World
Trump's return could leave Europe 'on its own', De Croo warns
Donald Trump’s potential re-election in 2024 could leave Europe “on its own”, Belgium’s Prime Minister Alexander De Croo warned on Tuesday.
Speaking at the first plenary session of the year in the European Parliament in Strasbourg, De Croo said Europe should “not fear” the prospect of a Trump comeback.
“If 2024 brings us America First again, it will be more than ever Europe on its own,” De Croo said.
“We should, as Europeans, not fear that prospect,” he added. “We should embrace it by putting Europe on a more solid footing, stronger, more sovereign, more self-reliant.”
His stark warning came hours after Trump’s landslide victory in the Iowa caucus – a first decisive step towards becoming the 2024 Republican presidential candidate.
A Republican takeover in the US presidential elections in November – whether Trumpian or not – threatens to severely disrupt the West’s tightly aligned policy on Ukraine.
The US is Kyiv’s biggest donor of military and financial aid, but the support has been stalled due to calls from some cohorts of the Republican party to scale back on payments.
It has put further pressure on the EU to scramble to approve its planned €50-billion fund for Ukraine, after Hungarian premier Viktor Orbán used his veto to block the proposal in December. Member states are currently preparing concessions to Orbán in the hopes of green-lighting the plan during an emergency summit on February 1.
Orban congratulated Trump on his sweeping victory in the Iowa caucus earlier on Monday.
But De Croo, whose government holds the six-month rotating presidency of the Council of the EU, warned that Europe’s future hinges on the war in Ukraine.
“For America and for other allies, the support for Ukraine is a strategic question, it is a geopolitical consideration. For us Europeans. the support to Ukraine is existential,” De Croo told the parliament.
“It goes to the heart of our security and our prosperity,” he added.
Earlier this month, Internal Market Commissioner Thierry Breton revealed that while serving as US President in 2020, Trump told European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen that the US would not help Europe if it was attacked.
“You need to understand that if Europe is under attack we will never come to help you and to support you,” Trump said during the 2020 World Economic Forum in Davos, according to Breton, adding that “by the way, NATO is dead.”
Trump’s warning came two years before Russia moved its troops into Ukraine, prompting the NATO alliance to provide unprecedented military and financial backing to Kyiv, and Finland and Sweden to break with their decades-long policy of neutrality to request to join the alliance’s ranks.
Officials in Brussels also fear that a Trump comeback could spell the end of a recent respite in EU-US trade tensions, and deliver a hit to Europe’s economy.
The Trump administration slapped tariffs on EU steel and aluminium entering the US in 2018, claiming the foreign-made products were a threat to national security. A truce agreed with the Biden administration to resolve the dispute was recently extended for a further 15 months.
Trump has vowed that if elected president in 2024 he will raise a 10% tax on all foreign imports, and even higher levies on products coming from China.
Meanwhile, the states of Colorado and Maine have barred him from running for president for his role in the Capitol Hill riots in January 2021. Trump is expected to contest the decisions.
The former president’s comfortable lead over Republican rivals means he could still win without standing in these two states – but his frontrunner status could be challenged if other states follow Colorado and Maine’s lead.
World
Argentinian flight instructor jumps to death from plane, 22-year-old student forced to land alone
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A flight instructor jumped to his death out of a small aircraft over Argentina, forcing the student pilot he was teaching to land the plane herself.
Leandro Andrés Bertazzo, 42, was on board a two-seat Cessna 150G on Saturday when he made the decision to jump out over the province of Córdoba, according to CNN, which cited its Argentinian affiliate TN.
“He made this tragic decision on board an aircraft with another person by his side,” Eduardo Álvarez, director of the Flying Parrot Córdoba flying school where Bertazzo worked, told TN. “It’s impossible to think about it or understand it, but the human mind is so complex.”
An undated photo of Leandro Andrés Bertazzo, a 42-year-old pilot who jumped to his death from a plane on Saturday, July 4 in Argentina. (Instagram/Leandro Bertazzo)
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Rosario, the 22-year-old student, later told authorities that Bertazzo told her, “You know what you have to do, carry on,” before taking off his gear, opening the door and leaping out, according to Álvarez.
