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Sports May 01, 2026

The Foxes' Miracle: 10 Years of Leicester City's Premier League Triumph

As the 10th anniversary of Leicester City's historic Premier League title approaches, manager Claud…
The Foxes' Miracle: A Decade of ReflectionAs the 10th anniversary of Leicester City's historic Premier League title approaches, the club's manager and key players look back on what is widely regarded as the greatest sporting miracle of the modern era. The narrative has shifted from a simple underdog story to a complex analysis of strategic pragmatism, cultural cohesion, and the unshakeable belief of a squad that refused to accept their limitations.The Pragmatic Road to GloryThe foundation of the title win was built on a philosophy of incremental ambition rather than immediate grandiosity. Claudio Ranieri revealed that the season began with a strictly pragmatic target: securing 40 points to ensure survival. This low-bar approach allowed the players to breathe, but it was the subsequent escalation of goals that defined their ascent. When they reached the Europa League, the target became Europe; upon qualifying for the Champions League, the mandate shifted to 'this year or never again.'Initial Goal: 40 points for safety.Mid-Season Goal: Qualification for European competition.Final Goal: Champions League qualification and the Premier League title.This strategy, coupled with Riyad Mahrez's persistent questioning of the squad's potential, created a psychological shift from doubt to destiny. Ranieri, a pragmatic man, knew the team was capable of something special, but the players' internal belief was the catalyst that turned a 'little team' into a champion.The Cultural Impact DataThe victory was not just a footballing achievement; it was a cultural phenomenon that transcended the sport. The ownership of Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha played a pivotal role in fostering a family-like culture that made the squad feel touchable and united. This unity was reflected in the club's diverse community, particularly the strong bond formed with the local Indian community, who felt a newfound sense of belonging and shared identity with the club.The global impact was immediate and overwhelming. From international recognition to a performance by Andrea Bocelli at the King Power Stadium, the 'Foxes' story captivated the world. The players found themselves celebrated not just as athletes, but as legends, with the title serving as a bridge between cultures and communities.The Legacy of the UnderdogLeicester City's triumph has permanently altered the landscape of the Premier League. It proved that financial dominance is not the sole determinant of success and that mentality, effort, and cultural cohesion can overcome the odds. The 'Foxes' legacy serves as a blueprint for future underdog stories, demonstrating that the most difficult hurdle is often the belief that the impossible cannot be achieved.
#Leicester City #Claudio Ranieri #Premier League
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Tech May 01, 2026

ChatGPT Images 2.0 Sees Significant Traction in India, Mixed Global Response

ChatGPT Images 2.0 has seen significant traction in India, becoming the largest user base since its…
India Emerges as Largest User Base for ChatGPT Images 2.0 India has emerged as the largest user base for ChatGPT Images 2.0 since its launch last week, OpenAI said on Thursday. ChatGPT Images 2.0 is designed to handle more complex prompts and produce detailed visuals, including accurate text across multiple languages. Global Response to ChatGPT Images 2.0 However, third-party data reviewed by TechCrunch points to a more measured global response, with limited overall growth alongside sharp spikes in select emerging markets. Data shared by Sensor Tower and Similarweb with TechCrunch suggests the rollout has led to a more mixed global response. Key Statistics ChatGPT's app downloads rose 11% week-over-week following the launch. Daily active users and sessions were up only around 1%. ChatGPT was downloaded about 5 million times in India during the launch week, compared with roughly 2 million in the U.S. Some emerging markets saw sharper spikes in ChatGPT's app downloads, with increases of up to 79% week-over-week during the rollout period. India's User Base and Engagement In India, the early trends suggest ChatGPT Images 2.0 is largely being used as a form of self-expression. Rather than purely functional outputs, users are creating studio-style portraits from everyday photos, social media-ready images, and imaginative visuals that place themselves at the center. Future Outlook The early patterns also highlight how AI image tools are being adopted differently across markets. With the new ChatGPT Images release, OpenAI is pushing further with improvements such as better rendering of non-Latin text, including Hindi and Bengali, and new 'thinking' capabilities that allow it to refine outputs and generate multiple variations from a single prompt.
#OpenAI #ChatGPT #India
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Tech Apr 30, 2026

