
Israel Strikes at the “Heart of Iran’s Nuclear Enrichment Programme”
The U.S. president confirmed he had advance knowledge of the strikes and reiterated that Iran “cannot have a nuclear bomb.”

The U.S. president confirmed he had advance knowledge of the strikes and reiterated that Iran “cannot have a nuclear bomb.”

As the prime minister resists calls for early elections, thousands demand accountability in the streets.

Italy poured cold water on the suggestion it must immediately increase spending levels.

Overwhelmed by scandals and now let down by the Commission, the Spanish government is wobbling like never before.

The Social Democrat police commissioner has called for the expulsion of all officers who are affiliated with the largest opposition party.

A senior official with communist roots says what many fear: Afghan immigration is tearing at the fabric of French society.

The German chancellor has betrayed his voters once again by refusing to do what he promised while in opposition.

Politicians who have betrayed their voters on border controls—and much else—have a lot to answer for when it comes to growing violence.

Slovakian PM Robert Fico has vowed not to sign measures that harm his country’s interests.

Teenage contract killers use semi-automatic weapons, but Sweden focuses on tightening fireworks restrictions.
The editor-in-chief faces seven months probation for posting a meme with the interior minister holding the sign: “I hate freedom of expression.”
In 70% of the foiled attacks, the would-be perpetrator was under the age of 21.
After Trump rejected the “zero-for-zero” tariffs offer, Brussels is again threatening to respond with “extremely aggressive” measures.
European public funds have been given to explicit sex classes and helped to promote harmful relationships.
Lending its weight to the Patriots’ arguments, the court ruled that finding transparent information on how NGOs are granted taxpayer funds was “practically impossible.”
Far from being a “shaming moment” for Israel, it was, in fact, a stain on the Labour Party.
Both Brussels and member states prefer talks over retaliation, at least for now.
These students “can’t stand that we can have an objective view of the conflicts in the Middle East,” Professor Balanche said.
The growing disillusionment within the German centre-right party has led district associations to call for a binding membership vote on the coalition agreement.
Pro-EU candidates are vying for the second spot, each armed with wildly different opinion polls to push others to withdraw.
The UK may back the plan as a quieter route into European defense, avoiding the appearance of a Brexit betrayal.
The prospect of the U.S. vice president taking part in a Catholic pilgrimage on French soil sent a far-left MP into a tizzy.