Politics
US, European military chiefs discuss security guarantees for Ukraine

Top military leaders from the US and some European countries have been working on plans to help provide security guarantees to Ukraine, officials said.
They shared their ideas with national security advisers this week, as efforts continue to find ways of protecting the country while the war with Russia drags on.
This followed US President Donald Trump’s pledge to help protect the country under any deal to end Russia’s three-and-a-half-year-old war in Ukraine.
A Pentagon statement said US and European planners had developed the military options for “appropriate consideration” by allied national security advisers. Reuters was the first to report that the military leaders were preparing the options.
The chiefs of defence for the United States, Finland, France, Germany, Italy, the United Kingdom and Ukraine met in Washington, DC, between Tuesday and Thursday.
A source familiar with the matter said US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who also serves as Trump’s national security adviser, held a conference call on Thursday with his European counterparts to discuss the options.
A separate US official said Rubio spoke with UK National Security Adviser Jonathan Powell, the European Commission president’s head of cabinet Bjoern Seibert, NATO secretary general’s chief of staff Geoffrey van Leeuwen, and other national security counterparts in France, Italy, Germany and Finland.
Final details must still be worked out, the source familiar with the matter said, but European countries would provide “the lion’s share” of any forces involved in security guarantees for Ukraine.
That echoed Vice President JD Vance’s comment on Wednesday that Europe would need to shoulder “the lion’s share” of the costs of the operation.
“The planning work continues,” said the source, adding that Washington was still “determining the scope of its role.”
Trump has said he will not deploy US troops in Ukraine but has left the door open to other US military involvement, including air support.
Troop deployments
One option was sending European forces to Ukraine but putting the United States in charge of their command and control, sources told Reuters.
US air support could come in several ways, including providing more air defence systems to Ukraine and enforcing a no-fly zone with US fighter jets.
French President Emmanuel Macron and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer have both supported troop deployments as part of a “coalition of the willing”, with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz also signalling openness to his country’s participation.
The head of Germany’s soldiers’ union said on Thursday that European NATO leaders must face the reality that tens of thousands of troops would need to be deployed in a Ukraine peace force for the long term.
Trump has pressed for a quick end to Europe’s deadliest war in 80 years, while Kyiv and its allies have expressed concern he could seek to force an agreement on Russia’s terms.
Politics
Khamenei’s Death Puts Hassan Khomeini in Spotlight

The death of Ali Khamenei has intensified debate over who will lead Iran next, with attention turning to Hassan Khomeini, grandson of the Islamic Republic’s founder.
Clerics in Iran’s powerful Assembly of Experts are responsible for appointing the next Supreme Leader, and Khamenei’s killing has accelerated what had long been a sensitive and unresolved succession question.
A Symbolic Heir
Hassan Khomeini, 53, is the grandson of Ruhollah Khomeini, the revolutionary leader who established the Islamic Republic in 1979.
He currently serves as custodian of his grandfather’s mausoleum in southern Tehran, a role that carries strong symbolic weight in Iranian politics.
Although he has never held formal government office, he is considered influential within clerical circles and maintains close ties with reformist figures.
Seen as a Relative Moderate
Hassan Khomeini is widely viewed as more moderate compared to hardline factions that consolidated power during Khamenei’s tenure.
He has publicly criticised the Guardian Council for disqualifying reformist candidates.
He called for accountability following the 2022 death of Mahsa Amini, which sparked nationwide protests.
He supported diplomatic engagement during the 2015 nuclear agreement negotiations.
However, he has also defended the Islamic Republic’s system and criticised anti-government unrest, underscoring his loyalty to the state structure.
Barred From Electoral Politics
In 2016, Hassan Khomeini attempted to run for the Assembly of Experts but was disqualified by the Guardian Council, reportedly over religious credential requirements. Many observers interpreted the move as an effort to prevent a reformist challenge.
Despite this setback, he remains a respected cleric with connections across political factions, including ties to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).
Succession Uncertain
The selection of a new Supreme Leader will shape Iran’s domestic and foreign policy direction at a moment of heightened regional tension.
Some analysts argue that appointing a more moderate figure could help stabilise internal dissent and improve international positioning. Others believe hardliners may push for continuity.
The Assembly of Experts is expected to begin deliberations amid a 40-day national mourning period declared following Khamenei’s death.
Politics
France to boost nuclear arsenal, involve European allies in deterrence

