war’s effect on the global economy.

 

The new supreme leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, was appointed by a committee of senior clerics days after President Trump declared that he was an “unacceptable choice” and amid Israeli threats to kill Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s successor.

 

Iran’s military and hard-line political forces trumpeted the selection and pledged allegiance to the new supreme leader. But in Tehran, opponents of the government could be heard chanting “Death to Mojtaba” from their windows — reflecting widespread albeit muted dissent.

 

As the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran, which has killed hundreds of people, spreads to the wider Middle East, fears of a prolonged conflict have rippled across the world.

 

Oil prices briefly surged to almost $120 per barrel, their highest level since the Covid pandemic, and markets in Asia and Europe fell again. In the United States, Democrats said rising oil prices would inflame an affordability crisis. And Mr. Trump’s plans for the next steps in the war, let alone its endgame, remain very much unclear.

 

As the conflict entered its 10th day, Iran continued to retaliate with attacks on Israel and U.S. allies across the Persian Gulf.

 

At least one person was killed in Israel during an Iranian missile attack on Monday morning, according to Magen David Adom, the Israeli emergency service, raising the death toll in the country to at least 11. Saudi Arabia’s defense ministry said Monday it had intercepted attacks headed toward the kingdom’s massive Shaybah oil field, as well as thwarted drones over northern Riyadh, the capital, and three ballistic missiles targeting a Saudi air base.

 

The State Department said on Sunday that it had ordered nonemergency American personnel and family members to leave the U.S. embassy in Saudi Arabia — the latest diplomatic evacuation in the region. The announcement followed several attacks from Iran on the building and in the nearby area.

 

In Bahrain, the state-owned energy company declared that it could no longer fulfill its contracts, citing the ongoing conflict and a recent attack on its refinery complex.

 

Here’s what else we’re covering:

 

Investor jitters: As Asian markets declined on Monday, spiking oil prices sparked a mass exit from the region’s previously booming stocks. Markets opened lower in Europe, too.

 

New leader: Iran’s new supreme leader is known to have close ties to Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps. He is not just Iran’s new religious and political authority but also the commander in chief of its armed forces.

 

Gulf states: Anger grew in Persian Gulf nations over the civilian toll of Iranian retaliatory strikes. Bahrain’s health ministry said that 32 people had been injured, including children, in an Iranian drone strike on Monday in the island of Sitra, near Manama, the capital. In Qatar, the foreign ministry blamed Iran for the deaths of two civilians on Sunday in Saudi Arabia, saying that an attack had targeted a residential facility.

 

School hit: A newly released video adds to the evidence that an American missile likely hit an Iranian elementary school where 175 people, many of them children, were reported killed. The evidence contradicts Mr. Trump’s claim that Iran was responsible for the strike.

 

Lebanon: Israeli ground forces raided a new area of southern Lebanon, according to the Israeli military, part of an effort to carve out and expand a buffer zone inside the country. Israel and Hezbollah have been fighting for the past week since the Lebanese armed group, which is backed by Iran, shot rockets at Israeli territory.

Shabana Mahmood TORN APART in Commons debate over 'DANGEROUS' illegal migrants

 

In March 2026, MP Rupert Lowe (now representing his own Restore Britain party) launched a sharp critique of the Ministry of Defence (MoD) during a Public Accounts Committee meeting.

 


In March 2026, MP Rupert Lowe (now representing his own Restore Britain party) launched a sharp critique of the Ministry of Defence (MoD) during a Public Accounts Committee meeting. His "devastating takedown" focused on what he described as a culture of "internal inconsistencies" and a failure to properly address widespread fraud within the department.

 

Key points of his criticism included:

  • Systemic Fraud: Lowe highlighted cases such as an ex-corporal who defrauded the MoD of over £911,000 through fake expense claims and an army financial administrator who stole more than £300,000 by issuing checks to himself.
  • Cultural Failure: He argued that there is a fundamental "cultural problem" where counter-fraud and police teams do not trust or work together effectively.
  • Lack of Accountability: Lowe expressed frustration with a system that relies on "risk registers" and "analytical tools" rather than ensuring that those who steal face genuine consequences, stating that "people have got to fear... that when they steal they go to prison".
  • Asset Management: He specifically called out the "financial risk" posed by the loss of equipment like laptops and phones, characterizing the department's reluctance to engage on these issues as a sign of deeper dysfunction.
  • The exchange gained significant attention on social media and through outlets like the Daily Express, where it was framed as a scathing indictment of civil service mismanagement.

'I DON'T KNOW WHERE TO START!' - Rupert Lowe launches DEVASTATING takedown on Ministry of Defence

IN FULL | Suella Braverman defects to Reform UK with BLISTERING attack on immigration and ECHR