Musk Faces Third Day of Questioning in OpenAI Trial

Elon Musk faces a third day of questioning in a contentious trial over OpenAI's founding, with Musk…
The Trial Continues Elon Musk's court case against Sam Altman continues on Thursday, after a day of contentious exchanges during OpenAI's cross-examination of the Tesla CEO. Musk will face another round of questioning before his lawyer calls more witnesses, including OpenAI's president, Greg Brockman. The Dispute Over OpenAI's Founding Witness testimony and evidence has revealed formerly private emails, text messages and diary entries surrounding the formation of OpenAI, giving a behind-the-scenes look at how the tech behemoth was created. Many of the tech industry's most powerful players are named as witnesses and will give their account on the origins of Musk and Altman's bitter feud. Altman is set to testify later in the trial, which will last three weeks. Musk's Allegations Against OpenAI Musk, who co-founded OpenAI in 2015, is arguing that Altman, Brockman and OpenAI broke a foundational agreement when they shifted the company from a non-profit intent on bettering humanity into a for-profit structure. Musk claims that Altman and Brockman unjustly enriched themselves and should be removed from the company. He is also seeking the undoing of the for-profit conversion and $134bn in damages to be redirected to OpenAI's non-profit arm. OpenAI's Response OpenAI rejects Musk's allegations and is attempting to show that he was always aware of plans for creating a for-profit entity. The AI firm's attorneys have stated Musk is "motivated by jealousy" of OpenAI's success after he left the company in 2018 after a failed attempt to take control. OpenAI has emphasized that it is still overseen by a non-profit. The Implications of the Trial The trial, which began on Monday with jury selection at a federal courthouse in Oakland, California, has already produced dramatic moments and bold accusations. Musk and OpenAI's lead attorney William Savitt spent most of Wednesday in a heated back and forth, with the world's richest person becoming noticeably frustrated and saying that Savitt's questions "are designed to trick me". The Future of OpenAI Silicon Valley is intently watching the trial for both its blockbuster testimony and the potential effects it will have on the AI industry. OpenAI is intending to go public later this year at around a $1tn valuation, but if Musk succeeds in this case, it could greatly complicate that effort – an outcome that would also benefit Musk's own xAI artificial intelligence firm.
#Elon Musk #Sam Altman #OpenAI
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Politics Apr 30, 2026

