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Global Briefing June 30

Wars Won, Peacemaking Moves to Ankara

Both of the West's won wars kept fighting this week on their edges. A US-brokered Israel-Lebanon framework was rejected by Hezbollah within hours; a tanker was hit in the Strait of Hormuz even as 108 ships transited; Ukraine struck a Volgograd arms plant and Moscow's fuel hub while Poland's president stripped Zelensky of a medal. The diplomacy migrated east -- to Qatar and, on July 7, a NATO summit in Ankara -- even as the winners' home fronts shook: the US Supreme Court blocked Trump from firing the Fed's Lisa Cook, France counted 1,000 heat deaths, and a gunman killed 11 in Stade.

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us · United States

Trump Can't End Iran War, So He Changes Subject

This was the week the Iran war stopped being a foreign-policy story for Americans and became a domestic one: inflation hit a three-year high of 4.2%, petrol is up 39% since the fighting began, and a hundred days in the average household is $750 poorer. The economy is somehow still adding jobs. But unable to end the war that is driving the prices, the president spent the week fighting on every other front instead — his own last election, naturalised citizens, China, and the spy law that briefs him each morning.

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gb · United Kingdom

Britain Runs Out of Money for Defence and Order

John Healey's resignation as defence secretary was not an ordinary reshuffle: he walked out accusing Keir Starmer and the Treasury of refusing to pay for Britain's defence at the most dangerous moment since the Cold War, the week the entire fleet of attack submarines sat in dock. And as the state struggled to fund the things that keep a country safe abroad, it was visibly losing its grip on order at home — the Henry Nowak murder, riots in Belfast, a stabbing in a Manchester school. A government is meant to be able to do both. This one, this week, could do neither.

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fr · France

France Arms Europe as Politics Turn Against EU

France spent the week as Europe’s indispensable power — hosting the G7 at Évian, extending its nuclear umbrella to eight allies, presiding over Eurosatory, the West’s biggest arms fair. Yet a new poll put the far right’s Jordan Bardella on 35 percent for 2027, fifteen points clear, on a platform of calling the EU “obsolete” and halving France’s payments to it — and a July 7 court ruling may leave his party with no eligible candidate at all.

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de · Germany

Merz Bets Germany's Future on Autonomy as US Pulls 5,000 Troops

Friedrich Merz has made his choice: a Germany less dependent on an America it no longer trusts. This week he absorbed the loss of 5,000 US troops pulled out over his criticism of the Iran war, killed the €100bn FCAS fighter jet with France, and offered Ukraine a seat inside the EU. It is a coherent bet on strategic autonomy. The catch is that the costs are arriving at home — a suspected extremist arson that blacked out 40,000 homes, and a record 85,837 politically motivated crimes — before the autonomy does.

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ua · Ukraine

Ukraine Wins Deep War but Struggles to Hold Skies

Ukraine's bet on strangulation over storming paid off this week: a destroyed rail bridge and a regional state of emergency left occupied Crimea all but cut off, a NATO official said Russia can no longer resupply it, and drones hit refineries and defense plants deep inside Russia. On the front, Russia's offensive stalled — just 14 sq km gained in May. But the win has a ceiling: Ukraine needs about 60 Patriot interceptors a month and the Iran war has drained the US stockpile, even as Russian strikes killed civilians in Kharkiv, Sumy and Oleshky.

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tr · Turkey

Erdoğan Declares Turkey a 'Playmaker' at Security Conference

Erdoğan spent the week looking indispensable to the world — mediating between Washington and Tehran, branding Turkey a regional 'playmaker', and savaging Netanyahu over Gaza. It is real influence, and it has a domestic use. The more the West needs Ankara, the freer his hand at home, where he has jailed his strongest rival and hundreds of opposition officials and will host NATO's leaders next month behind 40,000 security personnel. The same assertiveness that makes Turkey useful to Washington also had its jets harassing European defence ministers off Cyprus.

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Day in Review

All Events

Every other event tracked today, with a one-line preview. Click Show summary to read more.

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ua48

Ukraine strikes Russian weapons plant in Volgograd and Moscow fuel hub in deep strike campaign

Background: Ukraine has been conducting deep strikes into Russian territory, including a mass drone attack on Moscow in May 2026 that hit multiple targets and demonstrated capability to overwhelm air defenses. New development: On June 27, 2026, Ukraine struck the Titan-Barrikady weapons plant in Volgograd, which produces artillery systems and components for Iskander-M missile launchers, and an oil pumping station near Moscow in Vtorovo, Vladimir region. The attacks caused a fire at the plant and wounded at least 10 people. The oil pumping station, owned by Transneft, was hit for the second time in a month. Ukrainian President Zelenskyy confirmed the strikes, stating they are part of a strategy to bring the war to Russia and pressure Putin into peace negotiations.

