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Germany says it expected Trump’s withdrawal of US troops as row over Iran comments grows – live

The UK Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) said suspicious activity had been reported 84 nautical miles southwest of the port of Mukalla in Yemen. A bulk carrier reported that a small boat and a fishing vessel came within 500m of it, according to UKMTO. Since the US-Israeli war against Iran began on 28 February, reports coming into UKMTO have gone “through the roof”, particularly in the strait of Hormuz, according to the Royal Navy, which runs the centre. UKMTO recorded 41 incidents between 1 March and 27 April, the majority of which were attacks where ships were damaged, their crew harmed, or they suffered collateral damage. “The most distressing calls are those from ships under attack,” said Cmdr Jo Black, UKMTO head of operations. “It’s an absolutely terrifying experience for them – they’re civilians, they’re not prepared for this – drones, missiles, small arms fire aimed at their bridge or engine room, and threats to their safety – so they’re stressed, many speak only very rudimentary English and they’re trying to describe things often beyond their comprehension.

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Australian activists released in Crete allege mistreatment by Israeli forces who intercepted Gaza flotilla

Three Australian activists say they have launched a hunger strike in Crete, after being left there by Israeli authorities following the interception of a flotilla attempting to transport aid to Gaza. Ethan Floyd, Neve O’Connor and Zack Schofield – three of six Australians released after their ships were intercepted on Wednesday – said they and their colleagues were subjected to mistreatment while held for two days onboard an Israeli vessel. Greek officials said 31 of the roughly 175 activists from the flotilla were taken to a hospital on Crete. Schofield said the three Australians have since been discharged from Sitia hospital but remain on the island. Twenty-two vessels were intercepted off the coast of Crete on Wednesday evening while travelling as part of the Global Sumud flotilla, which left Italy on Monday. Schofield, who spoke with Guardian Australia after his release, said the activists were held by Israel on a transport ship. He said the vessel had been retrofitted as a prison, with the main deck dominated by shipping containers surrounded by barbed wire. Schofield alleged the protesters were subjected to violence by the Israeli forces, despite claims from Israel’s foreign minister that they were “taken off unharmed”. “They took people into the fourth shipping container and beat them with the butts of their rifles and batons, and with their fists and their feet,” he said. “I saw a man shot at point-blank range with a rubber bullet in the leg and in the back. A friend of mine who was in the American delegation told me he was dragged into that fourth shipping container and repeatedly kicked in the testicles, among many other places that they beat him.” Sign up for the Breaking News Australia email Schofield alleged he witnessed a young Colombian woman being repeatedly punched in the ribs by an IDF soldier. Guardian Australia has not independently verified Schofield’s allegations. He described the treatment he received himself on board as “mild violence”. “I had two flash-bang grenades thrown directly at my feet as I was sitting opposite the entrance to the prison yard, and I had to duck out of the way before they exploded in my face,” he said. “I was forced into stress positions, kneeling on the floor for lengths of time with my head slammed against the ground.” He said crowded conditions meant about a quarter of the detainees were forced to sleep outside at any given time, and were flooded twice after Israeli soldiers pumped sea water over the deck. The Guardian has sought comment from the IDF and the Israeli embassy in Australia. Schofield, Floyd and O’Connor announced via video they had decided not to take any food from the Israelis “as they continued their starvation of the Palestinian people”, and until the Israeli authorities released two of the flotilla leaders, Thiago Ávila from Brazil and Saif Abu Keshek from Spain. The Israeli foreign affairs ministry has confirmed Ávila and Abu Keshek were to be transported back to Israel “for questioning”. “This Hamas-led-flotilla is another provocation designed to divert attention from Hamas’s refusal to disarm – and to serve the PR interests of professional provocateurs,” Israel’s foreign minister,” Gideon Sa’ar, posted on X on Friday. “Saif Abu Keshek, suspected of affiliation with a terrorist organisation and Thiago Ávila suspected of illegal activity, will be brought to Israel for questioning. Israel will not allow the breach of the lawful naval blockade on Gaza.” Flotilla organisers said the detention of the two men was illegal and asked international governments to pressure Israel for their immediate release. Several European governments with nationals among those arrested have called on Israel to free the activists and called its action a flagrant contravention of international law. Spain demanded the immediate release of Keshek, a Spanish national. Sa’ar has defended the operation, posting on X that the IDF “successfully blocked attempts to breach the lawful naval blockade” and insisting that all participants “were taken off unharmed”. Three other Australians – Bianca Webb-Pullman, Surya McEwen and Cameron Tribe – were also released. The Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (Dfat) said consular staff were on the island to provide assistance. “We are also continuing to liaise with local authorities in Israel and Greece including to confirm the detention of any Australians,” a Dfat spokesperson said in a statement. “Australia has been part of the international call on Israel to comply with the binding orders of the International Court of Justice, including to enable the provision of basic services and humanitarian assistance at scale. “We understand people want to respond to the humanitarian situation in Gaza but we continue to urge Australians not to join others seeking to break the Israeli naval blockade as they will be putting themselves and others at risk of injury, death, arrest or deportation. “We encourage those wishing to deliver humanitarian aid to Gaza to do so through established channels.” Supporters in Australia were planning a paddle-out event on Sydney Harbour on Sunday to show solidarity with the flotilla. – with Agence France Presse

