Cuba–U.S. tensions grow as talks continue and sanctions persist
Cuba and the United States have been at odds for more than six decades, with tensions rooted in the 1959 revolution that transformed the island&rsq...
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez has said it is unfair for people around the world to shoulder the cost of U.S.–Israeli attacks on Iran, warning that Spanish firms have already lost €100 billion ($116 billion) in less than a month as a result of the conflict.
“Every bomb that falls in the Middle East hits the wallets of our families,” Sánchez told the Spanish Parliament in Madrid on Wednesday (25 March), as he set out the reasons for his Socialist-led government’s opposition to the conflict.
“It is not fair that someone sets fire to the world and the rest of us have to swallow the ashes,” he added.
The €100 billion figure referred to the decline in the aggregate market capitalisation of Spain's blue‑chip IBEX index since Israel and the U.S. attacked Iran on 28 February.
Spain’s Parliament is expected to vote on a package aimed at helping citizens weather the economic fallout of the Middle East conflict on Thursday. The measures include reductions to fuel and electricity taxes and fuel subsidies to sectors most exposed to energy price spikes.
Sánchez, one of the most vocal supporters of Palestinians among Western leaders, also warned that Israel was seeking to inflict as much harm in Lebanon as it had in Gaza.
“An emboldened Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, aims to inflict on Lebanon the same destruction and suffering that was committed in Gaza,” he said.
On Tuesday, Israel’s Defence Minister announced the country’s intention to occupy southern Lebanon as part of its campaign against the Iran-backed Lebanese armed group Hezbollah.
The involvement of Yemen’s Houthis has heightened regional tensions as the Iran-aligned group joins the conflict. The U.S. says it is hopeful of holding talks with Iran in the coming days, while Tehran has said that "talking and bombing is intolerable". Welcome to our live coverage of the conflict.
Turkish military personnel participating in NATO’s mission in Iraq have been “successfully” withdrawn from the country, the Turkish Defence Ministry announced on Thursday.
The four astronauts selected for NASA’s Artemis II mission have arrived in Florida, entering the final phase of preparations for the first crewed journey towards the Moon in more than five decades
Hamas would have to allow its vast network of tunnels in Gaza to be destroyed as it gives up its weapons over eight months, under a disarmament plan drawn up by the U.S. President Donald Trump’s Board of Peace.
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz has voiced doubts about the effectiveness of the U.S. and Israeli military campaign in Iran, warning that the conflict risks becoming prolonged and increasingly complex.
Cuba and the United States have been at odds for more than six decades, with tensions rooted in the 1959 revolution that transformed the island’s political and economic system. Renewed focus on relations comes as Donald Trump’s rhetoric intensifies and conditions on the island worsen.
Russian drone attacks on Ukraine have killed four people, Ukrainian officials said on Saturday (28 March).
Nepal’s ousted former prime minister, KP Sharma Oli, and former home minister Ramesh Lekhak have been arrested over alleged negligence linked to the deaths of protesters during anti-corruption demonstrations last September.
China is moving ahead with plans to establish a nationwide long-term care insurance system, aimed at supporting its rapidly ageing population and easing the financial burden on families caring for elderly relatives.
The U.S. Congress failed on Friday (27 March) to resolve a six-week funding impasse that has disrupted airports and left tens of thousands of federal workers without pay, raising fears of further travel chaos during the busy spring break period.
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