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Tuesday, April 7, 2026

Trump announces two-week Iran ceasefire

Astronauts prepare for mission’s most dangerous moment | ‘I’m an orthopaedic hip surgeon. These are the mistakes midlifers make’
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Wednesday, 8 April 2026

Issue No. 409

Good morning.

Donald Trump has announced a ceasefire in the war between the US and Iran. His announcement of a two-week pause in fighting came just moments before the deadline he had given the Islamic Republic to reopen the Strait of Hormuz or face the death of a “whole civilisation”. Benedict Smith reports on a historic truce.

Meanwhile, The Telegraph will be hosting the first in a series of live debates later this month. Join Allister Heath and guests including Michael Gove and Charles Moore for a special event on April 22, in Westminster’s Emmanuel Centre. Plus, you’ll have the chance to put your questions to our panel in our Q&A. Sign up here.

Chris Evans, Editor

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In today’s edition

Are you a coffee snob? You may be going to Hell

Artemis II astronauts prepare for mission’s most dangerous moment

Plus, ‘I’m an orthopaedic hip surgeon. These are the mistakes midlifers make that lead to pain and surgery’

Last chance: A whole year for just £25

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Donald Trump announces 11th-hour Iran ceasefire

A woman in Tehran reacts to the ceasefire announcement

Benedict Smith

Benedict Smith

US Reporter

 

There were just minutes to spare before Donald Trump’s threat to wipe out Iranian civilisation when he accepted a ceasefire deal mediated by Pakistan.

Taking to Truth Social last night, Trump wrote: “Subject to the Islamic Republic of Iran agreeing to the COMPLETE, IMMEDIATE, and SAFE OPENING of the Strait of Hormuz, I agree to suspend the bombing and attack of Iran for a period of two weeks. This will be a double sided CEASEFIRE!”

Israel and Iran have both agreed to the truce, meaning that Tehran will reopen the strait immediately, as long as both countries halt their attacks. The ceasefire doesn’t cover Lebanon, Israel has clarified.

The US president hailed a new “Golden Age of the Middle East”, calling the truce a “big day for world peace”.

Markets rallied following the announcement, with oil prices plunging nearly 17 per cent and stocks surging.

Demonstrators in Tehran burn American and Israeli flags

Although Tehran has agreed to reopen the strait, the agreement does little to address the reasons why the US went to war in the first place.

Crucially, Iran is still thought to retain its enriched uranium, and has not ruled out producing any more.

Trump started bombing Tehran seemingly with the intention of stopping the world being held hostage by a nuclear-armed “terrorist state”. However, it seems to be in the same position after almost six weeks of war.

Peace talks are going ahead on Friday, but the regime appears to have been left with a stronger hand than it had in the past.

Now it knows it can push up oil prices by choking off the flow of tankers through the Strait of Hormuz. If it chooses, it can tighten the screws on the US president again.
Continue reading

Go deeper with our full coverage of the Iran war:

How the 11th hour US-Iran ceasefire unfolded

Trump will never be able to wipe out Iranian civilisation

• David Blair:
Iran’s stubborn rulers defied Saddam Hussein. They won’t yield to Trump

Follow the latest here

 

Opinion

Allison Pearson Headshot

Allison Pearson

Waitrose’s sacking of a hero employee sums up Broken Britain

By bravely tackling a shoplifter, Walker Smith demonstrated old-fashioned values that are all but extinct in modern society

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<span style="color:#DE0000;">Philip Johnston</span> Headshot

Philip Johnston

There is one lesson Starmer must learn from his hero Wilson – when to resign

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<span style="color:#DE0000;">Rowan Pelling</span> Headshot

Rowan Pelling

Pretending to be legally married is a dangerous celebrity trend

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Matt Cartoon
 

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In other news

Anna Wintour and Meryl Streep on the cover of American Vogue

Anna Wintour and Meryl Streep on the cover of American Vogue

Your Essential Reads

Exclusive: British drones destroy Russian-controlled bridge

The operation’s team designed a 50kg shaped charge that could be lowered by cable on to the bridge’s weakest points

In a breakthrough operation that will shape the future of warfare, Ukrainian forces used British drones to destroy a Russian-held bridge over the River Dnipro. Initially deemed impossible, the success of the two-month campaign marks the first known case of a drone-led operation being used to bring down a bridge in combat history.

This exclusive story is available to subscribers only.
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Kanye West has been banned from entering the UK and the festival he was due to headline, Wireless, has been cancelled

Rap’s anti-Semitism problem doesn’t stop at Kanye West

Amid the furore about Kanye West being barred from Britain on account of his anti-Semitic outbursts, it’s worth remembering a sinister truth: in the rap world, hatred of Jews doesn’t start or end with him. Liam Kelly delves into a sulphurous history – and discovers some of the most shocking lyrics you’ll ever read.
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Kanye West blocked from entering Britain

 

Charlotte Divine earned thousands on OnlyFans but says the lifestyle left her depressed

‘Social media lured me into the porn industry. Your teenage daughter could make the same mistake’

I joined OnlyFans on my 18th birthday, writes Charlotte Divine. With 30,000 followers on TikTok and countless suggestive messages in my inbox, I saw the platform as a way to make money. Soon, I was earning thousands and falling for the glamorous lies spun by social media influencers. Beneath the false promise of empowerment is a far darker reality – one that is hidden from teenage girls until it’s too late.

