Battle Lines: Biden blocks weapons to Israel, the dire state of Iran’s economy, war correspondent responds to Civil War film

Rafah
Palestinians sit to next to belongings as people flee Rafah - Mohammed Salem/Reuters

We speak to our Middle East correspondent Natalia Vasilyeva in Jerusalem on Israel’s impending assault on Rafa and Biden’s threats to halt weapons supplies to Israel. Then, we hear from Jumana Shahin, a Gaza resident who’s fled to Egypt to protect herself and her young daughter. Then, we speak to our economics reporter Melissa Lawford on the dire state of Iran’s economy. And finally, I talk to senior foreign correspondent Roland Oliphant, who recently saw the film Civil War, directed by Andrew Garland. Roland, as a war reporter, had some thoughts on the film and he shares them with us.

Across the world, from Europe to Asia, from the Americas to the Middle East, tensions are rising between nation states as the traditional alliances and alignments evolve in the 21st century.

This year sees war in Europe and the Middle East, and elections in major economies, from the US and the UK to Taiwan. Insurgencies flare in Yemen and Burma, tensions escalate in East Africa, and all around the world the international security architecture buckles under increasing pressure.

Battle Lines, a new podcast from The Telegraph, combines on-the-ground reporting with analytical expertise to help the listener to better understand the course of world politics, wars and tensions, as fault lines grind and slip in an increasingly dangerous and confusing multipolar world.

Listen to Battle Lines using the audio player in this article or on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, or your favourite podcast app.