Starmer and Macron urge allies to increase pressure on Putin after ‘frank’ talks between US and Russia on Ukraine – Europe live | Europe

Starmer and Macron urge allies to increase pressure on Putin after ‘frank’ talks between US and Russia on Ukraine – Europe live | Europe


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Starmer, Macron urge allies to step up ‘pressure’ on Putin, say peacekeeping plans are ‘mature’ and ‘ready to go’

British prime minister Keir Starmer and French president Emmanuel Macron called for more pressure in the form of fresh sanctions against Moscow to secure a ceasefire in Ukraine, AFP reported.

French president state visit to UK
prime minister Sir Keir Starmer and president of France Emmanuel Macron look at screens during a joint military visit to the Allied Maritime Command (MARCOM) centre in Northwood, London.
Photograph: Leon Neal/PA

“We should shift our work for preparing for peace, making it happen by forcing Putin to the table… this coordinated pressure will make a difference,” said Starmer.

Starmer also said the European plans for a peacekeeping force were “mature” after months of planning, with Macron describing them as “ready to go” once a ceasefire is agreed, PA news agency reported.

Separately, Macron also called for allies to “step up the pressure on Russia”.

Key events

Jakub Krupa

Jakub Krupa

The two leaders will also appear at a joint press conference at the end of Macron’s three-day state visit in Britain at some point in the next hour – I will bring you all the latest here.

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Starmer, Macron urge allies to step up ‘pressure’ on Putin, say peacekeeping plans are ‘mature’ and ‘ready to go’

British prime minister Keir Starmer and French president Emmanuel Macron called for more pressure in the form of fresh sanctions against Moscow to secure a ceasefire in Ukraine, AFP reported.

French president state visit to UK
prime minister Sir Keir Starmer and president of France Emmanuel Macron look at screens during a joint military visit to the Allied Maritime Command (MARCOM) centre in Northwood, London.
Photograph: Leon Neal/PA

“We should shift our work for preparing for peace, making it happen by forcing Putin to the table… this coordinated pressure will make a difference,” said Starmer.

Starmer also said the European plans for a peacekeeping force were “mature” after months of planning, with Macron describing them as “ready to go” once a ceasefire is agreed, PA news agency reported.

Separately, Macron also called for allies to “step up the pressure on Russia”.

Sweden’s migration minister ‘shocked’ by teenage son’s far-right activism

Miranda Bryant

Miranda Bryant

Nordic correspondent

Sweden’s migration minister has said he is “shocked and horrified” after discovering his teenage son’s involvement in far-right extremist groups.

Johan Forssell is migration minister in the Swedish government run by his party, the Moderates. Photograph: SOPA Images/LightRocket/Getty Images

Johan Forssell, whose centre-right party runs a governing coalition that depends on the support of the far-right Sweden Democrats, said on Thursday that he had been contacted a few weeks ago by the Swedish security service, Säpo, about his 16-year-old son’s activities.

The minister decided to go public after the anti-racism magazine Expo revealed that a “close relative of a Swedish minister” was active in the violent far right.

Despite following his son on social media, where his son in turn followed far-right activists and influencers, Forssell said he had no idea about his involvement until he was contacted by journalists.

“As a father you are shocked, you are horrified. I have a deeply remorseful 15-year-old, who just turned 16,” Forssell told TV4. “These activities are over but our conversations will, of course, continue.”

Writing on social media, he said he hoped it would be an “eye-opener” for other parents, saying the findings “highlight a bigger societal issue”. “How much do we actually know about what our children do on social media and how can we protect them from being dragged into something we don’t want?”

Forssell said his son, who has not been named, is not suspected of any crime.

Far-right extremism has long been present in Sweden, but experts say recent years have seen a shift towards smaller, more agile groups, often based around fitness, recruiting boys and young men on social media platforms before moving to other private platforms. The number of active groups in the Swedish far right are believed to be at their highest point since 2008.

The last general election saw the Sweden Democrats, which has roots in neo-Nazism, become the country’s second biggest party and gain a powerful role in the direction of the governing coalition.

Jakub Krupa

Jakub Krupa

Speaking of difficult relations between a father and son, let’s go to Sweden, and Miranda Bryant for a story about the country’s migration minister and his son.

Ukraine arrests Chinese father and son on suspicion of spying

Ukraine says it has arrested a Chinese father and son on suspicion of spying on its Neptune anti-ship missile programme, a key part of Kyiv’s growing domestic arms industry that is critical to its defence against Russian forces.

A pixillated image of one of the Chinese nationals, centre, detained by the Ukrainian security service. Photograph: UKRAINIAN SECURITY SERVICE/AFP/Getty Images

The announcement by Ukraine’s security service (SBU) follows assertions by Kyiv in recent months that Beijing, which has sought to project an image of neutrality, is helping the Kremlin’s war effort.

Counterintelligence officials arrested a 24-year-old former student in Kyiv after they provided him with “technical documentation” related to Neptune production, the SBU said in a statement on Wednesday.

They later detained his father, who had aimed to smuggle out the documents to the Chinese special services, the agency said. The father had been living in China but visited Ukraine to “personally coordinate” his son’s work, it added.

A Ukrainian official told Reuters the two men were the first Chinese people arrested for spying since Russia’s full-scale invasion in 2022.

