UK News
Russian threats against Baltics ‘unacceptable’ and danger to ‘our entire union’, EU’s von der Leyen says – Europe live | Europe
Russia’s threats against the Baltics ‘completely unacceptable and ‘threat against our entire union’, EU’s von der Leyen says
And in the last few minutes, the European Commission’s president Ursula von der Leyen issued a strong statement along the similar lines.

In a post on X, she said:
“Russia’s public threats against our Baltic States are completely unacceptable.
Let there be no doubt: a threat against one Member State is a threat against our entire Union.
Russia and Belarus bear direct responsibility for drones endangering the lives and security of people on our Eastern flank.
Europe will respond with unity and strength. We will continue reinforcing the security of our Eastern flank with strong collective defence and preparedness at every level.”
Key events
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French lawmakers back Macron choice to run Bank of France
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China ‘eaten much of German industry’s lunch,’ report warns as it urges Berlin to stop admiring Beijing
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Ukraine involved in ‘very active’ talks with UK over decision to relax sanctions on Russian crude
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‘Europe’s security is indivisible,’ Lithuania’s foreign minister says
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US plans to shrink forces available to Nato during crises, Reuters says
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EU reiterates call for Russians not to be allowed to benefit from Middle East conflict after US, UK relax sanctions on oil
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Russia’s threats against the Baltics ‘completely unacceptable and ‘threat against our entire union’, EU’s von der Leyen says
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Russia’s aggressive stance ‘may lead to situations … in which we will need to react firmly,’ Poland’s Tusk warns
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Hungary’s Magyar hopes to meet Ukraine’s Zelenskyy as he seeks new opening in relations
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Tusk and Magyar discuss regional cooperation, energy and EU reforms in Warsaw
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‘Russian claim’ on Latvia, Baltics is ‘totally ridiculous, and Russia knows it,’ Nato’s Rutte says
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Russia ‘remains most direct threat to Euro-Atlantic security,’ Nato’s Rutte says
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Tusk, Magyar brief media after talks in Warsaw
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Nato’s Rutte briefing press ahead of Nato ministerial in Sweden on Friday
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EU agrees to implement US trade deal struck last summer after night talks
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People in shelters in Lithuania during earlier drone alert – in pictures
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Lithuania lifts drone alert
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Morning opening: Drone alerts in the Baltics, again
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Putin praises ‘unprecedented’ relations with China with focus on foreign policy, trade, energy
French lawmakers back Macron choice to run Bank of France
Over in France, French lawmakers narrowly approved President Emmanuel Macron’s former chief of staff to govern the central bank, with Emmanuel Moulin winning just enough votes to secure the job, AFP reported.
Macron critics say the centrist head of state is seeking to install allies in top positions to shield key government institutions before his five-year term ends next year.
Marine Le Pen’s far-right, anti-immigration party is gearing up for what it considers its strongest opportunity yet to take power in the 2027 presidential election.
Moulin, Macron’s choice for the position, had faced questions about his ability to act independently.
Lawmakers in the lower house voted overwhelmingly against him, but enough Senators backed his appointment for it to be approved.
An influential policymaker, Moulin, 57, has held a series of top posts in finance and the presidency, AFP noted.
He served as secretary general of the Élysée Palace for a year and was before that chief of staff to centrist Gabriel Attal during his brief stint as prime minister in 2024.
He served as director general of the French Treasury between 2020 and 2024, overseeing economic policy and public debt.
China ‘eaten much of German industry’s lunch,’ report warns as it urges Berlin to stop admiring Beijing

Lisa O’Carroll
In other news, Germany must stop admiring China’s success in the EU or it will sleepwalk into the kind of deindustrialisation the US experienced 25 years ago, a leading Brussels thinktank has said.
With China’s surplus with Germany having doubled between 2024 and 2025 from $12bn (£9bn) to $25bn, creating a $94bn trade imbalance, the Centre for European Reform (CER) said Europe’s largest economy risked a repeat of what happened in the US in 2001 when a sudden surge in imports permanently hollowed out towns in the American midwest.
