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The last continent: how deadly bird flu travelled the world before landing on a remote Australian beach

It was a rough five-day sail from the Falkland Islands and, as the science expedition approached the South Georgia coast, they found fur seal carcasses floating on the water. “There were these moments when it would hit us,” says Dr Jane Younger, remembering the expedition to the British sub-Antarctic territory six months ago. Younger, an ecologist at the Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies at the University of Tasmania, was with scientists from the United States, France, South Africa and the Falklands to check on the spread of the H5N1 variant of bird flu. The disease has cut a devastating and traumatising swathe across the planet, killing millions of birds and mammals since it took hold in Europe in 2020. More than 200 million poultry birds in the United States have been culled and tens of thousands of seals in South America have died. The H5N1 strain was detected in migrating seabirds in the sub-Antarctic in late 2023 and in South Georgia’s seal population in early 2024. “We were hoping because this was the third year, we might not have seen so many dead animals. But that wasn’t the case. The smell was overwhelming,” says Younger. From one cove to the next, Younger saw hundreds of giant petrels – a scavenging seabird with a two-metre wingspan – feasting on the densely packed bodies of dead fur and elephant seals. “We saw an adult female fur seal. It had freshly died and the pup was still trying to suckle. The male was still trying to defend her,” she says. “It was this little family unit … that was upsetting.” While Younger was in South Georgia, another team of scientists, led by Australia’s Antarctic program, were 6,500km (4,000 miles) east on Heard Island, discovering 13,000 dead elephant seal pups alongside hundreds of other dead seals and birds, including penguins. Disease tests were positive. Younger and the Antarctic program scientists are all back in Australia, but it appears the virus has followed them to its final frontier. Now it has Australia’s unique wildlife in its sights. A potential tragedy for the world Giant petrels and brown skuas migrate from their Antarctic breeding grounds to waters off Australia in the southern winter. They rarely come ashore unless they see a chance to scavenge or are sick. Three petrels and a skua were found dead or sick on beaches along the country’s vast southern shoreline earlier this month. This week, tests confirmed they had the deadly strain, with two more suspect cases. H5N1 has now reached every continent on the planet. Risk to humans from the disease is low. Since 1997 there have been about 500 deaths in 25 countries, mostly among people working in commercial poultry. For context, about 1,700 people died in Australia last year from influenza. Sea and water birds migrate south to Australia during the southern hemisphere spring, but also north from Antarctica in the winter. The continent is surrounded by the disease. Now national and state governments, conservationists and scientists are anxiously waiting to see if this wave of incursions will spread into Australia’s native wildlife. The variant presents unique challenges and risks for Australia. About half of the country’s bird species are endemic – that is, they exist nowhere else on the planet. Endemism levels are even higher in land-based mammals, at about 87%. Losing a species to extinction in Australia means the species disappears from the planet. The high number of unique species also means little is known about how they might react to the disease. “We’re not exactly sure what the impacts will be, but we’re very clear there will be impacts,” says Dr Fiona Fraser, Australia’s threatened species commissioner. “These endemic species are highly valued by Australians and have enormous cultural value to our First Nations people. Any loss of these species is a tragedy for the world.” Watching the carnage overseas, Australia established a national response plan to bird-flu in 2024 and has been funding projects to reduce the risk of spread. About 100 response plans have been drawn up for both species and locations at risk. Prof John Woinarski, an ecologist at Charles Darwin University, has spent decades documenting the decline of Australia’s threatened species to habitat loss and invasive species like cats, foxes and pigs. About 18 months ago he started work with the government and BirdLife Australia to analyse the bird flu risk to the country’s mammals and birds. “Sixty-odd million years of isolation has meant Australian fauna is ecologically distinctive. It’s hard to predict what might happen just from looking at mammals overseas,” he says. More than 150 bird species are considered at “very high risk” of extinction or major population declines if they catch the disease, according to the risk analysis. More than 10 mammals are also deemed high-risk, including the unique Australian sea lion, the Tasmanian devil, the platypus and the rakali (water rat). “It is turbocharging the pathway to extinction, and that’s why [the government] has tried to prioritise those at risk,” he says. “The potential for spread within Australia is likely to be very high and very rapid.” Decades of effort to build back threatened mammal and bird populations are likely to be undone, Woinarski says. “It’s going to be a major setback.” Like many experts the Guardian spoke to, Woinarski said if the bird flu arrivals of recent weeks do not spread into native animal populations now, it will happen sooner or later. “It is likely to be highly confronting for most people,” he says. “People will see corpses of their favourite birds in all sorts of places. “And it is a gruesome death. The birds lose their coordination and make these jerky movements and have a tortured death. It is not a pleasant sight.” “It will spread across almost all of Australia in the next six to 12 months and will be recurring for three to five years. Maybe after that it will stabilise and become just another threat. But there are a lot of unknowns.” Prof Brendan Wintle is a conservation biologist at the University of Melbourne the Biodiversity Council, a not-for-profit expert group. He says before the disease has a chance to spread, the government should be creating captive populations of some threatened species which could quickly become complete extinct if infected. “We need insurance policies,” he said. “There has been such low funding for risk assessments and management of conservation that we are quite poorly prepared in terms of people on the ground to secure species. That needs redressing.” More than 1,700 species and unique habitats are considered threatened in Australia. “We have so many threatened species and so little funding,” says Wintle. ‘We’ve been on the lookout’ For 40 years, University of New South Wales ecologist Prof Richard Kingsford has been climbing into a plane every October to spend six weeks flying across a third of the country to monitor waterbirds. On each trip he flies 38,000km (24,000 miles) – a distance that would almost circumnavigate the planet. He has already seen a decline in numbers of about 70% since the 1980s. “The surveys give us a chance to see if there are any mass deaths. We’ve been on the lookout for [the disease] ever since it got into Asia and Antarctica,” he said. Wetlands and watercourses are natural reservoirs for disease and also attract dense groups of birds, creating ideal conditions for spread. Kingsford says individual water birds can fly huge distances, spanning the continent, meaning they could spread the disease far and wide. Right now, good rains have seen water birds flocking to the country’s interior. But an El Niño climate pattern is expected to dry out the inland in the coming months, pushing birds towards the coasts, where they will more easily come into contact with infected migrating birds. “I worry about our water birds because they have been declining for years. There could be a massive whammy coming their way,” Kingsford says. “The big question is how and when will it get into the waterbird community? Then, the pathways [for spreading the disease] are many and varied.”

