
Slovakia Resists Brussels Pressure to Cut Russian Energy Imports
Bratislava says rapid reductions in Russian gas could cost the country billions and disrupt national energy security.

Bratislava says rapid reductions in Russian gas could cost the country billions and disrupt national energy security.

“We want guarantees that this problem will not remain only on Slovakia’s back,” PM Fico said ahead of Tuesday’s key meeting.
The current cap of $60 could be limited to $45, putting the pressure on Moscow, but on the European economy as well.

The U.S. president warned that Brussels’ approach could make the situation in Ukraine “much worse.”
Al-Sharaa confirmed that his country is also indirectly negotiating with Israel to ease tensions between the two nations.

Even the Commission knows the current energy model is failing, but while they stay silent, European families pay the price.

Conservative PM Viktor Orbán lambasted the centrist opposition’s aims of “colluding with Brussels” to seize power.

A new report lambasts Brussels for a 16th sanctions package—this time aimed at Russian aluminium imports.

Due to the restructuring of the energy markets since the outbreak of the war in Ukraine in 2022, Norway now supplies 30% of Europe’s energy needs.

According to a recent report by the Kyiv School of Economics, taxes on large foreign corporations paid for as much as one third of Russia’s 2025 military budget.