'Time for a change' - Son Heung-min announces Tottenham departure
'Another absolute rocket!' - Watch Son Heung-min's best Tottenham goals
Ukraine says it hit Russian oil facilities, military airfield - Reuters
'India are on top' heading into day three of final Test - Vaughan
'Like being with a rock star' - departing Son's 10 years at Spurs
India will buy Russian oil despite Trump's threats, NYT reports - Reuters
Warner fires Ashes 'surfboard' jibe at England's Root
McIlroy to miss PGA Tour play-off opener
Cuatro años de enfrentamientos de la fiscal del ‘caso Montoro’ con el jefe de Anticorrupción y la Guardia Civil dificultan la investigación
Trump fires US labor official over data and gets earlier than expected chance to reshape Fed - Reuters
Kia America recalls 201,149 US Telluride vehicles - Reuters
Raducanu beaten by Wimbledon finalist Anisimova
Richardson arrested for domestic violence in Seattle, report says - Reuters
I no longer identify as Nigerian, Badenoch says
Ghislaine Maxwell moved to prison camp, Trump says no plea for pardon - Reuters
Víctimas del triple asesino de Madrid liberado por Trump hablan por primera vez: “No podemos entender el silencio de las autoridades”
Los mercados vislumbran ya los estragos de los aranceles de Trump a la economía global
Tres dimisiones en diez días: el escándalo de los políticos y sus falsos y fluctuantes currículos
Salvador Illa se va de veraneo con Pedro Sánchez a Lanzarote antes de la tormenta de septiembre
Nuevo orden comercial mundial
Descubre en Valencia en una caja de zapatos el diario de su padre en la Guerra Civil de la que nunca habló
Steve McCurry, un gran fotógrafo al que le cabrean algunas preguntas: “Has intentado hacer que yo diga alguna tontería”
Javier Ambrossi: “He dudado sobre si solo caía bien Javi y a mí se me tenía que comer con patatas”
Chess grandmaster Carlsen wins at Esports World Cup
Democratic governors advise strong counteroffensive on redistricting
Court allows Trump to end union bargaining for federal workers - Reuters
Trump orders nuclear submarines moved after Russian 'provocative statements' - Reuters
Global stock index sinks with dollar, bond yields after weak US jobs data - Reuters
Kugler resigning from Fed, opening door to Trump appointment - Reuters
She wants Zohran’s seat
Atkinson stars but late drops sees India lead England after day two
Drop, drop, drop - England's poor fielding allows India to build lead
Ook Nederland gaat weer noodhulp afgooien boven Gaza
Top MoD civil servant to leave in wake of Afghan data breach
Cien años de camino de vuelta: cuando los nietos latinos de los emigrantes españoles regresan a Madrid
How to follow Hungarian Grand Prix on the BBC
Norris' openness used against him - Sainz
Civil service interns must be working class, government says
BBB komt met nieuwe kandidatenlijst Tweede Kamer: 'Uit alle provincies'
'Not often you see Root lose his temper' - tensions rise on day two
Labour councillor resigns to help Corbyn's party
Green Party members start choosing new leadership
Labour MP Tulip Siddiq to face trial in Bangladesh
Cooper leads first public poll since jumping in North Carolina Senate race
The nation’s cartoonists on the week in politics
Councillors faced 'stalking and death threats'
Trump’s political operation has stockpiled a massive amount of cash ahead of the midterms
Some Gaza and Ukraine posts blocked under new age checks
A Democrat in the middle of the Israel firestorm
Elon Musk gave Trump and the GOP $15M even as he was fighting with the president
Lib Dems call for cap on SEND school profits
Adams, Cuomo, Mamdani and Sliwa pay their respects
Title will come down to fewest mistakes - Norris
Small boats crossings hit 25,000 for the year
'Overcorrections': McBride on some Democrats' remarks on transgender people | The Conversation
Verstappen says he will race with Red Bull in 2026
Minister says lawyers missing the point on Palestinian recognition
Ofcom investigates 34 porn sites over age checks
Andrew Benson Q&A: Send us your questions
The shockingly shrunken footprint of a former president
Team principal Vasseur signs new Ferrari deal
Meta profits surge helps drive Zuckerberg’s AI ambitions
What screen time does to children's brains is more complicated than it seems
The Gulf bets big on AI as it seeks the 'new oil'
NSC-Kamerlid Joseph stapt per direct over naar BBB
TikTok removes video by Huda Beauty boss over anti-Israel conspiracy theories

