The perils of meddling in the Middle East

🚣 Gentlemen’s rules | đŸŒ± Planting hack | đŸ“ș AI advert

In the headlines

MPs will vote this afternoon on the final stage of the assisted dying bill, which would allow terminally ill adults with less than six months to live to end their lives with medical assistance. The bill’s proposer, Labour MP Kim Leadbeater, says she’s “confident” it will pass, though at least a dozen MPs who backed the legislation or abstained in the last vote plan to oppose it. The foreign ministers of Britain, Germany and France are meeting their Iranian counterpart in Geneva today for the first high-level talks since Israel attacked Iran last week. Donald Trump says he will decide whether to join Israeli strikes “within the next two weeks”. Too much sleep could be worse for you than not enough. Scientists who analysed data from more than 2.1 million people found that those who regularly get less than the recommended seven hours of shut-eye are 14% more likely to die from any cause, but those who generally kip for more than nine hours are 34% likelier to croak.

Comment

George W Bush prematurely announcing victory in Iraq in 2003. Reuters/Alamy

The perils of meddling in the Middle East

More or less every US president in the past 50 years has been undone by “ill-fated embroilment in the Greater Middle East”, says Gerard Baker in The Times. For Jimmy Carter it was the US embassy hostage crisis in Iran; for Ronald Reagan, the Iran-Contra “debacle” and the 1983 bombing of a Beirut barracks that killed 241 Americans. Bill Clinton’s underwhelming response to Islamist terror – from the first World Trade Center bombing in 1993 to the attack on the USS Cole in Yemen seven years later – “led directly” to 9/11. George W Bush’s legacy will forever be stained by the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. For Barack Obama, it was failures in Libya and his refusal to enforce his “red line” warning to Syria’s Bashar al-Assad. Joe Biden’s presidency was “doomed” after his disastrous withdrawal from Afghanistan in 2021.

You could argue the only president to achieve any sustained success in the region – besides perhaps George Bush Sr – is Donald Trump in his first term. He did that by staying out of wars and keeping intervention to “surgical” strikes with limited objectives, such as the 2020 drone attack that killed Iranian general Qasem Soleimani. You can see why Trump might think a few “bunker-busting” bombs in Iran would be a similarly limited operation. But that’s exactly the sort of belief that led so many of his predecessors into “hopeless and heartbreaking wars”. What if the Iranian regime survives and launches retaliatory assaults on American military bases or terror attacks in the US itself? Would that lead to “more steps up the escalation ladder”? That’s the question America’s commander-in-chief must ask himself: how can he be sure this time will be different?

Advertisement

When the markets move, your money doesn’t.

If you’re looking for more consistent returns and need liquidity, cash is the place to be. But managing it and getting the best returns is a job in itself. With Insignis, you can access 3,500+ savings accounts from over 50 banks and building societies. Grow your cash savings and choose the right level of access to suit your personal and financial needs.

Discover how Insignis could work for you at insigniscash.com or speak with your Financial Adviser to learn more.

Tomorrow’s world

When the American betting firm Kalshi asked production companies for quotes to make a TV advert to air during the NBA finals, says Mashable, they were told it would take longer than they’d wanted and cost in the “six or seven-figure range”. So they turned to self-described AI filmmaker PJ Accetturo, who knocked out an ad in two days at a cost of $2,000. Accetturo gave the brief to Google’s Gemini chatbot, and asked it to produce prompts which he used to make a video in Veo3, the firm’s video maker. The “unhinged” results are above. Click the image to watch the whole thing.

Much better than an iPhone. Getty

Today our paid subscribers will be reading about:

đŸ€ł How screens are unraveling the social fabric
đŸ„” What a true gentleman does in a heatwave
đŸȘ A handy guide for which vegetables make “good neighbours”
đŸ§± The corporate drones who get Lego on expenses
🔋 Why repurposing old coal mines could power the future
😎 The precision operation to create the first artificial solar eclipse
💬 Christopher Hitchens on old friends

To join them, and go back to receiving the full newsletter every day, please take out a subscription. New subscribers get 50%, meaning it’s only £4 a month or £40 for the year.

Let us know what you thought of today’s issue by replying to this email
To find out about advertising and partnerships, click here 
Been forwarded this newsletter? Try it for free 
Enjoying The Knowledge? Click to share

Reply

or to participate.