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  • US-Iran talks delayed as Israeli bombs in Lebanon kill 18 or more

    US-Iran talks delayed as Israeli bombs in Lebanon kill 18 or more

    A fresh wave of Israeli military bombardment across southern Lebanon has thrown a critical new set of Iran-US peace negotiations into disarray, forcing both delegations to delay their planned departure for opening talks in Switzerland. The violence, which left at least 18 Lebanese civilians dead, comes just weeks after the Trump administration and Iranian leadership signed a preliminary memorandum of understanding (MOU) to outline a path toward ending the ongoing Iran war, which began when the U.S. and Israel launched joint military operations in late February.

    The incident also sparked open friction between senior U.S. officials and Israeli leadership. U.S. Vice President JD Vance, who was originally set to join the American delegation to Switzerland, publicly criticized Israeli leaders for a pattern of launching large-scale bombing attacks during key moments of diplomatic progress. Vance’s remarks echoed a similar disruption that unfolded just last weekend: shortly after U.S. President Donald Trump announced plans to sign the MOU, Israeli forces carried out a deadly strike on central Beirut.

    “We seem to be right on the cusp of a major breakthrough in the agreement, and then all of a sudden, there’s a major explosion that goes off in a civilian population center in Beirut, and a lot of people who have nothing to do with Hezbollah lose their lives,” Vance told reporters on Thursday. “That’s not acceptable.”

    Friday’s bombardment targeted heavily populated residential areas across southern Lebanon’s Nabatieh district, according to on-the-ground reporting from Roqayah Chamseddine, a writer based in the region. Chamseddine documented mass civilian casualties in the towns of Dweir Harouf, Al-Sharqiya, and Kfar Sir, with additional strikes hitting Kfar Roumman, Haboush, Jebchit, Toul, and Deir al-Zahrani. Many of the residents in these areas had only just begun returning to their homes after previous ceasefire efforts, before the new offensive expanded into the Western Bekaa Valley, with warplanes targeting Abu Rashed Heights and launching strikes along the Litani River valley near Zalaya.

    Hours after the initial Israeli strikes, Hezbollah carried out an anti-tank attack that killed four Israeli soldiers in southern Lebanon, according to official statements from the Israel Defense Forces. The attack triggered harsh rhetoric from Israel’s far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, who called for widespread retaliation. “All of Lebanon must burn,” Ben-Gvir declared, adding, “With all due respect to the Americans, Israel must make it clear to the entire world that the blood of our sons and the security of our citizens are not forfeited.”

    Officially, the Trump White House only cited unspecified logistical challenges to explain the delay of the U.S. delegation’s departure, making no public mention of the Lebanese bombardment. But Lebanese outlet Al Mayadeen, citing an anonymous Iranian government source, confirmed that the latest Israeli assault was the direct cause of Tehran’s decision to postpone its delegation’s trip.

    The 60-day opening round of technical talks was meant to work out detailed implementation of the MOU, which calls for “the immediate and permanent termination of military operations on all fronts, including in Lebanon.” Iranian leadership has repeatedly made clear that a full end to Israeli attacks on Lebanese territory is a non-negotiable precondition for advancing a final peace deal. Mediators have now shifted focus to rescheduling the talks, as escalating violence in Lebanon threatens to erase what little diplomatic momentum had been built to end the months-long conflict.

  • US-Iran peace deal: Six things we learned from the Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding

    US-Iran peace deal: Six things we learned from the Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding

    A landmark preliminary peace agreement between the United States and Iran that halted a months-long devastating conflict across the Middle East hit an immediate snag this week, after Washington confirmed that high-level final talks scheduled in Switzerland have been postponed due to unresolvable logistical challenges. The delay came just one day after the leaders of both nations signed the Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding (MoU), a 14-point framework that pauses hostilities and lays the groundwork for a permanent end to the war that broke out in late February 2026.

    US Vice President JD Vance, who was set to lead the American negotiating delegation to Switzerland, will not travel as planned, the White House announced late Thursday, noting that logistics for the summit had proven far from “simple or predictable” amid the complex, fast-moving diplomatic process.

    The preliminary deal, signed separately by US President Donald Trump and Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian on Wednesday, marks the official end to open military conflict that has upended regional stability, crippled energy markets, and caused widespread humanitarian damage across the Middle East. The framework establishes a path to restore open commercial shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, the critical Persian Gulf chokepoint that handles roughly 20% of global oil supplies, which had been effectively blocked by Iran since the outbreak of hostilities. That blockade triggered a sharp surge in global crude prices in the months following the war’s start.

    Within hours of the MoU’s signing, the first wave of commercial shipping resumed: three Saudi-flagged supertankers completed transits through the strait by Thursday morning. Under the terms of the memorandum, Iran will guarantee toll-free safe passage for all commercial vessels through the waterway for the 60-day negotiating window, but the long-term status of shipping fees remains a major unresolved point of disagreement. Trump told The New York Times over the weekend that the final agreement would lock in a permanent toll-free arrangement, but Iranian officials announced Thursday that they plan to introduce transit fees for long-term operations. The MoU itself offers only vague guidance, requiring Iran to negotiate future regulatory frameworks with Oman and other Gulf littoral states in line with international law and the sovereign rights of coastal nations.

    The deal also outlines a series of economic concessions to Iran, whose economy has been crippled by decades of US sanctions compounded by a US naval blockade on exports imposed after the war began. Per the MoU’s terms, the US began dismantling its naval blockade on Friday morning, with full withdrawal of blockading forces scheduled for 30 days after the preliminary deal was signed. The framework also commits the US to lift all existing sanctions on Iran — including multilateral UN and IAEA sanctions, as well as Washington’s unilateral primary and secondary sanctions — as part of a final agreement, and to unlock billions of dollars in Iranian assets frozen by the US, some dating back to the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

    One of the most contentious sticking points surrounding economic relief is the proposed $300 billion reconstruction and development fund for Iran outlined in the MoU. Initial statements from Vice President Vance suggested the US would lead the funding effort, but senior administration officials have since walked that pledge back. Vance clarified Monday that the US would instead invite third countries to contribute to the fund, and Trump doubled down on that position Tuesday, telling reporters the US would not invest “ten cents” in Iranian reconstruction.