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Venezuela earthquakes: death toll rises again to more than 1,400

The ⁠death toll ⁠in ⁠the twin earthquakes that struck ⁠Venezuela earlier ⁠this week ‌has ‌risen to ‌1,430, according to one of the country’s top politicians Jorge Rodríguez. Another 3,200 people were injured ⁠and 3,100 left homeless by the disaster, the National Assembly president added, speaking on state television. Rescuers are still searching for survivors after the 7.2 and 7.5 magnitude quakes struck within a minute of each other on Wednesday evening, flattening buildings in the north of the country. At least 68,900 people have been reported unaccounted for by their families. Many civilians in La Guaira, one of the hardest-hit areas, have been using shovels and their bare hands to dig through the rubble of collapsed buildings. On Saturday, the UN estimated that the quakes caused $6.7bn in damage, equivalent to 6% of Venezuela’s GDP. The preliminary assessment accounts for losses to assets including housing but does not cover wider economic disruption, the UN Development Programme said in a statement. The South American country’s acting president, Delcy Rodríguez, said on state television that more than 14,000 members of the military and police were patrolling affected areas, where access has been blocked and special permits are required to enter. Further rescue teams sent by governments from across the world, including Mexico, the US, Brazil, El Salvador and France, arrived in Venezuela on Saturday. It comes after teams from countries including the Netherlands, Turkey and the UK were deployed to aid the search and rescue effort. But a specialist team of British crisis-response volunteers, from the charity Serve On, that was heading to Caracas was stuck in Madrid airport for more than 24 hours. The disruption came after Simón Bolívar International airport, the only international airport that serves Venezuela’s capital, was badly damaged by the earthquakes. Their team leader, Vernon Young, told the Press Association: “These things are always time critical. We’re a light team and can move quickly. The sooner you get there, the more chance you have of saving lives.” He added: “We’re a technical rescue team and can potentially find deeply entombed victims just by their movement. We still believe we will make a decent contribution if we get there in the next day or two.” Because there are no direct flights from the UK to Venezuela, the team has been at Madrid airport since 9pm on Friday after connecting flights from Istanbul were cancelled. Flights from Madrid have also been cancelled, leaving the volunteers stranded due to their reliance on civilian transport. Jeremy Lewin, a US state department official, said the US military would help coordinate flights to bring in rescue workers, mobile hospitals and supplies. He said two 80-person search teams had been deployed and a US navy transport ship was docked off the coast of Venezuela, ready to receive airlifted survivors in need of medical attention. Lewin said it was a “race against the clock” to find people injured in the quakes. He added: “People are trapped under rubble, and the priority is to get the search and rescue teams and the medical professionals and others to them as quickly as possible to save lives.” Loyce Pace, the International Red Cross’s regional director for the Americas, said: “People are still terrified to re-enter what were their homes.” Foreign nationals have been confirmed among the dead, reportedly including 15 of Portuguese nationality or descent, seven Chinese, two Brazilians, five Spaniards and an Italian-Venezuelan.

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Bahrain condemns Iranian tit-for-tat drone attack as ‘flagrant threat’

