fredag 15 maj 2026

Latest news

Political situation in the UK
Sources: Pressed Starmer invests heavily in defense

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer – who is fighting for his political survival – is planning a defense investment of 18 billion pounds, equivalent to 226 billion kronor. This is stated by defense sources for The Times.

National Security Advisor Jonathan Powell has reportedly warned Starmer that the country cannot afford the fighter jets, ammunition and technology required to maintain its place on the global stage without a sharp increase in defense spending.

The announcement, which is expected next week at the earliest, comes at a time when Starmer is in a deep political crisis and is challenged for the role of prime minister by Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham.

Starmer has promised to invest in defense and security during his time in power, and his critics have warned that this is not possible without substantial financial contributions.

Drone alert in Europe
Drone alert over Finland and Latvia – flights stopped

In Uusimaa, Finland, warnings about potential drones have been issued. People in the area are advised to stay indoors until the danger is deemed to be over, writes Yle. At Helsinki-Vantaa Airport, traffic has been suspended until further notice and arriving flights have had to be redirected.

Fighter jets have also reportedly been seen flying over Uusimaa and Helsinki.

At 06:30, air traffic was back on and the danger was deemed to be over.

At the same time, a drone alert has been received in eastern Latvia during the night, writes Delfi. Residents there are also advised to stay indoors. Anyone who sees a suspicious low-flying object is urged to raise the alarm.

NATO fighter jets have reportedly been activated, according to the country's defense force NBS.

“As long as Russia’s aggression against Ukraine continues, it is possible that similar incidents will be repeated, when a foreign unmanned aerial vehicle flies into or approaches Latvian airspace,” they write on X.

Political situation in Peru
Votes counted in Peru’s election – after a month

Left-wing candidate Pedro Sánchez will face Keiko Fujimori in the final and decisive round of elections in Peru next month. This is reported by Reuters.

It took a month to count all the votes after the first round of elections in the politically divided country, which led to accusations of vote fraud, not least from right-wing candidate Rafael López Aliaga, who was close to Sánchez in the vote count.

Right-wing politician Fujimori is the daughter of former President Alberto Fujimori, who fled to his parents’ homeland of Japan in 2000 after accusations of corruption and human rights violations. He was later arrested in Chile and imprisoned in Peru.

Keiko Fujimori received 17.18 percent of the vote while Sánchez received 12.03 percent – ​​marginally more than López Aliaga’s 11.9 percent.

A total of 33 presidential candidates ran in the election, according to the AP

US-Cuba relations

Sources: US preparing indictment of Cuba’s Raúl Castro

The US is preparing an indictment of Cuba’s former president Raúl Castro, sources told ABC News.

Raúl Castro succeeded his brother Fidel as president and, despite having now formally stepped down, is considered Cuba’s most powerful man.

According to the sources, the indictment concerns the shooting down of a plane belonging to the anti-government human rights group Brothers to the Rescue in 1996.

The US has blocked all fuel shipments to Cuba and, according to the Wall Street Journal, the White House has made it its goal to push through a change of government on the island by 2026.

Earlier this year, the US abducted Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro to stand trial in the US.

 

Climate Threat Global Challenges

Study: World's Rivers Are Becoming More Oxygen-Depleted

Climate change is slowly causing the world's rivers to become more oxygen-depleted, a new Chinese study shows, according to AP.

The researchers used satellites and AI to map and analyze oxygen levels from 1985 to the present in more than 21,000 rivers worldwide. They found that oxygen levels have dropped by an average of 2.1 percent.

The figure may sound low, but if the trend continues or accelerates, another four to five percent of oxygen could disappear before the end of the century. This could lead to fish deaths, reduced biodiversity and the formation of ecological dead zones, according to the researchers. 

Expert warns of “unprecedented extreme weather”

Climate change combined with the El Niño weather phenomenon is making 2026 a year with an unusually high risk of extreme weather, reports TT.

“If there is a strong El Niño later this year, there is a serious risk that climate change will result in unprecedented extreme weather,” says climate professor Friederike Otto at Imperial College in London

Scientists have already noted several extreme weather events, such as record heat waves in Australia and the United States. In 16 countries, mainly in West Africa, fires have burned more than ever since measurements began in 2012.

