Europeans may as well start learning Russian if Ukraine does not get more support, Kaja Kallas warns – Europe live | Ukraine

Published: 2025-06-18 14:34:57 | Views: 17


'If we don't help Ukraine further, we should start learning Russian,' Kallas echoes Rutte's warning

EU’s Kallas continues:

On Ukraine, the European Union is doing its part here too, not least because Ukraine is Europe’s first line of defence. We know that Russia responds to strength and nothing else.

She highlights the importance of the 18th sanction package proposed by the EU, saying that “every sanction weakens Russia’s ability to fight this war.”

But she ends on a warning again:

We have to do more for Ukraine, for our own security too.

To quote my friend Nato secretary general Mark Rutte: if we don’t help Ukraine further, we should all start learning Russian.

The stronger Ukraine is on the battlefield today, the stronger they will be around the negotiation table when Russia finally is ready to talk.

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As anti-tourism protests grow in Europe, we need a rethink – but that’s no reason to stop travelling

As you may be planning your holidays now, here is a thoughtful piece on how people travelling to certain parts of Europe this summer may consider the strength of emotions felt by local residents there, increasingly frustrated by overtourism.

Tourists sit in a restaurant as people protest against overtourism in the Balearic island of Mallorca, Spain. Photograph: Joan Mateu Parra/AP

Leah Pattem argues that visitors could be more sensitive, while the authorities should seek sustainable solutions for residents and tourists – but just staying at home is no answer.

After coordinated protests across Europe last weekend, it’s easy for the ethically conscious tourist to feel uncertain. Across southern Europe – and particularly in Spain, Italy and Portugal – there are headlines blaming visitors for everything from overcrowding to housing shortages. In gentrifying neighbourhoods, slogans such as “Tourists go home” have appeared on walls and windows, with some angry residents grabbing headlines by squirting water pistols at tourists.

Does that mean a golden age of tourism is over? No. Does the complicated relationship between those who want to visit the world’s most interesting places and those who live in them need a reset? Probably.

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