World
Brussels wants to help EU countries with defence spending
The European Fee needs member states to spend extra on defence and to assist them do it extra effectively, because it seems to higher handle the bloc’s capabilities following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Extra EU international locations are inflating their army budgets on account of Moscow’s latest aggression, which is why, in an unprecedented transfer, the European Fee mentioned on Wednesday that it might probably coordinate this spending on their behalf to extend the effectiveness of defence expenditure.
“We’ve to purchase [military equipment] collectively like we did with the vaccines and we wish to do with the gasoline,” Josep Borrell, EU Excessive Consultant for International Affairs informed reporters in Brussels.
“And that is why we’re proposing a joint procurement defence job drive the place member states might have interaction with their short-term procurement wants. And we additionally suggest monetary incentives for member states to take part on this [task force].”
The Fee’s plans are a unprecedented transfer, provided that the EU treaties forbid it from financing defence operations.
It argues that Moscow and Beijing’s defence budgets have skyrocketed previously decade, leaving the EU susceptible, with it is army capabilities lagging behind.
That is why within the short-term, it needs member states to replenish weapons stockpiles, concurrently changing soviet-era tools and reinforcing air and missile defence techniques.
Past this, it says drone and armoured automobile reserves needs to be beefed up, while additionally boosting house and cyber defence capabilities.
Lastly, member states martime forces want strengthening too.
However the cash can not come from the EU price range, so it has to come back from elsewhere.
Fabrice Pothier, chief government officer at Rasmussen World, informed Euronews that funds must come from its so-called “personal sources”, which may usually imply discovering new sources of income.
“There can be some critical European Fee personal sources that may be allotted to assist some widespread initiatives or collective or multinational initiatives amongst member states,” Pothier mentioned.
“And clearly the European Fee won’t ever have the funds for to match or to fill the hole between what European member states are spending now and the place they need to be within the coming years, however actually it might probably have a enabling impact – it might probably kick-start some functionality initiatives that in any other case wouldn’t be taking place.”
Brussels additionally needs to spice up the power of the bloc’s defence business to make army tools, particularly within the aeronautics and missile sectors, because it seems to make itself extra strategically autonomous.
This concept of strategic autonomy has now been considerably dampened, in line with Bruno Lete from the German Marshall Fund.
“The issue is that Europe’s dream of Strategic Autonomy has been sunk in Ukraine,” Lete informed Euronews.
“After years of debate whether or not NATO or the EU ought to lead safety, it’s NATO that has emerged because the trusted associate. With the occasions in Ukraine some EU international locations regard the US or the UK as a greater safety insurance coverage, than say France or Germany.”
EU member states will now should log out on the proposals earlier than they will turn out to be a actuality.
World
Ron Ely, Star of TV’s Tarzan, Cause of Death Revealed
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World
Scientists study ‘very rare’ frozen remains of 35,000-year-old saber-toothed cub
A mummified saber-toothed cub of a catlike animal dating back 35,000 years was left almost perfectly preserved in Siberia’s permafrost.
The remains had been found back in 2020, northeast of Yakutia, Russia. Research regarding the study of the cub was published in the journal Scientific Reports on November 14, 2024.
The discovery of frozen remains from the Late Pleistocene period is “very rare,” according to the published research, though most discovered in Russia lie in the Indigirka River basin, the authors note.
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The mummified cub remained well-preserved, frozen in time for thousands of years. The frozen nature of this find left it in impressive condition, even still containing fur.
“The mummy body is covered with short, thick, soft, dark brown fur with hair about 20–30 mm long,” the authors wrote in the published research, also pointing out that the fur that was located on the back and neck of the cub was longer than the hair that was found on the legs.
The head of the mummy was also left well-preserved, down to its chest, front arms and paws.
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The study of this find wasn’t just a unique opportunity for scientists, it also provided first-of-its kind research.
“For the first time in the history of paleontology, the appearance of an extinct mammal that has no analogues in the modern fauna has been studied,” the authors of the study explained.
The scientists determined that the cub had died at about three weeks old. It was identified by the authors of the study as belonging to the species Homotherium latidens and had many differentiations from a modern lion cub of a similar age.
The shape of the muzzle displayed by the mummified cub, which had a large mouth and small ears, plus a “massive” neck, long forelimbs and a darker colored coat, were all among key differences from today’s modern lion cubs that scientists observed.
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Scientists also worked in their research to find out how the extinct species was able to survive through frigid temperatures.
Large contributors to their survival were the shape of the large paws and absence of carpal pads. Scientists believe these elements helped them get through the snow.
In recent years, there have been other ancient animals found in Siberian permafrost.
For example, in 2021, a mummified wolf was discovered that dated back over 44,000 years, Live Science reported in June 2024.
World
More than 100 Palestinians killed in Israeli attacks on Gaza in 48 hours
Director of the Kamal Adwan hospital says several staff wounded in Israeli bombardment.
At least 120 people have been killed in Israeli attacks on Gaza in two days, Palestinian health officials said, as Israel intensified its bombardment across the besieged territory.
At least seven people were killed when a residential home was hit overnight in the Zeitoun suburb of Gaza City, health officials said on Saturday. The other deaths were recorded in central and southern Gaza.
Israeli air raids caused significant damage to al-Faruq Mosque in the Nuseirat refugee camp in central Gaza, according to a social media video verified by Al Jazeera.
Israeli forces also deepened their ground offensive and bombardment of northern Gaza, where one of the last partially operating hospitals was hit, wounding several workers.
Hussam Abu Safia, director of the Kamal Adwan Hospital, said in a statement on Saturday that Israeli forces “directly targeted the entrance to the emergency and reception area several times, as well as the hospital courtyards, electrical generators, and hospital gates”.
The bombardment “resulted in 12 injuries among doctors, nurses, and administrative staff within the emergency and reception areas”, he said.
The Israeli military rejected the allegations and said it was “not aware of a strike in the area of the Kamal Adwan Hospital” following an initial review of the situation.
On Friday, Gaza’s Ministry of Health said hospitals have fuel left for only about two days before it needs to start restricting services.
Israel’s military imposed a siege and launched a renewed ground offensive in northern Gaza last month, saying it aimed to stop Hamas fighters from waging more attacks and regrouping in the area.
The United Nations warned earlier this week that almost no aid had been delivered to northern Gaza since Israel’s renewed offensive as aid groups and food security experts warn of a famine in the area.
In a call with Defence Minister Israel Katz on Saturday, United States Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin pressed Israel to “take steps to improve the dire humanitarian condition in Gaza”, the Pentagon said.
Israel’s assault on Gaza has killed more than 44,000 people and wounded more than 104,000 since October 2023, according to Palestinian health officials.
Israel launched its assault on Gaza after the Hamas-led attacks on southern Israel on October 7, 2023, in which at least 1,139 people were killed and about 250 others seized as captives.
A spokesperson for the armed wing of Hamas, Abu Ubaida, said later on Saturday that a female Israeli captive in the group’s custody had been killed in northern Gaza in an area under attack by Israel’s forces.
“The life of another female prisoner who used to be with her remains in imminent danger,” he added, accusing the government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of being responsible and of undermining efforts to end the war.
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