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Europe
France
9 October 2025 France’s royal pretender, Louis de Bourbon, Duke of Anjou, has criticised the country’s deepening political and institutional crisis and urged the French to look to their monarchic heritage as a source of renewal and hope. Regarded by royalist traditionalist „legitimists” as Louis XX, the rightful heir to the long-abolished French throne, de Bourbon traces his lineage directly to King Louis XIV through Philip V of Spain. According to de Bourbon, France’s Republican system itself encourages division rather than unity or long-term vision. ’The Republic, true to its history, remains subject to partisan logic. Although the Constitution desired by General de Gaulle appeared to seek a remedy for this flaw, it must be acknowledged that fifty years later, the scourge that has so often brought suffering to France has reappeared with renewed force,’ he wrote in a column for the Journal du Dimanche. “I believe it is my duty, as head of the House of Bourbon and heir to the dynasty that built France, to speak out on this matter.” De Bourbon criticised those who put their career before their country. ’Once again, parties and politicians, far from acting in the higher interest of France and therefore of the French people, prefer to play their own games,’ he said. ’As has so often been the case in the past, the republican institutions and the political class are proving unequal to the challenges of our time,’ he wrote. The French political class to be corrupt, he said, while calling for the restoration of the moral and cultural monarchy as a source of inspiration for rebuilding the country. In his column, he presents himself as a legitimate moral voice as he is the descendant of France’s former kings, and claims historical responsibility for the nation’s well-being. The Fifth Republic, like its predecessors, could be on the verge of collapse, he predicted. (Source: Brussels Signal - Belgium)
(7 October 2025) Time may be running out for Master of clocks Macron. He is more likely to dissolve parliament than step down. (Source: BBC - United Kingdom)
Oct 6, 2025 At the end of the first quarter of 2025, France’s public debt stood at 3.346 trillion euros ($3.9 trillion), or 114% of GDP. France’s new Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu resigned less than a month in office and less than 24 hours after naming a new government that prompted a key coalition ally to withdraw support - the conservatives who hold 50 seats, objected to his choice for defense minister. As France is faced with a massive debt crisis, Lecornu’s main task would have been to pass a budget. National Rally is calling on President Macron to either call for new snap parliamentary elections or resign. France Unbowed also asks for Macron’s departure. (Source:PBS - U.S.)
Germany
6 October 2025 Former German chancellor Angela Merkel told Hungarian Youtube channel Partizan on October 3 that she had proposed that EU members agree a new format for negotiating with Russia in 2021, before the full-scale Russian invasion in 2022. She has blamed Poland and the Baltic States for war in Ukraine, turning down a proposal for the European Union to negotiate directly with Russia on Ukraine. (Source: Brussels Signal - Belgium)
Russia
October 9, 2025 ’My own best estimate of Russia’s military losses, based on multiple sources’, is 350,000 killed—or close to a million if one includes those who cannot return to service because of severed limbs or other permanent injuries. Many are listed as missing in action, including tens of thousands of unrecovered corpses. (Source: Foreign Policy - U.S.)
by Kovalev, an 'independent journalist and former investigations editor at Meduza who left Russia in 2022.