    On the regional security front, the MoU requires an immediate and permanent end to all military operations across all fronts, including Lebanon, where Israel has expanded its invasion of southern Lebanon to disarm the Iran-aligned Hezbollah movement since March. The agreement commits both the US and Iran to upholding Lebanon’s territorial integrity and sovereignty, but it makes no mention of Israel, which currently occupies roughly one-fifth of southern Lebanon and has continued airstrikes that have killed more than 3,000 people since March, even after the MoU was signed. A senior US official confirmed Friday that Israel and Hezbollah had agreed to a new ceasefire, but top Israeli officials have repeatedly rejected the US-Iran deal, saying it does not bind their government and that they will not withdraw from occupied Lebanese territory until Hezbollah is fully disarmed. Far-right Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir said Monday that the agreement does not meet Israel’s security requirements, and Defense Minister Israel Katz confirmed this week that Israeli forces would remain indefinitely in self-declared “security zones” across Lebanon, Syria, and Gaza. Trump publicly criticized Israel’s conduct in Lebanon during a G7 summit Tuesday, marking a clear rift with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, saying that Israel had fought in Lebanon for “too long” and that unnecessary civilian casualties from widespread bombing were unacceptable.

    The most consequential unresolved security issues, including the status of Iran’s nuclear program and its ballistic missile arsenal, have been deliberately deferred to the 60-day negotiating period outlined in the MoU, with the window extendable by mutual consent of both parties. The US has long alleged that Iran’s enriched uranium stockpile is evidence of a covert nuclear weapons program, a claim Iran has consistently denied — a denial explicitly reaffirmed in the preliminary agreement. Currently, Iran holds uranium enriched to roughly 70%, a level far higher than the 5% needed for civilian energy production, but still below the 90% enrichment required for nuclear weapons. The MoU only requires that the two sides negotiate a mutually acceptable framework for managing the stockpile as part of a final deal. US officials have proposed exporting the stockpile to a third country, a step Iranian Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei has reportedly already ruled out.

    Notably, the MoU makes no mention of limiting Iran’s ballistic missile program — a core stated war objective for the US when hostilities began. At the war’s start, Trump justified US intervention by warning that Iran’s arsenal of more than 3,000 ballistic missiles, the largest in the Middle East, could soon reach the US mainland. But this week, Trump shifted his stance, telling reporters that if other regional powers possess ballistic missiles, it is unfair to deny Iran the same capability, adding that “missiles are not the problem” in terms of global catastrophic risk.

    The agreement also formally abandons the long-rumored US and Israeli goal of regime change in Tehran. The MoU explicitly requires both nations to respect each other’s sovereignty and refrain from interference in internal affairs. At the G7 summit this week, Trump claimed he “never cared about regime change” in Iran, praising the current Iranian leadership, which took power after a US-Israeli airstrike killed longtime Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei in February. “I think they’re very smart, I think they’re far less radicalised; I think they’re good,” Trump said, adding “Frankly, I think that’s regime change.” The statement marked a sharp reversal from Trump’s address on the first day of the war, when he called on the Iranian people to overthrow the clerical government and declared “the hour of your freedom is at hand.”

    All remaining outstanding issues will be negotiated over the next 60 days, and any final peace agreement will be codified in a binding United Nations Security Council resolution, per the MoU’s terms.

  • Israel and Hezbollah agree ceasefire after escalation threatens US-Iran deal

    Israel and Hezbollah agree ceasefire after escalation threatens US-Iran deal

    Just 24 hours after the United States and Iran finalized a broader agreement aimed at ending cross-regional hostilities, a dramatic surge in clashes between Israel and Lebanon’s Hezbollah pushed the Middle East to the brink of a wider regional war, before the two parties agreed to a ceasefire that took effect at 4 p.m. local time Friday.

    Diplomatic efforts to broker the truce were led by intensive backchannel negotiations and calls mediated by both Washington and Tehran, a source with direct knowledge of Hezbollah’s position confirmed to Middle East Eye. The breakthrough came only after Tehran threatened to pull out of planned follow-up talks with U.S. negotiators scheduled in Geneva in response to heavy Israeli airstrikes across Lebanon, the source added. The agreement remains conditional on Israel abiding by its terms, the source emphasized.

    A senior Israeli official confirmed the truce to Reuters, noting that the ceasefire would hold only so long as Hezbollah halts all attacks on Israeli targets. The official also confirmed that Israeli military forces will remain positioned in areas of southern Lebanon they have seized during recent advances.

    The rapid escalation that preceded the ceasefire began Thursday night, when Hezbollah fighters ambushed advancing Israeli troops near Ali al-Taher, a strategically critical hilltop outpost just outside the southern Lebanese city of Nabatieh. The ambush left four Israeli service members dead, including a senior battalion commander, and multiple others wounded, the Israeli military confirmed. Hezbollah claimed responsibility for the attack, stating its fighters had used both ambushes and drone strikes to repel the Israeli advance into the area.

    Israel responded within hours with a massive wave of airstrikes that hit more than 80 targets across southern and eastern Lebanon. By Friday morning, Lebanon’s Ministry of Health reported that at least 47 civilians and combatants had been killed in the bombardment, with another 39 people wounded across 11 affected towns. Rescue teams have been unable to reach trapped survivors due to ongoing shelling, health officials warned, adding that the final casualty count is expected to climb.

    Seven people were killed in the southern Lebanese village of Harouf alone, with additional residents still believed to be trapped under collapsed buildings, health ministry sources told Middle East Eye. Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency documented mass displacement from the southern districts of Tyre and Bint Jbeil, as thousands of residents fled north to escape the violence. Many of those fleeing had only just returned to their home villages in the days after the U.S.-Iran interim agreement was reached earlier this week.

    Hezbollah officials argue that the scale and scope of Israel’s retaliation went far beyond a proportional response to the ambush, suggesting the assault was a deliberate attempt to derail the broader U.S.-Iran regional peace deal. The U.S.-Iran agreement has already sparked fierce backlash in Israel, where political leaders across the ruling coalition have condemned it as a strategic victory for Tehran.

    “If this were merely a response to the ambush, then why did Israel also strike Baalbek and the Bekaa Valley in eastern Lebanon?” a second Hezbollah source asked, pointing to the geographic spread of attacks far from the site of the Thursday clash. The source explained that Israeli troop movements and the intensity of bombardment indicate the Israeli military’s core goal is to seize full control of the Ali al-Taher position, which offers unobstructed commanding views over most of the Nabatieh district and the Iqlim al-Tuffah region.

    “Israel considers it strategically significant because of its location within the area it is attempting to control, which it has described as the ‘Yellow Line’,” the source said. “Control of this position would allow Israel to overlook the entirety of the Nabatieh district and the Iqlim area, as part of an attempt to consolidate its presence in the same territory it occupied before Lebanon’s liberation in 2000.”

