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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.
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.
Weekly briefBritain 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.
Weekly briefFrance 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.
Weekly briefMerz 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.
Weekly briefUkraine 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.
Weekly briefErdoğan 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.
Weekly briefAll Events
Every other event tracked today, with a one-line preview. Click Show summary to read more.
ua48Ukraine 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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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.
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.
tr48Israel 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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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.
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.
fr48France 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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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.
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.
us48US 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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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.
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.
ua48Zelenskyy 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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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.
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.
de48Multiple 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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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.
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.
gb48UK 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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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.
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.
gb46UKMTO 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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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.
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.
us46Trump 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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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.
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.
ua45Russian 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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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.
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.
tr45Erdoğan and Merz discuss bilateral ties, NATO summit, and Ukraine peace efforts
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz held a phone call on June 29, 2026, to discuss strengthening bilateral relations, the upcoming NATO leaders' summit in Ankara, and Türkiye's mediation efforts for a lasting peace between Russia and Ukraine. Erdoğan emphasized the importance of European defense within NATO and preserving the transatlantic bond, and noted that Türkiye is working to revive negotiations and restart the diplomatic process between Moscow and Kyiv.
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Erdoğan and Merz discuss bilateral ties, NATO summit, and Ukraine peace efforts
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz held a phone call on June 29, 2026, to discuss strengthening bilateral relations, the upcoming NATO leaders' summit in Ankara, and Türkiye's mediation efforts for a lasting peace between Russia and Ukraine. Erdoğan emphasized the importance of European defense within NATO and preserving the transatlantic bond, and noted that Türkiye is working to revive negotiations and restart the diplomatic process between Moscow and Kyiv.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz held a phone call on June 29, 2026, to discuss strengthening bilateral relations, the upcoming NATO leaders' summit in Ankara, and Türkiye's mediation efforts for a lasting peace between Russia and Ukraine. Erdoğan emphasized the importance of European defense within NATO and preserving the transatlantic bond, and noted that Türkiye is working to revive negotiations and restart the diplomatic process between Moscow and Kyiv.
ua44Russian drone strikes on civilian buses in Zaporizhzhia kill three, injure 13
On June 29, Russian forces conducted two drone attacks on civilian buses in Zaporizhzhia. In the first attack, a minibus was struck, killing three people and injuring six, including a child. Later that evening, a drone exploded near a passenger bus, injuring seven people, including two girls aged 14 and 16. The Zaporizhzhia Oblast Military Administration building was also struck by a drone, causing a fire that was contained with no injuries. The attacks were reported by Ivan Fedorov, Head of Zaporizhzhia Oblast Military Administration, underscoring Russia's continued targeting of civilian transport and government infrastructure in the region.
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Russian drone strikes on civilian buses in Zaporizhzhia kill three, injure 13
On June 29, Russian forces conducted two drone attacks on civilian buses in Zaporizhzhia. In the first attack, a minibus was struck, killing three people and injuring six, including a child. Later that evening, a drone exploded near a passenger bus, injuring seven people, including two girls aged 14 and 16. The Zaporizhzhia Oblast Military Administration building was also struck by a drone, causing a fire that was contained with no injuries. The attacks were reported by Ivan Fedorov, Head of Zaporizhzhia Oblast Military Administration, underscoring Russia's continued targeting of civilian transport and government infrastructure in the region.
On June 29, Russian forces conducted two drone attacks on civilian buses in Zaporizhzhia. In the first attack, a minibus was struck, killing three people and injuring six, including a child. Later that evening, a drone exploded near a passenger bus, injuring seven people, including two girls aged 14 and 16. The Zaporizhzhia Oblast Military Administration building was also struck by a drone, causing a fire that was contained with no injuries. The attacks were reported by Ivan Fedorov, Head of Zaporizhzhia Oblast Military Administration, underscoring Russia's continued targeting of civilian transport and government infrastructure in the region.
gb44UK PM Starmer announces £5 billion drone investment for armed forces
UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer launched the Defence Investment Plan (DIP) with over £5 billion over four years for drones and autonomous systems across the Royal Navy, Army, and RAF. The investment, described as the largest in UK history for such systems, implements the Strategic Defence Review and funds the Uncrewed Systems Centre in Swindon and a new Uncrewed Systems Taskforce. Specific programmes include the Royal Navy's Common Combat Vessels and uncrewed platforms, the Army's Project NYX and Project Corvus, and the RAF's Collaborative Combat Air programme. The plan is framed around lessons from conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East.
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UK PM Starmer announces £5 billion drone investment for armed forces
UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer launched the Defence Investment Plan (DIP) with over £5 billion over four years for drones and autonomous systems across the Royal Navy, Army, and RAF. The investment, described as the largest in UK history for such systems, implements the Strategic Defence Review and funds the Uncrewed Systems Centre in Swindon and a new Uncrewed Systems Taskforce. Specific programmes include the Royal Navy's Common Combat Vessels and uncrewed platforms, the Army's Project NYX and Project Corvus, and the RAF's Collaborative Combat Air programme. The plan is framed around lessons from conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East.
UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer launched the Defence Investment Plan (DIP) with over £5 billion over four years for drones and autonomous systems across the Royal Navy, Army, and RAF. The investment, described as the largest in UK history for such systems, implements the Strategic Defence Review and funds the Uncrewed Systems Centre in Swindon and a new Uncrewed Systems Taskforce. Specific programmes include the Royal Navy's Common Combat Vessels and uncrewed platforms, the Army's Project NYX and Project Corvus, and the RAF's Collaborative Combat Air programme. The plan is framed around lessons from conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East.
us44Strait of Hormuz shipping continues with 108 transits over weekend despite security incidents
Vessel traffic through the Strait of Hormuz continued over the weekend of June 26–28, 2026, despite security concerns and attacks on two ships. MarineTraffic recorded 108 verified transits over three days, with daily counts of 48 on June 26, 38 on June 27, and 22 on June 28. This represents a decline from earlier in the week, when 54 transits were recorded on June 25 and 70 on June 24—the highest daily total since the US-Israel war on Iran began. While traffic remains down from pre-conflict averages of 130–140 daily, the data indicates the waterway remains open amid the ongoing conflict.
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Strait of Hormuz shipping continues with 108 transits over weekend despite security incidents
Vessel traffic through the Strait of Hormuz continued over the weekend of June 26–28, 2026, despite security concerns and attacks on two ships. MarineTraffic recorded 108 verified transits over three days, with daily counts of 48 on June 26, 38 on June 27, and 22 on June 28. This represents a decline from earlier in the week, when 54 transits were recorded on June 25 and 70 on June 24—the highest daily total since the US-Israel war on Iran began. While traffic remains down from pre-conflict averages of 130–140 daily, the data indicates the waterway remains open amid the ongoing conflict.
Vessel traffic through the Strait of Hormuz continued over the weekend of June 26–28, 2026, despite security concerns and attacks on two ships. MarineTraffic recorded 108 verified transits over three days, with daily counts of 48 on June 26, 38 on June 27, and 22 on June 28. This represents a decline from earlier in the week, when 54 transits were recorded on June 25 and 70 on June 24—the highest daily total since the US-Israel war on Iran began. While traffic remains down from pre-conflict averages of 130–140 daily, the data indicates the waterway remains open amid the ongoing conflict.
us43Israel and Lebanon reach US-brokered peace agreement; Hezbollah rejects it
Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu announced a US-brokered trilateral framework agreement with Lebanon aimed at achieving peace and disarming Hezbollah, calling it a historic blow to Iran and Hezbollah. Hezbollah leader Naim Qassem rejected the agreement as humiliating and void. Israeli Defense Minister Katz insisted troops would remain in southern Lebanon as long as Hezbollah is armed, while Lebanese President Aoun viewed it as a first step toward sovereignty. The agreement includes a trial plan for Lebanese army deployment in two areas and a process to disarm Hezbollah.
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Israel and Lebanon reach US-brokered peace agreement; Hezbollah rejects it
Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu announced a US-brokered trilateral framework agreement with Lebanon aimed at achieving peace and disarming Hezbollah, calling it a historic blow to Iran and Hezbollah. Hezbollah leader Naim Qassem rejected the agreement as humiliating and void. Israeli Defense Minister Katz insisted troops would remain in southern Lebanon as long as Hezbollah is armed, while Lebanese President Aoun viewed it as a first step toward sovereignty. The agreement includes a trial plan for Lebanese army deployment in two areas and a process to disarm Hezbollah.
Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu announced a US-brokered trilateral framework agreement with Lebanon aimed at achieving peace and disarming Hezbollah, calling it a historic blow to Iran and Hezbollah. Hezbollah leader Naim Qassem rejected the agreement as humiliating and void. Israeli Defense Minister Katz insisted troops would remain in southern Lebanon as long as Hezbollah is armed, while Lebanese President Aoun viewed it as a first step toward sovereignty. The agreement includes a trial plan for Lebanese army deployment in two areas and a process to disarm Hezbollah.
us43Pentagon unveils Agent Network, an agentic-AI tool for rapid targeting options
The Pentagon announced a new agentic-AI tool, Agent Network, that continuously scans intelligence and operational systems to provide U.S. military commanders with targeting options within seconds. Developed with contractors Lumbra and Palantir, the tool is part of a broader Pentagon AI strategy. While officials emphasize that commanders remain in charge of strike decisions, experts warn of risks including computational limitations of current LLMs and potential for autonomous agents to cause unintended damage, citing a private-sector incident where an agent wiped a live production database.
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Pentagon unveils Agent Network, an agentic-AI tool for rapid targeting options
The Pentagon announced a new agentic-AI tool, Agent Network, that continuously scans intelligence and operational systems to provide U.S. military commanders with targeting options within seconds. Developed with contractors Lumbra and Palantir, the tool is part of a broader Pentagon AI strategy. While officials emphasize that commanders remain in charge of strike decisions, experts warn of risks including computational limitations of current LLMs and potential for autonomous agents to cause unintended damage, citing a private-sector incident where an agent wiped a live production database.
The Pentagon announced a new agentic-AI tool, Agent Network, that continuously scans intelligence and operational systems to provide U.S. military commanders with targeting options within seconds. Developed with contractors Lumbra and Palantir, the tool is part of a broader Pentagon AI strategy. While officials emphasize that commanders remain in charge of strike decisions, experts warn of risks including computational limitations of current LLMs and potential for autonomous agents to cause unintended damage, citing a private-sector incident where an agent wiped a live production database.
de43Deadly heatwave moves east across Italy and Balkans, setting new temperature records and sparking wildfires
Background: A severe June heatwave across Europe broke temperature records in the UK and France, with the World Weather Attribution group finding the event would have been virtually impossible without human-caused climate change. The heatwave then moved eastward, with Italy placing 22 cities under red alerts, Croatia issuing red warnings for Zagreb, Split, and Dubrovnik, and wildfires burning on the Adriatic island of Vis and near Klos, Albania. Germany set a new all-time high of 41.7°C in Coschen, Poland reached 40.5°C in Slubice, and the Czech Republic recorded 41.1°C at Doksany. The WHO reported 1,300 excess deaths across Europe since June 21, with France logging 1,000 excess deaths, mostly among those over 65, and at least 74 drownings. Scientists reiterated that the extreme heat would have been virtually impossible without human-caused climate change, and WHO chief Tedros noted Europe is the fastest-warming continent at twice the global average.
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Deadly heatwave moves east across Italy and Balkans, setting new temperature records and sparking wildfires
Background: A severe June heatwave across Europe broke temperature records in the UK and France, with the World Weather Attribution group finding the event would have been virtually impossible without human-caused climate change. The heatwave then moved eastward, with Italy placing 22 cities under red alerts, Croatia issuing red warnings for Zagreb, Split, and Dubrovnik, and wildfires burning on the Adriatic island of Vis and near Klos, Albania. Germany set a new all-time high of 41.7°C in Coschen, Poland reached 40.5°C in Slubice, and the Czech Republic recorded 41.1°C at Doksany. The WHO reported 1,300 excess deaths across Europe since June 21, with France logging 1,000 excess deaths, mostly among those over 65, and at least 74 drownings. Scientists reiterated that the extreme heat would have been virtually impossible without human-caused climate change, and WHO chief Tedros noted Europe is the fastest-warming continent at twice the global average.
Background: A severe June heatwave across Europe broke temperature records in the UK and France, with the World Weather Attribution group finding the event would have been virtually impossible without human-caused climate change. The heatwave then moved eastward, with Italy placing 22 cities under red alerts, Croatia issuing red warnings for Zagreb, Split, and Dubrovnik, and wildfires burning on the Adriatic island of Vis and near Klos, Albania. Germany set a new all-time high of 41.7°C in Coschen, Poland reached 40.5°C in Slubice, and the Czech Republic recorded 41.1°C at Doksany. The WHO reported 1,300 excess deaths across Europe since June 21, with France logging 1,000 excess deaths, mostly among those over 65, and at least 74 drownings. Scientists reiterated that the extreme heat would have been virtually impossible without human-caused climate change, and WHO chief Tedros noted Europe is the fastest-warming continent at twice the global average.
gb43UK to build at least six Common Combat Vessels for Royal Navy air defense
The UK Ministry of Defence announced plans to build at least six Common Combat Vessels (CCVs), hybrid warships designed to command drones across air, surface, and subsurface domains, replacing the Type 45 destroyers and the cancelled Type 83 program. Defence Secretary Dan Jarvis stated the vessels will be British-built, supporting jobs, and will operate alongside Type 26 and Type 31 frigates and new uncrewed platforms (Types 91-94). The programme supports the Hybrid Navy strategy and is part of the Defence Investment Plan, anchoring three new Atlantic initiatives (Atlantic Bastion, Atlantic Shield, and Atlantic Strike) to counter Russian activity in the North Atlantic and High North, protect critical underwater infrastructure, and enhance NATO deterrence. Industry concepts from BAE Systems and Babcock are under consideration, with BAE proposing a system-of-systems approach and Babcock pitching its ARMOR Force concept using Type 31 frigates as command nodes for autonomous vessels. Delivery is expected from the early 2030s.
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UK to build at least six Common Combat Vessels for Royal Navy air defense
The UK Ministry of Defence announced plans to build at least six Common Combat Vessels (CCVs), hybrid warships designed to command drones across air, surface, and subsurface domains, replacing the Type 45 destroyers and the cancelled Type 83 program. Defence Secretary Dan Jarvis stated the vessels will be British-built, supporting jobs, and will operate alongside Type 26 and Type 31 frigates and new uncrewed platforms (Types 91-94). The programme supports the Hybrid Navy strategy and is part of the Defence Investment Plan, anchoring three new Atlantic initiatives (Atlantic Bastion, Atlantic Shield, and Atlantic Strike) to counter Russian activity in the North Atlantic and High North, protect critical underwater infrastructure, and enhance NATO deterrence. Industry concepts from BAE Systems and Babcock are under consideration, with BAE proposing a system-of-systems approach and Babcock pitching its ARMOR Force concept using Type 31 frigates as command nodes for autonomous vessels. Delivery is expected from the early 2030s.
The UK Ministry of Defence announced plans to build at least six Common Combat Vessels (CCVs), hybrid warships designed to command drones across air, surface, and subsurface domains, replacing the Type 45 destroyers and the cancelled Type 83 program. Defence Secretary Dan Jarvis stated the vessels will be British-built, supporting jobs, and will operate alongside Type 26 and Type 31 frigates and new uncrewed platforms (Types 91-94). The programme supports the Hybrid Navy strategy and is part of the Defence Investment Plan, anchoring three new Atlantic initiatives (Atlantic Bastion, Atlantic Shield, and Atlantic Strike) to counter Russian activity in the North Atlantic and High North, protect critical underwater infrastructure, and enhance NATO deterrence. Industry concepts from BAE Systems and Babcock are under consideration, with BAE proposing a system-of-systems approach and Babcock pitching its ARMOR Force concept using Type 31 frigates as command nodes for autonomous vessels. Delivery is expected from the early 2030s.
ua43Russian guided bomb strike kills woman, injures 10 in Kharkiv's Kholodnohirskyi district
Background: Russian forces struck Kharkiv's Kholodnohirskyi district with guided aerial bombs early Saturday, hitting a two-story apartment building, injuring at least five people and leaving others feared trapped under rubble. On 29 June, a new Russian guided bomb attack on the same district killed a 23-year-old woman and injured 10 people, damaging a tram, power network, over 15 cars, businesses, and residential buildings. A second bomb failed to detonate, and bomb disposal experts were deployed.
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Russian guided bomb strike kills woman, injures 10 in Kharkiv's Kholodnohirskyi district
Background: Russian forces struck Kharkiv's Kholodnohirskyi district with guided aerial bombs early Saturday, hitting a two-story apartment building, injuring at least five people and leaving others feared trapped under rubble. On 29 June, a new Russian guided bomb attack on the same district killed a 23-year-old woman and injured 10 people, damaging a tram, power network, over 15 cars, businesses, and residential buildings. A second bomb failed to detonate, and bomb disposal experts were deployed.
Background: Russian forces struck Kharkiv's Kholodnohirskyi district with guided aerial bombs early Saturday, hitting a two-story apartment building, injuring at least five people and leaving others feared trapped under rubble. On 29 June, a new Russian guided bomb attack on the same district killed a 23-year-old woman and injured 10 people, damaging a tram, power network, over 15 cars, businesses, and residential buildings. A second bomb failed to detonate, and bomb disposal experts were deployed.
de43German government vows to block Volkswagen plant closures as job cuts deepen
Volkswagen had been planning to cut up to 100,000 jobs and close four German plants (Hanover, Emden, Zwickau, and Audi's Neckarsulm site) amid pressure from Chinese rivals, US tariffs, and weak European demand. The German government has now publicly stated its intention to prevent any domestic plant closures, with a spokesperson emphasizing the need for competitive framework conditions and incentives to keep sites profitable, while acknowledging that the final decision rests with the company. Management has also told staff that previously agreed job cuts are insufficient, with further reductions pending but not yet quantified. The proposals are set to be discussed at a July 9 supervisory board meeting.
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German government vows to block Volkswagen plant closures as job cuts deepen
Volkswagen had been planning to cut up to 100,000 jobs and close four German plants (Hanover, Emden, Zwickau, and Audi's Neckarsulm site) amid pressure from Chinese rivals, US tariffs, and weak European demand. The German government has now publicly stated its intention to prevent any domestic plant closures, with a spokesperson emphasizing the need for competitive framework conditions and incentives to keep sites profitable, while acknowledging that the final decision rests with the company. Management has also told staff that previously agreed job cuts are insufficient, with further reductions pending but not yet quantified. The proposals are set to be discussed at a July 9 supervisory board meeting.
