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Iran: UK support to US is act of aggression

Iran’s warning that UK base access makes London "complicit in aggression" isn’t diplomatic posturing—it’s backed by boots-on-the-ground evidence most outlets ignore. Novara Media cuts through Downing Street’s "defensive strikes" spin with raw footage of B-1 bombers and 2,000-pound bombs at RAF Fairford, proving this isn’t theory but observable reality. When your government hides bomb movements behind tarped fences, "defensive" starts sounding like a bad joke.

The Evidence They Can’t Hide

Novara Media reports that Declassified UK’s investigation found "a significant amount of heavy US bombers stationed here... around a quarter to half of the US fleet of B-1s." Crucially, the team witnessed "one of the B-1s taking off presumably heading over to bomb Iran" while soldiers moved ordnance—a detail buried in official silence. This isn’t speculation; it’s visual proof of offensive operations from British soil. The government’s claim that bases are used only for "defensive and limited purpose" collapses when confronted with footage of weapons designed for deep-strike payloads. Novara Media writes, "This doesn’t scream defensive operation to me—the US forces... are hiding concealing what they’re doing behind the fence." That single observation dismantles months of ministerial obfuscation.

Iran: UK support to US is act of aggression

Critics might note that UK-US defense interdependence is structural, not optional—but when the MoD refuses to confirm "whether they have to approve the list of targets" or "monitor how many civilians were killed," it exposes complicity by design. The evasion is the evidence.

The Economic Blind Spot

Where Novara shines is connecting military policy to kitchen-table consequences. Phil Miller argues that by failing to challenge Trump and Netanyahu earlier, the UK enabled "decades long damage to the global economy" through destroyed gas fields. He notes Iran’s retaliation against Gulf energy infrastructure directly impacts British households: "We’re going to be seeing higher energy prices, higher food prices... because of this US-Israeli foreign policy." This reframes the conflict from abstract geopolitics to immediate cost-of-living pain—a lens missing from mainstream coverage.

If the UK had actually stood up to Netanyahu and Trump... I don’t think we’d have got to the stage... where they’re doing potentially decades long damage to the global economy.

Weaving in Diego Garcia’s history deepens this: the 1966 forced expulsion of Chagossians to host US bombers created the very infrastructure now enabling Iran strikes. Britain’s colonial military footprint isn’t legacy—it’s active complicity.

The Illusion of Control

Novara Media highlights Downing Street’s fantasy of "policing" US actions. When asked how they verify strikes target only "missile launcher sites," the government gives "no running commentary." Miller exposes the absurdity: "The UK is saying that whatever these [2,000 lb bombs] are being used for is defensive." The core flaw? Assuming Iran forfeits self-defense rights—a legal fiction that ignores how US bases on Iranian soil (like those in Iraq) invite retaliation.

France’s 1966 withdrawal from NATO command shows alternatives exist, yet the UK remains trapped in "lock step" with America. Even Spain—host to US bases—takes a "more independent line," proving dependence isn’t destiny. Novara rightly notes Caroline Lucas’s warning that Trump "has lazily suggested he might go and attack Cuba," linking Middle East escalation to broader recklessness. (Cuba’s illegal energy embargo—mentioned in the broadcast—reminds us how such "offensive” rhetoric becomes policy.)

Bottom Line

Novara Media’s strongest contribution is proving UK complicity through physical evidence at Fairford—a journalistic coup most outlets avoid. Its vulnerability? Underestimating how deeply Atlanticist ideology is baked into British statecraft. Watch for whether public opposition (50% against base access) forces Starmer to choose between law and loyalty.

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Iran: UK support to US is act of aggression

by Novara Media · Novara Media · Watch video

Welcome to Navara Live. Coming up tonight, the Iranian foreign minister has warned that letting the US use British bases constitutes participation in aggression. And we speak to declassified UK editor Phil Miller about Britain's role in the war on Iran. are we complicit?

Does that make us vulnerable? Also, analyst Espanar Batman Helich explains why Trump has bitten off more than he can chew in the Middle East. we do a bit of a deep dive on the economics of this conflict. incredibly interesting.

plus we have a special report from Steven Mefin. He's in Havana amid the illegal US energy embargo of Cuba. And finally, Bernie Sanders continues his campaign against AI companies. Can he save us all from doom?

I'm Michael Walker. I'll be joined in the second half of tonight's show by Richard H, host of Navar Media's new show, Do Your Own Research. if you'd like to support our work, you can sign up at nvaria.com/support. The Iranian foreign minister has warned the UK that letting the US use British bases is participation in aggression.

So saying we are part of the war. in a call with UK foreign secretary Iet Kooper, say Abbas Aragi also demanded that the British government ceases cooperation with the United States. Now, Downing Street has repeatedly claimed that British bases are only being used for defensive rather than offensive action. and this is how the prime minister's spokesperson responded to Araguchi.

so he said, well, they said as a spokesperson, we didn't participate in the initial strikes and we're not getting drawn into the wider war. We have authorized the US to use our bases for a specific defensive and limited purpose in response to Iran's continued and outrageous aggression. And we've always said that this is the best way to eliminate the urgent threat and restore a path to diplomacy. however, an investigation by Declassified at the Arya Fairford Air Base in Glostershare makes UK involvement in the Iran war seem not quite so innocent.

>> There's a significant amount of heavy US bombers stationed here at RAF Fairford. for several B-52s. around a quarter to half of the US fleet of B1s are also stationed here. at one point we actually saw one of the B1s taking off presumably heading over to bomb Iran.

We've also seen a number of 2,000 pound bombs just stationed kind of ...