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Europe looks to boost its security, urges U.S. to ‘repair and revive trust’ – National TenX News

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German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said on Friday that Berlin had begun talks with France about a European nuclear deterrent, while President Emmanuel Macron said Europe had to become a geopolitical power given the Russian threat would not disappear.

Merz, who said the region had to become stronger in order to reset its relationship with the United States, called in a speech to open the Munich Security Conference, on Washington to “repair and revive trust” in a dangerous new era of great power politics, warning the U.S. could not go it alone as the old global order crumbles.

He was later followed by Macron, who pushed back on criticism of the continent, but said it was time that Europe was more assertive and prepared itself with a stronger security architecture.

The speeches underscored how European leaders are increasingly looking to carve an independent path after a year of unprecedented upheaval in transatlantic ties, while also striving to maintain their alliance with Washington.

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Europe faces myriad threats from Russia’s war in Ukraine to massive ruptures in global trade.

“I have begun confidential talks with the French President on European nuclear deterrence,” Merz said. “We Germans are adhering to our legal obligations. We see this as strictly embedded within our nuclear sharing in NATO. And we will not allow zones of differing security to emerge in Europe.”


Click to play video: 'Russian drone strike kills one as Ukrainian official urges Europe to “prepare yourself” for war'


Russian drone strike kills one as Ukrainian official urges Europe to “prepare yourself” for war


FRANCE IS EU’S ONLY NUCLEAR POWER

Macron is due to make a speech on the nuclear deterrent later this month.

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He said the consultations with Germany and other leaders were part of a broader discussion that included conventional deep strikes capabilities, which Europe does not possess unlike Russia, and the role of France’s nuclear deterrent.

“This is the right time for audacity. This is the right time for a strong Europe,” Macron said. “Europe has to learn to become a geopolitical power. It was not part of our DNA.”

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“We have to reshuffle and reorganise our architecture of security in Europe. Because the past architecture of security was totally designed and framed during Cold War times. So it’s no longer adapted,” he said.

European nations have long relied heavily on the United States, including its large nuclear arsenal, for their defence but have been increasing military spending, partly in response to sharp criticism from the Trump administration.


Click to play video: 'Russia’s Medvedev says expiry of New START nuclear missile treaty should ‘alarm everyone’'


Russia’s Medvedev says expiry of New START nuclear missile treaty should ‘alarm everyone’


While Germany is currently banned from developing a nuclear weapon under international agreements, France is the European Union’s only nuclear power following Britain’s departure from the bloc and has the world’s fourth-largest stockpile.

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Taking his cue from those warning that the international rules-based order was about to be destroyed, Merz said: “I fear we must put it even more bluntly: This order, however imperfect it was even at its best, no longer exists in that form.”

Switching to English at the end, Merz said: “In the era of great power rivalry, even the United States will not be powerful enough to go it alone. Dear friends, being a part of NATO is not only Europe’s competitive advantage. It is also the United States’ competitive advantage.”

“So let’s repair and revive transatlantic trust together,” he added.


Defence Minister David McGuinty told a panel on defence industrial cooperation at the conference that Canada was strengthening its ties with Europe on defence procurement and security. He did not mention the U.S. but affirmed Canada was stepping up its defence spending and capabilities with help from diverse partners.

U.S. Sen. Chris Coons of Delaware, a top Democrat on multiple foreign relations and defence committees, told the same panel that America needs to adopt the same approach of cooperation in order to counter China and Russia.

When asked if he believes the Trump administration is following that advice, however, Coons acknowledged he did not.

“That is a core concern,” he said, citing the recent push to acquire Greenland from fellow NATO member Denmark.

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“Our core attitude must be, we only get through this with our allies.”


Click to play video: 'Munich Security Conference opens without Carney after B.C. school shooting'


Munich Security Conference opens without Carney after B.C. school shooting


A YEAR AFTER VANCE BLAST, RUBIO STRIKES WARMER TONE

U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio had also said transatlantic ties faced a “defining moment” in a rapidly changing world but struck a more conciliatory tone that contrasted with remarks by Vice President JD Vance in 2025.