Volkswagen had been planning to cut up to 100,000 jobs and close four German plants (Hanover, Emden, Zwickau, and Audi's Neckarsulm site) amid pressure from Chinese rivals, US tariffs, and weak European demand. The German government has now publicly stated its intention to prevent any domestic plant closures, with a spokesperson emphasizing the need for competitive framework conditions and incentives to keep sites profitable, while acknowledging that the final decision rests with the company. Management has also told staff that previously agreed job cuts are insufficient, with further reductions pending but not yet quantified. The proposals are set to be discussed at a July 9 supervisory board meeting.
tr43NATO parliamentary leaders at Istanbul summit call for stronger defense, 5% GDP spending target, and continued Ukraine support
Parliamentary leaders from NATO member states gathered at the NATO Parliamentary Summit in Istanbul on June 29, 2026, calling for enhanced defense capabilities, greater allied unity, and increased defense spending, with several pledging up to 5% of GDP by 2035. Speakers emphasized continued support for Ukraine, adaptation to new threats including cyber and AI, and the need for a stronger European pillar within NATO. The summit precedes the NATO Leaders Summit in Ankara scheduled for July 7-8.
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NATO parliamentary leaders at Istanbul summit call for stronger defense, 5% GDP spending target, and continued Ukraine support
Parliamentary leaders from NATO member states gathered at the NATO Parliamentary Summit in Istanbul on June 29, 2026, calling for enhanced defense capabilities, greater allied unity, and increased defense spending, with several pledging up to 5% of GDP by 2035. Speakers emphasized continued support for Ukraine, adaptation to new threats including cyber and AI, and the need for a stronger European pillar within NATO. The summit precedes the NATO Leaders Summit in Ankara scheduled for July 7-8.
Parliamentary leaders from NATO member states gathered at the NATO Parliamentary Summit in Istanbul on June 29, 2026, calling for enhanced defense capabilities, greater allied unity, and increased defense spending, with several pledging up to 5% of GDP by 2035. Speakers emphasized continued support for Ukraine, adaptation to new threats including cyber and AI, and the need for a stronger European pillar within NATO. The summit precedes the NATO Leaders Summit in Ankara scheduled for July 7-8.
fr43France and Germany clash over reform of EU diplomatic service EEAS
The European External Action Service (EEAS) has faced internal turmoil under High Representative Kaja Kallas, with officials questioning its effectiveness and mandate. Now, France and Germany are publicly debating the future structure of the EEAS. France proposes strengthening Kallas's role by making her a first executive vice-president with authority over foreign affairs, trade, and development, while Germany has floated diluting her powers and transferring them to the European Commission. A French discussion paper outlines three models: empowering the Commission, shifting the EEAS closer to the Council, or strengthening both institutions simultaneously. Paris prefers the third option, which would give Kallas significant authority within the Commission. The debate reflects broader challenges in making EU foreign policy more effective amid global fragmentation, with EU foreign ministers set to discuss the issue in September.
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France and Germany clash over reform of EU diplomatic service EEAS
The European External Action Service (EEAS) has faced internal turmoil under High Representative Kaja Kallas, with officials questioning its effectiveness and mandate. Now, France and Germany are publicly debating the future structure of the EEAS. France proposes strengthening Kallas's role by making her a first executive vice-president with authority over foreign affairs, trade, and development, while Germany has floated diluting her powers and transferring them to the European Commission. A French discussion paper outlines three models: empowering the Commission, shifting the EEAS closer to the Council, or strengthening both institutions simultaneously. Paris prefers the third option, which would give Kallas significant authority within the Commission. The debate reflects broader challenges in making EU foreign policy more effective amid global fragmentation, with EU foreign ministers set to discuss the issue in September.
The European External Action Service (EEAS) has faced internal turmoil under High Representative Kaja Kallas, with officials questioning its effectiveness and mandate. Now, France and Germany are publicly debating the future structure of the EEAS. France proposes strengthening Kallas's role by making her a first executive vice-president with authority over foreign affairs, trade, and development, while Germany has floated diluting her powers and transferring them to the European Commission. A French discussion paper outlines three models: empowering the Commission, shifting the EEAS closer to the Council, or strengthening both institutions simultaneously. Paris prefers the third option, which would give Kallas significant authority within the Commission. The debate reflects broader challenges in making EU foreign policy more effective amid global fragmentation, with EU foreign ministers set to discuss the issue in September.
ua43Poland-Ukraine UPA Dispute Intensifies, Threatens Alliance Against Russia
Background: Polish President Karol Nawrocki revoked Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy's Order of the White Eagle after Zelenskyy named a military unit after the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA), which Poland holds responsible for WWII massacres of ethnic Poles. Zelenskyy returned the award, and multiple Ukrainian officials renounced Polish honors. The dispute is now being weaponized in Polish domestic politics ahead of the 2027 election, with right-wing parties using anti-Ukrainian sentiment to gain ground. Zelenskyy announced a national pantheon of Ukrainian heroes, implicitly rejecting Polish demands. A CBOS poll shows 51.9% of Poles have a worsened view of Ukraine. Polish far-right leaders call for halting military aid and blocking Ukraine's EU path. The crisis threatens the crucial alliance against Russia. Today's development: The dispute has further escalated as Nawrocki uses the issue to consolidate right-wing support ahead of the 2027 election. Zelenskyy retaliated by returning the medal and skipping a major Ukraine recovery conference in Gdańsk. Polish right-wing parties, including the Confederation and Confederation of the Polish Crown, are calling for an end to military aid to Ukraine and blocking its EU path unless Kyiv acknowledges the UPA massacres. Kyrylo Budanov warned the fight is a 'serious mistake' that could escalate further.
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Poland-Ukraine UPA Dispute Intensifies, Threatens Alliance Against Russia
Background: Polish President Karol Nawrocki revoked Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy's Order of the White Eagle after Zelenskyy named a military unit after the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA), which Poland holds responsible for WWII massacres of ethnic Poles. Zelenskyy returned the award, and multiple Ukrainian officials renounced Polish honors. The dispute is now being weaponized in Polish domestic politics ahead of the 2027 election, with right-wing parties using anti-Ukrainian sentiment to gain ground. Zelenskyy announced a national pantheon of Ukrainian heroes, implicitly rejecting Polish demands. A CBOS poll shows 51.9% of Poles have a worsened view of Ukraine. Polish far-right leaders call for halting military aid and blocking Ukraine's EU path. The crisis threatens the crucial alliance against Russia. Today's development: The dispute has further escalated as Nawrocki uses the issue to consolidate right-wing support ahead of the 2027 election. Zelenskyy retaliated by returning the medal and skipping a major Ukraine recovery conference in Gdańsk. Polish right-wing parties, including the Confederation and Confederation of the Polish Crown, are calling for an end to military aid to Ukraine and blocking its EU path unless Kyiv acknowledges the UPA massacres. Kyrylo Budanov warned the fight is a 'serious mistake' that could escalate further.
Background: Polish President Karol Nawrocki revoked Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy's Order of the White Eagle after Zelenskyy named a military unit after the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA), which Poland holds responsible for WWII massacres of ethnic Poles. Zelenskyy returned the award, and multiple Ukrainian officials renounced Polish honors. The dispute is now being weaponized in Polish domestic politics ahead of the 2027 election, with right-wing parties using anti-Ukrainian sentiment to gain ground. Zelenskyy announced a national pantheon of Ukrainian heroes, implicitly rejecting Polish demands. A CBOS poll shows 51.9% of Poles have a worsened view of Ukraine. Polish far-right leaders call for halting military aid and blocking Ukraine's EU path. The crisis threatens the crucial alliance against Russia. Today's development: The dispute has further escalated as Nawrocki uses the issue to consolidate right-wing support ahead of the 2027 election. Zelenskyy retaliated by returning the medal and skipping a major Ukraine recovery conference in Gdańsk. Polish right-wing parties, including the Confederation and Confederation of the Polish Crown, are calling for an end to military aid to Ukraine and blocking its EU path unless Kyiv acknowledges the UPA massacres. Kyrylo Budanov warned the fight is a 'serious mistake' that could escalate further.
fr41Iran Rejects French Role in Strait of Hormuz Mine Clearance, Insists on Sole Responsibility
Background: Iran has consistently demanded domestic control over uranium enrichment and the Strait of Hormuz as conditions for a nuclear deal with the US. Today: Iran's Deputy Foreign Minister Kazem Gharibabadi rejected French President Emmanuel Macron's offer, announced on June 29, to cooperate with Oman on clearing mines from the Strait of Hormuz, insisting that only Iranian forces will handle mine clearance under the Islamabad memorandum with the US. Gharibabadi warned France not to complicate the sensitive situation with provocations. The dispute comes amid fragile US-Iran de-escalation channels and an interim peace deal, with both sides seeking to keep the accord on track after recent strikes.
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Iran Rejects French Role in Strait of Hormuz Mine Clearance, Insists on Sole Responsibility
Background: Iran has consistently demanded domestic control over uranium enrichment and the Strait of Hormuz as conditions for a nuclear deal with the US. Today: Iran's Deputy Foreign Minister Kazem Gharibabadi rejected French President Emmanuel Macron's offer, announced on June 29, to cooperate with Oman on clearing mines from the Strait of Hormuz, insisting that only Iranian forces will handle mine clearance under the Islamabad memorandum with the US. Gharibabadi warned France not to complicate the sensitive situation with provocations. The dispute comes amid fragile US-Iran de-escalation channels and an interim peace deal, with both sides seeking to keep the accord on track after recent strikes.
Background: Iran has consistently demanded domestic control over uranium enrichment and the Strait of Hormuz as conditions for a nuclear deal with the US. Today: Iran's Deputy Foreign Minister Kazem Gharibabadi rejected French President Emmanuel Macron's offer, announced on June 29, to cooperate with Oman on clearing mines from the Strait of Hormuz, insisting that only Iranian forces will handle mine clearance under the Islamabad memorandum with the US. Gharibabadi warned France not to complicate the sensitive situation with provocations. The dispute comes amid fragile US-Iran de-escalation channels and an interim peace deal, with both sides seeking to keep the accord on track after recent strikes.
ua41Russian drone attack injures mother and three children in Kherson
On June 29, 2026, at approximately 11:00 local time, Russian forces used a drone to attack a mother and her three children playing in a garden in central Kherson. The 34-year-old woman, a 13-year-old boy, and two girls aged 6 and 3 suffered blast injuries and stress and were hospitalized. The attack was reported by Oleksandr Prokudin, Head of Kherson Oblast Military Administration. This attack is part of the ongoing pattern of Russian drone strikes targeting civilians in the Kherson region.
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Russian drone attack injures mother and three children in Kherson
On June 29, 2026, at approximately 11:00 local time, Russian forces used a drone to attack a mother and her three children playing in a garden in central Kherson. The 34-year-old woman, a 13-year-old boy, and two girls aged 6 and 3 suffered blast injuries and stress and were hospitalized. The attack was reported by Oleksandr Prokudin, Head of Kherson Oblast Military Administration. This attack is part of the ongoing pattern of Russian drone strikes targeting civilians in the Kherson region.
On June 29, 2026, at approximately 11:00 local time, Russian forces used a drone to attack a mother and her three children playing in a garden in central Kherson. The 34-year-old woman, a 13-year-old boy, and two girls aged 6 and 3 suffered blast injuries and stress and were hospitalized. The attack was reported by Oleksandr Prokudin, Head of Kherson Oblast Military Administration. This attack is part of the ongoing pattern of Russian drone strikes targeting civilians in the Kherson region.
gb41Royal Navy again left without attack submarines at sea due to maintenance crisis
The Royal Navy's Astute-class attack submarine fleet has historically struggled with availability due to maintenance bottlenecks, dry-dock shortages, and specialist engineer scarcity. As of now, open-source tracking confirms that no attack submarines are at sea, a recurring problem. Two boats are inactive at Faslane after prolonged out-of-water periods, two are undergoing extended deep maintenance at Devonport, and only one recently returned from deployment but is not ready. A further boat is in trials, and the last is under construction. The maintenance bottleneck persists due to single-location deep maintenance capacity, dry-dock shortages, spare parts scarcity, and a lack of specialist engineers. This leaves Britain without its most potent conventional naval capability at a time of heightened Russian submarine activity in the North Atlantic, and also affects protection of nuclear deterrent submarines and carrier strike groups. The Navy has a recovery plan with modest early measures, but major infrastructure improvements at Devonport and on the Clyde will take years.
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Royal Navy again left without attack submarines at sea due to maintenance crisis
The Royal Navy's Astute-class attack submarine fleet has historically struggled with availability due to maintenance bottlenecks, dry-dock shortages, and specialist engineer scarcity. As of now, open-source tracking confirms that no attack submarines are at sea, a recurring problem. Two boats are inactive at Faslane after prolonged out-of-water periods, two are undergoing extended deep maintenance at Devonport, and only one recently returned from deployment but is not ready. A further boat is in trials, and the last is under construction. The maintenance bottleneck persists due to single-location deep maintenance capacity, dry-dock shortages, spare parts scarcity, and a lack of specialist engineers. This leaves Britain without its most potent conventional naval capability at a time of heightened Russian submarine activity in the North Atlantic, and also affects protection of nuclear deterrent submarines and carrier strike groups. The Navy has a recovery plan with modest early measures, but major infrastructure improvements at Devonport and on the Clyde will take years.
The Royal Navy's Astute-class attack submarine fleet has historically struggled with availability due to maintenance bottlenecks, dry-dock shortages, and specialist engineer scarcity. As of now, open-source tracking confirms that no attack submarines are at sea, a recurring problem. Two boats are inactive at Faslane after prolonged out-of-water periods, two are undergoing extended deep maintenance at Devonport, and only one recently returned from deployment but is not ready. A further boat is in trials, and the last is under construction. The maintenance bottleneck persists due to single-location deep maintenance capacity, dry-dock shortages, spare parts scarcity, and a lack of specialist engineers. This leaves Britain without its most potent conventional naval capability at a time of heightened Russian submarine activity in the North Atlantic, and also affects protection of nuclear deterrent submarines and carrier strike groups. The Navy has a recovery plan with modest early measures, but major infrastructure improvements at Devonport and on the Clyde will take years.
us40US nuclear negotiating team with Iran departs for Qatar
US Special Envoy Steve Witkoff informed lawmakers that the technical team for nuclear negotiations with Iran has left Switzerland for Qatar. Witkoff and Secretary of State Marco Rubio confirmed that Iran has not received any funds under the memorandum of understanding and stressed the need to prevent Iran from retaining highly enriched uranium.
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US nuclear negotiating team with Iran departs for Qatar
US Special Envoy Steve Witkoff informed lawmakers that the technical team for nuclear negotiations with Iran has left Switzerland for Qatar. Witkoff and Secretary of State Marco Rubio confirmed that Iran has not received any funds under the memorandum of understanding and stressed the need to prevent Iran from retaining highly enriched uranium.
US Special Envoy Steve Witkoff informed lawmakers that the technical team for nuclear negotiations with Iran has left Switzerland for Qatar. Witkoff and Secretary of State Marco Rubio confirmed that Iran has not received any funds under the memorandum of understanding and stressed the need to prevent Iran from retaining highly enriched uranium.
tr40Türkiye condemns Israeli strikes in southern Syria, urges international action
Türkiye has strongly condemned Israeli airstrikes on the Syrian provinces of Quneitra and Daraa, labeling them a violation of Syria's sovereignty, international law, and the 1974 Separation of Forces Agreement. The Turkish Foreign Ministry and Communications Director Burhanettin Duran called on the international community to take immediate action to halt what they described as unlawful attacks that endanger civilians and undermine regional stability.
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Türkiye condemns Israeli strikes in southern Syria, urges international action
Türkiye has strongly condemned Israeli airstrikes on the Syrian provinces of Quneitra and Daraa, labeling them a violation of Syria's sovereignty, international law, and the 1974 Separation of Forces Agreement. The Turkish Foreign Ministry and Communications Director Burhanettin Duran called on the international community to take immediate action to halt what they described as unlawful attacks that endanger civilians and undermine regional stability.
Türkiye has strongly condemned Israeli airstrikes on the Syrian provinces of Quneitra and Daraa, labeling them a violation of Syria's sovereignty, international law, and the 1974 Separation of Forces Agreement. The Turkish Foreign Ministry and Communications Director Burhanettin Duran called on the international community to take immediate action to halt what they described as unlawful attacks that endanger civilians and undermine regional stability.
gb39British Army fields 10,000 drones in six months under Project AKSA
Background: UK Armed Forces Minister Al Carns previously warned that NATO must restructure for drone warfare, citing Russia's massive drone arsenal and UK investments. Today, the British Army announced it has fielded 10,000 small drones and thousands of autonomous systems within six months under Project AKSA, backed by £300 million in investment. General Sir Roly Walker, speaking at the RUSI Land Warfare Conference 2026, described the programme as a bottom-up revolution that pairs brigades with multiple industry partners and pushes development down to individual formations, moving the Army from episodic experimentation to continuous adaptation. The programme also delivered 50 operational-level electronic warfare systems and a brigade's worth of counter-UAS equipment, drawing lessons from the war in Ukraine. Walker set out an aim for half of the Army's annual capital expenditure to go on the most survivable 20% of its systems by 2030, and estimated the total addressable market for remote and autonomous systems at over £100 billion over ten years.
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British Army fields 10,000 drones in six months under Project AKSA
Background: UK Armed Forces Minister Al Carns previously warned that NATO must restructure for drone warfare, citing Russia's massive drone arsenal and UK investments. Today, the British Army announced it has fielded 10,000 small drones and thousands of autonomous systems within six months under Project AKSA, backed by £300 million in investment. General Sir Roly Walker, speaking at the RUSI Land Warfare Conference 2026, described the programme as a bottom-up revolution that pairs brigades with multiple industry partners and pushes development down to individual formations, moving the Army from episodic experimentation to continuous adaptation. The programme also delivered 50 operational-level electronic warfare systems and a brigade's worth of counter-UAS equipment, drawing lessons from the war in Ukraine. Walker set out an aim for half of the Army's annual capital expenditure to go on the most survivable 20% of its systems by 2030, and estimated the total addressable market for remote and autonomous systems at over £100 billion over ten years.
