Iran war could push global food insecurity to record levels, leaving 363 million people hungry Analysis from the United Nations World Food Programme suggests that if the war in Iran continues until June, an additional 45 million people will be without enough food.

Discover more articles based on similar topics and interests

Trump has expressed growing contempt for North Atlantic allies as they refused to be drawn into his war on Iran â key US politics stories from Wednesday 1 April at a glance Donald Trump has said he is âabsolutelyâ considering withdrawing the US from Nato, warning that the matter was âbeyond...

President says âlittle journeyâ to Iran has achieved military objectives but offers no clear timeline on end to conflict Donald Trump used a primetime address to the nation on Wednesday evening to declare the month-long war in Iran a success ânearing completionâ, despite a spiraling conflict that...

Researchers at the University of Manchester have used artificial intelligence to uncover a complex picture behind England's long-running productivity puzzle, challenging the idea that the country's economic performance can be explained by a simple North-South divide.

Going from serving the nation to serving a prison sentence As Australia faces renewed strategic tension and the heightened prospect of conflict abroad, new Flinders University research warns that many veterans and their familiesâthe very people relied upon to protect the nationâare being failed...

Donald Trumpâs Iran War Address: Flaunts âOverwhelming Victoriesâ By U.S. Military; Repeats Claim That Strait of Hormuz Will âOpen Up Naturallyâ President Donald Trump addressed an uneasy nation on Wednesday as the United Statesâ war with Iran entered its second month.

Fifty years of measuring the world's cleanest air Australia marks 50 years of monitoring the world's cleanest air in remote northwest Tasmania at Kennaook / Cape Grim Baseline Air Pollution Station, supporting global efforts to track human-driven changes to the atmosphere.