The Guardian Weekly magazine is a round-up of the world news, opinion and long reads that have shaped the week. Inside, the past seven days' most memorable stories are reframed with striking photography and insightful companion pieces, all handpicked from The Guardian and The Observer.
Editor’s notes
Global report • Headlines from the last seven days
United Kingdom
Reader’s eyewitness
SCIENCE AND ENVIRONMENT
Is Iran Trump’s Suez crisis? • What began as a show of strength has exposed the costs of brinkmanship, recalling Britain’s disastrous 1956 intervention. Its global standing never recovered; now the US risks repeating that history in the Middle East.
Peace talks stall • Too many negotiators and too little time to reach an agreement
The king’s speech • Forget protocol – here’s what Charles should really say in the US
On Budapest streets, joy and disbelief greet end of Orbán era
Rising star • Budapest’s next leader energised voters but is ‘a dark horse’
‘Ambassadors for humanity’ • Artemis II crew return as Nasa faces deep cuts
How did a festival get it so wrong over Kanye West? • Industry experts say booking the controversial US rapper was a calculated risk that will have major implications for other music events
Tribal lines • Is sectarianism putting power sharing at risk in Stormont?
Emperor penguins under threat of extinction
Squawk back • Macaws are returning to Rio after 200 years
How the EU’s largest news publisher fell in love with the US
Stop the press? • White House correspondents’ dilemma over Trump dinner
Why a dating agency is matching couples with same names
A new KFC • How Korean fried chicken took over the world
Snakes alive! One man’s quest to help deliver an antivenom • Bitten by snakes 200 times – on purpose – Tim Friede put his ‘ass on the line’ to help stop snakebite deaths, which appear to be rising amid the climate crisis
Survival mode • Why the Nato alliance looks strong despite Trump threats
Bullish Dallas goes after new money on ‘Y’all Street’
DEGREES OF SEPARATION • UK universities rely on fees from overseas applicants, which has given rise to some unscrupulous recruiters and left many student hopefuls with crushing debt and no job
THE A TEAM • FROM TATE TO MOUNTBATTEN-WINDSOR, A NUMBER OF NOTORIOUS FIGURES HAVE GIVEN ANDREWS A BAD RAP IN RECENT YEARS. BUT A GROWING NUMBER OF DREWS FROM AROUND THE WORLD ARE DETERMINED TO CHANGE THAT
Polly Toynbee • Orbán’s defeat could represent a turning tide for the hard right
Hettie O’Brien • Capitalism’s endgame is to own all that we use in our everyday lives
Jonathan Freedland • Netanyahu may pay at polls for pursuing wrong strategy for decades
The Guardian View • London is nothing like the lawless dystopia depicted by online propagandists
Opinion Letters
Light and shade • As his Venice award-winning new movie opens in the UK, the master of offbeat indie cinema Jim Jarmusch talks about why each new film is harder to make
The cosmic, teeming frequencies of space • As Artemis II returns from the dark side of the moon, Nasa’s transformations of electromagnetic energy into sound remind us that everything is vibrating
A light that never goes out • In the years after the fall of communism, Warsaw’s neon signs were left to rust. A museum is sparking a revival of interest in the cold war-era illuminations
Reviews
Could AI be the greatest art heist in history? • Tech barons are plundering the art world – and getting away with it
Everyday miracles • This charming insider account of life stuck in a centre for disabled adults...