World
EU-China ties determined by Beijing’s support for Russia – Borrell

China’s help to Russia over its battle in Ukraine “will decide the standard” of its relations with the European Union, Josep Borrell stated on Tuesday forward of a go to to Beijing by Emmanuel Macron and Ursula von der Leyen.
“We’ve been clear with China that its place on Russia’s atrocities and battle crimes will decide the standard of our relationships with Beijing,” the EU’s high diplomat stated.
“There’s a clear expectation from a everlasting member of the Safety Council to face up in defence of (the) worldwide rules-based order and China has an ethical obligation to contribute to a good peace. They can’t be siding with the aggressor. They can’t be militarily supporting the aggression. That is our message to China from immediately’s assembly and from all of the European Union visits going to Beijing,” he added.
A flurry of European diplomatic overtures has taken place since China began easing its COVID-19-related journey restrictions late final 12 months.
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz was the primary to make the journey in November, adopted by European Council President Charles Michel a month later. Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez visited Beijing final week with French President Emmanuel Macron beginning a three-day state go to to China on Wednesday, the place he will likely be joined by the European Fee President. Borrell himself will journey to the nation subsequent week.
‘A transfer in the direction of peace requires China’
The EU’s official stance on China is that the nation is concurrently a companion for cooperation and negotiation, an financial competitor and a systemic rival.
Von der Leyen acknowledged final week that relations between the EU and China have develop into “extra distant and harder” in recent times, branding Beijing “extra repressive at residence and extra assertive overseas” in a bid to “make China much less depending on the world and the world extra depending on China.”
She nonetheless stated the 27-country bloc can not “decouple” from China, and may as a substitute “de-risk” by addressing financial and strategic imbalances. This might be achieved by lowering dependencies on sure applied sciences and by toughening up instruments to make sure honest competitors practices and continued EU possession of key industries and infrastructure.
Forward of the journey, Paris was eager to emphasize that Ukraine will characteristic excessive on the agenda, in a bid maybe, to dispel any criticism over the hefty contracts the necessary delegation of enterprise leaders accompanying Macron is anticipated to signal with Chinese language counterparts.
Beijing is extensively seen as presumably the one nation on the earth that might have a game-changing impact on the battle as a consequence of its shut ties with Russia, demonstrated with nice fanfare two weeks in the past when Xi Jinping visited Moscow.
“China is the one nation on the earth in a position to have a direct and radical impression on the evolution of the battle, in a single path or the opposite. And the ambition of the President of the Republic is to have the ability to convey, throughout his discussions with President Xi Jinping, the results of 1 selection or the opposite,” an Elysée supply stated.
“And so, the selection to have the ability to transfer in the direction of peace requires China to take clearer positions on this goal, i.e. peace, and on the trail that may result in it, additionally to help the Ukrainian civilian inhabitants in varied facets we are attempting to work on,” it added.
Von der Leyen ‘s participation in Macron’s go to and in a trilateral assembly with Xi on Thursday is “totally in step with this effort from the start to indicate the Chinese language authorities that we’re coming, not as disunited states, however as bearers of a European place,” the supply added.
‘US-EU relations have by no means been stronger’
Western allies together with the EU have warned China that any supply of deadly army help to Russia would represent a purple line and end in penalties.
Beijing, for its half, describes itself as a impartial peace-broker and has launched a 12-point plan to finish the battle. The plan has been welcomed by Moscow however closely criticised by the West for failing to call the battle a “battle” or “invasion” with Russia because the aggressor.
Borrell, in the meantime, described as ironic Russian President Vladimir Putin’s menace to deploy tactical nuclear weapons in Belarus days after issuing a joint assertion with Xi calling on nuclear-weapon states to not deploy nuclear weapons overseas.
“His (Putin’s) latest nuclear gamble with a nuclear weapons transfer to Belarus constitutes a brand new escalation and poses a direct menace to European safety. And this comes, satirically, after Chinese language President Xi visited Moscow and talked about the necessity for peace, and so they agreed on the necessity to not deploy nuclear arms overseas,” he stated.
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, talking alongside Borrell in Brussels, added that “US-European Union relations have by no means been stronger or extra necessary for advancing our shared pursuits.”
“The US and the EU proceed to work in lockstep along with a broad coalition of companions all over the world to make sure that Ukraine can defend itself, its folks, its territory, the suitable to decide on its personal path.
“We additionally spoke about our continued partnership on financial safety. We’ve critical considerations concerning the challenges posed by financial coercion, by the weaponisation of financial dependencies and non-market insurance policies and practices, together with by the Individuals’s Republic of China,” he added.