    The escalation came one day after the Israeli government published an official map expanding its declared military deployment zone in southern Lebanon, pushing the boundary of controlled territory all the way to the outskirts of Nabatieh, north of the Litani River. Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz made clear the operation’s territorial goals during an interview with Israeli television, stating that holding seized territory is the military’s top priority. Katz added that the Israeli military is destroying villages in occupied areas of southern Lebanon and will not allow displaced residents to return to their homes.

    “The 200,000 residents who lived in the security zone are not returning. None of them are returning,” Katz said.

    Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu confirmed he had personally ordered strikes against dozens of Hezbollah targets in response to the deaths of the four Israeli soldiers, adding that Israeli forces will remain in the southern Lebanon security zone “for as long as necessary.” Far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir doubled down on the aggressive rhetoric, calling for “all of Lebanon to burn.”

    When asked whether Hezbollah believes the Israeli escalation was carried out with U.S. approval, the second Hezbollah source said the group now assesses that public disagreements between Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s far-right government and the U.S. administration are genuine. This marks a shift from the long-held view among Hezbollah supporters that public disputes between the two allies often mask broad alignment on core regional strategic goals.

    International pressure for a de-escalation grew quickly after the violence erupted: former U.S. President Donald Trump said Washington expected a full and immediate ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah, while France called on the U.S. to intervene aggressively to prevent the fighting from spilling into a full-scale regional war.

    The outbreak of renewed violence derailed planned diplomatic talks between the U.S. and Iran in Geneva, with negotiations scrapped as tensions flared. A third source familiar with Hezbollah’s position said Tehran has given the group clear assurances that it will not sign any final agreement with Washington that does not include binding provisions addressing Lebanon’s security and territorial integrity. Specifically, Iran will reject any deal that does not include “a complete and comprehensive cessation of hostilities against Lebanon across all Lebanese territory” alongside a formal commitment to a full Israeli military withdrawal from all seized Lebanese territory, the source said.

    When asked whether indirect diplomatic contacts between Hezbollah and the U.S. are still ongoing, the source said he would “neither confirm nor deny” that such communications are taking place, but added that when American officials wish to reach Hezbollah, “they know exactly which channels to use.”

    Hezbollah has repeatedly accused Israel of intentionally violating both the existing Lebanon ceasefire and the new U.S.-Iran regional agreement, noting that Israel has continued to target civilians, destroy civilian infrastructure and push forward with its ground incursion into southern Lebanon. The third source confirmed that Hezbollah still opposes any new round of direct bilateral negotiations between the Lebanese government and Israel hosted in Washington, and does not consider itself bound by that process. The source also added that the group has received multiple indications that the U.S. itself is no longer committed to the proposed negotiating track.

    The latest round of fighting has laid bare the core, unresolved divide that has undermined all regional efforts to end the long-running conflict. Israel insists it will retain control of seized territory in southern Lebanon and bar displaced Lebanese residents from returning to their border communities. Hezbollah, by contrast, maintains that no final regional peace agreement can be accepted without an immediate end to all Israeli attacks and a full Israeli military withdrawal from all Lebanese territory.

    As thousands of residents flee southern Lebanese towns for the second time in as many weeks, the standoff over the Ali al-Taher position has emerged as both a critical battle for strategic terrain and an early make-or-break test for the fragile U.S.-Iran negotiated framework that was meant to bring an end to cross-regional hostilities.

  • Israel kills dozens in Lebanon as minister calls to ‘open the gates of hell’

    Israel kills dozens in Lebanon as minister calls to ‘open the gates of hell’

    A fresh wave of Israeli airstrikes on southern Lebanon has sent shockwaves across the Middle East, killing at least 21 people and injuring more than 39 others since Thursday night, according to an official announcement from Lebanon’s Ministry of Public Health. The attack has already derailed planned follow-up negotiations between the United States and Iran aimed at cementing a region-wide ceasefire, triggering harsh condemnation from Lebanese leadership and sharp, bellicose threats from top Israeli officials.

    Lebanese President Joseph Aoun labeled the strikes a “dangerous and reprehensible escalation” that has claimed the lives of dozens of innocent civilians, among them women and children. In a formal statement, Aoun emphasized that the aggression undermines every ongoing effort to solidify a ceasefire and end broader regional conflict, coming just days after the US and Iran signed a landmark memorandum of understanding (MoU) designed to end more than 100 days of cross-border fighting that has devastated Lebanon.

    The Israeli military, for its part, confirmed that Hezbollah fighters had killed four of its soldiers in southern Lebanon on Friday, including a senior battalion commander. Hezbollah issued its own statement confirming the attack, explaining that its fighters targeted Israeli forces that were attempting to advance into sovereign Lebanese territory. The militant group detailed that it lured an Israeli military unit into a pre-planned “kill zone” near the southern Lebanese area of Ali al-Tahir, destroying three Merkava tanks in the engagement. When a second Israeli unit moved in to recover the first, fighters hit it with concentrated rocket barrages and mortar fire.

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu quickly issued a vow of retaliation in a social media statement Friday, promising Hezbollah would pay a “heavy price” for the attack. He reiterated that Israeli forces would maintain a presence in a self-declared “security zone” in southern Lebanon for as long as necessary to protect Israeli communities in the country’s north. Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz echoed Netanyahu’s hardline stance, stating that the Israeli military would not tolerate attacks on its soldiers and civilians, and any ceasefire violation by Hezbollah would be met with overwhelming force. Katz also confirmed the security zone extends from Lebanon’s Mediterranean coastline all the way to the Beaufort Heights, formalizing Israel’s expanded military footprint in the region.

    The rhetoric grew even more extreme from far-right members of Netanyahu’s governing coalition. National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir, who has a long track record of inflammatory rhetoric against Lebanese people, called for a drastically more aggressive military response. “For every tear shed by an Israeli mother, a thousand Lebanese mothers should cry,” Ben Gvir wrote on the social platform X, adding that “all of Lebanon should burn” and emphasizing that Israel must make clear “the blood of our sons and the security of our citizens are not up for grabs.” This is not the first time Ben Gvir has made extreme remarks: just one week prior, he publicly called for the kidnapping of Lebanese women and youth to pressure Hezbollah.

    Shortly after Ben Gvir’s comments, Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, another far-right member of the coalition, echoed the rhetoric, calling on Israel to “open the gates of hell” for Hezbollah – a phrase he previously used to describe Israel’s military campaign in Gaza that has been widely labeled genocidal by international bodies and human rights groups.

