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Volunteer calls return to Clare ‘sobering’ after Ukraine mission

Return to Clare 'sobering' after Ukraine work - volunteer
A Clare flag hanging in a bunker in Ukraine

On the Edge of Sound: Two Irish Volunteers and the New Geometry of War

When you imagine a warzone you might picture shattered facades, columns of smoke, rows of sandbags and the solemn pace of ambulances. What Oran McInerney and Declan McEvoy came back talking about was something sharper, more modern: the soft whine of drones threading the sky like predatory insects, the weathered resilience of people insisting on normal life in the shadow of missile warnings, and the strange intimacy of cross-border compassion that brings an electrician from County Clare to a makeshift kitchen in Kharkiv.

The conflict that began in February 2022 has now rolled into its fifth year, a slow-motion catastrophe stretching over a thousand kilometres of front line. It has become a conflict not only fought with boots and tanks, but with batteries, microprocessors and the kinds of commercially accessible aerial systems that turn ambulances into targets and a quick extraction into a life-or-death sprint.

Frontline Medicine in the Drone Age

“You can’t linger anymore,” Oran tells me in a voice that holds the grit of somebody who has repeatedly come back from the heart of things. “An extraction that used to be measured in minutes is now measured in seconds. If a drone spots you, you’re finished.”

From Doonbeg in Co Clare, Oran has travelled multiple times to eastern Ukraine as an emergency medical technician working with a US-based NGO. He’s evacuated civilians from places that have become shorthand for the war’s brutality—Kramatorsk, Bakhmut—and has loaded wounded soldiers, Ukrainian and Russian, into ambulances while the horizon bled with the slow, lethal choreography of modern warfare.

“There’s always a quiet moment,” Oran says. “It’s the pause between the siren and the impact, when everyone looks at the sky. That’s when you learn faces—aged, terrified, incredulous. One man I helped said he couldn’t believe someone had come from Ireland to lift him out. He gripped my hand like we’d been family for years.”

The threat that modern drones pose is not hypothetical. With effective ranges easily reaching dozens of kilometres and loitering munitions able to strike with precision, the frontline is no longer a bright-line trench; it’s a wide, dangerous zone. Volunteers and medics operate in a corridor that some describe as up to 50 kilometres deep, within reach of guided unmanned systems, making any rescue operation a potentially lethal target.

Life’s Ordinary Bones, War’s Shifting Flesh

Declan, who volunteered in Kharkiv preparing meals for emergency services and hospitals, brought back stories of a city that has learned an uneasy double life. “Most nights missiles and drones came calling,” he recalls. “You get the alert on your phone and move like a practiced machine into cover. Then, five minutes later, someone’s buying bread. It’s surreal.”

Kharkiv’s streets, he says, are full of small rituals of survival. Old women sweep stoops, teenagers queue for coffee in bullet-scarred cafes, and once-a-week market stalls sell sunflower oil, loaves and warm pleasantries. Orthodox churches hold candlelit vigils, and in parks small shrines appear—photographs, flowers, a few candles—homemade altars to lives stopped too soon.

“I struggled with that normality,” Declan admits. “I’d be popping into a shop for crackers while air raid sirens pulsed through the city. You feel the cognitive dissonance—how does life continue next to the act of being destroyed?”

Human Threads and Hard Choices

Both men return to Ireland carrying more than photos and anecdotes. They carry names. They carry the weight of friendships formed under pressure. Oran speaks of colleagues who will never leave—a contrast that throws his own mobility into stark relief. “I can get on a plane. They can’t. It’s their home, their family. You see them in a trench or a bunker and you realise your sacrifice is different.”

That difference gnaws. For locals, staying is not an adventurous choice but a tethered duty. “We are defending everything we know,” a Kharkiv nurse told Declan as they ladled soup into steel bowls. “Leaving would be losing our history.”

For international volunteers, the calculus is different and often agonisingly simple: go, help, leave. Yet many of them find themselves bound in ways bureaucracy cannot quantify—by names, stories, the cadence of a city that fed them and trusted them. The Irish tricolour fluttering in Kyiv with the names of expatriates who died stands as a small, private testament to that binding, a shrine to connections that defy borders.

What This Means for Humanitarian Work Globally

Modern conflicts increasingly blur the line between combatants and civilians, between front and rear. The weaponisation of commercial technology—drones, encrypted communications, satellite-guided delivery systems—changes how humanitarian aid is delivered and who can safely deliver it.

  • Frontline lengths: The conflict’s active line across Ukraine now extends to more than 1,000 km, creating a vast, fragmented zone where civilians and aid workers are exposed.
  • Displacement: Millions have been uprooted, seeking refuge within Ukraine or abroad, creating sustained humanitarian needs for housing, healthcare and mental health support.
  • Technology’s double edge: Drones improve situational awareness for aid convoys but also expose them to targeted attacks, challenging the neutrality and safety traditionally afforded to ambulances and medical personnel.

“Humanitarian doctrine hasn’t kept pace with the technologies of modern war,” says an independent conflict analyst I spoke with. “We need new rules of engagement for unmanned systems, clearer protections for medical transports, and rapid, practical protocols for volunteers operating in contested airspaces.”

Small Actions, Big Echoes

In the end, the narrative that Oran and Declan bring home is stubbornly, beautifully human. It’s not a parade of victories or a manifesto of geopolitical analysis; it’s a ledger of little mercies. It’s a bowl of soup served to a nurse coming off a 12-hour shift. It’s a stretcher lifted by strangers who become family by force of necessity. It’s an Irish flag wrapped around names that no one should forget.

