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Europe
Poland
Tuesday 22 July 2025 Poland prepares 40-page manual titled Safety guide ‘to coping in case of war' or natural disaster, an interior ministry official says. ’Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk has repeatedly warned that the threat of a global war is serious and real’. Russia has repeatedly denied that it engages in sabotage or cyberattacks on other countries and says it has no intention of starting a war with NATO. The booklet will be released online in September in Polish. Ministry plans to deliver printed copies to all 14 million households in Poland. (Source: The Independent – United Kingdom)
European Commission
July 22, 2025 The European Union’s first-ever commissioner for defense and space has issued a stark warning: the world’s most dangerous moment could arrive as soon as 2027, 'when Russia and China may coordinate aggressive moves designed to overwhelm Western defenses'. Kubilius ’echoed’ recent remarks by U.S. Air Force Gen. Grynkewich, NATO’s top commander for air operations. Grynkewich had warned last week that the United States and its European allies must be prepared to fight two wars simultaneously, should Russian President Putin escalate in Ukraine or Eastern Europe, and in the Pacific if Chinese President Xi launches an invasion of Taiwan. ’We’re going to need every bit of kit and equipment and munitions that we can in order to beat that,’ Grynkewich said. Later yesterday evening, Kubilius said the U.S. has the right and reason to turn its focus to China, to start to shift more and more toward the Indo-Pacific. Former Indo-Pacific Command chief Adm. Davidson testified before Congress in 2021 that China could attempt to forcibly reunify with Taiwan by 2027. Kubilius traveled to Washington to assess potential shortfalls in European defense capabilities as the U.S. increasingly pivots its strategic attention toward the Indo-Pacific. He said EU member states are actively preparing for a shift in the American military posture on the continent. As of 2025, more than 80,000 U.S. troops are stationed in Europe – a presence widely expected to decline „in the coming years’. ’We don't know what Americans will decide’ Kubilius said. He noted that the EU has reduced its reliance on U.S.-made weapons from 60% of total imports to 40%, and hopes to lower that dependency further through increased domestic production. Kubilius ’underscored the critical importance of maintaining unwavering support’ for Ukraine’s defense against Russia. President Trump announced that the United States would offer advanced weapons systems to Ukraine – ’on the condition that European partners cover the cost’. ’We're going to be sending Patriots to NATO and then NATO will distribute that,’ Trump said last week. As defense commissioner, Kubilius is tasked with ’implementing an ’$840 billion framework to ’Re-Arm Europe,’ including a €150 billion loan’ facility available to member states for building out their armed forces and industrial capacities. (Source: Fox News - U.S.)
July 22, 2025 6:00 am CET Here are the winners and losers from EU’s retaliation plan against US tariffs. (Source: Politico - U.S.)
Moldova
Tuesday 22 July 2025 Plahotniuc, a fugitive Moldovan oligarch implicated in a $1 billion bank fraud and other illicit schemes was detained today in Greece. He fled Moldova in 2019 as he faced a series of corruption charges including allegations of complicity in a scheme that led to $1 billion disappearing from a Moldovan bank in 2014, which at the time was equivalent to about an eighth of Moldova’s annual GDP. Plahotniuc has denied any wrongdoing. He fled to the U.S. from Moldova in June 2019 after failing to form a government with his Democratic Party. The U.S. declared him persona non grata in 2020 and his whereabouts were unknown for years. His assets were frozen in the U.K. and its overseas territories. (Source: The Independent - United Kingdom)
Ukraine