Background: UK Armed Forces Minister Al Carns previously warned that NATO must restructure for drone warfare, citing Russia's massive drone arsenal and UK investments. Today, the British Army announced it has fielded 10,000 small drones and thousands of autonomous systems within six months under Project AKSA, backed by £300 million in investment. General Sir Roly Walker, speaking at the RUSI Land Warfare Conference 2026, described the programme as a bottom-up revolution that pairs brigades with multiple industry partners and pushes development down to individual formations, moving the Army from episodic experimentation to continuous adaptation. The programme also delivered 50 operational-level electronic warfare systems and a brigade's worth of counter-UAS equipment, drawing lessons from the war in Ukraine. Walker set out an aim for half of the Army's annual capital expenditure to go on the most survivable 20% of its systems by 2030, and estimated the total addressable market for remote and autonomous systems at over £100 billion over ten years.
ua39Ukraine strikes Russian bridges, logistics depot, UAV control stations, and EW command post
Ukraine's General Staff reported that on June 28-29, 2026, defense forces struck a road bridge near Novoazovsk (Donetsk), two railway bridges in Luhansk Oblast, a logistics depot near Novosvitlivka (Luhansk), three Russian UAV ground control stations near Huliaipole (Zaporizhzhia), Tyotkino (Kursk), and Bakhmut (Donetsk), and a command post of a Russian electronic warfare unit near Velyka Novosilka (Donetsk). These strikes targeted Russian military logistics and command infrastructure in occupied Donetsk, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhia, and Russia's Kursk Oblast.
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Ukraine strikes Russian bridges, logistics depot, UAV control stations, and EW command post
Ukraine's General Staff reported that on June 28-29, 2026, defense forces struck a road bridge near Novoazovsk (Donetsk), two railway bridges in Luhansk Oblast, a logistics depot near Novosvitlivka (Luhansk), three Russian UAV ground control stations near Huliaipole (Zaporizhzhia), Tyotkino (Kursk), and Bakhmut (Donetsk), and a command post of a Russian electronic warfare unit near Velyka Novosilka (Donetsk). These strikes targeted Russian military logistics and command infrastructure in occupied Donetsk, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhia, and Russia's Kursk Oblast.
Ukraine's General Staff reported that on June 28-29, 2026, defense forces struck a road bridge near Novoazovsk (Donetsk), two railway bridges in Luhansk Oblast, a logistics depot near Novosvitlivka (Luhansk), three Russian UAV ground control stations near Huliaipole (Zaporizhzhia), Tyotkino (Kursk), and Bakhmut (Donetsk), and a command post of a Russian electronic warfare unit near Velyka Novosilka (Donetsk). These strikes targeted Russian military logistics and command infrastructure in occupied Donetsk, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhia, and Russia's Kursk Oblast.
us38Farmers worldwide brace for El Niño amid trade and energy pressures
Background: A severe El Niño event was forecast to threaten global crop production, with hot and dry weather disrupting planting across Asia and raising food supply concerns. Meteorologists have now declared the onset of El Niño, with forecasts of a particularly strong event. Aid agencies, including the FAO and WFP, have issued a joint appeal for over $200 million to protect 8.8 million people in high-risk countries, warning of heightened food insecurity in southern Africa, Central America, India, and Australia. The expected peak overlaps the main maize season in southern Africa. Global inventories of rice, wheat, corn, and soybeans are high, offering some relief at the market level, but regional pain is expected. The U.S. may see positive yield impacts, while vulnerable regions face heightened food insecurity amid reduced humanitarian aid funding. Trade between countries is highlighted as the most important tool for mitigating production deficits.
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Farmers worldwide brace for El Niño amid trade and energy pressures
Background: A severe El Niño event was forecast to threaten global crop production, with hot and dry weather disrupting planting across Asia and raising food supply concerns. Meteorologists have now declared the onset of El Niño, with forecasts of a particularly strong event. Aid agencies, including the FAO and WFP, have issued a joint appeal for over $200 million to protect 8.8 million people in high-risk countries, warning of heightened food insecurity in southern Africa, Central America, India, and Australia. The expected peak overlaps the main maize season in southern Africa. Global inventories of rice, wheat, corn, and soybeans are high, offering some relief at the market level, but regional pain is expected. The U.S. may see positive yield impacts, while vulnerable regions face heightened food insecurity amid reduced humanitarian aid funding. Trade between countries is highlighted as the most important tool for mitigating production deficits.
Background: A severe El Niño event was forecast to threaten global crop production, with hot and dry weather disrupting planting across Asia and raising food supply concerns. Meteorologists have now declared the onset of El Niño, with forecasts of a particularly strong event. Aid agencies, including the FAO and WFP, have issued a joint appeal for over $200 million to protect 8.8 million people in high-risk countries, warning of heightened food insecurity in southern Africa, Central America, India, and Australia. The expected peak overlaps the main maize season in southern Africa. Global inventories of rice, wheat, corn, and soybeans are high, offering some relief at the market level, but regional pain is expected. The U.S. may see positive yield impacts, while vulnerable regions face heightened food insecurity amid reduced humanitarian aid funding. Trade between countries is highlighted as the most important tool for mitigating production deficits.
tr38Top EU officials to visit Turkey for talks on security and trade
Three senior European Commission officials—Kaja Kallas, Marta Kos, and Magnus Brunner—are set to visit Turkey on Tuesday for talks with Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan. The visit aims to revitalize EU-Turkey relations, with discussions expected to cover Turkey's EU membership bid, modernization of the customs union, visa liberalization, and regional security issues including the war in Ukraine and developments in the South Caucasus and Gaza.
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Top EU officials to visit Turkey for talks on security and trade
Three senior European Commission officials—Kaja Kallas, Marta Kos, and Magnus Brunner—are set to visit Turkey on Tuesday for talks with Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan. The visit aims to revitalize EU-Turkey relations, with discussions expected to cover Turkey's EU membership bid, modernization of the customs union, visa liberalization, and regional security issues including the war in Ukraine and developments in the South Caucasus and Gaza.
Three senior European Commission officials—Kaja Kallas, Marta Kos, and Magnus Brunner—are set to visit Turkey on Tuesday for talks with Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan. The visit aims to revitalize EU-Turkey relations, with discussions expected to cover Turkey's EU membership bid, modernization of the customs union, visa liberalization, and regional security issues including the war in Ukraine and developments in the South Caucasus and Gaza.
ua36Ukrainian oligarch Vadym Yermolaiev critically injured in Monaco explosion
Ukrainian oligarch Vadym Yermolaiev, sanctioned by Ukraine for business in Russian-occupied Crimea, was critically injured in a deliberate explosion at a residential building in Monaco. A woman and a 13-year-old were also injured. The suspect placed a backpack containing an explosive device in the lobby and fled; French and Monaco authorities are cooperating in the manhunt.
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Ukrainian oligarch Vadym Yermolaiev critically injured in Monaco explosion
Ukrainian oligarch Vadym Yermolaiev, sanctioned by Ukraine for business in Russian-occupied Crimea, was critically injured in a deliberate explosion at a residential building in Monaco. A woman and a 13-year-old were also injured. The suspect placed a backpack containing an explosive device in the lobby and fled; French and Monaco authorities are cooperating in the manhunt.
Ukrainian oligarch Vadym Yermolaiev, sanctioned by Ukraine for business in Russian-occupied Crimea, was critically injured in a deliberate explosion at a residential building in Monaco. A woman and a 13-year-old were also injured. The suspect placed a backpack containing an explosive device in the lobby and fled; French and Monaco authorities are cooperating in the manhunt.
us35US authorizes Anthropic to restore Mythos 5 access for critical infrastructure organizations
Background: The Trump administration previously imposed export controls on Anthropic's Fable 5 and Mythos 5 AI models, citing national security concerns over potential jailbreak vulnerabilities, after Amazon and other companies reported security issues to the White House. The controls forced Anthropic to disable the models for all customers, sparking backlash from cybersecurity leaders, industry groups, and foreign allies who warned the move weakens U.S. cyber defenses, undermines AI export strategy, and risks pushing customers toward Chinese or open-source alternatives. Parts of the National Security Agency lost access to Mythos 5 as a result. The earlier ban also raised concerns among EU officials, including French minister Benjamin Haddad, who called for Europe to invest more in sovereign AI capabilities. Today: Anthropic announced on Friday that the US government has authorized the restoration of Mythos 5 access to select US organizations operating and defending critical infrastructure. The company stated it is working to expand access and make Fable 5 available for general use again, following weeks of collaboration between Anthropic and the government.
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US authorizes Anthropic to restore Mythos 5 access for critical infrastructure organizations
Background: The Trump administration previously imposed export controls on Anthropic's Fable 5 and Mythos 5 AI models, citing national security concerns over potential jailbreak vulnerabilities, after Amazon and other companies reported security issues to the White House. The controls forced Anthropic to disable the models for all customers, sparking backlash from cybersecurity leaders, industry groups, and foreign allies who warned the move weakens U.S. cyber defenses, undermines AI export strategy, and risks pushing customers toward Chinese or open-source alternatives. Parts of the National Security Agency lost access to Mythos 5 as a result. The earlier ban also raised concerns among EU officials, including French minister Benjamin Haddad, who called for Europe to invest more in sovereign AI capabilities. Today: Anthropic announced on Friday that the US government has authorized the restoration of Mythos 5 access to select US organizations operating and defending critical infrastructure. The company stated it is working to expand access and make Fable 5 available for general use again, following weeks of collaboration between Anthropic and the government.
Background: The Trump administration previously imposed export controls on Anthropic's Fable 5 and Mythos 5 AI models, citing national security concerns over potential jailbreak vulnerabilities, after Amazon and other companies reported security issues to the White House. The controls forced Anthropic to disable the models for all customers, sparking backlash from cybersecurity leaders, industry groups, and foreign allies who warned the move weakens U.S. cyber defenses, undermines AI export strategy, and risks pushing customers toward Chinese or open-source alternatives. Parts of the National Security Agency lost access to Mythos 5 as a result. The earlier ban also raised concerns among EU officials, including French minister Benjamin Haddad, who called for Europe to invest more in sovereign AI capabilities. Today: Anthropic announced on Friday that the US government has authorized the restoration of Mythos 5 access to select US organizations operating and defending critical infrastructure. The company stated it is working to expand access and make Fable 5 available for general use again, following weeks of collaboration between Anthropic and the government.
us35Berri warns U.S.-brokered Lebanon-Israel deal could cause internal divisions, says only Iran-U.S. talks can secure Israeli withdrawal
Background: On 5 June 2026, Berri announced Hezbollah's readiness for a parallel withdrawal and unconditional ceasefire. On 29 June 2026, Berri criticized a U.S.-brokered Lebanon-Israel agreement signed in Washington, warning it could incite internal divisions and asserting it will not be implemented. He argued that only Iran-U.S. negotiations offer a realistic path for Israeli withdrawal from southern Lebanon, and that any attempt to separate Lebanon from the U.S.-Iran track would prolong Israeli occupation. The agreement allows for Israeli redeployment contingent on Hezbollah's disarmament, which Hezbollah has rejected. Berri described the agreement as 'dictates' and said its most dangerous aspect is the potential to draw Lebanese into internal confrontation.
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Berri warns U.S.-brokered Lebanon-Israel deal could cause internal divisions, says only Iran-U.S. talks can secure Israeli withdrawal
Background: On 5 June 2026, Berri announced Hezbollah's readiness for a parallel withdrawal and unconditional ceasefire. On 29 June 2026, Berri criticized a U.S.-brokered Lebanon-Israel agreement signed in Washington, warning it could incite internal divisions and asserting it will not be implemented. He argued that only Iran-U.S. negotiations offer a realistic path for Israeli withdrawal from southern Lebanon, and that any attempt to separate Lebanon from the U.S.-Iran track would prolong Israeli occupation. The agreement allows for Israeli redeployment contingent on Hezbollah's disarmament, which Hezbollah has rejected. Berri described the agreement as 'dictates' and said its most dangerous aspect is the potential to draw Lebanese into internal confrontation.
Background: On 5 June 2026, Berri announced Hezbollah's readiness for a parallel withdrawal and unconditional ceasefire. On 29 June 2026, Berri criticized a U.S.-brokered Lebanon-Israel agreement signed in Washington, warning it could incite internal divisions and asserting it will not be implemented. He argued that only Iran-U.S. negotiations offer a realistic path for Israeli withdrawal from southern Lebanon, and that any attempt to separate Lebanon from the U.S.-Iran track would prolong Israeli occupation. The agreement allows for Israeli redeployment contingent on Hezbollah's disarmament, which Hezbollah has rejected. Berri described the agreement as 'dictates' and said its most dangerous aspect is the potential to draw Lebanese into internal confrontation.
de35German Foreign Minister Wadephul meets US Secretary Rubio in Washington ahead of NATO summit
Background: NATO foreign ministers met in Sweden in May 2026 to discuss European defense, burden-sharing, US tensions, and support for Ukraine. On June 29, 2026, German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul met US Secretary of State Marco Rubio in Washington to discuss NATO burden-sharing, the planned US withdrawal of 5,000 troops from Germany, continued support for Ukraine, and the renewed escalation of US-Iran tensions, with both sides accusing each other of violating a ceasefire despite a framework agreement. After the meeting, Wadephul called for a stronger trans-Atlantic relationship, warning that multiple crises are jeopardizing global economic stability and threatening to drive a wedge between close partners. Following the Washington meeting, Wadephul traveled to Paraguay for a Mercosur summit.
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German Foreign Minister Wadephul meets US Secretary Rubio in Washington ahead of NATO summit
Background: NATO foreign ministers met in Sweden in May 2026 to discuss European defense, burden-sharing, US tensions, and support for Ukraine. On June 29, 2026, German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul met US Secretary of State Marco Rubio in Washington to discuss NATO burden-sharing, the planned US withdrawal of 5,000 troops from Germany, continued support for Ukraine, and the renewed escalation of US-Iran tensions, with both sides accusing each other of violating a ceasefire despite a framework agreement. After the meeting, Wadephul called for a stronger trans-Atlantic relationship, warning that multiple crises are jeopardizing global economic stability and threatening to drive a wedge between close partners. Following the Washington meeting, Wadephul traveled to Paraguay for a Mercosur summit.
Background: NATO foreign ministers met in Sweden in May 2026 to discuss European defense, burden-sharing, US tensions, and support for Ukraine. On June 29, 2026, German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul met US Secretary of State Marco Rubio in Washington to discuss NATO burden-sharing, the planned US withdrawal of 5,000 troops from Germany, continued support for Ukraine, and the renewed escalation of US-Iran tensions, with both sides accusing each other of violating a ceasefire despite a framework agreement. After the meeting, Wadephul called for a stronger trans-Atlantic relationship, warning that multiple crises are jeopardizing global economic stability and threatening to drive a wedge between close partners. Following the Washington meeting, Wadephul traveled to Paraguay for a Mercosur summit.
gb35UK's Starmer leaves Africa 'reset' unfinished after resignation
UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer resigned on June 22, 2026, after less than two years in office, leaving his promised 'reset' of UK-Africa relations largely unfulfilled. Despite initial high-level engagement and deals with Nigeria and South Africa, delivery lagged due to internal reshuffles, fiscal constraints (aid dropping to 0.3% of GNI by 2027), and shifting strategic priorities toward the EU and Gulf states. The UK's influence in Africa is fading compared to China, though the upcoming G20 presidency offers a potential opportunity for renewed engagement.
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UK's Starmer leaves Africa 'reset' unfinished after resignation
UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer resigned on June 22, 2026, after less than two years in office, leaving his promised 'reset' of UK-Africa relations largely unfulfilled. Despite initial high-level engagement and deals with Nigeria and South Africa, delivery lagged due to internal reshuffles, fiscal constraints (aid dropping to 0.3% of GNI by 2027), and shifting strategic priorities toward the EU and Gulf states. The UK's influence in Africa is fading compared to China, though the upcoming G20 presidency offers a potential opportunity for renewed engagement.
UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer resigned on June 22, 2026, after less than two years in office, leaving his promised 'reset' of UK-Africa relations largely unfulfilled. Despite initial high-level engagement and deals with Nigeria and South Africa, delivery lagged due to internal reshuffles, fiscal constraints (aid dropping to 0.3% of GNI by 2027), and shifting strategic priorities toward the EU and Gulf states. The UK's influence in Africa is fading compared to China, though the upcoming G20 presidency offers a potential opportunity for renewed engagement.
us35Iran says conditions for final nuclear agreement with US not yet met
Iran had previously declared its nuclear enrichment rights non-negotiable and confirmed US talks via Pakistan. Now, foreign ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei stated that negotiations for a final agreement with the United States, including on the nuclear program, have not yet begun. He cited Article 13 of the memorandum of understanding, which makes final talks conditional on the implementation of other provisions, highlighting ongoing procedural hurdles.
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Iran says conditions for final nuclear agreement with US not yet met
Iran had previously declared its nuclear enrichment rights non-negotiable and confirmed US talks via Pakistan. Now, foreign ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei stated that negotiations for a final agreement with the United States, including on the nuclear program, have not yet begun. He cited Article 13 of the memorandum of understanding, which makes final talks conditional on the implementation of other provisions, highlighting ongoing procedural hurdles.
Iran had previously declared its nuclear enrichment rights non-negotiable and confirmed US talks via Pakistan. Now, foreign ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei stated that negotiations for a final agreement with the United States, including on the nuclear program, have not yet begun. He cited Article 13 of the memorandum of understanding, which makes final talks conditional on the implementation of other provisions, highlighting ongoing procedural hurdles.
us34JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon plans to step down within three years, succession frontrunners emerge
JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon plans to remain in his role for up to three more years before transitioning to executive chairman, with co-presidents Troy Rohrbaugh and Doug Petno as leading internal candidates to succeed him. The bank's board is devoting significant time to succession planning, aiming to name a successor within two to two-and-a-half years. Rohrbaugh is seen as the frontrunner internally.
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JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon plans to step down within three years, succession frontrunners emerge
JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon plans to remain in his role for up to three more years before transitioning to executive chairman, with co-presidents Troy Rohrbaugh and Doug Petno as leading internal candidates to succeed him. The bank's board is devoting significant time to succession planning, aiming to name a successor within two to two-and-a-half years. Rohrbaugh is seen as the frontrunner internally.
JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon plans to remain in his role for up to three more years before transitioning to executive chairman, with co-presidents Troy Rohrbaugh and Doug Petno as leading internal candidates to succeed him. The bank's board is devoting significant time to succession planning, aiming to name a successor within two to two-and-a-half years. Rohrbaugh is seen as the frontrunner internally.
ua34Russian commercial LNG tanker armed with heavy machine guns in Baltic
The Russian commercial LNG tanker Marshal Vasilevskiy, critical for supplying the Kaliningrad exclave, has been observed with 12.7mm Kord heavy machine guns mounted on its bridge while operating in the Baltic Sea. This is the first direct evidence of Russia arming a civilian ship in the region, likely to defend against potential Ukrainian drone attacks. The development reflects Russia's growing concern over the vulnerability of its strategic logistics vessels and shadow fleet, as Ukraine has demonstrated long-range drone strike capabilities in the Baltic.