    The latest escalation comes at a critical diplomatic juncture: US and Iranian officials had been scheduled to meet in Switzerland this week to continue negotiating the terms of the MoU signed in Paris Wednesday. That agreement requires an immediate end to fighting on all regional fronts, including Lebanon, and Iranian officials have repeatedly warned that any continued Israeli military presence or operation inside Lebanese territory counts as a direct violation of the deal. Crucially, the Israeli government is not a signatory to the MoU and has openly opposed its provisions for Lebanon. Since the agreement was signed, the Israeli military has released a new official map outlining plans for expanded military occupation and operations across southern Lebanon.

    In response to Israel’s new strikes, Lebanon-based broadcaster Al Mayadeen reported Thursday that the Iranian delegation had postponed its planned talks with US officials in Switzerland. The Swiss foreign ministry confirmed the postponement Friday, officially putting the diplomatic process on hold amid the new violence.

    Even before this latest wave of violence, Lebanon has already suffered staggering human cost since cross-border fighting resumed on March 2. The new strikes bring the total death toll across the country to at least 3,915, a figure that stands despite a formal ceasefire agreement between Israel and Hezbollah signed back on June 2.

  • How can Andy Burnham become prime minister and what comes next for Britain?

    How can Andy Burnham become prime minister and what comes next for Britain?

    In a political earthquake that has upended Britain’s domestic political landscape, former Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham has secured a landslide victory in the Makerfield constituency by-election, catapulting him directly into position as the clear frontrunner to become the United Kingdom’s next prime minister.

    Burnham’s stunning win in the early hours of Friday defied every recent political trend in the northern, working-class dominated seat. Just one month prior, Nigel Farage’s right-wing Reform UK had delivered a crushing blow to Labour in Makerfield during local elections, opening a 20-point lead over the incumbent party. Against all polling expectations, however, Burnham captured 55% of the by-election vote to Reform’s 35%, handing the insurgent right-wing party its second high-profile by-election defeat of 2025, following a second-place finish behind the Greens in the Gorton and Denton contest in February.

    This double defeat seriously undermines Reform’s core narrative that a Farage-led government is an inevitable outcome of the next general election. Political analysts now agree that Burnham’s victory has shifted the entire trajectory of British party politics.

    Within the Parliamentary Labour Party, Burnham already commands widespread popularity, with dozens of MPs now viewing him as Labour’s best chance to secure a stable majority in the next election. Polling on his impact is split: some analysts predict his leadership would boost Labour’s national support by multiple percentage points, while others argue the shift would be more modest, and leave Labour still neck-and-neck with Reform.

    The path to Downing Street for Burnham is already laid out in Labour Party rulebook. To trigger a leadership challenge against incumbent Prime Minister Keir Starmer, he only needs the public backing of 81 Labour MPs, plus support from 5% of local Labour party branches or three party-affiliated groups, including at least two major trade unions. A challenge would then proceed to a membership-wide vote. If Starmer chooses to resign voluntarily, Burnham could even secure an uncontested “coronation” to the leadership.

    Notably, Burnham’s inner circle has actively discouraged junior ministers from resigning en masse to force Starmer out, a dramatic escalation that would risk splitting the party. Instead, the frontrunner prefers to give Starmer space to announce a voluntary timetable for stepping down. A senior anonymous campaign source quoted by The Guardian noted: “If they’re trying to force Keir’s hand with a kamikaze approach it will ultimately be counterproductive.”

    If Starmer steps aside, Burnham could be sworn in as prime minister within a matter of weeks. But multiple Westminster sources confirm the incumbent prime minister remains determined to hold onto his position, and is prepared to fight any leadership challenge head-on. Still, few political insiders in Westminster believe Starmer can survive the current momentum behind Burnham, with many already describing him as a “dead man walking.”

    A shortened, accelerated leadership contest lasting only a few weeks is also a likely outcome, which could see Burnham face off against Starmer and former Health Secretary Wes Streeting. While Streeting’s allies claim he has already secured the required 81 MP nominations to get on the ballot, polling consistently shows he is far less popular with rank-and-file Labour members than even Starmer, let alone Burnham.

    Politically, Burnham is positioned on the soft left of the Labour Party, and is often described as a pragmatic politician who has adjusted his policy stances over his decades in public life. During his tenure as Greater Manchester mayor, he and his allies developed a distinct economic philosophy dubbed “Manchesterism,” which he now proposes to roll out nationally. The framework calls for a far more interventionist approach to the UK economy than Starmer’s cautious platform: it is not full socialism, but represents a clear break from four decades of privatization and centralized political control. In Burnham’s own words, Manchesterism is a “modern and functional response to the high-inequality, low-growth trap that came from the 1980s drive to privatise economic power and overcentralise political power in the Treasury.” He has already publicly committed to bringing water and energy utilities back into public ownership if he takes office.

    Still, open questions remain about what version of Burnham would govern as prime minister. During the by-election campaign, he signaled he would retain key planks of Starmer’s policy agenda, most notably the current government’s aggressive push to cut net immigration levels. This pivot is widely interpreted as an attempt to win over working-class voters who have drifted to Reform in recent years, but it has already become a key point of attack for the Green Party, which has seen a major surge in national support under Starmer’s leadership.

    While the Greens captured just 0.7% of the vote in Makerfield, political analysts note the party has never prioritized the constituency, focusing its resources instead on the upcoming Manchester mayoral race, where they believe they have a credible shot at victory. In last month’s local elections, the Greens actually inflicted more damage on Labour’s vote share across the country than Reform did, a fact Burnham and his team are acutely aware of. Some of Burnham’s left-leaning economic policies could help win back disaffected Green-leaning voters, but foreign policy and immigration remain major flashpoints.

    Green Party co-deputy leader Mothin Ali publicly criticized Burnham on Friday over his immigration stance and his refusal during the campaign to label Israeli military actions in Gaza as genocide. Burnham largely avoided discussing foreign policy during the by-election, with internal Labour sources confirming he and his team believed the issue would not help him win over Makerfield voters. But if he wants to win over the Labour membership, which overwhelmingly supports stronger action to address the crisis in Gaza, he will be forced to take a clearer stance on the issue. A shift toward a stronger condemnation of Israeli military actions would also help him undercut the Greens and win back left-wing voters who have abandoned Labour in recent years.

    Political events are expected to move rapidly over the coming week, and many outcomes remain uncertain at this stage. It remains unclear whether Burnham will move quickly to claim the premiership, whether a prolonged public leadership contest will unfold, or whether Starmer will ultimately concede that his time as leader has come to an end. What is certain, however, is that the United Kingdom’s political landscape will be fundamentally reshaped by the outcome of the Makerfield by-election, regardless of what comes next.