So what do we owe the people who stay? What responsibility do those of us who live far from conflict have toward those who remain tethered to war? These are uncomfortable questions. They ask us not only to marvel at bravery but to reconsider how we fund, protect and legislate humanitarian action in a world where the sky itself can be weaponised.

“You learn to be efficient, to be fast, to be kind in the smallest moments,” Oran says, softer now. “You also learn how fragile hope can be, and how necessary it is.”

If you met someone like Oran or Declan in a grocery queue tomorrow, would you ask where they’d been? Would you listen to their stories? And would you be ready to understand how a distant war has reshaped the geometry of compassion—so that saving one life often means racing against the hum of a machine in the sky?

Her Royal Highness The Duchess of Edinburgh Visits Somalia

Mogadishu 24 February 2026 – Ahead of International Women’s Day (8 March), The Duchess made a two-day visit to Somalia 23 to 24 February.In Mogadishu,

Israeli strikes kill eight in Gaza as fragile truce unravels

Israeli fire kills eight people in Gaza as truce falters
Israeli drone strikes hit two police checkpoints in southern Gaza's Khan Younis

When the Dawn Breaks: Another Day of Loss in Gaza

There is a sound here that never quite leaves the chest: the dull, abrasive echo of things collapsing, of homes remembering how to fall. In Tuffah, a neighborhood in northern Gaza City, people picked through concrete and wire at first light, searching for shoes, photos, anything that could make the day seem like yesterday instead of an endless rupture. Then the ambulances came, and the count of the living and the dead shifted again.

Gaza health officials say eight people were killed in Israeli strikes yesterday. Two were killed in an airstrike on a group of Palestinians in Tuffah. Later, five others lost their lives after drone strikes hit two police checkpoints — one in southern Khan Younis, another northwest of the Bureij refugee camp in Abu Hujair. Several more were wounded, some critically, according to medics on the ground.

A neighborhood speaks

“We heard the plane, then a sound like a giant hitting the ground,” said Laila, a woman in her forties who had returned to Tuffah with three children to salvage a mattress. “My brother was at the corner. He called and then the phone went dead.” Her voice trembled, but she did not sob. “There is no time for that.”

At Shifa and Nasser hospitals, stretcher-bearers moved through corridors that smelled of antiseptic and diesel. “We are treating more shrapnel, more children with burns,” said a medic who asked not to be named. “The triage keeps growing. We are running out of painkillers and bandages.”

The military narrative

The Israeli military said its forces operating in the southern Gaza Strip killed a militant who had entered an area still held by Israeli forces. It described the incident as a violation of the U.S.-brokered ceasefire that began last October. Officials said the individual “posed an imminent threat” to troops.

There was no immediate comment from the Israeli military about the airstrike in Tuffah or the drone strikes in Khan Younis and Bureij, even as the humanitarian toll mounted and local ambulances ferried victims from the rubble.

Fragments of a fragile peace

The ceasefire, negotiated last October after months of intense fighting, has been both fragile and paradoxical: it stopped wide-scale offensives but did not end the deaths. Gaza’s health ministry says more than 72,000 people, mostly civilians, have died from Israeli fire since the war began after Hamas’s 7 October 2023 attack on southern Israel, an assault that Israeli tallies put at about 1,200 killed.

Since the ceasefire came into effect last October, the ministry reports at least 600 more people have been killed by Israeli fire. Israel, for its part, reports that four soldiers have been killed by militants in Gaza since the truce began. Both sides accuse each other of violations — an accusation that plays out in neighborhoods where the only witnesses are children playing among shattered glass and the occasional elderly man who remembers when the shops had names that didn’t ask for donations.

Into the second phase

In January the Gaza deal entered a second phase. Israel is expected to withdraw more of its troops from the Strip; Hamas is meant to cede administrative control of many day-to-day functions. But transitions on paper often collide with realities on the ground: checkpoints still cast long shadows, and the administrative handover moves slowly, like a conversation interrupted mid-sentence.

“Every change takes place under pressure — political, military, humanitarian,” said Miriam Ben-Ari, a regional analyst who has tracked ceasefire negotiations. “The intent of the second phase is de-escalation, but if those small violations continue, the confidence necessary to fully implement the agreement evaporates quickly.”

Lives in numbers

Numbers can flatten suffering into data, but they are useful for understanding scale. The Gaza health ministry’s figure — more than 72,000 dead — adds a weight that is almost impossible to hold alone. Hundreds more wounded every week. Hospitals stretched to their breaking point. Displacement on a scale that makes temporary tents feel like a permanent address.

Humanitarian agencies warn that Gaza’s infrastructure — sewage, water, electricity — has been devastated. Schools double as shelters. Markets are skeletal. The World Food Programme and other aid groups report logistics are messy and sporadic, and reconstruction funds remain uncertain, while political impasses complicate delivery of basic services.

Voices from the street

“We sleep in shifts so the children don’t get scared,” a father in Khan Younis told me, his hands stained with dust. “At night you can still hear the drones. We pretend it’s thunder.”

An older woman in Bureij, who has lived through multiple displacements in her lifetime, said, “We plant what we can and wait for the rain. That’s what families here do — we keep trying.” Her eyes had the strange patience of people who have learned to pace their grief, to measure it out like a ration.

What does the world owe?

As a global audience, what should we do with this information? It is easy to become numbed by repetition: another strike, another tally. But every number contains names, interior lives, future plans severed mid-sentence: children who wanted to be teachers, a baker whose oven cannot be fixed, a midwife who has lost her clinic.