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‘We feel angry – and we have reason to be’: Brazil’s resurgent punk scene is a howl of outrage at injustice

As black-clad police combatants charged into the hillside favela and opened fire, a black-clad punk scurried out of the community in the opposite direction, his hands trembling from fright. “Holy shit! All those guns! Things are getting ugly!” spluttered Rodrigo Cilirio, the founder and bassist of one of Rio’s most enduring punk bands, as he took cover behind a tree. It was here in the Morro da Lagartixa on Rio’s volatile northside that Cilirio’s group, Repressão Social (Social Repression), was born just over 30 years ago: a howl of rage against the relentless cycle of urban violence, police brutality, deprivation and discrimination that continues to plague the outskirts of Brazil’s largest cities. “[Punk] is my way of letting it all out so I don’t choke to death. It’s my voice,” Cilirio, 47, explained while waiting for the gunfire to subside near the favela where he grew up. “This is what we are exposed to,” the black musician sighed of that morning’s gun battle, during which one local was shot in the leg. “Punks go through what everyone goes through: bullets flying and a life of stress … every single day.” Fifty years after punk culture took off on the streets and stages of the UK, the movement is alive and kicking in Brazil and across the world, from Indonesia and Myanmar to Colombia and Mexico. “The global south has really embraced punk culture as a way to respond to their own individual and local contexts … I suspect it’s outlived and gone global more than most people would probably have expected from the outset,” said Kevin Dunn, author of Global Punk: Resistance and Rebellion in Everyday Life. Dunn partly attributed that expansion to the flexibility of punk’s do-it-yourself culture. Colombian bands have embraced traditional Indigenous instruments while Mexican and Guatemalan sounds have influenced southern California’s punk scene. “It can mould to whatever kind of local musical tradition is around,” Dunn said. Punk music exploded in London and New York in the mid-1970s with bands such as the Sex Pistols and Ramones – although some trace its roots to a Peruvian group called Los Saicos (the Psychos) a decade earlier. Dunn called the movement “a response to the stultifying, oppressive aspects of life” and frustration at social conservatism, unemployment and the unfulfilled promises of modernisation. “There was a lot of discontent and what punk did was [capture] the forms of alienation that people felt … where the forces of life – economic, political, social – they’re all up there beating down on you … [Punks thought]: The world is shit and … we’re gonna push back.” Half a century later Latin American punks continue to push back, as police militarisation, gender-based violence, corruption, racism, inequality and a resurgence of authoritarian governance and far-right politics provide a backdrop and motivation. “Punk started over in Europe but it became much stronger here because the violence is so much worse,” said Cilirio, who has lost numerous friends and acquaintances to deadly police violence which disproportionately affects young black men. Brazil’s punk scene is focused on the hardscrabble working-class fringes of cities such as São Paulo, Belo Horizonte and Rio; places like the Morro da Lagartixa (Lizard Hill) favela, where Repressão Social formed in 1995. “It’s about police violence. It’s about poverty. It’s about all the people living on the streets. We deal with all of this [in our songs],” Cilirio, who friends call Abutre (Vulture) because of his religiously black attire, said during a Friday night band practice fuelled by dirt-cheap ginger cognac and cigarettes. The musician compared his socially divided city to colonial-era Brazil, when wealthy enslavers lived in opulent residences called the “casa grande” and their workers in quarters called the “senzala”. “This is the modern-day senzala,” Cilirio said of the depressed redbrick favelas that blanket the hills around his home. “They banished everyone here to the suburbs … and all they care about is our cheap workforce.” The band’s scarlet dreadlocked vocalist Vic Morphine, who lives in Rio’s oldest favela, Providência, said she had been drawn to punk by her indignation at social injustice and violence against women. “We feel angry – and we have reason to be angry,” said Morphine, 31, calling punk a way of “expressing all my outrage in my way of being, in my style, in my voice and in the music I make”. The singer included Brazilian punk in long history of resistance and uprisings, including 1835’s Malês slave revolt of African Muslims and the War of Canudos in 1896. At a recent gig a barefoot Morphine launched into a fevered rendition of a song excoriating the barbarity of 21st-century life. “Massacres! Murders! … They snatch you! They kill you! There is no more hope!” she shrieked into the mic as a mixed-breed poodle with a pink mohican circled the mosh pit. Punk culture has spread far beyond Brazil’s big cities since it first landed in the land of samba and bossa nova at the tail-end of the 1964-85 dictatorship. One recent Sunday, scores of music fans flocked to a skate park in a rural city called Varginha to watch punk and hardcore bands, including Repressão Social play, although in true punk style, the Rio band failed to turn up. Moshing at the heart of the circle pit was Willkesley Franciscato, a 35-year-old punk with a circle-A tattoo on his biceps. “Punk has this really virulent ideology, like a virus. It has the capacity to contaminate people who are just fed up with everything…. Punk contaminates everyone who identifies with these questions of freedom, equality, believing in a better future,” Franciscato said. Varginha’s oldest punk, 45-year-old Kleberson Eugênio da Silva, believed the resurgence in punk culture under way in Brazil had come just in the nick of time. During the far-right 2018-2023 presidency of Jair Bolsonaro neo-Nazi skinheads came out of the woodwork, emboldened by his radical and racist rhetoric, Silva claimed. “It was a massive trigger for these guys to hit the streets … Before, they hid away … now you see them parading all over the place. We can’t allow this to grow,” said the punk who has a scar on his belly from being stabbed during an altercation with a Brazilian bonehead. Twenty-four hours after the police operation on Lizard Hill, calm had returned as Cilirio led the way through deserted streets covered in graffiti glorifying the local drug gang. In a cluttered backroom, he showed off a treasure trove of counterculture memorabilia: dog-eared demo tapes, screenprinted T-shirts and anarchist pamphlets. Punk rallying cries cried out from the collaged pages of handwritten punk zines in a mix of English and Portuguese. “Fight back … Hell Vomit … Fuck Nazi … Guns don’t kill hunger! … Resist!” Hanging from a washing line was a T-shirt stamped with a cartoon of a ski-masked punk decapitating Donald Trump with a hunting knife. “It’s a museum,” Cilirio said, showing off his group’s first record, a 14-track blaze of high-octane anti-establishment fury called Police Brutality. One zine in his collection contained the lyrics to a 1981 track by Discharge, a hardcore punk group from Stoke-on-Trent whose words perfectly captured the futility of Rio’s “war on drugs”. “It’s all a fuckin’ farce,” they said. “A stray bullet kills an innocent child. Nothing’s gained and nothing’s solved.” Another sheet of lyrics had been penned by Cilirio to celebrate his movement’s unstoppable global march. “We are suburban punks. Favela punks. Third world punks,” he wrote, before proclaiming: “Punk culture will never die”.

