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The political controversy regarding a government school located in Parmat area of Kanpur is deepening. The school building has become very old and dilapidated, due to which regional Samajwadi Party MLA Amitabh Bajpai had decided to demolish the school and rebuild it. For this, the foundation stone laying program was fixed on May 15. However, right in front of this school is the house of BJP leader Suresh Awasthi.
It is being told that BJP leader Suresh Awasthi had proposed to build a room in the school from the quota of MP Ramesh Awasthi, the foundation stone of which was to be laid by MP Ramesh Awasthi on May 14. But seeing the growing controversy, the MP distanced himself from the foundation stone laying program and refused to attend the program. At the same time, the question of the reputation of BJP leader Suresh Awasthi is also linked behind this entire controversy, because Samajwadi Party MLA Amitabh Bajpai wants to lay the foundation stone in front of his house, which is not acceptable to him.
In view of this, there is a tense situation in the area. Samajwadi Party MLA Amitabh Bajpai is going to lay the foundation stone for the reconstruction of the school on May 15 at 11 am, but before that, heavy police force has been deployed at his Kakadev residence. The police have converted the entire area into a cantonment to prevent the MLA from reaching the foundation stone laying site.
On this whole issue, MLA Amitabh Bajpai says that he will go to lay the foundation stone under any circumstances. He said that if the police stops him from going to the spot, he will lay the foundation stone through virtual medium. SP MLA Amitabh Bajpai, while submitting a memorandum to the Governor, said that an MLA was stopped from working in his own constituency and the havan-puja program organized by him was also not allowed to take place. MLA Amitabh organized the foundation stone laying ceremony at his own house and has vowed that until the school work is done, he will neither wear clothes on top nor slippers on bottom.
Islamabad, Pakistan – A two-day meeting of BRICS foreign ministers in New Delhi ended on Friday without a common position on the war on Iran, with the bloc’s outcome document acknowledging only that “differing views” remained among members.
It was the second consecutive BRICS gathering in India to fail to produce a consensus on the conflict involving the United States and Israel.
The meeting opened on Thursday at Bharat Mandapam in New Delhi under the chairship of Indian External Affairs Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar. It marked the first major ministerial engagement under India’s 2026 BRICS presidency.
The 10-member grouping of emerging economies coordinates on economic and security issues while seeking a greater voice for the Global South in institutions long dominated by Western powers. A leaders’ summit is scheduled for September in India.
The meeting unfolded against the backdrop of the US-Israel war on Iran, now in its 77th day.
The latest conflict began on February 28 with US and Israeli strikes on Iranian military sites, nuclear facilities and infrastructure. Since then, Iran closed the Strait of Hormuz to commercial shipping, global energy prices have surged and diplomatic efforts, including Pakistan-mediated talks in Islamabad last month, have stalled. The US also imposed a naval blockade on Iranian ports on April 13.
The BRICS meeting coincided with US President Donald Trump’s state visit to China, the first by an American president to Beijing in nearly a decade. Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi was in Beijing, so China was represented at the BRICS meet instead by its ambassador to India, Xu Feihong.
Alongside Araghchi, the meeting was attended by Russia’s Sergey Lavrov, Brazil’s Mauro Vieira, South Africa’s Ronald Lamola, and the foreign ministers of Indonesia, Egypt and Ethiopia.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi met the visiting ministers on the sidelines before departing for Abu Dhabi.
The United Arab Emirates sent Khalifa bin Shaheen Al Marar, its minister of state for foreign affairs, rather than its foreign minister.
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi had initially avoided naming the UAE in his formal address once the summit began. Later, he said that it was not an act of restraint but “for the sake of maintaining unity”, according to Iranian state media.
Araghchi urged BRICS members to explicitly condemn what he described as US and Israeli “violations of international law” and to “take concrete action to halt warmongering and bring an end to the impunity of those who violate the UN Charter”.
“We believe that BRICS can, and must, become one of the principal pillars in shaping a more just, balanced and humane global order, an order in which might can never be right,” he said.