International diplomacy has an ethical dimension here: ceasefires are not just pauses in fighting; they are opportunities to rebuild trust, to secure humanitarian corridors, to lay groundwork for a durable peace. When those opportunities are punctured by violence, the cost is paid in lives and in the erosion of any hope that the next phase will be different.

Questions to sit with

  • How can ceasefires be enforced in a way that actually protects civilians?
  • What are the responsibilities of third-party brokers when violence resumes?
  • And perhaps most fundamentally: what measures can the international community take to make rebuilding not just possible but dignified?

Endings that demand beginnings

Walking through the rubble of Tuffah, I saw a child balancing a toy car in front of a collapsed gate. The car was dusty, its paint scratched, but it rolled. It is a simple, unwieldy image of stubborn hope: human beings continuing to move forward even when the ground gives beneath them. That resilience is not an argument for passivity. It is a call to action.

There are no simple solutions here. But there are choices: to look away, or to listen; to count numbers, or to count names. When the next dawn comes, will the world be ready to help mend what has been broken, and to hold both the immediate suffering and the long-term justice in its hands?

Milan tram derailment leaves at least one dead, about 40 injured

At least one dead, 40 injured after tram derails in Milan
Italian police officers and firefighters at the site of a tram derailment in Milan

When a Tram Lost Its Way: A Night That Shook the Heart of Milan

It was a bright, ordinary weekday in central Milan — the kind of day when office lights pulse to life, café lids flip back, and the city hums with the confident rhythm of people on the move. Then came the sound: not the soft click of shoes on cobbles, but a single, gutting crash that reversed every head and stilled a street of a million tiny energies.

On Vittorio Veneto Street, one of the arteries that feed Italy’s fashion capital, a modern yellow-and-white tram jumped its tracks and hurtled into the shopfront of a small store. By early evening counts, a person had died and around 40 were injured, officials said; one of the wounded was listed in critical condition. Emergency services — 13 ambulances among them — swarmed the scene, while civil protection teams pitched a temporary medical tent on the pavement to triage the wounded.

Scenes from the center

The picture that unfolded was shockingly domestic. Glass glittered across the street like bad confetti. A tram, one of the newest in Milan’s fleet, lay awkwardly slung across the thoroughfare, its metal shell bitten into the façade of a shop. Passersby who had been inside offices or trapped in traffic told reporters they felt the building shudder.

“I heard this enormous bang, like thunder from below,” said Marco, a barista who stepped outside his café to find the tram half in the street and half inside a boutique. “People were screaming, but then they were helping. The women from the hairdressers were tying scarves into slings—anything to stop the bleeding.”

An onlooker who had been a passenger described the suddenness. “One moment I was sitting, looking at my phone. The next we were all on the floor, thrown forwards. For a second, I thought it was an earthquake,” she told a local reporter. The image—commuters pinned to their seats and the tram’s interior turned into a scene of chaos—has replayed in countless accounts.

Authorities respond, questions mount

The Milan transport company, Azienda Trasporti Milanesi (ATM), issued a statement expressing shock and sorrow, and said it was working hand-in-glove with judicial authorities to determine what happened. “Our hearts are with the victims,” an ATM spokesperson said. “We will support the investigation and do everything we can for those affected.”

Emergency responders and investigators face a familiar checklist: mechanical failure, human error, infrastructure defect, or an unexpected hazard on the track. But as the street was cleared and forensic teams photographed skid marks, spokes and metal sheared clean, the city found itself asking a more unsettling question: how could a vehicle built to carry dozens of people across narrow, crowd-rich streets end up embedded in a shop window?

Trams and Milan: intimacy and risk

Milan’s trams are woven into the city’s identity. Their wooden benches, the soft clatter against rails, the pale yellow livery cutting historic streets—these are images tourists bring home in glossy photos and locals take for granted. The network has been running since the 19th century and serves tens of thousands of commuters every day. On any given morning, a tram is more home than vehicle for many: a place to hold your coffee, read the headlines, or practice a quick Italian greeting with a stranger.

That intimacy, though, is a double-edged sword. Dense traffic, pedestrians, narrow lanes and tight turns all concentrate risk. Yet historically, serious tram accidents in Milan have been rare, and public transport in Italy remains an essential lifeline. Experts point out that modern trams are designed with safety features that make such derailing unusual.

“When you look at urban tram systems across Europe, they’re among the safest ways to move large numbers of people,” said Dr. Elena Rossi, a transport safety specialist at the Polytechnic University of Milan. “But safety is not just built-in hardware. It’s daily maintenance, consistent training, and—importantly—a system that allows crews to react to anomalies. That’s why investigators will be methodical here.”

Human threads and the city’s texture

Talk to Milanese and you hear the human side of the story: the shopkeepers who opened their doors to bleeding strangers; the pensioners who walked to the scene with blankets; the police officers who spent hours recording statements beneath the arches of the tramway. “It was terrible, but there was this huge wave of solidarity,” said Lucia, who runs a small family-run boutique opposite the crash. “Everyone who could lifted, carried, calmed. That’s Milan in a sentence.”

There are cultural details that anchor the event in place: the clack of heels on Vittorio Veneto’s paving, the scent of espresso drifting from a bar that refused to close, the chatter of fashion students discussing an assignment as if life would simply go on. Yet underneath the stoicism, there was shock—an expression common in cities where people are used to urban drama but not catastrophe at their doorstep.

What comes next

Investigators will comb through data from the vehicle’s black box, review CCTV footage, and interview the driver and witnesses. Regulators will ask whether the tram’s design or maintenance contributed, whether speed limits were observed in that stretch, and if signage and track conditions met standards. The judicial inquiry could take weeks or months. Families of the injured and of the deceased will seek comfort and answers, and the company faces a reputational storm as it tries to restore confidence.