Supreme Court Weakens Voting Rights Act in Louisiana Redistricting Case

The US Supreme Court has weakened a key provision of the Voting Rights Act by ruling that Louisiana…
Supreme Court Decision Reshapes Voting Rights LandscapeThe United States Supreme Court has voided a key provision of a landmark civil rights law by ruling that the electoral map of Louisiana had been drawn up unconstitutionally to create two Black-majority districts. The decision represents a major reinterpretation of the landmark Voting Rights Act of 1965 – in particular, its provision designed to protect minority voters from having their political power diluted.Wednesday's Supreme Court ruling is seen as a major win for Louisiana Republicans and President Donald Trump's administration and is expected to make it harder for minorities to challenge electoral maps as racially discriminatory under the 1965 law. It is unclear how much of that provision – Section 2 of the act – remains in force following this decision.The Louisiana Redistricting RulingThe court held that a map that created two Black-majority congressional districts in Louisiana was unconstitutional. The 6-3 ruling by justices blocks an electoral map that had given Louisiana a second Black-majority US congressional district.The court's conservative majority found that the Louisiana district represented by Democrat Cleo Fields relied too heavily on race. Chief Justice John Roberts described the 6th Congressional District as a "snake" that stretches more than 320km (200 miles) to link parts of Shreveport, Alexandria, Lafayette and Baton Rouge.The ruling was authored by Justice Samuel Alito and joined by his five fellow conservative justices. The dissenting justices are liberals."That map is an unconstitutional gerrymander," Alito wrote on behalf of the six conservatives.Understanding the Voting Rights ActThe Voting Rights Act was a piece of follow-up legislation to the Civil Rights Act, signed into law by President Lyndon B Johnson in 1964. It bans discrimination on the basis of race, colour, religion, sex or national origin.The 1965 law primarily ended common discriminatory practices against Black voters that were prevalent in many states, including literacy tests, that were designed to prevent them from voting.Section 2 of the act prohibits voting practices or procedures that discriminate on the basis of race, colour or membership of a language-minority group. The section has long been understood to bar electoral maps that dilute the voting strength of minority communities, even when there is no direct evidence of racist intent.How the Court Weakened the Voting Rights ActSection 2 of the act was amended by Congress in 1982 to prohibit electoral maps that would result in undermining the clout of minority voters, even without direct proof of racist intent.For more than four decades, plaintiffs could win a Section 2 claim by showing that a voting map had a racially discriminatory impact under this legal standard, known as the "results test".The Supreme Court's ruling on Wednesday, however, has in effect applied an "intent test" to Section 2, experts said. In the ruling, Alito wrote that the focus of Section 2 must now be to enforce the US Constitution's prohibition on intentional racial discrimination under its 15th Amendment.Interpreting Section 2 to "outlaw a map solely because it fails to provide a sufficient number of majority-minority districts would create a right that the amendment does not protect", Alito concluded.Political Power Shifts in CongressThe effect of the ruling may be felt more strongly in 2028 because most filing deadlines for this year's congressional races have already passed. Louisiana, though, may have to redraw its congressional districts now to comply with the decision.Republicans currently hold 217 seats in the House while Democrats hold 212. There is one independent and five vacancies in the House. In the Senate, Republicans hold 53 seats and Democrats hold 45. Two independents caucus with the Democrats.The state has primary elections set for May 16. Louisiana Governor Jeff Landry told Republican candidates for the House of Representatives that he planned to suspend next month's primary elections to allow state lawmakers time to approve a new congressional map.Erosion of Civil Rights ProtectionsReactions to the ruling have been sharply divided along political lines."I love it," Trump told reporters after hearing of the decision, adding that he believes Republican-led states will now want to reconfigure their voting maps. In a social media post, Trump praised Alito as "brilliant" and called the ruling "a BIG WIN for Equal Protection under the Law, as it returns the Voting Rights Act to its Original Intent, which was to protect against intentional Racial Discrimination".Former President Barack Obama, a Democrat, warned that the ruling will free state legislatures to reconfigure electoral districts to "systematically dilute and weaken the voting power of racial minorities – so long as they do it under the guise of 'partisanship' rather than explicit 'racial bias'"."This is a devastating and profound step backwards for American Democracy," Democratic Senator Raphael Warnock wrote on social media.Justice Elena Kagan, in a dissent joined by the two other liberal justices on the Supreme Court, said the ruling rendered the Voting Rights Act "all but a dead letter" and predicted "grave" consequences.Redistricting Battles Ahead of 2026 MidtermsWith November's congressional elections looming, the court's decision could prompt Republican-led states to seek to redraw electoral maps to weaken US House seats considered safely Democratic.The ruling comes during a wider battle over congressional redistricting before midterm elections in November. The Congressional Black Caucus, a group of African American US lawmakers, condemned the ruling."Without the protections of the VRA [Voting Rights Act], Republicans now have the ability to move forward with a nationwide scheme to rig congressional maps in their favor – to manufacture more districts for themselves by eliminating majority-Black districts, while stripping away the ability to challenge those racist, anti-Black maps in court," it said in a statement.Warnock, a member of the caucus, said the ruling gutted the protections that civil rights champion Martin Luther King Jr "marched for [and] the protections made possible by civil rights protesters who spilled blood in pursuit of a more perfect union".
#Supreme Court #Voting Rights Act #Louisiana
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Entertainment Apr 30, 2026

