Published On 4 Dec 2025
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Published On 4 Dec 2025

Published On 4 Dec 2025
According to a survey, the majority of people in Germany, France, the Netherlands, and several other EU member states believe that there is a high likelihood that Russia will start a war against their nation.
Just over half of respondents in nine of the nine surveyed European nations reported that the risk of war was “high” or “very high” in their surveys, according to a poll conducted by Cluster17 in France on Thursday.
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Poland, which was once a part of the Soviet Union and borders Russia, had by far the highest level of war anxiety, with 77 percent of respondents citing a high risk of conflict, according to the survey.
Respondents in Belgium and the Netherlands reported that 59% of respondents saw a high risk of war, with roughly 50% of Germans, French, and Spanish respondents all agreeing.
34 percent of respondents, followed by Portuguese and Croatians, had the lowest risk of war.
Just under half of Europeans surveyed said they viewed Donald Trump as an “enemy of Europe,” up four points from September.
Le Grand Continent, a French-based journal for foreign affairs, published the poll.
Since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, Europe’s leaders have been preoccupious about the security situation there.
Following similar actions by Belgium and the Netherlands, France announced last week that it would reintroduce military service, which was discontinued in 1996, starting from January 1 on a voluntary basis.
Emmanuel Macron, the president of France, blatantly cited the action as a response to Russian aggression, warning that Moscow would try to take advantage of any “signal of weakness.”
Vladimir Putin, the president of Russia, retaliated on Tuesday over proposed changes to a Trump-backed plan to end the Ukrainian war by saying that Russia was “ready” for war.

Published On 4 Dec 2025
More social media checks are being conducted as the US expands its vetting process for applicants seeking highly skilled H-1B visas, as well as those who work in fields like misinformation and disinformation.
On Thursday, the US Department of State mandated that all H-1B applicants and their dependents make all of their social media profiles public so that they “don’t intend to harm Americans and our national interests.” Following a similar requirement in July that all student visa applicants must publicly update their social media profiles, this is made.
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H-1B visas allow US businesses to employ foreigners with “speciality” knowledge, typically in academic or technical fields like medicine, technology, finance, and engineering. The H-1B offers a path to immigrating to the US, despite being categorized as temporary visas.
According to an internal cable obtained by the Reuters news agency, the State Department will also examine H-1B applications for work in fields that promote “free speech” censorship.
For any work in “misinformation, disinformation, content moderation, fact-checking, compliance, and online safety,” or “social media or financial services companies involved in the suppression of protected expression,” consular staff are required to review applicants’ LinkedIn and employment histories.
Any accompanying family members and H-1B visa renewal applicants are subject to the new regulations.
You should pursue a finding that the applicant is ineligible, the cable said, “if you find evidence that an applicant was responsible for, or complicit in, censorship or attempted censorship of protected expression in the United States.”
The US State Department, which previously supported international projects aimed at verifying facts and combating misinformation and disinformation, is departing from the US Agency for International Development (USAID).
Since his January return to the White House, US President Donald Trump has taken action to ease what he perceives as restrictions on “free speech,” which are typically those of conservative voices. Following the US Capitol attack on January 6, 2021, Trump himself was previously removed from X, formerly known as Twitter. Elon Musk, a free speech skeptic and tech billionaire, purchased the platform in 2022, and he was reinstated.
Signing an executive order that outlaws “federal censorship” of free speech was one of his first as president. The US State Department threatened in May that it would impose a ban on foreigners who had worked to impose restrictions on free speech on US citizens, including by pressuring US tech companies to impose rules on social media content.

The centrist Liberal Party’s Nasralla received 40.23 percent of the votes cast on Wednesday, while Asfura’s Asfura received 39.69 percent, according to the nation’s National Electoral Council (CNE).
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Less than 14 000 votes lessen Nasrallah’s advantage over Asfura.
With 19.01 percent, Rixi Moncada of the ruling leftist LIBRE Party was significantly ahead.
The CNE believed that the outcome was still too early.
Even if the candidate has the fewest votes or does not have an absolute majority, the candidate with the most votes wins.
The counting of votes on Sunday was a contentious affair due to technical difficulties.
Voting was resumed by the CNE on Wednesday, with members of the electoral council blaming the organization behind the tabulating platform for the inconveniences.
Cossette Lopez-Osorio, a CNE official, claimed the most recent counting halt was the result of system maintenance that was performed without proper notice and that she found it “inexcusable.”
Despite the issues, 72-year-old television presenter Nasralla remained confident despite the difficulties.
On X, he wrote, “We’re going to win, either way.”
As the final votes are counted, election observers from the Organization of American States, the Organization of the European Union, and Honduras’ electoral authority have urged calm and patience.
The CNE predicts that a winner’s announcement may still be days away because ballots are still coming from far-off places, some of which are only accessible by donkey or riverboat.
Initial estimates for Asfura’s lead of about 500 votes were based on the early preliminary results released on Monday. Voters would have to be manually tallied, according to election organizers, who declared a “technical tie.”
Nasralla had a slight lead when the count was updated on Tuesday.
Trump claimed election fraud on Monday, claiming on his Truth Social account that Honduras was “trying to change the results of their Presidential Election.”
“There will be hell to pay!” declares the statement. On November 30th, Hondurans’ electorate cast an overwhelming majority of ballots, he claimed. If Asfura loses, Trump has threatened to halt US aid to Honduras. The US gave the Central American nation $ 193.5 million in aid in 2024.
A winner’s announcement is legally given within one month.
The ruling party candidate, Moncada, criticized the vote-transmission system for lacking transparency and disclosed it to the Telesur television news network on Wednesday.
In response to Trump’s accusations of fraud, which she claimed violated international laws, Moncada said it was “a direct intervention that adversely affected the Honduran people’s interests.”
Additionally, Trump pardoned former Asfura National Party leader Juan Orlando Hernandez, who had been serving a 45-year drug trafficking sentence in the US.
In what was widely believed to be more interference, the 57-year-old lawyer was freed on Monday.
Hernandez thanked Trump on Wednesday in his first social media post since his release, claiming that he had “changed my life.”
Hernandez stated earlier that he had experienced political persecution in a four-page letter to the US president that was released by the media on Wednesday.