“China Shock 1.0” not only led to losses of up to 2.5m jobs but was also marked by a rise in suicides, divorce and drug use in US towns that lost industries to the Chinese, according to the CER report.
That fraying of the US social fabric, it said, was “an eerie warning shot for Germany’s car and machine-building cities like Wolfsburg and Stuttgart”, a reference to the homes of Volkswagen and Mercedes-Benz, two brands emblematic of German engineering and design success.
“Germany remains hesitant, even as China has already eaten much of German industry’s lunch and is preparing to start on dinner,” said the CER.
Entitled “China Shock 2.0: the cost of Germany’s complacency”, the thinktank report concluded: “Berlin cannot keep admiring the problem,” adding that the risk for Berlin was acute, yet the German political leaders had “struggled to see the problem clearly”.
Ukraine involved in ‘very active’ talks with UK over decision to relax sanctions on Russian crude
Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s office says it is seeking clarification from Downing Street on the UK’s decision to lift sanctions on some Russian oil, amid accusations from the Conservatives that Keir Starmer is helping the Kremlin make money.
Ukraine’s president has not yet commented on the decision to issue a new licence for imports of diesel and jet fuel made from sanctioned Russian oil. The UK has also permitted the maritime transport of Russian liquefied natural gas.
Zelenskyy has previously urged western partners to maintain a tough sanctions regime against Russian oil exports, pointing out that Moscow uses cash from hydrocarbon sales to fund its war against Ukraine.
In recent months Kyiv has intensified long-range strikes against Russia’s oil infrastructure, hitting ports on the Baltic and Black Sea, as well as targets in the Urals, more than 1500kms from the frontline. Zelenskyy has dubbed these remote attacks “long-range sanctions”.
“There is currently very active communication between our diplomats and the Office [of the President] and the British side to clarify the details,” an aide to Zelenskyy said on Wednesday.
‘Europe’s security is indivisible,’ Lithuania’s foreign minister says
Lithuania’s foreign minister Kęstutis Budrys responded to von der Leyen’s statement, thanking her for support for the region.
“Thank you, @vonderleyen, for your strong message of solidarity. Europe’s security is indivisible. EU’s strength lies in its unity & our adversaries know that. Together we are strong and resilient.”
US plans to shrink forces available to Nato during crises, Reuters says
Just as the EU’s von der Leyen (13:05) and Poland’s Tusk (13:03) issue their stark warnings about the security situation in the region, the Trump administration is planning to tell Nato allies this week that it will shrink the pool of military capabilities that the US would have available to assist the alliance’s European nations in a major crisis, Reuters reported quoting three sources familiar with the matter said.
Under a framework known as the Nato Force Model, the alliance’s member countries identify a pool of available forces that could be activated during a conflict or any other major crisis, such as a military attack on a Nato member, Reuters said.
While the precise composition of those wartime forces is a closely guarded secret, the Pentagon has decided to significantly scale down its commitment, said the sources, who requested anonymity to speak candidly about the plans.
Several details were unclear, such as how quickly the Pentagon plans to shift crisis-mode responsibilities on to European allies. The sources said, however, that the Pentagon plans to announce its intention to lessen its commitment at a Friday meeting of defence policy chiefs in Brussels.
EU reiterates call for Russians not to be allowed to benefit from Middle East conflict after US, UK relax sanctions on oil
Elsewhere in Brussels, the European Commission was asked about the US and UK decisions to relax strict sanctions on Russian crude oil as fuel prices rise.
The commission was pointedly asked if their decisions do not undermine the broader approach to put as much pressure on the Russian economy as possible.
The chief spokerperson, Paula Pinho, said:
“We will not comment on what other countries are doing on sanctions regarding Russia.
We remain committed to our sanctions on imports of Russian oil and gas, and we need to reiterate the call for Russians not to be benefiting from the ongoing conflict in the Middle East. It’s too ironic.”
