First Lady, Oluremi Tinubu, is set to preach at London’s Lambeth Palace, the seat of the Archbishop of Canterbury, on Thursday, as Nigeria records its first state visit to the United Kingdom in nearly four decades.
This is as President Bola Tinubu and Oluremi arrived Tuesday at London’s Stansted Airport.
The First Lady will also meet representatives of the Church of England, same day.
According to the official schedule reported by AFP, before Oluremi’s scheduled preaching, she and President Tinubu will first meet King Charles III on Wednesday. A meeting is also scheduled with heir-to-the-throne, Prince William, and his wife, Catherine, who will travel with them to Windsor, on the same day.
King Charles will later receive Tinubu for an audience at the historic Windsor Castle, west of London, before hosting a state banquet there in the evening.
Tinubu has visited Britain several times in his tenure, and the two countries remain major partners in trade, aid, and defense. London is also home to a massive Nigerian diaspora.
READ ALSO: PHOTOS: Tinubu Arrives In UK For Historic State Visit
Britain and Nigeria have a strong diplomatic relationship, and London and Abuja concluded a strategic partnership in November 2024 to strengthen economic, immigration, and security cooperation.
Likely on the agenda are issues ranging from major Nigerian port renovations backed by Britain as well as trade, which reached 8.1 billion pounds ($11 billion) in the year to September 2025, an 11.4 per cent year-on-year increase, according to the report.
The visit comes after suspected suicide bombings killed at least 23 people in northeastern Nigeria on Monday evening.
The country has been roiled by a jihadist insurgency since 2009, which US President Donald Trump has claimed amounts to a “genocide” of Christians — sparking a diplomatic crisis between Washington and Abuja, which denies the allegations.
Tinubu responded by ordering security chiefs to move to Maiduguri, where the attacks happened, to “take charge of the situation”.
READ ALSO: Tinubu Meets King Charles Today, To Talk Nigerian Port Renovations, Trade, Others
On Thursday, Tinubu is expected to meet British Prime Minister Keir Starmer and members of the Nigerian community abroad, according to the official schedule.
United Kingdom Officials welcome President Bola Ahmed Tinubu and First Lady, Senator Oluremi Tinubu, with them, United Kingdom Ambassador to Nigeria, Muhammed Maidugu, as the president arrived in the UK for a 2-day visit on Tuesday.
Missing from the official schedule is the traditional meeting between the visiting head of state and the British opposition.
The last Nigerian state visit to the UK took place in 1989, although Tinubu was received by Charles in September 2024.
Several central neighbourhoods in Beirut have been attacked in a series of Israeli strikes. Al Jazeera’s Zeina Khodr has been at the scene of one attack that flattened a multi-storey residential building.
The United States and Israel say their escalating military assault on Iran is about nuclear proliferation, deterrence and regional security. But recent developments suggest another, older logic at work. The deeper objective is not simply weakening Iran or forcing regime change. It is safeguarding the mobility of oil – the lifeblood of the global capitalist economy.
Consider the recent US strike on Iran’s Kharg Island, the country’s main oil export terminal. The island sits just off the coast of the Gulf near the Strait of Hormuz, through which roughly one-fifth of the world’s oil passes each day. Any disruption there would reverberate immediately across global energy markets. Recent reports highlight how sensitive oil prices are to the threat of disruption in the strait.
Yet the most revealing feature of the Kharg Island strike is not simply that it occurred, but what was deliberately spared.
US President Donald Trump publicly celebrated the operation, declaring that American forces had destroyed “every MILITARY target” on the island. At the same time, he emphasised that the oil infrastructure itself had been left untouched. Writing on Truth Social, Trump said he had chosen not to “wipe out the Oil Infrastructure on the Island”, warning that such restraint could change if Iran threatened shipping in the Strait of Hormuz.
This distinction is revealing. Kharg Island handles the vast majority of Iran’s crude exports. Destroying its oil terminals would have dramatically disrupted global supply and likely sent prices soaring. Instead, Washington opted for a calibrated strike: military damage without energy paralysis.
