Trump tells UK 'go get your own oil' and 'King sent to US'












"I started it... you finish it", is Metro's headline, after US President Donald Trump reportedly "infuriated" allies including the UK by telling them to "go get your own oil" from the blockaded Strait of Hormuz. The Daily Mail says Trump's "taunt" exposes Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer without a plan. But the Daily Mirror describes the US president as "unhinged", pointing out it was his "shambolic" war against Iran that shut the waterway. "This is oil your fault," is its headline.
"King sent on mission to salvage a century of friendship", is the i Paper's lead. The paper says the announcement of the state visit next month came just "minutes" after Trump's "outburst" against allies about oil.
The Guardian reports on what it calls "a tentative sign of a more proactive European pushback" against the Iran war. The paper says France blocked Israeli planes from flying weapons through its airspace and Italy refused last-minute permission for US bombers to land in Sicily.
The Sun says that BBC bosses are being urged to say why the radio host, Scott Mills, was kept on air despite them reportedly knowing that he was interviewed by the police in 2018 about sex offences involving a boy aged under 16. The case was dropped in 2019. The paper says the BBC has remained "tight lipped" over what changed since the alleged original decision not to act.
The broadcaster sacked Mills on Monday over allegations related to his personal conduct. The BBC has not given any further details over the allegations and it is not clear what, if any, role a police investigation into sexual offences played in his sacking. The investigation, which began in 2016, was closed in 2019 after the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) deemed there was insufficient evidence to bring charges. Mills has been approached for comment.
According to the Times, an MP whose husband is accused of spying for China has been reported for inappropriate conduct with a senior naval officer working on Britain's nuclear deterrent. Joani Reid reportedly got "carried away" at a drinks reception during a visit to the Faslane naval base in Argyle and Bute last year. A source close to Ms Reid said claims she had been reported because of national security concerns were "opportunistic hypocrisy".
"Japanned", declares the Daily Mirror, while the Sun opts for "down the pan", as the back pages offer criticism of England's 1-nil defeat at Wembley last night. The Guardian says the fans who stayed until the final whistle "booed with feeling". "The only blessing", according to the Daily Express, is that "at least the World Cup is not just around the corner".

Sign up for our morning newsletter and get BBC News in your inbox.