The UAE’s representative, Al Marar, used his own statement to single out Iran in his national statement and called for condemnation of Iranian actions, according to media reports.
The exchange exposed the deepest fault line within the expanded bloc, which now includes both Iran and the UAE as full members despite the two standing on opposite sides of an active conflict.
After all member states had spoken, Araghchi requested the floor again.
“The UAE was directly involved in the aggression against my country,” he told the gathering, according to the Iranian state media. “When the attacks started, they didn’t even issue a condemnation.”
He accused the UAE of allowing the US to use Emirati territory to launch attacks on Iran and said Emirati aircraft had directly participated in strikes.
“Yesterday it was revealed that UAE fighter jets participated in attacks against us and even took direct action against us. Therefore, the UAE is an active partner in this aggression,” he said, according to Iran’s IRNA news agency.
Araghchi also criticised Abu Dhabi for not condemning an attack on a school in Minab city on the first day of the conflict, in which Iran says about 170 students were killed.
Iran, he argued, had not attacked the UAE itself, but only US military bases located on Emirati territory.
The UAE rejected that characterisation. Abu Dhabi says Iranian strikes targeted energy infrastructure and civilian facilities inside the country, and that it has intercepted more than 2,800 Iranian drones and missiles since February 28.
Al Marar, for his part, reiterated the UAE’s demand for condemnation of Iranian attacks on energy infrastructure and other facilities.

India’s Jaishankar, navigating the dispute as chair, called for “safe and unimpeded maritime flows through international waterways, including the Strait of Hormuz and Red Sea”, adding that unilateral sanctions “cannot substitute dialogue, nor can pressure replace diplomacy”.
He also reminded members that “it is essential for the smooth advancement of BRICS that later members fully appreciate and subscribe to the BRICS’ consensus on various important issues”.
On the sidelines, Jaishankar held a bilateral meeting with Araghchi and later posted on X that they had a “detailed” discussion on regional developments and bilateral ties.
This was not the first BRICS meeting in India to end without consensus over the Iran war.
On April 24, India hosted a BRICS deputy foreign ministers’ and special envoys’ meeting on the Middle East, also in New Delhi. That gathering ended without a joint statement, with India issuing only a chair’s summary.
Iran had pushed for language recognising that the US and Israel initiated the conflict, while the UAE demanded wording condemning Iranian strikes on Gulf states.
Since February 28, BRICS has not issued a single joint statement on the war, under India’s chairship.
The outcome document issued at the close of the meetings this week reflected the impasse.
On the conflict in the Middle East, it noted only that “there were differing views among some members” and listed a set of general principles – the need for dialogue and diplomacy, respect for sovereignty, unimpeded maritime flows and the protection of civilian lives – without naming any party or assigning responsibility.
Iran’s demand that the bloc condemn US and Israeli aggression went unmet. The UAE’s push for language condemning Iranian strikes went equally unmet.
Addressing a media briefing at the Iranian embassy in New Delhi on Friday, Araghchi appeared to blame the UAE — a BRICS member state that has “its own special relationship with Israel” — for there being no consensus document at the end of the meeting.
“The only reason they stopped the final statement was their support for Israel and the United States in their aggression against Iran, which is very, very unfortunate,” said Araghchi.
The Iranian diplomat went on to say that the country in question cannot be protected by the US and Israel, and that US military installations that were meant to provide it security had become a source of insecurity. “That was proved during this war,” said Araghchi.
The document did condemn “the imposition of unilateral coercive measures that are contrary to international law”, language widely understood as a reference to US sanctions on Iran, though Washington was not named.
On other agenda items, the meeting was more productive. Member states reached agreement on more than 60 issues, including energy cooperation, trade, digital infrastructure, climate action and multilateral reform.
For Jauhar Saleem, a former Pakistani diplomat, the outcome was unsurprising.
“BRICS is an organisation with some very important countries, but it remains a disparate group with very different foreign interests, perspectives and agendas,” he told Al Jazeera.
On the Iran war specifically, he said consensus was never realistic.
“There was no possibility of a joint approach to begin with, and negotiations on a joint statement quite expectedly turned out to be a damp squib,” he said.
