Thursday, April 2, 2026

Euronews - Europe's destiny by Jorge Liboreiro - 2 April 2026

 

Euronews 

Europe’s destiny

By Jorge Liboreiro


Dear readers, allow me to address you directly with a special announcement that might disappoint some of you: after six years in circulation, this newsletter, The Briefing, is coming to an end as part of a broader overhaul of our editorial offer. I personally thank you for dedicating your time once a week to reading my commentary and the stories of my excellent colleagues.


As I close this chapter, it’s inevitable for me to look back at the long history of this newsletter, which has borne witness to the troubled, confused and at times melodramatic recent history of the European Union.


Tellingly, The Briefing was born out of a crisis: the COVID-19 pandemic. Our team decided to launch the newsletter, then daily, during a hastily arranged Zoom call, with all of us locked down at home. Reading back the first issue, sent almost six years ago, I’m struck by its opening lines.


“Europe is at war. It is a war with an invisible enemy, a war our leaders tell us we must all play our part in and yet, despite the fact that we share the same foe in this life and death battle – COVID-19 – it feels like this war is starting to tear the EU apart,” the edition read.


The paragraph reads like a chilling prophecy. Less than two years after that first newsletter, an actual war of unspeakable brutality would break out on European soil, altering the trajectory of our bruised continent in ways that we’re yet to realise.


Ukraine’s brave fight against Russia’s attempt to redraw the European map by force has arguably been the most prominent story in this newsletter. Even when the war as such wasn’t mentioned, its ripple effects were present, one way or the other. It’s the end of the so-called “peace dividend”, the “wake-up call”, the “great reckoning” with the spectacular collapse of the premise that economic interlinks would make armed conflicts unthinkable in the 21st century.


The cruellest irony is that the very economic interlinks that were supposed to rein in our most violent instincts are today being brutally wielded as modern-day weapons. Trade flows, customs duties, supply chains, natural resources, currency reserves and even human beings are being leveraged on an unprecedented scale, wreaking havoc on the rules and principles meant to stabilise international relations. If there’s one norm left, that’s constant instability.


Of all the major powers in the world trying to weather the ruthless storm, the European Union is perhaps the worst equipped.


The bloc’s byzantine decision-making is designed to nurture and maintain consensus among disparate member states. The internal processes were never easy or fast, but they worked and delivered results. The EU prospered steadily from the fall of the Berlin Wall until the 2008 financial meltdown. Its economy was head-to-head with the United States. The value of the euro soared.


But then the tremors started and haven’t stopped since. Just as this newsletter bids farewell, the EU is coping with a widening war in the Middle East, a new energy crisis and a US president intent on pushing the transatlantic alliance to the brink. And that’s just a quick selection of our top stories.


The dizzying succession of events, most of which were unimaginable until the day they happened, has challenged not only our single market, our dependencies, our defence capabilities, our democratic resilience and our fixation on unanimity. At its core, it has challenged our unity – the audacious project of political and economic integration that emerged from the ashes of World War II. 


Looking at the dire state of things, some would argue that the EU is doomed to crumble, that it’s just a matter of time, that the internal and external forces trying to tear it apart are too mighty to be resisted. But others would say the opposite: that the geopolitical tempest makes the perfect case for a stronger and closer union, that mid-size countries have no credible chance of surviving on their own. Some, like Mario Draghi, are openly talking about federalism again.


The debate is still ongoing, but one conclusion has already emerged: the status quo is untenable. The EU must change because the world has changed. This brings me to a recent speech delivered by Ursula von der Leyen, who has been a recurrent (maybe the lead?) character in the history of this newsletter.


Speaking to ambassadors in Brussels, the president of the European Commission declared that the continent could no longer be “the custodian for the old-world order”. The blunt remark immediately raised eyebrows. Critics said her words were a dangerous invitation to turning a blind eye to rampant violations of international law. Amid the backlash, she later stressed the “unwavering commitment” to the rules-based order, though she didn’t backtrack.


If you manage to go beyond the “custodian” line, what you find is an incisive and frank summary of the anxieties that today permeate Europe, particularly our feeling of being powerless spectators in the theatre of geopolitics. But her detailed dissection isn’t meant to browbeat or dismay. Quite the contrary: it’s meant to encourage Europe to forego its fatalist resignation, raise its head proudly and “seize the opportunities” that every crisis brings.


“In times of radical change like ours, we can either cling to what used to make us strong and defend habits and certainties that history has already moved beyond, or we can choose a different destiny for Europe,” she said.


