Ukraine, Trump and Europe
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Traders are piling into bets that Wednesday’s UK Budget will push the pound lower against the dollar, and the pharmaceutical industry saw some promising — and not so promising — clinical trial results. Plus, US tech stocks leapt on Monday and Ireland’s military neutrality has created a weak spot in Europe’s defences.
While the two sides reached a broad agreement months ago, American officials visited Brussels this week to discuss the details. Europe has a wish list, but so does the United States.
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Germany wants to build Europe’s strongest army – a new conscription bill is moving that closer
Earlier this year, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz pledged to build Europe’s strongest army – a tall order for a country whose military has undergone years of neglect.
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Trump’s ‘America First’ collides with Macron’s ‘Europe First’ in face-off over Western dominance
Macron and Trump's complex relationship mixes rivalry with diplomacy as France pushes for European independence from U.S. influence in defense and foreign policy.
In an extraordinary journey, a Palestinian man used a jet ski to cross the Mediterranean Sea and reach Europe after he fled the war in Gaza.
The prospect of a possible deal between Russia and Ukraine brokered by the U.S. sent European defense stocks lower again on Monday. Rheinmetall, Hensoldt and Renk all fell around 4%, with the Stoxx Europe aerospace and defense sector now down 14% from its early October peak,
When Poland announced that an explosion damaged a railway track leading to Ukraine this week, Prime Minister Donald Tusk was quick to declare it was an unprecedented act of sabotage designed to cause catastrophe.
Like other European leaders, British Labour politicians are borrowing from Denmark’s restrictive asylum policy. One of its architects cautions that “balance” is necessary.