Beyond the immediate questions of cause and accountability, this event nudges a broader conversation: what does safe urban mobility look like as cities densify and as we increasingly rely on shared, high-capacity transit? How do we balance the urgency of efficient movement with the patience of maintenance and oversight?

If there is a small mercy in these calamities, it is the reminder of how quickly communities can rally. Volunteers from neighborhood associations arrived to hand out water and blankets. An elderly woman who’d been waiting for the bus lent her handbag as a makeshift pillow. These are the gestures that don’t make the headlines but stitch a city back together.

Questions for the reader

As you picture that tram — rigid and bright, half in the street and half in a shop window — ask yourself: what would you do if something like this happened where you live? How do you feel about the trade-offs between modern, high-capacity transit and the complexities of historic urban fabric? And perhaps most urgently: what do we owe one another in those first chaotic hours after a public disaster?

Milan will reopen its streets, sweep away the glass, and set its trams rolling again. But the memory of that evening will linger in the city’s corners and in the hands of those who helped. For the families of the injured and the person who died, the weeks ahead will be about healing, recovery, and answers. For everyone else, it is a reminder of the fragile trust we place in the systems that move us—and the human heartbeat that keeps those systems humane.

Hillary Clinton Insists Husband Was Unaware of Jeffrey Epstein’s Crimes

Clinton confident husband didn't know of Epstein's crimes
Hillary Clinton said that she knew Ghislaine Maxwell casually as an acquaintance

In the Quiet of Chappaqua, a Loud Reminder of Power and Pain

Chappaqua wears its history like an old coat: familiar, slightly frayed, a little proud. On the day Hillary Clinton slipped into the room to give her closed-door deposition, fog lay low over the town green and the diner on King Street poured coffee into paper cups for the same faces that have read the morning paper here for decades.

It was here, amid maple trees and modest clapboard houses, that a national drama folded inward. Reporters clustered like shorebirds outside the quiet suburban house where the Clintons live, microphones glinting, while inside a Republican-led congressional committee pursued questions about Jeffrey Epstein — the disgraced financier who died in a federal jail cell in 2019 while awaiting trial on sex‑trafficking charges.

What Was Said — and What Wasn’t

Hillary Clinton told lawmakers she had “no idea” about Epstein’s criminal conduct and was confident her husband, former President Bill Clinton, did not know about the crimes, either. “I think the chronology of the connection that he had with Epstein ended years, several years, before anything about Epstein’s criminal activities came to light,” she said in an opening statement shared publicly.

Her answers, she said afterward, were as complete as she could make them in the face of endless, repetitive questioning. “I answered every question as fully as I could,” she told aides and social media followers. When pressed about Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein’s close associate who was convicted of sex trafficking and sentenced to 20 years in prison, Clinton described Maxwell as an acquaintance she had met on a few occasions — but nothing more.

If you were looking for fireworks, you didn’t find them in the transcript of her opening remarks. What you did find were careful, measured denials threaded with a challenge: if Congress truly wanted the whole picture about Epstein, it should ask President Donald Trump — who socialized with Epstein in the 1990s and early 2000s — to testify under oath about his own connections.

Politics, Process, and a Leaked Photograph

The deposition in Chappaqua was the culmination of months of rancor. The Clintons initially resisted subpoenas but ultimately agreed to testify after Republicans threatened contempt. The hearing briefly paused when a photograph, taken in violation of committee rules, leaked to social media — a reminder that in the age of viral images, even closed rooms are porous.

James Comer, the Republican chair of the House Oversight Committee, called the session “productive” and said it raised unanswered questions about Epstein’s web of connections. “The purpose of the whole investigation is to try to understand many things about Epstein,” he said afterward. Yet Comer also acknowledged the limits of a single deposition. “There were a lot of questions that we asked that we weren’t satisfied with the answers that we got,” he told reporters.

The Man at the Center — and the Papers That Keep Revealing

Jeffrey Epstein’s name still convenes a constellation of threads: mansions, private islands, elite networking — and a mountain of paperwork. In recent months, the Justice Department has released millions of pages of court records and documents tied to the Epstein dossier, revealing meetings, flight logs and social circles that span finance, politics, and celebrity.

Those records include references to flights Bill Clinton took on Epstein’s plane in the early 2000s, which the former president has acknowledged and regretted. According to Comer, Epstein visited the White House 17 times while Clinton was in office — a tally the committee says warrants further scrutiny. For many, the paperwork has been an ugly reminder that proximity to power can look like complicity, even when it is not.

Voices from the Town and the Courtroom

“You could feel the tangle of history here,” said Maria Alvarez, who runs the bakery across from the train station. “People have their opinions. Some defend the Clintons; some are angry that politicians never seem to face consequences. But mostly folks here are tired — tired of hearings, tired of secrets.” Her voice was soft but edged with frustration.

A legal expert following the probe, Professor Daniel Hargrove of Columbia Law School, put the session into a broader legal frame. “A deposition like this can clear a name or raise more questions. It’s not a trial. It’s a thread in a larger fabric of inquiry. What matters most is whether these documents and testimonies cohere into something that can be tested,” he said.

Meanwhile, survivors’ advocates say that the spectacle of politically charged depositions risks sidelining the people who were harmed. “We keep seeing name‑calling and partisan theater,” said Anika Jones, director of Survivors’ Voice, an advocacy nonprofit. “What survivors need is accountability and resources, not politicking. That’s been the tragedy of this story: the victims are often the afterthought.”

