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Trump’s nuclear ‘renaissance’ rests on risky plan for radioactive waste

The administration goes all-in on recycling spent fuel despite a history of spectacular mishaps, including an unintentional atom bomb.

By Evan Halper, 23 Sept 25, https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2025/09/22/trump-nuclear-waste-recycling-risk/

The Trump administration’s plan to fast-track construction of new commercial nuclearreactors to address a power cruncharound the country leans heavily on a small group of start-ups trumpeting a bold claim: that they can make almost all of these operations’ radioactive waste disappear.

That effort is already underway, with a company called Oklo announcing this month that it will spend $1.7 billionto build an “Advanced Fuel Center” made upof shiny, futuristic buildings on a Tennessee plot where uranium was enriched for the Manhattan Project more than 80 years ago. The first phase of the development, to be completed in the next five to seven years, will use nascent recycling machinery to spin radioactive reactor waste into fresh, usable fuel for plants.

Industry and administration officials also plan to recycle into reactor fuel plutonium retrieved from dismantled nuclear weapons, one of the most dangerous materials on the planet. The projects follow a decades-long pursuit of nuclear energy recycling in the U.S. with a history of spectacular failures, including inadvertently helping a renegade nation build an atomic bomb.

Even as some prominent nuclear scientists warn that Oklo and other start-ups are glossing over major shortcomings in their technology, the companies argue the effort is key to securing enough energy to beat China in artificial intelligence innovation.

Oklo presents nuclear recycling as a tidy process: Waste gets reformulated into fuel, the nuisance of spent-fuel stockpiles goes away, and a small amount of unusable radioactive material is safely buried, perhaps in compact canisters tubed thousands of feet into the Earth’s crust.

“We’re moving forward to actually bring this to scale and realizing the benefits of it,” said Oklo CEO Jacob DeWitte.

Nonproliferation groups and prominent nuclear scholarsoppose those plans. They say neither the companies nor the administration has shared the science backing the claim that recycling nuclear fuel at commercial scale using current industry techniques is safe or practical.

But the details that are public so far, experts say, don’t seem to break new ground.

“These are the same technologies that were developed and rejected decades ago,” said Ross Matzkin-Bridger, a senior adviser at the Energy Department during the Biden administration who now heads the Nuclear Materials Security Program at the nonprofit Nuclear Threat Initiative. “They have been rebranded with new names and slight tweaks, but they still have the same problems. The only thing new is misleading narratives that they have solved the safety, security and waste-management issues that make these technologies unworkable.”

If recycling spent fuel is possible, it would solve a real problem.Some 90,000 metric tons of radioactive spent fuel sits mostly in casks outside operating and retired plants. Were it all in one place, storing it could require a facility sprawling dozens of acres.

Spent nuclear fuel storage sites

More than 90,000 metric tons of radioactive spent fuel from commercial reactors sits in storage containers scattered across the country on the properties of the nation’s operating and retired nuclear plants.

“All of that spent uranium fuel from our reactors today is just a growing liability for our country,” Energy Secretary Chris Wright said at a congressional hearing in May. Calling it “a growing burden,” he said, “A lot of this waste and burden right now could actually be fuel and could be of value to next-generation reactors.”

Days later, President Donald Trump signed an executive order calling for the quadrupling of nuclear power in the U.S. and directing his Cabinet to “utilize all available legal authorities” to enable large-scale recycling of nuclear waste. Meeting that goal requires deployment of hundreds of new reactors in communities across the country.

DeWitte,Oklo’s CEO, was in the Oval Office for the signing. Before becoming energy secretary, Wright sat on Oklo’s board. He resigned in February and forfeited his unvested shares in the firm. He pledged in his government ethics disclosures to “not participate personally and substantially” in any government matters involving Oklo.

Both Oklo’s and Curio’s methods involve putting either spent fuel rodsor material recovered from theminto molten salt and using an electric current to separate out usable fuel. The technique, called “pyroprocessing,” was first developed in the Argonne National Laboratory in the 1960s, but worries about the immense cost and the risks that the process would create weapons-grade materials kept it from being deployed commercially.

Curio also converts uranium directly from spent fuel rods into a gas it says can be enriched into fuel.

DeWitte argues that the recycling process can now be completed more safely and affordably,in part because it could be used in a new generation of nuclear reactors that would not require as high a level of fuel purity as the existing fleet does. Oklo and Curioalso say new safeguards make the technology impractical for weapons production, a central claim that critics say is not backed by the research they’ve seen.

“We didn’t try to go about doing this the way that others have looked at this and which hasn’t really worked out well in the past,” said DeWitte. Earlier commercial efforts separated out usable fuel from spent rods using acid instead of molten salt, a process the start-ups say is more costly and environmentally harmful.

The advanced reactors Oklo hopes to fuel don’t yet exist in the United States. Only Russia and China have such commercial “generation IV” reactors, at deeply subsidized demonstration plants. Test reactors have been built in the U.S. and in Britain, but cost overruns and engineering setbacks have long scuttled plans to bring them to market and forced developers to push back target dates for their projects. Oklo is now attempting to build the first such commercially viable reactor at the Idaho National Laboratory by late 2027.

More than 90 percent of the energy innuclear fuel rods currently goes to waste because conventional reactors cannot extract it before it becomes mechanically useless, according to the Energy Department. Promoters of recycling argue that is like building a Porsche and junking it after one lap around the track. Skeptics have their own car metaphor: They argue that the latest iteration of the technology is just a new paint job on the same old, un-roadworthy jalopy.

Those concerns are echoed in a letter that 17 prominent nuclear scholars, nongovernmental organization leaders and former nuclear regulators sent to congressional committee chairs in July, warning that the U.S. could “unintentionally foster the spread of sensitive nuclear weapons-related technology.”

The United States largely abandoned efforts to recycle waste for civilian reactors during the Carter administration, after technology shared with India was used by that country to create its first nuclear weapon, according to Frank von Hippel, co-founder of the Program on Science and Global Security at Princeton University. The recycling machinery the U.S. helped India build through the “Atoms for Peace” program enabled scientists there to separate plutonium from spent reactor fuel, he said, a key step to making a bomb.

The companies now promoting recycling have launched a public relations blitz to convince lawmakers and the public that those risks are obsolete, despite experts like von Hippel arguing otherwise.

At Curio’s headquarters in Washington, an office decorated with mid-century nuclear posters and other artifacts from the atomic era’s heyday, CEO Edward McGinnis explained his company’s solution.

“We want to make sure that we have a security barrier,” McGinnis, who was a top nuclear and nonproliferation adviser in previous administrations, said as he walked a reporter through a model of the technology. “It is self-protecting. If you attempted to get to that plutonium to use it for bad purposes, you’d probably die trying.”

The industry has won over the Trump administration.

“A couple years ago, we would have never thought about using plutonium in reactors,” Bradley Williams, the lead for energy policy at the Idaho National Laboratory, where the administration is pursuing recycling research in partnership with companies, said at a recent industry event promoting recycling. “Now it might be a necessity.”

He said the challenge of producing enough fuel to power all the new reactors needed to meet America’s surging demand for energymay require it, as the nation seeks to win a global race to develop artificial intelligence and revive its manufacturing sector. “If the U.S. is going to quadruple nuclear production by 2050, fuel availability is quickly becoming the key issue,” Williams said.

“Fuel availability and energy security are the new national security interest and our focus in light of [competition with] Russia and China,” he said. “Nonproliferation is something we continue to worry about. But I’d argue that most of the world is more worried about keeping the lights on right now, and they’ll use whatever fuel they can get, and we might need to use every fuel we can get.”

That enthusiasm has spread to the states. Curio, which is also prospecting for a site to build a football-field-size spent-fuel recycling plant where nuclear waste would be shipped from around the nation, says officials in several states are courting the firm.

It’s a marked turnabout from the first Trump administration, which pulled the plug in 2018 on a planned plutonium recycling facility in South Carolina after nearly $6 billion in tax dollars was spent on building it. The project’s cost had more than tripled by then, and its estimated completion date, according to the Government Accountability Office, had been extended to as late as 2048 — “a potential delay of nearly 32 years.”