Saleem argued that the episode reflected a broader shift in global diplomacy.
“Bloc politics is going to become increasingly irrelevant in this era where even the most cohesive alliances are almost breaking apart,” he said.
That dynamic, he added, plays to Pakistan’s strengths.
Islamabad has sought to position itself as a mediator between Washington and Tehran, hosting talks last month while maintaining channels with both sides.
“Pakistan’s balanced approach, focused on bilateralism, is more suited to these times where walking a diplomatic tightrope is a norm rather than a novelty,” Saleem said.
“Pakistan’s remarkable diplomacy goes to the trust it has created by taking principled positions on international issues rather than being swayed by short-term interests.”
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Artificial intelligence (AI) already shows up in your phone, your searches and plenty of apps you use every day. Now, some Silicon Valley investors are betting the machines behind those AI answers could one day run at sea.
A company called Panthalassa has raised $140 million in new funding to develop and deploy autonomous, floating AI computing nodes powered by ocean waves. The Series B round brings Panthalassa’s total funding to $210 million, a sign that investors are taking this ocean-based AI idea seriously. The round was led by Peter Thiel, the Palantir co-founder, and the company says the money will help complete a pilot manufacturing facility near Portland, Oregon. Panthalassa also plans to deploy its Ocean-3 pilot node series in the northern Pacific Ocean later in 2026.
Instead of building another giant AI data center on land, Panthalassa wants to place computing power out at sea. Ocean waves would generate electricity. Seawater would help with cooling. Onboard computing systems would process AI prompts and send the results back to land through low-Earth-orbit satellites.
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LOWERING YOUR ELECTRIC BILL COULD BE FLOATING IN THE OCEAN
META BUILDS WORLD’S LARGEST AI SUPERCLUSTERS FOR THE FUTURE

Panthalassa’s Ocean-2 prototype rides in open water during testing, giving a real-world look at the kind of floating wave-energy system behind the company’s ocean AI plan. (Panthalassa)
Panthalassa’s floating nodes are designed to capture wave motion and turn it into electricity. The company says it has spent a decade developing the technology behind its power generation, onboard computing and autonomous ocean operations. Its earlier Ocean-1, Ocean-2 and Wavehopper prototypes were tested in 2021 and 2024. Think of each node like a floating power station with AI hardware inside. Waves move the system. That motion helps drive a generator. The power then feeds the onboard chips.
WHY AI IS CAUSING SUMMER ELECTRICITY BILLS TO SOAR
The company’s plan is to use those chips for AI inference. That is the part of AI where a model responds to your prompt after it has already been trained. In simple terms, it is what happens when you ask a chatbot a question and get an answer back. That makes the ocean plan a little easier to understand. Training massive AI models requires huge data movement and tight coordination. Answering prompts may be more realistic for a floating node, at least in some situations.
AI data centers need huge amounts of electricity. They also need space, cooling systems and local support from communities that may not want a massive facility nearby. Those problems have pushed companies to look for unusual answers. Ocean-based computing is one of them.
Panthalassa says its nodes would operate far from shore in wave-rich parts of the ocean. The goal is to use that wave energy directly onboard instead of sending the power back to land. “We’ve built a technology platform that operates in the planet’s most energy-dense wave regions, far from shore, and turns that resource into reliable clean power,” said Garth Sheldon-Coulson, Panthalassa’s co-founder and CEO.
A SUPERCOMPUTER CHIP GOING TO SPACE COULD CHANGE LIFE ON EARTH
The ocean also offers cold surrounding water. That could help cool the chips onboard. Cooling is a major issue because data centers produce a lot of heat. Panthalassa is taking a different path from traditional land-based data centers. Instead of pulling more power from the grid, it wants floating nodes that generate their own electricity from waves.
A SUPERCOMPUTER CHIP GOING TO SPACE COULD CHANGE LIFE ON EARTH

The Ocean-2 prototype sits inside a coastal facility, showing the size and shape of Panthalassa’s floating node before deployment at sea. (Panthalassa)
The ocean may help with power and cooling, but it creates another problem: connection. Traditional data centers rely on high-capacity fiber-optic connections because they need to move huge amounts of data fast. A floating node far out at sea may depend on low-Earth-orbit satellite links. That can work for some AI responses, but it may be slower and more limited than fiber.