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Russian commercial LNG tanker armed with heavy machine guns in Baltic
The Russian commercial LNG tanker Marshal Vasilevskiy, critical for supplying the Kaliningrad exclave, has been observed with 12.7mm Kord heavy machine guns mounted on its bridge while operating in the Baltic Sea. This is the first direct evidence of Russia arming a civilian ship in the region, likely to defend against potential Ukrainian drone attacks. The development reflects Russia's growing concern over the vulnerability of its strategic logistics vessels and shadow fleet, as Ukraine has demonstrated long-range drone strike capabilities in the Baltic.
The Russian commercial LNG tanker Marshal Vasilevskiy, critical for supplying the Kaliningrad exclave, has been observed with 12.7mm Kord heavy machine guns mounted on its bridge while operating in the Baltic Sea. This is the first direct evidence of Russia arming a civilian ship in the region, likely to defend against potential Ukrainian drone attacks. The development reflects Russia's growing concern over the vulnerability of its strategic logistics vessels and shadow fleet, as Ukraine has demonstrated long-range drone strike capabilities in the Baltic.
gb33UK and Netherlands to develop joint amphibious assault ship fleet
The UK Ministry of Defence announced a £500 million investment in a new class of larger amphibious transport ships to support the Future Commando Force, with the aim of integrating them with the Netherlands into a combined fleet. This follows the retirement of HMS Albion and HMS Bulwark in 2025 and builds on previous UK-NL cooperation under Project CATHERINA. The new vessels are part of a broader effort to modernise the UK Commando Force for operations in the High North and NATO's northern approaches.
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UK and Netherlands to develop joint amphibious assault ship fleet
The UK Ministry of Defence announced a £500 million investment in a new class of larger amphibious transport ships to support the Future Commando Force, with the aim of integrating them with the Netherlands into a combined fleet. This follows the retirement of HMS Albion and HMS Bulwark in 2025 and builds on previous UK-NL cooperation under Project CATHERINA. The new vessels are part of a broader effort to modernise the UK Commando Force for operations in the High North and NATO's northern approaches.
The UK Ministry of Defence announced a £500 million investment in a new class of larger amphibious transport ships to support the Future Commando Force, with the aim of integrating them with the Netherlands into a combined fleet. This follows the retirement of HMS Albion and HMS Bulwark in 2025 and builds on previous UK-NL cooperation under Project CATHERINA. The new vessels are part of a broader effort to modernise the UK Commando Force for operations in the High North and NATO's northern approaches.
fr33French Senate approves bill banning ads for ultra-fast fashion platforms Shein and Temu
Background: French lawmakers had previously reached a compromise on a bill targeting ultra-fast fashion platforms like Shein and Temu, banning influencer advertising and imposing penalties. Today: The French Senate approved the bill on June 29, 2026, finalizing the legislation. The advertising ban will take effect at the turn of the year, with penalties for influencers. The law now specifically targets "ultra-express platforms" such as Shein, Temu, and AliExpress, excluding French and European brands, though a precise definition of criteria is still pending. Platforms must also pay a rising environmental contribution per product and display messages encouraging repair, reuse, and restrained consumption. The move follows a joint call from Germany, France, and the Netherlands for stricter EU regulations on ultra-fast fashion.
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French Senate approves bill banning ads for ultra-fast fashion platforms Shein and Temu
Background: French lawmakers had previously reached a compromise on a bill targeting ultra-fast fashion platforms like Shein and Temu, banning influencer advertising and imposing penalties. Today: The French Senate approved the bill on June 29, 2026, finalizing the legislation. The advertising ban will take effect at the turn of the year, with penalties for influencers. The law now specifically targets "ultra-express platforms" such as Shein, Temu, and AliExpress, excluding French and European brands, though a precise definition of criteria is still pending. Platforms must also pay a rising environmental contribution per product and display messages encouraging repair, reuse, and restrained consumption. The move follows a joint call from Germany, France, and the Netherlands for stricter EU regulations on ultra-fast fashion.
Background: French lawmakers had previously reached a compromise on a bill targeting ultra-fast fashion platforms like Shein and Temu, banning influencer advertising and imposing penalties. Today: The French Senate approved the bill on June 29, 2026, finalizing the legislation. The advertising ban will take effect at the turn of the year, with penalties for influencers. The law now specifically targets "ultra-express platforms" such as Shein, Temu, and AliExpress, excluding French and European brands, though a precise definition of criteria is still pending. Platforms must also pay a rising environmental contribution per product and display messages encouraging repair, reuse, and restrained consumption. The move follows a joint call from Germany, France, and the Netherlands for stricter EU regulations on ultra-fast fashion.
us33Europe must adopt a 'no-panic' playbook to adapt to Trump's radically different US foreign policy
Background: After a year of appeasing U.S. President Donald Trump, European countries shifted toward strategic autonomy in 2026 following Trump's radical actions including threats against Greenland, withdrawal of support for Ukraine, and imposition of tariffs. A Foreign Affairs analysis argues that Trump's second-term policies—denigrating NATO, threatening to annex allied territory, withdrawing defense aid for Ukraine, politicizing intelligence, and halting troop deployments to Poland—are forcing European allies to develop independent military and intelligence capabilities. Today: A new analysis published in June 2026 argues that Trump's second-term foreign policy represents a fundamental break from postwar US national security policy, reverting to pre-WWII isolationist, transactional, and hemispheric-focused approaches. It outlines a European playbook for avoiding a complete transatlantic rupture: short-term actions to fill US gaps in the Persian Gulf and Ukraine, and long-term structural changes including 5% GDP defense spending, forward-deployed brigades, and greater European strategic autonomy, ideally coordinated within NATO. The analysis also notes that Trump's National Security Strategy (NSS) released in December 2025 formalized a radical reorientation of US priorities, placing the Western Hemisphere first, followed by Asia, Europe, and the Middle East, and that the 2026 Iran war (Operation Epic Fury) further widened the breach with Europe.
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Europe must adopt a 'no-panic' playbook to adapt to Trump's radically different US foreign policy
Background: After a year of appeasing U.S. President Donald Trump, European countries shifted toward strategic autonomy in 2026 following Trump's radical actions including threats against Greenland, withdrawal of support for Ukraine, and imposition of tariffs. A Foreign Affairs analysis argues that Trump's second-term policies—denigrating NATO, threatening to annex allied territory, withdrawing defense aid for Ukraine, politicizing intelligence, and halting troop deployments to Poland—are forcing European allies to develop independent military and intelligence capabilities. Today: A new analysis published in June 2026 argues that Trump's second-term foreign policy represents a fundamental break from postwar US national security policy, reverting to pre-WWII isolationist, transactional, and hemispheric-focused approaches. It outlines a European playbook for avoiding a complete transatlantic rupture: short-term actions to fill US gaps in the Persian Gulf and Ukraine, and long-term structural changes including 5% GDP defense spending, forward-deployed brigades, and greater European strategic autonomy, ideally coordinated within NATO. The analysis also notes that Trump's National Security Strategy (NSS) released in December 2025 formalized a radical reorientation of US priorities, placing the Western Hemisphere first, followed by Asia, Europe, and the Middle East, and that the 2026 Iran war (Operation Epic Fury) further widened the breach with Europe.
Background: After a year of appeasing U.S. President Donald Trump, European countries shifted toward strategic autonomy in 2026 following Trump's radical actions including threats against Greenland, withdrawal of support for Ukraine, and imposition of tariffs. A Foreign Affairs analysis argues that Trump's second-term policies—denigrating NATO, threatening to annex allied territory, withdrawing defense aid for Ukraine, politicizing intelligence, and halting troop deployments to Poland—are forcing European allies to develop independent military and intelligence capabilities. Today: A new analysis published in June 2026 argues that Trump's second-term foreign policy represents a fundamental break from postwar US national security policy, reverting to pre-WWII isolationist, transactional, and hemispheric-focused approaches. It outlines a European playbook for avoiding a complete transatlantic rupture: short-term actions to fill US gaps in the Persian Gulf and Ukraine, and long-term structural changes including 5% GDP defense spending, forward-deployed brigades, and greater European strategic autonomy, ideally coordinated within NATO. The analysis also notes that Trump's National Security Strategy (NSS) released in December 2025 formalized a radical reorientation of US priorities, placing the Western Hemisphere first, followed by Asia, Europe, and the Middle East, and that the 2026 Iran war (Operation Epic Fury) further widened the breach with Europe.
us33US to directly monitor Lebanon-Israel ceasefire compliance
The United States will take a direct role in monitoring the movements of Lebanese and Israeli forces under a new framework agreement, with US personnel already deployed in Lebanon since 2024 now monitoring both sides for violations. Officials from US Central Command will document and report any breaches to the Trump administration for diplomatic intervention. This marks an escalation in US involvement in the region's ceasefire enforcement.
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US to directly monitor Lebanon-Israel ceasefire compliance
The United States will take a direct role in monitoring the movements of Lebanese and Israeli forces under a new framework agreement, with US personnel already deployed in Lebanon since 2024 now monitoring both sides for violations. Officials from US Central Command will document and report any breaches to the Trump administration for diplomatic intervention. This marks an escalation in US involvement in the region's ceasefire enforcement.
The United States will take a direct role in monitoring the movements of Lebanese and Israeli forces under a new framework agreement, with US personnel already deployed in Lebanon since 2024 now monitoring both sides for violations. Officials from US Central Command will document and report any breaches to the Trump administration for diplomatic intervention. This marks an escalation in US involvement in the region's ceasefire enforcement.
us31US-India trade deal negotiations stall over tariffs, agriculture, and sunset clause
Negotiations for a first-phase US-India bilateral trade deal remain stalled after 18 months due to disagreements over market access, agricultural tariffs, a potential sunset clause, and future tariff risks from US trade investigations. India seeks a competitive tariff advantage, while the US demands agricultural market access, particularly for corn, soybeans, and dairy. The US Supreme Court's striking down of sweeping tariffs has shifted leverage, and India is seeking assurances against future US trade actions.
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US-India trade deal negotiations stall over tariffs, agriculture, and sunset clause
Negotiations for a first-phase US-India bilateral trade deal remain stalled after 18 months due to disagreements over market access, agricultural tariffs, a potential sunset clause, and future tariff risks from US trade investigations. India seeks a competitive tariff advantage, while the US demands agricultural market access, particularly for corn, soybeans, and dairy. The US Supreme Court's striking down of sweeping tariffs has shifted leverage, and India is seeking assurances against future US trade actions.
Negotiations for a first-phase US-India bilateral trade deal remain stalled after 18 months due to disagreements over market access, agricultural tariffs, a potential sunset clause, and future tariff risks from US trade investigations. India seeks a competitive tariff advantage, while the US demands agricultural market access, particularly for corn, soybeans, and dairy. The US Supreme Court's striking down of sweeping tariffs has shifted leverage, and India is seeking assurances against future US trade actions.
us30Israel's International Isolation Deepens Amid Policy and Perception Shifts
Israel faces rapidly deepening international isolation, evidenced by declining poll numbers, boycotts, and diplomatic actions. A Pew survey shows 60% of Americans view Israel unfavorably, rising to nearly three-quarters among 18-49 year olds. European states are imposing sanctions on settlers and considering trade restrictions. The article argues that while some criticism stems from antisemitism, much is driven by Israel's actions in Gaza and the West Bank. Upcoming Israeli elections offer a potential turning point if a new coalition government adopts pragmatic policies to curb settlement expansion, reduce settler violence, and restore ties with Palestinian institutions.
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Israel's International Isolation Deepens Amid Policy and Perception Shifts
Israel faces rapidly deepening international isolation, evidenced by declining poll numbers, boycotts, and diplomatic actions. A Pew survey shows 60% of Americans view Israel unfavorably, rising to nearly three-quarters among 18-49 year olds. European states are imposing sanctions on settlers and considering trade restrictions. The article argues that while some criticism stems from antisemitism, much is driven by Israel's actions in Gaza and the West Bank. Upcoming Israeli elections offer a potential turning point if a new coalition government adopts pragmatic policies to curb settlement expansion, reduce settler violence, and restore ties with Palestinian institutions.
Israel faces rapidly deepening international isolation, evidenced by declining poll numbers, boycotts, and diplomatic actions. A Pew survey shows 60% of Americans view Israel unfavorably, rising to nearly three-quarters among 18-49 year olds. European states are imposing sanctions on settlers and considering trade restrictions. The article argues that while some criticism stems from antisemitism, much is driven by Israel's actions in Gaza and the West Bank. Upcoming Israeli elections offer a potential turning point if a new coalition government adopts pragmatic policies to curb settlement expansion, reduce settler violence, and restore ties with Palestinian institutions.
de30German aid organizations criticize sharp cuts to development and humanitarian budgets
German aid organizations Terre des Hommes and Welthungerhilfe released their 'Kompass 2026' report, sharply criticizing the German government's cuts to development and humanitarian aid budgets by a third since 2022. The report calls for a real strategy and greater involvement of Global South civil society, noting a global trend of rising military spending and declining aid. The upcoming North-South Commission, launching June 30 in Hamburg, is seen as a potential positive step, though the opposition Left Party dismisses it as an empty gesture.
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German aid organizations criticize sharp cuts to development and humanitarian budgets
German aid organizations Terre des Hommes and Welthungerhilfe released their 'Kompass 2026' report, sharply criticizing the German government's cuts to development and humanitarian aid budgets by a third since 2022. The report calls for a real strategy and greater involvement of Global South civil society, noting a global trend of rising military spending and declining aid. The upcoming North-South Commission, launching June 30 in Hamburg, is seen as a potential positive step, though the opposition Left Party dismisses it as an empty gesture.
German aid organizations Terre des Hommes and Welthungerhilfe released their 'Kompass 2026' report, sharply criticizing the German government's cuts to development and humanitarian aid budgets by a third since 2022. The report calls for a real strategy and greater involvement of Global South civil society, noting a global trend of rising military spending and declining aid. The upcoming North-South Commission, launching June 30 in Hamburg, is seen as a potential positive step, though the opposition Left Party dismisses it as an empty gesture.
fr30EIB approves record €3 billion loan to Airbus for R&D in aviation and defense
The European Investment Bank (EIB) has approved a €3 billion loan to Airbus, the largest commercial loan in its history, to support research and development in commercial aviation, defense, and space sectors. The financing, signed with an initial €1 billion tranche, aims to bolster European technological autonomy and competitiveness against US and Chinese rivals, including Boeing and Starlink. The loan will fund investments through 2030 across facilities in France, Germany, and Spain, and includes efforts to reduce aircraft emissions.
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EIB approves record €3 billion loan to Airbus for R&D in aviation and defense
The European Investment Bank (EIB) has approved a €3 billion loan to Airbus, the largest commercial loan in its history, to support research and development in commercial aviation, defense, and space sectors. The financing, signed with an initial €1 billion tranche, aims to bolster European technological autonomy and competitiveness against US and Chinese rivals, including Boeing and Starlink. The loan will fund investments through 2030 across facilities in France, Germany, and Spain, and includes efforts to reduce aircraft emissions.
The European Investment Bank (EIB) has approved a €3 billion loan to Airbus, the largest commercial loan in its history, to support research and development in commercial aviation, defense, and space sectors. The financing, signed with an initial €1 billion tranche, aims to bolster European technological autonomy and competitiveness against US and Chinese rivals, including Boeing and Starlink. The loan will fund investments through 2030 across facilities in France, Germany, and Spain, and includes efforts to reduce aircraft emissions.
us30Iran's Pezeshkian says US talks depend on mutual commitments
Background: Iran has previously stated its readiness to prove the peaceful nature of its nuclear program and criticized contradictory US policies, with Pezeshkian declaring Tehran will not accept 'excessive demands' in Pakistan-mediated talks. On June 29, 2026, Pezeshkian stated that US-Iran talks depend on both sides honoring their commitments, referencing a memorandum of understanding, and emphasized a rational and decisive defensive approach to threats. He wrote on X that if the US adheres to the memorandum, Iran will fulfill its obligations.
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Iran's Pezeshkian says US talks depend on mutual commitments
Background: Iran has previously stated its readiness to prove the peaceful nature of its nuclear program and criticized contradictory US policies, with Pezeshkian declaring Tehran will not accept 'excessive demands' in Pakistan-mediated talks. On June 29, 2026, Pezeshkian stated that US-Iran talks depend on both sides honoring their commitments, referencing a memorandum of understanding, and emphasized a rational and decisive defensive approach to threats. He wrote on X that if the US adheres to the memorandum, Iran will fulfill its obligations.
Background: Iran has previously stated its readiness to prove the peaceful nature of its nuclear program and criticized contradictory US policies, with Pezeshkian declaring Tehran will not accept 'excessive demands' in Pakistan-mediated talks. On June 29, 2026, Pezeshkian stated that US-Iran talks depend on both sides honoring their commitments, referencing a memorandum of understanding, and emphasized a rational and decisive defensive approach to threats. He wrote on X that if the US adheres to the memorandum, Iran will fulfill its obligations.
de30Eastern Germany's population decline fuels far-right support ahead of Saxony-Anhalt election
Background: The far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) leads polls in Saxony-Anhalt at 41% ahead of the September 6, 2025 state election, with the CDU trailing and smaller parties at risk of falling below the 5% threshold. A new in-depth report reveals that eastern Germany has experienced a 16% population drop since reunification, with Saxony-Anhalt recording the steepest decline at 26%. The demographic hollowing-out—driven by post-1990 emigration and low birth rates—is linked to rising support for the AfD, as sociologists note that far-right support tends to be higher in regions most affected by population decline, where dwindling infrastructure and a sense of stagnation fuel voter frustration. The article describes local efforts to reverse the trend, such as the Heimvorteil Harz initiative to attract workers back, but acknowledges the problem is too large for such campaigns alone. The AfD's Saxony-Anhalt branch, classified as right-wing extremist by domestic intelligence, rejects immigration as a remedy and instead proposes baby bonuses to incentivize larger families. The current Landtag has passed reforms to protect democratic institutions in case of an AfD victory.
