
A Leeds family has been sleeping on the ground in an underground parking lot in Muharraq, Bahrain. Since the US-Israel strikes on Iran started in late February, Frankie, 37, her husband, and their three children, ages five, six, and nine, have taken refuge there. Drones and missiles are being intercepted above them. Sirens continue to sound on their phones. They pass the time by teaching the children charades and playing leapfrog in between alerts. Frankie said, “Living like this is unsustainable,” to the Guardian. That was a memorable sentence. She didn’t relocate to a conflict area, which is the problem. Two and a half years ago, she relocated from a city in northern England to Bahrain for work. And now here she is, making sporadic trips upstairs to get toys and snacks in between explosions.
Officially, Britain did not participate in this conflict. Keir Starmer used language that implied legal teams had been involved, and he did so repeatedly and with clarity. He distanced London from the strikes, refused to allow the US to use RAF bases, and presented the entire issue as someone else’s problem. Nobody wanted another Blair-Iraq moment, so it was a politically calculated stance that made sense in some ways. However, the notion that a war could be deemed “not ours” while British families seek refuge in the Gulf, a drone strikes a UK military base in Cyprus, the Strait of Hormuz closes, and fuel prices skyrocket throughout Britain was always going to be short-lived.
Key Information
| Topic | Britain’s war anxiety during the 2026 Iran conflict |
| Conflict | US-Israel strikes on Iran began late February 2026 |
| France deployed the Charles de Gaulle carrier swiftly; the UK’s response was widely criticised. | “Not our war” — PM Keir Starmer refused US use of RAF bases |
| RAF Akrotiri attack | Drone strike on UK base in Cyprus on 1 March 2026 |
| UK naval response | HMS Dragon dispatched to Cyprus — delayed until 10 March |
| Ceasefire brokered by | Pakistan — two-week ceasefire announced, Strait of Hormuz reopened |
| Britons affected directly | Expats in Bahrain, Dubai, Saudi Arabia — sheltering, stranded, fleeing |
| Britain vs. France response | France deployed the Charles de Gaulle carrier swiftly; the UK’s response was widely criticised. |
| Trump’s remark on UK | Called Starmer “no Churchill”; said UK joined war only after it was “already won” |
| Military assessment | Gen Lord Dannatt: Britain “embarrassed and humiliated” by crisis |
| Reference / Source | The Guardian — ‘A constant state of anxiety’ (Mar 2026) |
It’s difficult to ignore how rapidly the distinction between “not our war” and “directly affecting our lives” vanished. Within hours of the initial strikes, Lucy, a 45-year-old Midlands resident in Dubai, saw her neighborhood supermarket’s shelves empty. Not pasta. Not any milk. The meat section is no longer there. In order to drown out the sound of missile interceptions close to the airbase near their house, her youngest son started donning noise-cancelling headphones. “We are living in a constant state of anxiety,” she replied. Press conferences and official positions are unable to fully convey what that phrase, “constant state of anxiety,” captures. The lines that governments draw around disputes are not respected by anxiety.
The impact of the war was different but no less severe back in Britain. Concerns about fuel prices, disruptions to travel, and Iranian-British communities in places like Oxford calling themselves “worried sick” about relatives were all examples of how the conflict spread in ways that were always foreseeable, even though they were viewed as surprises. Being told that a war isn’t your own while its effects are sitting in your inbox, the line at the gas station, or your WhatsApp messages from relatives in Tehran is particularly cruel.
The political repercussions have been severe. Trump, who has never been one for diplomatic nuance, referred to Starmer as “no Churchill”—a comparison that stings with precision because the Churchillian myth is actually fundamental to Britain’s understanding of its own place in the world. For many years, the foundation of British foreign policy has been the notion of a country at the forefront of liberal ideals, Washington’s indispensable ally, and the nation that appears. This story has withstood a great deal of abuse. It might have suffered more harm than most from this crisis. The contrast was evident when France’s President Macron quickly sent the aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle to Cyprus with a fully operational naval escort while Britain was still rushing to prepare HMS Dragon. The British media observed with what can only be characterized as a mix of disbelief and embarrassment.
The geopolitical analysis often obscures a larger psychological component. Consistent self-narratives give nations, like individuals, a certain stability. The impact is not limited to politics when those narratives break down, such as when a nation that considers itself a major military force discovers it cannot deploy a carrier without borrowing escort ships, when it is excluded from decisions made by its closest ally, or when a former Army chief uses terms like “embarrassed” and “humiliated” in public. It’s confusing in a way that directly contributes to public discomfort. Some scholars refer to it as ontological insecurity. The term “feeling that things aren’t as solid as they were” is more commonly used by common people.
The long-term effects of Britain’s Iran war posture are still unknown, including how it will affect its standing in Europe, its unique relationship with Washington, and the quiet rebalancing that is already taking place as Macron establishes France as the continent’s serious military guarantor. It appears more obvious that the British people’s current anxiety, whether they are stuck in parking lots in Dubai or are watching fuel prices at home, isn’t unreasonable. People react rationally when they see structures they thought were stable turn out to be a little less so. The conflict might be thousands of miles away. It has created a much closer level of uncertainty.