Britain invested decades in a project intended to recycle uranium and plutonium for the type of next-generation nuclear reactors Curio and Oklo are now targeting.

But the new reactors did not work out as planned, beset by engineering challenges and cost overruns. And the recycling systems were constantly breaking down. By the early 2000s, it was significantly more expensive to try to recycle spent fuel in the U.K. than to dispose of it at storage facilities. As a result of the failed recycling efforts, the nation was left with one of the world’s largest stockpiles of plutonium, and no place to put it.

Japan has had similar problems. A facility it planned to open in the 1990s is still not producing fuel, after its cost exploded to $27 billion. France, which uses an acid process to recycle spent fuel on a large scale, has had more success. But, according to nuclear energy economists, it requiresbillions of dollars of subsidies and highly secure facilities to keep plutonium from getting into the wrong hands.

The administration projects confidence those issues are being solved, arguing that perfecting the technology is a national imperative at a time when the U.S. is growing ever more desperate for solutions to its power crunch and its nuclear waste problem.

“The idea that it will be more politically acceptable to build reprocessing plants that are handling intensively radioactive materials, and that also require their own waste repository, doesn’t make any sense to me,” said Matthew Bunn, a nuclear and energy policy scholar at Harvard.

States courting the projects are largely ignoring such warnings. Rep. Chuck Fleischmann, a Republican from Tennessee who co-chairs the House Nuclear Cleanup Caucus, said Oklo is just one of several recycling outfits looking to locate in his district, and he welcomes the interest. He’s convinced that the technology is no longer risky.

Utah is also positioning to go all-in, after the state’s Office of Energy Development declared in a report that “the risks of recycling are primarily political in nature, all technical risks can and already are being navigated safely around the world.” -[???]

Curio’s McGinnis got little pushback from lawmakers there when he made his pitch at a legislative hearing last fall. Following his presentation, Utah state Sen. David P. Hinkins, a Republican from Orangeville, pronounced: “You’re welcome here.”

September 24, 2025 Posted by | technology, USA | Leave a comment

Global report confirms and details nuclear power’s stagnation: Someone needs to tell Australia’s Opposition Party

Small modular reactors

Dan Tehan told Sky News he planned to visit Idaho to investigate developments relating to small modular reactors (SMRs). But the only significant recent SMR ‘development’ in Idaho was the 2023 cancellation of NuScale’s flagship project after cost estimates rose to a prohibitive A$31 billion per GW.

The NuScale fiasco led the Coalition to abandon its SMR-only policy and to fall in love with large, conventional reactors despite previously giving them a “definite no”.

SMR wannabes and startups continue to collapse on a regular basis. WNISR-2025 reports that two of the largest European nuclear startups Newcleo (cash shortage) and Naarea (insolvent) are in serious financial trouble.

Ultra Safe Nuclear Corporation filed for bankruptcy protection in the US last year – just a year after a company representative falsely told an Australian Senate inquiry that it was constructing reactors in North America. The Nuward project was suspended in France last year following previous decisions to abandon four other SMR projects in France.

Jim Green, Sep 23, 2025, https://reneweconomy.com.au/global-report-confirms-and-details-nuclear-powers-stagnation-someone-needs-to-tell-the-coalition/

The latest edition of the World Nuclear Industry Status Report paints a glum picture for the nuclear power industry — the number of countries building reactors has plummeted from 16 to 11 over the past two years — and gives the lie to claims by the Coalition that Australia risks being ‘left behind’ and ‘stranded’ if we don’t jump on board.

That appears to be news to new Coalition energy spokesman Dan Tehan, who has taken over the portfolio from Ted O’Brien, the chief architect of the nuclear power policy that cost the Coalition around 11 seats in the May 2025 election.

Speaking to Sky News from the US, where he says he is on a nuclear “fact-finding” mission, Tehan said Sky News that “every major industrialised country, apart from Australia, is either seriously considering nuclear or is adopting nuclear technology at pace”.

Continuing with the theme, Tehan said: “Australia is going to be completely and utterly left behind, because we have a nuclear ban at the moment in place, and if we’re not careful, the rest of the world is going to move and we are going to be left stranded.”

The simple fact is, however, that there isn’t a single power reactor under construction in the 35 countries on the American continent; and the number of countries building reactors has plummeted from 16 to 11 over the past two years.

World Nuclear Industry Status Report 

Tehan could — but won’t — read the latest edition of the World Nuclear Industry Status Report (WNISR-2025), released on Monday. For three decades, these annual reports have tracked the stagnation and decline of the nuclear industry.

There are two related factoids that nuclear enthusiasts can latch onto among the 589 pages of bad news in WNISR-2025: record global nuclear power generation of 2,677 terawatt-hours in 2024 and record capacity of 369.4 gigawatts (GW) as of December 2024. But they are pyrrhic wins. Both records are less than one percent higher than the previous records and they mask the industry’s underlying malaise.

Nuclear power generation has been stagnant for 20 years. Then, a relatively young reactor fleet was generating a similar amount of electricity. Now, it’s an ageing fleet. WNISR-2025 notes that the average age of the 408 operating power reactors has been increasing since 1984 and stands at 32.4 years as of mid-2025.

For the 28 reactors permanently shut down from 2020-24, the average age at closure was 43.2 years. With the ageing of the global reactor fleet and the closure of more and more ageing reactors, the industry will have to work harder and harder just to maintain the long pattern of stagnation let alone achieve any growth. Incremental growth is within the bounds of possibility; rapid growth is not.

Further, the global figures mask a striking distinction between China and the rest of the word. WNISR-2025 notes that in the 20 years from 2005 to 2024, there were 104 reactor startups and 101 closures worldwide. Of these, there were 51 startups and no closures in China. In the rest of the world, there was a net decline of 48 reactors and a capacity decline of 27 GW. So much for Tehan’s idiotic claim that Australia risks being “left behind” and “stranded”.

Even in China, nuclear power is little more than an afterthought. Nuclear’s share of total electricity generation in China fell for the third year in a row in 2024, to 4.5 percent. Nuclear capacity grew by 3.5 GW, while solar capacity grew by 278 GW. Solar and wind together generated about four times more electricity than nuclear reactors.

Since 2010, the output of solar increased by a factor of over 800, wind by a factor of 20, and nuclear by a factor of six. Renewables, including hydro, increased from 18.7 percent of China’s electricity generation in 2010 to 33.7 percent in 2024 (7.5 times higher than nuclear’s share), while coal peaked in 2007 at 81 percent and declined to 57.8 percent in 2024.

Global data

In 2024, there were seven reactor startups worldwide — three in China and one each in France, India, the UAE and the US. There were four permanent reactor closures in 2024 — two in Canada and one each in Russia and Taiwan. The 2025 figures are even more underwhelming: one reactor startup so far and two permanent closures.

As of mid-2025, 408 reactors were operating worldwide, the same number as a year earlier and 30 below the 2002 peak of 438.

Nuclear’s share of total electricity generation fell marginally in 2024. Its share of 9.0 percent is barely half its historic peak of 17.5 percent in 1996.

The number of countries building power reactors has fallen sharply from 16 in mid-2023 to 13 in mid-2024 and just 11 in mid-2025. Only four countries — China, India, Russia, and South Korea — have construction ongoing at more than one site.

As of mid-2025, 63 reactors were under construction, four more than a year earlier but six fewer than in 2013. Of those 63 projects, more than half (32) are in China.

As of mid-2025, 31 countries were operating nuclear power plants worldwide, one fewer than a year earlier as Taiwan closed its last reactor in May 2025. Taiwan is the fifth country to abandon its nuclear power program following Italy (1990), Kazakhstan (1999), Lithuania (2009) and Germany (2023).

Nuclear newcomers

Only three potential newcomer countries are building their first nuclear power plants — Bangladesh, Egypt and Turkiye. All of those projects are being built by Russia’s Rosatom with significant financial assistance from the Russian state.

(According to the World Nuclear Association, only one additional country — Poland — is likely to join the nuclear power club over the next 15 years.)