The implication is difficult to ignore. The US is prepared to weaken Iran militarily, but it remains deeply invested in maintaining the flow of oil that sustains the global economy.
Energy security has long structured US strategy in the Gulf. Since the Carter Doctrine of 1980 – which declared the region’s oil supply a vital American interest – Washington has treated Gulf energy infrastructure as a strategic priority. The possibility that Iran could restrict shipping through the Strait of Hormuz remains one of the most destabilising risks to the global economy.
In this light, the Kharg Island strike looks less like a step towards total war than a signal. Iran’s military capacity may be targeted, but the oil infrastructure underpinning the global economy remains a protected asset.
Taken in isolation, the Kharg strike could be read as escalation management. But placed alongside Washington’s behaviour across multiple theatres, a more consistent logic comes into view.
This logic becomes clearer when placed alongside other recent moves by the Trump administration. In Venezuela, for example, Washington has intensified its confrontation with President Nicolas Maduro. While US officials frame their pressure campaign in terms of democracy and corruption, Venezuela also happens to possess the largest proven oil reserves in the world. Control over Venezuela’s political future is therefore inseparable from control over how and where its oil is produced and sold.
If a more pro-US government were to emerge in Caracas, Venezuela’s oil industry could be reoriented towards Western markets and investment. In that sense, the conflict is not only ideological but also deeply material. Indeed, analysts have pointed out that Washington has long sought to reshape Venezuela’s oil sector in ways that align more closely with US economic interests.
The same logic can be seen in Washington’s shifting stance towards Russian oil. Even as the US continues to frame Moscow as a strategic adversary, US policymakers have recently eased certain restrictions affecting Russian crude exports in order to stabilise global energy markets and prevent price spikes. Even confrontation with a strategic adversary is recalibrated when oil flows are at risk. The move underscores a broader reality: geopolitical rivalries often give way to the overriding imperative of keeping energy flows stable. Whether the source is Russia, Venezuela or the Persian Gulf, the priority remains the same – keep the oil flowing and the global economy running.
The pattern extends beyond oil itself.
The same imperative is now extending beyond oil to the critical minerals that underpin future energy and technological systems. Trump has repeatedly revived the idea of acquiring Greenland – a territory believed to hold enormous reserves of rare earth minerals as well as potentially significant energy resources beneath its Arctic seabed. These resources have become increasingly valuable in a world defined by technological competition and energy transition.
Similarly, Washington has pushed aggressively for access to Ukraine’s rare earth minerals, which are essential for advanced electronics, renewable energy technologies and military systems. These minerals have become a central strategic concern for major powers seeking to secure supply chains for critical industries.
Across these cases, what emerges is a consistent effort to secure control over the resources and infrastructures that sustain the global economy. Taken together, these moves point to a consistent geopolitical strategy. Trump’s foreign policy appears increasingly shaped by what might be called extractive imperialism – the effort to secure control over the resources that power global capitalism.
Oil remains central to this system. Despite decades of discussion about renewable energy transitions, hydrocarbons still dominate the world’s energy supply. Global trade, transportation and industry remain deeply dependent on steady flows of crude oil and natural gas.
The infrastructure enabling oil mobility – pipelines, export terminals, shipping routes and refineries – has become one of the most strategically protected elements of the global economy.
The Kharg Island strike illustrates this dynamic with unusual clarity. Military assets were fair game; oil infrastructure was not. Violence was carefully calibrated so as not to disrupt the energy circulation on which the global economy depends.
The war with Iran is often framed as a struggle over nuclear weapons or regional influence. Those concerns certainly matter. But beneath them lies a more fundamental geopolitical objective: preserving the energy arteries that sustain the global economic order.
What is at stake is not simply conflict between states, but the management of a global system that cannot tolerate interruptions to its own energy lifelines.
Oil has long structured the geopolitics of the Middle East. The Kharg Island episode shows that it still does. Beneath the rhetoric of deterrence and security lies a familiar imperial imperative: keep the oil moving.
Islamabad, Pakistan – On the evening of March 13, drones struck three locations across Pakistan. Two children were wounded in Quetta. Civilians were also injured in Kohat and in Rawalpindi, the garrison city that houses the headquarters of Pakistan’s armed forces and neighbours the capital, Islamabad.
