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Europe
Belgium
04.11.2025 An investigation by several European media outlets revealed today that hundreds of millions of location data points from mobile phones in Belgium, including those belonging to employees of EU institutions, NATO headquarters, and military bases, are being sold. More than 1,000 phones were located within NATO sites, according to the report. Investigators said they were able to identify several senior European officials, including three holding high-level positions in EU institutions, whose movements matched their home and workplace locations. Data brokers reportedly offer access to location datasets for Belgium for prices ranging from $24,000 to $60,000 per year, covering up to 700,000 tracked phones per day. Experts warned that, despite being marketed as "anonymous," location data can easily be de-anonymized. Research shows that knowing only two points of reference, such as a person's home and workplace, can be enough to identify them with 95% accuracy. (Source: Anadolu Agency - Turkey)
November 3, 2025 Belgium’s defense minister Francken said a series of unidentified drones flying over the Kleine-Brogel Air Base in northern Belgium that is reported to house U.S. nuclear weapons could be part of a spying operation. Multiple drones were spotted above over the weekend. Nuclear watchdogs have reported the base as home to U.S. nuclear bombs under NATO weapons sharing agreements. 'They [the drones] come to spy, to see where the F-16s are, where the munitions are, and other highly strategic items,' Francken told. 'A drone jammer was used, but without success... A helicopter and police vehicles pursued the drone, but lost it after several kilometers,' he said. (Source: Fox News - U.S.)
The Netherlands
30 October 2025 The Liberal Democrats (D66) party has claimed a narrow but decisive win in the Netherlands’ snap general election, eclipsing Wilders’ 'hard-right' Party for Freedom (PVV). With almost 100 per cent of votes counted, D66 is on course for 26 seats in the 150-seat House of Representatives, equal to the PVV’s projected 26. On that result, a left-wing government with D66, VVD, Labour-GreenLeft alliance (PvdA-Groenlinks) and the Christian Democratic Appeal (CDA) party, would appear the most obvious, although a more right-leaning one, with JA21 and without Socialists and Greens of PvdA-Groenlinks, is also a theoretic possibility. The outgoing cabinet, the most Conservative in decades, faltered on ambitious pledges for border controls and affordable housing, exacerbating a crisis with a shortfall of 400,000 homes and rents spiralling. (Source: Brussels Signal - Belgium)
European Commission
November 4, 2025 The European Commission said today that the EU could welcome new members as early as 2030. It praised Montenegro, Albania, Ukraine and Moldova. The Commission criticised Serbia. It accused Georgia. (Source: Reuters - United Kingdom)
Asia
Japan
Oct 31, 2025 A day after US President Trump said he has granted South Korea approval to build a nuclear-powered submarine in a Philadelphia shipyard, which would allow Seoul to join six nations with such vessels, Japanese Defence Minister Koizumi reiterated today that all options are on the table to strengthen Japan’s defence capabilities, including the use of nuclear power to propel Japanese submarines. Mr Koizumi took the ministerial post in Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s Cabinet on Oct 21. South Korea is an important neighbour and partner we should cooperate with when dealing with various issues facing the international community, Mr Koizumi said. He stressed the importance of Japan-South Korea security cooperation and trilateral cooperation involving the United States, citing North Korea’s recent test-firing of missiles. Opponents of nuclear propulsion argue that developing nuclear-powered submarines would contradict Japan’s constitutional limits of self-defence. (Source: The Straits Times - Singapore / Kyodo News - Japan)
Philippines
02.11.2025 Canada today became the fifth country to sign a visiting forces defense agreement with the Philippines, allowing the two nations to deploy military personnel in each other’s territory and expand defense collaboration. The signing came after the recent Multilateral Maritime Cooperative Activity (MMCA) in the West Philippine Sea involving the Philippines, the US, Australia, and, for the first time, New Zealand. This agreement is following the signing of such agreements with the US in 1998, Australia in 2007, Japan in 2024, and New Zealand in April 2025. (Source: Anadolu Agency - Turkey)
Caribbean
Haiti
October 31, 2025 Hurricane Melissa death toll nears 50, mostly in Jamaica and Haiti, as it hurries through Cuba toward Bermuda. (Source: CBS News / AP = U.S.)
North America
United States
Nov. 3, 2025 In February, the State Department designated six Mexican drug cartels, as well as MS-13 and the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua, as foreign terrorist organizations, giving U.S. spy agencies and military units sweeping legal authorities to conduct espionage and covert operations targeting the criminal networks. In April the Trump administration was considering launching drone strikes on drug cartels in Mexico. President Sheinbaum already has allowed the CIA to expand surveillance flights. Under her leadership, Mexico has deployed 10,000 troops to the U.S. border, increased fentanyl seizures and extradited 55 senior cartel figures to the U.S. “I have great respect for the president, a woman that I think is a tremendous woman,” Trump said last month. “She’s a very brave woman, but Mexico is run by the cartels.' The Trump administration has begun detailed planning for a new mission to send American troops and intelligence officers into Mexico to target drug cartels. Under the new mission being planned, U.S. troops in Mexico would mainly use drone strikes to hit drug labs and cartel members and leaders. (Source: NBC News - U.S.)