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The tipping point: what happens when deaths outnumber births?

In Japan, there are now companies that specialise in cleaning the apartments of elderly people who have died alone and gone undiscovered for weeks or months, while adult incontinence pads have outstripped nappy sales for more than a decade. In Italy, depopulating villages are selling homes for €1 to attract new residents and keep services running. In the UK, falling pupil numbers are already closing schools and classrooms in parts of London. These are not isolated curiosities, but signs of a broader shift taking place across much of the developed world. “In the EU in 2024, 21 of 27 countries had more deaths than births,” said Prof Sarah Harper, the director of the Oxford Institute of Population Ageing. Across Asia and the Americas, too – from Japan and South Korea, to Cuba and Uruguay – many countries are seeing the same pattern. It reflects two long-running demographic changes: people are living longer, and the average number of children they are having – something demographers refer to as fertility – is falling. In the UK, the latest projections from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) suggest that deaths will outnumber births every year from 2026 onwards, driven by falling fertility and the large, postwar “baby boom” generation living longer than previous generations, but now reaching later life. The population is still expected to grow, but more slowly than previously forecast, peaking at about 72.5 million in 2054 before beginning to gradually decline. Earlier projections had suggested growth would continue until 2096. “Although the point where there are more deaths than births is emotionally significant, it’s part of a long process,” said Dr Paul Morland, a demographer and author of No One Left: Why the World Needs More Children. Life expectancy has been rising since the late 18th century, while fertility has been declining since the late 19th century, aside from a brief mid-20th century rebound. “There comes a point when these two lines cross,” he said. The reasons people are having fewer children are complex. A fertility rate of 2.1 children per woman is typically needed for a population to replace itself over time. The UK rate is 1.44. “Recent fertility declines in the UK have been especially marked in those under 30, indicating some postponement,” said Prof Melanie Channon, of the University of Bath. “However, even accounting for the trend towards later parenthood, fertility is still declining.” These changes are already being felt. “In the short run, those in sectors that serve children – maternity care, schools, childminders – and new parents are feeling the falling number of births,” said Dr Bernice Kuang, of the University of Southampton. Falling enrolment is forcing some schools to close, while businesses such as soft play centres and childminders are struggling. Even midwifery training is affected, as students must attend a minimum number of births. The effects of such struggles extend beyond children themselves. “Working parents – disproportionately mothers – may have to leave the labour force or reduce their hours,” Kuang said, with implications for the economy and gender equality. Meanwhile, longer lifespans are contributing to a gradual “greying” of the population, with consequences of its own. As populations age, Morland says, they tend to become more risk-averse, with investment flowing into safer assets rather than innovation, while a smaller, older workforce may be less entrepreneurial and able to sustain economic growth. The pressures on public finances are also stark, with fewer workers supporting rising spending on pensions, health and social care. Older people require far higher levels of support, placing a growing burden on younger workers. At the same time, consumption patterns are shifting. Younger people tend to spend more on goods and appliances, whereas older people spend more on care and other services that cannot easily be automated or offshored. “Just as your labour force is drying up, you have more demands for local hands-on labour,” Morland said. Many developed nations face similar pressures. What is striking, however, is how these trends have spread beyond the richest economies. In many middle- and lower-income countries, fertility is falling despite more limited economic development. Parts of Latin America, as well as countries such as Jamaica and Thailand, and states in India including Tamil Nadu and Kerala, have fertility rates comparable with – or lower than – those in Britain. “There are countries that will grow old before they grow rich,” said Morland. All this marks a shift in how demographic change unfolds. Historically, falling birthrates followed rising incomes, urbanisation and education – the so-called demographic transition. But now fertility is declining more rapidly than economic development, driven in part by changing aspirations and social norms. Even