Pakistan’s military said the drones were intercepted before reaching their targets. But President Asif Ali Zardari said Kabul had “crossed a red line by attempting to target our civilians”.
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It was not the first such incident. In late February, Information Minister Attaullah Tarar said anti-drone systems had brought down small drones over Abbottabad, Swabi and Nowshera in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. Another attack was reported in Bannu in the same province, where five men were injured after a quadcopter hit a mosque.
While the Taliban group in Afghanistan claimed to have struck military targets in Rawalpindi and Islamabad in the latest attacks last week, Pakistan’s military dismissed those assertions as propaganda, describing the drones as “rudimentary” and “locally produced”. Al Jazeera reached out to the Pakistani military to seek its views on the latest drone attacks but received no response.
Yet, analysts say, irrespective of how the Taliban’s drones are characterised, these recent incidents point to an increasingly troubling pattern for Pakistan: drones over garrison cities, drones over places of worship, drones over urban centres. The government responded by imposing a nationwide ban on drone flights and briefly restricting airspace over the capital.
“As much as Pakistan is downplaying these drones, the point is not what level of drone they are; the point is that drones are coming, and they are coming to the capital. That is the central danger,” said Abdul Basit, a senior associate fellow at the International Centre for Political Violence and Terrorism Research (ICPVTR) in Singapore.
For many in Pakistan’s security circles, the question is no longer whether the drones caused significant damage. It is whether their ability to penetrate deep into the country, at a time when Pakistan has been engaged in an “open war” with Afghanistan for three weeks, reveals holes in its preparedness against a threat that is increasingly emerging as the future of warfare.
A conflict years in the making
The escalation with Afghanistan has not occurred out of the blue, analysts point out. By 2025, Pakistan was experiencing one of its deadliest periods in nearly a decade.
Attacks by armed groups were concentrated in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan provinces, and particularly carried out by the Pakistan Taliban, also known as Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP). Pakistan insists that the TTP is an ideological ally of the Taliban in Afghanistan, and that the latter has given the Pakistan Taliban shelter and support in attacks on Pakistani soil. The Taliban has rejected Pakistani allegations that it is complicit in the TTP attacks against Pakistan.
Even as Islamabad and Kabul traded charges — and engaged in occasional border clashes — the attacks in Pakistan last year surpassed the total for 2024 well before the year ended, according to data from the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data project.
Islamabad repeatedly pressed Kabul, both bilaterally and through partners such as China, to act against the TTP and other armed groups, but Afghan authorities denied harbouring anti-Pakistan armed groups on its soil.
The first serious escalation between the two neighbours came in October 2025, when they engaged in a week of intense border clashes, the worst since the Taliban’s return to power in 2021.
Mediation efforts by Qatar and Turkiye produced a fragile ceasefire, but core differences remained unresolved. Pakistan continued to demand that Kabul act against the TTP, while the Taliban insisted that it was not to blame for the neighbouring country’s internal security challenges.
By February 2026, Islamabad appeared to conclude that diplomacy had run its course.
On February 21 and 22, Pakistan launched air strikes on what it described as “terrorist” camps in Afghanistan’s Nangarhar, Paktika and Khost provinces, targeting groups linked to TTP and ISIL (ISIS).
The Taliban responded with artillery fire across the border, attacking border posts and launching drone attacks into Pakistani territory while Pakistan, relying on its superior air power, continued its aerial campaign.
The fighting has persisted since. Afghan authorities accuse Pakistan of killing dozens of civilians. On March 16, Kabul said a strike hit the Omar Addiction Treatment Hospital, a 2,000-bed facility, with hundreds of people killed in the attack.
Pakistan rejected the allegation, calling it “false and aimed at misleading public opinion”, and said its strikes had “precisely targeted military installations and terrorist support infrastructure”.
The United Nations special rapporteur on human rights in Afghanistan said he was “dismayed” by reports of civilian casualties and urged all parties to respect international law, including the protection of civilian sites.