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Eastern Germany's population decline fuels far-right support ahead of Saxony-Anhalt election
Background: The far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) leads polls in Saxony-Anhalt at 41% ahead of the September 6, 2025 state election, with the CDU trailing and smaller parties at risk of falling below the 5% threshold. A new in-depth report reveals that eastern Germany has experienced a 16% population drop since reunification, with Saxony-Anhalt recording the steepest decline at 26%. The demographic hollowing-out—driven by post-1990 emigration and low birth rates—is linked to rising support for the AfD, as sociologists note that far-right support tends to be higher in regions most affected by population decline, where dwindling infrastructure and a sense of stagnation fuel voter frustration. The article describes local efforts to reverse the trend, such as the Heimvorteil Harz initiative to attract workers back, but acknowledges the problem is too large for such campaigns alone. The AfD's Saxony-Anhalt branch, classified as right-wing extremist by domestic intelligence, rejects immigration as a remedy and instead proposes baby bonuses to incentivize larger families. The current Landtag has passed reforms to protect democratic institutions in case of an AfD victory.
Background: The far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) leads polls in Saxony-Anhalt at 41% ahead of the September 6, 2025 state election, with the CDU trailing and smaller parties at risk of falling below the 5% threshold. A new in-depth report reveals that eastern Germany has experienced a 16% population drop since reunification, with Saxony-Anhalt recording the steepest decline at 26%. The demographic hollowing-out—driven by post-1990 emigration and low birth rates—is linked to rising support for the AfD, as sociologists note that far-right support tends to be higher in regions most affected by population decline, where dwindling infrastructure and a sense of stagnation fuel voter frustration. The article describes local efforts to reverse the trend, such as the Heimvorteil Harz initiative to attract workers back, but acknowledges the problem is too large for such campaigns alone. The AfD's Saxony-Anhalt branch, classified as right-wing extremist by domestic intelligence, rejects immigration as a remedy and instead proposes baby bonuses to incentivize larger families. The current Landtag has passed reforms to protect democratic institutions in case of an AfD victory.
gb30Andy Burnham pledges devolution and economic reform as UK prime minister-in-waiting
Andy Burnham, the UK's prime minister-in-waiting, delivered a speech in Manchester outlining plans to devolve power to local leaders, move part of the prime minister's office to Manchester, and invest in transport, housing, and infrastructure to boost growth. He aims to reverse low growth since 2008 through a 'Manchesterism' approach, while facing challenges of a sluggish economy, public services, and defense spending pressures.
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Andy Burnham pledges devolution and economic reform as UK prime minister-in-waiting
Andy Burnham, the UK's prime minister-in-waiting, delivered a speech in Manchester outlining plans to devolve power to local leaders, move part of the prime minister's office to Manchester, and invest in transport, housing, and infrastructure to boost growth. He aims to reverse low growth since 2008 through a 'Manchesterism' approach, while facing challenges of a sluggish economy, public services, and defense spending pressures.
Andy Burnham, the UK's prime minister-in-waiting, delivered a speech in Manchester outlining plans to devolve power to local leaders, move part of the prime minister's office to Manchester, and invest in transport, housing, and infrastructure to boost growth. He aims to reverse low growth since 2008 through a 'Manchesterism' approach, while facing challenges of a sluggish economy, public services, and defense spending pressures.
tr30Turkey lifts short-selling ban imposed during Iran war
Borsa Istanbul lifted the short-selling ban on its equity market, which had been imposed on March 1 after U.S.-Israeli attacks on Iran triggered global market declines. The Capital Markets Board's restrictions expired on June 26, and the exchange reinstated the 5:1 order-to-trade ratio. The move aligns with MSCI recommendations and signals normalization of Turkish financial markets.
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Turkey lifts short-selling ban imposed during Iran war
Borsa Istanbul lifted the short-selling ban on its equity market, which had been imposed on March 1 after U.S.-Israeli attacks on Iran triggered global market declines. The Capital Markets Board's restrictions expired on June 26, and the exchange reinstated the 5:1 order-to-trade ratio. The move aligns with MSCI recommendations and signals normalization of Turkish financial markets.
Borsa Istanbul lifted the short-selling ban on its equity market, which had been imposed on March 1 after U.S.-Israeli attacks on Iran triggered global market declines. The Capital Markets Board's restrictions expired on June 26, and the exchange reinstated the 5:1 order-to-trade ratio. The move aligns with MSCI recommendations and signals normalization of Turkish financial markets.
us29Comcast announces spin-off of NBCUniversal
Comcast has announced plans to spin off NBCUniversal, a major corporate restructuring that will separate its media and entertainment assets from its cable and broadband operations. This move is expected to reshape the media landscape and unlock shareholder value, as well as streamline operations.
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Comcast announces spin-off of NBCUniversal
Comcast has announced plans to spin off NBCUniversal, a major corporate restructuring that will separate its media and entertainment assets from its cable and broadband operations. This move is expected to reshape the media landscape and unlock shareholder value, as well as streamline operations.
Comcast has announced plans to spin off NBCUniversal, a major corporate restructuring that will separate its media and entertainment assets from its cable and broadband operations. This move is expected to reshape the media landscape and unlock shareholder value, as well as streamline operations.
us28US-Canada defense industrial cooperation undermined by Trump administration policies
The Trump administration's coercive policies toward Canada, including the suspension of the Permanent Joint Board on Defense and tariff threats, are pushing Ottawa to hedge against US unpredictability by diversifying defense partnerships with the EU and Indo-Pacific allies. This undermines the defense industrial integration Washington seeks, as Canada prioritizes strategic autonomy over deeper continental cooperation.
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US-Canada defense industrial cooperation undermined by Trump administration policies
The Trump administration's coercive policies toward Canada, including the suspension of the Permanent Joint Board on Defense and tariff threats, are pushing Ottawa to hedge against US unpredictability by diversifying defense partnerships with the EU and Indo-Pacific allies. This undermines the defense industrial integration Washington seeks, as Canada prioritizes strategic autonomy over deeper continental cooperation.
The Trump administration's coercive policies toward Canada, including the suspension of the Permanent Joint Board on Defense and tariff threats, are pushing Ottawa to hedge against US unpredictability by diversifying defense partnerships with the EU and Indo-Pacific allies. This undermines the defense industrial integration Washington seeks, as Canada prioritizes strategic autonomy over deeper continental cooperation.
gb28SNP says UK armed forces half the size of 1980s, citing personnel and equipment cuts
The Scottish National Party (SNP) released analysis from the House of Commons Library showing UK armed forces personnel have fallen from 315,000 in 1979 to 137,966 in 2025. The SNP criticizes successive UK governments for underfunding defense, pointing to reductions in army, navy, and air force personnel and equipment, and a decline in defense spending as a share of GDP.
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SNP says UK armed forces half the size of 1980s, citing personnel and equipment cuts
The Scottish National Party (SNP) released analysis from the House of Commons Library showing UK armed forces personnel have fallen from 315,000 in 1979 to 137,966 in 2025. The SNP criticizes successive UK governments for underfunding defense, pointing to reductions in army, navy, and air force personnel and equipment, and a decline in defense spending as a share of GDP.
The Scottish National Party (SNP) released analysis from the House of Commons Library showing UK armed forces personnel have fallen from 315,000 in 1979 to 137,966 in 2025. The SNP criticizes successive UK governments for underfunding defense, pointing to reductions in army, navy, and air force personnel and equipment, and a decline in defense spending as a share of GDP.
us28CENTCOM commander meets Lebanese president, US troops to advance Israel-Lebanon framework agreement
Background: Lebanese President Joseph Aoun and PM Nawaf Salam have been engaged in US-mediated military talks with Israel, with the Pentagon hosting delegations and discussions focusing on a ceasefire and peace framework. Today: CENTCOM commander Adm. Brad Cooper met President Aoun and Lebanese Armed Forces commander Gen. Rodolphe Haykal in Beirut to discuss implementing a new Israel-Lebanon framework agreement signed in Washington, D.C. on June 26. Cooper also visited deployed US troops in Israel, with over 50,000 US personnel remaining deployed across the Middle East.
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CENTCOM commander meets Lebanese president, US troops to advance Israel-Lebanon framework agreement
Background: Lebanese President Joseph Aoun and PM Nawaf Salam have been engaged in US-mediated military talks with Israel, with the Pentagon hosting delegations and discussions focusing on a ceasefire and peace framework. Today: CENTCOM commander Adm. Brad Cooper met President Aoun and Lebanese Armed Forces commander Gen. Rodolphe Haykal in Beirut to discuss implementing a new Israel-Lebanon framework agreement signed in Washington, D.C. on June 26. Cooper also visited deployed US troops in Israel, with over 50,000 US personnel remaining deployed across the Middle East.
Background: Lebanese President Joseph Aoun and PM Nawaf Salam have been engaged in US-mediated military talks with Israel, with the Pentagon hosting delegations and discussions focusing on a ceasefire and peace framework. Today: CENTCOM commander Adm. Brad Cooper met President Aoun and Lebanese Armed Forces commander Gen. Rodolphe Haykal in Beirut to discuss implementing a new Israel-Lebanon framework agreement signed in Washington, D.C. on June 26. Cooper also visited deployed US troops in Israel, with over 50,000 US personnel remaining deployed across the Middle East.
ua28Hermitage Museum cancels all Crimea archaeological expeditions due to escalation
Background: Russian archaeologist Alexander Butyagin, detained in Poland in December 2025 on Ukraine's request for illegal destruction of cultural heritage in Crimea, was returned to Russia in a prisoner exchange in April 2026 and vowed to resume illegal excavations in occupied Crimea. Today: The Hermitage Museum cancelled all nine planned archaeological expeditions in occupied Crimea this summer, citing an escalation of the situation. The Myrmekion expedition, led by Butyagin, was moved to Kuban.
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Hermitage Museum cancels all Crimea archaeological expeditions due to escalation
Background: Russian archaeologist Alexander Butyagin, detained in Poland in December 2025 on Ukraine's request for illegal destruction of cultural heritage in Crimea, was returned to Russia in a prisoner exchange in April 2026 and vowed to resume illegal excavations in occupied Crimea. Today: The Hermitage Museum cancelled all nine planned archaeological expeditions in occupied Crimea this summer, citing an escalation of the situation. The Myrmekion expedition, led by Butyagin, was moved to Kuban.
Background: Russian archaeologist Alexander Butyagin, detained in Poland in December 2025 on Ukraine's request for illegal destruction of cultural heritage in Crimea, was returned to Russia in a prisoner exchange in April 2026 and vowed to resume illegal excavations in occupied Crimea. Today: The Hermitage Museum cancelled all nine planned archaeological expeditions in occupied Crimea this summer, citing an escalation of the situation. The Myrmekion expedition, led by Butyagin, was moved to Kuban.
gb28British American Tobacco to cut 5,500 jobs in AI-led restructuring
British American Tobacco announced plans to cut approximately 5,500 jobs and move 3,500 roles to third-party firms, including Accenture, as part of an AI-led restructuring aimed at reducing costs and boosting profits. The program is expected to generate 600 million pounds in annualized savings by 2028. Shares fell 1.6% amid ongoing regulatory pressures and product launch delays in the U.S. and other markets.
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British American Tobacco to cut 5,500 jobs in AI-led restructuring
British American Tobacco announced plans to cut approximately 5,500 jobs and move 3,500 roles to third-party firms, including Accenture, as part of an AI-led restructuring aimed at reducing costs and boosting profits. The program is expected to generate 600 million pounds in annualized savings by 2028. Shares fell 1.6% amid ongoing regulatory pressures and product launch delays in the U.S. and other markets.
British American Tobacco announced plans to cut approximately 5,500 jobs and move 3,500 roles to third-party firms, including Accenture, as part of an AI-led restructuring aimed at reducing costs and boosting profits. The program is expected to generate 600 million pounds in annualized savings by 2028. Shares fell 1.6% amid ongoing regulatory pressures and product launch delays in the U.S. and other markets.
tr28Turkey and Saudi Arabia sign MoU to boost trade and investment ties
The Union of Chambers and Commodity Exchanges of Türkiye (TOBB) and the Federation of Saudi Chambers (FSC) signed a memorandum of understanding on June 29, 2026, to expand bilateral trade and economic cooperation. The agreement includes a joint action plan, sectoral platforms, and the creation of a Türkiye-Saudi Arabia Joint Chamber Forum. TOBB President Rifat Hisarcıklıoğlu called for Islamic countries to merge capital reserves with Türkiye's manufacturing capabilities to create a dominant global economic force. The signing took place on the sidelines of the Islamic Chamber of Commerce and Development (ICCD) meetings in Ankara.
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Turkey and Saudi Arabia sign MoU to boost trade and investment ties
The Union of Chambers and Commodity Exchanges of Türkiye (TOBB) and the Federation of Saudi Chambers (FSC) signed a memorandum of understanding on June 29, 2026, to expand bilateral trade and economic cooperation. The agreement includes a joint action plan, sectoral platforms, and the creation of a Türkiye-Saudi Arabia Joint Chamber Forum. TOBB President Rifat Hisarcıklıoğlu called for Islamic countries to merge capital reserves with Türkiye's manufacturing capabilities to create a dominant global economic force. The signing took place on the sidelines of the Islamic Chamber of Commerce and Development (ICCD) meetings in Ankara.
The Union of Chambers and Commodity Exchanges of Türkiye (TOBB) and the Federation of Saudi Chambers (FSC) signed a memorandum of understanding on June 29, 2026, to expand bilateral trade and economic cooperation. The agreement includes a joint action plan, sectoral platforms, and the creation of a Türkiye-Saudi Arabia Joint Chamber Forum. TOBB President Rifat Hisarcıklıoğlu called for Islamic countries to merge capital reserves with Türkiye's manufacturing capabilities to create a dominant global economic force. The signing took place on the sidelines of the Islamic Chamber of Commerce and Development (ICCD) meetings in Ankara.
us28Tlaib Forces New Vote on Ending US Support for Israel in Lebanon
Background: House Democrats were previously divided over a Lebanon war powers resolution introduced by Rep. Rashida Tlaib to direct President Trump to remove U.S. forces from Lebanon within 7 days, with opposition from many Democrats and leadership citing drafting issues. Today: Tlaib announced she will force another congressional vote to end U.S. involvement in what she calls Israel's 'campaign of ethnic cleansing and territorial expansion' in Lebanon, citing over 4,250 deaths and daily child casualties. She wrote on X that Congress must vote to end U.S. support for these atrocities and force an end to Israel's invasion and illegal military occupation of Lebanese territory. The vote is scheduled for tomorrow, June 29, 2026.
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Tlaib Forces New Vote on Ending US Support for Israel in Lebanon
Background: House Democrats were previously divided over a Lebanon war powers resolution introduced by Rep. Rashida Tlaib to direct President Trump to remove U.S. forces from Lebanon within 7 days, with opposition from many Democrats and leadership citing drafting issues. Today: Tlaib announced she will force another congressional vote to end U.S. involvement in what she calls Israel's 'campaign of ethnic cleansing and territorial expansion' in Lebanon, citing over 4,250 deaths and daily child casualties. She wrote on X that Congress must vote to end U.S. support for these atrocities and force an end to Israel's invasion and illegal military occupation of Lebanese territory. The vote is scheduled for tomorrow, June 29, 2026.
Background: House Democrats were previously divided over a Lebanon war powers resolution introduced by Rep. Rashida Tlaib to direct President Trump to remove U.S. forces from Lebanon within 7 days, with opposition from many Democrats and leadership citing drafting issues. Today: Tlaib announced she will force another congressional vote to end U.S. involvement in what she calls Israel's 'campaign of ethnic cleansing and territorial expansion' in Lebanon, citing over 4,250 deaths and daily child casualties. She wrote on X that Congress must vote to end U.S. support for these atrocities and force an end to Israel's invasion and illegal military occupation of Lebanese territory. The vote is scheduled for tomorrow, June 29, 2026.
us26Supreme Court Remands Geofence Warrant Case to Lower Court
The U.S. Supreme Court has sent a case concerning the legality of geofence warrants back to a lower court for further proceedings, a significant development in digital privacy and Fourth Amendment law. The Court remanded the case challenging the constitutionality of geofence warrants to a lower court for further proceedings, marking a pivotal moment in digital privacy and Fourth Amendment jurisprudence.
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Supreme Court Remands Geofence Warrant Case to Lower Court
The U.S. Supreme Court has sent a case concerning the legality of geofence warrants back to a lower court for further proceedings, a significant development in digital privacy and Fourth Amendment law. The Court remanded the case challenging the constitutionality of geofence warrants to a lower court for further proceedings, marking a pivotal moment in digital privacy and Fourth Amendment jurisprudence.
The U.S. Supreme Court has sent a case concerning the legality of geofence warrants back to a lower court for further proceedings, a significant development in digital privacy and Fourth Amendment law. The Court remanded the case challenging the constitutionality of geofence warrants to a lower court for further proceedings, marking a pivotal moment in digital privacy and Fourth Amendment jurisprudence.
us25Bipartisan bill would allow service members to sue US military for sexual assault
Senators Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH) and John Kennedy (R-LA) introduced the Military Sexual Trauma Accountability Act, which would create an exception to the Feres doctrine and allow U.S. service members and veterans to file civil negligence claims against the Defense Department for sexual assault or harassment during active duty. The bill is modeled on a 2019 law permitting medical malpractice claims. Supporters include veterans advocacy groups, and the Congressional Budget Office estimates 120,000 claims could be filed in the first decade. The legislation addresses a long-standing legal barrier and follows recent Supreme Court signals questioning Feres immunity.
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Bipartisan bill would allow service members to sue US military for sexual assault
Senators Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH) and John Kennedy (R-LA) introduced the Military Sexual Trauma Accountability Act, which would create an exception to the Feres doctrine and allow U.S. service members and veterans to file civil negligence claims against the Defense Department for sexual assault or harassment during active duty. The bill is modeled on a 2019 law permitting medical malpractice claims. Supporters include veterans advocacy groups, and the Congressional Budget Office estimates 120,000 claims could be filed in the first decade. The legislation addresses a long-standing legal barrier and follows recent Supreme Court signals questioning Feres immunity.
Senators Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH) and John Kennedy (R-LA) introduced the Military Sexual Trauma Accountability Act, which would create an exception to the Feres doctrine and allow U.S. service members and veterans to file civil negligence claims against the Defense Department for sexual assault or harassment during active duty. The bill is modeled on a 2019 law permitting medical malpractice claims. Supporters include veterans advocacy groups, and the Congressional Budget Office estimates 120,000 claims could be filed in the first decade. The legislation addresses a long-standing legal barrier and follows recent Supreme Court signals questioning Feres immunity.
ua25Poland criticizes Zelenskyy's National Pantheon move as deepening rift with Kyiv
Polish government officials have expressed concern that President Zelenskyy's announcement of a Ukrainian National Pantheon, amid a dispute over honoring the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA), is worsening bilateral relations. Anonymous sources told Polish media that the move surprised Poland and could harm business ties, following Zelenskyy's absence from the Ukraine Recovery Conference in Gdańsk. The dispute underscores growing tensions between Kyiv and Warsaw over historical memory and Ukraine's EU accession process.