SOLAR DEVICE TRANSFORMS USED TIRES TO HELP PURIFY WATER SO THAT IT’S DRINKABLE
The challenge grows when multiple nodes need to work together. AI systems often depend on fast communication between chips, servers and storage. If those parts are floating in the ocean and talking by satellite, coordination gets harder. That means AI data centers at sea may not replace land-based data centers anytime soon. They may be better suited for certain AI tasks where the model can live onboard, and the response does not require constant back-and-forth with other machines.
There is another practical question: What happens when something breaks? A land-based data center can send in technicians. A floating AI node in rough seas may need a ship, special equipment and the right weather window. That adds cost and delay.
Panthalassa says it is developing autonomous systems meant for harsh ocean conditions. Its press release says Ocean-3 testing is meant to demonstrate AI inference and refine manufacturing before commercial deployments in 2027. Still, the ocean is brutal. Saltwater eats away at equipment. Storms can turn a routine repair into a major operation. Constant motion also puts stress on the hardware. For this plan to work, Panthalassa will have to show that each node can keep running for years in harsh ocean conditions without frequent human repairs.
WHY AI IS CAUSING SUMMER ELECTRICITY BILLS TO SOAR

Panthalassa’s Ocean-2 prototype is transported by barge, a reminder that building AI infrastructure at sea also means solving major deployment and maintenance challenges. (Panthalassa)
Ocean data centers are not new. Microsoft experimented with underwater data center servers through Project Natick, including tests in 2015 and 2018. Those tests showed that sealed underwater servers could run reliably while using seawater for cooling, with Microsoft reporting a lower failure rate than comparable land-based systems. Microsoft later ended the project.
Chinese companies have also reportedly pushed ahead with underwater data center projects near Hainan and Shanghai. Keppel has explored floating data center designs in Singapore, where land constraints make the concept especially attractive. Panthalassa’s plan goes in a different direction. It combines wave power with onboard AI chips and satellite-based results. It also depends on floating nodes that would need to operate far from the kind of support a normal data center gets. That is why the idea is getting attention. It is also why skepticism is fair.
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For now, this will not change how your phone or computer works. You will not suddenly see a “powered by ocean waves” label on your favorite AI app. But the bigger picture affects everyone. AI needs an incredible amount of electricity. As more companies add AI tools to their products, they need more places to run those systems. That pressure can affect energy grids, water use, local battles over new data centers and even your utility bills over time.
Panthalassa argues its approach could reduce the need for new data centers and power plants on land. That could ease pressure on local communities and the grid, but the company still has to prove the system can work reliably at sea. If ocean-based AI moves beyond testing, it could also raise fresh questions about marine maintenance, environmental oversight and who controls computing infrastructure in international waters.
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Everyone is using AI on their phones and computers these days, but the heavy lifting often happens in huge data centers behind the scenes. That is why Panthalassa’s ocean plan is getting attention. The company wants to use waves for power and seawater for cooling. The hard part is proving that floating AI nodes can survive rough seas, limited satellite links and complicated maintenance. If Panthalassa can pull it off, ocean-based AI could become part of the tech we use every day. If it cannot, it may show just how difficult it is to keep feeding AI’s growing demand for power.
If this kind of ocean-powered AI takes off, would you worry about what these floating nodes could mean for our oceans? Let us know by writing to us at Cyberguy.com
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This year has not brought good for the farmers of Kashmir, especially this year is going to prove bad for the apple farmers. First Season The increase in the cost of production due to the impact of Corona and now the high prices of petrol and diesel has increased the problems of the farmers. In the month of May, apple orchards suffered 75-90 percent damage due to heavy hailstorm in many areas of North, South and Central Kashmir. There has been considerable damage to apple orchards in Baramulla, Kulgam, Shopian and Anantnag districts.
