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Ukraine asks Israel to seize vessel it claims is carrying grain stolen by Russia

Ukraine has asked Israel to seize a vessel it claims is carrying grain looted from Russian-occupied territories, triggering a rare diplomatic spat between the two countries. The dispute spilt into public view this week when president Volodymyr Zelenskyy said that “another vessel” carrying grain “stolen by Russia” had arrived at a port in Israel and was preparing to unload. “The Ukrainian side is asking its Israeli partners to seize the vessel and its cargo, conduct a search, seize the vessel’s and cargo documentation, take grain samples, and question the crew members,” Ukraine’s prosecutor general Ruslan Kravchenko said on Telegram on Wednesday. Ukraine said the cargo vessel Panormitis, sailing under a Panamanian flag, was en route to dock in Haifa. Ukraine’s foreign ministry also said on Tuesday that since March it had also raised concerns with Israel about another vessel, the Abinsk, which it said was allegedly carrying stolen grain. That ship was allowed to unload and depart despite Kyiv’s objections, it said. Israeli foreign minister Gideon Saar pushed back against Ukrainian claims that Israel was allowing stolen grain into its ports, accusing Kyiv of engaging in “Twitter diplomacy” and failing to provide evidence that the Russian cargo awaiting entry had been taken from occupied Ukrainian territory. Saar added that the formal petition, which was submitted by Ukraine on Tuesday, was “now being examined by the relevant authorities”. Representatives of the vessel’s Greece-based management company also denied it was carrying any grain from occupied Ukraine, saying in a statement to Reuters its cargo was Russian. Relations between Ukraine and Israel have remained uneasy since Russia’s full-scale invasion, as Israeli leaders have sought to keep channels open with both Kyiv and Moscow – limiting their support for Ukraine largely to humanitarian aid and resisting pressure to supply Israeli-made weapons systems or introduce sanctions against the Kremlin. Kyiv has repeatedly accused Russia of stealing grain from occupied Ukrainian territory and selling it on international markets. The Israeli outlet Haaretz reported on Sunday that Israel had been buying grain allegedly looted by Russia from occupied Ukrainian territory for at least two years, though Kyiv had not publicly commented on the issue until this week. In a statement to Haaretz, an EU spokesperson said the bloc was mulling sanctions on Israeli individuals and entities aiding Russia. The EU’s foreign affairs spokesperson, Anouar El Anouni, told Haaretz that the European Union “has taken note of the reports that a Russian shadow fleet vessel carrying stolen Ukrainian grain has been allowed to unload at Haifa port in Israel despite previous contacts of Ukraine with Israeli authorities on the subject.”

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Veteran goalkeeper, 70, to return to pitch for official game in Spain

At an age when many veteran footballers might prefer to be regaling grandchildren, friends and assorted barflies with slightly embroidered tales of their former sporting prowess, 70-year-old Ángel Mateos González is heading back on to the pitch. The Spaniard, who retired from competitive football 27 years ago, is due to play in goal for the Asturian team CD Colunga in a fifth-tier match this Sunday. If all goes to plan and he pulls on his gloves, he will reportedly become the oldest player to take part in an official match in Spain. Mateos, who has been helping out Colunga’s keepers during this season’s Tercera Federación group two campaign, said he did not know whether he would play the full game. “I’m going to train with the team this week but I still don’t know if I’ll play the entire 90 minutes or just the first half,” he told the local newspaper El Comercio. In a post on Facebook, the northern Spanish team said they had decided to play Mateos in their match against regional rivals CD Praviano to celebrate the goalie and his lifelong dedication to work and to football. The side denied the move was a stunt, adding that the decision was about recognising a man who represented its values. “Mateos perfectly embodies what we stand for at CD Colunga: passion; consistency; respect for football, and a way of experiencing the sport that transcends age,” the statement said. “Age is secondary. What matters is attitude, dedication and commitment to the sport. We’re talking about a man who was a miner, who has dedicated his life to work and football, and who has helped our goalkeepers all season long.” The club added: “Mateos isn’t playing because he’s 70 years old. He’s playing because he’s earned it.” The former miner told El Comercio that while he had always kept himself active, football had changed a little over the years. “When I started out, it was almost a different sport,” said Mateos. “The balls; the pitches … I remember I used to keep a bucket next to the goalpost so I could bail out water when the pitch got muddy, which was almost an everyday occurrence back then.” Mateos told Cope radio he had been playing football since he was 10 and was still the same weight – 68 or 69kg – that he was at the age of 18. He also said he was fiercely competitive, hated losing any kind of game, and had always loved different sports. “A lot of the guys I worked with in the mines didn’t like sports and just wanted to go to the bar,” he said on Wednesday. “I never got that. You have to keep active and do sport or go for a walk.” CD Colunga said Sunday’s match was about much more than one man’s advancing years. “If anyone’s focusing solely on his age, then they’re missing what’s important,” it said. “This is about getting back to the essence of football, recognising the people who make it great and showing that there’s another way of doing things.” Reuters contributed reporting

