


Syrian rebels have dealt a blow to Vladimir Putin’s naval ambitions
The loss of a key Mediterranean port could hobble the Russian navy
FOR 50 YEARS Russia’s foothold in the Mediterranean has been bound up with the Assad dynasty in Syria. It was in 1971 that Hafez al-Assad—father of Bashar, Syria’s dictator until last week—became president of the country. And it was the same year that the Soviet Union signed a deal with Syria to lease a port at Tartus on Syria’s coast. That enduring Russian military presence now hangs by a thread, following the swift collapse of the Assad regime. The Kremlin appears to have avoided a panicked and disorderly departure, but its influence on NATO’s southern flank is likely to wane.
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Will Giorgia Meloni turn out to be Europe’s Trump card?
The Italian leader is among those angling to be the linchpin of the transatlantic relationship

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A new law lets police seize unexplained luxury goods

The hard-right Vox party is winning over Spain’s youth
The kids like TikTok, Instagram and radical nationalism
Emmanuel Macron loses another prime minister
Michel Barnier’s fall accelerates the unravelling of the French centre
Huge anti-Russian protests in Tbilisi echo Ukraine’s Maidan
A turn away from the EU plunges Georgia into crisis
France’s government faces the imminent loss of a vote of confidence
Michel Barnier, the prime minister, has failed to get his budget through parliament