Bahrain has said it was attacked by Iran with drones on Saturday, apparently in response to overnight US strikes on Iran. A ship in the strait of Hormuz was also attacked. Bahrain’s foreign ministry said a “number of drones” were launched at the country, though there were no immediate reports of damage. It condemned the attack and described it as a “flagrant threat to the security of citizens and residents”. No damage or casualties were reported in the attack on a tanker in the strait of Hormuz. No one claimed responsibility for the attack, but Iran was suspected to be behind it. Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps said earlier on Saturday that it had targeted several sites of the “US terrorist army in the region”, without specifying where. Bahrain is home to the US navy’s fifth fleet. The strikes came after the US military said it struck Iranian missile and drone locations overnight, as well as coastal radar sites, in what it said was a response to an Iranian drone attack on a ship in the strait of Hormuz. The tit-for-tat strikes marked the first incident of violence between the US and Iran since a memorandum of understanding (MOU) was signed between the two countries last week. The MOU – the first of its kind signed by the US and Iran since the latter’s 1979 Islamic revolution – extended a fragile ceasefire and set a 60-day window for talks to achieve a lasting peace. Many gaps remain between the two sides, and one of the chief obstacles is the strait of Hormuz, which the US president, Donald Trump, is keen to make operational again, with energy prices remaining high and the US midterm elections a few months away. The strait was in effect closed by Iran during the war and its status is still being worked out by Iran, Oman and other regional mediators, who are trying to create a postwar framework to govern the waterway. A multinational maritime body supervised by the US navy said on Saturday it would expand a route near Oman in thestrait of Hormuz to increase inbound and outbound traffic. This would threaten a main source of leverage for Tehran, which has used its control over the strait and surrounding shipping as a card in negotiations with the US. The International Maritime Organisation stopped its efforts to evacuate stranded ships from the strait on Friday, and said it would not resume until there were guarantees that ships would not be attacked. The organisation said it had been able to evacuate about 115 ships in recent days, while other tankers remained stuck, some stranded for months. Iran has said that ships must follow its orders and has threatened to start charging tolls for ships trying to move through the waterway. Despite the threats and attacks, ships have been trying to leave the strait in recent days. The US and Gulf states have rejected Iran’s attempts to control the strait, as it is considered an international waterway. The US vice-president, JD Vance, who has played a central role in negotiations with Iran, said on Friday night that Iran should “pick up the phone” in the event of disagreements, warning that “violence will be met with violence”. Meanwhile, in Lebanon, Hezbollah rejected a framework agreement reached on Friday in Washington between Israel and the Lebanese government. Hezbollah is not participating in the talks, despite the war being between Hezbollah and Israel. Hezbollah’s leader, Naim Qassem, described the 14-point-agreement as a surrender to Israel, and said it was “null and void”. He accused the Lebanese government of making needless concessions to Israel that undermined the country’s sovereignty. The document laid out a phased withdrawal of Israeli troops from south Lebanon, replacing them with Lebanese army soldiers who would be tasked with ensuring no members of Hezbollah returned to the area, as well as dismantling the armed group’s infrastructure there. Israel occupies more than 600 sq km of south Lebanon, an area it says it will not leave. Israeli forces have demolished dozens of villages in occupied areas and have displaced more than a million residents, primarily from south Lebanon. Under the terms of the framework agreement, the disarmament of Hezbollah is a prerequisite for the withdrawal of Israeli forces. Hezbollah criticised the attempt to disarm the group, with Qassem saying such an eventuality would legitimise Israel’s presence in south Lebanon. Despite the disagreements, a ceasefire brokered by the US between Hezbollah and Israel last week has mostly held, with some exceptions. The Israeli military carried out a drone strike on Saturday in the Nabatieh area. Lebanon’s health ministry said one person was killed. Israel said it targeted an individual who “posed a threat to its forces”, without providing any evidence for the claim. Iran has repeatedly linked the durability of the Lebanon ceasefire and the withdrawal of Israeli troops from Lebanon to the success of peace talks with the US – something that Israel and the US have resisted.

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Europe heatwave: drought fears in Italy as records tumble around Europe – as it happened

Germany has recorded a new temperature record today, just a day after recording its hottest day ever. The German Weather Service recorded 41.5C in Drewitz, in Saxony-Anhalt state, this afternoon, according to AFP. That beats the record of 41.3C that was set just a day before in Saarbrücken. Police in Berlin have resorted to deploying water cannons to help people cool down in the German capital amid the heatwave. Berlin police are patrolling the city with two water cannons, which are normally used for riot control and dispersing crowds, to provide some relief from the heat, the German newspaper Der Tagesspiegel reported. Berlin broke its temperature record, with 39.2C recorded at a weather station in Tempelhof on Saturday afternoon. A teenager and two men have died after getting into difficulty swimming in open water, bringing the total number of drownings during the recent heatwave to five in the UK. Experts have warned that the heatwave sweeping across Europe could cause Swiss glaciers to lose vast amounts of ice, AFP reports. The snow and ice that accumulated on Switzerland’s glaciers over the winter is expected to have completely melted by Monday, marking the second-earliest arrival on record of the annual tipping point known as glacier loss day. The Danish Meteorological Institute has reported a 37C reading north of the city of Aarhus on Saturday, the highest on record since measurements began in 1874. Romania is the latest country to issue a red alert, putting out a warning that almost the entire country would face extreme heat from Monday to Wednesday. Slovakia has issued a similar warning and confirmed that Friday night was the warmest on record with temperatures not dropping below 26.3C. The Czech Republic, Hungary and Moldova were also on the highest alert for the weekend, with Balkan countries also bracing for a tough few days. More than 700 flights were delayed at London Heathrow and Gatwick airports, with some attributed to thunderstorms brought by the record-breaking heatwave.

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Lebanon-Israel deal may stop war crime victims seeking justice, experts say

