
EU Wants To Reward Allies—and Punish Neutral Countries
The bloc is increasingly treating foreign aid as a tool of political pressure, especially toward countries that refuse to side clearly with the West.

The bloc is increasingly treating foreign aid as a tool of political pressure, especially toward countries that refuse to side clearly with the West.

Tunisian President Saied said he won’t be the EU’s border guard; Commission President Ursula von der Leyen unveiled one billion reasons to change his mind.

Two-thirds of Japanese believe in supporting Ukraine, even if that’s economically harmful to them, as PM Kishida vows to ramp up financial aid.

Hungary’s generous assistance comes despite the fact that it’s been maligned repeatedly as a “trojan horse” of Russia.