Vice President J.D. Vance’s speech on February 14 at the Munich Security Conference—in which he criticized European nations for what he described as a “retreat” from free speech principles and an embrace of mass migration—drew disagreement and public rebukes from some foreign leaders,
It was meant to shock. And shock it did. The European functionaries, heads of state, defense ministers, and NATO bigwigs assembled at Munich’s Bayerische Hof last Friday expected the US vice president to enlighten them on the peace plan for Ukraine just launched by President Donald Trump.
Speeches delivered by J. D. Vance and Pete Hegseth were not just verbal lashings of America's allies but a wholesale rejection of eighty years of U.S. foreign policy.
German voters go to the polls Sunday for a rare snap election in which the stakes couldn’t be higher. Germany is the biggest economy in Europe and has taken in more Ukrainian war refugees than any of its neighbors,
The dispute involves Catholic precepts on immigration and charity—which the Church has administered for decades through U.S.A.I.D.
MUNICH (AP) — Vice President J.D. Vance hammered home the U.S. demand that the NATO alliance step up defense spending on Friday, ahead of a security meeting in Europe at a time of intense ...
In an address at the Munich Security Conference in Germany, Mr Vance warned Europe's greatest ... said it did not support Ukraine joining NATO as part of a settlement. US defence secretary Pete ...
Vance criticized the European Union’s establishment for undermining democracy by silencing populist parties and stifling alternative viewpoints. He argued that Europe’s democracy would not survive if leaders continued to dismiss the concerns and demands of their people.
Vice President Vance warns Ukrainian President Zelenskyy against publicly criticizing President Trump, emphasizing the need for diplomacy.
The US Vice-President accused European politicians of what he said was a fear of their own people. Read more at straitstimes.com.
PARIS — U.S. Vice President J.D. Vance on Tuesday warned global leaders and tech industry executives that “excessive regulation” could cripple the rapidly growing artificial intelligence industry in a rebuke to European efforts to curb AI’s risks.
The US Vice President criticizes migration management – "If we can survive 10 years of Thunberg's bickering, you can handle a few months of Musk's" – "Europeans fear your voters"