A new agreement between Lebanon and Israel could block victims of Israeli war crimes in Lebanon from pursuing accountability and hinder future efforts to give the international criminal court jurisdiction in the country, legal experts have said. Lebanon and Israel signed a 14-point framework agreement in Washington on Friday designed to work towards an end to fighting between Israel and Hezbollah. Article 13 of the deal says Israel and Lebanon will “cease all hostile or negative actions in international political or legal forums” to establish good faith between the two sides. The text, which is broadly phrased, could prevent victims of Israeli war crimes allegedly committed during fighting since 8 October 2023 from seeking justice through international or national courts. Legal experts have also understood this to mean that Lebanon would not be able to grant the ICC jurisdiction in the country, which advocates have pushed for to prosecute Israel and its leaders for alleged war crimes. “This will kill any hope of granting the ICC jurisdiction, even any hope of a UN fact-finding mission,” said Farouk al-Moghrabi, a former adviser to the ministry of human rights who helped draft a law to give the ICC jurisdiction in Lebanon. He said the law also would kill internal efforts to investigate and document crimes. Nizar Saghieh, a lawyer and head of Legal Agenda, a Lebanese NGO, said: “The government is normalising the crime and waiving its rights to ensure any investigation or the prosecution of these crimes, or even to assist the victim in their search for justice.” A spokesperson for the Lebanese presidency did not reply to a request for a comment. The head of Hezbollah, Naim Qassem, has rejected the agreement signed in Washington as a “humiliation”. The group has consistently called on the Lebanese government to stop direct negotiations with Israel. Israel and Hezbollah have been fighting since 2023, when Hezbollah launched rockets at Israel in solidarity with Hamas, triggering two Israeli invasions of southern Lebanon and widespread bombing campaigns. Israeli strikes in Lebanon have killed more than 8,000 people, while Hezbollah attacks have killed dozens of Israeli soldiers and at least 49 civilians in Israel. As part of its campaign in Lebanon, Israel has killed more than a dozen journalists, more than 300 emergency responders and hundreds of women and children. Human rights experts have said Israel may have committed numerous war crimes in Lebanon, including the targeting of journalists on 13 October 2023, mass forcible displacement of hundreds of thousands of people and specific instances deliberately targeting civilians. One of the avenues for accountability for victims of alleged Israeli war crimes in Lebanon has been petitioning the government to grant the ICC limited jurisdiction to investigate and prosecute on its territory. The ICC issued arrest warrants for the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, and the former defence minister, Yoav Gallant, for alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity committed in Gaza. Israel and the US have undertaken an aggressive campaign against the ICC in response, including the US placing sanctions on ICC judges. The Lebanese government has so far not granted the ICC jurisdiction because of initial resistance from Hezbollah and potential US sanctions. Friday’s framework agreement would be another obstacle to accountability in the country. Lebanon’s national human rights commission put out a statement commenting on the framework agreement, emphasising that no agreement should prevent victims from seeking justice. “The commission emphasises that prosecuting perpetrators of war crimes, crimes against humanity and torture does not constitute an act of hostility or a political stance, but rather a legitimate exercise of the rights to justice,” the statement said. The vague and broad nature of the framework agreement also made it uncertain what would be considered a “hostile or negative action”, it said. The office of the UN high commissioner for human rights recently arrived in Lebanon for a fact-finding mission on possible war crimes committed during the last war. It is unclear whether such work will be prohibited under the new agreement. “The fact that this is happening after all of these crimes, this is normalisation of the crimes and ensuring some kind of impunity to Israel,” Saghieh said.

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Thunderstorms disrupt Gatwick and Heathrow as hundreds of flights delayed or cancelled

Thunderstorms have caused severe delays to hundreds of flights at Heathrow and Gatwick airports, leaving passengers stuck on grounded planes for hours in the scorching heat. Overnight, downpours and thunderstorms lit up the skies of London after back-to-back days of 30C-plus weather as the UK and much of Europe experienced a record-breaking heatwave. The stormy weather delayed more than 600 flights due to land or depart from Heathrow and Gatwick, some for more than six hours, while dozens more have been cancelled. One flight from Gatwick to Antalya scheduled to land in Turkey at 11:50am is now due in at 6pm. The UK’s air traffic control service, Nats, said disruption was “expected to continue through the rest of the day” due to “forecasted severe weather across the south-east of England”. Some travellers expressed their frustration on social media. One said they had been stuck on a grounded British Airways plane at Heathrow from 7am until noon. Another person said their daughter has been sat on an easyJet plane at Gatwick for four hours. According to flight tracker FlightAware, at least 367 flights due to land or take off from Heathrow were delayed on Saturday and 352 in and out of Gatwick. Some travellers have been stuck abroad in the sweltering heat. Twenty-nine-year-old Adam Joseph told BBC News that he had been stranded at Venice airport without air conditioning after his Gatwick-bound flight was delayed for at least four hours. “We could’ve stayed at the hotel for another three to four hours,” Joseph said. “We are also being told that even in the event of a four-hour-plus delay, because of an air traffic control restriction, we will not be entitled to compensation.” He added: “I’ve had to give up my chair to a family with a pregnant mother. “People are very angry … we have had no communication from [British Airways] whatsoever.” British Airways said in a statement: “Like other airlines, we’ve had to make some adjustments to our schedule today due to air traffic control restrictions caused by adverse weather conditions affecting parts of UK airspace. “While the vast majority of our customers will be unaffected, we apologise for the inconvenience caused and our teams are working hard to help those impacted get their journeys back on track.” EasyJet said it had to “pre-emptively cancel some flights to and from Gatwick in advance” over the thunderstorms. “We are doing all possible to minimise the impact of the weather disruption for our customers and are notifying passengers in advance with their options to rebook or receive a refund as well as hotel accommodation and meals where required,” a spokesperson said. Delays have also hit smaller airports including Leeds Bradford and Edinburgh, with three departures delayed at the former and four arrivals and 15 departures delayed at the latter on Saturday due to the weather. London City also experienced disruption, with a spokesperson for the airport saying: “Flights are gradually returning to normal following this morning’s weather-related air traffic restrictions. There have been some associated delays and cancellations.”