Amid a wider regional conflict that saw the United States and Israel bombarding Iranian cities and Iran’s retaliatory strikes across the Gulf region, the Pakistan-Afghanistan confrontation has drawn less global attention.
Yet analysts say the introduction of drones into the conflict marks a significant shift.
“This dimension is a paradigmatic shift in conflicts all over the globe,” said Iftikhar Firdous, cofounder of The Khorasan Diary, a research and security portal focused on the region.
“Loitering munitions are cheap, tantalising and effective, a perfect weapon for non-state actors or states with sub-par military equipment to counter and respond to bigger powers,” he told Al Jazeera.
A new threat in the skies
Pakistan is a nuclear-armed state with a standing army of more than 600,000 personnel and one of the largest air forces in the region.
A mortar round falls towards a target from a drone, in this still image from a handout video, said to show Pakistani forces conducting a strike on a Taliban post on the Afghan border, in Spin Boldak, October 15, 2025 [Handout/Inter-Services Public Relations via Reuters]
Still, the Taliban’s “rudimentary” drones managed to force an airspace closure and target locations deep inside Pakistani territory.
“This escalation is dangerous in both its horizontal and vertical dimensions,” ICPVTR’s Basit told Al Jazeera. “Horizontally, you are seeing this reach urban centres, Rawalpindi, the capital itself being hit, and hit persistently. Vertically, the threat is now coming from the air, with suicide bombing mechanisms delivered by drones.”
The drones are not exactly new to Pakistan’s landscape. The TTP and other armed groups, particularly in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, have been deploying weaponised quadcopters against checkposts, police stations and military convoys since at least 2024.
Despite a ban on importing drones, analysts estimate such devices cost between 55,000 and 278,000 Pakistani rupees ($200 to $1,000) and are commercially available in Pakistani markets, sourced mostly from Chinese manufacturers.
Ahmed Sharif Chaudhry, the director general of Pakistan’s Inter-Services Public Relations, the military’s media wing, in a news conference in January this year, acknowledged that the country suffered 5,397 “terrorist” incidents in 2025, of which more than 400, nearly one in 10, involved quadcopter drones.
In December 2025, the Pakistan Taliban announced the formation of its dedicated air force unit, which indicated the group’s first official acknowledgement that it possessed drone technology.
Peshawar-based Firdous said, perhaps in their current form, these drones do not have the sophistication to cause large-scale damage.
“Pakistan’s air defence system can easily tackle them. But as the Taliban and the TTP get their hands on better technology,” he said, “that situation could change.”
On the other hand, Muhammad Shoaib, an academic and security analyst at Quaid-i-Azam University in Islamabad, said drones are arguably the most effective weapons the Taliban can use against Pakistan.
“Their reliance on drones and extensive propaganda based on the footage suggests that the relations between the two sides are likely to deteriorate and violence will increase,” he told Al Jazeera.
Experts say the use of drones by the Taliban marks a shift from the group’s history of using improvised explosive devices in its war against NATO forces to standoff aerial attacks that allow operatives to remain beyond the range of return fire.
“The parallel with IEDs is instructive,” said Basit, who has extensively written and researched on drone warfare.
“The Taliban relied on rapidly evolving, adapting techniques to fight against American forces during the so-called war on terror. Now these drones are effectively a suicide bomber from the air. The tactical sophistication will keep increasing, and no matter what countermeasures you bring, the sheer volume and variety could exhaust the defence over time,” he said.
Limits of defence
Intercepting these drones is harder than it sounds, say analysts.
Pakistan’s air defence systems were designed primarily to counter high-altitude threats, such as fighter aircraft and ballistic missiles, particularly from India. Low-flying, slow-moving quadcopters create a different problem.
“Pakistan’s current air defence network can counter numbered drone projectiles via soft-kill and hard-kill measures,” said Hammad Waleed, a research associate at the Islamabad-based think tank Strategic Vision Institute.
He was referring to electronic jamming and signal disruption on the one hand — “soft-kill” tactics — and the physical interception or destruction of a drone — “hard kill” measures on the other.