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Background: Ukraine has been conducting deep strikes into Russian territory, including a mass drone attack on Moscow in May 2026 that hit multiple targets and demonstrated capability to overwhelm air defenses. New development: On June 27, 2026, Ukraine struck the Titan-Barrikady weapons plant in Volgograd, which produces artillery systems and components for Iskander-M missile launchers, and an oil pumping station near Moscow in Vtorovo, Vladimir region. The attacks caused a fire at the plant and wounded at least 10 people. The oil pumping station, owned by Transneft, was hit for the second time in a month. Ukrainian President Zelenskyy confirmed the strikes, stating they are part of a strategy to bring the war to Russia and pressure Putin into peace negotiations.

tr48

Israel formally recognizes Armenian genocide

The Israeli government, led by Foreign Minister Gideon Sa'ar, unanimously approved a proposal to recognize the mass killings of Armenians during World War I as genocide. The decision, announced on Sunday, requires parliamentary ratification and comes amid deteriorating relations with Turkey since the Gaza war began in October 2023. Sa'ar cited a moral duty to reject denial, particularly by the Turkish government, and the move aligns Israel with the US, France, Germany, and Italy, which have already recognized the killings as genocide.

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The Israeli government, led by Foreign Minister Gideon Sa'ar, unanimously approved a proposal to recognize the mass killings of Armenians during World War I as genocide. The decision, announced on Sunday, requires parliamentary ratification and comes amid deteriorating relations with Turkey since the Gaza war began in October 2023. Sa'ar cited a moral duty to reject denial, particularly by the Turkish government, and the move aligns Israel with the US, France, Germany, and Italy, which have already recognized the killings as genocide.

fr48

France reports over 1,000 excess deaths as heatwave overwhelms hospitals and mortuaries

Background: A severe June heatwave in France has already overwhelmed hospitals, forced event cancellations, and caused drownings and a child's death. New development: France's national health agency now reports over 1,000 excess deaths from June 24, with 85% among those aged 65 and over. Mortuaries and funeral homes are overwhelmed, with occupancy at 66% nationwide, up from the normal 30-45%; two funeral homes in central Paris have been at full capacity since Friday. At least 40 additional drownings occurred as people sought relief in waterways. Epidemiologist Antoine Flahault notes that most hospital beds lack air conditioning, which could reduce heatwave mortality by at least 40%. Experts call for long-term urban cooling measures, including increased green spaces and water features, as Europe warms at twice the global average.

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Background: A severe June heatwave in France has already overwhelmed hospitals, forced event cancellations, and caused drownings and a child's death. New development: France's national health agency now reports over 1,000 excess deaths from June 24, with 85% among those aged 65 and over. Mortuaries and funeral homes are overwhelmed, with occupancy at 66% nationwide, up from the normal 30-45%; two funeral homes in central Paris have been at full capacity since Friday. At least 40 additional drownings occurred as people sought relief in waterways. Epidemiologist Antoine Flahault notes that most hospital beds lack air conditioning, which could reduce heatwave mortality by at least 40%. Experts call for long-term urban cooling measures, including increased green spaces and water features, as Europe warms at twice the global average.

us48

US Supreme Court blocks Trump's firing of Fed Governor Lisa Cook, upholds Fed independence

The US Supreme Court ruled 5-4 to block President Donald Trump's attempt to fire Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook, ruling that the administration failed to provide adequate procedural protections. The decision affirms the Federal Reserve's independence by requiring cause for removal of its governors. In a separate 6-3 ruling, the court expanded presidential power to fire heads of other independent agencies like the FTC, overturning a 1935 precedent. The Cook case will return to lower courts where the administration must prove its mortgage fraud allegations.

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The US Supreme Court ruled 5-4 to block President Donald Trump's attempt to fire Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook, ruling that the administration failed to provide adequate procedural protections. The decision affirms the Federal Reserve's independence by requiring cause for removal of its governors. In a separate 6-3 ruling, the court expanded presidential power to fire heads of other independent agencies like the FTC, overturning a 1935 precedent. The Cook case will return to lower courts where the administration must prove its mortgage fraud allegations.

ua48

Zelenskyy Vows to Respond to Russian Strikes to Weaken Russia's Ability to Prolong War

President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, in his evening address on June 29, condemned recent Russian strikes on civilian targets in Zaporizhzhia, Dnipro, Kherson, Kharkiv, Donetsk, and Sumy oblasts, calling the war a "terrorist war" against Ukraine. He vowed that Ukraine will continue responding to Russian attacks in ways that weaken Russia's ability to prolong the conflict, citing a petrol shortage in Russia as a consequence of Ukraine's long-range strikes. Zelenskyy thanked Ukrainian troops holding the line, especially in Donetsk Oblast, and noted that Russia has postponed its deadline for capturing Donetsk Oblast 15 times. He announced intensive international engagement in the coming weeks and expressed hope for positive decisions from partners in June and July.