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Pete Hegseth denies Iran war is a ‘quagmire’ as cost to US hits estimated $25bn

Pete Hegseth has denied that the US-Israel war on Iran is “a quagmire” and claimed critics of the operation posed a greater threat to the US than Iran itself, as he came under pressure to set out Washington’s strategy for the conflict. Appearing before the House armed services committee alongside Gen Dan Caine, chair of the joint chiefs of staff, the US defense secretary asked lawmakers to approve a $1.5tn budget in military spending – and then described some of them as “the biggest challenge” to the war effort. “The biggest adversary we face at this point are the reckless, feckless and defeatist words of congressional Democrats and some Republicans,” he declared. These remarks did not appear in prepared written statement submitted to the committee. Two months into a conflict that Donald Trump predicted would last four to six weeks, Hegseth invoked the US’s long and painful deployments in Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan – wars he previously criticized bitterly – as a benchmark for endurance. The war against Iran, he said, was “an existential fight for the safety of the American people”, and the administration was “proud of this undertaking”. Protesters’ chants rang from the hallways, calling Hegseth and Caine war criminals. Many members of the public struggled to be admitted into the hearing. Trump posted an AI-generated image of himself holding a weapon amid explosions with the caption “NO MORE MR. NICE GUY” on social media on Wednesday, and wrote that Iran “better get smart soon”. He also told the Axios news website that he stands prepared to keep Iran under a naval blockade until a deal is reached, raising the prospect of a prolonged conflict. The financial cost of the war meanwhile continues to grow: Jules Hurst III, chief financial official for the Pentagon, told the committee that the estimated cost for the US is $25bn and counting, mostly from munitions and including operations, maintenance and replacing equipment. Tensions soared when the California Democrat John Garamendi was given the floor, and hammered Hegseth over the “astounding incompetence” which he argued had led to “political and economic disaster at every level”. “The president has gotten himself and America stuck in a quagmire of another war in the Middle East,” Garamendi said. “He is desperately trying to extricate himself from his own mistakes; it is in America’s, and indeed the world’s, interest he succeed in that.” Hegseth was incensed by the statement, particularly around the invocation of another quagmire in the Middle East, and attacked the congressman for his speech. “Who are you cheering for here? Who are you pulling for?” Hegseth shot back. “Your hatred for President Trump blinds you to the truth of the success of this mission and the historic stakes that the president is addressing that the American people support. “You call it a quagmire, handing propaganda to our enemies? Shame on you for that statement,” Hegseth added. Trump has “stared [Iran] down” and will now “get a better deal than anyone ever has and ensure Iran never has a nuclear weapon”, Hegseth claimed. When committee chair Mike Rogers, a Republican, opened proceedings, he signaled that he was already onboard with the budget proposal from the administration. “All of our adversaries are spending more of their GDP on defense than we are,” Rogers said, calling the $1.5tn figure one that “accounts for the true cost of American deterrence”. Hegseth added that the budget included what he called “a historic troop pay increase – 7% for lower enlisted”. The ranking Democrat, Adam Smith of Washington, instead questioned whether the 50-60% spending increase would be responsibly managed – “we have every reason to doubt that”, he said – and challenged the administration over the diplomatic isolation in which the war was being fought. “We’re doing this on our own, as we increasingly push away all our allies, sometimes just gratuitously insulting them,” Smith said. “In the middle of this war where we’re asking Nato to come join us, the president took time to insult President Macron [of France] and his wife. How is that helping us?” Smith also raised the strike on a school in the Iranian city of Minab during the opening phase of the joint US-Israeli campaign, in which Iranian officials say at least 168 people were killed, most of them children. The Pentagon had said in those early days that the attack was under investigation, though until today Hegseth and Caine have not been required to address it under oath. “We made a mistake and that happens in war,” Smith said. “Two months after it happened, we refused to say anything about it, giving the world the impression that we just don’t care.” There was also a tense exchange between Hegseth and Smith later in the hearing, when Hegseth declared that Iran’s nuclear facilities had been “obliterated”. “Whoa, whoa, whoa. We had to start this war, you just said, because the nuclear weapon was an imminent threat. Now you’re saying it was completely obliterated?” Smith asked. When Hegseth replied that Iran had not abandoned its nuclear ambitions, Smith pressed on: “So Operation Midnight Hammer accomplished nothing of substance.” “You’re missing the point,” Hegseth said.