Opening the door of a plane midair is incredibly difficult. Álvarez said it would be akin to trying to open the door of a car traveling 124 miles per hour.
Cessna 150m FRA150M climbing out after take-off with flaps deployed and hills behind. (aviation-images.com/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)
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Álvarez said that Rosario managed to land the plane safely, despite being in “complete shock.” There was no damage to the plane, according to TN.
Álvarez noted that Bertazzo had gone on a flight with another student earlier in the day.
A view from the main road of the flight school Bertazzo worked at, Flying Parrot Córdoba. (Google Maps)
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Álvarez also told TN that Bertazzo had visited a psychiatric institute, something that was only known by his family prior to his death.
Prosecutors in Córdoba will lead the investigation into Bertazzo’s death. The plane he jumped from is now in police custody.
World
Former US Olympian pleads not guilty in DC reflecting pool vandalism case
Former Olympic canoeist David Hearn denies damaging US President Donald Trump’s Washington, DC reflecting pool renovation.
Published On 9 Jul 2026
A former US Olympian has pleaded not guilty to vandalising the newly renovated Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool, in a case that has drawn national attention amid accusations that the administration of US President Donald Trump is trying to shift blame for a troubled renovation.
David “Davey” Hearn, a 67-year-old three-time Olympic canoe racer, entered his plea in federal court on Thursday after prosecutors accused him of “maliciously” damaging the “American flag blue” lining installed at the bottom of the reflecting pool at Trump’s request ahead of celebrations taking place at Washington’s National Mall for the 250th anniversary of the United States’ independence on July 4.
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Federal prosecutors allege Hearn pulled at the liner on June 19, causing more than $1,000 in damage. He has been charged with destruction of government property, an offence that carries a maximum prison sentence of 10 years.
Hearn denied the allegations. He admitted he stopped at the pool during a bike ride, reached inside and touched a section of lining that was already peeling away, but that he did not remove or damage it. He told The Associated Press he let go when a park employee told him to stop.
Hearn’s lawyers argue the prosecution is an attempt by the Trump administration to deflect attention from what they describe as a botched renovation project.
“This indictment reflects the administration’s effort to shift blame for their own failures,” they said in a statement. “The justice system exists to determine facts, not to provide political cover.”
The 620-metre (2,030-foot) reflecting pool reopened in June after Trump ordered the new liner to be installed across the bottom. He said he was compelled to go ahead with the $14.7m renovation after a friend visiting from Germany called the pool dark and disgusting.
But within days, algae began to spread across the surface, the water turned chartreuse green, and sections of the liner began peeling away.
Experts have explained that the dark new coat of paint at the bottom of the pool would elevate the temperature and allow algae to grow, and that algae blooms in water are common at this time of year, especially in shallow, stagnant water like that of the pool.
Trump blamed the issues on vandals, claiming without evidence that “corrosive and destructive chemicals” were poured into the pool and that vandals “took some form of knife or blade” and put a long “gash into the beautiful facade”, although no one has been charged over those alleged acts.
The US president warned that anyone who allegedly damaged the pool could face long prison terms. “Please remember that there is a 10 year prison sentence for the destruction, or even the attempted destruction, of such things — Which will be fully enforced!” he wrote on Truth Social.
Last week, US Attorney for the District of Columbia Jeanine Pirro announced the indictment against Hearn, accusing him of intentionally damaging the liner.
The US Department of the Interior has said that at least six people were arrested on suspicion of vandalising the pool in the weeks after it reopened. National Guard troops and US Park Police were deployed to protect the site, which was fenced off during July 4 celebrations.
Thursday’s hearing drew a packed courtroom, with dozens of supporters waiting outside after Hearn entered his plea.
The reflecting pool’s problems have continued, with Trump acknowledging it will need to be drained again so the damaged liner can be repaired.
World
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