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President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, in his evening address on June 29, condemned recent Russian strikes on civilian targets in Zaporizhzhia, Dnipro, Kherson, Kharkiv, Donetsk, and Sumy oblasts, calling the war a "terrorist war" against Ukraine. He vowed that Ukraine will continue responding to Russian attacks in ways that weaken Russia's ability to prolong the conflict, citing a petrol shortage in Russia as a consequence of Ukraine's long-range strikes. Zelenskyy thanked Ukrainian troops holding the line, especially in Donetsk Oblast, and noted that Russia has postponed its deadline for capturing Donetsk Oblast 15 times. He announced intensive international engagement in the coming weeks and expressed hope for positive decisions from partners in June and July.

de48

Multiple shootings in Stade, Germany leave at least 11 dead

Two separate shootings in Stade, northern Germany, on June 29, 2026, left at least 11 people dead. The first attack at a women and children's shelter killed six staff members, with police citing a family dispute as the motive. Mourners gathered to light candles near the site. The second shooting at a youth welfare facility killed at least five and injured several others; two suspects were arrested, including the suspected shooter. Authorities have stated there is no ongoing threat to the public and are investigating the backgrounds and motives of both incidents. The shootings have shocked the community of about 50,000 residents near Hamburg.

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Two separate shootings in Stade, northern Germany, on June 29, 2026, left at least 11 people dead. The first attack at a women and children's shelter killed six staff members, with police citing a family dispute as the motive. Mourners gathered to light candles near the site. The second shooting at a youth welfare facility killed at least five and injured several others; two suspects were arrested, including the suspected shooter. Authorities have stated there is no ongoing threat to the public and are investigating the backgrounds and motives of both incidents. The shootings have shocked the community of about 50,000 residents near Hamburg.

gb48

UK unveils defense shake-up modeled on Ukraine war, shifting to drones and unmanned systems

Britain announced a major restructuring of its armed forces, the Defence Investment Plan, inspired by lessons from the war in Ukraine. The plan prioritizes cheap drones, autonomous systems, and rapid innovation over expensive traditional platforms like destroyers and frigates. It includes investment in Common Combat Vessels as control ships for unmanned systems, a national Collaborative Combat Air program for autonomous jets, and Europe's largest drone testing center, with an additional £15 billion over the defense budget. This marks a fundamental shift in UK military strategy, reflecting the impact of drone warfare on modern conflict.

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Britain announced a major restructuring of its armed forces, the Defence Investment Plan, inspired by lessons from the war in Ukraine. The plan prioritizes cheap drones, autonomous systems, and rapid innovation over expensive traditional platforms like destroyers and frigates. It includes investment in Common Combat Vessels as control ships for unmanned systems, a national Collaborative Combat Air program for autonomous jets, and Europe's largest drone testing center, with an additional £15 billion over the defense budget. This marks a fundamental shift in UK military strategy, reflecting the impact of drone warfare on modern conflict.

gb46

UKMTO raises Strait of Hormuz threat level after oil tanker hit by projectile

The UK Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) raised the threat level in the Strait of Hormuz to 'substantial' after a tanker reported being struck by an unidentified projectile. This follows US airstrikes on Iranian targets in response to Iranian drone attacks on shipping, and Iran has accused Washington of violating a ceasefire agreement. Iranian forces reportedly struck US positions in the region, and Bahrain was targeted by Iranian drones. The incident underscores escalating tensions between the US and Iran over control of the strategic waterway, threatening global energy transit.

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The UK Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) raised the threat level in the Strait of Hormuz to 'substantial' after a tanker reported being struck by an unidentified projectile. This follows US airstrikes on Iranian targets in response to Iranian drone attacks on shipping, and Iran has accused Washington of violating a ceasefire agreement. Iranian forces reportedly struck US positions in the region, and Bahrain was targeted by Iranian drones. The incident underscores escalating tensions between the US and Iran over control of the strategic waterway, threatening global energy transit.

us46

Trump warns fuel retailers to lower gasoline prices as oil drops to $68

US President Donald Trump warned fuel retailers to immediately lower gasoline prices, citing that oil prices have dropped to $68 per barrel after the Strait of Hormuz closure earlier this year. He threatened 'big problems' if retailers do not comply, accusing them of illegal gauging. The warning comes amid declining oil prices following a US-Iran memorandum of understanding.

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US President Donald Trump warned fuel retailers to immediately lower gasoline prices, citing that oil prices have dropped to $68 per barrel after the Strait of Hormuz closure earlier this year. He threatened 'big problems' if retailers do not comply, accusing them of illegal gauging. The warning comes amid declining oil prices following a US-Iran memorandum of understanding.

ua45

Russian strike on Dnipro kills six, injures 29 on June 29

On June 29, Russian forces struck Dnipro, killing six civilians and injuring 29. The attack damaged a business, a college, residential houses, and vehicles. Additional injuries were reported in the Nikopol district and Piatykhatky hromada, where a 72-year-old man and a 41-year-old woman were injured in an overnight attack. This attack continues the pattern of Russian targeting of Ukrainian urban centers.

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On June 29, Russian forces struck Dnipro, killing six civilians and injuring 29. The attack damaged a business, a college, residential houses, and vehicles. Additional injuries were reported in the Nikopol district and Piatykhatky hromada, where a 72-year-old man and a 41-year-old woman were injured in an overnight attack. This attack continues the pattern of Russian targeting of Ukrainian urban centers.