so, the pattern is not uniform. Israel remains unusual in maintaining much higher birth rates – about 3 children per woman – suggesting that culture may play a role. The UK, too, may be more resilient than some of its neighbours. “There is a very strong and persistent two-child norm in the UK, which means our fertility rate is slightly more buoyant than some other European countries where single children are more accepted,” said Channon. In parts of sub-Saharan Africa, fertility remains high and populations are growing rapidly, even as mortality declines. In parts of central Asia, meanwhile, economies have grown without the same decline in births. Migration also plays a crucial role. While deaths may outnumber births, the UK’s population is still expected to grow for now, largely because of net inward migration, albeit at lower levels than previously assumed. Demographic projections are not destiny. They do not account for unexpected shocks or policy shifts, and migration is particularly difficult to predict. As the ONS puts it: “Projections are not forecasts.” If the direction of travel is clear, the question becomes not so much whether demographic change can be reversed, but how societies respond to it. Some changes are already “baked in”, reflecting what demographers call population momentum – the way large generations moving through populations continue to shape their size and age structure. “Population growth will slow down, but it will be a long time before it reverses,” said Kuang, pointing to China, where decades of low fertility have only recently translated into population decline. This means there is time to act. Morland argues that countries with low fertility rates face difficult trade-offs between economic growth, migration and birthrates – though others suggest the picture is more complex. Rather than trying to “fix” falling birthrates, policymakers should prepare for an older population – from rethinking how old age support is funded, to enabling people to remain in work for longer. “Simply telling people to have more babies is unlikely to work,” said Kuang. These changes may need to be far-reaching. As Harper, the author of the forthcoming book Ageing Societies: Risk and Resilience, puts it: “The main challenge is that 20th-century labour markets, pension systems, family norms, healthcare institutions and long-term care arrangements were built under demographic conditions that no longer prevail.” Adapting to longer lives will therefore require rethinking how people work, retire and are supported in later life. “The traditional linear life course – education, continuous employment, abrupt retirement – is increasingly obsolete,” said Harper. Instead, longer lives may involve more flexible patterns of work, retraining and phased retirement, alongside efforts to tackle ageism and support lifelong learning, as well as redesigning homes, transport and public spaces to support independence and connection in later life. And even if telling people to have more children is unlikely to work, there may be ways of supporting them to have the children they want. “Everyone should have the right to decide how many children they have, and when,” said Channon. Yet, many are unable to do so: in three-quarters of surveyed countries, more than 40% of women end their reproductive lives with fewer children than they would like, reflecting economic insecurity, work-family conflict and wider social constraints. Policies that support families, particularly affordable childcare and parental leave, can make a difference, said Channon, but are more effective at helping people realise their intentions than dramatically raising birthrates. She and others also call for more comprehensive reproductive health education in schools, noting that “curricula often don’t include important topics such as fertility, preconception health, pregnancy and miscarriage”, which might impact young people’s ability to make informed choices, Channon said. Migration can help ease labour shortages in the short term, as those who move for work are typically young and economically active, but it is not a magic bullet. Migrants also age, meaning a fixed level of migration would not be enough to keep pace with reduced fertility and an ageing population. “And I am also wary of the ethics of encouraging migrants to come to the UK solely to fill labour gaps while making a path to settlement, or any kind of viable long-term future here, extremely difficult,” said Kuang. Others point to wider ethical questions, including the impact on countries that lose skilled workers to richer economies. The good news is that demographic change rarely arrives with a jolt. It unfolds gradually until its effects are visible everywhere – in classrooms, in health and social care, and in the shifting relationships between generations. The question now is whether those changes continue to accumulate quietly, or whether governments and societies begin to confront them more openly, and work on ways to adapt.