03.11.25 New tests of the US nuclear weapons system ordered up by President Trump will not include nuclear explosions, Energy Secretary Wright, Wwhose agency is responsible for testing, has said. “I think the tests we're talking about right now are system tests,” Wright said in an interview on Fox News. “These are not nuclear explosions. These are what we call noncritical explosions.” The US military regularly tests its missiles that are capable of delivering a nuclear warhead, but it has not detonated the weapons since 1992. (Source: The Telegraph - India)
Nov 03, 2025 The first in-person meeting between Presidents Trump and Xi in six years focused almost exclusively on trade and technology, resulting in a temporary rollback of tariffs and export restrictions but producing no new agreements or progress on broader security or geopolitical issues. The meeting largely served to stabilize U.S.-China relations and decrease tensions, with both leaders agreeing to reciprocal visits in 2026 for further discussions. (Source: ChinaUS Focus - based in Hong Kong, China)
by Shambaugh, Gaston Sigur Professor and Director of China Policy Program at George Washington University, Distinguished Visiting Fellow at Hoover Institution of Stanford University
October 31, 2025 US President Trump set the refugee admissions ceiling at 7,500 for fiscal year 2026. 100,000 refugees entered under former president Biden in fiscal 2024. Trump said in an annual refugee determination dated September 30 admissions would be focused largely on South Africans from the country’s white Afrikaner ethnic minority. The White House said it would move oversight of refugee support programmes from the state department to the department of health and human services. (Source: TimesLive - South Africa)
South America
Ecuador
01.11.2025 President Noboa rules out US base on Galapagos Islands, citing environmental concerns. The proposal to host a foreign military base, raised by Noboa, a close of US President Trump, had targeted Baltra Island in the Galapagos. Ecuador’s Constitution has prohibited foreign military bases since 2008. The future of foreign military presence in Ecuador will be decided by voters in a Nov. 16 referendum. (Source: Anadolu Agency - Turkey)
Peru
November 4, 2025, Tuesday Peru has officially severed diplomatic relations with Mexico following the decision of Mexican authorities to grant asylum to former Peruvian Prime Minister Betssy Chávez, who is facing charges for her alleged involvement in the failed coup attempt led by former President Castillo in 2022. She is reportedly staying at the residence of the Mexican Embassy in Lima. (Source: Novinite - Bulgaria)
Venezuela
5 Nov 2025 The US government has linked the Sinaloa Cartel to the Cartel of the Suns, the name given to the state-embedded drug trafficking system that operates in Venezuela, putting connections between any state elements and the Mexican group under a magnifying glass. At the same time, the US military has escalated anti-narcotics operations targeting trafficking from Venezuela to new levels, launching airstrikes against at least nine vessels allegedly carrying drugs in the southern Caribbean that it said left from the Venezuelan coast. Under these conditions, the Sinaloa Cartel and other trafficking networks will likely be turning their attention to safer routes. Zulia in northwest Venezuela is a key corridor for Colombian cocaine destined for international markets. The town of San Felipe was once so awash with brokers from Mexico’s most famous crime group - the Sinaloa Cartel - that it gained the nickname Sinaloa. Mexican traffickers have been retreating from Zulia as the regime of President Maduro has consolidated control over the country’s organized crime landscape. The government appears to be favoring local criminal actors. Zulia’s proximity to the coca-rich region of Catatumbo in Colombia means a significant portion of cocaine produced on the other side of the border makes its way to Zulia. Systematic corruption on the Venezuelan side ensures that drugs can pass freely through the country and be dispatched to the Caribbean and Central America as long as security force officials get their cut. Sinaloa Cartel representatives can sometimes leave a trafficking territory after having solidified relationships with local criminals who work with them. In the end, the Sinaloa Cartel becomes nothing more than a buyer. Since operations of the armed forces in April 2021, Venezuela’s criminal landscape has been more clearly divided into groups that are either allies or enemies of the government. Maduro and other high-ranking officials often favor local criminal actors who they can more easily influence or impact, some of whom even provide an extra layer of protection against potential dissent or function as tools of oppression against political opponents. Drug trafficking in Venezuela is dependent on corruption, with trafficking networks paying off security forces and political actors to be able to operate. As such, it is also possible that in Zulia, the Sinaloa Cartel-linked emissaries failed to pay the right officials, or that officials demanded so much protection money that the Mexicans decided it was no longer an economically viable route. There were also reports of the disappearance of Mexican brokers from Catatumbo, Colombia between 2021 and 2023. Intermediaries representing Mexican drug trafficking organizations began returning in late 2023. (Source: InSight Crime - Colombia)
Tue, November 4, 2025 Zhuravlyov, Russia’s parliamentary defense committee’s deputy chairman, told Russian website Gazeta.Ru, that he sees no obstacles in providing Oreshnik or Kalibr missiles to Venezuela. President Trump has accused Venezuelan President Maduro of being the head of alleged smuggling operation, carrying drugs from Venezuela to the United States that U.S. forces are targeting. Maduro reportedly reached out to Russian President Putin for assistance amid the strikes in the Caribbean. Zakharova, spokesperson for the Russian foreign ministry, condemned the strikes on Saturday, calling them excessive military force. According to president Trump, he has not made a final decision on expanding the strikes on Venezuelan land. According to the Kremlin, the Oreshnik missile can carry nuclear warheads. (Source: Yahoo / Mediaite = U.S.)