The Hague buzzed with tension as NATO leaders gathered in June 2025, the North Sea wind cutting through the city’s calm. Inside the summit hall, polished tables reflected the faces of 32 leaders, each wrestling with a world on edge. Russia’s war in Ukraine, now three years deep, loomed large, and President Donald Trump’s brash demands for a 5% GDP defense spending target dominated the agenda. Nobody expected what came next. Trump, flanked by aides, leaned into his microphone. “Europe’s gotta pay up. Five percent, folks. No more freeloading.” His words, blunt as ever, echoed through the room.

NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte, a master of diplomacy, nodded, his compromise already in motion: 3.5% for core military spending, 1.5% for cybersecurity and infrastructure. Spain’s Pedro Sánchez had resisted, citing social welfare, but a last-minute tweak—“allies commit” instead of “we commit”—gave Madrid an out. By Wednesday, the deal was sealed: 5% by 2035, a seismic shift from the 2% baseline.

In Moscow, Kremlin aides pored over the news. President Vladimir Putin’s jaw tightened. NATO’s new pledge signaled a fortified West, with Poland already at 4.7% and Baltic states arming to the teeth. Russia’s military, stretched thin in Ukraine, faced a daunting prospect: a NATO capable of deploying 300,000 troops in 30 days, backed by a 400% surge in air defenses and millions of artillery shells. “They’re encircling us,” a general muttered. Putin ordered a review of Baltic fleet deployments, wary but silent.

Back in The Hague, the summit’s five-point communique reaffirmed Article 5—mutual defense, ironclad. Trump, pressed on his commitment, shrugged. “I stand with it. Why else am I here?” Yet, beneath the unity, a quiet revolution brewed. German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, in a Berlin speech, framed the spending hike as Europe’s duty, not a favor to Trump. “Russia threatens us all,” he said. “We must be unassailable.” UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer pledged 5% by 2035, eyeing a “war footing.”

Whispers filled the summit’s margins. French President Emmanuel Macron, sipping coffee with Starmer and Canada’s Mark Carney, floated a bold idea: a European defense mechanism, UK and Canada included, to hedge against U.S. unpredictability. “Trump’s push gives us cover,” Macron murmured. “We spend more, but on our terms.” Carney, fresh from pledging 2% by 2026, nodded. “Canada’s in—less reliance on Washington.” The UK, post-Brexit and nuclear-armed, saw a chance to lead. Starmer envisioned joint procurement, shared cyber defenses, and a rapid-response force—Europe’s shield, not America’s shadow.

Trump, basking in his “victory,” seemed oblivious. He tweeted from Air Force One: “NATO’s paying up BIG! America First!” But European diplomats saw irony. His pressure, meant to burden allies, had sparked their ambition for autonomy. “He’s lit a fire he doesn’t see,” a Polish official quipped.

As leaders dined with Dutch royals, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, a summit guest, watched quietly. Excluded from main talks, he still secured Trump’s nod for aid. Yet, Europe’s pivot hinted at a future where Ukraine’s fight might rely less on U.S. whims. Rutte, hosting, sensed the shift. “We’re stronger, fairer, more lethal,” he told reporters, his smile masking the tectonic change.

Months later, Brussels buzzed with plans for a European Defense Union. The UK and Canada joined early talks, pooling resources for drones, tanks, and satellites. Russia, rattled, scaled back Baltic exercises. Trump, distracted by trade wars, missed the headlines. The Hague summit, meant as his triumph, had planted seeds for a West less tethered to his vision—one ready to stand alone.

  • The Runway AI Film Festival, featuring finalists displayed on IMAX screens nationwide, has sparked a discussion not just about the potential of AI in filmmaking, but about the deeper implications of financial speculation in the arts. As AI-generated content gains market traction, it raises questions about whether such works truly enrich our cultural landscape or merely inflate market bubbles.

    Read more …