In fact, the increase in the prices of petrol and diesel due to the Iran war has increased the problems of the farmers. Paddy cultivation is to start in the next few days in Kashmir, but the medicinal season has already started in apple orchards. Everywhere people are seen working with small tractors running on diesel and sprayers running on petrol.
Apart from this, high prices of petrol and diesel have reduced the profits of farmers. According to farmer Abdul Hameed of Saheb, Anantnag, ‘Diesel-petrol is used for every work, even diesel is sprayed to protect trees from diseases.
Farmer Abdul Hameed has also said that “Horticulture is already in trouble for the last several years. The rates are getting low. On one hand the prices of medicines are high and on the other hand the prices of diesel are now high. The government should withdraw this change.” The farmer also said that “For the new hybrid variety of apple orchards, the expenses have increased further…because there is a lot of use of drip irrigation and water pumps in them, the expenses of which have increased.”
According to Sahil, a young and small farmer, where his orchard used to cost Rs 20,000 worth of diesel in a year, now it will cost him Rs 30,000 because everything in his orchard is mechanized. The farmer told that the apples are not fully ripe yet and the farmers are worried about the crop being ready and not getting good prices in the market. The farmer said that if the expenses increase and the prices remain the same then he will be called a farmer.
Ruckus over sale of liquor in Jammu and Kashmir, BJP’s protest against Omar government

Microsoft is introducing a new capability that will allow it to remotely roll back problematic Windows drivers delivered through Windows Update.
Called Cloud-Initiated Driver Recovery, the new feature will remove the need for hardware partners or end users to manually fix driver issues once drivers have been distributed to devices. The recovery process is entirely managed by Microsoft, with no partner-side actions required, and will only be initiated for Windows drivers rejected due to quality issues during shiproom evaluation.
Under the current system, if a driver distributed through Windows Update has quality issues, the hardware partner must submit a replacement, or users must manually uninstall the faulty driver, which can leave devices using subpar drivers for a long time.
With Cloud-Initiated Driver Recovery, Microsoft can directly trigger a rollback to a previous, stable driver version (or the next best version available on Windows Update) without requiring new software or actions from hardware partners.
“Today, when a driver published through Windows Update is identified after distribution to have quality issues, the remediation path relies on the hardware partner to submit an updated driver — or on end users to manually uninstall the problematic driver themselves. This creates a gap where devices may remain on a low-quality driver for an extended period,” Microsoft said.
“With Cloud-Initiated Driver Recovery, Microsoft can now trigger a recovery action directly from the Hardware Dev Center (HDC) Driver Shiproom, rolling back a problematic driver to the previously known-good version via the Windows Update pipeline. This is handled through coordinated updates to the PnP driver stack and the driver flighting and publishing services.”
The company also noted that:
The new Windows Update feature is being tested between May and August and will begin rolling back drivers rejected during Flighting or Gradual Rollout starting September 2026.
Last week, at WinHEC 2026 (the Windows Hardware Engineering Conference) in Taipei, Microsoft unveiled a Driver Quality Initiative (DQI) to raise driver quality, reliability, and security across the Windows ecosystem, in coordination with OEM, silicon, and hardware partners.
“In the months ahead, we will keep investing in the fundamentals that matter most to customers: reliability, security, performance, compatibility and quality,” Microsoft said. “We’ll also keep collaborating with OEMs, silicon partners, IHVs, ODMs and the broader hardware ecosystem through the Windows Resiliency Initiative, the new Driver Quality Initiative and the work we do together every day.”
In June 2025, Microsoft also announced plans to periodically remove legacy drivers from the Windows Update catalog to mitigate compatibility issues and security risks.
Automated pentesting tools deliver real value, but they were built to answer one question: can an attacker move through the network? They were not built to test whether your controls block threats, your detection rules fire, or your cloud configs hold.
This guide covers the 6 surfaces you actually need to validate.
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For decades, if Europe faced a major war, the hidden assumption was not just that America would show up.
It was that America would organize the fight.
The United States would provide the top commanders, the logistics, the intelligence, the airpower, the nuclear umbrella, the reinforcement routes, the satellites, the refueling aircraft and the command networks that made NATO work when things got real. European allies contributed forces and geography, but the American machine held the alliance together.