Speaking shortly after, UK prime minister Keir Starmer said the country would cancel a planned rise in motor fuel tax, and insisted there “is not a question of lifting existing sanctions in any way” more broadly.
More on this on our UK blog with Andrew Sparrow:
Russia’s threats against the Baltics ‘completely unacceptable and ‘threat against our entire union’, EU’s von der Leyen says
And in the last few minutes, the European Commission’s president Ursula von der Leyen issued a strong statement along the similar lines.
In a post on X, she said:
“Russia’s public threats against our Baltic States are completely unacceptable.
Let there be no doubt: a threat against one Member State is a threat against our entire Union.
Russia and Belarus bear direct responsibility for drones endangering the lives and security of people on our Eastern flank.
Europe will respond with unity and strength. We will continue reinforcing the security of our Eastern flank with strong collective defence and preparedness at every level.”
Russia’s aggressive stance ‘may lead to situations … in which we will need to react firmly,’ Poland’s Tusk warns
Meanwhile, Poland’s prime minister Donald Tusk issued a stark warning against a possible escalation in the conflict with Russia, warning that Moscow’s aggressive stance “may lead, in near future, to situations in which it will be necessary to react firmly.”
Tusk warned that Russia’s continuing aggression on Russia “means this threat to other borders is indeed real,” as he cautioned that the heightened tensions “may also affect our neighbours, especially the Baltic states, through no fault of their own.”
“Russia’s aggressive policy towards Ukraine and its neighbourhood may lead, and in near future, to situations in which it will be necessary to react firmly.”
He said he was convinced that “the whole of Nato, including our American allies, will take very seriously the threats and provocations that may arise, and are already arising at the moment, especially with regard to our Baltic neighbours.”
He said the situation was “serious.”
“We would like to avoid bad events, but I am not one of those who will close their eyes to reality and pretend that nothing is happening.
I do not want to scare anyone, there is no direct threat to Poland at this time, that is not what we are talking about, but the threat of provocations of various types is becoming a fact.”
Hungary’s Magyar hopes to meet Ukraine’s Zelenskyy as he seeks new opening in relations
Hungary’s Péter Magyar said he hoped to hold talks with Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelenskyy in June as the two countries try to repair their bilateral relations after years of tensions caused by pro-Russian Hungarian administration of Viktor Orbán.
Earlier this week, the foreign ministers of both countries started formal talks about the rights of the ethnic Hungarian minority in Ukraine, which remain one of the stumbling blocks for Ukraine’s process of seeking the membership of the EU (Europe Live, Monday).
In sharp contrast with Orbán’s rhetoric, Magyar said that “Ukraine is a victim [of aggression] and has the right to defend itself by all possible means” to safeguards its territorial integrity.
He said the war should be ended as soon as possible, with a lasted peace guaranteed by the international community, pointedly saying that the guarantees needed would have to be stronger than those adopted in the Budapest memorandum of 1994.
He suggested that he could meet Zelenskyy in the city of Berehove in western Ukraine, in the Zakarpattia region, where many ethnic Hungarians live.
Tusk and Magyar discuss regional cooperation, energy and EU reforms in Warsaw
I have listened back to Donald Tusk and Péter Magyar’s press conference in Warsaw.
The pair talked a lot about the hopeful signal that the Hungarian election have sent around the world, with Tusk saying Magyar’s win pushed back on claims that liberal democracy was failing in Europe and could not defend itself from populism and authoritarian tendencies.
They also spoke about the importance of returning to closer cooperation in the Visegrad Four format with the Czech Republic and Slovakia after years of tensions and conflicts with Viktor Orbán.
Tusk and Magyar also spoke about closer energy cooperation which could help Hungary diversify from Russian energy sources, and on their planned reformist agenda in the EU, pushing the bloc to become more economically competitive.
But two main lines from the leaders came on other topics, so let me bring them next.