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Hope out of chaos: how the dark era of Trump is creating a new approach to global politics

Antonio de Aguiar Patriota, Brazil’s ambassador to London, had no difficulty joining the dystopians describing the modern world in a recent speech, a world suffering from “global warming and environmental degradation, multiple conflicts, rising military budgets, disregard for international law and international humanitarian law, disruptions to trade, erosion of democratic governance and technological developments that are met with excitement and fear”. Yet beneath the surface, he said, “something is happening. Something is moving.” The change Patriota could detect in “the global north” was a new division into “two poles, a unilateralist superpower on the one hand and a majority of multilateralists on the other”. “The highly unpopular and illegal war in Iran is fast becoming a vivid example of the chaos and instability bred by unilateralism,” he said. “It is laying bare a perception that the world will not be made unipolar again.” The argument that the current dark era of American unilateralism and lawless militarism may be coming to a premature end, sinking below the waters in the strait of Hormuz, is gathering momentum as other western countries recover their poise and place long-term bets that they can no longer cower under the US security blanket. They have seen what meagre protection that blanket provided for the Gulf monarchies and how little it has promoted European interests in Ukraine, and many have finally realised they are better off with different, diverse friendship groups. In a recent speech in China, the Spanish prime minister, Pedro Sánchez, explained “what is happening today is not a transfer of hegemonies. It is a multiplication of poles – not only of power, but also of prosperity.” This was something to be celebrated, the liberal leader said. “For the first time in contemporary history, progress is germinating simultaneously in many places across the planet. This is happening here in China, in Asia. But also on the African continent and in a region very close to Spain: Latin America.” But it is not just leftwingers claiming the era of American primacy is on the wane. It is embedded in the thinking of Paris, Brussels, Warsaw and even Berlin. Friedrich Merz, the centre-right chancellor of the impeccably Atlanticist Germany, initially neutral about the lawfulness of the US attack on Iran, has declared that the US is being humiliated by Iran, and likens Donald Trump’s misjudgment in launching his attack on Tehran to those made by his predecessors in their invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan. Instead of cowering, disagreeing or hoping Trump’s attacks on Europe’s feckless freeloaders might be a passing phase, many European countries are embracing his advice to take more responsibility for defence. As a result, a bypass around America is being constructed. Similarly, on the global stage, the demands are growing that western powers – not just the US – relinquish their outsized representation in global institutions in favour of the global south. Few of these changes will occur overnight or prove linear. But Iran, and the running mutual resentments it is stirring between Trump and Europe, are accelerating the process of detachment. Decline in US dependability Prof Stephen Walt, of Harvard University, recently explained this is partly because American influence is not just a function of its wealth or power. It’s also a function of how the US is viewed. He said it was important for allies “to think that the United States knows what it’s doing, not that it’s infallible, but it generally knows what it’s doing, that it can execute a plan in a competent fashion. The Trump administration has sent a message to the rest of the world that that’s not the case any more, and that means other states are going to be less likely to rely on American advice going forward, at least for a while.” Walt added that “the other message this war has sent is that the administration really cared about only one other country in the world, Israel, and that came at the expense of other allies in Europe and Asia”, because of the huge economic damage the war has caused and the lack of consultation with other allies before the war began. The former US ambassador to London, Jane Hartley, recently said of the British prime minister: “In defence of Keir Starmer, what was our goal in Iran? What was the legal basis for this war? What was our plan B? What was our exit strategy? We could not answer any of those questions. But what is most troubling is the public. Because the public no longer thinks America is a force for good.” But for this to be more than another temporary episode of US retreat, it requires more than a change in attitude. What is needed is a serious attempt to build other poles and alternative forms of cooperation besides the US. That process is now under way. Building new alliances Mark Carney, the Canadian prime minister, has set out his concept of a middle powers grouping, and Canada has already signed more than 20 economic and security deals, including with China, to increase exports outside its US base. New ad hoc alliances and trade corridors that do not go through Washington are being formed. From the Brazilian perspective it is new “coalitions of the responsible” that are being created, with “coordination across regions, cultures and political systems”. Patriota also praised the new, confident, more political groupings challenging populism and American militarism. The inaugural meeting of Global Progressive Mobilisation in Barcelona in April was attended by leaders including Brazil’s Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, Mexico’s Claudia Sheinbaum, South Africa’s Cyril Ramaphosa, the Barbados prime minister, Mia Mottley, as well of course as the new poster child of the European left, Sánchez. Sánchez told the progressives to be confident about what lay ahead despite a “horizon full of uncertainty” and “the noise of the subservient right”. “Do not be fooled,” he said. “The far right and the right are not shouting because they are winning; they are shouting because they know