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Attempts to rescue Timmy the stranded whale ‘inadvisable’, experts say

Attempts to rescue a young humpback whale stranded in shallow waters off the Baltic coast in Germany have been criticised by the International Whaling Commission (IWC) as “inadvisable”. The 10 metre-long whale, variously nicknamed Timmy or Hope, swam on to a sandbank more than a month ago and its health deteriorated as it repeatedly became stranded. Hopes were raised on Tuesday when divers helped the mammal on to a flooded barge. By Wednesday, the barge, pulled by a tug boat, had reached Danish waters as it headed towards the North Sea. But the IWC’s strandings expert panel said the creature “appeared to be severely compromised” and “unlikely to survive” even if attempts to move it into deeper water were successful. Till Backhaus, the environment minister for the state of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, said if the whale was in good health, it would be released in the sea.Backhaus told reporters: “Something like this has never happened before in Germany, where a life-saving operation of this kind has been carried out. And this was an experiment, and the experiment was a success, and that’s wonderful.” The minister said the whale was resting peacefully, adding that on Tuesday night it had vocalised. The mission is being financed by two multimillionaires, who have said they hope to save the mammal “whatever it costs”. It has sparked a national whale frenzy, with supporters baking whale-shaped cakes, composing songs about the animal and having themselves tattooed with images of the whale. But experts from the Oceanographic Museum in Stralsund on Germany’s Baltic coasthave also said that attempts to save the whale were in vain and that the whale should be left to die in peace. The creature has been described as lethargic and covered in blister-like blemishes. Parts of a fishing net, some of which was removed early on in its stranding, is believed to be still caught in its mouth. The museum’s director, Burkard Baschek, said: “A rescue attempt … is no longer worthwhile … this has been confirmed to us repeatedly by international colleagues.” He said continuing to try to save the whale amounted to “pure animal cruelty”. On Wednesday, the same group of experts warned against letting it loose in the open sea, saying it was in danger of drowning and urged the team behind the operation to be transparent, including providing data on the creature’s whereabouts and release location if it was freed. The IWC said that active interventions to save stranded whales, “including refloat or translocation attempts such as towing or moving by barge”, were “inadvisable on grounds of animal welfare and human safety”. It said: “In our assessment, these interventions, although well meant, impose very considerable additional stress upon a creature that is already gravely ill, to little ultimate benefit.” The animal has been attached with a tracking device and is being accompanied by a support team that includes veterinarians. In the event of the animal’s death, the IWC said, work to recover its remains, carry out a detailed necropsy and safely dispose of its remains should be carried out as soon as possible.

