Connect with us

Middle East

UK adds £75 billion to defence budget

Published

on

The UK has pledged to add a further £75 billion to its defence budget over the next six years, taking spending well above the Nato target and putting pressure on its European allies to follow suit.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said during a visit to Poland on Tuesday that the new package was ‘the biggest boost to our national defence for a generation’, while his office argued that it ‘sets a new standard for other major European Nato economies to follow’.

The move will enable the UK to spend the equivalent of 2.5 per cent of GDP on defence by the end of the decade.

Speaking at a press conference with NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg, Sunak argued that now was not the time for complacency, saying: “We cannot continue to worry about what price America will pay or what burden America will bear if we are not willing to make sacrifices for our own security.”

The pledge, which Sunak insisted would not require budget cuts or tax rises, would increase Britain’s annual defence spending to £87 billion by 2030-31.

“A game changer for European security”

“If all NATO countries spent at least 2.5 per cent of their GDP on defence, our collective budget would increase by more than £140 billion,” the prime minister’s office said in a statement accompanying Sunak’s announcement.

London said the new package would include an extra £10 billion investment in munitions production over the next decade and radical reforms to Britain’s defence procurement procedures. It will also create a new ‘Defence Innovation Agency’ to boost military research and development.

“Today is a turning point for European security and an important moment for British defence,” said Sunak.

Responding to Sunak’s announcement, Labour’s shadow defence secretary John Healey said his party would “like to see a fully funded plan” to reach 2.5 per cent, but that “the Conservatives have shown time and again that they cannot be trusted on defence and we will be looking closely at the details of their announcement”.

Sunak urges Europeans to spend more

After Warsaw, he travelled to Berlin and met Chancellor Olaf Scholz.

Rishi Sunak told European countries that they must increase their defence spending to ensure that the United States remains committed to NATO in the future.

The prime minister said the continent must take more responsibility for its defence in an environment where Donald Trump is running for a second term in the White House.

Speaking with Scholz in Berlin, Sunak said US presidents have “reasonably” always demanded that Europe spend more on defence.

He argued that European countries could not ask the US to fund the continent’s security unless they were “prepared to sacrifice” themselves.

The Prime Minister noted that it was important for Europe to show that it was taking on more of the burden ‘to keep the United States committed to NATO’.

British helicopters heading to Russian border for NATO exercises

NATO is planning a training exercise in Finland on Friday in an area close to the Russian border.

The UK is taking part in the exercises. A squadron of nine British Army Apache attack helicopters, worth £40 million each, are heading to Finland to take part in what has been described as ‘the biggest Nato exercise since the Cold War’.

After Finland, four Wildcat reconnaissance helicopters and two RAF Chinook support helicopters will travel to Estonia, where they will remain for an extended period.

The exercise in Finland involving Apache attack helicopters is called ‘Arrow’, while the exercise in Estonia involving all three types of helicopter is called ‘Swift Response’.

The exercises are part of Steadfast Defender 24, which tests NATO’s plans to strengthen its defences in Europe against an “imminent enemy”.

The exercises involve 90,000 troops from 32 members of the military alliance, as well as around 20,000 British personnel.

Middle East

Russia: NATO’s return to Afghanistan poses risk of new instability

Published

on

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has warned against renewed attempts to return NATO military infrastructure to Afghanistan, saying such actions could become a dangerous source of future conflict.

According to Russian media, Lavrov in a press conference in Samarkand, Uzbekistan said that Western countries have launched a new format of consultations in Doha through the United Nations.

“The attempt to return the military infrastructure of NATO countries to Afghanistan under various pretexts is unacceptable, and such efforts are underway,” he added.

“We are witnessing the West actively trying to re-enter the Afghanistan game, a game it left after the Taliban returned. We have no problem with this, but the West presence should be fair and without hidden agendas,” Lavrov added.

He said that these efforts will create a new “time bomb,” and perhaps not even a “slow bomb”, he added.

He has said that Moscow is closely monitoring Western efforts to “influence Central Asia and other strategic regions.”

Lavrov furthered, “We are resolutely opposed to the politicization of cooperation and the imposition of ideological programs, especially the attempts of some Western countries to dominate this and other geopolitical spaces.”

This comes when the Taliban Foreign Ministry also said that Russia has agreed to accept Taliban’s diplomat at the ambassadorial level.

Continue Reading

Middle East

Seven-year Gaza ceasefire proposal emerges

Published

on

A new ceasefire proposal for Gaza, presented by Egypt and Qatar, envisions Israel’s complete withdrawal from Gaza and the official end of the war. Hamas has indicated its readiness to hand over control.