“Not with nostalgia, or by mourning the old world, but by shaping the new one.”


Editor’s final message: On that inspiring note, The Briefing says goodbye. Thank you again for reading this newsletter during its six years in circulation. 



Why this ad?

WHAT ELSE IS GOING ON?

🟦  A RAGING WAR

In an address to the nation, US President Donald Trump vowed to strike Iran “extremely hard” and bring it back to “the Stone Ages”. In response, Tehran threatened “crushing, broader and more destructive” attacks. The prospect of fresh escalation sent oil prices up and stocks down. As Washington keeps bashing NATO allies, the UK hosted a coalition of the willing to secure passage through the Strait of Hormuz, but only when the war ends. We explain why the waterway is so critical.


🟦‘VERY SERIOUS SITUATION’

The energy crisis unleashed by the war in the Middle East is becoming a “very serious situation,” Dan Jørgensen, the European Commissioner for Energy, warned this week as he called on member states to reduce energy demand as a way to control spiralling prices. The impact on jet fuel has been particularly heavy, sending shockwaves across the travel industry, writes Quirino Mealha. The disruption is shedding new light on Algeria as Europe’s emergency gas provider.


🟦THE V WORD

Ahead of the Hungarian elections of 12 April, Péter Magyar’s Tisza Party continues to widen its lead over Viktor Orbán’s Fidesz. Meanwhile, Brussels is laying the groundwork to make the first payment to Ukraine under the €90 billion loan as soon as Hungary lifts its veto, which EU officials only expect to resolve after the election. And High Representative Kaja Kallas has floated the possibility of reverting to the “Plan A” of tapping into Russia’s immobilised assets.


🟦BUYER’S REMORSE

At the centre of Orbán’s veto is the Soviet-era Druzhba pipeline, which has remained non-operational since a Russian drone attack in January. Hungary insists it needs low-cost Russian oil to keep its economy afloat. But as Tamsin Paternoster found out, this dependency is the result of political and financial decisions, rather than technical or commercial constraints.


🟦MONEY MATTERS

Germany and Italy are pushing for sweeping new powers to block foreign stablecoin operators from the EU unless their home countries meet the bloc’s regulatory standards, according to a document seen by Eleonora Vasques. The proposed move could shut out some of the largest crypto firms from one of the world’s biggest financial markets.


🟦HOME THREATS

Rupturing pipes, distorted doors and windows and huge cracks in your home. These are the threats that face more than 12 million properties in France, as heat-trapping gases continue to bake the planet and fuel extreme weather events. Liam Gilliver examines the phenomenon known as “shrinking-swelling”.


🟦BETTING ON 007

We’ve had our April Fools fun with our “exclusive announcement” of the new James Bond... However, the article got tongues wagging in the Euronews office and beyond. If a woman were cast as 007, what could her “Bond boys” co-stars look like? Here's some fantasy casting.



Why this ad?

IT'S IN THE NUMBERS

Germany’s top economic research institutes have sharply revised the forecast for the country, which is being hit hard by the turmoil in energy markets. Where economists were still projecting growth of 1.3% to 1.4% last autumn, they now expect GDP to expand by just 0.6% this year and 0.9% in 2027. At the same time, average annual inflation is forecast to reach 2.8% in 2026 and 2.9% in 2027.


AP Ndews ALERTS - April 2, 2026 -   Pam Bondi out as attorney general, Trump says

 

Foreign Affairs -- The Iran Imperative How America and Israel Can Shape a New Middle East -- Amos Yadlin and Avner Golov - May/June 2026 Published on April 2, 2026 (Yazarlar İsrail'de üst düzey makamlarda bulunmuş sorumlu kişiler)

Foreign Affairs

The Iran Imperative

How America and Israel Can Shape a New Middle East

Amos Yadlin and Avner Golov

May/June 2026 Published on April 2, 2026



iran illustration

Illustration by Ed Johnson; Photo source: Reuters.



In early 2024, the Islamic Republic of Iran was riding high. It was the dominant external actor in four Middle Eastern states: Iraq, Lebanon, Syria, and Yemen. Its missiles and armed proxies menaced and coerced Arab countries. Israel, Tehran’s main enemy, had been damaged by Hamas’s October 2023 attack and was fighting a seven-front war against Iranian proxies. The Islamic Republic’s nuclear program was moving steadily closer to producing a weapon as Iranian officials enriched uranium to 60 percent and expanded their ballistic missile manufacturing. Suddenly, the regime’s long-standing calls for “death to Israel” and “death to America” seemed to have much more meaning. Iran appeared close to fulfilling its five-decade quest to become the most powerful country in the Muslim world.