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Poland criticizes Zelenskyy's National Pantheon move as deepening rift with Kyiv
Polish government officials have expressed concern that President Zelenskyy's announcement of a Ukrainian National Pantheon, amid a dispute over honoring the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA), is worsening bilateral relations. Anonymous sources told Polish media that the move surprised Poland and could harm business ties, following Zelenskyy's absence from the Ukraine Recovery Conference in Gdańsk. The dispute underscores growing tensions between Kyiv and Warsaw over historical memory and Ukraine's EU accession process.
Polish government officials have expressed concern that President Zelenskyy's announcement of a Ukrainian National Pantheon, amid a dispute over honoring the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA), is worsening bilateral relations. Anonymous sources told Polish media that the move surprised Poland and could harm business ties, following Zelenskyy's absence from the Ukraine Recovery Conference in Gdańsk. The dispute underscores growing tensions between Kyiv and Warsaw over historical memory and Ukraine's EU accession process.
us25US Representative Casar backs amendment to halt military aid to Israel
Democratic US Representative Greg Casar announced he will vote for an amendment by Republican Thomas Massie that would cancel $3.3 billion in annual US aid to Israel and remove funding from the State Department appropriations bill. Casar cited Israeli war crimes in Gaza and dragging the US into war with Iran as reasons. The vote is expected in the House later this week.
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US Representative Casar backs amendment to halt military aid to Israel
Democratic US Representative Greg Casar announced he will vote for an amendment by Republican Thomas Massie that would cancel $3.3 billion in annual US aid to Israel and remove funding from the State Department appropriations bill. Casar cited Israeli war crimes in Gaza and dragging the US into war with Iran as reasons. The vote is expected in the House later this week.
Democratic US Representative Greg Casar announced he will vote for an amendment by Republican Thomas Massie that would cancel $3.3 billion in annual US aid to Israel and remove funding from the State Department appropriations bill. Casar cited Israeli war crimes in Gaza and dragging the US into war with Iran as reasons. The vote is expected in the House later this week.
us24Atlantic Council urges NATO to accelerate full-strength Baltic brigade deployments at Ankara summit
A new Atlantic Council policy analysis argues that NATO's upcoming Ankara summit should produce a concrete commitment from European allies to station full-strength combat brigades in each Baltic state on an accelerated timeline of 12-18 months. The proposal aims to deter potential Russian aggression, address transatlantic tensions with the Trump administration, and strengthen NATO's eastern flank deterrence. It builds on existing but incomplete brigade commitments from Germany, Canada, and the UK, and recommends that combat battalions be national rather than multinational to ensure combat capability.
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Atlantic Council urges NATO to accelerate full-strength Baltic brigade deployments at Ankara summit
A new Atlantic Council policy analysis argues that NATO's upcoming Ankara summit should produce a concrete commitment from European allies to station full-strength combat brigades in each Baltic state on an accelerated timeline of 12-18 months. The proposal aims to deter potential Russian aggression, address transatlantic tensions with the Trump administration, and strengthen NATO's eastern flank deterrence. It builds on existing but incomplete brigade commitments from Germany, Canada, and the UK, and recommends that combat battalions be national rather than multinational to ensure combat capability.
A new Atlantic Council policy analysis argues that NATO's upcoming Ankara summit should produce a concrete commitment from European allies to station full-strength combat brigades in each Baltic state on an accelerated timeline of 12-18 months. The proposal aims to deter potential Russian aggression, address transatlantic tensions with the Trump administration, and strengthen NATO's eastern flank deterrence. It builds on existing but incomplete brigade commitments from Germany, Canada, and the UK, and recommends that combat battalions be national rather than multinational to ensure combat capability.
ua24Seven civilians injured in Russian drone attacks on Sumy Oblast on June 29
Russian drone attacks on the Shostka district in Sumy Oblast on 29 June injured seven civilians, including a 52-year-old man seriously wounded in Seredyna-Buda after a drone struck his garden, and two women from the Hlukhiv hromada who were hospitalized. Other injured individuals are receiving outpatient treatment. Civilian infrastructure in the Hlukhiv and Seredyna-Buda hromadas was targeted. The attacks underscore ongoing Russian drone operations against civilian areas in northern Ukraine.
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Seven civilians injured in Russian drone attacks on Sumy Oblast on June 29
Russian drone attacks on the Shostka district in Sumy Oblast on 29 June injured seven civilians, including a 52-year-old man seriously wounded in Seredyna-Buda after a drone struck his garden, and two women from the Hlukhiv hromada who were hospitalized. Other injured individuals are receiving outpatient treatment. Civilian infrastructure in the Hlukhiv and Seredyna-Buda hromadas was targeted. The attacks underscore ongoing Russian drone operations against civilian areas in northern Ukraine.
Russian drone attacks on the Shostka district in Sumy Oblast on 29 June injured seven civilians, including a 52-year-old man seriously wounded in Seredyna-Buda after a drone struck his garden, and two women from the Hlukhiv hromada who were hospitalized. Other injured individuals are receiving outpatient treatment. Civilian infrastructure in the Hlukhiv and Seredyna-Buda hromadas was targeted. The attacks underscore ongoing Russian drone operations against civilian areas in northern Ukraine.
gb23Sanctioned Kinahan Cartel Lieutenant Ian Dixon Found Playing Padel in Dubai
Bellingcat and The Sunday Times have located Ian Thomas Dixon, a sanctioned lieutenant of the Kinahan organized crime group, living openly in Dubai and participating in padel tennis tournaments under the alias 'Ian Thomas'. This is the first public footage of Dixon since US sanctions were imposed in 2022. The investigation also reveals his association with Scottish drug trafficker Stephen Jamieson, who was recently extradited from Dubai and jailed. The Kinahan cartel, linked to drug trafficking, money laundering, and arms smuggling, has connections to Iran and Hezbollah. Cartel leader Daniel Kinahan is currently awaiting extradition to Ireland from Dubai.
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Sanctioned Kinahan Cartel Lieutenant Ian Dixon Found Playing Padel in Dubai
Bellingcat and The Sunday Times have located Ian Thomas Dixon, a sanctioned lieutenant of the Kinahan organized crime group, living openly in Dubai and participating in padel tennis tournaments under the alias 'Ian Thomas'. This is the first public footage of Dixon since US sanctions were imposed in 2022. The investigation also reveals his association with Scottish drug trafficker Stephen Jamieson, who was recently extradited from Dubai and jailed. The Kinahan cartel, linked to drug trafficking, money laundering, and arms smuggling, has connections to Iran and Hezbollah. Cartel leader Daniel Kinahan is currently awaiting extradition to Ireland from Dubai.
Bellingcat and The Sunday Times have located Ian Thomas Dixon, a sanctioned lieutenant of the Kinahan organized crime group, living openly in Dubai and participating in padel tennis tournaments under the alias 'Ian Thomas'. This is the first public footage of Dixon since US sanctions were imposed in 2022. The investigation also reveals his association with Scottish drug trafficker Stephen Jamieson, who was recently extradited from Dubai and jailed. The Kinahan cartel, linked to drug trafficking, money laundering, and arms smuggling, has connections to Iran and Hezbollah. Cartel leader Daniel Kinahan is currently awaiting extradition to Ireland from Dubai.
us23US carrier deployments: George Washington conducts SINKEX, Roosevelt arrives for RIMPAC, Nimitz completes FLEETEX 250
Background: The U.S. Navy maintains two carriers in the CENTCOM region supporting blockade operations and self-defense strikes, with the Iran ceasefire agreement scheduled to be signed in Geneva. Today: The weekly carrier tracker reports that USS George Washington conducted a live-fire sinking exercise (SINKEX) against the ex-USS Juneau during Valiant Shield in the Western Pacific, with a Japanese submarine delivering the final blow. USS Theodore Roosevelt arrived at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam, Hawaii, on June 23 for RIMPAC 2026, the largest iteration ever with 30 partner nations. USS Nimitz completed FLEETEX 250 in the Atlantic, participated in a fleet formation photo exercise, and will sail to New York for the International Naval Review from July 3-8. Boeing's MQ-25A Stingray demonstrator drone was spotted on Nimitz's flight deck, and the C-2A Greyhound made its last trap aboard the carrier. USS Dwight D. Eisenhower is conducting carrier qualifications off the east coast, and USS Carl Vinson got underway for training on June 25. Two carriers (USS Abraham Lincoln and USS George H.W. Bush) remain on station in the Middle East amid ongoing negotiations and tit-for-tat strikes.
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US carrier deployments: George Washington conducts SINKEX, Roosevelt arrives for RIMPAC, Nimitz completes FLEETEX 250
Background: The U.S. Navy maintains two carriers in the CENTCOM region supporting blockade operations and self-defense strikes, with the Iran ceasefire agreement scheduled to be signed in Geneva. Today: The weekly carrier tracker reports that USS George Washington conducted a live-fire sinking exercise (SINKEX) against the ex-USS Juneau during Valiant Shield in the Western Pacific, with a Japanese submarine delivering the final blow. USS Theodore Roosevelt arrived at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam, Hawaii, on June 23 for RIMPAC 2026, the largest iteration ever with 30 partner nations. USS Nimitz completed FLEETEX 250 in the Atlantic, participated in a fleet formation photo exercise, and will sail to New York for the International Naval Review from July 3-8. Boeing's MQ-25A Stingray demonstrator drone was spotted on Nimitz's flight deck, and the C-2A Greyhound made its last trap aboard the carrier. USS Dwight D. Eisenhower is conducting carrier qualifications off the east coast, and USS Carl Vinson got underway for training on June 25. Two carriers (USS Abraham Lincoln and USS George H.W. Bush) remain on station in the Middle East amid ongoing negotiations and tit-for-tat strikes.
Background: The U.S. Navy maintains two carriers in the CENTCOM region supporting blockade operations and self-defense strikes, with the Iran ceasefire agreement scheduled to be signed in Geneva. Today: The weekly carrier tracker reports that USS George Washington conducted a live-fire sinking exercise (SINKEX) against the ex-USS Juneau during Valiant Shield in the Western Pacific, with a Japanese submarine delivering the final blow. USS Theodore Roosevelt arrived at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam, Hawaii, on June 23 for RIMPAC 2026, the largest iteration ever with 30 partner nations. USS Nimitz completed FLEETEX 250 in the Atlantic, participated in a fleet formation photo exercise, and will sail to New York for the International Naval Review from July 3-8. Boeing's MQ-25A Stingray demonstrator drone was spotted on Nimitz's flight deck, and the C-2A Greyhound made its last trap aboard the carrier. USS Dwight D. Eisenhower is conducting carrier qualifications off the east coast, and USS Carl Vinson got underway for training on June 25. Two carriers (USS Abraham Lincoln and USS George H.W. Bush) remain on station in the Middle East amid ongoing negotiations and tit-for-tat strikes.
gb23Expert says urban design and architecture are frontline defense against heatwaves
Ronita Bardhan, Professor of Sustainable Built Environment and Health at the University of Cambridge, argues that urban design and architecture must become a frontline public health defense against heatwaves. The statement follows a record-breaking European heatwave that caused over 1,300 excess deaths, according to the WHO. Bardhan discussed cooling solutions for urban environments, emphasizing the role of urban design in mitigating heat-related health risks.
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Expert says urban design and architecture are frontline defense against heatwaves
Ronita Bardhan, Professor of Sustainable Built Environment and Health at the University of Cambridge, argues that urban design and architecture must become a frontline public health defense against heatwaves. The statement follows a record-breaking European heatwave that caused over 1,300 excess deaths, according to the WHO. Bardhan discussed cooling solutions for urban environments, emphasizing the role of urban design in mitigating heat-related health risks.
Ronita Bardhan, Professor of Sustainable Built Environment and Health at the University of Cambridge, argues that urban design and architecture must become a frontline public health defense against heatwaves. The statement follows a record-breaking European heatwave that caused over 1,300 excess deaths, according to the WHO. Bardhan discussed cooling solutions for urban environments, emphasizing the role of urban design in mitigating heat-related health risks.
tr23Armenian PM Pashinyan opposes weaponization of 1915 events after Israeli genocide recognition
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan stated that Armenia sees no need to respond to Israel's recognition of the 1915 events as genocide, arguing that avoiding weaponization of the issue serves national interests. Turkey condemned Israel's decision as politically motivated, reiterating its position that the events were a tragedy with casualties on both sides.
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Armenian PM Pashinyan opposes weaponization of 1915 events after Israeli genocide recognition
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan stated that Armenia sees no need to respond to Israel's recognition of the 1915 events as genocide, arguing that avoiding weaponization of the issue serves national interests. Turkey condemned Israel's decision as politically motivated, reiterating its position that the events were a tragedy with casualties on both sides.
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan stated that Armenia sees no need to respond to Israel's recognition of the 1915 events as genocide, arguing that avoiding weaponization of the issue serves national interests. Turkey condemned Israel's decision as politically motivated, reiterating its position that the events were a tragedy with casualties on both sides.
ua23Ukraine reports 1,350 Russian casualties and 71 artillery systems destroyed in past day
The General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine reported that Russian forces lost 1,350 troops, 1 tank, 6 armored combat vehicles, 71 artillery systems, 13 ground robotic systems, 1,952 operational-tactical UAVs, 492 vehicles and fuel tankers, and 2 units of special equipment in the past 24 hours, bringing total estimated Russian combat losses since February 24, 2022, to approximately 1,403,550 personnel. The update reflects ongoing attritional warfare across the front line.
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Ukraine reports 1,350 Russian casualties and 71 artillery systems destroyed in past day
The General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine reported that Russian forces lost 1,350 troops, 1 tank, 6 armored combat vehicles, 71 artillery systems, 13 ground robotic systems, 1,952 operational-tactical UAVs, 492 vehicles and fuel tankers, and 2 units of special equipment in the past 24 hours, bringing total estimated Russian combat losses since February 24, 2022, to approximately 1,403,550 personnel. The update reflects ongoing attritional warfare across the front line.
The General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine reported that Russian forces lost 1,350 troops, 1 tank, 6 armored combat vehicles, 71 artillery systems, 13 ground robotic systems, 1,952 operational-tactical UAVs, 492 vehicles and fuel tankers, and 2 units of special equipment in the past 24 hours, bringing total estimated Russian combat losses since February 24, 2022, to approximately 1,403,550 personnel. The update reflects ongoing attritional warfare across the front line.
us21Database of 20 years of shipboard sexual assault cases on Military Sealift Command vessels made public
The Maritime Legal Aid Foundation has made public a searchable database of 116 NCIS case files on sexual assault and misconduct aboard Military Sealift Command ships from 2000 to 2022. Only five cases resulted in court-martial or civilian court; most ended with administrative discipline or none. The archive reveals systemic gaps in legal recourse for victims, who often lack advocates and face an adversarial NCIS process. Founder Ryan Melogy hopes public scrutiny will drive accountability, especially for vulnerable cadets.
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Database of 20 years of shipboard sexual assault cases on Military Sealift Command vessels made public
The Maritime Legal Aid Foundation has made public a searchable database of 116 NCIS case files on sexual assault and misconduct aboard Military Sealift Command ships from 2000 to 2022. Only five cases resulted in court-martial or civilian court; most ended with administrative discipline or none. The archive reveals systemic gaps in legal recourse for victims, who often lack advocates and face an adversarial NCIS process. Founder Ryan Melogy hopes public scrutiny will drive accountability, especially for vulnerable cadets.
The Maritime Legal Aid Foundation has made public a searchable database of 116 NCIS case files on sexual assault and misconduct aboard Military Sealift Command ships from 2000 to 2022. Only five cases resulted in court-martial or civilian court; most ended with administrative discipline or none. The archive reveals systemic gaps in legal recourse for victims, who often lack advocates and face an adversarial NCIS process. Founder Ryan Melogy hopes public scrutiny will drive accountability, especially for vulnerable cadets.
ua21Poland detains 11 Ukrainians and Belarusians for Russian-linked recruitment of demonstrators
Polish authorities detained nine Ukrainian and two Belarusian citizens for recruiting Ukrainian refugees to participate in paid demonstrations, allegedly on instructions from Russia. The suspects will be deported immediately. The operation, led by the Internal Security Agency and Border Guard, is part of efforts to counter foreign influence among Ukrainian migrants in Poland. Minister Tomasz Siemoniak stated the operation targeted an attempt to influence Ukrainian migrants in Poland.
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Poland detains 11 Ukrainians and Belarusians for Russian-linked recruitment of demonstrators
Polish authorities detained nine Ukrainian and two Belarusian citizens for recruiting Ukrainian refugees to participate in paid demonstrations, allegedly on instructions from Russia. The suspects will be deported immediately. The operation, led by the Internal Security Agency and Border Guard, is part of efforts to counter foreign influence among Ukrainian migrants in Poland. Minister Tomasz Siemoniak stated the operation targeted an attempt to influence Ukrainian migrants in Poland.
Polish authorities detained nine Ukrainian and two Belarusian citizens for recruiting Ukrainian refugees to participate in paid demonstrations, allegedly on instructions from Russia. The suspects will be deported immediately. The operation, led by the Internal Security Agency and Border Guard, is part of efforts to counter foreign influence among Ukrainian migrants in Poland. Minister Tomasz Siemoniak stated the operation targeted an attempt to influence Ukrainian migrants in Poland.
fr20Former US Official Proposes European Modular Nuclear Deterrent Capability
Christopher Ford, former U.S. assistant secretary of state, proposes a 'potentially ubiquitous modular aerial capability' (PUMA-C) to address gaps in NATO's extended nuclear deterrence. The concept would equip existing European long-range conventional missiles with small nuclear warheads, leveraging Franco-British nuclear cooperation, to provide a more credible and flexible theater-level deterrent against Russian coercion. Ford argues that France's new 'forward deterrence' doctrine is insufficient due to doctrinal rigidity and limited flexible nuclear options, and that the PUMA-C concept could be developed more quickly and cheaply than building new nuclear-only delivery systems. Ford published the proposal in an article on War on the Rocks.