their time is running out.” His willingness to condemn the Iran war as illegal, a view not initially voiced by the British or Germans, has infuriated Trump, but Sánchez knows, as does the European right, that Trump has become an electoral albatross. Even Nigel Farage denies him thrice. Trump’s response is to threaten to throw Spain out of Nato, something he does not have the power to do, or to withdraw troops from Germany. US commitment to Nato becomes a bargaining chip. For instance, instead of praising Germany for planning to boost its number of active duty soldiers by 75,000 by the mid-2030s, Trump threatens. Like a pyromaniac, he burns alliances for fun. Macron has warned that Trump’s daily questioning of US commitment to Nato is corrosive. “It threatens to empty Nato of substance,” he has suggested. The signs of a reaction to this are springing up in surprising places. For instance, there can be few bodies that so faithfully represent the British establishment as the House of Lords select committee on international relations and defence. Its members include the former Nato secretary general George Robertson, the former UK ambassador to Washington, Kim Darroch, and the former Conservative chancellor, Norman Lamont. Yet in its recent report on the future of the US special relationship, the peers were unconstrained in their criticism of America. “US intelligence is being politicised … force is no longer a last resort. A leadership vacuum is being created … the changing complexion of US foreign and defence policy means the current degree of UK reliance is no longer tenable. Future UK policymaking on Russia and security in eastern Europe and the high north should no longer take US support in conventional deterrence as given. “Nor can the UK rely on historic goodwill and cultural affinity to sustain the relationship in an increasingly transactional context.” The solution was for the UK no longer to be infantilised by the US – in Robertson’s phrase – and “lead on a concentrated move towards greater European leadership in Nato”. Defence in Europe The idea of a European Defence Union, complementary to Nato, is now increasingly aired in the European Commission, one involving Britain, Norway and Ukraine as well as EU countries – something Volodymyr Zelenskyy himself advocates. John Lough, the head of foreign policy at the New Eurasian Strategies Centre thinktank, said: “There is growing recognition in the European core of Nato that for Europe to defend itself against Russia will require integrating Ukraine into a European defence framework. Ukraine has the largest conventional army in Europe with more than four years’ up-to-date experience of fighting the Russians. “It also has a capable and innovative defence industry that has shown the ability to develop new weapons at speed. The agreements signed between Germany and Ukraine earlier this month on drone production and the sharing of battlefield data for the development of new weapons systems are a sign of things to come. “Ukraine is a world leader in the development of drone capabilities, including drone interceptors. It is hardly a surprise that Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the UAE have quickly signed deals with Ukraine on drone cooperation after coming under attack by Iran.” Humanity at stake But the transformation is not just about Europe restructuring its defences faced with an unreliable ally, it is whether this decline in US primacy is seen as a badly needed opportunity to address the wider global crisis. For millions of people, the head of the UN humanitarian programme, Tom Fletcher, said last week: “The international order is not on the cusp of collapse, it has already collapsed. What we are going through right now is not a drill.” Fletcher called for greater honesty about the scale of global upheaval and the need for a renewed seriousness in public life. This is because the way Trump and his fellow travellers have put an axe to international law has made the task of humanitarians near impossible. Indeed, humanity itself is under attack, Agnès Callamard, the secretary general of Amnesty International, said in presenting the human rights organisation’s 2025 report. She described 2025 as the year of the predators. Over 500 pages, Amnesty International set out a report card for the world in which humanity scored badly owing to “genocide and crimes against humanity in Gaza”, “crimes against humanity” in Ukraine, extrajudicial killings committed by the US outside its borders, and attacks on Venezuela and Iran. The world has been plunged into an age of unorder, as Mark Leonard, the director of the European Council on Foreign Relations thinktank, puts it in his new book Surviving Chaos. Leonard warns that “to talk about disorder implies that there is an order that people agree on and that people are breaking the rules, but I think our world is quite different from that. The rules are not being violated. They’re being ignored as irrelevant. There is no stable balance of power. There’s no agreement on what the rules are.” He added: “The difficulty is that the US regards its domestic strength rather than international institutions or global alliances as the basis of its security.” Yet as Patriota said, something is moving, or poised to move. The unipolarists – he identified the US, Russia and Israel – retain their power to punish and wreak revenge. Trump can still mesmerise every news cycle. In France and Germany, the populist right are ascendant. But at the same time, the unipolarists are an embattled minority even in their own countries and finding it increasingly hard to locate allies or impose their will. A new UN secretary general next year would at least have the chance to challenge the current unrepresentative security council – made up of the second world war victors China, France, Russia, UK and US – to reform after 30 years of failing to do so. In this post-rupture world in which Washington’s reliability can no longer be assumed, and in which Beijing’s partnership, however complicated, cannot be refused, everything suddenly is up for grabs. A US reverse in Iran may not have the visual symbolism of the retreat from Saigon or Kabul, but its reverberations could yet be as wide.