That is changing.
TRUMP EFFECT FORCES GERMANY TO REPRIORITIZE DEFENSE AS NATION PLAYS CATCH-UP IN MILITARY SPENDING
Trump’s NATO reset is no longer just a demand that Europe spend more money. It is becoming a change in who plans the fight, who moves the forces, who covers the flanks, and who supplies the weapons Europe would need if the next crisis arrives while Washington is focused elsewhere.
I previously argued in this space that the 2026 National Defense Strategy put the new bargain in writing: Europe remains allied with the United States, but it no longer gets to be the first claim on American military capacity. Iran made that prioritization visible faster than Europe expected.
Now the military machinery is moving.
The most important evidence is NATO’s command map. In February 2026, mere days after the launch of the National Defense strategy, NATO allies agreed to redistribute senior command roles so that for the first time, not Americans but Europeans moved into leadership of all three major Joint Force Commands: Norfolk, Naples and Brunssum. The United Kingdom is slated for Norfolk, Italy for Naples and Germany and Poland for Brunssum.

NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte holds a press conference ahead of NATO Defense Ministers’ Meeting at NATO Headquarters in Brussels, Belgium on February 11, 2026. (Dursun Aydemir/Anadolu via Getty Images)
For context, a Joint Force Command is the war-planning layer between political decisions and battlefield execution. If Russia pressures the Baltics, if the Mediterranean erupts, or if reinforcements have to cross the Atlantic, these headquarters matter because they organize the campaign. They decide how the theater is run: where forces go, what gets reinforced first, and how land, air, sea, cyber and logistics are coordinated in a crisis.
Moving Europeans into all three is therefore not a staffing shuffle. It is Europe being moved into responsibility for the actual conduct of regional war.
‘PUTIN IS PUSHING THE LIMITS’: EASTERN ALLIES WARN TRUMP NOT TO PULL US TROOPS
Brunssum is the Eastern Flank command closest to Russia. In practical terms, that means Poland, the Baltics, the Suwałki Gap and any serious Russia contingency. Germany and Poland moving into leadership there matters because Poland is no longer only the frontline country warning Western Europe about Moscow, spending heavily on tanks, and serving as Ukraine’s logistics hub. It is being pulled into NATO’s operational core.

President Donald Trump, left, speaks to NATO General Secretary Mark Rutte during a North Atlantic Council plenary meeting during the the NATO summit in The Hague, Netherlands, on June 25, 2025. (AP Photo Kin Cheung, Pool)
Naples is the Southern Flank command closest to the Gulf region and Africa. That means the Mediterranean, the Balkans, North Africa, migration pressure, Red Sea disruption, energy routes and Middle East spillover. Italy’s elevation matters because Iran showed that the southern theater is no longer secondary. A Gulf crisis can hit European shipping, fuel prices, naval deployments and NATO politics almost instantly.
Norfolk is the Atlantic and High North command. It protects the reinforcement artery between North America and Europe. If American or Canadian forces have to cross the Atlantic to reinforce Europe, Norfolk matters. It also links the Arctic, the Nordics and the North Atlantic sea lanes.
EUROPEAN OFFICIALS PITCH NEW IDEA TO SHORE UP DEFENSES WITH TRUMP’S RETURN
This is a new military map of Europe.
The old political map was Paris, Berlin and Brussels. The emerging military map is Poland on the Eastern Flank, Italy in the Mediterranean, Britain on the Atlantic artery, Germany as the logistics and industrial base, and the Nordics tied into the High North and Baltic theater.
But Washington is not giving Europe the whole machine.
‘MAKE NATO GREAT AGAIN’: HEGSETH PUSHES EUROPEAN ALLIES TO STEP UP DEFENSE EFFORTS
The United States keeps SACEUR, the top NATO military command, and the commands that integrate air, land and maritime power. That means Europe is being asked to run more of the regional fight, while America keeps the pieces that decide capabilities and whether the fight can be sustained, escalated, reinforced and won.