“But in the case of swarms of drones or overwhelming drone usage, the country will struggle. Traditional air defences were made for fighter jets, mostly in medium- to high-altitude combat. Drones fly at lower altitudes, dodging radar coverage,” he told Al Jazeera.
Adil Sultan, a former Pakistan air force (PAF) air commodore who has written extensively on emerging technologies in conflict, particularly drones, said there is no “foolproof system” to intercept all kinds of drones.
“Drones that are commercially available and hover at slow speeds, and can be launched from anywhere, including from our own territory against certain targets, are particularly difficult,” he said.
“It may be difficult to shoot down every incoming drone, and it is also not a cost-effective strategy,” Sultan told Al Jazeera.
Recent incidents underline these limitations. In Kohat, police jammed a drone’s signal, causing it to crash. Falling debris still injured two people.
Basit, the Singapore-based scholar, said Pakistan — and other militaries — needed to prepare for a future where drone attacks would be the norm.
“This is the new normal, and somewhere along the line, a drone will get through and hit a target. Ukraine and Iran are instructive examples. A drone on its own is low-yield, but the day they combine it with other tactics, a vehicle-borne IED followed by a drone strike simultaneously, the consequences become far more serious. As this becomes more sophisticated, cracks will begin to show,” he warned.
Russia’s ongoing four-year war against Ukraine, and now the US-Israel war on Iran, have shown apparently weaker countries putting up strong resistance against significantly larger, more powerful armies by using hundreds of drones to counter their offensive.
Expanding threat
The Taliban’s drone attacks came less than a year after Pakistan’s air defences were tested along its eastern frontier.
A man inspects debris at the site of an alleged Indian drone strike in Karachi, Pakistan, in May 2025 [Rehan Khan/EPA]
During India’s Operation Sindoor in May 2025, the bigger neighbour deployed Israeli-made drones, specifically HAROP loitering munitions, which Waleed of the Strategic Vision Institute described as a means to map Pakistan’s air defence network before follow-on missile attacks.
“We are looking at a complex mosaic of conflict in what we call a triple-stretch in military studies. Iran-Afghanistan on the western flank and India on the eastern,” Firdous said.
“That could really exhaust the resources of Pakistan. In that scenario, civilian targets are usually the last; Pakistan’s economic and military architecture will face the brunt,” he cautioned.
Waleed went further in his assessment of the combined threat, presenting an ominous picture of what Pakistan’s security apparatus could face.
“If a two-front threat materialises, Pakistan would be better off neutralising the western threat first. Otherwise, you risk India and the Taliban synergising their operations, sleeper cells targeting PAF bases, drone attacks and suicide bombings from the west, while India’s air force exploits a military already stretched thin dealing with multipronged attacks from the other direction,” Waleed said.
Basit said a simultaneous two-front scenario, while unlikely, is no longer unthinkable.
“Pakistan’s air defence architecture is fairly capable, and the military learns from experience,” he said. “But a two-front war does not suit anybody. The more pressing question Pakistan needs to ask itself is: what exactly is it doing with Afghanistan? What is the rationale, and where does it draw the line?”
New war dynamics
Some analysts believe that Pakistan’s counter-drone response has been reactive rather than strategic.
“The response has been reactionary and ad hoc,” Waleed said. “A proper counter-drone strategy is required that addresses response options in civilian airspace, sets penalties for the sale of off-the-shelf systems to militant groups, and formulates a technical doctrine.”
And if the trajectory of the threat continues unchecked, the consequences could extend well beyond border skirmishes.
“If a drone were to strike a senior civilian target, or a high-profile urban installation, the consequences would be severe; it could even become an aviation nightmare,” said Basit.
The urgency is underscored by what may be coming, Waleed warned.
Quadcopters could evolve into kamikaze drones of the kind Iran uses, with the next stage being fast-speed first-person view (FPV) drones along with artificial intelligence-driven drone swarms, he cautioned.
Widespread damage was left across areas near Tel Aviv after overnight Iranian missile strikes using cluster warheads. Two people were killed in an attack that Iran said was in response to the killing of senior official Ali Larijani.