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At the same gathering of top security officials last year, Vance had attacked European allies in a speech that marked the start of a series of confrontations.

“I think it’s at a defining moment … the world is changing very fast right in front of us,” Rubio said before departing for Munich.

“(The U.S. is) deeply tied to Europe, and our futures have always been linked and will continue to be,” said Rubio, who is a potential rival to Vance for the 2028 U.S. presidential race. “So we’ve just got to talk about what that future looks like.”

Transatlantic ties have long been central to the Munich Security Conference, which began as a Cold War forum for Western defence debate. But the unquestioned assumption of cooperation that underpinned it has been upended.

Underscoring the damage, a YouGov poll on Friday of the six largest European countries showed favourability towards the U.S. in Europe hitting its lowest since tracking began in 2016.

The latest figures are broadly comparable to – and in some cases higher than – the perceived threat from China, Iran or North Korea, although behind Russia, YouGov said.


Click to play video: 'UK, allies pledge billions in further military aid to Ukraine as fight against Russia continues'


UK, allies pledge billions in further military aid to Ukraine as fight against Russia continues


U.S. President Donald Trump has toppled Venezuela’s leader, threatened other Latin American countries with similar military action, imposed tariffs on friends and foes alike and talked openly about annexing Greenland – a move that could effectively end the NATO alliance.

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Last year’s speech by Vance accused European leaders of censoring free speech and failing to control immigration, which Merz explicitly rejected.

“A rift has opened up between Europe and the United States. Vice President JD Vance said this very openly here in Munich a year ago,” Merz said.

“He was right. The culture war of the MAGA movement is not ours. Freedom of speech ends here with us when that speech goes against human dignity and the constitution. We do not believe in tariffs and protectionism, but in free trade,” he said, drawing applause.

—With additional files from Global News

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Epstein files fallout: People who’ve resigned or been fired after DOJ release – National TenX News

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The fallout after the release of millions of documents in late January — related to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein — continues as job departures, firings and resignations among high-powered business executives, politicians, lawyers, prolific academics and public figures ramp up.

As the files are dissected and studied, high-profile people across Europe, North America and the Middle East have seen consequences for their various relationships with the late financier Epstein.

Find below some of the people who’ve lost their roles or jobs.

High-ranking lawyer to leave Goldman Sachs

A top lawyer at global banking firm Goldman Sachs has announced she will leave her role after appearing in the Epstein files.

Kathy Ruemmler confirmed Thursday that she will exit Goldman Sachs in June after email correspondence revealed a relationship between her and Epstein.

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Speaking to the Financial Times on Thursday, Ruemmler said, “I made the determination that the media attention on me, relating to my prior work as a defence attorney, was becoming a distraction.”

She initially said she would not resign from the role she has held since 2020, and a Goldman Sachs spokesperson previously stressed that Ruemmler “regrets ever knowing him,” The Guardian reported.


Kathy Ruemmler, Former White House Counsel, appears on “Meet the Press” in Washington, D.C., Sunday, June 29, 2014.

William B. Plowman/NBC/NBC Newswire/NBCUniversal via Getty Images

Reummler, who worked as White House counsel under former president Barack Obama, had extensive communications with Epstein between 2014 and 2019 after he was convicted of child sex trafficking offences, the documents show.

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Communications include advising Epstein on how to respond to a media request to comment on the alleged special legal treatment he received due to his status and connections.

It also shows she received gifts from Epstein, whom she frequently called “Uncle Jeffrey.”

“I am totally tricked out by Uncle Jeffrey today! Jeffrey boots, handbag, and w=[a]tch,” she wrote in an email to Epstein in January 2019.

Waterloo professor ‘pauses’ work over Epstein ties


People in Canada have also been impacted by past connections to Epstein.

Lee Smolin, a revered theoretical physicist and founding member of the University of Waterloo’s Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics, a world-renowned independent research centre known for its work in quantum theory, has “agreed to pause his working relationship” with the university, the institute confirmed to Global News in a statement.

His name appears 182 times in the latest tranche of Epstein documents.

While being mentioned in the files does not indicate any criminal wrongdoing, the documents reveal a relationship between Smolin and Epstein, which continued after the former financier’s 2008 sex-trafficking conviction.