July 22, 2025 - 11:15:21 Russia unleashed one of its largest aerial assaults on Ukraine in recent months. A drone struck the entrance to a subway station in Kyiv’s Shevchenkivskyi district. The heaviest strikes hit the city's Darnytskyi district. The overnight Russian barrage of Kyiv began shortly after midnight and continued until around 6 a.m. It was the first major attack on Kyiv since Trump’s special envoy to Ukraine, Kellogg, arrived in the city last Monday. Russia halted strikes during his visit. Russia’s Ministry of Defense said its attack used drones and Kinzhal hypersonic missiles. It said the barrage successfully targeted airfield infrastructure and Ukraine’s military-industrial complex. The Ministry said its forces shot down 74 Ukrainian drones overnight. Twenty-three drones were shot down in the Moscow region, 15 of which were intercepted over the city itself. Ukraine’s Air Force said Russia launched 426 Shahed and decoy drones overnight and on Monday, as well as 24 missiles of various types. It said 200 drones were intercepted with 203 more jammed or lost from radars. In a video address, Zelenskyy said another round of talks between Ukrainian and Russian delegations was planned for tomorrow. He discussed the preparations with Umerov, who led the Ukrainian team in the previous two rounds. French Foreign Minister Barrot arrived in Kyiv yesterday for talks with Zelenskyy. They spoke about expanding defense cooperation, including a decision by French companies to start manufacturing drones in Ukraine. ’Britain and Germany chaired a virtual meeting yesterday to discuss US President Trump’s plans for NATO allies to provide Ukraine with weapons’. ’Trump’s arms plan, announced a week ago, involves European nations sending American weapons, including Patriot air defense missile systems, to Ukraine via NATO - either from existing stockpiles or buying and donating new ones’. The so-called Ukraine Defense Contact Group meeting was led by British Defense Secretary Healey and his German counterpart Pistorius. It was attended by US Defense Secretary Hegseth, NATO leader Rutte and NATO’s Supreme Allied Commander Europe, Gen. Grynkewich. Ukraine waits for Patriots. Ukraine’s new Defense Minister Shmyhal, who until recently served as prime minister, urged allies to speed up deliveries of American air defense systems. Patriot systems could come ’thanks to Switzerland’, whose defense ministry said Thursday it was informed by the US Defense Department that it will reprioritize the delivery of five previously ordered systems to support Ukraine. European Commissioner for Defense and Space Kubilius visited Washington yesterday ahead of talks with US officials about European defense and support for Ukraine. He welcomed Trump taking a harder line on Putin. If you combine American economic power and European economic power we are something like 20 times Russia’s power, he said. ’We need political will.’ A senior NATO official said the alliance is still coordinating the delivery of other military aid - such as ammunition and artillery rounds - which includes aid from the US that was briefly paused. Germany has said it offered to finance two new Patriot systems for Ukraine and raised the possibility of supplying systems it already owns and having them replaced by the US. But delivery could take time, German Chancellor Merz suggested - it is a question of days, perhaps weeks. (Source: The Korea Herald - South Korea / AP - U.S.)
United Kingdom
22.07.2025 The British government has agreed to a final investment decision to give the Sizewell C nuclear plant the go-ahead. The government has approved a multibillion-pound deal for Sizewell C, which will provide clean, homegrown power to the equivalent of six million homes. The cost of construction is around £38 billion (some $51 billion), which Canadian pension fund La Caisse, UK energy firm Centrica, and Amber Infrastructure will jointly fund. The government - the single largest equity shareholder in the project - will take an initial 44.9% stake; La Caisse will have 20%, Centrica 15%, and Amber Infrastructure an initial 7.6%. French energy giant EDF is taking a 12.5% stake in the project. as well as a proposed £5 billion ($6.7 billion) debt guarantee from France’s export credit agency, Bpifrance Assurance Export, to back the company’s commercial bank loans. (Source: Anadolu Agency - Turkey)
Europe
22.07.2025 No justification remains for Israeli military operations in Gaza, French foreign minister Barrot told the broadcaster France Inter. He warns against worsening 'already catastrophic situation.' German Development Minister Alabali Radovan criticized her government today for not signing a declaration by more than two dozen countries that demands an immediate end to the war in the Gaza Strip. 'I would have liked Germany to join the signal sent by the 29 partners. What is happening in Gaza right now is incomprehensible. Innocent children are dying. People are starving,' Alabali Radovan told the Rheinische Post newspaper. Israel 'must stop killing people at distribution points,' says European Commission foreign policy chief Kallas. British foreign secretary Lammy warned today that if a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip is not reached soon, further action against Israel could be taken. He recalled that in response to Israeli practices, the UK sanctioned Israeli ministers, halted free trade talks with Israel and suspended some arms export licenses. His remarks came after more than two dozen countries, including the UK, Australia, and Japan, as well as the EU, condemned Israel's inhumane killing of civilians in the Gaza Strip yesterday and demanded that the war in the besieged enclave end immediately. (Source: Anadolu Agency - Turkey)
