NATO countries on the Baltic Sea will look to boost security when they meet in Helsinki on Tuesday, following the suspected sabotage of undersea cables widely blamed on Russia.
TALLINN, Estonia (AP) — An imprisoned opposition activist in ... authorities haven’t released any information about his condition and barred his lawyer from visits. The European Parliament has urged authorities to release him and other political ...
An emerging consensus among U.S. and European security services holds that accidents were the cause of damage to Baltic seabed energy and communications lines.
With Donald Trump’s return to the Oval Office, Europe finds itself under renewed pressure to increase its defense spending. NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte recently addressed the European Parliament,
The move marks yet another step in the systematic military encircling of Russia by the US-led military alliance, which continues to back the far-right Ukrainian regime in a war aimed at inflicting a strategic defeat on Moscow and subjugating its territory to semi-colonial status.
Estonia will allow its navy in the Baltic Sea to respond to potential threats with force.
Just days out from the return of Donald Trump to the White House, the future of Russia’s war against Ukraine is dominated by a great unknown: whether the incoming president will manage to push Moscow to stop its advance on the battlefield,
Asked whether some other country could take Armenia’s place in the , Alexey Overchuk called the question incorrect
HANOI, January 15. /TASS/. Moscow considers Yerevan’s decision to launch the process of the EU (European Union) entry as a start of Armenia’s withdrawal from the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU), Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexey Overchuk told reporters.
Estonia energy company Fermi Energia has begun the site selection process for that country's first nuclear power plant, more than a decade after
Finnish rock legend Harri Rinne finds peace on Estonia’s Hiiumaa, embracing nature while joking about becoming the country’s president.
NATO should raise its current 2% of GDP defense spending goal, or the allies can begin taking "Russian language courses or move to New Zealand," Secretary General Mark Rutte jokingly told the European Parliament on Jan.