Then, in April 2024, Israel struck a Quds Force meeting building situated adjacent to the Iranian embassy complex. The facility served as the operational headquarters for Brigadier General Mohammad Reza Zahedi, the commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps’ operations in Syria and Lebanon, who was responsible for coordinating Iranian-led terror activities against Israel. Iran, in turn, directly attacked Israel. And in the months that followed, it quickly became clear that Tehran’s prior confidence was misplaced: the regime was much more vulnerable than it seemed. Israel, alongside France, the United Kingdom, and the United States, intercepted almost all of Iran’s drones and missiles. Israel then destroyed Iran’s air defense systems. Israeli forces dealt a severe blow to Hezbollah—Iran’s most vaunted proxy—by killing its longtime leader and destroying many of its weapons. In June 2025, Israel launched a military strike against Iran’s nuclear sites and ballistic missile facilities. Working with Washington, it bombed and buried much of Iran’s enriched uranium. And in February this year, the United States and Israel again went to war with Iran, severely damaging more of its military and security infrastructure, striking the regime’s defense production industries, and eliminating senior figures at the highest levels, including former Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and his top deputy, Ali Larijani.


But despite these successes, not everyone in the United States is pleased. In fact, many American analysts believe the conflict has squandered U.S. resources in what is almost certain to be an unsuccessful attempt to change Iran’s regime. Some also think the war has happened at the behest of the Israelis, and that the conflict has undermined the United States’ reputation and churned through its munitions in order to weaken a country that is mainly a threat to Haifa, Jerusalem, and Tel Aviv.


But these objections are wrong. This was never a conflict of choice. Iran declared war on the United States (which it calls the “Great Satan”) as soon as the Islamic Republic came into being, when regime affiliates stormed the U.S. embassy and held 66 diplomats hostage for over a year. Tehran has since killed, directly or indirectly, thousands of American troops. Even in its weakened state, the regime still menaced Washington’s interests. Critics of this recent war also overlook its success. By greatly weakening Iran’s radical regime, the conflict has given more pragmatic officials an opportunity to seize control while increasing the confidence and relevance of domestic opposition forces. It has accelerated the creation of a broad anti-Iran alignment that includes Israel, the United States, key Arab states—including Bahrain, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates—and some European countries. It has, in other words, laid the groundwork for a better Middle East.


That does not mean a positive future is guaranteed. In Tehran, hard-liners are fighting to remain ascendant. Israel’s regional status needs rehabilitation after the war with Gaza, which eroded trust between Israel and Arab countries. That is why it must deepen its cooperation with the United States. The two countries need to enmesh their defense bases and use their combined might to attack Iran until it can no longer meaningfully threaten its neighbors. They should jointly offer assistance and protection to Arab states that are struggling not just with Tehran but also with a host of environmental and economic challenges. By doing so, they can prove to the Arab countries that the safest bet is to partner with Israel and the United States rather than cozy up to Iran, China, or Russia. They can thus pave the way for Arab-Israeli normalization—and make sure Washington remains central to the region.


FINISH THE JOB

For years, the United States’ approach toward Iran revolved around sanctions and diplomacy that had little impact. But when U.S. President Donald Trump returned to office in January 2025, he decided to be courageous and attack the regime. His administration’s goals are to destroy Iran’s ballistic missile capabilities and industrial base, prevent it from threatening regional waterways and energy infrastructure, avert any future nuclear breakout, and sharply reduce Tehran’s capacity to fund, arm, and direct proxy forces across the region. These aims reflect long-standing American priorities: stabilizing the Middle East, avoiding proliferation, and maintaining freedom of navigation.


Israel, of course, shares this agenda. But it has reinforced, rather than displaced, the United States’ role. Israeli forces have helped protect the United States and regional partners through intelligence sharing and strikes on Iran’s missile program. In doing so, they have fought shoulder to shoulder with American troops as no state has since World War II—despite not being a formal treaty ally. The campaign has thus underscored that Israel is not merely a U.S. security consumer. Under certain conditions, it can function as a close and capable partner.


Israel is not merely a U.S. security consumer.