Asia
Japan
22.07.2025 European Council President Costa and European Commission President der Leyen today reached Japan for a summit with Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba tomorrow. They began their trip to Japan by visiting World Expo 2025 in Osaka. Costa and von der Leyen are scheduled to meet Chinese President Xi in Beijing on Thursday. In 2024, the total trade in goods between the EU and Japan reached €130.7 billion (around $137.9 billion). (Source: Anadolu Agency - Turkey)
Southeast Asia
Jul 22, 2025 China is set to expand its influence over Southeast Asia's development as the administration of U.S. President Trump and other Western donors slash aid, a study by an Australian think tank, the Sydney-based Lowy Institute said Sunday. Total official development finance to Southeast Asia - including grants, low-rate loans and other loans - grew modestly to $29 billion in 2023, the annual report said. Based on recent announcements, overall official development finance to Southeast Asia will fall by more than $2 billion by 2026, the study projected. Trump has halted about $60 billion in development assistance - most of the United States' overseas aid program. Seven European countries - including France and Germany - and the European Union have announced $17.2 billion in aid cuts to be implemented between 2025 and 2029. The United Kingdom has said it is reducing annual aid by $7.6 billion, redirecting government money toward defense. Poorer countries such as East Timor, Cambodia, Laos and Myanmar are being left behind and social sector priorities such as health, education, and civil society support that rely on bilateral aid funding are likely to lose out the most. A deepening divide could undermine long-term stability, equity and resilience, it warned. Across most of Southeast Asia, around 86 million people still live on less than $3.65 a day. China's relative importance as a development actor in the region will rise as Western development support recedes. Beijing's development finance to the region rose by $1.6 billion to $4.9 billion in 2023 - mostly through big infrastructure projects such as rail links in Indonesia and Malaysia. China's infrastructure commitments to Southeast Asia surged fourfold to almost $10 billion, largely due to the revival of the Kyaukphyu Deep Sea Port project in Myanmar. By contrast, Western alternative infrastructure projects had failed to materialize in recent years. "Similarly, Western promises to support the region's clean energy transition have yet to translate into more projects on the ground - of global concern given coal-dependent Southeast Asia is a major source of rapidly growing carbon emissions.’ (Source: Japan Times / AFP - France; -JIJI - Japan)
North America
United States
July 22, 2025 Speaker Johnson said he would shut the House down early for the summer tomorrow to head off Democrats’ calls for votes for greater transparency into the investigation of Epstein, the sex offender and former friend of President Trump. The U.S. says it will withdraw from UNESCO, again. The move reflects Mr. Trump’s deep mistrust and distaste of multilateralism and international institutions. (Source: The New York Times - U.S.)
(22 July 2025) United States President Trump will impose 100% tariffs on countries such as India, China and Brazil if they continue to buy oil from Russia amid the war in Ukraine, Republican Senator Graham said on Sunday in an interview with Fox News. The three countries will have to choose between the American economy and helping Russian President, he said. ‘We’ll crush your economy’, US senator Graham warns: If [India, China and Brazil] keep buying cheap Russian oil…’we are going to tear the hell out of you and crush your economy.’ India and China are among the countries whose imports of cheaper fuel from Russia have increased since 2022. ’On July 16, North Atlantic Treaty Organization chief Rutte also warned that secondary sanctions could hit India, China and Brazil’ if they continue to trade with Russia. NATO is a military alliance of 32 countries, including the United States and several members of the European Union. (Source: Scroll – India)
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