


The EU’s response to Donald Trump’s tariffs could be stinging
The world’s biggest trade bloc has plenty of cards, if it plays them right
“SHE SCOLDED me for half an hour, saying I was a complete idiot,” quipped Robert Fico, Slovakia’s prime minister, on March 31st. Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the European Commission, had just called to chastise him for speaking bilaterally with the Trump administration about trade and tariffs. He had violated the first rule of the European Union’s trade-fight club: you, national leader, do not talk about trade. The EU speaks with one voice.

Ukraine thinks it can hold off Russia as long as it needs to
Russia may have Chinese volunteers, but Ukraine has drones

How Europe hopes to turn Ukraine into a “steel porcupine”
Investing in the country’s defence industry is the best way to keep it in the fight

Jordan Bardella, the French hard right’s young hope
After Marine Le Pen was barred from running for president, the 29-year-old may have to take her place
Europe cannot fathom what Trumpian America wants from it
From tariffs to Ukraine, Europeans are stuck in the Fog of Peace
Germany’s Mütterrente is a poor way to pay parents
A recession is not the time to raise benefits for those who had kids long ago
Russia’s army is being subordinated to its security services
Vladimir Putin mistrusts his generals