Prime minister backs US president as he bombs Iranian nuclear sites and says key facilities 'completely and totally obliterated’

Donald Trump is keeping the world guessing about whether he will join Israeli attacks on Tehran's nuclear facilities.

Sir Keir Starmer’s spokesman called for restraint and a return to diplomacy

The PM repeated his call for de-escalation in the region, saying concerns about Tehran's nuclear programme were best dealt 'by way of negotiations than by way of conflict'.

The prime minister has urged the US President to step back from the brink. But if Trump does strike Iran, what are Starmer’s options? Kate Devlin explains

The Prime Minister said that Tehran's atomic programme was 'a grave threat to international security' after bombers dropped 30,000-pound 'bunker buster' bombs on the Fordow…

The prime minister says in a statement that Iran can never be allowed to develop a nuclear weapon.

Prime minister backs US president as he bombs Iranian nuclear sites and says key facilities 'completely and totally obliterated’

UK prime minister says Iran’s nuclear programme is a ‘grave threat to international security’

When Trump left the G7 Starmer told journalists that the US president wanted to de-escalate the Middle East crisis. Five days later Trump bombs Iran. The Independent’s David…

Keir Starmer and Donald Trump spoke last night after the US strikes on Tehran's nuclear sites. But No10's readout did not include any reference to 'de-escalation'.

Top Trump advisers have struck a more cautious tone than the president, who claims that a volley of missiles and bunker-buster bombs obliterated three Iranian nuclear sites

The prime minister has repeatedly called for calm in the Middle East. But in the wake of Trump’s strikes on Iran, what are Starmer’s options? Kate Devlin and Millie Cooke explain …

Former security minister Tom Tugendhat says US strikes were “the right thing to do” and that UK Government is “vacillating”

After days of ministers desperately dodging on whether they supported the action, Keir Starmer sounded a much more positive tone as he arrived at the Nato summit in The Hague.