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Thousands of US hockey fans sing Canadian anthem amid tensions between neighbor countries

The Electric City. Nickel City. Queen City. City of No Illusions. Buffalo, New York, has accrued many nicknames over the years but, in an age of growing tensions between two traditional allies, one among them has taken on extra resonance: the City of Good Neighbors. Buffalo, which sits at the head of the Niagara River, has cultivated a reputation for its small-town feel and welcoming atmosphere, especially to visitors crossing the border from Canada. This week, ahead of a key ice hockey match between two US teams, singer Cami Clune began what has been a tradition for more than half a century: a rendition of the Canadian national anthem. The Buffalo Sabres are an outlier in the National Hockey league as the only team to celebrate their northern neighbours – even when a matchup is between two US-based teams. But as Clune began with the opening refrain, her microphone malfunctioned and her voice cut out. A crowd of nearly 20,000 filled the silence. The vast majority were American – and knew all the words. As the anthem progressed, the crowd grew louder with cheers. “Well that was interesting!!” Clune wrote on social media afterward. “Thank you all for singing along with me. We have the best fans ever!” The warm gesture comes amid an increasingly bitter rupture between the two nations that has persisted for more than a year. Last year, a largely Canadian crowd booed the US national anthem during an international tournament hosted in Montréal. Torontonians also jeered the Star-Spangled Banner ahead of a game between the Toronto Raptors basketball team and the Los Angeles Clippers. The root of the tensions lies in Donald Trump’s threats to annex Canada and put punishing tariffs on key Canadian industries. The provinces have retaliated by pulling American wine and spirits from their shelves. Canadians have maintained a boycott of travel south that has key tourist destinations panicking and trying to mend the geopolitical rift. But like most border communities, the geographic proximity between the two countries has forged a deeper and heavily overlapping relationship. Canada is visible from the roof of Buffalo’s KeyBank Center and is only a 10-minute drive from the border in busy traffic. “I don’t think people understand just how fluid the border is between Buffalo and southern Ontario. People routinely cross for little things like shopping, beach days, college and in some cases work,” one user wrote on Reddit, adding many Americans took advantage of a lower drinking age to the north. “It’s all suffering now bc of geopolitics, but western New York and southern Ontario are bros.” Others framed the anthem as a “matter of respect” for Canadian fans, adding the “feeling is mutual regardless of what either of our governments are doing or saying at the time”.

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EU farmers and hauliers to get up to €50,000 to cover extra costs of Iran war

The EU is to subsidise up to 70% of the extra cost of fuel and fertilisers caused by the Iran war for farmers, fishing businesses and road hauliers as part of a package of emergency measures. Individual companies can claim up to €50,000 each between now and the end of the year with minimum paperwork, a measure the EU hopes will remove what it sees as an existential threat to hauliers and farmers. Energy-intensive industries including steel, chemicals or even rail firms, will be able to claim up to 70% of the extra electricity cost of eligible consumption. Announcing the measures on Wednesday, the European Commission vice-president, Teresa Ribera, said they could be the difference between “survival or giving up” for many businesses. “I want to reassure European citizens, national governments and European institutions are monitoring and are ready to react in cases when it is needed,” she said. Oil and gas prices surged during the US-Israeli war against Iran that began in February, with fertiliser prices shooting up by 61% in March alone after supplies of urea and fuel were choked off by the blockage of the strait of Hormuz. The French fossil fuel multinational TotalEnergies has said its net profit rose 51% in the first quarter of the year to $5.8bn, drawing criticism from politicians as well as climate and consumer groups. The company must find a way to redistribute the huge profits it has made on the back of the Iran war oil crisis, the French prime minister, Sébastien Lecornu, said. “TotalEnergies must, one way or another, take a stance on how to distribute, and potentially in the most effective and rapid way possible,” he said. Antoine Bouhey, the campaign coordinator at Reclaim Finance, said: “TotalEnergies’ war profits highlight our persistent dependence on fossil fuels, whose soaring prices once again benefit shareholders at the expense of consumers.” Greenpeace France denounced what it called “cynical logic” while “households pay the high price at the pump”. The EU said the loosening of state aid rules was an emergency measure aimed at helping those in agriculture and fisheries, including aquaculture, as well as transport – covering road, rail and inland waterways, plus intra-EU short sea shipping. No relief has been offered to airlines and airports regarding jet fuel, but potential future intervention has not been ruled out. Individual member states can configure the state aid they offer businesses according to local conditions, but small hauliers, farmers and fishers will be able to claim the fixed amount of up to €50,000, with minimal fuss. They will not, for example, need to provide receipts for fuel at petrol pumps. Although the scheme raises the risk of fraud, the EU has said it believes the problems facing small- and medium-sized businesses after the sharp rise in costs since the war on Iran mean a light-touch approach is necessary. The European Commission said the Middle East crisis temporary state aid framework (METSAF) would be a “targeted and temporary framework to address the crisis in some of the most exposed sectors in the economy”. It will be in place until 31 December, underlining assessments made in Brussels that even if the US and Iran struck a peace deal today, oil and gas prices would remain high for many months. Last week, the energy commissioner, Dan Jørgensen, said the crisis could last up to two years; the time it would take Qatar, for example to rebuild bombed gas plants. Some concerns have been raised that the subsidies in the form of grant aid could increase the demand for fossil fuels and compromise the EU’s target to transition to renewables. Ribera defended the move, pointing out the measure was short term. “Achieving a clean economy is what will shield us from the energy crises of the future. The energy transition remains the most effective strategy for Europe’s autonomy, growth and resilience,” she said. “Nevertheless, the recent spikes in energy prices require an immediate response. The METSAF allows for easily applicable solutions that will sustain the continuous development of core EU sectors such as agriculture, fishery and transport, by cushioning the effects of the crisis.”