That is exactly what a Trump NATO reset looks like in practice. Europe gets more of the commands and America keeps the system.
The force posture is starting to follow the same logic. The planned withdrawal of about 5,000 U.S. troops from Germany is not just a headcount story. The drawdown reportedly affects a brigade combat team added after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and cancels a planned long-range fires battalion with Tomahawk missiles that German officials viewed as a deterrent against Russia.
That matters. A brigade combat team is combat power. Long-range fires are what allow a force to strike deep targets, command posts, air defenses and logistics nodes before they hit NATO troops. These are exactly the kinds of capabilities Europe long assumed America would provide in a serious contingency.
Pulling them back tells Europe the new strategy is not paperwork but serious. NATO’s exercise schedule points in the same direction. The drills are not random. They show the wars NATO thinks it may have to fight.

U.S. Navy Sailors signal to an E-2D Hawkeye aircraft, attached to Airborne Command and Control Squadron 124, as it taxis on the flight deck of world’s largest aircraft carrier, USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN 78), in support of Operation Epic Fury, on February 28, 2026 at Sea. Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, was confirmed killed after the United States and Israel launched a joint attack on Iran on February 28. (U.S. Navy via Getty Images)
Exercise Steadfast Dart 26 involved more than 10,000 troops from 13 member states and tested rapid deployment and sustainment of the Allied Reaction Force in Brunssum’s area of responsibility. Translation: can NATO move forces quickly into the Eastern Flank before a Russian crisis becomes a disaster? Amber Shock 26 put roughly 3,500 troops and heavy equipment into the crucial Suwałki Gap with Russia to practice movement and logistics in one of Europe’s most dangerous corridors. Cold Response 2026 brought about 30,000 troops from 14 allies across Norway and Finland, tied to the High North problem in the Arctic theater against Russia.
NATO CHIEF SIGNALS ALLIES MAY ACT ON HORMUZ, WARNS OF ‘UNHEALTHY CODEPENDENCE’ ON US
The Strait of Hormuz was not Europe’s battlefield, but Europe was exposed. Oil, LNG, shipping insurance, industrial costs and inflation all depend on maritime security. When Washington pushed allies to help police the strait, Europe faced a real military question: could it help secure an energy artery when America was busy elsewhere?
The EU’s Operation Aspides had supported more than 640 merchant vessels in its first year, including more than 370 close-protection escorts. But it operated with only a handful of high-end European ships. When Hormuz became the crisis point, EU ministers had no appetite to extend the mission into the strait, even while acknowledging Aspides lacked enough naval assets.
That was not just political caution. It exposed the mechanics of European power: too few ships, narrow mandates, legal constraints and limited appetite for risk.
BRETT VELICOVICH: IRAN BUILT A DRONE TERROR MACHINE — AMERICA JUST HACKED IT
Iran did not create the NATO reset. It showed why the reset has urgency. Europe is now building around the gaps the old bargain allowed it to avoid.
Air and missile defense is one example. Europe is expanding initiatives such as European Sky Shield and signing contracts for systems like IRIS-T SLM. But serious air and missile defense depth could take five to ten years, and some deliveries run toward 2028 to 2030.
Drones show the same gap. Europe is launching drone and counter-drone initiatives, including cooperation with Ukraine, but there is still limited evidence of European mass production on the scale Ukraine, Russia or Iran have made central to modern war.
Ammunition is improving, but the math is brutal. Europe is trying to move from roughly 300,000 shells annually toward 2 million while supporting Ukraine and rebuilding its own stockpiles. Military power is not a press release. It is output per month.
The most revealing dependency may be above the battlefield. Europe can get more command responsibility, but it still relies heavily on the American layer that makes command effective. That is why spending alone is not the story.
Europe can spend more and still fail if the money buys fragmented national arsenals instead of one usable military machine. Collaborative procurement was only 18 percent of EU defense investment in 2022, far below the 35 percent benchmark. After Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, urgent buying flowed heavily to non-European suppliers.
In plain terms, Europe has to stop building 27 separate shopping carts and start building a war machine.