The number of countries operating power reactors reached 32 in the mid-1990s. Since then it has fallen to 31. That pattern is likely to continue in the coming decades: a trickle of newcomers more-or-less matched by a trickle of exits.

Russia is by far the dominant supplier on the international market, with 20 reactors under construction in seven countries (and another seven under construction in Russia). Apart from Russia, only France’s EDF (two reactors in the UK) and China’s CNNC (one reactor in Pakistan) are building reactors abroad.

WNISR-2025 notes that it remains uncertain to what extent Russia’s projects abroad have been or will be impacted by sanctions imposed on Russia following its invasion of Ukraine. Sanctions — including those on the banking system — have clearly delayed some projects.

Construction of nine reactors began in 2024: six in China, one in Russia, one Chinese-led project in Pakistan, and one Russian-led project in Egypt. 

Chinese and Russian government-controlled companies implemented 44 of 45 reactor construction starts globally from January 2020 through mid-2025, either domestically or abroad. The one exception is a domestic construction start in South Korea.

Small modular reactors

Dan Tehan told Sky News he planned to visit Idaho to investigate developments relating to small modular reactors (SMRs). But the only significant recent SMR ‘development’ in Idaho was the 2023 cancellation of NuScale’s flagship project after cost estimates rose to a prohibitive A$31 billion per GW.

The NuScale fiasco led the Coalition to abandon its SMR-only policy and to fall in love with large, conventional reactors despite previously giving them a “definite no”.

Or perhaps Tehan was at Oklo’s SMR ‘groundbreaking ceremony’ in Idaho on Monday. Oklo doesn’t have sufficient funding to build an SMR plant, or the necessary licences, but evidently the company found a shovel for a ‘pre-construction’ ceremony and photo-op.

Worldwide, there are only two operating SMRs plants: one each in Russia and China. Neither of the plants meet a strict definition of SMRs (modular factory construction of reactor components). Both were long delayed and hopelessly over-budget, and both have badly underperformed since they began operating with load factors well under 50 percent.

WNISR-2025 notes that there are no SMRs under construction in the West. Pre-construction activity has begun at Darlington in Canada. But as CSIRO found in its latest GenCost report, even if there are no cost overruns in Canada, the levelised cost of electricity will far exceed the cost of firmed renewables in Australia.

Argentina began planning an SMR in the 1980s and construction began in 2014, but it was never completed and the project was abandoned last year.

SMR wannabes and startups continue to collapse on a regular basis. WNISR-2025 reports that two of the largest European nuclear startups Newcleo (cash shortage) and Naarea (insolvent) are in serious financial trouble.

Ultra Safe Nuclear Corporation filed for bankruptcy protection in the US last year – just a year after a company representative falsely told an Australian Senate inquiry that it was constructing reactors in North America. The Nuward project was suspended in France last year following previous decisions to abandon four other SMR projects in France.

Nuclear vs. renewables

For two decades, global investments in renewable power generation have exceeded those in nuclear energy and are now 21 times higher.

Total investment in non-hydro renewables in 2024 was estimated at US$728 billion, up eight percent compared to the previous year. 

In 2024, solar and wind capacity grew by 452 GW and 113 GW, respectively, with the combined total of 565 GW over 100 times greater than the 5.4 GW of net nuclear capacity additions.

In 2021, the combined output of solar and wind plants surpassed nuclear power generation for the first time. In 2024, wind and solar facilities generated over 70 percent more electricity than nuclear plants.

In April 2025, global solar electricity generation exceeded monthly nuclear power generation for the first time and kept doing so in May and June 2025. In 2024, wind power generation grew by 8 percent, getting close to nuclear generation.

Renewables (including hydro) account for over 30 percent of global electricity generation and the International Energy Agency expects renewables to reach 46 percent in 2030. Nuclear’s share is certain to continue to decline from its current 9 percent.

WNISR-2025 concludes: “2024 has seen an unprecedented boost in solar and battery capacity expansion driven by continuous significant cost decline. As energy markets are rapidly evolving, there are no signs of vigorous nuclear construction and the slow decline of nuclear power’s role in electricity generation continues.”

Dr. Jim Green is the national nuclear campaigner with Friends of the Earth Australia and a member of the Nuclear Consulting Group.

September 24, 2025 Posted by | AUSTRALIA, spinbuster | Leave a comment

Russia willing to extend New Start nuclear treaty – Putin

22 Sept 25, https://www.rt.com/russia/625057-putin-start-treaty-initiative/

The president stressed that allowing the deal to expire would be a big mistake.

Russia is prepared to continue abiding by the New START treaty on nuclear arms for one year even after it expires next February, Russian President Vladimir Putin has said. 

Speaking at a meeting with the permanent members of Russia’s Security Council on Monday, Putin said that due to the hostile and destructive steps taken by the West in recent years, the foundations of constructive relations and cooperation between nuclear-armed states have been significantly undermined.   

“Step by step, the system of Soviet-American and Russian-American agreements on nuclear missile and strategic defensive arms control was almost completely dismantled,” Putin said. He stressed that the systems of agreements between Russia and the US, who possess the two largest nuclear arsenals in the world, long served as a stabilizing factor and contributed to global stability and international security.  

Putin noted that the New START treaty, signed in 2010 by Russia and the US, is the last remaining bilateral agreement limiting nuclear weapons. He warned that allowing it to expire and abandoning its legacy would be “a mistaken and short-sighted step, which, in our view, would also negatively impact the goals of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.”  

The president announced that in order to avoid provoking a strategic arms race and ensuring an “acceptable level of predictability and restraint,” Russia is prepared to continue adhering to the central limitations of the New START Treaty for one year after February 5, 2026.  

“Based on our analysis of the situation, we will subsequently make a decision on maintaining these voluntary self-restraints,” he added. 

At the same time, Putin stressed that Moscow would implement this measure only if the US “follows suit and does not take steps that undermine or disrupt the existing balance of deterrence potential.”

The president ordered Russia’s relevant agencies to continue closely monitoring US activities in regard to strategic offensive arms arsenals and any plans to expand the strategic components of the US missile defense system. If it is deemed that Washington is taking actions that undermine Moscow’s efforts to maintain the status quo on strategic offensive arms, Russia will “respond accordingly,” Putin said.

September 24, 2025 Posted by | politics international, Russia | Leave a comment

Mark Carney has significant financial interests in nuclear power.

The Prime Minister wants to encourage a sector in which he has significant financial interests through Brookfield.

Anne Caroline Desplanques, Monday, September 22, 2025, https://www.journaldemontreal.com/2025/09/20/mark-carney-a-dimportants-interets-financiers-dans-le-nucleaire

The Prime Minister wants to encourage an industry in which he has significant financial interests through Brookfield, the company whose board he chaired until January.

“Should we accelerate the development of nuclear energy in this country?” asked the moderator of the French-language leaders’ debate during the election campaign.

“Yes, absolutely,” candidate Mark Carney replied enthusiastically, before indicating that Canada had “great advantages” in this area, particularly “CANDU and Westinghouse.

Brookfield acquired the American company Westinghouse Electric Company for US$4.6 billion from the Japanese firm Toshiba in 2018. The company, headquartered in Pittsburgh, USA, states on its website that it is the world’s largest provider of infrastructure and services for nuclear power plants.

In 2022, Brookfield sold it to its own entity, Brookfield Renewable Partners, which was then headed by Mark Carney, who was responsible for investments in the energy transition sector within the firm.

Since then, Brookfield Renewable has owned 51% of Westinghouse. The remaining 49% belongs to the Canadian mining company Cameco, a global uranium giant. The Prime Minister still holds options to purchase 409,300 Brookfield shares.

Nuclear power, a solution to achieve carbon neutrality

At the time of the transaction, he stated that “any credible trajectory towards carbon neutrality relies on significant growth in nuclear energy.”

But economist Jack Gibbons of the Ontario Clean Air Alliance counters that this position ignores the management of radioactive waste, materials that remain a danger to people and the environment thousands of years after their use.

For him, a pan-Canadian electricity transmission line harnessed to hydroelectric dams and solar and wind farms should be the priority and a national emergency, given the acceleration of global warming.

