Westminster is scrambling tonight. The news broke like a thunderclap. US and Israeli jets struck deep into Iranian territory. The scale is staggering. Early estimates put the dead at thousands. Civilians, mostly. The usual fog of war is thicker than ever.
Downing Street released a terse statement. It called for an 'independent and impartial' casualty count. No condemnation of the strikes. No endorsement. Just a plea for transparency. That tells you everything. The government is terrified of being dragged into this.
I have been on the phone to sources in the Foreign Office. They are fuming. They were not warned. Not fully. The Americans gave them a heads-up, but the timing and scale were a shock. One source described it as 'a fait accompli.' The special relationship is being tested.
The numbers are climbing. Hospitals in Tehran are overwhelmed. The IRGC is claiming heroics. But the leaks from within the regime suggest chaos. Command and control is degraded. The mullahs are cornered. They will lash out.
Britain's call for a independent count is clever. It puts London on the side of facts. It also buys time. The government does not want to take sides yet. But the opposition is stirring. Labour's frontbench is demanding answers. The Liberal Democrats are calling for an emergency debate. The SNP is already accusing the government of complicity.
Inside the Cabinet, there is unease. The Defence Secretary is privately uneasy about the lack of consultation. The Foreign Secretary is trying to manage the fallout. The PM is silent. That is rare. He usually loves the camera. Not tonight.
The real game is about positioning. Britain wants to be seen as a honest broker. But the Americans will not tolerate any criticism. The pressure will be immense. Expect a series of carefully worded statements in the coming days. Each one will be parsed for meaning.
There are rumours of a joint EU statement. France and Germany are also alarmed. But they are even more cautious. The US is the security guarantor of Europe. Nobody wants a rupture.
The markets are already reacting. Oil prices are spiking. The FTSE is tumbling. The cost of this will be felt at the petrol pump. The Treasury is already modelling the impact on inflation.
On the backbenches, the mood is ugly. Conservative MPs are split. The hawks want Britain to stand 'shoulder to shoulder' with Israel. The doves are whispering about 'adventurism.' The 1922 Committee is meeting tomorrow. It could get nasty.
The real question is what comes next. Iran has promised 'severe revenge.' That could mean closing the Strait of Hormuz. That would choke global oil supplies. It could mean attacks on US bases in the Gulf. It could mean proxies striking Western targets. The security services here are on high alert.
Downing Street's call for an independent count is a first step. It is a stay of execution. The government hopes the situation will clarify. But clarity is in short supply. The fog is thick. And the bodies are piling up.
I will have more as the night wears on. The coffee is already cold. The phone is hot. This story is just beginning.