08/10/2025 - 17:55 Russia’s foreign intelligence service has accused Western countries of plotting false flag operations to discredit Moscow. Russia accused Polish intelligence on September 30 of working with Ukrainian agents to create a fake Russian-Belarusian special forces unit aimed at attacking Polish infrastructure. A week earlier, the SVR claimed that NATO and EU officials were planning provocations in Moldova’s pro-Russian breakaway region of Transnistria. The SVR alleged on October 6 that the UK was recruiting Ukrainian agents to stage a maritime attack that would appear to have been carried out by Russia. The supposed plan included the use of Chinese equipment, which the SVR said was intended to implicate Beijing as well. The agency claimed the operatives were instructed to get arrested by Western authorities and then claim they had acted on orders from Moscow. Phase 0 is Western terminology which corresponds in Russian military doctrine to a special period – a concept inherited from the Soviet era – ’describing a phase of heightened tensions immediately before war breaks out’. During this special period, Russian doctrine focuses on sowing confusion, justifying future military actions and solidifying domestic support. While these accusations are directed at Western governments, their primary audience appears to be domestic, through Russian media outlets to shape public opinion at home, portraying Russia as perpetually under siege. Russia always invariably claims to be on the defence. This helps maintain internal support and frame any future military action as a necessity. Part of the hybrid warfare playbook – meant to sow confusion and blur the line between peace and wartime - these false flag claims could be part of a strategy to pre-emptively discredit Western narratives – ’or to justify real acts of sabotage later on’. Moscow’s objective may be less about striking first and more about signalling the potential cost of any future confrontation. „Instead of planning an outright offensive, Russia appears to be shaping the narrative – offering the West a preview of what open conflict with Moscow might look like, while positioning itself to deny accountability if escalation occurs. (Source: France 24)
October 8, 2025 12:12 PM GMT+2 Russia will shoot down Tomahawk cruise missiles and bomb their launch sites if the United States decides to supply them to Ukraine, a senior Russian lawmaker said today. ’Our response will be tough, ambiguous, measured, and asymmetrical. We will find ways to hurt those who cause us trouble,’ Kartapolov, a former deputy defence minister, head of the Russian parliament's defence committee, told the state RIA news agency. He said Tomahawks could only be given in small numbers - in tens rather than hundreds. "We know these missiles very well, how they fly, how to shoot them down; we worked with them in Syria, so there is nothing new. The only problems will be for those who supply them and those who use them; that's where the problems will be,’ he said. Kartapolov was also cited as saying that Moscow had so far seen no signs that Ukraine was preparing launch sites for Tomahawks, something he said Kyiv would not be able to hide if it got such missiles. If and when that happened, he said Russia would use drones and missiles to destroy any launchers. U.S. President Trump said on Monday he would want to know what Ukraine planned to do with Tomahawks before agreeing to provide them because he did not want to escalate the war between Russia and Ukraine. He said, however, that he had sort of made a decision on the matter. (Source: Reuters - United Kingdom)
Oct.6.2025 1:40PM The first flight of the KVN drone took place in June 2024, just in time for the Ukrainian invasion in Kursk. Tchadaiev deployed 230 models on the ground, and the drone, which costs $500, destroyed 42 of the 50 Western armored vehicles in a specific Ukrainian offensive. (Source: Folha de S. Paulo - Brazil)
6:31 pm, October 6, 2025 Over the last month, the Ukrainian Armed Forces (AFU) have succeeded in slowing the Russian army’s advance in central Donbas. In August, Ukraine redeployed significant forces from other fronts to reinforce defenses around Russia’s breakthrough between Pokrovsk and Kostyantynivka, leaving other sectors more vulnerable. Russian troops have advanced toward Sloviansk along both banks of the Siverskyi Donets River, capturing the Kreminna Forests. Another Russian force is advancing almost unopposed westward along the Dnipropetrovsk–Zaporizhzhia regional border, in addition to smaller-scale crises in Ukrainian defenses near Orikhiv, south of Zaporizhzhia, and around Kupyansk in the eastern Kharkiv region. (Source: Meduza - based in Riga, Latvia)
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Ukraine
Wednesday 08 October 2025 19:52 BST A Russian drone attack struck an oil depot in Ukraine's Chernihiv region today morning. The National Energy Company of Ukraine said that several regions of Ukraine have been left without power. In the Chernihiv region the local power company is forced to implement three simultaneous hourly power cuts. (Source: The Independent - United Kingdom)
October 6, 2025 How and why Ukraine’s military is going digital? The analysis presented in this paper is based primarily on interviews conducted with representatives of the Ukrainian Armed Forces, the MOD, and the Defense Procurement Agency. These interviews provided first-hand insights into the evolving practices of defense acquisition and procurement under wartime conditions. (Source: Center for Strategic and International Studies - U.S.)
by Bondar, a fellow with the Wadhwani AI Center at the CSIS in Washington, D.C.