World
Scarlett Johansson Was Offered ‘Sex Object’ Roles ‘For Years’ After ‘Lost in Translation,’ Says Bill Murray Was in a ‘Hard Place’ on Set: ‘Life Has Humbled Him’ Now

Scarlett Johansson remembered in an interview with Vanity Fair her career getting pigeonholed by “sex object” roles after the breakout success of Sofia Coppola’s 2003’s “Lost in Translation,” which cast a 17-year-old Johansson opposite Bill Murray.
“After ‘Lost in Translation,’ every role that I was offered for years was ‘the girlfriend,’ ‘the other woman,’ a sex object — I couldn’t get out of the cycle,” Johansson said. “It sort of felt like, ‘Oh, I guess this is my identity now as an actor.’ There wasn’t much I could do with that.”
Johansson added that her representatives at the time did not help her try to avoid these roles, although “they were reacting to the norm. The industry worked like that forever.”
“You come into your sexuality and your desirability as part of your growth, and it’s exciting to blossom into yourself,” she continued. “You’re wearing the clothes you want, you’re expressing yourself, then you suddenly turn around and you’re like, ‘Wait, I feel like I’m being’ — I don’t want to say exploited because it’s such a severe word. That term is so heavy, but yeah, it was a kind of an exploitation.”
“Lost in Translation” stars Murray as a fading movie star in Tokyo who befriends Johansson’s college graduate amid a midlife crisis. Johansson would not go into specifics but did say “Bill was in a hard place” during the film’s production, adding: “Everybody was on tenterhooks around him, including our director and the full crew, because he was dealing with his… stuff.”
Johansson said she never had worked with an actor in Murray’s “headspace” before. The two performers ran into each other earlier this year behind the scenes of “SNL50,” where Murray was in a much more spirited mood.
“He’s such a different person now. I think life has humbled him,” Johansson said, confirming she was partly referring to his behavior on the set of the 2022 movie “Being Mortal” that resulted in the project being shut down. Murray said earlier this year that he gave a woman on set a kiss through a mask, although he maintained he was just being silly.
“Certainly, yes — that was really bad,” Johansson said. “But I also know COVID was a hard thing for him. Life — all these things have led up to him being held accountable for that kind of behavior. But you know what? How wonderful that people can change.”
Speaking of her experience on “Lost in Translation” at large, Johansson added: “I’m pretty proud of how I handled myself. I really just did the work, you know? It’s a good tactic for pushing through stuff. Eyes on the prize.”
Head over to Vanity Fair’s website to read Johansson’s cover story in its entirety.
World
Trump makes historic UAE visit as first US president in nearly 30 years

President Donald Trump on Thursday will soon land in the United Arab Emirates for his final stop in the Middle East this week in a visit that marked the first time a U.S. president has traveled to the nation in nearly 30 years, following President George W. Bush’s trip in 2008.
Trump, who has secured major business deals first in Saudi Arabia and then Qatar, is expected to announce more agreements with what has long been one of the U.S.’ chief trading partners in the region — though given recently announced trillion-dollar deals, it is unclear what more the Emiratis will agree to.
In March, the UAE pledged a $1.4 trillion investment in the U.S. economy over the next decade through AI infrastructure, semiconductor, energy and American manufacturing initiatives, including a plan to nearly double U.S. aluminum production by investing in a new smelter for the first time in 35 years.
President Donald Trump waves as he boards Air Force One to depart Al Udeid Air Base on his way to the UAE on Thursday, May 15, 2025, in Doha, Qatar. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
TRUMP SIGNS AGREEMENTS WITH QATAR ON DEFENSE AND BOEING PURCHASES
On the eve of the president’s visit to the Middle Eastern nation, the State Department also announced a $1.4 billion sale of CH-47 F Chinook helicopters and F-16 fighter jet parts to Abu Dhabi.
However, lawmakers on Wednesday suggested they may block this sale amid concerns over direct personal business ties, as Trump’s crypto venture has also received a $2 billion investment by a UAE-backed investment firm.
“If I was a betting person, I’d bet that the Emiratis almost certainly kept some things in reserve for President Trump’s actual visit that can be announced when he’s on the ground in Abu Dhabi,” John Hannah, former national security advisor to Dick Cheney and current Randi & Charles Wax senior fellow at the Jewish Institute for National Security of America (JINSA), told Fox News Digital. “I wouldn’t be at all surprised if we see some new items unveiled or some additional details put out on some of the earlier announcements.”
“The UAE has clearly staked its future on being the Middle East leader in a wide range of 21st-century technologies, from AI to chips to space,” he added. “And of course, the shopping list for high-end weapons is almost limitless and always a possible deliverable for a trip like this.”
Increased scrutiny arose around Trump’s Middle East tour as engagement with all three nations holds personal value to him, given the Trump Organization’s luxury resorts, hotels, golf courses, real estate projects and crypto investment schemes in the region.