As for the argument that nuclear power is a more stable source of energy, not subject to the vagaries of the weather, he indicates that this is a false belief.

“The Darlington nuclear reactor has been offline for one hour out of every five hours since it was commissioned for maintenance,” he recalls. “No energy source can guarantee a 24/7 supply.”

September 24, 2025 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

The recognition of Palestine: what it does, what it doesn’t do, and why now

rather than respond to the pleas of the public with material sanctions against Israel, European and Western states have largely opted to adopt this symbolic recognition and pro forma support for a two-state solution. Meanwhile, on the ground, Israel continues to engage in annexation measures that are meant to render these recognitions meaningless.

The recognition of Palestine as a state is more of a symbolic gesture than a meaningful act, like imposing sanctions on Israel would be. Still, it shows that even Israel’s allies have been forced to take action as Israel’s genocide in Gaza deepens.

By Qassam Muaddi  September 22, 2025, https://mondoweiss.net/2025/09/the-recognition-of-palestine-what-it-does-what-it-doesnt-do-and-why-now/

The United Kingdom, Canada, Portugal, and Australia officially recognized the State of Palestine in a series of separate but coordinated statements on Sunday, September 21. Other European and Western nations, including France, Belgium, New Zealand, and several other key allies of Israel, are expected to join the chorus of recognitions at today’s UN General Assembly meeting in New York. The summit is based on a joint Saudi-French initiative to revive a two-state solution called “the New York Declaration,” which was first issued at a conference on September 12. The conference was boycotted by the U.S, which opposed the summit.

In Sunday’s initial announcements of recognition, UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer said that “we are acting to keep alive the possibility of peace and a two-state solution,” adding that the ongoing Israeli bombardment campaign in Gaza, as well as its starvation of the Palestinian population, were “utterly intolerable.” Starmer also decried Israel’s acceleration of settlement building in the West Bank, which he said has caused the “fading” of hope in the two-state solution.In light of the wave of announcements, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that Israel’s response would come after he meets with U.S. President Trump on September 27, adding that he has “worked for years to prevent the establishment of this state of terror in the face of enormous internal and external pressure.”

The Israeli PM said that he has “doubled Jewish settlement in the West Bank,” vowing to continue, while condemning all nations recognizing a Palestinian state after October 7 as “rewarding terrorism.”

Meanwhile, the United States derided the countries that declared their recognition of Palestine as engaging in “performative gestures.” 

“Our priorities are clear,” a state department official told AFP on Sunday. “The release of the hostages, the security of Israel, and peace and prosperity for the entire region that is only possible free from Hamas.”

The recognition comes as Israel ramps up its annihilation campaign in Gaza City, which has resulted in the leveling of broad swathes of the ancient city’s eastern neighborhoods as the army sends in decommissioned armored personnel carriers rigged with explosives to destroy entire residential blocks. 

Israel is also openly discussing plans for the annexation of the West Bank. One such plan, presented earlier in September by far-right Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, would see the annexation of 82% of the West Bank, including Bethlehem. This annexation plan would leave Palestinians with nothing but six isolated enclaves that make up less than 18% of the West Bank. 

Israel has also accelerated the approval of the building of ambitious settlement projects, which aim to split the West Bank in two and “bury” the prospects of a Palestinian state, as articulated by Smotrich in mid-August.

What the recognition does

What the recognition does

The recognition is a political act, and it has political implications. 

Primarily, it opens the way for higher levels of diplomatic relations between Palestine and other countries that now recognize the occupied Palestinian territories as a part of Palestine’s national soil. This politically highlights the already-established illegality of Israel’s settlements in these territories. 

Finally, the recognition of a Palestinian state preemptively regards Israel’s planned annexation of the West Bank as illegitimate.

What it doesn’t do

However, this recognition does not imply any additional legal obligations on the part of the recognizing states to take action to ensure the establishment of the Palestinian state or to end the occupation of its territories. Those obligations were already enshrined in the Geneva Conventions, which define the obligations of states that are signatories to them in cases of occupation. 

One of those legal obligations is for states to refrain from engaging in any action that aids the annexation of occupied territory. Yet these same countries have been dealing commercially with the Israeli state’s settlement economy for years, despite their existing obligations.

Moreover, the aforementioned countries are members of the International Criminal Court (ICC), which has issued arrest warrants against Netanyahu and his former Defense Minister, Yoav Gallant. These states are under the obligation to aid in their arrest, whether they recognize Palestine as a state or not. 

Why now?

The worldwide Palestine solidarity movement has continued to expand in the same countries that have recently recognized Palestine, reflecting a marked shift in public opinion, driven largely by Israel’s increasingly graphic and devastating genocidal assault on Gaza. Politically, it has become untenable for many Western governments to remain passive, and the pressure to signal a position that diverges from their long-standing unconditional support for Israel has become impossible to ignore.

But rather than respond to the pleas of the public with material sanctions against Israel, European and Western states have largely opted to adopt this symbolic recognition and pro forma support for a two-state solution. Meanwhile, on the ground, Israel continues to engage in annexation measures that are meant to render these recognitions meaningless.

How will Israel respond?

The immediate changes on the ground are expected to come through Israel’s response to the wave of recognitions. Palestinians now brace for intensified crackdowns, including more arrests, raids, checkpoints, and further restrictions on movement. 

Yet the most anticipated Israeli step is the formal annexation of parts of the West Bank, most likely the Jordan Valley and the larger settlements, such as Maale Adumim east of Jerusalem. Such a move would bring about new layers of restrictions on Palestinians’ daily lives.

The official annexation of any part of the West Bank would likely impose new draconian restrictions on Palestinians seeking to move in and out of the annexed areas. Instead of simply being cut off from other Palestinian localities through a network of checkpoints and iron gates that are opened and closed by the Israeli army at will, they might soon be required to apply for special entry permits to move throughout the West Bank, as is currently the case for Palestinians wishing to visit Jerusalem.

Palestinians might also become subject to more intense restrictions on their freedom to build homes, access services, and work, intensifying the engineered hardship meant to push them to leave their homes altogether. 

 More rural communities, and possibly entire towns, could be forcibly expelled by settlers or demolished by the Israeli army.

These are scenarios Palestinians have already lived for years in areas effectively annexed — whether officially, as in East Jerusalem, or de facto, as across much of Area C. But Israel could depart from this pattern, as it has in Gaza, and push annexation to new levels, seizing as much land as possible with as few Palestinians as possible. “Maximum land, minimum Arabs,” as the old Zionist adage has it, most recently repeated by Smotrich.

Still, if any of these scenarios materialize, they will not be the direct outcome of Palestine’s recognition as a state, but rather of Western governments reducing that recognition to symbolism, while avoiding any real action that could force change on the ground.

September 24, 2025 Posted by | politics international | Leave a comment

Miliband poised to overrule local opposition to build nuclear waste dumps.

Review considers scrapping public votes on sites for radioactive storage facilities

Matt Oliver Industry Editor. Dan Martin

 Opposition to nuclear waste dumps in the English countryside could
be bypassed as Ed Miliband considers scrapping the need for local consent.
A review has been launched by the Department for Energy Security and Net
Zero (DESNZ), which could scrap the need for public votes when building
storage facilities for radioactive material.

A search is under way to find
a coastal location to host the UK’s first geological disposal facility
(GDF), a vast network of tunnels and vaults that would extend under the sea
and be used to store spent fuel from nuclear power plants. Opposition from
residents and councils is a particularly significant roadblock because the
Government’s policy is to only proceed with a scheme that has secured
local consent.

However, officials in the DESNZ have now begun a review of
that policy, The Telegraph understands. A Whitehall source stressed that no
decisions had been made but acknowledged that one potential outcome was
that other factors could be prioritised over local support, such as the
favourableness of local geology or the cost to the national purse.

They said the review was prompted by recent decisions of councils in
Lincolnshire and East Yorkshire to pull out of talks with Nuclear Waste
Services, the quango tasked with delivering the GDF. Talks are still
ongoing with local authorities in Cumbria, where there is greater local
support.