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Consequences of Iran war ‘may echo for months or years to come,’ EU chief warns – as it happened

… and on that note, it’s a wrap for today! European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen has warned that the consequences of the Iran war “may echo for months or even years to come” (9:22), as the bloc’s executive rushes to shield energy-intensive industries from price hikes offering more help and relaxed state aid rules (12:29, 13:19). Hungary’s incoming prime minister Péter Magyar is in Brussels for high-level talks with the European Union about planned reforms that could help him regain access to billions of euros in frozen EU funds (10:38, 11:20, 16:11). His visit comes as a leading MEP has called on the Hungarian European commissioner associated with the outgoing prime minister Viktor Orbán to resign, after the European parliament found “serious and prolonged management” failures in the department he ran (16:27). And in less grim news, French president Emmanuel Macron joined some diplomatic jokes with Britain’s King Charles and the US president, Donald Trump, responding to Charles’s speech at a state dinner in Washington last night (14:13). If you have any tips, comments or suggestions, email me at jakub.krupa@theguardian.com. I am also on Bluesky at @jakubkrupa.bsky.social and on X at @jakubkrupa.

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The little-known clause that Europe’s security may now depend on

Most people have heard of Nato’s article 5. The “one for all, all for one” clause states an armed attack on one member country should be considered an attack on all, requiring member states to come to the victim’s aid – including with “the use of armed force”. Not so many, till this week, had heard of the EU’s own mutual defence clause, article 42.7 (pdf), which says that if a member state comes under armed attack, the others “shall have towards it an obligation of aid and assistance by all the means in their power”. That’s perhaps because there hadn’t, until recently, been much need for Europeans to consult article 42.7. More than 40 US military bases and 85,000 troops across the EU (and UK) were testament to Washington’s defence commitment to the old continent. But times have changed. Earlier this year Donald Trump threatened to invade Greenland – and Denmark, a Nato member state, took the threat seriously enough to prepare for war, sending explosives and bloodbags to its largely autonomous territory. Two months later, the US president attacked Iran, without consulting European allies – then demanded they join in, called them “cowards” when they declined to help reopen the strait of Hormuz, and dismissed Nato as a “paper tiger”. He has said he is “absolutely” considering pulling the US out of the alliance. And when European leaders were reluctant to allow US bases on their territory to be used for bombing missions in Iran, his secretary of state, Marco Rubio, questioned the point of keeping the bases there. It should, by now, be clear to even the most staunchly atlanticist European, in short, that the US defence umbrella that has sheltered them for the past 77 years has sprung more than a few leaks, and could very conceivably be blown away altogether. That is certainly the view of Donald Tusk, prime minister of perhaps the US’s most fervent ally in Europe, Poland, who told the FT that the bloc’s “most important question” was whether the US would be “loyal” to its Nato pledge in the event of Russian attack. Hence the renewed interest in the EU’s article 42.7. On the face of it, it offers a stronger guarantee even than Nato’s, obliging EU states to aid their fellows “by all the means in their power” (the alliance stipulates only “as they deem necessary”). But what might that mean in practice? Unfortunately, the answer is: nobody quite knows. “The treaty is very clear about