An infographic titled “Trump’s high-stakes Gulf tour,” created in Ankara, Turkey, on Tuesday. (Yasin Demirci/Anadolu via Getty Images)
TRUMP CONTINUES TO DEFEND QATAR GIFTING US $400M JET: ‘WE SHOULD HAVE THE MOST IMPRESSIVE PLANE’
But all three nations also hold significant value to Washington, as they have become key players in some of the toughest geopolitical issues facing the U.S. and its allies.
Saudi Arabia and Qatar have been integral in facilitating U.S. negotiations when it comes to ending Russia’s war in Ukraine and hostage negotiations in the Gaza Strip.
While neither of these issues appeared to be top points of discussion in Trump’s visit to Saudi Arabia or Qatar, he may hit on geopolitical ties more heavily when it comes to the UAE, particularly given that Abu Dhabi is one of the few Middle Eastern nations that holds normalized diplomatic ties with Israel.
The UAE has ardently opposed Israel’s military operations in the Gaza Strip, has called for a two-state solution, and has rejected Trump’s “riviera plans,” instead favoring an Egypt-reconstruction alternative.

President Donald Trump, center, attends a photo session with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, United Arab Emirates Crown Prince Sheikh Khaled bin Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Qatar’s Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, Kuwait’s Crown Prince Mishal Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah and Gulf Cooperation Council Secretary-General Jasem Mohamed Albudaiwi during the GCC Summit in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on Wednesday. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
But Abu Dhabi has also maintained relations with the U.S.’ biggest adversaries, including China, Russia and Iran, which could be a topic of conversation during Trump’s one-day visit.
“As everywhere on this trip, the headlines will likely be dominated by the dollar signs and deal-making,” Hannah said. “But I’m personally most interested in the geopolitical angle of trying to reset the U.S.-Emirati strategic partnership, especially in the context of America’s great power competition with China and to a lesser extent Russia, and regionally with Iran.”

Secretary of State Marco Rubio, left, appears with UAE National Security Advisor Sheikh Tahnoon bin Zayed Al Nahyan at ADNEC Centre Abu Dhabi in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, on Feb. 19. (Reuters/Evelyn Hockstein/Pool)
Hannah explained that Trump’s visit to the UAE exemplifies a recommitment by the U.S. economically and militarily to support Abu Dhabi’s “stability, security, and success in a dangerous neighborhood” and could “pay real dividends going forward.”
“The UAE’s top leadership has come to believe that putting most of its eggs into the American basket was an increasingly risky bet as one president after another decided that the Middle East was a lost cause — nothing but ‘blood and sand’ as President Trump famously said in his first term — and the country needed to pivot its focus toward Asia,” he continued. “With a country as influential and resource-rich as the UAE, correcting that unhelpful perception and putting the strategic relationship back on a much more positive dynamic is an important goal.”
World
Leak: Commission to launch PFAS clean-ups in water resilience strategy

The European Commission is preparing to support a major clean-up initiative targeting Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), also known as “forever chemicals” due to their persistence in the environment and human body, according to a leaked proposal seen by Euronews.
The operation, which is expected to start in 2026, is a central feature of the forthcoming EU Water Resilience Strategy.
Controversially shelved by the previous Commission and now slated for presentation by 4 June, the new strategy aims to address increasingly severe flooding, droughts, and escalating water pollution across Europe.
According to a leaked draft of the proposal seen by Euronews, the Commission warns that “urgent action is needed to tackle pollutants of emerging concern which pose a risk to our vital sources of drinking water.”
“The EU must embark on decisive efforts to clean up these and other ubiquitous, persistent, bio-accumulative, and toxic substances, particularly where such chemicals remain indispensable for societal or industrial use,” the draft continues.
The leaked document stresses that remediation should follow the “polluter pays” principle, with public funding reserved for so-called orphan sites, namely locations where no responsible party can be identified.
The estimated cost of cleaning up PFAS contamination across Europe ranges from €5 billion to €100 billion annually, according to the Commission. The water sector alone could face up to €18 billion in additional yearly expenses for drinking water treatment. Costs for wastewater and sewage sludge management are projected to be even higher.
Among the planned initiatives is a public-private partnership launching in 2026, focused on the detection and clean-up of PFAS and other persistent chemicals. The initiative will align with recently revised EU legislation on industrial emissions, drinking water, and wastewater, and is intended to foster innovation and market development within the European water sector.
“Innovation and digitalisation are indispensable to remove emerging pollutants like PFAS and other toxic micro-substances,” the Commission notes in the draft adding that bio-based technologies could offer long-term solutions. The document also highlights the importance of achieving energy neutrality in the wastewater sector and improving integrated urban water management.
The PFAS actions in the strategy are intended to complement ongoing efforts under the revision of the EU’s REACH framework, as outlined in President von der Leyen’s 2024–2029 political guidelines, which are also slated for revision soon.
By the end of 2025, the Commission aims to adopt a comprehensive restriction on all PFAS in firefighting foams, identified as one of the primary sources of PFAS emissions.
PFAS and other highly persistent pollutants continue to accumulate in EU waters, with estimated health-related costs ranging from €52 billion to €84 billion annually.
Aligned with the Zero Pollution Action Plan, the Commission also proposes a monitoring and outlook system to tackle water and marine pollution at its source.
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