That is the next phase of Trump’s NATO reset. He got Europe to spend. Now Europe has to convert spending into hard power: air defense, drones, shells, ships, logistics, space assets and industrial surge.
The important point though is that what Trump foreshadowed is now happening.
The Pentagon formalized it. NATO’s command map is changing. The old NATO bargain made America the automatic first responder in Europe. The new bargain gives Europe more command responsibility and more of the conventional burden, while America keeps the strategic levers.
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That is Trump’s NATO reset becoming military reality.
This article is a Fox News Digital exclusive from the Tanvi Ratna’s Substack series on different theaters President Trump is realigning with the Iran War.
A sensational case has come to light from Shravasti district of Uttar Pradesh. A woman resident of Malhipur police station area has alleged that a young man named Irfan first lured her into love trap, then raped her by giving her intoxicants and started blackmailing her by making obscene videos. The victim alleges that now she is being pressurized to convert to religion and go with the accused.
The matter is being reported from Malhipur intersection of Malhipur police station area. Priyanka Gupta, wife of Arjun Gupta, who runs a juice and lassi shop here, has alleged that a young man named Irfan took advantage of her loneliness and helplessness. According to the allegation, when her husband was at work, the accused used to reach home and kept exploiting her for months by giving her intoxicants. The victim claims that the accused had also made an obscene video of her.
The woman has alleged that a woman named Rubina was also supporting the accused in this entire matter. According to the victim, when she became pregnant, both of them together forced her to have an abortion by giving her drugs.
The victim says that now the accused is continuously pressurizing her to convert to religion. It is alleged that if the accused protests, he is threatening to make obscene photos and videos viral on social media.
The victim and her husband have alleged that the case was complained to Malhipur police station, but the hearing was not held there. After this, both of them met Shravasti Superintendent of Police Rahul Bhati and demanded action.
The victim’s husband Arjun Gupta alleges that the accused Irfan lured his wife and exploited her for a long time by blackmailing her. He alleged that abortion was also done forcibly and now the family is being given death threats.
The victim Priyanka Gupta alleged that the accused first pretended to be in love, then threatened her by making a video and started pressurizing her for religious conversion. The woman has demanded strict action and justice from the police against the accused.
At present, police officials are said to be investigating the matter.
In Kaushambi district of Uttar Pradesh, the hobby of making social media reels cost the lives of four youths. Five youths were riding on the same bike and making a reel. Meanwhile, his bike went out of control and collided with a tractor-trolley coming from the front. In the accident, four youths including uncle and nephew died tragically on the spot, while one youth was seriously injured. The injured has been admitted to the hospital for treatment.
The incident is being reported from Karari police station area. According to the information, Dhanpara resident Rahul (14) son of Mahesh Prasad, Akash Saroj (25) son of Prithvi Saroj, Aman (22) son of Keshan, Chhotu and Vikas were going to have a feast with relatives riding on the same bike. On the way, the five youths made a reel on their mobile and saved it. It is being told that as soon as he reached near Maharajganj village, his bike collided with a tractor-trolley coming from the front.
The accident was so severe that the bike was completely damaged and the tractor-trolley also overturned. In the accident, Rahul, Akash Saroj, Aman and another youth died on the spot, while Vikas was seriously injured. After the accident the tractor driver fled from the spot.
As soon as the information about the incident was received, the police reached the spot and took possession of the four bodies and sent them for post-mortem. The injured youth has been admitted to the hospital. As soon as the news of the accident was received, the relatives of the deceased reached the spot and there was chaos in the family.
The reel made by the youth before their death is now going viral on social media. The police is also taking the video under investigation.
Superintendent of Police Satyanarayan Prajapat, who reached the spot, said that the police team had reached the spot as soon as Dial-112 received the information. The injured were immediately sent to the hospital and the bodies have been sent for post-mortem and further legal action is being taken.
SP said that the search for the absconding tractor driver is going on. Besides, the role of policemen who were negligent in checking on the route will also be investigated. He said that CCTV footage will be scrutinized and if negligence of any policeman comes to light, strict action will be taken against him.