Beyond Chappaqua: Power, Partisanship, and Public Trust

Why does this matter beyond the picturesque streets of Chappaqua? Because Epstein’s case is a mirror held up to how societies handle allegations that intersect with elite networks. It asks whether institutions — political, legal, social — are able to rise above rivalry and deliver transparency. It also forces a reckoning over how we treat survivors of sexual exploitation and trafficking.

Think about it: a man with multi-million-dollar connections dies awaiting trial; a handful of powerful names are scattered through documents and flight logs; one associate is convicted and imprisoned; others deny wrongdoing and point fingers. How does a democracy square that circle without succumbing to the partisan grindstone?

What Comes Next

Bill Clinton is slated to testify in the days after his wife’s deposition — an unprecedented moment in American history, as it will mark the first time a former president has been compelled to testify before Congress in such an investigation. For many, that raises the stakes and the emotional temperature.

Representative Robert Garcia, the top Democrat on the committee, pressed for a wider lens. “This shouldn’t be a selective show,” he told reporters. “If we’re serious about truth, we call everyone whose name is in the files.” Others on the committee have hinted at plans to release full video and transcripts, which will inevitably become fodder for both newsrooms and dinner-table debates.

Questions to Carry with You

As this chapter unfolds, ask yourself: Do you trust the institutions charged with investigating these matters? Who benefits when inquiries become political pugilism? And above all, how can systems better protect survivors while ensuring that claims are fairly and thoroughly examined?

In Chappaqua, the maple leaves fell like small, slow apologies. The town went back to its routines, even as the nation watched the threads of a long, painful story unwind. The deposition was one scene in a far larger drama — and the questions it raises will not be answered by one testimony, one photograph, or one news cycle. They will be answered, if at all, by the arc of investigation, reform, and public will.

Mareykanka oo ka digay weeraro ku wajahan Israel

Feb 27(Jowhar)-Wasaaradda Arrimaha Dibadda ee Mareykanka ayaa amartay in shaqaalaha, diblumaasiyiinta iyo qoysaska Mareykanka ah ee Israa’iil ku sugan laga soo daadgureeyo sababo la xiriira khataro amni oo isa soo taraya.

Denmark’s Prime Minister Announces Early General Election Date

Danish Prime Minister calls snap general election
Denmark's Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen walks to the Parliament Hall in Copenhagen

Denmark at a Crossroads: An Election Called as the Arctic Turns Hot

On an overcast morning in Copenhagen, where bicycles outnumber cars and the smell of freshly baked rye bread hangs in the air, Denmark’s prime minister stepped onto the steps of Christiansborg and announced what many here had been bracing for: a general election on 24 March. The declaration was crisp, parliamentary in formality, but it landed amid a geopolitical storm that stretches from the cobbled streets of the capital to the windswept ice fjords of Greenland.

“This is a moment to ask the people what kind of Denmark we want to be,” said Mette Frederiksen, her voice measured but unmistakably intent. Frederiksen—once Denmark’s youngest prime minister, raised in a Social Democratic household by a typesetter and a childcare assistant—has come to embody a paradox: socially rooted yet militarily resolute; compassionate at home and uncompromising on security abroad.

Why Now? The Clock, the Law and the Compass of Foreign Policy

Under Denmark’s constitution, an election must be held within four years of the last one—so the calendar alone made a 2026 vote inevitable. But the timing also carries political calculation. Frederiksen folded her announcement into a platform that leans hard into two subjects likely to matter to voters: security and redistribution. She proposed reforming the retirement age and introducing a wealth tax while pledging to deepen Denmark’s defense posture against renewed Russian assertiveness.

“Security policy will remain at the heart of Danish politics for years,” she told reporters, framing the vote as a referendum on Copenhagen’s role in a changing Europe. The language was no accident: Denmark has been one of Kyiv’s staunchest supporters since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, providing military equipment, humanitarian aid and vocal diplomatic backing.

Arctic Tensions: Greenland, Geopolitics and Personal Pride

At the heart of the diplomatic turbulence lies Greenland—an autonomous nation of roughly 56,000 people, whose ice-carved coastlines and strategic location have long drawn global attention. The saga that began with an extraordinary 2019 overture from then-US President Donald Trump—in which he floated buying Greenland—has simmered and flared, leaving a residue of mistrust.

“Greenlanders are not a piece of real estate,” sighed Aviaja, a Greenlandic schoolteacher I met in Nuuk. “We make decisions about our future.”

Washington’s renewed interest in Greenland has been framed as a matter of security: proximity to the North American continent, potential air bases, and new sea lanes as the Arctic warms. NATO’s response—an initiative called Arctic Sentry—aims to bolster allied presence in the high north. Denmark, which retains responsibility for Greenland’s foreign affairs, has insisted that any decisions about the island’s future must involve Greenlanders themselves.

The deeper concern for many Danes is this: how do you defend sovereignty and regional influence when your closest ally behaves unpredictably? Frederiksen hinted that Denmark must “stand on our own feet,” suggesting Copenhagen will seek to redefine aspects of its relationship with Washington without severing the alliance.

Domestic Politics: Polls, Losses and an Unsettled Electorate

Domestically, Frederiksen’s Social Democrats enter the campaign bruised. The party’s fortunes have waned since 2022, when it secured a plurality in the general election. Local and European election results last year were unkind: the Social Democrats lost nearly half the municipalities it once controlled, including Copenhagen—closing a century-long chapter of municipal dominance.

A recent TV2 poll placed the party at 21 percent—some 6.5 percentage points down from its 2022 general-election result of roughly 27.5 percent. “Numbers matter,” said political analyst Katrine Holm. “But narratives matter too. Security gives the Social Democrats a theme they can own. Whether that will be enough is another question.”