In its annual report last month, Nista downgraded the GDF
scheme’s rating from “amber” to “red” and said the change
reflected the “unaffordability” of the proposals. Nuclear Waste
Services has forecast that the facility could cost between £20bn and
£53bn to build, in a sign of the huge uncertainty surrounding the
project’s costs. Wherever it is eventually built, the Government has
argued that the GDF will bring billions of pounds of investment and more
than 4,000 local jobs. But Reform-run Lincolnshire county council and
Conservative-run East Lindsey council both voted to pull out of talks with
Nuclear Waste Services this year, with Lincolnshire councillors celebrating
with members of the public by popping bottles of champagne.

Sean Matthews, the county council’s leader, said locals had been subjected to years of
“distress and uncertainty”, adding: “I would like to apologise to the
communities who have been treated appallingly.” Guardians of the East
Coast, a pressure group set up to oppose the plans, said the looming
proposals had left people “unable to go on with their lives” or sell
their homes.

 Telegraph 22nd Sept 2025, https://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/2025/09/22/miliband-poised-to-overrule-nimbys-to-build-nuclear-waste/

September 24, 2025 Posted by | politics, UK | Leave a comment

UN Member States urged to prevent nuclear war and take action to eliminate nuclear weapons

Joint Appeal is sent to UN Member States.
Join Stop Nuclear Weapons: Peace is in our Hands,
the Nuclear Abolition Day Social Media Action
Plus some exciting in-person events for Nuclear Abolition Day

The United Nations has declared September 26 to be the International Day for the Total Elimination of Nuclear Weapons, and will hold a High-Level Meeting of Presidents, Prime Ministers, Foreign Ministers and Ambassadors of UN Member States this coming Friday to commemorate the day and advance nuclear disarmament. 

NuclearAbolitionDay.org, a network of civil society organizations working in consultation with the UN Office of Disarmament Affairs to promote the day, sent a Joint Appeal to all UN Member States today, calling on them to use the opportunity of the High-Level Meeting to: 

  • Affirm that the threat or use of nuclear weapons is inadmissible;
  • Stand down nuclear forces and adopt policies never to initiate a nuclear war;
  • Cut nuclear weapons budgets and investments, and redirect these to support the United Nations, enhance peacekeeping and international conflict resolution, protect the climate and advance sustainable development;
  • Commit to achieving the global elimination of nuclear weapons no later than 2045, the 100th anniversary of the UN.

The Joint Appeal has been endorsed by over 300 organizations as well as another 500 individuals, including legislators, former high-level officials (such as foreign ministers and UN officials), religious leaders, medical practitioners, academics/teachers, youth leaders, private sector (corporate) leaders and others (see below for a sample of the endorsers). 

There is still time to endorse the Joint Appeal, if you have not already done so, before it is presented to the High-Level Meeting by Dr. Deepshikha Kumari VijhExecutive Director of Lawyers Committee on Nuclear Policy and Coordination Team Member for the September 26 Nuclear Abolition Day Working Group.

Stop Nuclear Weapons: Peace is in our Hands

Social Media action for Nuclear Abolition Day, September 26

We invite everyone, where-ever you are in the world, to undertake the September 26 social media action Stop Nuclear Weapons: Peace is in our Hands. The action is based on a hand raised with palm facing forwards, which is a universal message to stop. Hands are also what we use to greet each other, create things and build cooperation. 

For this social media action, we use our hands or the NuclearAbolitionDay hand graphic to symbolically stop nuclear weapons and to build cooperation for a peaceful, nuclear-weapon-free world.​

September 24, 2025 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Nuclear projects seen slowing after record 2024 output, report says

By Forrest Crellin, September 23, 2025, https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/nuclear-projects-seen-slowing-after-record-2024-output-report-says-2025-09-22/

PARIS, Sept 22 (Reuters) – A record level of global nuclear power production seen in 2024 will be hard to maintain in the coming years due to a lack of required investment, aging plants and project disruptions, the World Nuclear Industry Status Report said on Monday.

Nuclear power has experienced a revival in interest from various countries trying to phase out fossil fuels, with the United States recently pushing hard to make nuclear energy a policy focus and securing several, opens new tabagreements with other countries to boost production.

Global nuclear power generation reached a record in 2024 of 2,677 terawatt-hours after declining for two years, largely due to growth in China, data from the report showed.

However, to keep global nuclear output steady through 2030 the world would need 44 additional startups beyond those already scheduled, lifting annual startups to roughly two and a half times the past decade’s pace, the report said.

Risks around aging fleets, sluggish construction, accelerating system disruption from renewable energy, and China-centred development are expected to impact growth and lead to declines in regional electricity production shares, according to the report. It is an annual publication produced in collaboration by various research groups.

Competition from cheaper non-hydro renewables and battery storage is expected to have a broad impact, as investment in the renewables was 21 times that of nuclear last year, while added capacity was more than 100 times net nuclear additions, it said.

Battery costs are also falling, down about 40% in 2024, while nuclear plant costs continue to rise, the report said.

“Together these new technologies are evolving towards a highly flexible fully electrified energy system… outcompeting traditional centralized fossil and nuclear systems,” the report said.

Nuclear power projects around the world are being beset by delays. From 2020 to mid-2025, 44 of 45 global construction starts were by Chinese or Russian state firms in countries such as Egypt and Turkey.

There is no evidence of a vigorous global nuclear buildout and nuclear’s share of global power generation is likely to erode further from 9% in 2024 unless project delivery and economics improve markedly, the report said.

Small modular reactors also remain largely aspirational, as despite rising public and private funding, no Western SMR construction has begun. China is the exception, with two SMR designs in operation or build, though limited operational data are available.

September 24, 2025 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Here’s What Life Is Like Inside One of Gaza’s Last Remaining Hospitals

Inside al-Wafa Rehabilitation Hospital, starving doctors still fight to keep patients alive.

By Sara Awad , Truthout September 20, 2025, https://truthout.org/articles/heres-what-life-is-like-inside-one-of-gazas-last-remaining-hospitals/

In the heart of a city at war, al-Wafa Rehabilitation Hospital struggles to survive. This site of healing and recovery has now been transformed into a place overwhelmed by cruel suffering.

Please don’t be fooled by the Israeli military propaganda that has asserted that this “building does not currently serve as a hospital” — an assertion conveniently circulated by The Jerusalem Post in December 2024, as the Israeli military sought to deflect criticism of its decision to bomb the hospital. Many credible sources verify how ludicrous that claim is, from the images that Getty’s photojournalists took following that bombing, to the World Health Organization’s appeal for an end to Israel’s attacks on this and other hospitals in Gaza.

From March to May 2025, I lived within the hospital’s walls as a caregiver to my mother. I witnessed how al-Wafa held so much pain in its rooms and corners. From children to the elderly, each patient carries their own devastating injury. When I returned to the hospital three months later as a guest, I observed how much more crowded it had become, with a massive number of patients seeking treatment. I interviewed the medical team and injured patients. This is the story of a hospital pushed to its extreme limits, and of the patients who continue to resist and survive inside it.

The hospital atmosphere now is more suffocating than before. Everywhere you look, you will see someone suffering. Hospital beds are full of tiny bodies of different ages and genders. No one can walk, all are sitting in their wheelchairs due to injuries that left them paralyzed. Being able to walk while everyone around you cannot is emotionally distressing and isolating.

“We cannot offer the bare minimum for the patients,” said Dr. Wael Khalif, director of al-Wafa hospital. The hospital is running out of nearly all medical equipment, from needles to surgical devices. Dr. Khalif described the overwhelming situation, with a massive number of patients on the waitlist to have care from the only rehabilitation hospital still functioning in Gaza, “There are 100 top urgent [patients] needing a bed, while another 400 to 500 patients are also waiting to be admitted,” the hospital director said.

The hospital is running out of nearly all medical equipment, from needles to surgical devices.

Dr. Khalif shed light on the catastrophic consequences of starvation inside the hospital. “Even healthy people are struggling to endure hunger and lack of proper nutrition, so imagine what’s happening for patients suffering from serious illnesses,” he said. Many patients are unable to receive even one meal per day. “Since the starvation period has begun, we are helpless to provide food for our patients,” he added.