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Gracie the giraffe who wandered off in Texas found safe – for real this time

A giraffe who absconded from a private game ranch in rural Texas and effectively went missing for nearly two weeks was found safe on Friday just a few miles away from the homestead, according to authorities. An aerial search ultimately pinpointed the whereabouts of Gracie “the w[a]ndering giraffe”, said Nathan Johnson, the Real county sheriff, in a Facebook post announcing the success of efforts to find the creature. Johnson’s post punctuated a saga that began on 12 June when Gracie wandered out of her enclosure at the Cedar Hollow Ranch in Leakey, a town of about 700 residents that is a two-hour drive west of San Antonio. News of a reticulated giraffe that is native to several countries in eastern Africa managing to somehow vanish in the Texas hill country region spread wide and far on the internet. And Johnson’s office appealed in a news release for citizens to keep their eye out for Gracie, going so far as to list her distinguishing features lest anyone confuse her with any other animals in the area. Vick Jones, the Cedar Hollow Ranch manager, put up a $5,000 reward for information reuniting the site with Gracie – and he hired helicopters as well as drones to aid search efforts for the giraffe, San Antonio’s CBS News affiliate KENS reported. Searchers’ hopes were falsely raised late on Tuesday when, as the Guardian reported, the website for San Antonio’s NBC affiliate WOAI published a story that Gracie had been found safe. But Johnson subsequently said that report was inaccurate. “The giraffe has not been located,” Johnson said. “It’s still at large.” The local station then backed away from the inaccurate story, saying the original report “couldn’t be confirmed”. Johnson blamed the confusion over Gracie’s whereabouts at the time on misinformation sowed by “idiots in their pajamas in their mother’s basement on the internet with nothing else to do”. It was shortly before 10 on Friday morning in Leakey when Johnson published a genuine post informing his community that aerial search efforts from Jones and Jeff Hill of Concho Aviation had paid off by finding Gracie. The giraffe was about four miles (6.4km) to the south of Cedar Hollow Ranch, said Johnson, who attached overhead pictures of Gracie nestled among some shrubs on spartan terrain. “Mr Jones has contacted his veterinarian and is putting a team together to safely capture Gracie and bring her home,” Johnson’s post said. According to the outlet, Johnson told WOAI that Gracie was “fat and happy” when found and had a “catch me if you can, suckers,” attitude.

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All quiet on the eastern flank? Nato leaders fear they can no longer rely on US help if Russia attacks

