torsdag 2 juli 2026

Report: Russia conducted drone offensive in Europe

Russia has used its shadow fleet to send drones across Europe in the past two years, according to a new report. In the picture, the Russian cargo ship Maia-1 passes outside Malmö on its way south through the Öresund in late October 2025. Photo: Johan Nilsson/TTShow more

Russia has likely used its shadow fleet to send drones over Europe and disrupt civil aviation, according to a report.

Through the drone offensive, they are believed to have monitored military sites and tested NATO countries' air defenses.

The report from the think tank International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) maps 144 drone sightings in Europe between 2024 and 2026, reports AP.

These include NATO countries such as Germany, France, Belgium, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, Denmark and Sweden. Drones were also observed over nuclear power plants.

The number of suspected Russian drones peaked at the end of last year, forcing airports in Germany, Spain and Denmark to temporarily close.

According to the IISS, the Russian drone offensive was a strategic failure for Europe – and exposed how poorly equipped Europe's air defenses are to respond to current threats.

Germany bans sick leave by phone

  
Friedrich Merz and his coalition partners in Berlin on Thursday. Photo: Michael Kappeler/AP/TT

Requirement for a medical certificate on the first day of illness. This was one of the news items when German Chancellor Friedrich Merz presented a reform package on Thursday.

The rules mean that employees can no longer report sick by phone, but need a medical certificate from the first day of illness.

“We cannot accept these high sick leave rates at our companies,” Friedrich Merz said during a press conference, according to AP.

The measure is part of 34 reforms aimed at boosting the German economy. The package was presented by the CDU leader and his coalition government on Thursday.

In addition to the proposal for sick pay, proposals for tax cuts and a review of the pension system were also presented. 

 

onsdag 1 juli 2026

Hindustan Times

 

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Task: Ukrainians charged with Nord Stream sabotage

Den misstänkte ukrainske mannen då han fördes till en domstol i Karlsruhe i Tyskland i november i fjol. 
The suspected Ukrainian man as he was brought to a court in Karlsruhe, Germany, last November. Photo: Uli Deck/Dpa Via AP/TT

German prosecutors are bringing formal charges against a 50-year-old Ukrainian man, who was detained on suspicion of involvement in the sabotage of the Nord Stream gas pipeline.

This is according to the man's lawyers for German media.

The man, who is said to have been an officer in a special unit of the Ukrainian military, was arrested in Italy in August last year and later extradited to Germany.

It was in September 2022 that leaks were discovered from the Nord Stream 1 and 2 gas pipelines, which run from Russia to Germany along the bottom of the Baltic Sea. It was later confirmed that the pipelines had been blown up.

The man is suspected of having played a leading role in the group – which also included a captain, an explosives expert and four deep-sea divers – that carried out the sabotage.

The group is accused of having attached four timed explosive charges to the gas pipelines near the Danish island of Bornholm.

The Süddeutsche Zeitung describes the evidence against the man as extensive, as he is said to have told relatives and acquaintances about the sabotage in telephone conversations.

The incident is being investigated in Germany because the consequences of the explosions also had an impact on German territory.

Another of the suspects was arrested in Poland in September. However, Polish authorities rejected a German request for extradition and the Ukrainian citizen was later released. 


NATO's Future

Analysis: Ahead of the NATO Summit in Ankara, More is at Stake Than the Defense Budget

A year ago, NATO agreed that member states would increase defense spending to five percent of GDP by 2035. But when the alliance's leaders gather for a summit in Ankara next week, much more than the economy will be at stake. This is what several experts write in an analysis by the Chicago Council on Global Affairs.

"Russia's continued war in Ukraine, the consequences of the US and Israel's war on Iran, and Donald Trump's threat to annex Greenland have once again raised questions about Washington's commitment to the alliance," they write.

Above all, US frustration over the fact that allies did not participate in the war against Iran has worsened the mood ahead of the summit, writes Liana Fix at the think tank Council on Foreign Relations.

"The Pentagon has used this dissatisfaction to push through plans for a further reduction in US forces and military resources tied to NATO," writes Fix.

She points out, among other things, that the US has already announced that 5,000 soldiers will be withdrawn from Germany, and that a deployment of long-range weapons systems has been canceled. Europe therefore needs to speed up its own defense planning with less American support.

“This means, among other things, acquiring the military capabilities required for a ‘European way of waging war’ – designed to deter Russia rather than imitate the US.”

Rutte: Europe’s rearmament secures 195,000 jobs in the US

European military rearmament secures around 195,000 jobs in the US. This is what NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte said in an interview with the Financial Times.

According to Rutte, there are 300 billion dollars, around 3,000 billion kronor, in European orders for American weapons systems, which helps to maintain employment.

At the same time, US officials have warned of delivery delays after the war in Iran, which has reduced the US's own weapons stockpile. This has led several NATO countries to turn outside the alliance to buy weapons, including from South Korea.

– I appreciate South Korea and the country has a fantastic defense industry. But of course they do it because they actually prefer to buy from NATO countries. The problem is that the defense industry cannot deliver on the scale needed, says Rutte.

 

Anger after Trump's loss: "Sterilize all foreigners"

Donald Trump och hans anhängare är rasande. 
Donald Trump and his supporters are furious. Photo: Julia Demaree Nikhinson /AP/TT

Donald Trump and his supporters are furious after babies born in the US continue to receive citizenship.

Now voices are being raised to stop the decision.

And to "sterilize all foreigners".

"The Supreme Court upheld the birthright to citizenship, which is very bad for our country," Trump wrote on social media after the Supreme Court hammered out the ruling.

Trump made the decision to tear down the 14th Amendment to the Constitution during his first days in office.

And he is not going to let the Supreme Court's decision stop him.

On Truth social, he urges Congress to push through the decision anyway.

“No long and cumbersome constitutional amendment is needed! Congress should start TODAY working to end what is costly and unfair to our country, citizenship,” he writes.

         Tårgas omger ridande poliser under en protest mot ICE, lördagen den 14 juni 2025 i Los Angeles.

         Tear gas surrounds mounted police officers during a protest against ICE, Saturday, June 14, 2025, in           Los Angeles. Photo: Ethan Swope / AP

”Upplös unionen”

Influential Trump supporter and influencer Sean Davis goes even further.

In a post on X, he calls for a ban on all pregnant foreigners – and the sterilization of all foreigners before entering the United States.

“There are several ways forward here,” he writes.

He also calls for the dissolution of the Union.

“A nation that cannot even limit who can be a citizen is not a nation,” he writes.

         Domare i högsta domstolen.

         Supreme Court Justices. Photo: Chip Somodevilla / AP

“INSANE”

Davis’s list has been met with both anger and derision. New York Times political commentator David French is one of several who are baffled:

“This entire list is absolutely INSANE. It’s completely bizarre that these people believe that the continued application of a rule that has existed for generation after generation... is the root of our national downfall,” he writes.