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Ukraine war briefing: Russian oil hub of Tuapse hit for fourth time as environmental disaster mounts

Ukrainian drones struck Russia’s Black Sea port of Tuapse on Friday for the fourth time in 16 days as authorities struggled to cope with a growing environmental disaster from toxic black smoke clouds and oil leaking into the sea. Ukraine’s SBU security service said drones had again struck the seaport and refinery that make Tuapse an important hub for Russian oil exports. Local Russian officials said a major operation was under way to put out a fire at the port but no casualties were reported. The refinery has been hit and set ablaze at least twice since 16 April, halting production, in attacks that have thrown up dense black clouds over the town and caused oil slicks along the coastline, ruining the beaches of the popular resort. Russian authorities had so far cleared more than 13,300 cubic metres of fuel oil and contaminated soil along the coast, they said on Friday. State TV showed a reporter standing on a blackened beach and using a spade to show how deep the oozing filth had seeped. Russia launched almost 410 drones at Ukraine in a daytime attack that including injuring 10 people in the western city of Ternopil, Ukrainian officials said on Friday. Air force units downed or neutralised 388 of them in the north, south, centre and west of the country, Ukraine’s air force said. In Ternopil, about 150-200km from the Polish border, 10 people were hurt in the attack, which hit industrial and infrastructure facilities, the city’s mayor said. In central Ukraine, 19 drones were downed over the Cherkasy region, the regional governor said, reporting damage to a nursery, a school, seven private houses and a power line. A woman was hurt in the central Vinnytsia region, the local governor said, adding that a building was destroyed. Near the southern city of Odesa, which had come under the overnight attack, another daytime attack damaged the roof of a shopping centre and caused a fire, the regional governor said, while Zelenskyy said at least five people were wounded in the region. Ukraine has announced plans to carry out reforms of the army this summer to address problems with infantry shortages and the discharge of the longest-serving soldiers, four years into the war with Russia. Manpower shortages have become an even more pressing issue as enthusiasm for service has waned amid reports of poor training and support, as well as heavy-handed draft officers. “Now, in May, all key details will be finalised,” Zelenskyy said on Telegram on Friday. “In June, the reform will begin – and the first results must already be delivered in June.” He promised higher pay for the infantry, saying: “A Ukrainian infantryman who holds the front line must feel that our state truly respects him.” Ukraine had to be ready to fight on if a peace deal could not be reached, Zelenskyy said. Mykhailo Fedorov, who was named defence minister in January, said the changes announced amounted to a “systemic” transformation of the army. Public prosecutors in Peru said they were investigating an alleged trafficking network offering fake jobs in Russia to Peruvians before forcing them to fight in Moscow’s war on Ukraine. Individuals including former military personnel and police officers were allegedly recruited through social media with deceptive offers of well-paid work as security agents and other jobs in Russia, the attorney general’s office said. According to information provided to the police, “victims were reportedly taken to Russia and, once on foreign soil, forced to take part in combat operations in the context of the armed conflict between Russia and Ukraine”, it said. Thirteen Peruvians had died in the Ukraine war, a lawyer for the victims’ families told local media.

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Cuba says Trump’s fresh sanctions on its economy amount to ‘collective punishment’