A nightmare scenario has been playing on eastern European minds with increasing intensity since Donald Trump returned to the White House: what if Russia attacks and the US does not join the fight? On the rare occasions the question is posed out loud, nobody much likes the answer. In mid-May, at a gathering in Tallinn, the US undersecretary of state Thomas DiNanno was asked directly whether American troops would fight if Russia invaded the Baltic states. He shifted uncomfortably in his chair, then gave a meandering answer. It did not include the word “yes”. Politicians from the region usually try to sidestep the issue in public, claiming Washington’s commitment to Nato allies remains strong, and the alarming rhetoric from the Trump administration should not be taken to heart. “We shouldn’t pour fuel on the fire” is a mantra that was repeated in interviews by ministers from several countries on the eastern flank, where proximity to Russia infuses security debates with extra intensity. Others admit that things are fraught between Europe and the US, but say a break in relations is out of the question, because the security gaps if the Americans absconded would be unbridgeable. Dovilė Šakalienė, a former Lithuanian defence minister, compared the relationship to “a dysfunctional family where divorce is not an option”. In private, informal conversations are taking place in whispers. What would the response to a Russian attack look like if the US did not show up? Should Europe be doing everything to keep Trump on side – or be drawing up plans for the event that Washington does not come through? And will Vladimir Putin look at the unease in Nato and decide it is the perfect time to test the alliance’s resolve? This account tracks the discussions in the eastern half of Europe during the 18 months since Trump took office for a second term, and shows how the prevailing mood has morphed from cautious approval of his demands for Europe to spend more into real doubts over US commitment to collective defence. It draws on interviews with dozens of officials in multiple countries, including national leaders, foreign and defence ministers, intelligence bosses and diplomats, many of whom spoke without attribution to discuss one of the most sensitive current foreign policy debates. Ultimately, it is a psychological question as well as a geopolitical one. Eastern Europe has been one of the world’s most pro-American regions since the fall of communism. Poland joined Nato in 1999, the three Baltic states joined in 2004, and US security guarantees have been a fundamental part of national defence strategies ever since. Now, these countries face the possibility they might be abandoned by their primary ally. One senior official in the region described a sense of bemused disillusionment: “What do you do when your beloved father figure suddenly starts drinking and behaving in a way that is utterly incomprehensible? It’s hard to know how to act.” *** The first warning shots came in February 2025, less than a month into Trump’s second term, when the US defence secretary, Pete Hegseth, visited Nato headquarters in Brussels. In remarks laced with disdain, Hegseth told allies that in a world where China was on the rise, European security would no longer be a priority for Washington. Europe had to step up and pay for its own defence, said Hegseth, and the US would seek to withdraw from much of its stake in the continent’s security. It was an unwelcome reality check for many Europeans, who had hoped Trump’s second term would be much like his first – fiery rhetoric but little real policy change. Hegseth chastised Europeans for making lofty speeches about values while expecting Washington to foot the bill. “Values are important, but you can’t shoot values, you can’t shoot flags, and you can’t shoot strong speeches. There is no replacement for hard power,” he said. The ministerial meeting was followed by an informal lunch discussion. As the ministers ate, seated at tables arranged in a large square, the German defence minister, Boris Pistorius, told Hegseth that Europeans needed a timetable for the US drawdown, so they knew how long they had to fill the gaps. The idea was not popular in the room. “Lots of us were upset with Pistorius,” said one European official who was present. “The feeling was that the Americans haven’t even made their mind up yet, so don’t tempt them with an idea that might actually push them into it and speed things up.” Many from the eastern part of Europe felt there was a positive way to view Hegseth’s message. After all, Poland and the Baltic states had been pushing western European nations to increase their defence spending for years. If Europe could step up and prove it was willing to spend more, the Americans would stay engaged and the continent would be safer, went the thinking. “Europe had avoided, lagged behind and procrastinated for decades, so that cold shower was justified and necessary,” said Šakalienė, Lithuania’s defence minister at the time, recalling Hegseth’s demands. Hegseth’s aggressive messaging on Ukraine was harder to swallow. Two weeks later, Trump humiliated the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, during a televised White House showdown. Soon after, the US administration halted intelligence-sharing with Ukraine. The cutoff was reversed after little more than a week, but it left a lasting impression, demonstrating that the normal boundaries and frameworks of diplomacy had been tossed into the bin. The moment had a particular impact on the Polish prime minister, Donald Tusk, and his inner circle. “It felt like the ground shifting beneath their feet,” said one well-connected source in Warsaw. One senior European official remembered raising these concerns directly to the then US national security adviser, Mike Waltz, on a trip to Washington. The official asked Waltz how the US could abandon Ukraine in the middle of a war, and said senior military officers at home, who had served with American forces in Afghanistan, felt betrayed and doubted whether Washington was still a reliable ally. Waltz said Ukraine was different, and that such a decision would never be taken with regards to a Nato ally. The official pushed back, pointing out that credible deterrence was based largely on perception: “I said to him: ‘In these kinds of discussions, what people believe is almost more important than what the reality would be.’” *** A few days after the Oval Office debacle, Keir Starmer gathered the leaders of a group of countries that would become known as the “coalition of the willing” in London. In public remarks, the attenders tried to minimise what had just transpired in the White House. But inside the room at Lancaster House, there was a feeling that something had broken. “I could see it on the faces of all these leaders – no matter if they were from the left or right, it was clear they understood that the world had changed,” said one person present. After the London meeting, the format continued with regular video calls. The discussions ostensibly focused on coming up with a viable post-deal security arrangement for Ukraine, but the subtext was about how to keep Trump engaged in European security more broadly. At each meeting, the leaders would discuss which of them would be seeing or speaking to the US president in the coming days. “We’d coordinate the messages and think about how to spin it to Trump in a positive way, think about the best way to manoeuvre him on to the right side,” said a source who was on many of the calls. Nato’s Dutch secretary general, Mark Rutte, as well as the leaders of Britain, France, Germany and Italy, had most access to Trump. Countries on the eastern flank were marginalised in these discussions, but Finland’s president, Alexander Stubb, had built up a rapport with Trump on the golf course, and acted “as a kind of ambassador for all the smaller countries”, said the source. In June, the annual Nato summit took place in The Hague, amid apocalyptic predictions that Trump could use it to sound the death knell of the alliance. “Everyone was trying to share some bad scenario of how it will go, that it