China’s foreign ministry on Thursday said it was “still verifying the relevant information”.

“If Chinese citizens are involved, we will safeguard their legitimate rights and interests in accordance with the law,” a ministry spokesperson, Mao Ning, told a regular press conference when asked about the arrests.

A lawyer for the men could not immediately be reached.

via Reuters

US ‘disappointed’ with lack of progress on Ukraine, Rubio tells Russia’s Lavrov in ‘frank’ exchange with ‘new idea’ from Russia

Separately, US state secretary Marco Rubio met earlier today with Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov on the sidelines of the Asean gathering in Malaysia.

US secretary of state Marco Rubio takes part in a media briefing during the 58th Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Foreign Ministers’ meeting and related meetings at the Convention Centre in Kuala Lumpur. Photograph: Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images

Rubio told reporters after the meeting that he expressed “disappointment and frustration” to his Russian counterpart over the lack of progress on resolving the Ukraine war.

“I echoed what the president [Donald Trump] said, both a disappointment and frustration at the lack of progress,” he said, saying it was “a frank, important conversation.”

Moscow described the meeting as a “substantive and frank exchange of views.”

AFP reported that Rubio also added that Lavrov shared “a new idea” on Ukraine, without offering any detail on what it was.

“It’s not a new approach. It’s a new idea or a new concept that I’ll take back to the president to discuss,” Rubio told reporters, cautioning it was not something that “automatically leads to peace, but it could potentially open the door to a path.”

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Germany’s Merz says he spoke with Trump on Patriots for Ukraine, no decision made yet

German chancellor Friedrich Merz said he spoke with US president Donald Trump about getting more Patriot missiles for Ukraine, but there was no final decision yet.

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz attends a press conference on the first day of the two-day Ukraine Recovery Conference (URC2025), on plans for the reconstruction of Ukraine, in Rome, Italy. Photograph: Guglielmo Mangiapane/Reuters

Merz said he was “in close contact with the American government, with president Trump” about plans to buy more Patriot systems and send them to Ukraine as he stressed the need to strenghten Ukraine’s air defence “in light of ongoing Russian attacks.”

“The Americans need some of them themselves, but they also have a lot of them. … It has not yet been finalised whether a delivery will be made,” he said.

Speaking at a press briefing on the sidelines of the Ukraine Recovery Conference, he also repeated his argument that Germany and Europe’s interests – on growth, free market economies, energy security and political freedom – are directly linked with supporting Ukraine in its fight against Russia.

Germany’s future is very closely linked to Ukraine’s future in this way.

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Lithuanian leaders briefly evacuated after alarm over airspace violation from Belarus

Lithuania’s political leaders were briefly taken to shelters after alarm was raised over an unidentified object violating the country’s airspace from Belarus, Lithuanian media reported.

Media reports said that prime minister Gintautas Paluckas and parliament speaker Saulius Skvernelis were taken to safety as the situation was investigated. Lithuanian president Gitanas Nausėda is on a foreign trip in Ireland.

According to reports, authorities were worried that the flying object could be a Shahed drone of the type used by Russia in ongoing attacks on Ukraine.

The Lithuanian Army confirmed on its Facebook page that the object was detected at 11.30am local time. After its fighter jets were tasked with responding to the incident, the object quickly fell to the ground around a kilometer from the Lithuanian-Belarusian border.

After closer investigation, the object was confirmed as an unmanned makeshift plane – reportedly made of plywood and foam – and as not posing immediate danger.

The handout photo of a suspected Russian or Belarussian makeshift object that violated Lithuanian air space on 10 July 2025. Photograph: Handout/Lithuanian Army

But the head of the parliamentary defence committee, Giedrimas Jeglinskas, told Lithuanian media that a further investigation of the incident was needed to establish if it was a provocation from Belarus or Russia.

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EU ‘blind’ on US intentions on tariffs deal

Lisa O'Carroll

Lisa O’Carroll

in Brussels

The EU and the US are no closer to announcing a deal after a phone call between EU trade commissioner Maroš Šefčovič and the US trade representative Jamieson Greer, it has emerged.

Maroš Šefčovič attends a debate on ‘EU-US trade negotiations’ during a session of the European parliament in Strasbourg, France. Photograph: Guillaume Horcajuelo/EPA

The agreement in principle is expected to be a three page document outlining headline reductions in tariffs for cars, medical devices and possibly steel, in exchange for a baseline 10% import duty on all imports from the bloc and some simplification of paperwork on food imports.

Sources say the agreement is just waiting for Trump’s sign off and that did not happen last night so the call with Greer could never have delivered the deal.

It could yet come later today but the EU is blind on Trump’s announcement intentions.

The European Commission has the power to accept the deal as it is not legally binding as it is an agreement in principle, meaning there is no need for the type of show business moment granted to UK prime minister Keir Starmer when he took a call from Trump while visiting Jaguar Land Rover’s factory in England.

EU’s von der Leyen survives no confidence vote in European Parliament

Elsewhere, European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen easily survived the no confidence vote in the European parliament in Strasbourg, with 175 votes in favour, and 360 votes against. 18 MEPs abstained.

Members of the European parliament attend a vote motion of censure of the Commission at the European parliament in Strasbourg, France. Photograph: Guillaume Horcajuelo/EPA



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