Not everyone was thrilled about the sudden campaign. Lars Løkke Rasmussen, leader of the coalition partner the Moderates, hinted at reluctance. “If it were up to us, we would have waited,” he told reporters, a terse reminder that coalitions are often marriages of convenience rather than romance.

The Platform: Guns, Gold and the Social Contract

Frederiksen’s sketch of a platform blends two currents that define contemporary Danish politics: muscular security policy and renewed attention to social fairness. She proposed a wealth tax aimed at funding welfare measures and signaled readiness to reform retirement rules in response to demographic shifts.

“We must protect our country and care for the many, not just the few,” said a municipal worker in Aarhus, who preferred not to give her name. “That’s a message that still resonates in neighbourhoods where people depend on public services.”

Beyond rhetoric, the broader region is moving: since 2022, many NATO members have increased defense budgets and committed to meeting the alliance’s 2 percent of GDP guideline. Denmark has contributed significantly to Ukraine relative to its size—sending ammunition, specialized equipment and financial support—and has signaled sustained investment in capability-building.

Voices from the North: Greenlanders Weigh In

Travel to Greenland and the abstract becomes visceral. At a fish market in Ilulissat, where wind gnaws at fishermen’s faces and enormous icebergs calve into the sea, locals speak of sovereignty in terms of livelihood. “Our fisheries sustain us,” said a fisherman, his hands knotted by years of work. “We decide how to manage those waters.”

Greenlandic leaders have been plain: meddling from overseas is unacceptable. The island’s 2009 Self-Government Act devolved many powers to Nuuk, and many Greenlanders view new diplomatic overtures with skepticism. There is also pride—an insistence that Greenland’s future must be charted by Greenlanders.

What This Election Means for Europe and the World

Small states often feel big-world tremors more acutely. Denmark’s vote will not only decide domestic policy; it will send a message about how Europe intends to navigate a more fractured transatlantic relationship, a warming Arctic, and an era of renewed great-power competition.

Ask yourself: when allies disagree, who sets the terms? When strategic geography collides with local identity, which wins? The Danish contest is a vivid reminder that in our interconnected age, local ballots can reverberate through capitals from Washington to Brussels to Nuuk.

  • Election date: 24 March 2026
  • Denmark population: ~5.9 million
  • Greenland population: ~56,000
  • Recent poll (TV2): Social Democrats at ~21% (a drop of ~6.5 percentage points from 2022)
  • Key issues: security and rearmament, retirement age reform, proposed wealth tax, Greenland’s future

Looking Ahead: A Small Nation’s Big Questions

On election day, Danes will cycle to polling stations, possibly pausing for a last cup of coffee—hygge in miniature—and consider whether they want a steady hand, a sharper rearmament, or a different social contract. Whatever the result, the contest will reflect a nation wrestling with its identity: protector of liberal values, pragmatic security actor, and guardian of northern lands that feel both remote and central to global strategy.

Will Denmark choose continuity or change? Will Greenland’s voice be amplified or sidelined? And how will Europe respond if alliances fray under pressure? These are not abstract questions. They matter to fishermen in Ilulissat, parents in Odense, and soldiers training on the ranges outside Aalborg. They matter to the West’s idea of solidarity in an uncertain century.

When the ballots are counted, the outcome will be a thermometer for a region in flux—a test of whether Denmark can reconcile the old social contract with urgent new demands from geopolitics. For now, Copenhagen’s streets hum with debate. The fjords are quiet, but the questions they inspire are anything but.

U.S. and Iran Report Major Headway in High-Stakes Negotiations

'Significant progress' in talks between US and Iran
Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi (L) with Oman's Foreign Minister Badr Albusaidi during their meeting in Geneva

At the edge of escalation: quiet diplomacy in Geneva, loud consequences across the globe

There is a particular hush to Geneva in late winter — soft coats, the clack of briefcases, a sky the color of unspent ink. In a glass-walled room not far from the lake, envoys shuffled in and out, translated phrases were weighed and reweighed, and an unlikely intermediary poured coffee and offered a steady hand.

Oman, long the understated broker between Washington and Tehran, announced what diplomats call a cautious success: “significant progress” had been made in indirect talks aimed at defusing one of the world’s most combustible disputes — Iran’s nuclear programme and the web of sanctions and threats that surround it.

“We have finished the day after significant progress in the negotiation between the United States and Iran,” Oman’s foreign minister, Sayyid Badr Albusaidi, posted on X after the sessions concluded. The two sides agreed to reconvene soon, with technical-level talks slated next week in Vienna.

It is tempting to imagine these rooms as removed from the clangor of aircraft carriers and airfields. It is not. The diplomatic thread is woven through a very visible military tapestry: the USS Gerald R. Ford steaming in the Mediterranean, the movement of fighter jets, and the evacuation of some diplomatic dependents from parts of the Middle East. The stakes are immediate and spectral — a deal could defuse threats of new strikes, while a breakdown could open a path toward a much wider, bloodier conflict.

What they brought to the table

On one side were American envoys, reportedly Steve Witkoff alongside Jared Kushner, engaging indirectly with Iran’s lead negotiator, Abbas Araqchi. On the other was Tehran’s steadfast demand: relief from sanctions and explicit recognition of the right to enrich uranium under international safeguards. Iran’s team said it would show “seriousness and flexibility,” while clearly prioritizing sanctions relief.

On the other side, the Trump administration — as it has publicly insisted — wants to widen the agenda. Washington’s negotiators have pushed for discussions that would bring Iran’s ballistic missile programme and its regional activities into the frame. “If you can’t even make progress on the nuclear programme, it’s going to be hard to make progress on the ballistic missiles as well,” said a senior U.S. official in a round of press briefings, echoing concerns shared by allies.