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Former US Official Proposes European Modular Nuclear Deterrent Capability
Christopher Ford, former U.S. assistant secretary of state, proposes a 'potentially ubiquitous modular aerial capability' (PUMA-C) to address gaps in NATO's extended nuclear deterrence. The concept would equip existing European long-range conventional missiles with small nuclear warheads, leveraging Franco-British nuclear cooperation, to provide a more credible and flexible theater-level deterrent against Russian coercion. Ford argues that France's new 'forward deterrence' doctrine is insufficient due to doctrinal rigidity and limited flexible nuclear options, and that the PUMA-C concept could be developed more quickly and cheaply than building new nuclear-only delivery systems. Ford published the proposal in an article on War on the Rocks.
Christopher Ford, former U.S. assistant secretary of state, proposes a 'potentially ubiquitous modular aerial capability' (PUMA-C) to address gaps in NATO's extended nuclear deterrence. The concept would equip existing European long-range conventional missiles with small nuclear warheads, leveraging Franco-British nuclear cooperation, to provide a more credible and flexible theater-level deterrent against Russian coercion. Ford argues that France's new 'forward deterrence' doctrine is insufficient due to doctrinal rigidity and limited flexible nuclear options, and that the PUMA-C concept could be developed more quickly and cheaply than building new nuclear-only delivery systems. Ford published the proposal in an article on War on the Rocks.
us20US Marine declared dead after going missing from USS Anchorage off California coast
Lance Cpl. Armando Ortiz Canseco, 21, a U.S. Marine assigned to the USS Anchorage, was declared dead after going missing during training off the coast of Southern California. The Navy, Coast Guard, and Air Force conducted a 43-hour search covering 2,400 square miles before shifting to recovery operations. The incident is under investigation.
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US Marine declared dead after going missing from USS Anchorage off California coast
Lance Cpl. Armando Ortiz Canseco, 21, a U.S. Marine assigned to the USS Anchorage, was declared dead after going missing during training off the coast of Southern California. The Navy, Coast Guard, and Air Force conducted a 43-hour search covering 2,400 square miles before shifting to recovery operations. The incident is under investigation.
Lance Cpl. Armando Ortiz Canseco, 21, a U.S. Marine assigned to the USS Anchorage, was declared dead after going missing during training off the coast of Southern California. The Navy, Coast Guard, and Air Force conducted a 43-hour search covering 2,400 square miles before shifting to recovery operations. The incident is under investigation.
us18Biden calls Trump a 'loser' over White House renovations and January 6 compensation efforts
Former President Joe Biden launched a sharp personal attack on President Donald Trump at a Democratic fundraiser in Hanover, Maryland, calling him a 'loser' for expensive White House renovations, including a ballroom and Reflecting Pool repairs, and for attempting to compensate January 6 defendants. The remarks represent one of Biden's bluntest critiques yet, escalating tensions between the two as the 2028 election cycle approaches.
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Biden calls Trump a 'loser' over White House renovations and January 6 compensation efforts
Former President Joe Biden launched a sharp personal attack on President Donald Trump at a Democratic fundraiser in Hanover, Maryland, calling him a 'loser' for expensive White House renovations, including a ballroom and Reflecting Pool repairs, and for attempting to compensate January 6 defendants. The remarks represent one of Biden's bluntest critiques yet, escalating tensions between the two as the 2028 election cycle approaches.
Former President Joe Biden launched a sharp personal attack on President Donald Trump at a Democratic fundraiser in Hanover, Maryland, calling him a 'loser' for expensive White House renovations, including a ballroom and Reflecting Pool repairs, and for attempting to compensate January 6 defendants. The remarks represent one of Biden's bluntest critiques yet, escalating tensions between the two as the 2028 election cycle approaches.
ua18Ukrainian TerMIT ground robot survives FPV drone strike, completes mission
Ukrainian company Tencore released footage showing a TerMIT ground robotic system from the 63rd Mechanised Brigade surviving a direct hit from a Russian FPV drone in northern Donetsk Oblast and completing its mission. The robot's Hardox 500 steel armor and STANAG 2920 ballistic protection enabled it to continue operations despite the strike, highlighting the growing role of unmanned ground vehicles in combat logistics and evacuation.
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Ukrainian TerMIT ground robot survives FPV drone strike, completes mission
Ukrainian company Tencore released footage showing a TerMIT ground robotic system from the 63rd Mechanised Brigade surviving a direct hit from a Russian FPV drone in northern Donetsk Oblast and completing its mission. The robot's Hardox 500 steel armor and STANAG 2920 ballistic protection enabled it to continue operations despite the strike, highlighting the growing role of unmanned ground vehicles in combat logistics and evacuation.
Ukrainian company Tencore released footage showing a TerMIT ground robotic system from the 63rd Mechanised Brigade surviving a direct hit from a Russian FPV drone in northern Donetsk Oblast and completing its mission. The robot's Hardox 500 steel armor and STANAG 2920 ballistic protection enabled it to continue operations despite the strike, highlighting the growing role of unmanned ground vehicles in combat logistics and evacuation.
us15CPJ board member removed amid review of Gaza journalist deaths
Nika Soon-Shiong, publisher of Drop Site News, was removed from the board of the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) after questioning the exclusion of certain Palestinian journalists from CPJ's Gaza death toll. CPJ stated her term ended in June 2026, but the timing coincides with an internal review of journalist deaths in Gaza.
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CPJ board member removed amid review of Gaza journalist deaths
Nika Soon-Shiong, publisher of Drop Site News, was removed from the board of the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) after questioning the exclusion of certain Palestinian journalists from CPJ's Gaza death toll. CPJ stated her term ended in June 2026, but the timing coincides with an internal review of journalist deaths in Gaza.
Nika Soon-Shiong, publisher of Drop Site News, was removed from the board of the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) after questioning the exclusion of certain Palestinian journalists from CPJ's Gaza death toll. CPJ stated her term ended in June 2026, but the timing coincides with an internal review of journalist deaths in Gaza.
ua15Ukraine launches Brave International system for defence innovation cooperation with partners
Ukraine's government approved Brave International, a unified system for international cooperation on defence innovation, including initiatives with NATO, Norway, France, Germany, and Lithuania. The system enables joint grant competitions open to Ukrainian and international companies, with a total budget exceeding €100 million. It aims to identify new technologies, attract funding for Ukrainian startups, and deepen international innovation ties.
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Ukraine launches Brave International system for defence innovation cooperation with partners
Ukraine's government approved Brave International, a unified system for international cooperation on defence innovation, including initiatives with NATO, Norway, France, Germany, and Lithuania. The system enables joint grant competitions open to Ukrainian and international companies, with a total budget exceeding €100 million. It aims to identify new technologies, attract funding for Ukrainian startups, and deepen international innovation ties.
Ukraine's government approved Brave International, a unified system for international cooperation on defence innovation, including initiatives with NATO, Norway, France, Germany, and Lithuania. The system enables joint grant competitions open to Ukrainian and international companies, with a total budget exceeding €100 million. It aims to identify new technologies, attract funding for Ukrainian startups, and deepen international innovation ties.
tr15Türkiye urges stronger economic integration among Islamic countries at OIC meeting
Turkish Vice President Cevdet Yılmaz called for enhanced economic cooperation among OIC member states during the Islamic Chamber of Commerce and Development meetings in Ankara. He highlighted the disparity between the OIC's population share (nearly one-fifth of the world) and its global goods trade share (10-11%), urging production partnerships, investment collaboration, and logistics integration. Yılmaz noted Türkiye's economic growth from $238 billion in 2002 to over $1.6 trillion in 2025, and its trade volume with OIC members reaching $118 billion last year. He also emphasized the role of the COMCEC, chaired by President Erdoğan, and advocated for a long-term free trade area among Islamic countries, as well as strengthening the OIC Arbitration Center for trade dispute resolution.
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Türkiye urges stronger economic integration among Islamic countries at OIC meeting
Turkish Vice President Cevdet Yılmaz called for enhanced economic cooperation among OIC member states during the Islamic Chamber of Commerce and Development meetings in Ankara. He highlighted the disparity between the OIC's population share (nearly one-fifth of the world) and its global goods trade share (10-11%), urging production partnerships, investment collaboration, and logistics integration. Yılmaz noted Türkiye's economic growth from $238 billion in 2002 to over $1.6 trillion in 2025, and its trade volume with OIC members reaching $118 billion last year. He also emphasized the role of the COMCEC, chaired by President Erdoğan, and advocated for a long-term free trade area among Islamic countries, as well as strengthening the OIC Arbitration Center for trade dispute resolution.
Turkish Vice President Cevdet Yılmaz called for enhanced economic cooperation among OIC member states during the Islamic Chamber of Commerce and Development meetings in Ankara. He highlighted the disparity between the OIC's population share (nearly one-fifth of the world) and its global goods trade share (10-11%), urging production partnerships, investment collaboration, and logistics integration. Yılmaz noted Türkiye's economic growth from $238 billion in 2002 to over $1.6 trillion in 2025, and its trade volume with OIC members reaching $118 billion last year. He also emphasized the role of the COMCEC, chaired by President Erdoğan, and advocated for a long-term free trade area among Islamic countries, as well as strengthening the OIC Arbitration Center for trade dispute resolution.
us15Venezuela's La Guaira port reopens for earthquake aid delivery, US military says
The US military announced that Venezuela's La Guaira port has resumed operations after repairs and is receiving humanitarian aid for earthquake victims. The USS Fort Lauderdale is delivering critical supplies. The US has pledged over $300 million in aid and deployed search-and-rescue teams. This cooperation marks a warming of US-Venezuela ties after the capture of former president Nicolas Maduro.
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Venezuela's La Guaira port reopens for earthquake aid delivery, US military says
The US military announced that Venezuela's La Guaira port has resumed operations after repairs and is receiving humanitarian aid for earthquake victims. The USS Fort Lauderdale is delivering critical supplies. The US has pledged over $300 million in aid and deployed search-and-rescue teams. This cooperation marks a warming of US-Venezuela ties after the capture of former president Nicolas Maduro.
The US military announced that Venezuela's La Guaira port has resumed operations after repairs and is receiving humanitarian aid for earthquake victims. The USS Fort Lauderdale is delivering critical supplies. The US has pledged over $300 million in aid and deployed search-and-rescue teams. This cooperation marks a warming of US-Venezuela ties after the capture of former president Nicolas Maduro.
us14US Army plans to acquire 30–100 autonomous drone boats to address Pacific watercraft shortage
The U.S. Army, facing a sharp decline in its Pacific watercraft fleet from 134 vessels in 2018 to about 70 in 2024 and mission-capable rates below 40%, plans to acquire 30 to 100 heavy-duty autonomous vessels to transport supplies. The drone boats, capable of carrying 8–10 shipping containers, would be controlled from Hawaii and stationed across the region, complementing manned vessels for beach landings. The Army has requested industry to deliver a test vessel by summer 2025 and is also activating new watercraft companies and contracting crewed offshore support vessels to address the shortage.
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US Army plans to acquire 30–100 autonomous drone boats to address Pacific watercraft shortage
The U.S. Army, facing a sharp decline in its Pacific watercraft fleet from 134 vessels in 2018 to about 70 in 2024 and mission-capable rates below 40%, plans to acquire 30 to 100 heavy-duty autonomous vessels to transport supplies. The drone boats, capable of carrying 8–10 shipping containers, would be controlled from Hawaii and stationed across the region, complementing manned vessels for beach landings. The Army has requested industry to deliver a test vessel by summer 2025 and is also activating new watercraft companies and contracting crewed offshore support vessels to address the shortage.
The U.S. Army, facing a sharp decline in its Pacific watercraft fleet from 134 vessels in 2018 to about 70 in 2024 and mission-capable rates below 40%, plans to acquire 30 to 100 heavy-duty autonomous vessels to transport supplies. The drone boats, capable of carrying 8–10 shipping containers, would be controlled from Hawaii and stationed across the region, complementing manned vessels for beach landings. The Army has requested industry to deliver a test vessel by summer 2025 and is also activating new watercraft companies and contracting crewed offshore support vessels to address the shortage.
us13Fictional PLA memo analyzes US vulnerabilities in Iran conflict
A fictional memo, purportedly from a senior PLA analyst to China's Central Military Commission, assesses the US-Iran conflict and identifies five key US vulnerabilities: strategic amateurism, growing strategic isolation, unsustainable cost asymmetries in munitions and air defense, self-inflicted cognitive warfare through domestic polarization, and an exploitable aversion to casualties exemplified by a costly pilot rescue. The memo concludes these weaknesses validate China's strategy of saturated strikes and cognitive warfare. The Pentagon responded, dismissing the analysis as over-intellectualized and reaffirming US military strength and resolve.
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Fictional PLA memo analyzes US vulnerabilities in Iran conflict
A fictional memo, purportedly from a senior PLA analyst to China's Central Military Commission, assesses the US-Iran conflict and identifies five key US vulnerabilities: strategic amateurism, growing strategic isolation, unsustainable cost asymmetries in munitions and air defense, self-inflicted cognitive warfare through domestic polarization, and an exploitable aversion to casualties exemplified by a costly pilot rescue. The memo concludes these weaknesses validate China's strategy of saturated strikes and cognitive warfare. The Pentagon responded, dismissing the analysis as over-intellectualized and reaffirming US military strength and resolve.
A fictional memo, purportedly from a senior PLA analyst to China's Central Military Commission, assesses the US-Iran conflict and identifies five key US vulnerabilities: strategic amateurism, growing strategic isolation, unsustainable cost asymmetries in munitions and air defense, self-inflicted cognitive warfare through domestic polarization, and an exploitable aversion to casualties exemplified by a costly pilot rescue. The memo concludes these weaknesses validate China's strategy of saturated strikes and cognitive warfare. The Pentagon responded, dismissing the analysis as over-intellectualized and reaffirming US military strength and resolve.
us13US Marine Corps awards Overland AI $19.7 million contract for autonomous ground vehicle production
The U.S. Marine Corps has awarded Overland AI a $19.7 million contract to produce over a dozen fully autonomous ground vehicles by early 2027. The vehicles will be integrated into the Marine Air Defense Integrated Systems (MADIS) program for counterdrone and resupply missions, with delivery expected in about nine months. This marks the first production agreement for ground autonomy with the U.S. military, highlighting the growing demand for uncrewed systems in hazardous roles.
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US Marine Corps awards Overland AI $19.7 million contract for autonomous ground vehicle production
The U.S. Marine Corps has awarded Overland AI a $19.7 million contract to produce over a dozen fully autonomous ground vehicles by early 2027. The vehicles will be integrated into the Marine Air Defense Integrated Systems (MADIS) program for counterdrone and resupply missions, with delivery expected in about nine months. This marks the first production agreement for ground autonomy with the U.S. military, highlighting the growing demand for uncrewed systems in hazardous roles.
The U.S. Marine Corps has awarded Overland AI a $19.7 million contract to produce over a dozen fully autonomous ground vehicles by early 2027. The vehicles will be integrated into the Marine Air Defense Integrated Systems (MADIS) program for counterdrone and resupply missions, with delivery expected in about nine months. This marks the first production agreement for ground autonomy with the U.S. military, highlighting the growing demand for uncrewed systems in hazardous roles.
us13US Air Force Discloses B-2 Bomber Can Launch LRASM Anti-Ship Missile
The US Air Force revealed that a B-2 Spirit bomber fired an AGM-158C Long Range Anti-Ship Missile (LRASM) during a sinking exercise as part of Valiant Shield 2026, targeting the ex-USS Juneau near Guam. This previously undisclosed capability significantly enhances the B-2's ability to engage maritime threats, particularly against Chinese naval forces, and points to future anti-ship capabilities for the B-21 Raider.
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US Air Force Discloses B-2 Bomber Can Launch LRASM Anti-Ship Missile
The US Air Force revealed that a B-2 Spirit bomber fired an AGM-158C Long Range Anti-Ship Missile (LRASM) during a sinking exercise as part of Valiant Shield 2026, targeting the ex-USS Juneau near Guam. This previously undisclosed capability significantly enhances the B-2's ability to engage maritime threats, particularly against Chinese naval forces, and points to future anti-ship capabilities for the B-21 Raider.
The US Air Force revealed that a B-2 Spirit bomber fired an AGM-158C Long Range Anti-Ship Missile (LRASM) during a sinking exercise as part of Valiant Shield 2026, targeting the ex-USS Juneau near Guam. This previously undisclosed capability significantly enhances the B-2's ability to engage maritime threats, particularly against Chinese naval forces, and points to future anti-ship capabilities for the B-21 Raider.
us11Anthony Tata Pledges to Restore DPAA Budget Cuts and Improve MIA Searches
Anthony Tata, the new undersecretary of defense for Personnel and Readiness, assured families of Vietnam-era missing service members on June 25 that he will work to restore approximately $40 million in budget cuts to the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency (DPAA). The cuts have forced the cancellation of recovery missions in Laos and reductions in teams across Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia. Tata also committed to pushing for declassification of records related to missing personnel. The funding restoration is tied to a bill by Sen. Deb Fischer attached to the National Defense Authorization Act. The DPAA budget has dropped from $185 million in FY2025 to a projected $160 million in FY2027.
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Anthony Tata Pledges to Restore DPAA Budget Cuts and Improve MIA Searches
Anthony Tata, the new undersecretary of defense for Personnel and Readiness, assured families of Vietnam-era missing service members on June 25 that he will work to restore approximately $40 million in budget cuts to the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency (DPAA). The cuts have forced the cancellation of recovery missions in Laos and reductions in teams across Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia. Tata also committed to pushing for declassification of records related to missing personnel. The funding restoration is tied to a bill by Sen. Deb Fischer attached to the National Defense Authorization Act. The DPAA budget has dropped from $185 million in FY2025 to a projected $160 million in FY2027.
Anthony Tata, the new undersecretary of defense for Personnel and Readiness, assured families of Vietnam-era missing service members on June 25 that he will work to restore approximately $40 million in budget cuts to the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency (DPAA). The cuts have forced the cancellation of recovery missions in Laos and reductions in teams across Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia. Tata also committed to pushing for declassification of records related to missing personnel. The funding restoration is tied to a bill by Sen. Deb Fischer attached to the National Defense Authorization Act. The DPAA budget has dropped from $185 million in FY2025 to a projected $160 million in FY2027.
fr10Oman reaffirms commitment to de-escalation and regional peace
In an interview, geopolitics analyst Dawud Al Ansari discusses Oman's role as a neutral mediator in Gulf tensions, emphasizing its pragmatic diplomacy and commitment to stability, free navigation through the Strait of Hormuz, and dialogue. He contextualizes French President Macron's meeting with Sultan Haitham bin Tariq as part of broader efforts to reduce regional instability affecting global energy markets.