the what,” said Ursula von der Leyen, the European Commission chief. “It is not clear about what happens when, and who does what.” At last week’s EU summit in Cyprus, leaders agreed the Commission would “prepare a blueprint” on how the bloc will respond if the clause is triggered. A “handbook” was being drawn up, said António Costa, the president of the European Council. The push to “operationalise” 42.7 has been driven by Cyprus, one of the few EU members not in Nato, after it was targeted by drones seemingly launched by Lebanon’s Hezbollah – one of which struck the UK’s RAF Akrotiri airbase. The country’s president, Nikos Christodoulides, called for bilateral assistance rather than invoking a clause widely acknowledged as poorly defined. Greece, France, Italy, Spain and the Netherlands mobilised assets, including jet fighters. But the incident showed the EU was far from being in a position “to act as a credible guarantor of security”, Christodoulides said, certainly in the event of a full-scale attack. Article 42.7, he said, urgently needed to become a practical operational tool. France is so far the only country to have formally triggered 42.7, after its 2015 terror attacks. Several EU states boosted troop numbers on EU and UN missions so France could recall its soldiers, while others provided intelligence and police support. Speaking in Athens at the weekend, its president, Emmanuel Macron, agreed with his Cypriot counterpart: clause 42.7 had to be “more than words” now there was “doubt on Nato’s article 5 – put on the table not by the Europeans, but by the US president”. Greece’s prime minister, Kyriakos Mitsotakis, also acknowledged the bloc had “never really spoken about” its mutual defence clause, “because we thought Nato would always do the job. But now we need to take this article much more seriously.” *** Europe’s war games So three scenarios are to be hypothetically “war gamed” in Brussels, by ambassadors and then ministers, to start that process, Euractiv reported: an attack on a non-Nato EU country; an attack on one in both; and a hybrid attack not covered by Nato. For the EU’s foreign affairs and security policy chief, Kaja Kallas, articles 42.7 and 5 are “complementary”, with the former covering a variety of different forms of aid – such as economic or medical – but only the latter specifically and explicitly mentioning military force. “There’s a very strong European pillar in Nato,” Kallas told Euronews. But, she added, Europe does need to “operationalise 42.7 … by mapping what the possibilities are; who does what in what case; how we all work together. And we need to do it fast.” Analysts say Europe should prepare for the worst. “Europe must insure itself against the possibility that American support may be limited, delayed or politically blocked,” wrote Christian Mölling and Torben Schütz of the European Policy Centre. In one sense at least, it is: European Nato members boosted their defence budgets by 14% last year, the steepest rise since 1953, according to a report this week by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (Sipri). The biggest increases, Sipri said, were in Belgium (59%), Spain (50%) and Norway (49%). Germany in particular has set itself the goal of creating the strongest military in Europe by 2039. But, as Mölling and Schütz note, procurement alone will not solve Europe’s defence problem. “The real gap concerns political and military leadership: who will decide on escalation, priorities, operational command and the distribution of risk?” they ask. “Who will turn political objectives into military options?” For obvious reasons, defence has always been the most sensitive of the EU’s dossiers. Figuring out how, if the US fails to show up, article 42.7 might work – with what would be a very European Nato, or perhaps no Nato at all – might help focus a few minds. 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