According to a BBC report, citing a senior Palestinian official, Egypt and Qatar, who are mediating between Israel and Hamas for a ceasefire and prisoner exchange, have put forward a new proposal that includes a long-term ceasefire and Israel’s complete withdrawal from Gaza.

The report states that the proposal encompasses a ceasefire lasting five to seven years, the official termination of the war, the complete withdrawal of the Israeli army from Gaza, and “the exchange of all Israeli hostages for Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails.”

According to the Palestinian official, Hamas has expressed willingness to transfer the administration of Gaza to the Palestinian Authority or a newly established Palestinian entity. The official described Hamas as showing “unprecedented flexibility.”

The British broadcaster reported that Israel has not yet commented on this plan and that a high-level Hamas delegation will travel to Cairo for consultations. The report indicates that the delegation will include the head of the Hamas Leadership Council, Mohammed Darwish, and the organization’s chief negotiator, Khalil al-Hayya.

The Qatar-based Al-Araby Al-Jadeed also reported that an Israeli delegation traveled to Cairo on Sunday evening to discuss the new proposal presented by the mediators.

Last week, Hamas rejected an Israeli ceasefire offer that had been conveyed to them but stated that they were open to discussing proposals that included an end to the war.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu also declared over the weekend that he would not end the war until Hamas is destroyed and all hostages are returned.

Continue Reading

Middle East

Hamas rejects partial ceasefire proposal

Published

on

Hamas announced its readiness to release all hostages in exchange for an end to the war, Israel’s withdrawal from Gaza, and the start of the reconstruction process.

Hamas’s chief negotiator, Khalil al-Hayya, responded to Israel’s “partial” ceasefire proposals. Hayya stated that Hamas had fulfilled all its obligations under the three-phase ceasefire agreement reached after one and a half years of negotiations. He added, “However, the Netanyahu government sabotaged the agreement before the first phase was even completed and carried out severe massacres against our people.”

Hayya stated that Netanyahu wants to continue the war to protect his political future. He said that Hamas had accepted the proposal presented by mediators during Ramadan, but Netanyahu rejected it and presented a new suggestion that did not include ending the war or withdrawal.

The Hamas leader said that all hostages could be released in exchange for Israel ending its attacks, completely withdrawing from Gaza, starting the reconstruction process, and lifting the blockade. Hayya emphasized their readiness for immediate negotiations on this comprehensive package.

Hayya stated that Netanyahu’s proposal prolongs the war and hunger, and therefore cannot be accepted. He stated that the weapons held by Hamas are a result of the occupation and represent a legitimate right of resistance.

Hayya expressed that Hamas welcomed the view of the US Special Envoy for Hostage Affairs that “the issue of war and prisoners should be resolved together,” stating that this stance aligns with Hamas’s position. He also called on the international community for urgent intervention to lift the Gaza blockade.

US National Security Council Spokesperson James Hewitt argued that Hamas’s statements serve violence, not peace. Hewitt said, “The Trump administration’s terms have not changed: Release the hostages or face hell.”

Israel and Hamas had signed a phased ceasefire plan in January, but this plan collapsed after the first phase. While Hamas sought to proceed to the second phase outlined in the agreement, Israel attempted to renegotiate the terms for releasing more hostages without guaranteeing a complete end to the war. Upon Hamas’s rejection of this proposal, Israel resumed its military attacks and occupation in Gaza on March 18.

Netanyahu is unwilling to end the war until Hamas’s military and administrative capabilities are completely destroyed. This stance is also supported by his far-right partners in the coalition. These partners threaten to bring down the government if Netanyahu ends the war.

Responding to al-Hayya’s statement, Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich said that Israel would not surrender to Hamas and that the war in Gaza would not end until “total victory” is achieved. In a post on his X account, Smotrich said, “The gates of hell should be opened to Hamas, the war should be deepened with the complete occupation of Gaza, the destruction of Hamas, and Trump’s plan for the voluntary resettlement of Gazans in another country should be implemented.”

Far-right coalition partner and National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir said that Israel should increase its military pressure to bring Hamas to a state of “kneeling and begging.” Ben Gvir said, “Hamas cannot dictate terms, it obeys terms! No agreement, no ceasefire, no aid; only the continuation of the war until the Nazi-like elements in Gaza surrender.”

Continue Reading

MOST READ

Turkey