European governments are under pressure to step up on defence after US President Donald Trump questioned whether the United ...
Berlin, Paris, London, and the other European governments intend to reduce their military dependence on the US by ...
Some rearmament is desirable. But figuring out how much to spend—and what to make—is critical to avoid mistakes, writes ...
A German court has decided to launch a criminal trial against two former executives of German engineering giant Siemens who ...
We’re at a moment in time where everything is important, we’re lacking everything, and so we have to be quite astute,” said ...
The Trump administration’s warning last month that Europe must now take care of security in its own backyard raises troubling ...
Everyone should understand that if the liberal order falls, the nonproliferation regime would fall with it. And the powers ...
The French president’s prescriptions for “strategic autonomy” and a European force for Ukraine are suddenly timely in a world ...
European leaders are working to bolster the Ukrainian military and recruiting partners for a “coalition of the willing” to ...
It's unclear whether Europe is seriously prepared to provide for its own defense. It has long failed to deliver on promises to increase defense spending.
General Mark Rutte will try to prove to Donald Trump in their Thursday meeting that he —and the nearly eight-decade partnership — still matter.
“W E WOULD BE safer if we had our own nuclear arsenal,” Donald Tusk, Poland’s prime minister, told his country’s parliament ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results