By Sarah Marsh and Matthias Williams BERLIN, Jan 29 (Reuters) - German Chancellor Friedrich Merz on Thursday said Europe had ...
Last year, a White House report on national security claimed that Europe will be “unrecognisable” and that its civilisation risks “erasure” in the face of increasing immigration and economic decline ...
The Trump administration says that while it is pushing for lower prices in the U.S. drugmakers will be able to make up the ...
As US President Donald Trump takes a sledgehammer to longstanding alliances with a volatile foreign policy that’s included threats to take control of Greenland and a spiraling feud with Canada, he’s ...
Will the long shadow cast by President Trump at last month’s World Economic Forum gathering in Switzerland lead to yet more ...
The events of this year’s World Economic Forum made one thing unmistakably clear: The post–Cold War global order is over, and the Davos class knows it. President Trump’s speech cut through the ...
His desire for Greenland has seemingly faded away ...
EU leaders appear to have finally accepted they are facing a new era of great power competition – the question now is how ...
France's Emmanuel Macron, the EU's Kaja Kallas and the prime ministers of Denmark and Greenland spoke of a "changing world ...
The big unknown is how long markets will stay calm in the face of growing geopolitical uncertainty.
As defence spending surges and arms output rises, Europe edges toward military autonomy — but capability gaps, industry ...
President Donald Trump’s Greenland gambit alarmed Europe’s mainstream and has even led some nationalist leaders – once proud of their ties to Trump – to distance themselves from him.