  • Vance tells Israel Trump is ‘your only ally’ left as Iran talks postponed

    Vance tells Israel Trump is ‘your only ally’ left as Iran talks postponed

    Tensions between the U.S. government and Israeli leadership have escalated sharply this week, after Vice President JD Vance delivered a blunt public warning to Israeli officials: President Donald Trump is the only major world leader still sympathetic to their cause, and they risk damaging their most critical security partnership by attacking the newly signed U.S.-Iran memorandum of understanding (MoU).

    Speaking at a White House press briefing Thursday, Vance pushed back against fierce Israeli criticism of the draft agreement, which includes a reported $300 billion reconstruction fund for Iran and paves the way for 60 days of formal negotiations on Tehran’s nuclear program and relief from international economic sanctions. The MoU, which aims to end months of open conflict between the two nations, has sparked widespread outrage across Israel’s political spectrum, with many leaders arguing the deal effectively grants Tehran a major strategic victory.

    Vance laid out a clear two-part message for Israeli cabinet members considering continued public opposition. “Number 1: Donald J. Trump is the only head of state in the entire world who is sympathetic to the nation of Israel at this moment in time,” he told reporters. “If I was in the cabinet of the Israeli government, I might not be attacking the only powerful ally that I have anywhere left in the entire world.”

    Israeli officials have also voiced particular anger over provisions in the MoU that require an immediate end to Israel’s ongoing war in Lebanon, with multiple senior figures saying they will refuse to comply with the terms. Itamar Ben Gvir, Israel’s far-right national security minister, has been one of the deal’s most vocal opponents, insisting Israeli forces will maintain their presence in occupied southern Lebanese territory indefinitely. In an interview with *The New York Times*, Vance pushed back against hardline positions from Ben Gvir and fellow far-right Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, questioning their alternative approach to long-term security. “What is your exact proposal? You’re a country of 9 million people. You can’t just kill your way out of solving every single national security problem that you have,” Vance said.

    The political confrontation comes as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu navigates a challenging path ahead of scheduled October national elections, as he works to shore up sagging approval ratings for his ruling coalition. During a press conference Monday, Netanyahu claimed Israel had secured decisive victories in all recent conflicts across Gaza, Lebanon, Syria and Iran. He also doubled down on his government’s 2025 and 2022 pre-emptive strikes against Iranian nuclear targets, arguing that inaction would have allowed Tehran to develop a functional nuclear weapon.

    Vance reminded Israeli leaders of the depth of U.S. security support that has sustained their country for decades, noting that roughly two-thirds of the defensive military equipment Israel relies on for national protection are manufactured in the United States and funded by American taxpayer dollars. “The problem for Israel is not Donald Trump, and anybody in Israel who thinks their biggest problem is the president of the United States needs to wake up and smell the reality of the situation that country is in,” he added.

    Uncertainty already hangs over the next phase of negotiations between the U.S. and Iran. The first formal negotiating session, scheduled for Friday in Switzerland, has been postponed indefinitely, with the White House announcing late Thursday that Vice President Vance would not attend the upcoming round of direct talks, citing unresolvable “logistical complications” that made the trip unfeasible.

    Fresh violence on Friday has further complicated prospects for a peaceful resolution, as Israel launched new air strikes across southern and eastern Lebanon. Lebanese official counts confirm 18 civilians and combatants were killed in the strikes, while Hezbollah carried out one of its deadliest attacks of the entire conflict, killing four Israeli soldiers including a senior battalion commander. The sudden escalation has reinforced fears that the ceasefire called for in the U.S.-Iran MoU could collapse before formal negotiations even get underway.

  • Palestine Action ban: Court ruling risks ‘slide into authoritarianism’, warn rights advocates

    Palestine Action ban: Court ruling risks ‘slide into authoritarianism’, warn rights advocates

    A controversial UK Court of Appeal ruling that upheld the government’s ban on the pro-Palestinian protest group Palestine Action has drawn fierce criticism from legal experts and civil society campaigners, who warn the decision dangerously expands the country’s already broad terrorism definition and undermines long-protected rights to peaceful protest.

    The ruling, delivered Monday by a five-judge appellate panel, overturned an earlier February 2025 High Court judgment that had struck down the proscription of Palestine Action as unlawful on three key grounds. The lower court had found that then-Home Secretary Yvette Cooper violated her own government’s proscription policies when she designated the group a terrorist organization, that the ban created an unacceptable chilling effect on freedom of speech and peaceful assembly, and that the measure was fundamentally disproportionate: only three of the 385 direct actions carried out by the group were deemed to meet the UK’s legal threshold for terrorist activity, and existing criminal law was already sufficient to prosecute any illegal activity linked to those actions.

    In overturning that decision, the Court of Appeal rejected the finding that Cooper had violated official proscription policy. The appellate judges ruled that policy guidelines did not limit the home secretary’s ability to consider external factors such as the ban’s potential to disrupt the group’s overall operations, arguing Cooper was owed “appropriate latitude” in her national security decision-making, and that her role granted her both institutional authority and democratic accountability to make such a designation. On the question of proportionality, the court held that Cooper had struck a fair balance between individual civil liberties and the UK’s stated national security interests.

    Critics argue the ruling grants unprecedented and undue deference to executive branch decision-making, creating a template that concentrates near-unchecked power in the hands of government ministers at the expense of judicial oversight. Former government lawyer Tim Crosland told Middle East Eye that the decision creates a pattern where courts are reluctant to challenge executive assessments of what counts as terrorism, clearing the way for unfettered executive authority that he argued is already misaligned with public interest, captured by corporate lobbying from the fossil fuel and arms industries.

    The ruling’s foundation rests in part on the interpretation of the UK’s unusually broad terrorism legislation, which includes “serious damage to property” carried out to influence government or intimidate the public for an ideological cause as a terrorist act. Critically, UK law provides no clear legal standard to define what qualifies as “serious damage”, leaving the determination to executive assessment that can be based on financial cost, potential risk to human life, or ties to national security. While government intelligence confirmed only three Palestine Action actions met the threshold for serious damage, the Court of Appeal took a holistic approach to the group’s activities, concluding the organization as a whole “overtly promotes unlawful violence amounting to terrorism”. The court cited Cooper’s estimate that the three high-profile actions — targeting defence contractor Thales in Glasgow in 2022, Instro Precision in Kent in June 2024, and an Elbit Systems UK facility near Bristol in August 2024 — caused millions of pounds in damage.