would be awkward, or bananas,” said one senior official who attended. In the end, the summit was as a success, largely thanks to the efforts of Rutte, who had made it his personal mission to keep Trump happy. Member states committed at the summit to raise defence their spending to 5% of gross domestic product by 2035 – a level already approached by Poland and the Baltic countries, but previously unthinkable even as a future target for many western European nations. Rutte made it clear this was Trump’s personal achievement, delighting the US president. Rutte’s fawning, including calling Trump “daddy” on the sidelines of the summit, was seen by many as distasteful but tolerable. “It’s cringe, but most European leaders are fine with it as long as he delivers Trump,” said one Nato official. The summit’s afterglow allowed some in eastern Europe to make the case again that Trump could turn out to be a net positive for the region’s security: the messaging might be chaotic and aggressive, but it had succeeded in forcing the reluctant western and southern Europeans into spending increases. “Barack Obama and Joe Biden asked politely for Europeans to spend more and it got us nowhere,” said the former Estonian president Kersti Kaljulaid. “It is only by being impolite and insistent that you can get Europe to change.” The problem, which would continually undermine such positivity, is that in the world of Trump, a firm promise today can be undone by a Truth Social post tomorrow. The stated US strategic goal of a shift away from Europe was unwelcome but theoretically manageable; the chaotic and unpredictable implementation was harder to deal with. For smaller states in particular, the peculiarities of Trump’s court can also cause problems with access. Ordinary communication channels do not work, US ambassadors often have little sway in the White House, and the circle of real decision-makers around Trump is so small that it is hard to gain influence over or insight into their thinking. “In Trump 1.0 we had nothing to complain about,” said Artis Pabriks, a former defence and foreign minister of Lativia. “People in the Pentagon and state department understood our needs very well. Now it’s completely different. We can’t get to deliver our message, we cannot predict, we cannot talk.” *** In September, about 20 Russian drones entered Polish airspace on a single night, in what appeared to be a calculated escalation and a test of Nato’s red lines. The alliance’s US chief commander in Europe, Alexus Grynkewich, liaised with Polish military headquarters in real time, opening up corridors for Dutch F-35 pilots to join Polish F-16s in the sky and shoot down many of the drones. “All sides try to compensate for the political situation with the quality of ties at a technical level,” said Sławomir Dębski, a Polish analyst and historian. The political messaging was more questionable. As the attack was unfolding, Trump posted an excited “Here we go!” on social media; he later suggested it “could have been a mistake” rather than a deliberate attack. In a rare rebuke, top Polish officials said publicly that Trump was wrong. “You can believe that one or two veer off target, but 19 mistakes in one night, over seven hours, sorry, I don’t believe it,” Poland’s foreign minister, Radosław Sikorski, told the Guardian at the time. In January, the next crisis moment emanated from Washington, not Moscow, when Trump doubled down on threats to annex Greenland from Denmark, a fellow Nato member. Some national capitals wrote alarmed requests to their missions asking for clarification on what would happen if Trump made good on his threats – could Denmark invoke article 5 of the North Atlantic treaty? Nato had not been designed for a scenario in which one member threatened another. One Nato diplomat described the feeling of those days as like looking into an abyss. The Greenland scare passed, partly with the help of more deft and fawning diplomacy from Rutte, but it was followed by Trump’s war on Iran. The new engagement in the Middle East has led to delays in US weapons deliveries to European allies and has contributed to the chaotic messaging on European security. In mid-May, Poland was shocked to learn that a rotation of 4,000 US troops scheduled to be deployed to the country imminently had been cancelled. Some had already arrived when the announcement was made. “We’re trying to find out what’s happening, but it’s hard to find an American who knows what’s happening,” said one official at the time. Trump soon reversed the cancellation via a Truth Social post, saying he was doing so because of his friendly ties with Poland’s nationalist president, Karol Nawrocki, who is at odds with the Tusk government. The implication was that troop levels could depend on Trump’s personal and political relationships with European leaders, something he has stated explicitly when criticising other countries. The personalisation of power under Trump means that every engagement where the man himself is present takes on outsized importance. This year’s Nato leaders summit will take place in Ankara in the second week of July, hosted by the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan. There had been cautious optimism at Nato that the summit would deliver another message of unity, partly based on a hope that the abundance of gold finishes and chandeliers at Erdoğan’s palace would put Trump in a good mood. However, just as allies were reiterating the need for unity ahead of Ankara, Hegseth came to Nato again last week and delivered another combative address. He blasted as “shameful” the decision by many European countries not to allow basing and overflight rights for Washington’s Iran war, and attacked Europe for focusing on “gender equity and climate change” instead of “tanks and fighters and air defences”. Hegseth announced a six-month review that would “examine America’s force posture and basing in Europe”, and said the US would lower its financial contributions to Nato if it found others were not meeting theirs (which many in western Europe are not). The eastern flank countries are ahead of spending targets and so should “pass” Hegseth’s review, but the public attacks again undermine the foundations of the alliance, and set a worrying tone before the summit in Turkey. *** Throughout the turbulence of the past 18 months, Europe has faced a choice: do everything to placate Trump and hope the next US president is more predictable, or speak publicly about the frustrations and try to prepare for a different kind of future where the US might really be absent? Rutte has told Nato leaders there is nothing to be gained from airing anger with Trump in public, and many agree. “It is not in our interest to be over-critical to the United States, given the personality of the American president,” said the Czech president, Petr Pavel. Most European leaders have taken the same line, although Giorgia Meloni’s acrimonious spat with Trump last week shows that even among some of his ideological allies, patience with the US president’s personality is wearing thin. Among eastern European nations, the Polish government has become an increasingly vocal outlier in recent months, perhaps encouraged by surveys showing Trump has historically low approval ratings for a US president among Poles. “We have been and will remain a loyal ally of America, but we cannot be suckers,” Sikorski told parliament in February. In the Baltic states, caution still dominates. In interviews, the foreign ministers of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania said that panic over the future of the transatlantic relationship was misplaced. “Of course the tension is concerning, but it needs to be dealt with in very calm ways,” said Estonia’s Margus Tsahkna. Dr Kristi Raik, who runs the ICDS, a leading Estonian thinktank, said this Baltic consensus might soon need to be overhauled. With Europe possibly on the brink of generational geopolitical upheaval, simply insisting that the transatlantic alliance will endure is a problematic strategy. “We cannot prepare ourselves for this possible future scenario if people are too scared to talk