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Are you a coffee snob? You may be going to Hell

Do you live with a food bore? The kind of person who will drink only craft beer, or insists on buying Kalamata olives? As a medieval historian explains, we once understood these as types of gluttony, and the Seven Deadly Sins still have plenty to teach us about the problems of modern life.

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The Moon, and Earth, seen from the Orion craft on Monday. The astronauts travelled further from Earth than anyone has before

The Moon, and Earth, seen from the Orion craft on Monday. The crew of the Artemis II mission face a nail-biting re-entry to Earth this weekend

Artemis II astronauts prepare for mission’s most dangerous moment

Nasa’s astronauts may have journeyed deeper into space than any human has before, but their biggest test is yet to come. The crew face a nail-biting re-entry into Earth this weekend, which is even more tense because of ongoing problems with their capsule’s heat shield.

This is supposed to protect the spacecraft and crew as they make their way back through Earth’s atmosphere and temperatures of about 1,648C. However, during the Artemis I uncrewed mission, parts of the shield failed and for Artemis II Nasa has come up with a new trajectory. It has never been tried before.

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Seize the day

‘I’m an orthopaedic hip surgeon. These are the mistakes midlifers make that lead to pain and surgery’

Around 100,000 replacements are performed each year in Britain, but the hip is still widely misunderstood, says Giles Stafford, an orthopaedic hip surgeon. The good news is that much of the damage is preventable. From overstretching to doing too much high-impact exercise, these are the hip health mistakes he sees most often.

For subscribers only

Below is one more article I hope you’ll find helpful this morning:

  • We’re a nation of egg lovers, with the average British person eating two a week. However, are you aware of the most nutritional ways to eat them? Telegraph Health explains how to cook your eggs for maximum health benefits here.
 

Critic’s corner

The traumatic childhood that propelled Freddie Mercury to greatness

Freddie Mercury performing with Queen at the Forum in Los Angeles, 1977

Freddie Mercury performing with Queen at the Forum in Los Angeles, 1977

Ed Power

Ed Power

 

Queen’s second album, which depicts the beautiful magical kingdom of Rhye ripped violently asunder in a destructive war, has long been one of rock’s greatest mysteries.

Freddie Mercury refused to explain any of it, dismissing his Tolkien-esque lyrics as “airy-fairy fantasies”. That hasn’t stopped fans trying to decipher its meaning through dozens of Reddit threads and YouTube videos. Their conclusion? Rhye was actually inspired by Mercury’s island childhood in Zanzibar, which his family fled after a revolution broke out when the singer was in his late teens.

For Freddie, stuck in suburban Middlesex, the island had come to symbolise a lost innocence and a place of refuge for “when reality got too much.” As Queen II is re-released this week, I examine how its bombastic style led to Bohemian Rhapsody.
Continue reading

 

Your say

We’re all going on a summer holiday

Every weekday, Orlando Bird, our loyal reader correspondent, shares an off-piste topic that has brought out the best of your opinions and stories.

Orlando writes...
Poor old static caravans. Decades of cheap jibes, and now this. A photograph was recently published of one standing forlornly near the grounds of Marsh Farm on the Sandringham Estate, the soon-to-be home of Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor – something like the opposite of a celebrity endorsement. Cue a carnival of mockery.


 

In response, The Telegraph’s Sally Howard stepped up to defend this much-maligned form of accommodation. Many readers felt similarly protective. Martyn Ford wrote: “I have great memories of family holidays in a static van. We used to go to Ingoldmells or Sutton on Sea. The kids loved it. The smell of 100 cooked breakfasts wafting across the site of a morning made you hungry.”


 

Michael Houston recalled: “My two younger brothers and I had holidays in a caravan in Southend-on-Sea during the 1950s. It was a grubby-looking duck-egg blue, and was very small, with no running water. But they were great times for us kids from a tenement house on a bombed-out street in East London. Southend’s shingle beach was heaven.”


 

Another reader said: “We had a static caravan on a site in Middleton, West Sussex, during much of the 1980s. For us kids it was a constant adventure. We’d go off on our bikes for the whole weekend, making bases, going down to the beach and messing around. Brilliant memories. Unfortunately, the caravan was blown over and destroyed in the great storm of 1987.”


 

G Sanderson was less enthusiastic: “I have pictures of my brother and I standing in front of a caravan in Rye during the 1960s, dressed in plastic macs, with our shoulders hunched against the cold. Our mother fared no better, dressed in a thick woolly jumper, sitting in a deckchair grimacing rather than smiling. We never went back.”

Happy memories of static caravans? Send them here, and the best of the bunch will feature in a future edition of From the Editor PM, for which you can sign up here.

Please confirm in your reply that you are happy to be featured and that we have your permission to use your name.

 

Puzzles

Panagram

Find as many words as you can in today’s Panagram, including the nine-letter solution. Visit Telegraph Puzzles to play a range of head-scratching games, including The 1% Club, Cogs, and Quick, Mini or Cryptic Crosswords.


 

Yesterday’s Panagram was CURVATURE. Come back tomorrow for the solution to today’s puzzle.

 

Thank you for reading. Have a fulfilling day and I hope to see you tomorrow.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. I’d love to hear what you think of this newsletter. You can email me your feedback here.

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