- France to expand nuclear arsenal amid geopolitical risks.
- European allies to join French nuclear wargames.
- France-Germany nuclear steering group to start cooperation.
PARIS: France will expand its nuclear arsenal and will potentially allow European partners to host its aircraft on nuclear deterrence missions, President Emmanuel Macron said on Monday, signalling a major doctrine change for France and the continent.
Though France and Britain are both nuclear powers, most European countries have relied primarily on the United States for deterring any potential adversaries — a decades-old pillar of transatlantic security.
But Trump’s rapprochement with Russia on the Ukraine war and his harsher posture towards traditional allies have rattled European governments, and some countries have expressed interest in how Paris could protect them by extending its nuclear umbrella.
“We are currently experiencing a period of geopolitical upheaval fraught with risk,” Macron said in a speech delivered from a submarine base in Brittany, adding that a hardening of the French deterrence model was needed.
Unveiling the update to France’s nuclear doctrine, a once-per-term ritual for presidents, Macron promised more cooperation with European allies that have expressed interest.
Germany, but also Greece, Poland, the Netherlands, Belgium, Denmark and Sweden would be able to take part in French nuclear wargames.
“I believe I can say our partners are ready,” Macron said.
Still, Macron gave no details on how the enhanced nuclear drive would be funded, while making clear decision-making on nuclear strikes will remain solely in the hands of the French president.
Arming up together
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said in a joint statement with Macron that France and Germany had established a nuclear steering group to discuss deterrence issues and would start concrete cooperation this year.

That would include participation by conventional German forces in French nuclear exercises and joint visits to strategic sites, as well as the development of non-nuclear capabilities with France and other European partners.
Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk said on X Poland was in talks “with France and a group of closest European allies on the programme of advanced nuclear deterrence”.
“We are arming up together with our friends so that our enemies will never dare to attack us,” he added.
The French leader said it would be possible to establish, under unspecified circumstances, strategic assets in other European countries that would be part of what he called a new “forward deterrence” doctrine.
“Our strategic air forces could be spread deep into the European continent,” Macron said, without giving more details.
Although the size of France’s nuclear arsenal is based on a strategy of “strict sufficiency”, the number of French warheads will be increased, Macron said.
France spends roughly 5.6 billion euros ($6.04 billion) a year to maintain its stockpile of 290 submarine- and air-launched weapons — the world’s fourth-largest arsenal. Britain has 225 nuclear warheads. Russia and the United States have more than 5,000 each.
Macron said close ties on nuclear deterrence will continue with Britain. He also said the current rethink of French nuclear doctrine has been done in total transparency with Washington, and was complementary to Nato’s nuclear mission.
Politics
Most Americans oppose Iran strikes, doubt Trump has plan

Nearly six in 10 Americans disapprove of the US decision to launch military action in Iran, with a majority also saying a long-term conflict between the two countries is likely, according to a new CNN poll conducted by SSRS.
The poll, fielded shortly after the US and Israeli attacks, finds broad scepticism about President Donald Trump’s handling of the situation: 60% say they do not think he has a clear plan, while 62% say he should seek congressional approval before any further military action.
Just 27% believe the US made enough of an effort at diplomacy before using force, compared with 39% who say it did not try hard enough, and 33% who are unsure.
Overall, 59% disapprove of the initial decision to strike Iran and 41% approve, with strong disapproval (31%) roughly double strong approval (16%). On escalation options, 44% say they favour the US trying to overthrow the Iranian government, while 56% oppose it.

Support for sending US ground troops is far lower: 12% favour deploying ground forces, 60% oppose, and 28% are unsure. A majority (56%) say a long-term military conflict is at least somewhat likely, including 24% who describe it as very likely.
Views split sharply by party. Republicans are far more likely to approve of the military action (77%) than independents (32%) or Democrats (18%), and more likely to say it will reduce the threat the US faces from Iran (58% of Republicans, 21% of independents and 9% of Democrats).
Within the Republican Party, CNN reports a pronounced MAGA and non-MAGA divide that appears closely linked to trust in Trump on the use of force.
Across the broader public, majorities disapprove across major demographic subgroups, including men and women, White, Black and Latino adults, and all age groups.
A separate Reuters/Ipsos poll that concluded Sunday found 27% approve of the strikes, 43% disapprove, and 29% are unsure.
It also found 56% believe Trump is too willing to use military force to advance US interests, including 87% of Democrats, 23% of Republicans and 60% of independents.
The poll surveyed 1,282 US adults online and had a margin of error of three percentage points.
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