about it,” she said. Reorienting towards a more Europe-focused security policy would involve proactive decision-making to change defence procurement and foreign policy positions, conversations that most politicians are unwilling to have for fear of provoking Trump and speeding up the US withdrawal. It all leads to a twisted and partial public discourse: “I don’t remember this level of self-censorship in public foreign policy discourse since the late Soviet period,” Raik said. *** To show Europe’s seriousness in the face of US demands, several European countries have sent troops to the Baltics under the Nato umbrella, most symbolically Germany, which is deploying a full brigade of troops to Lithuania in what will be the first permanent German foreign base since the second world war. Many new alliances or coalitions have been mooted: the former Nato chief Anders Fogh Rasmussen said this week that a European defence coalition, including Ukraine, should be created to defend the continent; the EU has created a new role of defence commissioner to increase coordination; and the French president, Emmanuel Macron, has offered to extend France’s nuclear umbrella over more countries in Europe, including Poland. There are elements of US hard power that are more difficult to replace, however. High-quality air defence systems and deep-strike capabilities are two key areas where it would take time and directed funding to close the gap. Intelligence gathering is another weak spot. A senior European intelligence official said the combined collection capabilities on Russia of all Nato intelligence agencies minus the US still amounted to “less than the US produces on its own”. For many, the idea of Europe managing alone does not bear contemplation. “If anyone thinks that the European Union, or Europe as a whole, can defend itself without the US, keep on dreaming. You can’t,” Rutte said bluntly while addressing the European parliament in January. Most in eastern Europe agree, and have tried to convince the US administration of the mutual benefits of retaining US commitments in Europe. “It’s not a one-way street. Americans also have an interest in being here,” said Sikorski. He conceded that some kind of US drawdown was now inevitable, and said he expected the eventual outcome to be a “Nato Mark 3”, in which Europe shouldered more of the burden and the US was “a cavalry-over-the-hill kind of ally”. Baiba Braže, the Latvian foreign minister, agreed. “Europeans have social welfare states with big budgets. Over the medium to long term, we should be able to handle a threat like Russia conventionally, with the US providing extended nuclear deterrence,” she said. There are two problems with transitioning to this model. First, western European governments have balked at prioritising defence over other pressing spending needs, as demonstrated recently in the spat that led to the UK defence secretary John Healey resigning. Second, there is doubt that the US is willing to commit to an orderly shifting of burdens rather than an abrupt break. If Trump finds himself more constrained after the midterms later this year, unpredictability may decrease. Yet the possibility of the US vice-president, JD Vance, or a similar ideologue entering the Oval Office in future could result in the US withdrawing from Europe with much more zeal than under Trump’s zigzagging, personality-based policies. “Trump at least has some fascination for Europe and a lingering desire for European approval; with Vance there is nothing but disdain for us,” said one official. In the short term, the key question is whether the very public tensions around collective defence have eroded the perception in the Kremlin that an incursion into Nato territory would provoke an overwhelming military response. “I’m less concerned about Nato; I think if we implement our pledges, everything will be OK,” said Lithuania’s foreign minister, Kęstutis Budrys. “I’m more concerned about the projection of unity that we’re showing to Russia, that they could find themselves making the crazy assessment that maybe it’s the right time.” *** On a recent afternoon during Estonia’s annual “spring storm” military exercises, drones buzzed in the air and quad bikes carrying ammunition deliveries sped along dusty forest roads. The war games, which lasted several weeks, involved 44,000 Estonian soldiers and volunteers as well as French and British troops, spread across a swath of public territory in the south-east of the country. In a sleepy village just three miles from the Russian border, a detachment of French troops prepared to defend the territory during the exercise’s active phase: the repulsion of an imagined Russian ground invasion of Estonia and Latvia, with simultaneous hybrid elements. As long as the Russian army remains tied up in Ukraine, the Kremlin has little available capacity to launch this kind of traditional attack against Nato. “We don’t see it. There are no capabilities,” said Tsahkna, the Estonian foreign minister. The Russian garrisons and bases close to the borders with the Baltic states are mostly empty. Nor would a clearcut invasion make much political sense at a time when Nato is riven by internal divisions. “The feeling in Russia is that as long as Trump is deepening tensions in the alliance, we don’t need to get in the way of that; we can let these cracks get wider,” said Peter Schroeder, a former senior analyst at the CIA. Instead, Putin is likely to continue with “hybrid” attacks involving sabotage, drones or other so-called “grey zone” warfare that would test the alliance’s red lines while retaining deniability and sowing chaos. How might Washington react if dozens of Russian kamikaze drones hit Warsaw or a Baltic capital? Or if an act of sabotage caused mass casualties? These are the questions that keep regional security officials awake at night. If Ukraine is forced to sign a peace deal and Russia has time to regroup, the Kremlin’s appetite for testing Nato may grow. One possible disaster scenario is presented in If Russia Wins: A Scenario, a short book by the German academic Carlo Masala that was released last year and is already in its 14th reprint in Germany. The book covers an unfolding, hypothetical crisis in spring 2028: Ukraine has been forced to concede territory to Russia after western support collapses, and now Kremlin leaders decide to test Nato by rolling tanks into Narva, an Estonian city of 50,000 mostly Russian-speaking residents, nestled against the border with Russia. In Masala’s scenario, Moscow assures Washington that the invasion is limited and merely meant to protect Russian speakers in Estonia. As allied leaders gather on a conference call to discuss the response, the unnamed but distinctly Trump-like US president makes one thing clear: “I’m not going to risk World War III over some small town in Estonia,” he tells allies. Some eastern European officials said the scenario was nonsensical, because of the increased authority vested in Nato’s military commanders since 2022. Nato’s top commander in Europe now has the authority to reinforce the border zones as soon as there are signs of Russia preparing an offensive operation. “If we see from the Russian side various things happening, then we will already start moving troops,” said Rob Bauer, the chair of the Nato military committee until last year. Nonetheless, said Masala, the principle of political control meant that the troop movements could be overruled at any moment by a single phone call: “It only works if no leader calls up the commander of their national unit to say: ‘Don’t move your ass.’” This is the uncertainty that sits at the core of European concerns about American reliability. For as long as Trump is in the White House, it creates a situation that Jana Puglierin of the European Council on Foreign Relations calls “Schrödinger’s Nato” – a state of ambiguity over whether the US is in or out, which will continue until a hypothetical moment of truth arrives. “Nobody knows the real status of the relationship until we ‘open the box’ – until Nato is tested militarily,” she said. “But by then, it might be too late for the Europeans.”