The US-China relationship

Trump: China may buy up to 750 Boeing planes

Yesterday, reports emerged that China had agreed to buy 200 Boeing planes. Today, Donald Trump said that China has the option to increase the order to up to 750 aircraft. The president told reporters aboard Air Force One on Friday, according to Reuters.

According to Trump, GE Aerospace engines are also included in the deal.

If the deal is completed, it will be Boeing's first major order from China in almost a decade. The company has long been largely excluded from the Chinese market due to trade tensions between Washington and Beijing.

It is unclear how many of the 200 planes are new orders and how many were already in Boeing's order book. An order for more than 500 planes, if it goes through, would be the largest in aviation history, the news agency writes.

Analysis: China is holding the baton – the US is falling behind

After Trump's meeting with Xi Jinping, one thing is clear: China sees itself as a great power equal next to the US, says Sveriges Radio's China commentator Moa Kärnstrand. And rightly so, believes Affärsvärlden's Peter Benson, who states that "China is clearly the world's leading industrial nation and the US is not even close" in a column. He writes that the US is still the world's largest economy in nominal dollars, but if you look at purchasing power, China overtook the US almost a decade ago.

Moa Kärnstrand also warns about how China may use its power in the future. One thing she identifies as new during the meeting was how clear Xi Jinping was that the US must handle Taiwan in the way that China wants – otherwise the US risks the economic relationship between the countries.

 

Economy

The AI ​​race
X AI challenges with new agent – ​​to compete with Claude

Elon Musk's AI company X AI is now launching its first coding AI agent in an attempt to take on rivals such as Anthropic, according to Bloomberg.

The agent, named Grok Build, is still in the early testing phase and is only available to paying users. It should be able to perform more advanced programming tasks by following the user's instructions, similar to Claude Code, for example.

The venture is a step into the rapidly growing market for AI tools for coding – an area where

Trump's business
Sources: Trump drops case against the IRS in exchange for unique billion-dollar fund

Donald Trump is expected to drop his $10 billion lawsuit and other legal cases against the US Internal Revenue Service. This in exchange for a $1.7 billion fund being created with the purpose of compensating people who claim to have suffered harm during the Biden administration, sources told ABCNews.

Money is expected to go to, among other things, the 1,600 people charged with the Capitol storming and other allies of Trump. The five-person commission that will be responsible for the fund, and which Trump himself will appoint, is said to have full power to distribute the money with minimal transparency.

Such a fund is expected to face significant legal opposition and several government representatives are also said to have raised the ethical problems with the arrangement. Never before has tax money been used in such a way, with such little transparency, according to ABC.

The fund is expected to be announced within a few days and until then, details can still change, the sources say.

Musk himself has said that X AI is lagging behind its competitors, the news agency writes. 

Russian invasion Economic effects
The price of “fish and chips” has doubled since 2019

The price of the unofficial British national dish “fish and chips” has doubled in the UK since 2019, writes The Independent. The price increase has recently been driven by the wars in Ukraine and Iran.

Today the average price is 11.17 pounds. In 2019 it was 6.48.

Now sellers have started to replace the traditional cod or haddock with the cheaper alternative pollock.

– The traditional fish and chip restaurant will disappear, unless we diversify and try new things, says Andrew Arnold, who sells fish in Pocklington outside York.

Middle East Crisis Economic Impact
Airlines pressured by higher fuel costs – raising prices

Airlines around the world are now raising ticket prices and cutting traffic after jet fuel prices surged, Reuters reports. The cost has risen from around $85-90 to $150-200 per barrel since the war between the US and Iran broke out.

The news agency writes that fuel accounts for up to a quarter of airlines' costs, and several companies are now warning of poor results. Air France-KLM, for example, has lowered its forecast and is raising prices, while Lufthansa is expecting billions in additional costs. Several companies are also cutting capacity or canceling flights. Low-cost carriers such as Ryanair and Easyjet are also warning of squeezed margins.

 

 

Judge Napolitano - Judging Freedom

Judge Napolitano - Judging Freedom