    That damage calculation has itself been contested. When sentencing activists for the August 2024 Elbit Systems raid, presiding Justice Johnson relied on an insurance report that underpinned a £1 million payout, which defence lawyers have challenged as being full of hearsay and inaccurate, noting it included damage to areas of the factory activists never entered and was prepared after the insurer had already approved the payout.

    Leading human rights lawyer Michael Mansfield KC argued that even if the damage claims are accepted, they do not justify a terrorist designation. He told Middle East Eye that the ruling overemphasizes the undefined standard of serious damage, a metric that is inherently subjective. Mansfield also rejected the government’s claim that the group’s actions were intended to influence government policy, noting Palestine Action turned to direct action after conventional advocacy failed to shift UK policy on the Israel-Gaza war, with activists acting out of frustration over ongoing civilian harm in Gaza.

    Civil rights organization Liberty warned that the ruling fails to draw any clear line between protected protest activity and terrorism, noting even the appellate court acknowledged it is unusual to designate an organization whose core activity is property-focused direct action as terrorist. The Court of Appeal also justified its overturning of the High Court ruling by arguing the lower court failed to account for an escalation in Palestine Action’s activity in the months leading up to the proscription order in June 2024. The judgment noted that Cooper paused the proscription process in May 2024 to request updated intelligence from Counter Terrorism Policing, which reported 158 additional direct actions, 28 of which caused what was defined as “significant damage” (either costing more than £50,000 in repairs or requiring a large police deployment), including tactics such as lock-ons, occupations, blockades, and vandalism.

    The court also cited an action at Brize Norton air base as evidence of escalation, despite acknowledging the action took place on the same day proscription was announced and that there was significant legal debate over whether it qualified as a terrorist act. Even so, judges ruled the action posed a threat to national security, and that this threat justified granting the home secretary a wide margin of appreciation in her decision to ban the group.

    Mansfield pushed back on the argument that elected politicians deserve automatic judicial deference, arguing that politicians have lost widespread public trust and that the close ties between UK ministers and the Israeli arms industry raise questions about the true motivation for the ban. “I don’t trust ministers to be telling me the absolute truth,” he said. Clive Dolphin, spokesperson for campaign group Defend our Juries, echoed these concerns, noting that the broad deference granted to the home secretary effectively undermines the entire purpose of judicial review, which exists to check executive overreach. “The slide into authoritarianism is not a single step, it’s not that somebody takes over on day one,” Dolphin said. “This is a really, really dangerous ruling.”

  • How Andy Burnham stood up to Starmer over Israel and could now reshape UK foreign policy

    How Andy Burnham stood up to Starmer over Israel and could now reshape UK foreign policy

    Less than two years after securing a landslide general election win, UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer finds his grip on the premiership slipping, following a resounding by-election victory that has cleared the path for a major leadership challenge from popular former Manchester mayor Andy Burnham.

    Starmer’s position has been precarious for months. Earlier this year, the Peter Mandelson scandal rocked his administration: sordid connections between the ex-US ambassador, a close Starmer ally, and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein prompted widespread calls for the prime minister to step down. That controversy was followed by devastating losses in May’s local elections, where Labour hemorrhaged support in its traditional northern English and London strongholds. Still, Starmer managed to hold on, with internal Labour sources confirming no party figure was willing to force a leadership change ahead of the local votes.

    The current crisis began in mid-May, when former Health Secretary Wes Streeting resigned from Starmer’s cabinet, citing a loss of confidence in the prime minister’s leadership, warning that “where we need vision, we have a vacuum. Where we need direction, we have drift.” Hours after Streeting’s departure, Labour MP Josh Simons resigned his safe Makerfield seat in northern England, triggering a by-election designed to return Burnham to parliament. Under Labour Party rules, only sitting Members of Parliament can stand for the party leadership, so the by-election was a critical first step for any would-be challenger.

    On Thursday, Burnham secured a decisive win, capturing 55% of the vote in a seat that had seen major defections to Nigel Farage’s far-right Reform UK in recent years. With his return to the Commons confirmed, Burnham now joins Streeting as one of two formal challengers set to oust Starmer.

    The outcome of this looming leadership contest is poised to reshape British foreign policy, most notably on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict – an issue that has roiled UK politics for more than two years amid Israel’s military campaign in Gaza. Polling expert John Curtice has confirmed that the Green Party, the most prominent major political voice opposing UK support for Israel, inflicted far greater damage on Labour’s local election vote share than Reform UK, as left-wing and pro-Palestinian voters abandoned the party in droves over its position. To win back these voters and counter the Green insurgency, any new Labour leader will be forced to adopt a harder line on Israel.

    Both challengers have laid out different positions on the conflict, with Burnham boasting a long track record of breaking with Starmer’s approach. Burnham, a popular soft-left figure within the party, has a nuanced political history on the issue: he voted for the 2003 UK invasion of Iraq, joined the pro-Israel group Labour Friends of Israel in 2015, and during his 2015 Labour leadership run described the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement as “spiteful” and called Israel a “democracy that has a long history of protecting minorities.”

    But beyond his pro-Israel credentials, Burnham has a lengthy record of criticizing the Israeli government and advocating for Palestinian statehood. He visited the occupied West Bank in 2012 with the pro-Palestine group Labour Friends of Palestine and the Middle East, called Benjamin Netanyahu’s 2015 re-election “depressing” over his pledge to expand illegal settlements, and publicly backed recognition of Palestinian statehood as a right, not a gift, as early as 2015. He has also called for an end to Israeli occupation and illegal settlement expansion, while condemning Hamas terrorist attacks.

    Burnham’s most significant break from Starmer came in the weeks after the 7 October 2023 Hamas attacks, when Starmer controversially backed Israel’s total blockade of Gaza – a move widely categorized as a war crime. Just two days after Starmer’s statement, Burnham released a statement that carefully distanced himself from the party leader, conditioning Israel’s right to self-defense on compliance with international law and calling for unimpeded humanitarian access to Gaza. By late October 2023, as the Gaza death toll surged, Burnham broke ranks entirely to join London mayor Sadiq Khan and Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar in calling for an immediate ceasefire, directly challenging Starmer’s refusal to back that position. He also publicly criticized Starmer for branding pro-ceasefire MPs disloyal, and used the moment to apologize for his own past vote for the Iraq War, acknowledging that the 2003 invasion had caused massive civilian harm and fueled global terrorism.

    This positioning paid off electorally: while Starmer’s Labour lost a third of its vote share in majority-Muslim areas during the 2024 local elections, Burnham comfortably retained his post as Greater Manchester mayor, where a large Muslim electorate resides. In the years since, he has repeatedly pushed the Labour government to take bolder action, joining a cross-party group in 2025 to urge immediate recognition of Palestinian statehood – a demand the Starmer government ultimately conceded to in September of that year.