UK News
Crystal Palace v Rayo Vallecano: Conference League final – live | Conference League
Key events
The pre-match ceremony/music/dancing is almost complete, not that the two sets of supporters have required much pepping up, given their teams are in a European final for the first time. The trophy is out and the players will follow soon.
This email from Peter Oh contains slightly less mascot-based doom-mongering and sums up most neutrals’ feelings about tonight’s game:
It’s refreshing to see a Madrid club other than Real and Atlético in a major final, and a London outfit other than the big fancy ones too numerous to mention.
“I note that Rayo Vallecano has a bolt of lightning on its club crest,” emails Justin Kavanagh, “while the Londoners have a bald eagle proudly flying over … the Crystal Palace. If you’re a Palace fan looking for omens, this is not good: Eagles’ nests can be destroyed by lightning, and, as we all know, the cause of the fire that destroyed the famous old glass palace located near Croydon was never confirmed. Careful now!”
It’s important to remember tonight’s winners will be granted an automatic spot in next season’s Europa League. Which is no small prize for the eighth-placed finishers in Spain (Rayo) and the team that finished 15th in the Premier League (Palace), neither of whom would be getting European football next season otherwise.
The two clubs have played just one appearance in the Europa League (or Uefa Cup, its predecessor) between them – when Rayo Vallecano qualified for the 2000-01 Uefa Cup courtesy of their fair play record.
Palace, of course, were kicked out of this season’s Europa League and demoted to the Conference League after a Uefa ruling on multi-club ownership. It turned out to be a blessing in disguise.
Half an hour until kickoff. I would ask how the nerves are among you Crystal Palace supporters, but the messages below suggest to me the fingernails are already being bitten …
And just like that some Palace fans have found my inbox and given their pre-match thoughts …
Paul Pateman: “Riad hasn’t strung games together because he was injured just after he arrived in summer 2024, and then again on his return. Since he returned he has been excellent but outshone a bit by Canvot’s breakthrough. Since he got back to fitness he has been in the squad and provided great cover for the regular three of Richards, Lacroix and Canvot.”
Jonathan Rendall: “Nervously watching the Palace game from home. I’m feeling a tense 1-0 to the Eagles, which I’ll take!”
Anne Patterson: “Getting very excited in southern Patagonia. Got the mate going and have made biscuits. Hope that if Wharton scores he doesn’t do a double flip on that ankle. Pino to score the winner.”
It seems half of south London has descended on Leipzig tonight but any Palace fans not out in Germany (or even if you are and you can get internet/signal), send me your predictions for the game.
My personal prediction? A comfortable Eagles’ win: 2-0.
For the Rayo Vallecano view please look no further than Sid Lowe’s piece on the third Madrid club, “the last team from another time, special for what they fight for and what they fight against”.
Here’s another corking quote from the same article. “We’re like kids gifted a toy: desperate to open it, to play, enjoy it.”
The big injury news for Palace is that Adam Wharton is fit enough to start, despite a scare in that final league game of the season against Arsenal, but Chris Richards – deemed ‘touch and go’ before the game – is only on the bench. If you search Adam Wharton’s name on your social media platform of choice, you’ll see his mum is in attendance in Leipzig and seemingly enjoying the experience.
The absence of Richards from the starting lineup means it’s a huge night for Chadi Riad in the back three. He’s yet to fully convince and string together a run of games for the Eagles. What better night to step up than tonight?
Team news
Crystal Palace: Henderson; Muñoz, Riad, Lacroix, Canvot, Mitchell; Wharton, Kamada; Pino, Sarr, Mateta.
Subs: Benítez, Matthews, Lerma, Johnson, Clyne, Hughes, Strand Larsen, Sosa, Richards, Guessand, Devenny, Cardines.
Rayo Vallecano: Batalla; Ratju, Lejeune, Ciss, Chavarría; López, Valentin, Palazón; Garcia, Alemao, De Frutos.
Subs: Cárdenas, Díaz, Trejo, Camello, Akhomach, Gumbau, Balliu, Espino, Molina, Mendy.
