Author: Press Room

As Iran mulls tariffs on Hormuz internet cables, how might the fees threaten Europe?

In a new attempt to put the West under economic pressure, Iran is floating the idea of imposing “access fees” on undersea internet cables crossing the Strait of Hormuz, a move that could further strain global trade following the passage’s blockage. ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT The plan was first laid out by Iran’s news agency Tasnim, which is linked to Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC). Questions have arisen over who exactly would have to pay such tariffs, and which kinds of services would be targeted. From a logistical point of view, firms operating cables under the Strait would be forced to…

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Von der Leyen calls for completing the European single market in EU parliament address

Published on 20/05/2026 – 12:09 GMT+2 European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen told EU lawmakers that the bloc must tear down remaining barriers in its internal market to compete in the current geopolitical climate. ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT “We must finish what we started. We must remove the barriers that still persist in our internal market,” von der Leyen told MEPs gathered in plenary session on Wednesday. “We must make it much easier to scale up across Europe. This is the basic promise of the single market and it must be fulfilled.” Von der Leyen singled out the practice of so-called…

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US planning to reduce commitment to NATO – including in wartime

Published on 20/05/2026 – 11:13 GMT+2 The US is due to announce major cuts to the number of troops available to Europe in the event of an invasion or war. ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT The decision comes as part of pre-planned changes to the US force posture in Europe and was initially signalled at the start of Trump administration in line with the priorities of Washington’s “America First” doctrine. The US currently has around 76,000 troops across NATO territory, the largest volume since the Cold War, due to Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. The announcement due on Friday will…

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“Seek shelter now”: Drone alert near Belarus border forces Vilnius airport closure

Published on 20/05/2026 – 10:43 GMT+2•Updated 10:58 Vilnius airport closed on Wednesday after a drone warning was issued across parts of the country. ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT Lithuania’s defence ministry said an air alert had been issued and NATO Baltic Air Policing had been activated after a suspected drone had been detected approaching from Belarus near to the border. “Immediately seek shelter in a ​safe place, take care of your ​close ones, await new recommendations,” a message sent to people ​in the country’s capital read. The air alert has since been lifted. Latvia also issued a warning on Wednesday morning to residents…

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UK minister ‘confident’ of steel pact with EU ahead of impending July tariffs

The UK’s Minister of State for Trade, Chris Bryant, has suggested his government is closing in on a deal on steel with the EU that would see both sides avoid punitive trade restrictions introduced to shield their domestic industries from over-capacities. ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT It comes as the Labour-led UK government pushes on with its economic “reset” with the European bloc, despite an impending leadership challenge that has left Prime Minister Keir Starmer grappling with his biggest political crisis since his landslide victory in 2024. Speaking to Euronews’ Europe Today from Strasbourg on Tuesday, Bryant said the UK was in “very…

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Europe Today: EU strikes deal on trade pact with US as Putin meets Xi Jinping in China

Published on 20/05/2026 – 7:53 GMT+2•Updated 8:25 Also on today’s show: ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT Explainer by Jakub Janas: Putin visits Xi Jinping — what does it mean for Europe? Interviews with Sir Chris Bryant, UK Minister of State for Trade, Colonel Martin L. O’Donnell, Chief of Public Affairs at NATO SHAPE, and Bernd Lange, Member of the European Parliament and chair of the European Parliament’s trade committee. When and where to watch Europe Today? You can join Euronews’ chief anchor Méabh Mc Mahon and our EU editor Maria Tadeo live on TV and Euronews’ website and digital platforms every weekday. Our…

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The EU simplifies the AI Act and bans ‘nudifier’ apps

EU governments and the European Parliament struck a provisional deal on May 7th to amend the AI Act, the landmark legislation that entered into force in August 2024. ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT The deal delays tough rules on high-risk AI systems covering biometrics, critical infrastructure, law enforcement, and employment decisions by 16 months. Enforcement is now pushed to December 2027. Supporters call it pragmatic relief for businesses struggling to compete with the US and China. Critics say it hands a victory to Big Tech at the expense of workers and fundamental rights. But the deal also adds something: a total ban on…

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Newsletter: Europe braces for a more hostile economic order

Good morning. It’s Mared Gwyn, bringing you today’s newsletter from Brussels. ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT My colleague Vincenzo Genovese is on the ground in Strasbourg, where Angela Merkel will be among 20 prominent European figures bestowed with an Order of Merit later this morning – despite the conflicting interpretations of her legacy, as Vincenzo and Stefan Grobe break down in this must-read. Later tonight in Strasbourg (at 9pm local time), EU lawmakers and diplomats will convene for crunch negotiations on the EU-US trade deal, as the clock ticks before the Trump-imposed 4 July deadline. Overnight, Greenland’s Prime Minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen suggested the…

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EU approves trade deal with the US despite uncertainty in transatlantic relations

Published on 20/05/2026 – 2:31 GMT+2•Updated 2:36 Diplomats and MEPs reached an agreement late on Tuesday to implement the contentious EU-US agreement, which eliminates duties on most US industrial goods imported into Europe. ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT The negotiations concluded two weeks after US President Donald Trump threatened to impose 25% tariffs on EU cars if Europeans did not implement the agreement — clinched by Trump and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen in Turnberry, Scotland, last summer — by 4 July. The so-called “Turnberry Agreement,” criticised by MEPs as unbalanced, raises US tariffs on EU goods to as much as…

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Watch: Brussels vs Washington—inside the high-stakes battle over the EU-US trade deal

Published on 19/05/2026 – 9:00 GMT+2•Updated 9:16 Last July, Trump and Ursula von der Leyen struck a trade deal in Scotland. ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT The maths looked simple: zero tariffs on US industrial goods against a 15% cap on European exports. It was built to protect a relationship worth almost 1.68 trillion euros. But now, the European Parliament is pushing back. After a US Supreme Court ruling against the tariffs, Washington introduced new duties on steel and aluminium, effectively violating the treaty before signature. And European lawmakers argue Europe cannot be bullied, so they are baking three defensive shields into the…

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