    For his part, Streeting has sought to position himself as a secret critic of Starmer’s policy since resignating from cabinet, releasing leaked 2025 text messages in which he claimed Israel was “committing war crimes before our eyes” and engaging in “ethnic cleansing.” However, many voters have not forgotten that Streeting publicly backed Starmer’s line for months after 7 October, and opposed ceasefire calls through that period. Unlike Burnham, Streeting has largely stayed aligned with the party’s official position for most of the conflict, and only recently softened his public stance, under pressure from challengers. In the 2024 general election, Streeting nearly lost his seat to a young British Palestinian independent candidate, who came within 528 votes of unseating him.

    Under the current Starmer administration, London has already taken small steps to distance itself from Israel, imposing a partial arms embargo amid growing public anger, but it has maintained deep military and political cooperation with Israel throughout its campaign in Gaza. Regardless of which challenger prevails, analysts agree that the next Labour leader will almost certainly ramp up criticism of Israel and could take far more concrete action, such as imposing full sanctions on illegal West Bank settlement goods to win back disillusioned left-wing and pro-Palestinian voters.

    For Burnham, the path to the premiership remains littered with obstacles. But if he can overcome them, insiders say he is the most likely candidate to return the Labour Party to its traditional centre-left roots. One thing is certain: all leadership contenders will be forced to take a clear stance on Starmer’s handling of the Gaza crisis, and a fundamental shift in Britain’s approach to the Middle East is likely in the coming months.

  • World Cup 2026: Why Sahrawis are rallying behind Algeria and not Morocco

    World Cup 2026: Why Sahrawis are rallying behind Algeria and not Morocco

    On a baked-earthen football pitch cut into the arid desert of southwestern Algeria’s Smara refugee camp, fine orange dust hangs thick in the still late-afternoon air, billowing in choking clouds every time a player sprints after a loose ball. Despite the unrelenting desert heat, a group of young men and teenage boys has gathered for their weekly match—one of the few steady rituals in a life defined by displacement. For the fans leaning on makeshift barriers watching the game, conversation drifts quickly from the local play to the World Cup unfolding thousands of miles across North America, and the deep, history-bound loyalty that draws nearly every Sahrawi refugee in Algeria’s camps to cheer for one team: Algeria.

    According to United Nations data, more than 173,000 Sahrawi refugees currently reside in a network of camps near Tindouf, Algeria. Their displacement stretches back 50 years, rooted in a decades-long dispute over their indigenous homeland of Western Sahara, a 266,000-square-kilometer desert expanse in Northwest Africa bordered by the Atlantic Ocean, Morocco, Mauritania and Algeria.

    The conflict’s origins trace to the late 19th century, when Spain colonized the region, then called Spanish Sahara. After Morocco gained independence from colonial rule in 1956, it staked a long-standing territorial claim to Western Sahara. By 1973, the Polisario Front formed to advocate for Sahrawi independence, launching an armed movement after Spain agreed to cede the territory to Morocco and Mauritania in the 1975 Madrid Accords—an agreement negotiated without any input from Sahrawi representatives, following Morocco’s mass Green March of 350,000 civilian supporters into the territory. The resulting war forced thousands of Sahrawis to flee across the border into Algeria, where they established the refugee camps that remain home to generations of displaced people today.

    A 1991 UN-brokered ceasefire established the MINURSO peacekeeping mission to oversee a planned independence referendum for Western Sahara, but the vote has never been held due to disputes over voter eligibility. The ceasefire collapsed entirely in 2020, after Morocco launched military operations in a UN buffer zone, and sporadic fighting has resumed in the years since. Today, Morocco controls most of Western Sahara, incentivizing Moroccan settlers to move to the region, while the Polisario Front holds a smaller eastern stretch of desert and continues to campaign for full Sahrawi independence—with Algeria as its most prominent regional backer.

    That decades-long political and humanitarian partnership has woven deep ties between Sahrawi refugees and their host nation. For generations, Sahrawi refugees have attended Algerian schools and universities, received medical care in Algerian hospitals, and built interwoven family, cultural and political bonds across the border. To many, Algeria is far more than a place of refuge—it is a steadfast ally in their struggle for self-determination.

    “My support for Algeria is unconditional,” Brahim Salem, a long-term camp resident, told Middle East Eye. “For us, Algeria is not just a neighbour. It’s a country that stood against oppression and gave us safety when we needed it most.”

    That loyalty translates directly to the football pitch. Because the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic remains unrecognized by FIFA, Sahrawi players cannot compete as an independent national team in major international tournaments. For displaced Sahrawis, supporting Algeria becomes a way to channel collective pride and national aspiration that cannot be expressed through their own team.

    Algalya, a 60-something refugee who fled Western Sahara as a war refugee decades ago, is among the millions of Sahrawi fans ready to cheer on Algeria. She still vividly remembers the joy of Algeria’s 2019 Africa Cup of Nations victory, when the entire camp erupted in celebration with traditional zaghareet ululations that lasted long into the night. “I remember having nowhere to go, and Algeria welcomed us with open arms,” she said. “I pray Algeria make us happy again.”

    Across the camps, football is woven into the fabric of daily life: children chase balls across dusty dirt streets between tents, families huddle around bulky secondhand televisions to watch major tournaments, and local weekly matches like the one in Smara draw crowds of enthusiastic spectators. For local players Hafdala Mohamed and Khalil, their World Cup plan is already set: they will gather to watch every single one of Algeria’s matches together, no matter how late kickoff falls.

    For Hafdala, like many other Sahrawi refugees, football is far more than just entertainment. It is one of the only unchanging certainties in a life shaped by decades of exile. Even as the conflict over their homeland remains unresolved, and the dream of self-determination stays unfulfilled, the shared joy of supporting Algeria on the world’s biggest football stage offers a rare moment of collective connection and hope.

  • Africa’s greatest World Cup kits – pick your favourite

    Africa’s greatest World Cup kits – pick your favourite

    The FIFA World Cup is globally celebrated for its breathtaking goals, last-minute drama, and raw emotional moments — but it is also a stage where memorable football fashion is born. When it comes to bold, culturally rooted, and instantly recognizable kit designs, African national teams have produced some of the most iconic looks in the tournament’s history. BBC Sport Africa has curated a list of 10 standout designs from the continent, spanning more than 50 years of World Cup participation, inviting fans to weigh in on which they rank as the all-time greatest.

