The disparity in international scrutiny applied to Israel's and Iran's nuclear programmes sits at the centre of a longstanding debate over non-proliferation consistency. Israel maintains a deliberate policy of nuclear ambiguity, neither confirming nor denying possession of nuclear weapons, while Iran's programme faces sustained international pressure, sanctions regimes, and formal IAEA oversight. The contrast is structural: Israel never signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, placing it outside the legal framework that obliges Iran to submit to inspections and comply with enrichment limits. That treaty architecture is the core mechanism explaining differential treatment, not selective political will alone. Iran's obligations are legally binding; Israel's are not. The practical consequence is that Western governments and multilateral bodies have enforcement tools against Tehran that simply do not apply to Jerusalem. Whether that asymmetry undermines the broader non-proliferation order is the live policy question, particularly as Iran's enrichment levels approach weapons-grade thresholds and regional states recalibrate their own security calculations.
Venezuela's earthquake death toll has reached 1,430 with the US Geological Survey warning fatalities could top 10,000, placing it among Latin America's deadliest in a century. US military planes are landing in Caracas, Washington is mobilising $150 million in aid, and rescue teams from 17 countries are on the ground.
Iranian armed forces attacked a cargo ship in the Strait of Hormuz on Thursday, briefly halting traffic through the waterway. The strike threatens a fragile US-Iran arrangement and could push shipping insurance costs and oil prices higher.
The US has struck Iran, with President Trump citing an Iranian attack on a ship in the Strait of Hormuz as justification. The action raises immediate risks for global oil flows through one of the world's most critical shipping chokepoints.
The US struck ten Iranian targets on the second consecutive day of military action, putting a fragile ceasefire under serious pressure. The escalation raises immediate risks for Gulf shipping, global oil supply, and regional stability.