Europe
10/08/2025 For the European Union, political trouble rises in the east. Russia’s refusal to halt its grinding war in Ukraine is only part of the problem. The E.U. is in turmoil. France is ’in a soap-operatic financial and political crisis’; its latest prime minister, Sébastien Lecornu, resigned Monday after less than a month in office. French President Macron is seriously weakened at home. Germany is mired in economic malaise. German Chancellor Friedrich Merz yet to achieve the stature and influence once commanded by Angela Merkel. The recent developments may further tip the E.U political balance to the right. In the Czech Republic on Sunday, another ’populist’ Euroskeptic and Ukraine critic, the billionaire former prime minister Andrej Babis, won national parliamentary elections, to replace the ’pro-Western’, pro-Ukraine coalition led by Prime Minister Petr Fiala. Babis and his right wing ANO (Yes) Party, ran under the banner of “Czechia first.” He promised to raise wages and pensions - and to shut down the Czech-led program that sends most of Europe’s artillery shells to Ukraine, denouncing the country’s outgoing government for giving ’Czech mothers nothing, and Ukrainians everything. Babis has said it’s not the arms, but how they are procured, that is the problem. He claims the program is corrupt and that Czech arms merchants are making a fortune. Babis wants the program shifted to NATO. After the election, Babis said the Czech Republic would remain a reliable partner in the E.U. and NATO. “We criticize the European Union, but we don’t want to destroy it,” ANO deputy leader Havlicek told the BBC. “We want to reform it.” Babis said talks have begun with the Freedom and Direct Democracy party, which has called for Ukraine immigrants to be deported, and the new Motorists for Themselves party, which opposes the E.U.’s green deal. Both are deeply skeptical about the European project. If Babis succeeds in forming a government coalition, officials in Brussels expect he will join Orbán and Fico to obstruct assistance for Ukraine and oppose new pressure on Russia. Babis, 71, boasted he has met President Trump multiple times. He is also good friends with Hungarian Prime Minister Orbán, who on Monday told the news site EconomX. that his country should not adopt the euro currency because the E.U. is disintegrating. Since 2010, PM Orbán has fashioned himself as a champion of “illiberal Christian democracy”- 'which led the European Union to suspend $21 billion in funding'. Mr Orbán is pledging to veto any attempt to start formal E.U. membership talks with Ukraine. He accused E.U. leaders of developing war plans against Russia. On October 2, at a leaders’ summit in Denmark, he dismissed as a nonstarter a plan by European Council President Costa to fast-track membership talks with Ukraine. “I do not agree,” Viktor Orbán said. “So this plan is dead". In neighboring Slovakia, SMER party’s leader, Prime Minister Robert Fico was attending Victory Day celebrations in Beijing and Moscow and meeting with Presidents Xi and Putin. Fico said during a televised debate on Sunday that the goal of his country is not the defeat of the Russian Federation. „Our goal is to end the war in Ukraine as soon as possible. These are Slavs killing each other. War is not a solution.” He added: ’If the E.U. spent as much energy on peace as it does on supporting the war in Ukraine, the war could have been over long ago.” Orbán and Fico have resisted calls to stop purchasing Russian oil and natural gas, which Trump has demanded as a condition of imposing new sanctions on Moscow - raising questions about whether any new pressure on the Kremlin will be forthcoming from Washington. The ’dependably dull, staunchly democratic ittle’ Lithuania saw mass protests over the weekend. Artists took to the streets to demand the ouster of the culture minister from the ’populist’ Nemunas Dawn Party, whose leader has been dogged by charges of antisemitism. Nemunas Dawn joined the government after Prime Minister Gintautas Paluckas resigned this summer under a cloud of corruption allegations, forcing his Social Democratic Party to find new coalition partners. E.U. heads of state and government are clashing openly with one another. Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk faces challenges at home, with the June election of conservative historian Nawrocki as president of Poland. Supported by Poland’s right-wing Law and Justice party and endorsed by Trump, Nawrocki ran a successful “Poland for Poles” campaign. Nawrocki wants Germany to pay steep reparations for Nazi crimes during World War II. The Polish president plans to fight illegal immigration, defend the Polish currency and limit the powers of the European Union. Nawrocki is highly critical of Russia - he recently called Putin a war criminal - but he is wary of Ukraine, which he insists should not be allowed to join NATO or the European Union. (Source: MSN / The Washington Post = U.S.)