The files show correspondence between the two in which they discuss the 2008 economic crisis, and several messages addressed to Epstein remind him to “call Lee Smolin.”

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Smolin previously told The Verge that he had not been in contact with Epstein since 2008 and had last seen him at a conference in 2007.

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Email correspondence appears to contradict Smolin’s timeline.

In one email dated Nov. 2, 2010, with the subject line “Hi from Toronto,” Smolin appeared to send a message that simply reads “Dear Jeffrey.” Epstein, in the same chain, replied, “You’re always welcome in ny.”

In a 2009 email to Epstein, who had just been released from jail at the time, Smolin wrote to him saying, “I hear that you are out and living there at home. Hope all is well, would love to see you and catch up at some point.”

Epstein wrote back, offering to fly Smolin and his family to Florida.

“That’s a very nice invitation. Thank you. Let me speak with [his wife’s name] about when would be possible,” he responded.

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Their final exchange appears to have been in 2013, according to the files released by the U.S. Department of Justice.

Dubai Sultan, port CEO, replaced

Dubai Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem, the head of DP World — one of the world’s largest port operators — was replaced on Friday after documents revealed some lewd exchanges between him and Epstein.

Without mentioning bin Sulayem by name, the Government of Dubai Media Office announced the appointment of Abdulla bin Damithan to the position of Chairman of the Ports, Customs and Free Zone Corporation in his place.

A prominent Emirati businessman, bin Sulayem regularly appears with Dubai’s ruler and has been photographed with President Donald Trump.


FILE – Former Nakheel CEO Chris O’Donnell, Donald Trump, and His Excellency Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem arrive at The Trump International Hotel & Tower Dubai on August 23, 2008, in Los Angeles, California.

Steve Granitz/WireImage

Bin Sulayem’s name appears 344 times in the Department of Justice’s Epstein library, mostly in email exchanges between him and Epstein.

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In one email from 2013, bin Sulayem wrote to Epstein, “This is the o=[n]e I went with in Paris do you think she is a he??”

“The hands do look like mine,” Epstein wrote back.

The emails also include the men discussing dinner and travel plans, as well as invitations from bin Sulayem to Epstein to various high-profile events.

Former Norwegian Prime Minister charged, others under investigation

Former Norwegian prime minister Thorbjørn Jagland has been charged with “gross corruption” over his ties to Epstein, police confirmed.

On Wednesday, police searched the home of  Jagland, who has also served as foreign minister, leader of the Norwegian Nobel Committee and head of the Council of Europe, the continent’s highest human rights watchdog.

He was questioned this week, police said, on suspicion of aggravated corruption. Jagland has said he was looking forward to helping to clarify the situation.

Police also this week questioned Mona Juul, a diplomat who played a role in setting up the back channel between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization that led to the 1993-1995 Oslo Accords, about her own links with Epstein.


Norway’s Former Prime Minister Thorbjorn Jagland, left, walks with his lawyer Anders Brosveet as the Norwegian Economic Crime Investigation Service searches his apartment in Oslo, Norway, Thursday Feb. 12, 2026.

Stian Lysberg Solum/NTB Scanpix via AP

Juul stepped down from her role as ambassador to Jordan and Iraq on Sunday, just days after being suspended amid Norwegian media reports claiming that each of her children was set to inherit $5 million in a will allegedly signed by Epstein shortly before his death in a New York City prison.

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Juul, who is under suspicion of aggravated corruption, has said she did not commit any crime.

The World Economic Forum has also started an independent investigation of its Norwegian CEO, Børge Brende, to clarify his relationship with the convicted sex offender.

In addition, Crown Princess Mette-Marit has apologized for her friendship with Epstein.

Peter Mandelson fired, resigns from the House of Lords, U.K. Labour Party

U.K. Labour peer Peter Mandelson resigned from the Labour Party and the House of Lords earlier this month over his association with Epstein.

U.K Prime Minister Keir Starmer also fired him from his role as British ambassador to the U.S. last year after communications between Mandelson and Epstein were made public in a previous release of Epstein files.

