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After US, France might deploy nuclear weapons in Europe against Russia as Third World War...

After US, France might deploy nuclear weapons in Europe against Russia as Third World War...

India.com5 hours ago

New Delhi: The three-year-old war between Russia and Ukraine is not coming to an end, rather the war between the two countries seems to be reaching a dangerous turn. After the destruction caused by Ukraine's drone attack by entering Russia and Putin's retaliation on it, the threat of a nuclear showdown has increased. Military experts say that if Ukraine loses, then European countries will be Russia's next target directly. Ukraine currently acts as a buffer zone between Russia and Europe. As soon as it surrenders its weapons, Russia will reach directly to the European border. Will France deploy its nuclear weapons in Europe?
French President Emmanuel Macron has indicated that he can deploy his nuclear weapons for the security of the whole of Europe. America has already deployed its nuclear attack aircraft in Europe. Up to 20 US nuclear weapons are stationed at a Bundeswehr airbase in Büchel in the state of Rhineland-Palatinate in Germany and only the US president has the code to release them, say reports.
According to Macron, if countries like Britain, Germany, Belgium, Italy and Turkey take responsibility, then France is ready. Countries like Poland, Lithuania, Denmark, and Hungary are already in panic due to Russia's fury.
France is the only nuclear power in the European Union, it has about 280 nuclear bombs, which can be fired from water, air or land. Britain has 225 nuclear weapons, but it is outside the European Union. European Union leaders say that due to the uncertain stance of the Donald Trump government, Europe cannot sit idle relying only on America.
Currently, more than 20 nuclear weapons of America have been kept at the German military airbase. The French President says that France does not want the Russia-Ukraine war to turn into the Third World War, but we have to be prepared.

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Handshake abroad, discord at home with Opposition in the spotlight
Handshake abroad, discord at home with Opposition in the spotlight

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time17 minutes ago

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Handshake abroad, discord at home with Opposition in the spotlight

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'He died the way he lived—underground': Israel confirms Hamas leader Muhammad Sinwar killed in May 13 strike; body found inside tunnel
'He died the way he lived—underground': Israel confirms Hamas leader Muhammad Sinwar killed in May 13 strike; body found inside tunnel

Time of India

time26 minutes ago

  • Time of India

'He died the way he lived—underground': Israel confirms Hamas leader Muhammad Sinwar killed in May 13 strike; body found inside tunnel

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'Harvard Is Starting To Behave': Donald Trump Amid Student Visa Ban Row
'Harvard Is Starting To Behave': Donald Trump Amid Student Visa Ban Row

News18

timean hour ago

  • News18

'Harvard Is Starting To Behave': Donald Trump Amid Student Visa Ban Row

Last Updated: US Education Secretary Linda McMahon defended Trump's actions on elite universities like Harvard and Columbia and said that she is seeing 'progress' from the institutions. US President Donald Trump has said that 'Harvard University has actually starting to behave" days after he signed a new order banning visas of foreign students who are set to begin attending the institution. The President in a recently held meeting with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz had said that, 'We want to have foreign students come. We're very honoured by it, but we want to see their list." 'Harvard didn't want to give us the list. They're going to be giving us the list now. I think they're starting to behave, actually, if you want to know the truth," he added. Additionally, US Education Secretary Linda McMahon defended Trump's actions on elite universities like Harvard and Columbia and said that she is seeing 'progress" from the institutions on the administration's demands. 'I have seen progress. And you know why I think we're seeing progress? Because we are putting these measures in place, and we're saying we're putting teeth behind what we're looking at," McMahon said in an interview with NBC News. advetisement She added that there still is a long way to go to remove antisemitism on campus and vet international students. 'It's very important that we are making sure that the students who are coming in and being on these campuses aren't activists, that they're not causing these activities," McMahon said. She said that students who come on campus should not be afraid to be there and should not feel unsafe. The secretary acknowledged that the universities have taken positive steps to combat what she said was growing antisemitism on campus, but credited Trump for pushing them to do so. 'I'm really happy to see what Harvard did, but I wonder if maybe they didn't get a little spur from our action, because they talk a lot about it, but I think we really started to see a lot of their actions once we were taking action," McMahon said. Amid accusations on Harvard and Columbia of fomenting antisemitism, Trump had cancelled $2 billion in grants to Harvard and $400 million in grants to Columbia. Her remarks came after the US President signed a proclamation aiming to ban foreign students from studying at Harvard earlier this week. In the executive order, Trump had declared that it would jeopardise national security to allow Harvard to continue hosting foreign students on its campus in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Later, a federal judge temporarily halted the Trump's order after Harvard filed a new lawsuit against the rule. In May, a federal court in Boston had blocked the Department of Homeland Security from barring international students at Harvard. The dispute has been building for months after the Trump administration demanded a series of policy and governance changes at Harvard, calling it a hotbed of liberalism and accusing it of tolerating anti-Jewish harassment. Harvard defied the demands, saying they encroached on the University's autonomy and represented a threat to the freedom of all US universities. Harvard enrolled nearly 6,800 international students in the 2024-2025 school year, amounting to 27 per cent of its total enrollment, according to university statistics. In 2022, Chinese nationals were the biggest group of foreign students at 1,016, university figures showed. After that were students from Canada, India, South Korea, Britain, Germany, Australia, Singapore and Japan. About the Author First Published: June 08, 2025, 22:28 IST

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