And it’s not just the patients facing starvation; the medical staff also cannot endure more suffering. They are exhausted, overwhelmed, and unable to afford services for their patients. “Many of the nursing staff are struggling with dizziness during their duties at the hospital,” said Dr. Khalif.

This disaster is deeply impacting nursing staff. Their hearts are breaking into a million pieces watching their patients dying of hunger and lack of proper care. “I wish I could offer food for my patients. I cannot offer even the smallest amount of food for them,” said Wesam Al-Shawa, 26, a nurse at al-Wafa hospital. She looked completely helpless, and I noticed the exhaustion in her eyes as she spoke.

The hospital’s physical therapist is also working under immense pressure. “We receive approximately 60 to 75 patients per day,” said Dr. Samah Awida, a physical therapist at al-Wafa. This huge number of patients seeking physical therapy sessions has taken a serious toll on the medical team as the situation continues to worsens.

“Many of the nursing staff are struggling with dizziness during their duties at the hospital.”

To make conditions even more unbearable, patients who reach the final stage of recovery are likely going to live in a tent with nothing more than an uninhabitable floor and a small space to sleep in, and, if they are lucky, access to a bathroom. “Our efforts go to waste when patients end up living in a tent,” Dr. Samah said, her tired eyes telling me everything.

Amid these collapsing systems, there is a girl with a story that should never have to be told: Dania Amara.

Five-year-old Dania is among the injured patients. She was wounded while playing with other children on July 7, 2025. “Her body was full of blood,” Dania’s mother recalled. Dania had injuries all over; small shrapnel tore at her small body and caused a paralysis of the limbs. “Why did Israel attack me? I was just playing around,” Dania asked her mother as I was interviewing her.

August 18, when I spoke to her, was Dania’s 40th day in the hospital. She dreams of going home to her siblings, walking again, painting, and enjoying proper meals. “My daughter is now disabled because of one piece of shrapnel,” her mother said.

Dania is just like any other child — full of innocence and life — but Israel has stolen that normalcy and turned her world upside down.

“She hits her legs and begs them to walk like before,” her mother said, tears filling her eyes. Dania’s injury has changed her life forever, and she is just one of thousands suffering as she does, most without documentation or recognition.

Only in Gaza’s hospitals can you watch childhood be stolen by war crimes.

Beyond physical rehabilitation, the occupational therapy department is facing its own obstacles in silence.

While the physical therapy sessions help patients to recover and potentially walk again, occupational rehabilitation helps them to live again. This department helps patients to be completely independent, hold spoons, brush their hair, dress themselves independently, and attend to other needs without assistance. “We do our utmost effort to give back life to our patients,” said Basam Alwan, a therapist in the department.

Hadeel Qriaqa, 27, is one of the many patients struggling to rebuild her life at al-Wafa. She sustained severe head trauma during an attack on her home in March 2025. Since then, she has lost much of her memory and the ability to speak.

Now, she attends occasional occupational therapy sessions with Dr. Alwan aimed at helping her relearn basic daily skills and regain some independence.

Al-Wafa rehabilitation hospital and its medical staff have displayed immense resilience amid the war. Despite all difficulties facing them, they are still fighting to keep their work alive two years into a genocide. The world must not continue to ignore their suffering.

September 24, 2025 Posted by | Gaza, health | Leave a comment

South Korea would accept a Trump-Kim deal to freeze nuclear programme, president tells BBC

BBC, Jean Mackenzie, Seoul correspondent, 22 Sept 25

South Korea’s president has said he would agree to a deal between Donald Trump and Kim Jong Un in which North Korea agreed to freeze production of its nuclear weapons, rather than get rid of them.

Lee Jae Myung told the BBC North Korea was producing an additional 15-20 nuclear weapons a year and that a freeze – as “an interim emergency measure” – would be “a feasible, realistic alternative” to denuclearisation for now.

North Korea declared itself a nuclear power in 2022 and vowed to never relinquish its weapons.

“So long as we do not give up on the long-term goal of denuclearisation, I believe there are clear benefits to having North Korea stop its nuclear and missile development,” Lee Jae Myung said.

“The question is whether we persist with fruitless attempts towards the ultimate goal [of denuclearisation] or we set more realistic goals and achieve some of them,” Lee added.

President Lee, who entered office in June, wants to establish peaceful relations with North Korea and reduce tensions, which flared under his predecessor Yoon Suk Yeol, who was impeached for trying to impose martial law last year.

The South Korean leader has been vocal about wanting President Trump to resume nuclear talks with Kim, which broke down in 2019 during Trump’s first term, after the US asked the North to dismantle its nuclear facilities.

In a speech to parliament on Sunday, the North Korean leader suggested he would be willing to negotiate with Trump – but only if the US dropped its demand for the North to denuclearise.

Lee told the BBC that he thought it possible that Trump and Kim could come back together, given they “seem to have a degree of mutual trust”. This could benefit South Korea and contribute to global peace and security, he added.

In a speech to parliament on Sunday, the North Korean leader suggested he would be willing to negotiate with Trump – but only if the US dropped its demand for the North to denuclearise.

Lee told the BBC that he thought it possible that Trump and Kim could come back together, given they “seem to have a degree of mutual trust”. This could benefit South Korea and contribute to global peace and security, he added.

The BBC sat down with the South Korean president at his office in Seoul, ahead of his trip to the United Nations General Assembly in New York on Monday.

South Korea currently holds the presidency of the UN Security Council, but Lee would not be drawn on whether the body was failing South Korea, because for years both China and Russia have blocked attempts to impose further sanction the North over its nuclear programme.

“While it’s clear the UN is falling short when it comes to creating a truly peaceful world, I still believe it is performing many important functions,” Lee said, adding that reforming the Security Council was “not very realistic”.

Asked whether China was now enabling North Korea’s nuclear weapons programme, Lee said it was “impossible to know”, but based on his current knowledge this was not his understanding………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………. https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cwy91w0e1z2o

September 24, 2025 Posted by | politics international, South Korea | Leave a comment

Nuclear power’s record year masks future sustainability challenges, says report

Last year, investment in renewables was 21 times greater than in nuclear power, and the added capacity from renewables exceeded net nuclear additions by over 100 times.

The report highlighted that there is no strong global expansion of nuclear power, and its contribution to global power generation is expected to decline further from 9% in 2024,

by Sayantan Sarkar, Edited by Devesh Kumar, Sep 22, 2025, https://invezz.com/news/2025/09/22/nuclear-powers-record-year-masks-future-sustainability-challenges-says-report/

  • Nuclear power output in 2024 hit a record but faces sustainability issues due to underinvestment.
  • Despite a global resurgence driven by climate change goals, significant challenges remain.
  • The US is a key proponent of nuclear energy, integrating it into its energy policy.

According to the World Nuclear Industry Status Report released on Monday, the record level of global nuclear power production achieved in 2024 will be difficult to sustain in the coming years. 

This is attributed to insufficient investment, the aging of existing plants, and disruptions to ongoing projects.

Nuclear power is currently experiencing a significant resurgence globally, driven by a growing imperative for nations to transition away from fossil fuels and combat climate change. 

Renewed interest in nuclear power

This renewed interest stems from nuclear energy’s inherent advantages as a low-carbon, dispatchable power source.

The US, in particular, has emerged as a vocal proponent of nuclear energy, making it a central focus of its energy policy. 

This commitment is evident in the recent legislative efforts and strategic initiatives aimed at bolstering domestic nuclear production and fostering international collaboration. 

The US has actively pursued and secured numerous agreements with other countries, signifying a concerted effort to expand nuclear energy’s role on a global scale. 

These agreements often involve sharing expertise, technology, and financial support to accelerate the development and deployment of advanced nuclear reactors.

Beyond the US, a diverse range of countries, from those with established nuclear programs to emerging economies, are exploring or re-evaluating nuclear power. 