Even though critical reservations about the plan from significant stakeholder Belgium seem unresolved, the European Commission has suggested an unprecedented use of frozen Russian assets or foreign borrowing to finance Ukraine’s war effort against Russia.
The executive body of the European Union announced “two solutions to address Ukraine’s financing needs” for 2026 and 2027 on Wednesday.
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A “reparations loan” funded by Russian state assets that were frozen in the EU as a result of Moscow’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine is the first option, followed by an EU loan to Kyiv obtained from the private market.
In a press release, the Commission stated that “these options reflect the EU’s commitment to supporting Ukraine as well as the defense of its sovereignty and the maintenance of state functions as well as as as a strategic investment in Europe’s security and the pursuit of a just and lasting peace.”
Ursula von der Leyen, president of the Commission, stated to reporters that the proposals will enable Ukraine to “take the means” to defend itself and advance peace negotiations from a strong position.
“We have a proposal to provide for the next two years the financing needs of Ukraine. That’s 90 billion euros. She stated that international partners would be responsible for covering the remainder.
“We are putting more money into Russia’s aggression war.” Von der Leyen continued, “And this should serve as a further incentive for Russia to engage in negotiating.”
The president of the Commission noted that Belgium, whose Brussels-based financial institution Euroclear is the principal holder of the frozen Russian assets, had almost fully been taken into account in the proposal to EU member states.
Von der Leyen claimed that the new proposal also applies to other EU financial institutions that are holding Russian assets, while EU officials claimed that France, Germany, Sweden, and Cyprus are also holding these types of assets that will be used to fund the loan.
The Commission added that the loan, which would be issued in the form of a loan, would not amount to a confiscation; instead, Ukraine would only be required to pay back the money if Russia makes up the lost wages from the war.
If 15 out of 27 members vote in favor, the EU could move forward with the proposal for frozen assets. At a summit of EU leaders on December 18, the Commission stated that it hoped to clinch a firm commitment from the members.
The second option, which involves borrowing money from foreign markets, would typically require the EU’s members to agree on something, which could prove challenging given Hungary’s friendly government’s opposition to previous funding for Ukraine.
Belgium has repeatedly stated that it opposes the freeze plan, arguing that the proposed use of 140 billion euros ($163 billion) would put a peace deal in jeopardy and put it at risk of Russian-style crippling legal action in the future.
Brussels has a requirement that EU nations agree to pay any legal fees incurred by any pending Russian legal disputes.
Belgian Foreign Minister Maxime Prevot reiterated these reservations on Wednesday, noting that the legal documents “do not address our concerns in a satisfactory manner.”
The worst of all, according to Prevot, is that the option of the reparations loan is risky and has never been done before. This explains why we continue to advocate for an alternative, such as allowing the EU to borrow funds from the markets.
Russia, in contrast, has claimed that using its assets would constitute theft. If the plan is approved, VTB’s head, Andrei Kostin, threatened the bloc with 50 years in court on Monday.
Von der Leyen claimed that Scott Bessent, the secretary of the US Treasury, had “positively received” the news of the proposed reparation loan. Despite the complexity of the plan’s 28-point plan to end the war, which suggested putting some of the assets in a joint US-Russian investment vehicle, the report provides that assurance.
By late 2027, the EU will have made a significant step toward removing the bloc’s decades-long reliance on Russian energy, as announced earlier on Wednesday.
The European Commission’s recommendations for ending Russian energy shipments were “historical agreement” reached between the EU government and representatives of the European Parliament, according to the EU announcement.
By the end of 2026, member states will no longer import liquefied natural gas (LNG) from Russia as per the agreement. By November 2027, imports of pipeline gas will be discontinued.
The organization claimed that the move puts an end to its “dependence on an unreliable supplier,” which has repeatedly “repeatedly destabilized European energy markets, put supply security in jeopardy, and damaged the European economy.”
Von der Leyen applauded the decision, stating that “we are now in the transition to full energy independence from Russia.”
We stand with Ukraine and aim for new energy partnerships and opportunities, she said, “by pledging Putin’s war chest.”

Somaliais are protesting President Donald Trump’s recent remarks that they called their nation “a place where people just run around killing each other.”
Published On 4 Dec 2025