November 4, 2025 Reports over the past week indicate that the United States is expanding its military presence in the Caribbean - a buildup that has fueled speculation about possible strikes against targets inside Venezuela. The Miami Herald and the Wall Street Journal reported that President Trump’s administration has identified Venezuelan military installations allegedly tied to drug trafficking networks as potential bombing targets. China today defended its growing cooperation with Venezuela, saying that its engagement with leader Maduro’s government constitutes normal cooperation between sovereign states and is not directed against any third party. China backs Venezuela. The comments, made by Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Mao, followed a Washington Post report that Maduro had sought military assistance from Russia. According to the Post article, Maduro is urgently seeking to strengthen Venezuela’s failing armed forces through military assistance from Russia, China and Iran. The outreach involves soliciting defensive radars, aircraft repairs, drone technology and potentially missiles. In Caracas, Maduro confirmed on Monday that Venezuela and Russia are advancing in what he described as serene and very productive military cooperation. The Venezuelan leader said he maintains daily and permanent communication with Russian President Putin. The Kremlin on Sunday acknowledged contacts with Venezuela, though spokesman Peskov did not confirm The Washington Post’s report that Maduro had formally requested military aid. The two nations are bound by contractual obligations, Peskov told. While Russia is taking the lead - Maduro directly appealed to Moscow - China is part of the same effort. China supports strengthened international cooperation to combat transnational crime and opposes the use or threat of force in international relations, Mao told. She added that China opposes any attempt to undermine peace and stability in Latin America and the Caribbean, as well as unilateral coercive actions against foreign vessels that exceed reasonable and necessary limits. Beijing also urged Washington to carry out regular judicial and law enforcement cooperation through bilateral and multilateral legal frameworks. It is not known what type of aid China has provided or pledged in response to Maduro’s request. Bejing has a significant history of supporting the Maduro regime with billions in loans, surveillance technology and medical aid. The U.S. military has sharply increased its presence off Venezuela’s coast as part of an operation the White House says is aimed at disrupting drug trafficking and criminal networks tied to the Caracas regime. The U.S. military will soon have 13 vessels in the region - including eight warships, three amphibious vessels, and a submarine - marking Washington’s largest military deployment in Latin America since the Gulf War. The newly arrived USS Gettysburg and USS Lake Erie cruisers have joined other U.S. vessels already stationed near Venezuelan waters, and the USS Gerald R. Ford, the Navy’s largest and most sophisticated aircraft carrier, is expected to arrive in days. In August, the mission has included maritime patrols by P-8 reconnaissance aircraft and long-range surveillance flights to map trafficking routes. In September, the deployment was reinforced with 10 F-35B fighters based at Ceiba Air Base in Puerto Rico and armed MQ-9 Reaper drones at Rafael Hernández Airport on the island. U.S. officials say those aircraft can conduct precision strikes against laboratories, clandestine airstrips, vehicles or vessels linked to drug operations. On Oct. 24, Defense Secretary Hegseth ordered the Gerald R. Ford and its strike group - including the cruiser USS Normandy and destroyers USS Thomas Hudner, USS Ramage, USS Carney, and USS Roosevelt - into the Caribbean. The carrier strike group, with more than 4,000 personnel and roughly 90 combat aircraft, is described by retired Venezuelan officers who spoke to the Herald as the centerpiece of a final phase intended to neutralize leaders of the Cartel of the Suns and Tren de Aragua, and to strike fixed and mobile targets inside Venezuela. (Source: Miami Herald - U.S.; "This story was complemented with reporting from El Nuevo Herald’s wire services”).
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