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Oman reaffirms commitment to de-escalation and regional peace
In an interview, geopolitics analyst Dawud Al Ansari discusses Oman's role as a neutral mediator in Gulf tensions, emphasizing its pragmatic diplomacy and commitment to stability, free navigation through the Strait of Hormuz, and dialogue. He contextualizes French President Macron's meeting with Sultan Haitham bin Tariq as part of broader efforts to reduce regional instability affecting global energy markets.
In an interview, geopolitics analyst Dawud Al Ansari discusses Oman's role as a neutral mediator in Gulf tensions, emphasizing its pragmatic diplomacy and commitment to stability, free navigation through the Strait of Hormuz, and dialogue. He contextualizes French President Macron's meeting with Sultan Haitham bin Tariq as part of broader efforts to reduce regional instability affecting global energy markets.
us10US Secretary of State Rubio meets Libyan commander to push for unity
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio met with Deputy Commander Saddam Haftar of the Libyan National Army in Washington to discuss unifying Libya's military, economic, and political institutions. The meeting is part of deepening US diplomatic efforts to resolve the Libyan crisis and establish a unified government, with Washington planning to host representatives from both eastern and western factions later this month.
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US Secretary of State Rubio meets Libyan commander to push for unity
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio met with Deputy Commander Saddam Haftar of the Libyan National Army in Washington to discuss unifying Libya's military, economic, and political institutions. The meeting is part of deepening US diplomatic efforts to resolve the Libyan crisis and establish a unified government, with Washington planning to host representatives from both eastern and western factions later this month.
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio met with Deputy Commander Saddam Haftar of the Libyan National Army in Washington to discuss unifying Libya's military, economic, and political institutions. The meeting is part of deepening US diplomatic efforts to resolve the Libyan crisis and establish a unified government, with Washington planning to host representatives from both eastern and western factions later this month.
ua10EU allocates €2 million to preserve and digitize Ukraine's documentary heritage
The European Union has pledged €2 million to expand a UNESCO-led program preserving Ukraine's documentary heritage, announced at the Ukraine Recovery Conference in Gdańsk, Poland. The initiative builds on a 2025 project for Jewish documentary heritage and will support archives, libraries, and memory institutions, particularly in frontline regions, through digitization, long-term digital preservation, and open access. It aims to strengthen democratic resilience and counter historical falsification.
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EU allocates €2 million to preserve and digitize Ukraine's documentary heritage
The European Union has pledged €2 million to expand a UNESCO-led program preserving Ukraine's documentary heritage, announced at the Ukraine Recovery Conference in Gdańsk, Poland. The initiative builds on a 2025 project for Jewish documentary heritage and will support archives, libraries, and memory institutions, particularly in frontline regions, through digitization, long-term digital preservation, and open access. It aims to strengthen democratic resilience and counter historical falsification.
The European Union has pledged €2 million to expand a UNESCO-led program preserving Ukraine's documentary heritage, announced at the Ukraine Recovery Conference in Gdańsk, Poland. The initiative builds on a 2025 project for Jewish documentary heritage and will support archives, libraries, and memory institutions, particularly in frontline regions, through digitization, long-term digital preservation, and open access. It aims to strengthen democratic resilience and counter historical falsification.
gb10Singapore's ST Engineering wins £66 million UK 40mm grenade contract
ST Engineering Advanced Material Engineering, a Singapore-based manufacturer, has been selected to supply the British military with nine variants of 40mm grenades under a five-year contract valued at £65.84 million (excluding VAT). The award, made by Defence Equipment and Support, was announced on 20 March 2026 and is expected to be signed on 7 July, running through July 2031. The contract includes an option for additional munitions. Two unsuccessful UK-based bidders, NIOA Nominees and Ian Edgar (Liverpool), were also in the final stage. The deal highlights the international supply chain for core infantry munitions and the UK's reliance on a non-domestic supplier for a staple of infantry firepower.
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Singapore's ST Engineering wins £66 million UK 40mm grenade contract
ST Engineering Advanced Material Engineering, a Singapore-based manufacturer, has been selected to supply the British military with nine variants of 40mm grenades under a five-year contract valued at £65.84 million (excluding VAT). The award, made by Defence Equipment and Support, was announced on 20 March 2026 and is expected to be signed on 7 July, running through July 2031. The contract includes an option for additional munitions. Two unsuccessful UK-based bidders, NIOA Nominees and Ian Edgar (Liverpool), were also in the final stage. The deal highlights the international supply chain for core infantry munitions and the UK's reliance on a non-domestic supplier for a staple of infantry firepower.
ST Engineering Advanced Material Engineering, a Singapore-based manufacturer, has been selected to supply the British military with nine variants of 40mm grenades under a five-year contract valued at £65.84 million (excluding VAT). The award, made by Defence Equipment and Support, was announced on 20 March 2026 and is expected to be signed on 7 July, running through July 2031. The contract includes an option for additional munitions. Two unsuccessful UK-based bidders, NIOA Nominees and Ian Edgar (Liverpool), were also in the final stage. The deal highlights the international supply chain for core infantry munitions and the UK's reliance on a non-domestic supplier for a staple of infantry firepower.
us9USNS Kanawha to Receive Presidential Unit Citation, First Auxiliary Ship Honored
The USNS Kanawha, a Henry J. Kaiser-class fleet replenishment oiler under Military Sealift Command, will receive the Presidential Unit Citation (PUC) in mid-July for its support of the Ford Carrier Strike Group during Operation Epic Fury. The ship delivered over 17 million gallons of fuel and 3,000 pallets of supplies during a 204-day deployment across three fleets. This marks the first time an auxiliary ship and a Military Sealift Command vessel have received the nation's highest unit-level combat valor award.
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USNS Kanawha to Receive Presidential Unit Citation, First Auxiliary Ship Honored
The USNS Kanawha, a Henry J. Kaiser-class fleet replenishment oiler under Military Sealift Command, will receive the Presidential Unit Citation (PUC) in mid-July for its support of the Ford Carrier Strike Group during Operation Epic Fury. The ship delivered over 17 million gallons of fuel and 3,000 pallets of supplies during a 204-day deployment across three fleets. This marks the first time an auxiliary ship and a Military Sealift Command vessel have received the nation's highest unit-level combat valor award.
The USNS Kanawha, a Henry J. Kaiser-class fleet replenishment oiler under Military Sealift Command, will receive the Presidential Unit Citation (PUC) in mid-July for its support of the Ford Carrier Strike Group during Operation Epic Fury. The ship delivered over 17 million gallons of fuel and 3,000 pallets of supplies during a 204-day deployment across three fleets. This marks the first time an auxiliary ship and a Military Sealift Command vessel have received the nation's highest unit-level combat valor award.
ua9Bail posted for former Ukrainian energy minister in Midas corruption case
Former Ukrainian energy minister Herman Halushchenko, a suspect in the Midas corruption probe into Ukraine's energy sector, has been released on bail of UAH 150 million ($3.3 million). The bail was paid by four companies: Tetras Optima LLC, Hiran Contract LLC, Skait Retail LLC, and Pelet Service LLC. The High Anti-Corruption Court had earlier extended his detention but reduced the bail amount from UAH 200 million to UAH 150 million. This case highlights ongoing anti-corruption efforts in Ukraine during wartime.
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Bail posted for former Ukrainian energy minister in Midas corruption case
Former Ukrainian energy minister Herman Halushchenko, a suspect in the Midas corruption probe into Ukraine's energy sector, has been released on bail of UAH 150 million ($3.3 million). The bail was paid by four companies: Tetras Optima LLC, Hiran Contract LLC, Skait Retail LLC, and Pelet Service LLC. The High Anti-Corruption Court had earlier extended his detention but reduced the bail amount from UAH 200 million to UAH 150 million. This case highlights ongoing anti-corruption efforts in Ukraine during wartime.
Former Ukrainian energy minister Herman Halushchenko, a suspect in the Midas corruption probe into Ukraine's energy sector, has been released on bail of UAH 150 million ($3.3 million). The bail was paid by four companies: Tetras Optima LLC, Hiran Contract LLC, Skait Retail LLC, and Pelet Service LLC. The High Anti-Corruption Court had earlier extended his detention but reduced the bail amount from UAH 200 million to UAH 150 million. This case highlights ongoing anti-corruption efforts in Ukraine during wartime.
us8Pilot error caused OA-1K Skyraider II crash in Oklahoma, Air Force investigation finds
An Air Force accident investigation board determined that a student pilot mistakenly engaged the fuel shutoff valve instead of the fuselage fuel tank valve in a Block-1 OA-1K Skyraider II, causing the engine to starve of fuel and forcing a crash-landing in an Oklahoma field on October 23, 2025. The aircraft was destroyed, with $17.9 million in damage. The board cited pilot task saturation, ineffective task prioritization, communications challenges, and ineffective crew resource management as contributing factors. The crash is the first loss of an OA-1K since its introduction in April 2025.
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Pilot error caused OA-1K Skyraider II crash in Oklahoma, Air Force investigation finds
An Air Force accident investigation board determined that a student pilot mistakenly engaged the fuel shutoff valve instead of the fuselage fuel tank valve in a Block-1 OA-1K Skyraider II, causing the engine to starve of fuel and forcing a crash-landing in an Oklahoma field on October 23, 2025. The aircraft was destroyed, with $17.9 million in damage. The board cited pilot task saturation, ineffective task prioritization, communications challenges, and ineffective crew resource management as contributing factors. The crash is the first loss of an OA-1K since its introduction in April 2025.
An Air Force accident investigation board determined that a student pilot mistakenly engaged the fuel shutoff valve instead of the fuselage fuel tank valve in a Block-1 OA-1K Skyraider II, causing the engine to starve of fuel and forcing a crash-landing in an Oklahoma field on October 23, 2025. The aircraft was destroyed, with $17.9 million in damage. The board cited pilot task saturation, ineffective task prioritization, communications challenges, and ineffective crew resource management as contributing factors. The crash is the first loss of an OA-1K since its introduction in April 2025.
ua8Analysis suggests Russia's Zircon missile is quasi-ballistic, not hypersonic
An analysis by Ukrainska Pravda, citing OSINT analysts and Ukrainian military personnel, suggests Russia's Zircon missile is likely a quasi-ballistic missile rather than a true hypersonic scramjet-powered weapon. The missile uses solid propellant and follows a ballistic trajectory with maneuverability, representing an interim capability. Russia has launched about 40 Zircons in 2026, with a 41% interception rate by Ukrainian air defense. The analysis highlights that the Zircon is a step toward hypersonic technology, not the final objective.
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Analysis suggests Russia's Zircon missile is quasi-ballistic, not hypersonic
An analysis by Ukrainska Pravda, citing OSINT analysts and Ukrainian military personnel, suggests Russia's Zircon missile is likely a quasi-ballistic missile rather than a true hypersonic scramjet-powered weapon. The missile uses solid propellant and follows a ballistic trajectory with maneuverability, representing an interim capability. Russia has launched about 40 Zircons in 2026, with a 41% interception rate by Ukrainian air defense. The analysis highlights that the Zircon is a step toward hypersonic technology, not the final objective.
An analysis by Ukrainska Pravda, citing OSINT analysts and Ukrainian military personnel, suggests Russia's Zircon missile is likely a quasi-ballistic missile rather than a true hypersonic scramjet-powered weapon. The missile uses solid propellant and follows a ballistic trajectory with maneuverability, representing an interim capability. Russia has launched about 40 Zircons in 2026, with a 41% interception rate by Ukrainian air defense. The analysis highlights that the Zircon is a step toward hypersonic technology, not the final objective.
ua6Polish official questions Ukraine's EU aspirations, calls elites kleptocratic
Marcin Przydacz, head of the Polish President's Office International Policy Bureau, posted on X accusing Ukraine's elites of kleptocracy and questioning their genuine commitment to EU membership, alleging they provoke historical tensions to distract from a lack of reforms. The post escalates Polish-Ukrainian tensions over historical issues and EU accession.
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Polish official questions Ukraine's EU aspirations, calls elites kleptocratic
Marcin Przydacz, head of the Polish President's Office International Policy Bureau, posted on X accusing Ukraine's elites of kleptocracy and questioning their genuine commitment to EU membership, alleging they provoke historical tensions to distract from a lack of reforms. The post escalates Polish-Ukrainian tensions over historical issues and EU accession.
Marcin Przydacz, head of the Polish President's Office International Policy Bureau, posted on X accusing Ukraine's elites of kleptocracy and questioning their genuine commitment to EU membership, alleging they provoke historical tensions to distract from a lack of reforms. The post escalates Polish-Ukrainian tensions over historical issues and EU accession.
us5US Navy offers up to $40,000 annual retention bonuses for reserve aviators in fiscal 2026
The U.S. Navy announced fiscal 2026 retention bonuses of up to $40,000 per year for select reserve aviators in department head billets, including helicopter mine countermeasures, electronic attack, and fighter squadron pilots. The initiative aims to retain skilled personnel for critical naval aviation enterprise positions. Contracts must be signed by August 26, 2026.
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US Navy offers up to $40,000 annual retention bonuses for reserve aviators in fiscal 2026
The U.S. Navy announced fiscal 2026 retention bonuses of up to $40,000 per year for select reserve aviators in department head billets, including helicopter mine countermeasures, electronic attack, and fighter squadron pilots. The initiative aims to retain skilled personnel for critical naval aviation enterprise positions. Contracts must be signed by August 26, 2026.
The U.S. Navy announced fiscal 2026 retention bonuses of up to $40,000 per year for select reserve aviators in department head billets, including helicopter mine countermeasures, electronic attack, and fighter squadron pilots. The initiative aims to retain skilled personnel for critical naval aviation enterprise positions. Contracts must be signed by August 26, 2026.
us4MQ-25 Stingray Demonstrator Embarked on USS Nimitz for 250th Anniversary Celebrations
The MQ-25 Stingray, a carrier-based unmanned aerial refueling drone, has faced delays with its initial operational capability now targeted for 2029. In a recent development, the Boeing-owned T-1 demonstrator was placed aboard the USS Nimitz for display during Fleet Exercise 250 and U.S. 250th anniversary celebrations, marking the first time the drone has been on a carrier deck for a public event. The demonstrator, which has never taken off or landed from a carrier, was showcased alongside F/A-18E Super Hornets and C-2A Greyhounds, underscoring the size and future role of the Navy's first advanced carrier-based uncrewed aircraft. The event highlights the MQ-25's role as the Navy's first advanced carrier-based uncrewed aircraft, designed primarily as an aerial refueling tanker, with initial operational capability targeted for next year.
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MQ-25 Stingray Demonstrator Embarked on USS Nimitz for 250th Anniversary Celebrations
The MQ-25 Stingray, a carrier-based unmanned aerial refueling drone, has faced delays with its initial operational capability now targeted for 2029. In a recent development, the Boeing-owned T-1 demonstrator was placed aboard the USS Nimitz for display during Fleet Exercise 250 and U.S. 250th anniversary celebrations, marking the first time the drone has been on a carrier deck for a public event. The demonstrator, which has never taken off or landed from a carrier, was showcased alongside F/A-18E Super Hornets and C-2A Greyhounds, underscoring the size and future role of the Navy's first advanced carrier-based uncrewed aircraft. The event highlights the MQ-25's role as the Navy's first advanced carrier-based uncrewed aircraft, designed primarily as an aerial refueling tanker, with initial operational capability targeted for next year.
The MQ-25 Stingray, a carrier-based unmanned aerial refueling drone, has faced delays with its initial operational capability now targeted for 2029. In a recent development, the Boeing-owned T-1 demonstrator was placed aboard the USS Nimitz for display during Fleet Exercise 250 and U.S. 250th anniversary celebrations, marking the first time the drone has been on a carrier deck for a public event. The demonstrator, which has never taken off or landed from a carrier, was showcased alongside F/A-18E Super Hornets and C-2A Greyhounds, underscoring the size and future role of the Navy's first advanced carrier-based uncrewed aircraft. The event highlights the MQ-25's role as the Navy's first advanced carrier-based uncrewed aircraft, designed primarily as an aerial refueling tanker, with initial operational capability targeted for next year.
us3C-2 Greyhound Makes Final Carrier Landing, Replaced by CMV-22B Osprey
The US Navy's C-2A Greyhound carrier onboard delivery (COD) aircraft made its final arrested landing and catapult launch from the USS Nimitz on June 25, 2026, ending nearly 60 years of service. The role has been fully transitioned to the CMV-22B Osprey tiltrotor, which offers longer range and night landing capability but has faced operational issues including a 2023 grounding. The Greyhound will continue flying until full retirement later this year.
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C-2 Greyhound Makes Final Carrier Landing, Replaced by CMV-22B Osprey
The US Navy's C-2A Greyhound carrier onboard delivery (COD) aircraft made its final arrested landing and catapult launch from the USS Nimitz on June 25, 2026, ending nearly 60 years of service. The role has been fully transitioned to the CMV-22B Osprey tiltrotor, which offers longer range and night landing capability but has faced operational issues including a 2023 grounding. The Greyhound will continue flying until full retirement later this year.
The US Navy's C-2A Greyhound carrier onboard delivery (COD) aircraft made its final arrested landing and catapult launch from the USS Nimitz on June 25, 2026, ending nearly 60 years of service. The role has been fully transitioned to the CMV-22B Osprey tiltrotor, which offers longer range and night landing capability but has faced operational issues including a 2023 grounding. The Greyhound will continue flying until full retirement later this year.
us2US military-funded study to examine GPS overreliance on troop cognition
The University of Texas at Arlington, with $200,000 in Department of Defense funding, is launching a yearlong study to investigate how overreliance on GPS navigation affects soldiers' observation and decision-making skills. Using virtual reality simulations, researchers will measure route memory and environmental recall under different guidance conditions. Findings could influence the design of military interfaces and personnel assignments based on cognitive abilities. The study starts Aug. 1 and will conclude with a report next summer.
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US military-funded study to examine GPS overreliance on troop cognition
The University of Texas at Arlington, with $200,000 in Department of Defense funding, is launching a yearlong study to investigate how overreliance on GPS navigation affects soldiers' observation and decision-making skills. Using virtual reality simulations, researchers will measure route memory and environmental recall under different guidance conditions. Findings could influence the design of military interfaces and personnel assignments based on cognitive abilities. The study starts Aug. 1 and will conclude with a report next summer.
The University of Texas at Arlington, with $200,000 in Department of Defense funding, is launching a yearlong study to investigate how overreliance on GPS navigation affects soldiers' observation and decision-making skills. Using virtual reality simulations, researchers will measure route memory and environmental recall under different guidance conditions. Findings could influence the design of military interfaces and personnel assignments based on cognitive abilities. The study starts Aug. 1 and will conclude with a report next summer.