Highlander Review: A Cult Classic Reborn

The 1986 film Highlander, directed by Russell Mulcahy and starring Christopher Lambert and Sean Con…
The Enduring Appeal of Highlander The sheer barking madness of this fantasy time-travel adventure from co-writer Gregory Widen and director Russell Mulcahy, now on re-release for its 40th anniversary, can best be described as Terry Gilliam meets James Cameron. The chiselled features of its Franco-American star Christopher Lambert – a kind of VHS Marlon Brando – are a minor source of diversion on their own and his Scottish accent has to be heard to be disbelieved. And Celia Imrie’s small role as the sexy but duplicitous 16th-century Scottish villager seals the deal on Highlander’s cult status. A Wacky Story of Immortals Forty years on, this depends more than ever on appreciating its trace of deadpan black comedy. Highlander’s wacky story concerns Connor MacLeod, smoulderingly played by Lambert, a fiery young warrior in the Scottish Highlands in the 1530s, who appears to have been killed during a war with the opposing Fraser clan. But he comes back to life, leading the excitable community to think he’s possessed by the devil. Driven out of the village, his only ally is his great love Heather (Beatie Edney), but the couple are astonished to encounter what appears to be an effetely dressed Spanish nobleman, played by Sean Connery, who incidentally displays in this film some very useful horsemanship. A Legacy of Action and Adventure But Connor has no choice but to accept his destiny, living on through the centuries. He fights a duel in 18th-century Europe, and during the second world war saves a child from the Nazis, who grows up to be Rachel (Sheila Gish), his secretary in an antiques business he runs in present-day New York under the name of Russell Nash. Every 40 or 50 years, he has to keep changing his identity using misappropriated death and birth certificates, meaning that Highlander can be added to the long list of movies and books who have borrowed Frederick Forsyth’s fake ID scam from The Day of the Jackal. A Cult Classic Reborn But NYPD officer Brenda (Roxanne Hart) has figured out that something is off about Mr Nash, who is preparing for a grand showdown with an evil immortal called the Kurgan, played by Clancy Brown; like Connor he is a great swordsman, and immortals can only be killed by being beheaded. The film’s galloping silliness never lets up, though it is perhaps an acquired taste: those who can’t indulge it may find themselves reminded of Quentin Tarantino’s belief that the 1980s were one of cinema’s worst decades. But those who can indulge it will find it uniquely quirky, funny and eccentrically ambitious. Release and Re-release Highlander is in UK cinemas from 4 May and on UHD and Blu-ray from 29 June.
#Highlander #Christopher Lambert #Sean Connery
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Entertainment Apr 30, 2026

Forbidden Solitaire Review: A Nostalgic Horror Card‑Battler Revives 90s PC Angst

Grey Alien Games and Night Signal Entertainment turn classic solitaire into a meta‑horror card‑batt…
The Lead: A Card Game That Becomes a 90s Horror Time‑WarpGrey Alien Games and Night Signal Entertainment have turned the classic solitaire puzzle into Forbidden Solitaire, a narrative‑driven card‑battler that plunges players into a cursed 1990s‑style PC horror world.Meta Horror Design: Layered Storytelling Meets Retro GamingThe game mirrors the meta‑horror of films like Scream and Blair Witch Project, letting players control both the protagonist Will Roberta and themselves as they navigate a haunted dungeon that blurs reality and the in‑game desktop.Story unfolds through instant‑message pop‑ups that reveal the mystery of the fictional developer Heartblade Interactive.Each battle is framed as a “game within a game,” echoing the self‑reflexive terror of 90s horror cinema.Gameplay Mechanics: Deck‑Building Solitaire with Strategic CombatTraditional solitaire rules are retained—discard cards one rank higher or lower—but combat adds a deck‑building layer similar to Marvel Snap and Balatro. Jokers introduce effects such as suit removal, curses, and lock‑outs, while successful clears increase attack power.Health reaches zero → defeat.Power‑ups, spells, and buffs create a compulsion loop.Reshuffle mechanic restores momentum during tough encounters.Retro Aesthetic and Audio: Faithful 1990s PC HomageThe visual and sound design faithfully reproduces low‑resolution VGA graphics, garish fonts, glitchy FMV, and a synth‑laden choral horror soundtrack, drawing inspiration from titles such as Night Trap, Phantasmagoria and Doom.Critical Reception and Market PositionCritics praise the game for turning a “difficult and unwieldy idea” into a compelling experience that works both as a nostalgic tribute and a solid card‑battler. Priced at £14.49, it targets indie‑gaming enthusiasts and retro‑horror fans alike.Previous Grey Alien title: Regency Solitaire.Co‑developer Night Signal known for horror adventure Home Safety Hotline.Looking Ahead: The Future of Indie Horror Card GamesIf the blend of meta‑narrative and deck‑building proves successful, we may see more indie studios experiment with genre‑crossing titles that leverage nostalgia while delivering fresh mechanics.
#Forbidden Solitaire #Grey Alien Games #Night Signal Entertainment
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Sports Apr 30, 2026