Mandelson said in an interview with British journalist Harry Cole last year that he “deeply” regretted his friendship with Epstein, after a note he wrote to the convicted sex offender was released by the U.S. House Oversight Committee in a “birthday book” gifted to the former New York City businessman on his 50th birthday.

In the note, Mandelson called Epstein his “best pal.”


Part of Lord Peter Mandelson’s note written to Jeffrey Epstein on his 50th birthday.

The U.S. Oversight Committee

Starmer initially showed support for Mandelson after the release of the note, stating that his government still had complete confidence in Mandelson and that it was “focused obviously on our relationship with the US, with President Trump coming for an unprecedented second state visit next week.”

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Mandelson told Cole that he “accepted assurances that he [Epstein] had given me about his indictment, his original criminal case in Florida. Like very many people, I took that at face value,” a decision he said he wished he had never made.

Starmer’s chief of staff also resigned this month over the furor surrounding the appointment of Peter Mandelson as the U.K. ambassador to the U.S. despite his ties to Jeffrey Epstein.

Morgan McSweeney said he took responsibility for advising Starmer to appoint Mandelson, 72, to Britain’s most important diplomatic post in 2024.

The list keeps growing

Other well-known figures facing growing furor over their ties to Epstein include Brad Karp, who announced he had stepped down as chairman of the law firm Paul Weiss in The Wall Street Journal on Wednesday amid allegations of ties to Epstein, and Toronto-born CBS News contributor and chief science officer of the protein brand David Protein, Dr. Peter Attia, who was shown to have kept close relations with Epstein in the 2010s according to newly released documents.

U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick is also facing calls to resign after emails showing he planned a visit to Epstein’s island with his family in 2012 surfaced.

Steve Tisch, the owner of the New York Giants, was found to have exchanged emails with Epstein in 2013 that included discussions about “working girl” status, prompting a review by the National Football League, ESPN reported.

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Last week, pop star Chappell Roan announced she was severing ties with her talent agency, Wasserman, after emails revealed exchanges between its CEO, Casey Wasserman, Epstein and Maxwell. Several Los Angeles officials have also called for Wasserman to step down as chair of the LA28 Olympics committee, The Guardian reported.

Late last year, a number of charities cut ties with Sarah Ferguson, the ex-wife of the former Prince Andrew, after British newspapers published an email that she reportedly wrote to the late convicted sex offender and financier Jeffrey Epstein, describing him as a “supreme friend.’’

— With files from Reuters and the Associated Press

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Canadians accused of joining ISIS moved out of Syria to prisons in Iraq – National TenX News

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Suspected ISIS members from dozens of countries including Canada have been moved out of Syria to prisons in Iraq, an official confirmed on Friday.

Iraq’s judiciary announced that more than 5,700 detainees had been transferred into its custody and that they were citizens of 61 countries, including Canada.

While more than half are Syrians, the National Center for International Judicial Cooperation listed Canada among the “most prominent foreign nationalities.”

The others included citizens of Germany, Russia, Australia, the Netherlands, Belgium, France, South Africa, New Zealand and the United Kingdom.

The statement did not specify how many Canadians were sent to Iraq, nor identify them by name. Global Affairs Canada said only that it was monitoring the situation.

But Global News has identified at least five Canadian men who were being held in Syria prior to the transfer, including a self-admitted ISIS sniper from Mississauga, Ont.

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Dozens of extremists left Canada to join ISIS. While most were killed, Kurdish fighters took several into custody during the final stages of the conflict in 2019.

The federal government flew the women and children back to Canada in 2022 and 2023, but left the men in the custody of the Kurdish forces.

They were detained in makeshift prisons in northeast Syria, a region that was controlled by the U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces.


U.S. military vehicles escort passenger buses transporting Islamic State detainees from northeastern Syria into Iraq. Feb. 8, 2026. (Credit Image: © Stringer/Xinhua via ZUMA Press).

But last month, the United States began moving the detainees to Iraq as Syrian government forces and jihadist groups began pushing into Kurdish-held areas.

The transfer wound down on Thursday, with almost 6,000 ISIS suspects having been transported across the border to prisons in Iraq.

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The Iraqi Supreme Judicial Council has said they would be investigated and put on trial in Iraq.