American and Israeli strikes have eroded much of Iran’s capacity for destruction and coercion. But they need to make sure Iran cannot rebuild its capabilities. To do so, Washington will need to set up a verification and enforcement regime that can prevent Iran from constructing nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons and rebuilding its missile and drone capabilities. It can accomplish this by working with its regional partners, which all cooperate under U.S. Central Command, along with other states that have interests in the Middle East. Washington must also sustain maximum economic pressure on the current Iranian regime. It should maintain blockades and no-fly zones that ensure Iran does not again become a regional threat. Finally, it must condition an end to these restrictions on Tehran dismantling its nuclear program, fully disbanding its proxy networks, ceasing its support for terrorist organizations, generally abandoning its efforts to export its revolutionary Islamist ideology, and explicitly recognizing Israel’s existence and the sovereignty of the many Arab states it has attacked.


Neutralizing Iran’s proxies is particularly essential. For decades, Iran has been able to wreak havoc on the Middle East by arming, funding, and coordinating nonstate partners—mostly through the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. These actors then carry out attacks of all kinds at the behest of Tehran, allowing the Islamic Republic to cause massive chaos while maintaining plausible deniability.


To shatter Iran’s network, Israel and Washington must establish a regional effort supported by the countries Iran has attacked during the war. The point of such a campaign would not be to eliminate Hezbollah in Lebanon, the Houthis in Yemen, or militias in Iraq. It is to leave them so fragmented and constrained that they struggle to function, particularly beyond their own countries. An intense U.S.-Israeli campaign could also drive a wedge between these groups and Tehran by making it clear that, when push comes to shove, the Iranians cannot save them. That, in turn, would neutralize their potential threat to the region.


Weakening the Islamic Republic also requires supporting Iranian opposition figures who seek regime change. American and Israeli leaders have both said they want to see new leaders in Tehran. But neither has, at the time of this writing, made regime change a formal objective. They should in the postwar campaign. And they should then use covert operations, economic pressure, and political and information warfare to further intensify pressure on Iran as a means of deepening internal regime divisions and undermining its ability to protect security personnel, their families, and the Iranian economic elite. Ultimately, regime change is the task of the Iranian people, but Israel and Washington can help create the conditions the country’s citizens need.


SPARRING PARTNERS

If the Islamic Republic is weakened, Israel and Washington will have opened the way for building a new Middle East. In recent years, many of Washington’s partners in the region felt compelled to establish diplomatic ties with Tehran in order to stop periodic attacks from Iranian forces and proxies. But if Arab states no longer fear such violence, they will not need to kowtow to the regime. The war has already made it clear that trying to play nice with Tehran won’t save these states from experiencing its fury. Gulf Arab governments set up all kinds of diplomatic and economic linkages with Iran in the 2020s, but none of them stopped Tehran from bombarding their countries. The Gulf’s efforts to be friendly with China and Russia—Iran’s two main patrons—have also failed to provide protection. The war has thus made it clear that the United States is still the only credible external security provider in the Middle East.


In fact, the joint U.S.-Israeli campaigns against Iran in 2025 and 2026 already mark an inflection point in the long effort to undermine Tehran’s regional position. The 2026 campaign, known in Israel as Roaring Lion and in the United States as Epic Fury, has helped restore American military prestige after years in which the Islamic Republic and its proxies concluded that Washington and its regional allies were unwilling to bear the costs of sustained confrontation. Israel and the United States, in other words, don’t need more proof that their efforts are working.


The success of these attacks also suggests that it is time for Washington to stop basing its relationship with Israel mostly on providing military aid. Instead, the two sides should focus just as much on operational integration and industrial collaboration. To do so, the United States wouldn’t need to increase security assistance. It would just have to gradually shift the emphasis of its aid away from funding for the purchase of American weapons and toward their joint development. It should also upgrade Israel’s position within the American industrial base by reducing political and procedural barriers and turning the Israeli industrial base into a sandbox for U.S. defense innovations. Doing so would allow Israel to better protect American interests in the Middle East and test emerging American military technologies, giving Washington better insight into how well its systems perform against their joint rivals.


Israel and the United States should even broaden their cooperation to include cutting-edge technologies. Artificial intelligence, quantum computing, semiconductors, rare-earth elements, and advanced energy are all central to geopolitical competition, and the United States needs help to either gain or hold a lead in each. Israel can provide such aid. Its highly educated population and sophisticated tech companies, for instance, can work with American companies on breakthroughs in AI security, advanced semiconductor packaging, critical materials processing, testing advanced forms of energy, and quantum-enabled technologies.


MENDING FENCES

Although military success against Iran can, on its own, open the door to a better and more stable Middle East, it will not by itself create this new regional order. To do that, Israel and the United States will have to translate their tactical and operational gains into a new political architecture that includes the region’s other pivotal states: Bahrain, Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and perhaps even Cyprus and Lebanon.