John Terry’s Far‑Right Turn: From Captain to Controversial Figure

Former England captain John Terry has sparked a fresh backlash after endorsing a far‑right Instagra…
The Controversial Instagram EndorsementIn early April, John Terry liked an Instagram post by former MP Rupert Lowe that urged a ban on foreign‑born benefit claimants and the deportation of “migrants who are incapable of financially supporting themselves”. Terry responded with a simple “100% yes”, prompting an immediate, scathing reaction from former teammate Denis Wise, who replied “200%”.Political Fallout and Public ReactionThe endorsement reignited accusations that Terry has long harboured far‑right sympathies, echoing earlier instances where he praised Lowe’s anti‑immigration pamphlet “Mass Deportations”. Critics argue the former captain is normalising extremist rhetoric that was once considered beyond the pale in mainstream sport.Terry’s Coaching Ambitions Amidst the StormWhile the controversy rages, Terry continues to chase a managerial role at Chelsea FC. After being passed over for the head‑coach vacancy in January, he remains on a consultancy contract, mentoring academy sides two days a month. The club’s reluctance to appoint him has been cited as a possible factor in his turn to high‑visibility political commentary.Broader Trend of Radicalisation in Retired FootballersMatt Le Tissier resurfaced in Southampton’s advisory board after promoting conspiracy theories about Ukraine.Rickie Lambert and Joey Barton have also embraced fringe narratives on social media.The pattern suggests a post‑retirement vacuum where former players seek relevance through provocative platforms.What Lies Ahead for Terry and the SportIf the backlash persists, Terry may pivot further into media work, podcasts, and right‑wing advocacy, potentially positioning himself for a future parliamentary candidacy. For football, the challenge will be balancing freedom of expression with safeguarding the sport’s inclusive image, especially as clubs grapple with the reputational risk of employing figures linked to extremist discourse.
#John Terry #Rupert Lowe #Chelsea FC
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Politics Apr 30, 2026

Labour's London Fortress Crumbles Amid Housing Crisis

The Labour Party faces potential electoral wipeout in London, its final political stronghold, with …
The Lead Labour Party is facing potential electoral disaster in London, its final political stronghold, with upcoming local elections projected to deliver the party's worst results in the capital in 50 years. The party's traditional support base is eroding as the Green Party capitalizes on Labour's failures on housing policy and other issues. The London Labour Stronghold Collapsing The significance of Labour's potential losses in London cannot be overstated. Even in the 2019 wipeout, London remained "deep red" for Labour. Now, the party faces what pollsters project will be their worst results there in 50 years. Council leaders are describing the upcoming elections as "the biggest fight of my political life." The Greens are positioned to win mayoralities in Lewisham and Hackney and potentially dislodge several inner-city councils from Labour control. The Political Fallout Analysis London represents more than just council seats—it's where key Labour figures like Keir Starmer, David Lammy, and Wes Streeting hold parliamentary seats. A significant defeat in the capital would not only humiliate these leaders but also damage the career prospects of many Labour MPs who cut their political teeth in local government. The Greens are particularly targeting Southwark and Lambeth, which have served as training grounds for many current Labour leaders. The Housing Crisis Connection The central issue driving Labour's decline is housing. Historically, Labour built its London voter base through the provision of council housing. However, under Tony Blair's leadership, only 280 council homes were built between 1997 and 2007, compared to nearly 52,000 during Thatcher's decade. Labour authorities have also been complicit in gentrification battles, passing council houses to private developers. The Greens have effectively used these failures as campaign ammunition, positioning themselves as the true champions of affordable housing. The Policy and Moral Dimensions Beyond housing, Labour faces criticism for its stance on issues like Gaza and immigration, which have alienated London's diverse population. In a city where almost half the residents are from ethnic minorities, policies perceived as contemptuous of these communities have proven fatal. The author suggests that Labour's moral failings may be even more damaging than their policy failures, raising questions about how any leader could recover from such a perception. The Future Outlook for Labour With the Green Party now boasting approximately 225,000 members and a youth wing nearly as large as the entire Liberal Democrat party, Labour faces a formidable opposition in its traditional heartland. The party's claim that it cannot do much about the housing crisis beyond waiting for the market to provide more homes rings hollow to voters experiencing the crisis firsthand. Unless Labour fundamentally rethinks its approach to housing and other key issues, its decline in London may accelerate, potentially spelling the end of the party as a national force.
#Labour Party #London Elections #Housing Crisis
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Politics Apr 30, 2026

