News Archive - Page 39
Archive index page 39 of 42, with direct story links for historical crawl depth.
Why the Midterm Elections Are Already the Most Important Thing in American Politics
November 2026 is only 7 months away. Here is why this midterm cycle is unlike any in American political history and what the current polling actually predicts.
EuroBulletin24 Editorial Desk | Linked source
What European Tourists Will Actually Find When They Visit Israel This Summer
Travel advisories say 'reconsider travel.' Here is what is actually happening for the tourists who are still in Israel and the hotels, tour operators, and airlines managing an impossible situation.
EuroBulletin24 Editorial Desk | Linked source
The Drone That Flew 3,900 Kilometers and Almost Started a Wider War: Iran's Diego Garcia Strike
Iran launched a missile that traveled approximately 3,900 kilometers toward Diego Garcia. It was intercepted. Here is the full technical and strategic assessment of what this means.
EuroBulletin24 Editorial Desk | Linked source
The European Country That Just Spent More on Defence Than Healthcare for the First Time Since 1945
Poland's defence budget has overtaken its healthcare spending for the first time since World War II. Here is what this means for Polish society and what European partners should learn.
EuroBulletin24 Editorial Desk | Linked source
Why the Iran-Saudi Air Base Strike Is the Most Dangerous Single Incident of the War So Far
The wounding of 15 US service members in an Iranian strike on Saudi soil is the most dangerous single incident of the Iran war. Here is why it changes the conflict's calculus fundamentally.
EuroBulletin24 Editorial Desk | Linked source
The New Pope's Hardest Year: Leo XIV's Baptism of Fire on the World Stage
Pope Leo XIV was elected less than a year ago. He has already navigated a US-Iran war, the Holy Sepulchre crisis, and a Palm Sunday that will be studied in Catholic history. Here is how he has performed.
EuroBulletin24 Editorial Desk | Linked source
The Spanish Town That Ran Out of Money to Pay Its Energy Bills — and What the Government Did
A small Spanish municipality declared it could not pay its energy bills in March 2026. Here is what happened and what it reveals about the crisis hitting local governments across Europe.
EuroBulletin24 Editorial Desk | Linked source
The Church of the Holy Sepulchre Has Survived Roman Emperors, Crusades, and Earthquakes. Now It Survived Netanyahu
The Church of the Holy Sepulchre was nearly destroyed multiple times in its 1,700-year history. Here is how Palm Sunday 2026's access crisis fits into that extraordinary story.
EuroBulletin24 Editorial Desk | Linked source
The Psychological Price of Being a Ukrainian Refugee in Europe in Year Four
Ukrainian refugees in Europe are approaching four years of displacement. Here is what longitudinal research shows about the psychological toll of prolonged temporary status.
EuroBulletin24 Editorial Desk | Linked source
What No One Is Saying About the Real Winners of Europe's Energy Crisis
While European households pay record energy bills, specific countries and companies are making extraordinary profits from the crisis. Here is who they are and why it's politically explosive.
EuroBulletin24 Editorial Desk | Linked source
The Iranian Woman Who Smuggled Drone Footage Out to the World — and What Happened to Her
A young Iranian woman used encrypted apps to share footage of strikes on factories with diaspora journalists. Here is her story and the risk she took to document history.
EuroBulletin24 Editorial Desk | Linked source
How European Disinformation Agencies Are Failing Against AI-Generated Content
EU disinformation monitoring agencies are struggling to keep pace with AI-generated influence operations. Here is the specific technology gap that's making European fact-checkers obsolete.
EuroBulletin24 Editorial Desk | Linked source
Inside the Houthi Naval Force That Has Changed Global Shipping Forever
The Houthis have conducted over 350 attacks on shipping in 16 months. Here is a detailed analysis of their actual military capability and why it is harder to defeat than it appears.
EuroBulletin24 Editorial Desk | Linked source
The Housing Question Europe Still Can't Answer: Eurobarometer Shows 68% Dissatisfied
New Eurobarometer data shows only 32% of EU citizens are satisfied with affordable housing access. Here is the full picture of what Europeans think about their housing situation and what they want done.
EuroBulletin24 Editorial Desk | Linked source
Fasting, Bombs, and Holy Week: How Christians in the Middle East Are Living Through Easter 2026
For Christians across the Middle East, Holy Week 2026 is happening in the middle of a war that has destroyed churches, restricted access to holy sites, and displaced millions. Here is how communities are observing.
EuroBulletin24 Editorial Desk | Linked source
Why Every Tech Company Is Suddenly Claiming to Be a Defence Company
From drone makers to AI firms to satellite companies, European tech startups are pivoting to defence contracts. Here is the money behind the transformation and the ethical debate it's generating.
EuroBulletin24 Editorial Desk | Linked source
The Amazon Is Burning Again — and the EU-Mercosur Deal Is About to Make It Worse
Early dry season fires are already appearing in the Amazon as the EU-Mercosur trade deal enters force. Environmental groups say the deal will accelerate what they call the 'chain saw clause.'
EuroBulletin24 Editorial Desk | Linked source
The Czech Republic's Quiet Defense Revolution Nobody Is Writing About
The Czech Republic has become one of Europe's most important defence manufacturing hubs in the past two years. Here is how a country that barely registered in NATO defence discussions has transformed itself.
EuroBulletin24 Editorial Desk | Linked source
The Gambling Industry's Holy Grail: Why Sports Betting Is Eating European Football
Gambling companies now sponsor more European football clubs than any other sector. Here is the money behind the relationship, the regulation trying to limit it, and the public health argument for change.
EuroBulletin24 Editorial Desk | Linked source
Why the Scalise DHS Vote Is Showing Republicans Can't Govern Even When They Control Everything
Steve Scalise called for new Senate leadership after a DHS bill failed to pass. Here is what this reveals about the structural problems Republicans face when governing.
EuroBulletin24 Editorial Desk | Linked source
Houthi Drones Over the Red Sea: The New Threat That's Costing Shipping Companies Billions
Houthi drone and missile attacks on Red Sea shipping have now been going on for 16 months. Here is the cumulative economic cost and why EUNAVFOR ASPIDES hasn't stopped them.
EuroBulletin24 Editorial Desk | Linked source
The Economic Model That Could Break Europe: Why Airbnb's Expansion Is Destroying European City Housing
New data across six European capitals shows Airbnb has removed more housing from the long-term rental market than any single EU policy has restored. Here is the scale of the problem.
EuroBulletin24 Editorial Desk | Linked source
The Real Story Behind How Italy's Judiciary Referendum Just Failed — and What Meloni Got Wrong
Italy's judiciary reform referendum failed to reach quorum in March 2026. Here is what Meloni's government was trying to achieve, why it failed, and what comes next.
EuroBulletin24 Editorial Desk | Linked source
Why Republicans in Congress Are Starting to Ask Questions About the Iran War They Voted to Not Stop
Some Congressional Republicans are beginning to raise questions about the Iran war's legal authorization and duration. Here is why this matters and what it signals.
EuroBulletin24 Editorial Desk | Linked source