In Tehran, officials say nuclear and non-nuclear matters should remain separate. “Our position is clear: nuclear issues and the lifting of sanctions must be at the center,” an Iranian foreign ministry spokesperson told local state media. “The other matters can be discussed in other forums.”

These are not abstract disputes. Under the 2015 JCPOA (the nuclear deal that once bound Iran and six world powers), Tehran limited its enrichment and allowed unprecedented monitoring by the International Atomic Energy Agency. When the United States withdrew in 2018, sanctions returned and Iran gradually rolled back many of those limitations. By 2021–2022 Iran had enriched uranium to near-weapon-grade levels — as high as 60% fissile purity in some reported instances — and analysts warned that the country’s so-called “breakout time” to produce a bomb’s worth of fissile material had shortened from a year to months, depending on assumptions.

Between a warning and a deadline

President Trump has set unmistakable timelines and stark choices in public remarks, warning that “really bad things” could happen if Tehran did not make a deal in days. For many observers, this rhetoric has added urgency to the negotiations while also underscoring the peril: when leaders publicly set short windows for diplomacy, the risk of miscalculation rises.

“Diplomacy is often noisy and slow,” said a veteran Middle East analyst at a European think tank, who asked not to be named. “But noisy deadlines have a way of producing desperate decisions. The hope here is that you can convert public pressure into discreet progress, quietly, before the drums of war get louder.”

Voices on the ground: fear, resilience, and the everyday

Walk through Tehran’s bazaar and the air carries cardamom, diesel, and impatience. Shopkeepers talk about rising prices, parents worry about conscription and the future of their children, and young Iranians — many who were born after the revolution — recite a different calculus when they talk about their nation and its ambitions.

“We want life, job, and peace,” said Azar, a mother of two who runs a tea stall near the Grand Bazaar. “Talks are good if they bring bread and stability, not just headlines. If the corridors of power decide everything, what about us?”

In the Gulf, energy markets skitter with every whisper of escalation. Traders and ministers watch not only carrier movements but also the quiet numbers: oil accounts for a significant share of Iran’s state revenue; sanctions have slashed exports and battering public services. Several Gulf producers have signaled nervousness at the prospect of renewed conflict that could choke shipping in the Strait of Hormuz and send oil prices spiking. World Bank and IMF analyses over recent years have documented how sanctions and inflation have eroded household incomes across Iran, feeding social unrest and political pressure for some kind of relief.

Why this matters to you

  • Global energy markets are sensitive to even the threat of conflict in the Persian Gulf; consumers in Seoul, London and Lagos may see it reflected in prices at the pump.
  • Non-proliferation norms are at stake: whether a negotiated rollback, rigorous verification, and return to inspections can be an effective template for preventing nuclear proliferation elsewhere.
  • Regional stability hinges on a delicate balance — the more Iran feels cornered, the more it is likely to lean on proxies around the region. That translates into everyday violence for people in Lebanon, Yemen, Iraq and beyond.

“This is not just about centrifuges and sanctions,” said a former IAEA inspector. “It’s about whether international rules and verification can outlast geopolitical competition. If diplomacy works here, it can be an argument for restraint globally.”

What happens next?

The next technical-level talks in Vienna will be critical. They will focus on timelines, sequencing of sanctions relief, and the technical benchmarks that inspectors can verify. But even if diplomats thread this needle, the agreement’s survival will hinge on domestic politics in both Tehran and Washington, regional trust deficits, and the stubborn realities of enforcement.

So I’ll ask you, the reader: do you trust the machinery of diplomacy — the translators, the back channels, the tweaks in Vienna — to keep a conflagration from starting? Or do public deadlines and military posturing make you think we are closer to miscalculation than to compromise?

These Geneva talks are small in the footprint of global headlines yet enormous in consequence. They are a reminder that the difference between war and negotiation often rests in rooms that the public never sees, and in the improbable patience of intermediaries like Oman who, for now, are buying the world more time.

Dagaal toos ah oo ka dhex qarxay Afghanistan iyo Pakistan

Feb 27(Jowhar)-Afghanistan iyo Pakistan ayaa mar kale dagaal uu ka dhex qarxay iyadoo Wasiirka Difaaca Pakistan Khawaja Asif ayaa sheegay in dagaal furan uu u dhexeeyo Pakistan iyo xukuumadda Taliban ee Afgaanistaan iyadoo qaraxyo laga soo sheegayo Kabul, dagaalkana uu ka socdo xadka.

Bill Clinton to Face Questioning by House Panel in Epstein Probe

Epstein files: Thousands of redacted documents released
Bill Clinton has previously expressed regret for socialising with Epstein and said he was not aware of any criminal activity

In the Quiet of Chappaqua, a Storm Overpowering the Small-Town Calm

The day the Clintons sat for depositions in a modest arts centre in Chappaqua felt like a town meeting that had swallowed the national conversation whole.

Journalists, camera crews and local residents funneled into that leafy Westchester hamlet as if a magnet had been dropped into a swimming pool: ripples outward, everyone converging on the centre. The Secret Service strung up metal barricades. Press vans clustered like migratory birds. Somewhere nearby, a deli owner wiped down the counter and shook his head at the spectacle.

“You usually come in for coffee and a crossword,” said Maria Hernandez, who has run the corner café for 18 years. “Now it’s ‘Did you see who walked by? Did you see the barricades?’. It feels unreal — like we’re in a movie about people who made a movie about people.”