EU's Article 42.7: Europe's Bid for NATO-like Collective Defense Amid US Tensions

European leaders are exploring Article 42.7 of the EU treaty as a potential mutual defense clause a…
The Growing Rift: Europe's Search for Security IndependenceEuropean leaders are seeking to clarify a little-used mutual defense clause in the European Union treaty as questions grow over Washington's long-term commitment to NATO during a deepening rift with the United States. The shift comes amid growing concerns that traditional security guarantees may no longer be reliable, prompting European nations to consider alternative defense arrangements.Understanding Article 42.7: Europe's Mutual Defense ClauseArticle 42.7 of the Treaty on European Union is the bloc's mutual defense clause. It states that if an EU member state is the victim of armed aggression on its territory, other member states are obliged to provide aid and assistance by all means in their power in line with the United Nations Charter.Unlike NATO's Article 5, which states that an attack on one member is considered an attack on all, the EU clause is not backed by an integrated military command structure, standing defense plans, or a permanent force able to respond automatically. The US has no obligation to intervene under Article 42.7, making it often seen as less credible as a military guarantee in practice, though it remains an important political commitment.Who Champions Article 42.7? Key Players Pushing for ImplementationCyprus, an EU member but not a NATO member, has been especially eager to strengthen the clause after a drone struck a British airbase on the island during the Iran war. Cypriot President Nikos Christodoulides confirmed that leaders had agreed it was time to define how the provision would work in practice if triggered.French President Emmanuel Macron has stressed that the clause should be treated as a binding commitment rather than a symbolic gesture. "On Article 42, paragraph 7, it's not just words," he stated. "For us, it is clear, and there is no room for interpretation or ambiguity."EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas emphasized that Europe must step up its defense efforts after Trump has "shaken the transatlantic relationship to its foundation." She noted that "Europe is no longer Washington's primary centre of gravity" and that "no great power in history has outsourced its survival and survived."Historical Context: Previous Invocations and LimitationsThe clause has been used only once before when France invoked it after the 2015 Paris attacks claimed by ISIL (ISIS), in which 130 people were killed and hundreds wounded. After Article 47.2 was invoked, other EU states shared intelligence aimed at helping French authorities unravel the conspiracy that led to the attacks.By contrast, NATO's Article 5 has also been invoked just once – after the September 11, b>2001 attacks in the US. Unlike the EU's response, NATO's help to the US wasn't limited to intelligence sharing. Allies contributed tens of thousands of soldiers to the US-led war in Afghanistan, which lasted two decades and resulted in more than 46,000 Afghan civilian casualties alongside 2,461 US personnel.NATO's Future: Questions of Cohesion and MembershipEurope's debate over its defense comes amid a string of disputes inside NATO. Reports that US officials have considered punitive measures against allies, including potentially suspending Spain from NATO or reviewing the US position on Britain's claim to the Falkland Islands, have revived questions over the alliance's future cohesion.According to Pablo Calderon Martinez, a specialist in European affairs, "There is no legal mechanism to remove a member" from NATO. However, there is a mechanism through which a member can withdraw itself from the organization. He noted that a more likely scenario would be the US choosing to leave.Carne Ross, a former British diplomat, emphasized that the deeper issue is whether Europe and Washington still share common values. "It is abundantly clear that we do not," he stated, pointing to Trump's "anti-democratic" actions.Europe's Defense Buildup: Preparing for Strategic AutonomyIn response to growing uncertainty, European countries have pledged to sharply increase their defense budgets, with many aiming to spend 5 percent of their gross domestic products each year on their militaries.While Trump cannot withdraw the US from NATO without congressional approval, doubts over Washington's commitment have already unsettled many European capitals. This has created new urgency around strengthening Europe's own defense capabilities and building a more credible European pillar inside, or alongside, NATO.As Ross noted, "The Europeans themselves, particularly the most powerful countries – Britain, France, Germany and Italy – need to be talking about how to defend themselves without the US."
#EU #NATO #Article 42.7
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