Factors influencing this trend include energy security concerns, the volatility of fossil fuel markets, and the increasing urgency to meet ambitious climate goals. 

The development of smaller, more modular reactors (SMRs) is also contributing to this revival, offering greater flexibility and potentially lower construction costs, making nuclear power a more attractive option for a wider array of nations. 

Rise of SMRs and outlook

In 2024, global nuclear power generation rebounded to a record 2,677 terawatt-hours, primarily driven by China’s growth, according to the nuclear industry status report data. This follows a two-year decline in nuclear power output.

However, the report indicated that maintaining current global nuclear output levels through 2030 would necessitate 44 additional startups beyond those already planned. 

This would require an annual startup rate approximately two and a half times faster than that of the past decade.

The report, an annual publication collaboratively produced by various research groups, predicted that several factors will affect growth and lead to a decline in regional electricity production shares. 

These factors include risks associated with aging fleets, slow construction, increasing system disruption from renewable energy, and China-centric development.

Competition and delays

It further indicated that competition from more affordable non-hydro renewables and battery storage is anticipated to have a widespread effect. 

Last year, investment in renewables was 21 times greater than in nuclear power, and the added capacity from renewables exceeded net nuclear additions by over 100 times.

A significant decline in battery costs, roughly 40% in 2024, in contrast to the continued increase in nuclear plant expenses, according to the report.

The report said:

Together these new technologies are evolving towards a highly flexible fully electrified energy system… outcompeting traditional centralized fossil and nuclear systems.

Global nuclear power projects are experiencing significant delays. From 2020 to mid-2025, 44 out of 45 new construction projects worldwide were initiated by Chinese or Russian state-owned companies in countries like Egypt and Turkey.

The report highlighted that there is no strong global expansion of nuclear power, and its contribution to global power generation is expected to decline further from 9% in 2024, unless project execution and economic viability show substantial improvement.

Additionally, western countries have not yet begun construction on any SMR despite increased public and private investment, and these largely remain an aspiration. 

China is an exception, with two SMR designs either operating or under construction, though detailed operational data are scarce.

September 24, 2025 Posted by | business and costs | Leave a comment

Canada keeps bankrolling Ukraine’s war crimes

The new prime minister, just like the old one, is handing Kiev the cash much needed at home

Eva Karene Bartlett, September 22, 2025, https://evakarenebartlett.substack.com/p/canada-keeps-bankrolling-ukraines?utm_source=post-email-title&publication_id=3046064&post_id=174317268&utm_campaign=email-post-title&isFreemail=true&r=1ise1&triedRedirect=true&utm_medium=email

Following in the shameful footsteps of both Justin Trudeau and Chrystia Freeland, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney continues pledging support and money (which Canadians desperately need) to Ukraine, to prolong the proxy war against Russia.

Carney chose Ukrainian Independence Day to voice the Canadian government’s continued pledge to support Ukraine. As he landed in Kiev on August 24, Carney posted on X, “On this Ukrainian Independence Day, and at this critical moment in their nation’s history, Canada is stepping up our support and our efforts towards a just and lasting peace for Ukraine.”

Later in the day he posted“After three years at war, Ukrainians urgently need more military equipment. Canada is answering that call, providing $2 billion for drones, armoured vehicles, and other critical resources.” This latest pledge brings Canada’s expenditure on Ukraine since February 2022 to nearly $22 billion.

Further, he pledged to potentially send Canadian or allied soldiers, stating“I would not exclude the presence of troops.”

Pause for a moment to examine the utter lack of logic behind these statements: For “peace” for Ukraine, Canada will support further war to ensure more Ukrainian men are ripped off the streets and forced to the front lines, where they will inevitably die in a battle they didn’t sign up for.

Like his European counterparts, Carney’s insistence on prolonging the war is in contrast to Russia’s position of finding a resolution.

I recently spoke with former Ambassador Charles Freeman, an American career diplomat for 30 years. Speaking of how the Trump administration, “began in office by perpetuating the blindness and deafness of the Biden administration to what the Russian side in this conflict has said from the very beginning,” he outlined the terms that Russia made clear in December 2021, “and from which it has basically not wavered.”

These include: “neutrality and no NATO membership for Ukraine; protections for the Russian speaking minorities in the former territories of Ukraine; and some broader discussion of European security architecture that reassures Russia that it will not be attacked by the West, and the West that it will not be attacked by Russia.”

It’s worth keeping in mind that Canada has been one of the main belligerents in Ukraine, funding and training Ukrainian troops for many years before the 2022 start of Russia’s military operation.

Canada’s training of Ukrainian troops included members of the notorious neo-Nazi terrorists of the Azov regiment. Former Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland proudly waved a Banderite flag in 2022. She was also proud of her dear grandfather, who was a chief Nazi propagandist.

In 2023, the Trudeau administration brought to speak in the Canadian parliament a Ukrainian Nazi, Yaroslav Hunka, who had been a voluntary member of the 1st Galician Division of the Waffen SS – well known for their mass slaughter of civilians.

Carney, in light of this, is merely keeping with the tradition of Ottawa’s support of extremism – including Nazism – in Ukraine (and in Canada). This support is not at all about protecting Ukrainian civilians.

Supporting Ukrainian war crimes

Canada’s continued support to Ukraine makes it complicit in the atrocities Ukraine commits. I myself have documented just some of Ukrainian war crimes in the Donbass, in 2019 and heavily throughout 2022.

These include deliberately shelling civilian areas (including with heavy-duty NATO weapons), slaughtering civilians in their homes, in markets, in the streets, in buses; peppering Donbass civilian areas with internationally prohibited PFM-1 “Petal” mines (since 2022, 184 civilians have been maimed by these, three of whom died of their injuries); and deliberately targeting medics and other emergency service rescuers.

Ukraine has also heavily shelled Belgorod and Kursk, targeting civilians, as well sending drones into Russian cities, killing civilians and destroying infrastructure.

Less detailed are Ukraine’s crimes against civilians in areas under Ukrainian control. These crimes – including rape, torture and point-blank assassination – come to light with the testimonies of terrorized civilians in regions liberated by Russia.Bring the government spending home

The social media fervor of Ukrainian hashtags and flags has died down considerably since 2022. Now, you see more and more Canadians demanding their government stop fueling war and start spending money to take care of Canadians.

Carney’s campaign pledges included easing the cost of living in Canada, yet he has taken no concrete actions to do so. In the many understandably angry replies to Carney’s latest tweets about supporting Ukraine, Canadians are demanding accountability.

“Mark Carney stop pretending you’re fighting for “freedom and sovereignty.” You just signed off on $2 BILLION of Canadian money for Ukraine while Canadians can’t even afford rent, food, or heating,” reads one of numerous such replies. “Veterans are abandoned, fentanyl floods our streets, and families collapse under inflation. You stand on foreign soil preaching about democracy while selling out the very people you’re supposed to serve. That’s not leadership that’s betrayal. Canadians never voted for this. You don’t speak for us.”

Scroll through replies to Carney’s Kiev stunt and you’ll find Canadians opposed to the wasting of still more money needed in their home country.

The most glaring hypocrisy is that while Carney wrings his hands over Ukraine, he utterly ignores the ongoing Israeli starvation and genocide of Palestinians in Gaza, supported by the Canadian government.

September 24, 2025 Posted by | Canada, Ukraine, weapons and war | Leave a comment

The genie of ‘Israeli First’ dominance is out of the bottle

Alastair Crooke, September 22, 2025, https://strategic-culture.su/news/2025/09/22/genie-israel-first-dominance-is-out-bottle/

Netanyahu will soon find that Israel has lost America – and the rest of the world, too.

‘Gaza is on fire; the Jewish state will not relent’, Israeli Defence Minister Katz excitedly proclaims: The IDF is striking with an Iron fist at terrorist infrastructure”. In fact, over recent weeks Israel has struck at ‘infrastructure’ in West Bank, Iran, Syria, Lebanon, Yemen, and Tunisia – besides Gaza.