U.S. and Israeli policymakers should therefore adopt a phased strategy aimed at advancing a new Middle East framework. It should be centered on a new “three seas” initiative featuring states on the Mediterranean Sea, the Red Sea, and the Persian Gulf—all operating under American leadership. Its overarching purpose would be to sustain the campaign against the Iranian regime, confront other radical forces, preserve regional security, and accelerate economic, political, and technological integration across the region.


The initiative’s first step should be to institutionalize the security framework that the United States established during the war. When it began attacking Iran in late February, Washington worked with its Middle Eastern partners to set up an impressive set of air and missile defense systems that protected Iran’s neighbors. The United States coordinated on maritime security, swapped intelligence, and carried out joint counterterrorism efforts with Israel, Arab countries, and some European states—such as Cyprus, France, Greece, and the United Kingdom. These practices should be expanded and formalized so that they outlast this bout of fighting.


Israel, the United States, and Arab countries should also find ways to cooperate on postconflict recovery, such as providing treatment to children traumatized by the bombings. They should work together to shore up their cyberdefenses. And they should tackle some of the resource challenges threatening the Middle East’s stability, such as energy, food, and water insecurity. The United States is uniquely positioned to connect Gulf Arab capital and infrastructure, Israeli innovation, and American industrial might into joint ventures that successfully address these issues. A joint endeavor will, in turn, strengthen the region’s pragmatic forces and weaken the radical ones that thrive on poverty and instability—Iran included.


A U.S.-Israeli technology partnership and Israel’s assistance in addressing these challenges could also help restore the Jewish state’s standing among its neighbors. They could thus help lay the groundwork for the final phase of the initiative: the pursuit of continued Arab-Israeli normalization, once conditions allow. (That includes the emergence of a new Israeli government that Arab states see as a trusted partner and that is capable of making productive decisions, including on the Palestinian issue.) Once signed, such deals would both constrain Iran and anchor the Middle East more firmly to the United States at a time of escalating great-power competition, as the region should be. The war has made it clear that Washington is both the primary guarantor of security in the Middle East and the only power capable of gathering Israel and the Arab states under a new, joint architecture.


A normalization deal would have to address the Palestinian question. Arab countries still pay attention to the future of the Palestinians, and this population cannot be ignored. But the agreement doesn’t have to solve the issue. Arab governments will have to accept that progress is likely to come through the kind of conditional, institutional approach laid out in Trump’s 20-point plan for Gaza, which aims to demilitarize the Gaza Strip, rehabilitate it, and then place it in the hands of a technocratic Palestinian entity that will not threaten Israel. The governing authority will then have to deradicalize both Gaza’s and the West Bank’s populations, including dismantling armed networks, ending material incentives for violence, and preventing public institutions from inciting attacks. Israel, meanwhile, will need to have the freedom to conduct security operations in Gaza and the West Bank even if they become independent.


Such a lengthy and piecemeal process is unlikely to satisfy those who want an immediate and dramatic resolution. But it is the only way forward—and thankfully, a weaker Iran makes the path easier. If Tehran can no longer strike Israel at will, incite violence along its borders, or support terrorist organizations such as Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad (which have helped spoil every peace process since the 1993 Oslo accords), Iranian officials will struggle to sabotage diplomatic and political efforts to find a solution.


PRESENT AT THE CREATION

The war with Iran is about more than just Iran. It is about whether the Middle East can finally have a hopeful future. The region might remain trapped between recurring proxy conflict, weak state authority, and cycles of ideological mobilization. But a far less powerful regime means the region could become more stable—organized around state interests, U.S.-backed security arrangements, economic interdependence, and Israel’s integration.


It is too early to say whether this positive outcome will prevail. Wars often promise strategic transformation yet ultimately change little. But the present moment has created an opening that has not existed in years. If Israel, the United States, and the Gulf states seize this moment, the current campaign won’t be remembered as just another chapter in the long-running conflict between Iran and the rest of the region. It will be remembered as the fight that finally brought peace to the Middle East.



AMOS YADLIN is Founder and President of MIND Israel. He is a retired Major General in the Israeli Air Force and served as the head of Israel’s Defense Intelligence from 2006 to 2010.


AVNER GOLOV is Vice President of MIND Israel. From 2018 to 2023, he was a Senior Director on Israel’s National Security Council.


More by Amos Yadlin 

More by Avner Golov 



Topics & Regions: Iran Geopolitics Security Defense & Military Strategy & Conflict War & Military Strategy U.S. Foreign Policy War in Iran U.S.-Israeli Relations


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