Cuba’s government has said new sanctions imposed on the island by Donald Trump amounted to “collective punishment”, as an enormous 1 May procession outside the American embassy in Havana vowed to “defend the homeland”. In an executive order on Friday, the US president said he would impose sanctions on people involved in broad sections of the Cuban economy, as he seeks to put more pressure on Havana after ousting Venezuela’s leader, Nicolás Maduro, earlier this year. The latest sanctions constituted “collective punishment” of the nation’s people, said Cuba’s foreign minister, Bruno Rodriguez. “We firmly reject the recent unilateral coercive measures adopted by the #UnitedStates government,” he posted on X in English. Trump has mused about taking over Cuba, which lies 145km from Florida and has been under a nearly continuous US trade embargo since Fidel Castro led a communist revolution in 1959. On Friday, Trump used a speech in Florida to again suggest the US could launch operations against Cuba. “On the way back from Iran, we’ll have one of our big – maybe the USS Abraham Lincoln aircraft carrier, the biggest in the world, we’ll have that come in, stop about 100 yards offshore and they’ll say, ‘Thank you very much. We give up.’” The economic situation has worsened for Cuba since Washington imposed a fuel blockade in January, with only one Russian oil tanker making it through since then. Supply shortages and power cuts have become the norm, and tourism – once Cuba’s most lucrative industry – has plummeted. Trump’s Friday order targets people known to “operate in or have operated in the energy, defence and related materiel, metals and mining, financial services or security sector of the Cuban economy, or any other sector of the Cuban economy”, as well as Cuban officials judged to have engaged in “serious human rights abuses” or corruption. Jeremy Paner, a former sanctions investigator at the US Treasury’s office of foreign assets control, said the move was the most significant one for non-American companies since the US embargo against Cuba began decades ago. “Oil and gas, mining companies and banks that have carefully segregated their Cuba operations from the United States are no longer protected,” said Paner, who is now a partner at Hughes Hubbard + Reed, a law firm. Friday’s sanctions come despite moves toward dialogue between the two countries, with senior US officials visiting the island for talks in April. The US has long demanded Cuba open up its state-run economy, pay reparations for properties expropriated by the government of former leader Fidel Castro and hold “free and fair” elections. Cuba has said its form of socialist government is not up for negotiation. Friday’s fresh measures took effect during 1 May celebrations that saw huge crowds in Havana march to the US embassy under the slogan “Defend the Homeland”. The march was led by the Cuban president, Miguel Diaz-Canel, and former revolutionary leader Raúl Castro. The day before, Diaz-Canel had called on Cubans to mobilise “against the genocidal blockade and the crude imperial threats to our country”, referring to US actions and rhetoric. With Agence France-Presse and Reuters

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US appeals court blocks mail-order access to abortion drugs

Access to mifepristone, the FDA-approved medication used to end pregnancy, could become severely limited following a ruling from US appeals court on Friday, which temporarily blocked the drug from being dispensed through the mail. The decision is for now the most sweeping threat to abortion access since the supreme court rolled back abortion rights in 2022, said Kelly Baden, vice-president at the Guttmacher Institute, an abortion rights advocacy group. “If allowed to stand, it would severely restrict access to mifepristone in every state, including those where abortion is broadly legal and where voters have acted to protect abortion rights,” she said. The so-called “abortion pill” is part of a two-drug regimen backed by decades of evidence for its efficacy and safety, and is used in the majority of abortions in the US. Usage has risen in recent years, especially in the aftermath of the 2022 ruling from the supreme court that overturned federal protections for a right to an abortion. In the year after that decision, the FDA formally modified its regulations to allow the drug to be prescribed online, expanding its use even in states where abortion care was being constricted. The drug has become a key target for the anti-abortion movement, and a series of lawsuits have challenged the drug’s initial approval in 2000 and the subsequent rules making it easier to obtain. Friday’s ruling came in response to a Louisiana lawsuit against the FDA. The state sought to pause distribution of the drug through the mail while the litigation proceeds. A conservative three-judge panel of the fifth US circuit court of appeals in New Orleans agreed with Louisiana that the FDA had failed to justify eliminating the in-person dispensing requirement. The ruling was hailed by Louisiana’s Republican attorney general, Liz Murrill, who in a statement said she would “look forward to continuing to defend women and babies as this case continues”. Meanwhile, with the FDA now under Trump, the agency has opened a review of the medication. Once this analysis is completed, officials at the agency said, they will determine if changes to its regulations are warranted. Reproductive rights advocates have voiced concerns that the review could further limit mifepristone’s use, despite the evidence supporting its safety. Developed in France in the 1980s, mifepristone is used around the world and is authorized in 96 countries. Its use is backed by roughly four decades of peer-reviewed research, according to a 2025 brief written by public health experts at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine. “Anti-abortion politicians have just made it much harder for people everywhere in the country to get a medication that abortion and miscarriage patients have been safely using for more than 25 years,” Julia Kaye, a senior staff attorney for the Reproductive Freedom Project of the ACLU, said in a statement. “Louisiana’s legal attack on mifepristone shamelessly packaged lies and propaganda as an excuse to restrict abortion – and the fifth circuit rubber-stamped it.” Use of mifepristone has enabled abortions to continue in states that have enacted bans, including 9,350 provided via telehealth in Louisiana in 2025, according to Guttmacher. This ruling, however, will have a far wider impact. “The decision is a stunning and deeply alarming development,” Baden said. “Reimposing medically unnecessary in-person dispensing requirements for mifepristone will send shockwaves of chaos and confusion across the country and dramatically upend patients’ ability to obtain abortion care. Reuters contributed reporting.