The so-called ‘Rules-Based Order’ blueprint (if it ever truly existed beyond narrative) has been ripped up in favour of violent Zionism: Genocide, sneak attacks under the guise of on-going peace negotiations, assassinations, and the de-capitation of political leaderships. It is war without limits; without rules; without law; and in complete disdain for the UN Charter. Ethical boundaries, more particularly, are dismissed as mere ‘moral relativism’.

Something profound is re-shaping Israeli foreign policy. The transformation needs be understood as a U-turn within the very core of Zionist thinking (a journey from Ben Gurion to Kahane), as Yossi Klein has written.

Israel’s strategy from past decades continues to rest on the hope of achieving some literal Chimeric transformative ‘de-radicalisation’ of both Palestinians and of the Region, writ large – a de-radicalisation that will make ‘Israel safe’. This has been the ‘holy grail’ objective for Zionists since Israel was first founded.

Israeli Strategic Affairs Minister Ron Dermer claims that such radical mutation in consciousness will only come from the bombing of opponents into utter submission. (The lesson which he draws from WWII). One aspect – Israel’s foreign policy – then is clear: It is the ‘War of the Jungle’.

But there is another aspect; one perhaps more troubling: These norms and ethical principles that Israel openly seeks to tear apart are, in the last resort, American proclaimed norms and values. Strikingly, the U.S. has abandoned its traditional ethos when it comes to Israel. And rather than criticise or seek to limit Israel’s use of such norm-busting military actions, the Trump Administration emulates them – sneak attacks under the guise of talking peace, de-capitation attempts, and striking with missiles at unknown vessels off Venezuela, vaporising the crew.

The U.S. is doing this openly – thumbing its nose, like Israel, at international law and conventions.

It does appear that key components of the U.S. Establishment increasingly favour the military strategies of Israel and even are shifting from the moral ethos of a ‘Just War’, shall we say, to one closer to the Hebraic ethos of ‘Amalek’. It amounts to updating western moral ‘software’ with the alternative ‘justice’ of absolute war.

Does the Israel state have a future? Israel is now carrying out a second Nakba in Gaza and the West Bank, with Jewish society remaining trapped in repression and denial – just as it was back in 1948. Israeli Historian, Ilan Pappe wrote in 2006 in his seminal work on the 1948 Nakba the fundamental importance of “retrieving [the events of 1948] from oblivion”:

Once the decision was taken [on 10 March 1948], it took six months to complete the mission. When it was over, more than half of Palestine’s native population, close to 800,000 people, had been uprooted, 531 villages … destroyed, and eleven urban neighbourhoods emptied of their inhabitants. The plan … and above all its systematic implementation in the following months, was a clear-cut case of an ethnic cleansing operation, regarded under international law today as a crime against humanity …

The story of 1948 is not complicated … It is the simple but horrific story of the ethnic cleansing of Palestine, a crime against humanity that Israel has wanted to deny and cause the world to forget. Retrieving it from oblivion is incumbent upon us, not just as a greatly overdue act of historiographical reconstruction or professional duty; it is … a moral decision, the very first step we must take if we ever want reconciliation to have a chance.

I wrote recently how Israeli film-maker Neta Shoshani’s controversial documentary about the 1948 Nakba showed Israeli ethical and legal boundaries to have been erased in a bout of bloodletting and rape. The absolute loss of ethos (there was no accounting or justice), Shoshani says, imperilled the then-legitimacy of the State founding project. Repeated a second time – the current war – she warns, “could be the one That Ends Israel”.

Shoshani’s comments hint at the trauma felt by secular liberal Jews at witnessing the norms and lifestyle of their largely secular-liberal society upended by the swivel towards the militaristic and eschatological objectives of the Israeli Right. Finance Minister Smotrich declared recently that the Jewish people are experiencing “the process of redemption and the return of the divine presence to Zion – as they engage in the ‘conquest of the land’”.

Many European Jews did arrive in the new Israeli state to find safety and protection, however, they also came to participate in the Zionist project in Palestine.

For now, Netanyahu states he has Trump’s “100%” support and “unlimited credit” for the maelstrom unleashed across the region. As Ben Caspit writes, quoting a senior Israeli diplomat:

“The fact that Rubio landed here just days after the [Doha] attack, and voiced almost no criticism — in fact, the opposite — gives a tailwind to Israel’s operation in Gaza … Israel has not received such a generous and long line of credit from any American administration”.

And Trump seems to be moving away from the ‘global peacemaker’ moniker to concentrate more narrowly on demonstrating American ‘exceptional greatness’ – through tariffs, sanctions or military operations – thus demonstrating a dominating, if not Great, America.

Yet the problems are all too apparent: In previous years, Israel had been largely relegated to the sidelines at the U.S. National Conservatism Conference. This time around, the Jewish state and its wars couldn’t be avoided. The latest Conservatism conference slid into ‘civil war’ between the neo-con ‘realists’ supporting Israel, and those asking: “Why are these our wars? Why are Israel’s endless problems America’s liabilities? Why should we accept [Israel as being part of] ‘America First’?”, as the editor of The American Conservative exploded: “We f***ing shouldn’t!”

The tension within the Republican Party is obvious: MAGA supporters wish to support Trump, but the big Jewish donors and commentators, such as pro-Israel hawk Max Abrahms, mocked Tucker Carlson-loving “MAGA isolationists” at the conference, who had gone “insane” in their push to disengage from the Middle East.

Trump warned Netanyahu that the genocide in Gaza is causing Israel to bleed support among Republicans, including especially among younger people. Nonetheless, Trump has not modified his unwavering support for Israel (for whatever reason), but he has taken notice of the ‘mood vibe’ amongst his base.

If Trump has indeed noticed the change, Netanyahu doesn’t care. As Amir Tibon in Haaretz reports:

“If Trump thinks his comments on Israel’s loss of ‘control over Congress’ will be a wake-up call for Netanyahu, he’s mistaken. Israelis didn’t need Trump to know that their country is losing the battle over global public opinion”.

“Netanyahu and Ron Dermer … are at peace with Israel’s loss of international support, heightened isolation, the threats of sanctions against it, and arrest warrants for its leaders (including Netanyahu himself). The two don’t seem to care, and the reason, ironically, is the very man sounding the alarm: Donald Trump”.

“From Netanyahu’s point of view, as long as he’s got Trump’s backing – none of it matters”.

Well, Israel’s wars have lost a generation of young American conservatives – and they’re not coming back. Whatever the circumstances to the killing of Charlie Kirk, his death has let loose the genie of ‘Israeli First’ dominance in Republican politics to escape from the bottle.

When Netanyahu does peer out, he will find that Israel has lost America (and the rest of the world, too).

September 24, 2025 Posted by | Israel, politics international | Leave a comment

Three dead after Ukraine bombs Crimea wellness resort – governor

21 Sept 25, https://www.rt.com/russia/625020-15-injured-crimea-ukraine-attack/

Sixteen people have also been injured in the strike, the Russian Defense Ministry has said.

At least three people were killed and sixteen injured by a Ukrainian drone strike on a wellness complex in Crimea on Sunday, the Russian Defense Ministry has said. A school building was also damaged, according to Crimean regional head Sergey Aksyonov.

The Russian Defense Ministry ministry stated that the attack targeted a “resort area of the Republic of Crimea, where there are no military facilities.”

Aksyonov said emergency services were working at the site and urged residents to “remain calm and trust only official information.”

The drone strike led to a fire at a school in the town of Foros, where the sanatorium is located, according to the regional arm of the Russian emergencies ministry. The 80 square meter fire has now been extinguished, it said.

In the peninsula’s largest city, Sevastopol, regional head Mikhail Razvozhaev reported that the Russian Black Sea fleet and air defenses are defending against a Ukrainian drone attack near the city.

“3 drones have been shot down so far,” he said on Telegram on Sunday.

Ukraine has been increasingly turning to long-range drone attacks for strikes inside Russia in recent months as its forces have been beaten back on the battlefield.

The attacks have targeted Russian energy and civilian infrastructure, killing and injuring dozens of civilians. Moscow has long accused Kiev of deliberately going after Russian civilians and often targeting children.

September 24, 2025 Posted by | Russia, Ukraine, weapons and war | Leave a comment