Some news from police in Leipzig overnight: They say 60 Crystal Palace fans classed as “known troublemakers” were ordered to leave the city centre on Tuesday night after two arrests were made following clashes with Rayo Vallecano fans.
Saxon State Police revealed clashes between fans “suddenly broke out” with bottles, glasses and furniture thrown as well as “physical altercations”.
The fan fest in the market area of Leipzig is said to have stayed peaceful, with around 2,000 fans from each of the two clubs in that area of the city.
It’s already linked at the top of this page but allow me to nudge you in the direction of Richard Foster’s scene-setting final preview from a Palace perspective. Try saying that after you’ve had a few …
Preamble
This is it. The big one. For Crystal Palace, and for Oliver Glasner, in his final game in charge of the Eagles, all roads lead to Leipzig and the Conference League final against Rayo Vallecano. Can Glasner guide Palace to a first piece of European silverware in their history and finish with two trophies in his two full seasons in south London? It would be some way to bow out.
Spanish side Vallecano, who finished eighth in La Liga and overcame Gary O’Neil’s RC Strasbourg over two legs in the semi-finals, stand in their way. The team from the Madrid district of Puente de Vallecas are not flush with big fancy names, and Palace are most certainly favourites, but this is a European final. Palace will hope to join West Ham and Chelsea on the list of English winners of the Conference League since its inception in 2022, and Aston Villa as an English winner of a Uefa pot this season. Arsenal could even make it a clean sweep for Premier League clubs in Europe in 2026 …
Let’s get going with the buildup, including team news, before the 8pm BST (9pm local time) kickoff in Germany. Looking forward to it.
UK News
Bridge shuts three times in two days due to overweight vehicles
The Menai Suspension Bridge, in Anglesey, is closed for the third time in about 24 hours.
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UK News
‘Typical council’: Residents baffled after ‘keep clear’ sign appears 15 years too late | Stoke-on-Trent
Hassan Ali was on holiday in Budapest when he was contacted by his neighbour about a sign that had been painted on the road directly outside his semi-detached home in Staffordshire.
The bright yellow sign, which read: “School: Keep Clear”, was painted on Greendock Street in the early hours of Friday morning, his neighbour informed him – a bewildering update considering there was no school to keep clear of and had not been one for the past 15 years.
“It’s ridiculous,” Ali said. “The school moved 15 years ago. Plus even if there is a school, the access to the school should be [over] there, not in front of my house.”
It’s a debacle that has caused somewhat of a stir in Longton, one of six towns in Stoke-on-Trent, attracting local media attention and forcing the council’s Labour leader, Jane Ashworth, to apologise for the mistake, admitting there “clearly isn’t a school” there.
The daubing has since been covered with black paint, making it barely legible while driving – an immediate response by the council seemingly to allay fears that people could receive a fine for parking outside their homes. However, the letters are still noticeable.
Ali said his friend had reported the road sign to local media and he believes the subsequent attention forced the council to act quickly. “Because of all the hoo-ha that happened … they act[ed] immediately,” he said. “Now we got the sign, but in black.”
Assuming how the mistake had happened, he said: “Typical council, the people sitting in the office, they don’t have any ideas.”
Lee Evans, who lives on the street, said he had noticed the sign on Friday and it was a topic of conversation with his neighbour.
He said: “Why’ve they put a school [sign] there when there’s no school no more?
“They probably got the wrong piece of paper haven’t they,” he added. “Gone off the old plans I reckon.”
Ashworth said she was embarrassed by the mistake and the authority would review the issue. “I’m annoyed for the residents that live there that have been messed about but embarrassed that we made such a mistake,” she told the BBC.
Ali said he wanted clarification on who was responsible for signing off the plan at the council and accused the local authority of “always blaming somebody else”. He also wanted to be told how much the entire debacle had cost.
He speculated: “Who’s going to pay for it? Me, they’re going to add it to the council tax.”
Stoke-on-Trent council has been contacted for comment.
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