Why the Depositions Matter

At the heart of the proceedings is Jeffrey Epstein — the late financier whose criminal conduct and connections have continued to ricochet through the corridors of power. Epstein pleaded guilty in 2008 to state charges related to soliciting prostitution, including accusations involving underage girls. He later faced federal sex-trafficking charges before his death in a New York jail cell in 2019, which authorities ruled a suicide.

This is not just about the man who died; it’s about the files, the flight logs, the photographs and the networks — and what they say about wealth, influence and accountability.

Republicans on the House Oversight Committee, armed with new disclosures from the Department of Justice that they describe as “millions of documents,” say they are trying to understand who moved in Epstein’s orbit and why. Democrats warn that the current probe is more about scoring political points against President Donald Trump than about seeking survivors’ justice.

Who was questioned, and why it matters

Hillary Clinton testified before the panel first, delivering an opening statement in which she pushed the committee to call President Trump to testify as well. “If this committee is serious about learning the truth about Epstein’s trafficking crimes,” she said publicly, “it would ask him directly under oath about the tens of thousands of times he shows up in the Epstein files.”

The following day, former President Bill Clinton took his turn. He is more entangled in public perception, having acknowledged several flights on Epstein’s private plane in the early 2000s for humanitarian work linked to the Clinton Foundation, but he has insisted he severed ties long before Epstein’s 2008 conviction and denied ever visiting Epstein’s private island.

Neither Hillary nor Bill Clinton has been accused of criminal wrongdoing in connection with Epstein. Mere mention in documents does not equate to criminal culpability. Yet the appearances were demanded under threat of contempt of Congress — two former first family members summoned into a moment that blends the personal and the political.

Images, Logs and the Weaponization Claim

Among the trove released by the Justice Department were photographs and travel logs that set off renewed public curiosity. One image included in the files — obscured by a black rectangle to protect parts of the photograph — showed Bill Clinton reclining in a hot tub. Another picture appeared to show him swimming beside a dark-haired woman widely identified as Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein’s alleged accomplice. Such images, whether grainy or pixel-perfect, are potent: they require no legalese to elicit a reaction.

“Photos have this strange power,” observed Dr. Lena Morales, a media studies professor at Columbia University. “They compress complexity into a moment and let our imaginations rush in. That’s why they’re central in political theatre, even if they tell an incomplete story.”

For Democrats, the whole inquiry smells of a partisan fishing expedition. “This is being used as a cudgel,” said Representative Aisha Carter, a Democrat on the committee. “We should be focused on victims. Instead, we are weaponizing trauma for political theater.”

For Republicans, the push is an accountability exercise. “The public deserves answers,” said Committee Chair James Comer. “We are following leads and documents. No one is above scrutiny.”

Chappaqua’s Uncomfortable Spotlight

Inside the arts centre, the mood was tightly controlled, but outside, neighbors struggled to reconcile the relaxed rhythms of their community with the gravity of what was unfolding. A retired teacher named Harold Peck, who moves easily between newspaper clippings and neighborly greetings, lamented how national debates arrive without knocking.

“Chappaqua is a town of book clubs and PTA meetings,” Peck said. “We like to think we can keep our lives small. But power has ways of collapsing distance.”

The depositions were held behind closed doors — a choice that angered the Clintons, who had asked for open hearings and even televised testimony, only to find themselves in a quiet room away from the public gaze. Bill Clinton called closed hearings akin to a “kangaroo court.” That line — sharp and performative — landed differently depending on one’s political lens.

What This Reveals About Power and Accountability

Beyond the personalities and photographs, the hearings invite deeper questions. How do wealth and access shape legal outcomes? How does public curiosity about the rich and famous intersect with the real needs of survivors seeking justice? And when political actors put their own interests ahead of victims’, who holds them accountable?

There are concrete numbers that help frame the scale. Epstein’s 2008 plea deal allowed him to serve 13 months in a county jail with work-release privileges — a sentence widely criticized as lenient. Civil suits connected to Epstein and Maxwell have alleged harm to dozens of women, and various legal settlements and claims have resulted in millions of dollars paid to victims, illustrating the monetary dimension of the fallout even as many survivors say money cannot be justice.

“We must not let spectacle eclipse substance,” said Naomi O’Connell, director of a nonprofit working with survivors of trafficking. “Investigations should be survivor-centered. Too often, they become about personalities and not accountability.”

Readers, what do you think?

Do high-profile hearings like these bring us closer to justice, or do they gratify a national appetite for scandal while leaving systemic problems untouched? When the cameras leave Chappaqua, will anything meaningful have changed for those Epstein wronged?

  • Epstein’s 2008 conviction: state charges related to solicitation of prostitution; served roughly 13 months.
  • 2019 federal charges: Epstein was facing sex-trafficking charges when he died in custody; death ruled a suicide.
  • Ongoing scrutiny: DOJ releases of documents have provided new leads and renewed political debate.

Closing Thoughts: A Community, a Country, a Conversation

The tiny town of Chappaqua, with its maple-lined streets and Sunday farmers’ market, may one day shrug off the attention. But the questions raised by these depositions are not local; they are national and global. They speak to how institutions respond when allegations implicate wealth and proximity to power, and whether public inquiry can evolve into meaningful reform.

As the sun set on the arts centre and the last of the press vans rolled away, Maria at the café poured one more coffee. “People will forget details,” she said, stirring sugar into a cup. “But stories like this hang around in the town like a smell. They make you notice things: who you trust, how you listen. Maybe that’s the point.”

So we keep watching, probing, asking. Because history is not only what powerful people do when no one is looking — it is also what we, as a society, insist upon seeing when we finally look back.

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