GERMANY - Apart from its impressive hilltop Renaissance castle, Bernburg is an unassuming sort of town. Not a place you’d expect to find signs of a looming political earthquake about to shake the German establishment. The evidence comes from a stretch of pavement set aside for Germany’s political parties to tout their wares. With Saxony-Anhalt facing a knife-edge state election on September 6, the parties have gone all in to drum up votes.
UK - Never in my lifetime has there been a bigger or more necessary shock to the defence strategy of this country than the resignations of both John Healey and his most accomplished and experienced minister of state, Al Carns. When we get past the political smoke, this double blow to the Government has existential implications for our whole nation. We are facing the very real prospect of war in the next few years, every bit as much as we did in the 1930s. And we are not ready. Healey, until yesterday the defence secretary, attacked the shortfall in terms of money.
MIDDLE EAST - Newly surfaced footage obtained by CNN indicates that a severe fire aboard the USS Gerald R Ford - the world's largest aircraft carrier - inflicted far more extensive damage than the Trump administration initially admitted to the public. Early in the conflict it was forced to depart Mideast regional waters and retreat West in the Mediterranean, before undergoing extensive repairs at port in Croatia. Pundits were skeptical of official explanations, which suggested an accidental fire was sparked in the laundry room aboard the giant vessel. The major blaze erupted in March at a moment Iran claimed to have directly hit US naval vessels, but the crisis was consistently downplayed by Pentagon officials at the time.
MIDDLE EAST - At least 39 times, Donald Trump has declared that a deal between the United States and Iran is close, imminent or nearly complete. On Thursday, he stated a “great settlement” had been agreed. The skepticism was immediate. By Friday morning, both sides were publishing contradicting accounts of what had been decided, unravelling the hope that the end of the war was near. On Friday, Mr Trump furiously denied that Washington had agreed to major concessions to Tehran after Iranian state media published a draft 14-point deal. “The terms that Iran leaked out to the Fake News have NOTHING to do with the terms that were agreed to, in writing,” Mr Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform as unease grew in Washington. The leaked draft includes demands that the US and its allies spend at least $300 billion (£224 billion) on reconstructing Iran, American forces withdraw from around Iran, and $24 billion (£18 billion) in frozen Iranian assets be released. There still appears to be a wide disconnect between both sides, raising concerns that Mr Trump’s “grand settlement” is far from being signed.
SPAIN - Repent from your evil ways or prepare to go to hell. That was the simple message from Pope Leo on Friday for people traffickers and criminal groups who deliver illegal aliens to Europe through Spain’s Canary Islands. Reuters reports on the final day of a week-long tour of Spain, in which the pontiff has urged global leaders to treat migrants more humanely, Leo said he wanted to directly address those who “take advantage of peoples’ desperation (or) organise death routes.” “Stop. Repent,” the first US pope declared. “For every life lost, every family deceived… you will have to appear before divine justice.” “Repent while there is still time,” he said, invoking the Catholic belief that someone who did evil in life must confess their sins and make amends or be sent to eternal hell in death. On Monday the leader of the world’s 1.4 billion Catholics called for a global response to the “tragic drama” of migration and said world peace was a “true global imperative.”
EUROPE - European Fighter Jet Is No More, as Germany and France Drop Contentious Joint Project. France and Germany are much better at fighting each other than at collaborating. Throughout history, the belligerent Germans (Prussians) and the French have fought no fewer than 9 wars against each other, ever since the 1700’s. Sometimes, like in the ‘War of the Fourth Coalition’ (1806–1807), Napoleonic France defeated Prussia; sometimes, like in World War II (1939–1945), Nazi Germany invaded and occupied France. Fast forward to the second half of the 20th century, when the European Union was created around the Franco-German alliance. For decades, this alliance of former foes carried the European project – but actual bilateral collaboration is a tricky proposition. This has become quite clear this week, as the German and French leaders have ditched a project to jointly develop and build a new-generation fighter jet. The industrial rivalries were reportedly stronger than Europe’s most ambitious defense program.
USA - The United States plans to significantly reduce the aircraft and warships it makes available for NATO operations in Europe, the New York Times reported on Friday, citing two senior European officials. The decision would limit NATO's ability to launch long-range strikes and conduct surveillance, the report said. The US plan includes cutting the number of F-16 and F-15E fighter jets from roughly 150 to 100, reducing maritime reconnaissance aircraft from 26 to 15, and removing all eight aerial refueling tanker jets it previously made available to Europe, the report said.
MIDDLE EAST - Donald Trump has canceled strikes against Iran and claimed that a peace deal is closer than ever, as Tehran's most senior leaders have approved the agreement. The President said that the 'final points' have been 'approved by all parties involved,' including Israel and America's Arab allies, and claimed the accord simply needed to be signed with a 'time and place' to be announced shortly. Iran has not yet approved any text for an agreement, state media outlet Fars reported. A senior Israeli official told local broadcaster Channel 12: 'We are not aware of any agreement being reached.' Trump's latest claim comes just hours after he said that the US was planning to seize Iran's Kharg Island oil depot and strike the country 'very hard tonight.' Kharg, known as the 'Forbidden Island,' is heavily fortified by missile batteries, naval mines and Revolutionary Guard units, and taking it would require thousands of American boots on the ground.
MIDDLE EAST - Within less than 48 hours, Iran and its proxies launched attacks against both Israel and American forces. Most observers see two separate events. Tehran sees one strategy. The missiles fired at Israel and the attacks on American military assets were not isolated acts of retaliation. They were part of a playbook the Islamic Republic has refined over decades. Iran’s leaders understand that they cannot outmatch the United States economically or militarily. They cannot defeat Israel’s technological and intelligence capabilities. Instead, they pursue a different objective: buying time.
UK - It’s not very long ago that rioting on the streets of Belfast was common. Peace remains fragile. Traces of old battles are visible in more recent ones, with loyalist commanders from the days of sectarian violence involved in stirring up anti-immigrant unrest. Yet now social harmony faces a new sort of danger, and not just in Belfast. As Southampton showed last week, rioting these days is easily sparked in places without a history of violence. Both cities got caught up in a phenomenon that threatens to undermine peace everywhere: the exploitation of ethnic and religious division by social media.
UK - The last minister to resign over national security was Lord Carrington. In 1982, Margaret Thatcher’s foreign secretary took responsibility for the Foreign Office’s failure to anticipate or prevent the Argentine invasion of the Falkland Islands. His integrity gained him the respect of the nation. Now John Healey has done the same. Across politics, many will recognise the burden of the choice. Healey has been living and breathing defence for years, and his commitment has drawn respect from all parties, including mine. But he knew what needed to be done and that’s exactly why he has gone. Healey can see what is coming and, more importantly, what is not.
UK - Every so often, we face a curriculum decision with the power to reshape the intellectual and economic landscape of the country. The elevation of computer studies into GCSE Computer Science was one such moment, catalysing a generation of coders and laying the groundwork for today’s digital economy. The introduction of a Natural History GCSE could be an intervention of equal magnitude.
UNITED NATIONS - Pregnant women in Kabul, sheep-herders outside of Modigushi, the urban-poor in Colombo. As the war in Iran passes 100 days, these are the people on the front line of a new hunger crisis. Months ago, the UN cautioned that a prolonged closure of the Strait of Hormuz would push millions into hunger; now they say their worst fears are materialising.
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