    The oldest entry on the list hails from 1974, when Zaire (now the Democratic Republic of the Congo) took to the World Cup stage in a striking yellow and green ensemble that perfectly embodied the fashion sensibilities of its era. Featuring a wide collar and a dramatic deep V-neck, the kit made its biggest statement by emblazoning both the country’s name and the national team’s Leopards nickname and logo directly across the chest. While Zaire’s 1974 tournament ended in disappointment — including a lopsided 9-0 defeat to Yugoslavia — the kit itself has gone down in history as a bold classic. Even contemporary Congolese designers draw inspiration from it: Alvin Junior Mak, who went viral recently for creating the current DRC squad’s viral leopard-print arrival suits, says he looked back to 1974 to ground his work. “When you are in Africa, we say if you want to move forward, you have to see where you come from,” Mak explained to BBC Sport Africa.

    Next on the list is Algeria’s 1982 kit, created for the country’s first ever World Cup appearance. Mirroring Zaire’s 1974 design choice, the kit featured the country’s name printed across the chest, written in elegant Arabic script. Like the Zaire kit, it also boasts a deep neckline and oversized collar that marked it as a product of early 1980s fashion. Produced by Sonitex, Algeria’s defunct state-owned clothing manufacturer, the design is no longer bound by copyright protection — a detail that has made it widely reproduced by small local brands for both domestic fans and the Algerian diaspora. This accessibility has cemented its cult status among Algerian football fans, particularly self-described football hipsters, says Algerian sports journalist Maher Mazahi.

    Cameroon’s 1990 kit is forever tied to one of the most iconic runs in African World Cup history. That year, the Indomitable Lions became the first African nation to reach the tournament’s quarter-finals, stunning defending champions Argentina 1-0 in the opening match and capturing global attention with Roger Milla’s iconic corner flag dance celebration. The 38-year-old striker, who was called out of retirement by Cameroon’s President Paul Biya, scored four unforgettable goals during the run. The kit’s centerpiece was a roaring lion emblazoned across the chest, a symbol that still stands for national pride, courage, and determination for Cameroonians, explains Paul Njie, BBC World Service’s Yaounde correspondent. “Many people believe that was the best ever performance of the Cameroon national team and some of them attribute that to the luck which came with the kit,” Njie says.

    For Nigeria’s 1994 World Cup debut, the Super Eagles debuted an away white kit that would become legendary. In that tournament, Nigeria claimed 3-0 and 2-0 wins over Bulgaria and Greece respectively while wearing the white jersey, dropping only their matches against Argentina and Italy when wearing their traditional green home kit. That coincidence has only added to the kit’s mythos among Nigerian football fans. “We see the legends, the players that made the difference for Nigerian football, and if I close my eyes that’s the first shirt that comes to mind,” former Super Eagles captain William Troost-Ekong told BBC Sport Africa. “Nigeria’s greatest set of Super Eagles have worn that shirt and all of us strive to be able to imitate that.”

    South Africa’s 1998 kit, worn during the country’s first ever World Cup appearance after the end of apartheid, is a geometric-designed classic from Italian sportswear brand Kappa. The design was an updated iteration of the kit Bafana Bafana wore when they won the 1996 Africa Cup of Nations on home soil, a moment that remains a touchstone of national pride. Though South Africa failed to win any of their three group stage matches in their 1998 debut, the kit has endured as a fan favorite. “These days South Africa tend to wear yellow, but back in the 1990s their shirts were much more fun,” said Josh Warwick, co-founder of the Cult Kits website. “In our opinion, Kappa were one of the great brands from that era.”

    One of the most controversial entries on the list is Cameroon’s 2002 sleeveless kit. Originally designed as a basketball-style vest, the Indomitable Lions wore the sleeveless version to win the 2002 Africa Cup of Nations title just months before the World Cup, and it instantly won over players and fans alike. “When we came to the dressing room we said, ‘Wow, this is a new generation of shirt’. When we went on to the pitch the world was watching and it became famous. Everybody in Africa wanted to wear that shirt,” former Cameroon midfielder Eric Djemba-Djemba recalled in a 2023 interview. However, FIFA ruled the sleeveless design violated World Cup competition rules, forcing Cameroon to add awkward black sleeves for the tournament — a decision many fans still see as an unnecessary spoiler.

    Senegal’s 2002 kit is tied to one of the biggest upsets in World Cup history: the Teranga Lions’ 1-0 opening match win over defending champions France, courtesy of a winning goal from the large, imposing midfielder Papa Bouba Diop, nicknamed “The Wardrobe” for his massive frame. The kit’s signature baggy fit even became part of its iconic look, and it remains wildly popular among Senegalese fans decades later. “Of all our kits, 2002 is the best,” said Mamour Insa, a Senegal fan who followed his team at a recent World Cup watch event in New York. “All our generation, they wear just that kit. A lot of young people wear it more than new designs. It is very difficult to find.”

    Ghana’s 2010 red and gold kit is forever linked to one of the most gut-wrenching moments in African World Cup history: Asamoah Gyan’s late penalty miss against Uruguay that would have sent the Black Stars into the tournament semi-finals, the first for any African side. With the match tied 1-1 in the final moments of extra time, Luis Suarez was sent off for a deliberate handball that stopped a sure Ghana goal, but Gyan’s penalty clipped the crossbar and went over; Uruguay went on to win the match in a penalty shootout. Despite the heartbreaking outcome, the kit itself remains a fan favorite. “I think it was a great shirt, the players loved it,” former Ghana midfield legend Michael Essien told BBC Sport Africa, jokingly adding that its tight, figure-hugging cut required a well-built physique to pull off.

    Nigeria’s 2018 neon green kit became a global viral sensation before the tournament even kicked off, with fans queuing for hours outside retailers to get their hands on the popular design. The Nike design pays deliberate homage to Nigeria’s 1994 debut kit, creating a modern classic that circles back to the Super Eagles’ first World Cup moment. “The best football shirt ever,” Troost-Ekong said of the design. “Everyone was trying to get hold of it, I had so many calls and messages.” Despite its massive popularity, the Super Eagles only got to wear it once during the 2018 tournament, in a 2-0 group stage win over Iceland.

    The newest entry on the list is Ghana’s 2026 home kit, which features a striking spiderweb design inspired by Kwaku Ananse, the iconic trickster spider figure from Ghanaian folklore. The bold design has drawn comparisons to Spider-Man’s suit for its bright, web-patterned look, but it may never get its moment on the World Cup stage: FIFA has already ruled that Ghana will not be allowed to wear the home strip for any of its 2026 group stage matches, leaving fans to wonder if this will go down as a would-be classic that never got its spotlight.