Africa
Burkina Faso
07/10/2025 Burkina Faso's military government said today it had arrested eight members of International NGO Safety Organisation (INSO), a Netherlands-based group specialising in humanitarian safety, including a Frenchman, a French-Senegalese woman, a Czech man, a Malian and four Burkinabe nationals, accusing them of spying and treason. Since seizing power in a September 2022 coup, Burkina Faso's military junta has turned away from the West and, in particular, its former colonial ruler France. Burkinabe authorities often repress dissent within civil society and the media, claiming it as part of the battle against jihadist violence that has plagued the country for a decade. (Source: France 24 "with AFP" = France)
Egypt
6 October 2025 Rising Nile waters inundated homes and fields in northern Egypt over the weekend. This year a late-season surge has pushed north from Ethiopia, through Sudan, and into Egypt. Egypt has accused Ethiopia of reckless unilateral operation of its Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam. (Source: Asharq Al-Awsat - headquartered in London, United Kingdom, owned by a member of the Saudi royal family)
Mali
Tuesday 07/10/2025 'The war in Ukraine and terrorism in the Sahel are connected,' Malian Prime Minister General Maiga said at the United Nations in late September. ''The Ukrainian regime has become one of the main suppliers of kamikaze drones to terrorist groups around the world,' he said. From explosive drones to inflatable decoy vehicles, Tuareg rebels in Mali have increasingly turned to tactics learnt from Ukrainian intelligence to strike the west African country’s army and its Russian allies. While the Tuaregs have ties to Kiev, Mali has increasingly relied on Russian mercenaries for help in fighting both the rebels and the jihadists affiliated with al-Qaeda and the isis extremist group roaming the wider Sahel region. Turkish drones gave the Malian army and its Russian partner an advantage over the Tuareg rebels when they captured the rebel stronghold of Kidal in 2023. In July 2024, Ukrainian military intelligence official, Yusov, implied that Kiev had provided information to the rebels so they could carry out an attack. The Azawad Liberation Front (FLA), created in November 2024, consists mostly of Tuareg, a semi-nomadic people of Berber descent. The FLA separatists, considered terrorists in the Sahel capitals, have joined forces at times with the al-Qaeda-linked Group for the Support of Islam and Muslims (JNIM). Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso, all ruled by military juntas that have turned their backs on the West to move closer to Russia, have severed diplomatic relations with Ukraine, accusing it of supplying weapons to the FLA. (Source: The Arab Weekly - put out by Al Arab Publishing House in London, United Kingdom)
Nobel Prize in Literature
Oct 9, 2025 Hungarian writer Krasznahorkai, whose philosophical, bleakly funny novels often unfold in single sentences, won the Nobel Prize in literature Thursday for his compelling and visionary oeuvre that, 'in the midst of apocalyptic terror', reaffirms the power of art. Several works including his debut, Sátántangó, and The Melancholy of Resistance were turned into films by Hungarian director Tarr. Krasznahorkai is a great epic writer in the Central European tradition that extends through Kafka to Bernhard, and is characterized by absurdism and grotesque excess, the Nobel judges said. Krasznahorkai, 71, has received many awards including the 2015 Man Booker International Prize. He also won the National Book Award for Translated Literature in the U.S. in 2019 for Baron Wenckheim’s Homecoming. He was friends with American poet and writer Ginsberg and would regularly stay in Ginsberg’s apartment while visiting New York City. He is the first winner from Hungary since Kertesz in 2002. Last year's prize was won by South Korean author Han for her body of work that the committee said confronts historical traumas and exposes the fragility of human life. Nobel Prize award ceremonies are held on Dec. 10, the anniversary of Nobel’s death in 1896. Each prize carries an award of 11 million Swedish kronor ($1.2 million), and the winners also receive an 18-carat gold medal and a diploma. (Source: Korea Times - South Korea)
October 09, 2025 The 2025 Nobel Prize in Literature was awarded to Hungarian author Krasznahorkai, at Borshuset in Stockholm, Sweden, on Oct 9, 2025. The second Hungarian to win the prize, awarded by the Swedish Academy, after Kertesz in 2002, Krasznahorkai was born in the small town of Gyula in southeast Hungary. His 1985 novel, Sátántangó, is set in a remote rural area. The novel portrays, in powerfully suggestive terms, a destitute group of residents on an abandoned collective farm in the Hungarian countryside just before the fall of communism, the Academy said. Several of his works have been adapted into films by Tarr. In 1993, he received the German Bestenliste Prize for the best literary work of the year for The Melancholy of Resistance. (Source: AsiaOne – Singapore)
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