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The council said in a statement that it had jurisdiction over all the detainees, “regardless of their nationality or position” in ISIS.

But Iraq also urged other countries to do their part and said it was unacceptable that some countries refused to repatriate their citizens.

U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio urged “countries to take responsibility and repatriate their citizens in these facilities to face justice.”


Muhammad Ali left Toronto in 2014 to join ISIS and was captured by Kurdish forces as he tried to flee.

Global News

The Canadians captured in Syria included Muhammad Ali, who joined ISIS in 2014 and used social media to incite terrorist attacks in Canada.

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In an interview with Global News after he was captured in 2018, the Mississauga, Ont. resident admitted he was part of an ISIS sniper team.

Also held by the Kurds were residents of Edmonton, Windsor and Montreal, as well as Jack Letts, a Briton who has never lived in Canada but obtained citizenship through his father.

A sixth Canadian, Mohammed Khalifa, was taken out of Syria by the United States and flown to Washington, D.C., in 2021 to face trial for terrorism.

The Toronto resident was sentenced to life for making ISIS propaganda videos in which he was shown executing prisoners with a handgun.


Iraqi security forces lead suspected Islamic State militants for questioning after they were transferred from Syria to Iraq, at Al-Karkh Central Prison in Baghdad, Iraq, Feb. 12, 2026. (AP Photo/Hadi Mizban).

Iraq has already put tens of thousands of suspected ISIS members through prosecutions that have been criticized by human rights groups.

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Human Rights Watch said the trials relied on confessions, despite torture allegations, and courts paid little heed to each suspect’s role in ISIS.

“Iraq is known for highly expedited proceedings where defendants often had limited or no access to legal counsel, evidence was rarely scrutinized in depth, and verdicts were delivered immediately,” said Queen’s University professor Amarnath Amarasingam. “This has resulted in long prison sentences and even the death penalty.”

“Researchers have warned for years that this may happen eventually if countries didn’t repatriate their citizens from these camps and prisons,” said Amarasingam, a terrorism expert who has studied Canadian ISIS members.


“By leaving Iraq to absorb the legal burden alone, states have outsourced justice to an overwhelmed system. There are now serious concerns about due process and wrongful convictions.”

Asked by Global News about the issue last month, Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand did not confirm that Canadians were among those sent to Iraq.

“We are examining the situation and we are in touch with our consular officials at every step of the way,” she said in Ottawa.

Global Affairs Canada similarly would not share any details on Thursday, saying it would not comment for “privacy and security reasons.”

“The safety and security of Canadians always remain the utmost priority for the government of Canada while meeting necessary legal obligations.”

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Stewart.Bell@globalnews.ca

&copy 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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White House says tariff rollback reports ‘speculation’ unless announced – National TenX News

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Recent media reports that U.S. President Donald Trump plans to roll back tariffs on steel and aluminum are “baseless speculation” unless he announces it, a White House official says.

The White House released a statement Friday morning addressing a report citing sources who spoke to The Financial Times and said Trump was considering the change.

“President Trump will never compromise on reinvigorating the domestic manufacturing that is critical to our national and economic security, especially steel and aluminum production,” the White House official said on background.

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“The Trump administration is accordingly implementing a nimble and nuanced tariffs agenda to most effectively reshore steel, aluminum, and other key manufacturing back to the United States — American steel production overtaking Japan’s for the first time since 1999 is proof of this agenda’s growing success.”

“Unless officially announced by the administration, however, any reporting about changes to our current tariff regime is baseless speculation.”

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Canada is the subject of multiple rounds of U.S. tariffs, including sector-specific tariffs on steel and aluminum, as well as other industries.

Trump called Canada “among the worst in the World to deal with” on social media Wednesday as the U.S. House of Representatives voted to pass a motion against his tariffs on Canada.

Trump is expected to veto that motion, which received bipartisan support.

“Canada has taken advantage of the United States on Trade for many years. They are among the worst in the World to deal with, especially as it relates to our Northern Border,” Trump wrote Wednesday night as results of the vote became clear. “TARIFFS make a WIN for us, EASY. Republicans must keep it that way!”


&copy 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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