Panama Rejects US Claims of Free Canal Passages for Government Vessels
Panama has denied claims made by the US State Department that American government vessels can now transit the Panama Canal without paying fees
NATO could issue a written guarantee that the planned US-NATO missile shield in Europe will not be directed against Russia, according to a senior Alliance official.
"It would be possible to have a statement in the long run," NATO's Assistant Secretary General for Political Affairs and Security Policy Dirk Brengelmann said when asked if NATO could provide political guarantees of non-aggression, as cited by RIA Novosti.
Brengelmann also told the Moscow-based Ekho Moskvy radio station that NATO leaders could sign the statement.
RIA Novosti points out that while U.S. officials have stated the shield is not directed against Russia, Moscow has yet to receive a written assurance. The US says it needs the shield, which will be eventually deployed in the Mediterranean, Poland, Romania and Turkey, to counter the threat of missile attacks from Iran.
Earlier this week, Turkish officials made it clear the country had agreed to host the radar of the missile defense system, which could have also been placed in Bulgaria. Bulgaria's government welcomed the announcement.
The past few months since the NATO summit in Lisbon in November 2010 took a decision to adopt the project for the US missile system in Europe as an Alliance-wide shield have seen occasional reports that Bulgaria might host elements the radar of the system.
The original missile defense in Europe plan of George W. Bush administration provided for stationing interceptors in Poland and the radar station in the Czech Republic. The modification of the plan by the Obama Administration switched it to sea-borne missiles and, later on, locations in southeastern Europe. Initially, there were reports and expectations that Romania and Bulgaria will replace Poland and the Czech Republic, respectively.
In May 2011, the US State Department and Romanian President Traian Basescu announced that the interceptor missiles of the future NATO/US missile shield in Europe will be stationed at the Deveselu Air Base near Caracal, Romania.
The System employs the SM-3 interceptor (also referred to as the "Aegis Ashore System") while the deployment to Romania is anticipated to occur in the 2015 timeframe as part of the second phase of the European Phased Adaptive Approach (EPAA) – the US national contribution to a NATO missile defense architecture.
The US Ballistic Missile Defense site is approximately 430 acres (175 hectares) and is located within the existing Romanian Air Base at Deveselu.
Deveselu is about 50 km away from the Romanian-Bulgarian border. The closest Bulgarian location is the village of Zagrazhden between the towns of Oryahovo and Nikopol.
The European Commission has launched investigations into Chinese e-commerce giants Temu and Shein over concerns related to consumer protection
Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz announced on Thursday that he has instructed the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) to prepare a plan allowing residents of Gaza to leave if they wish
France has delivered the first Mirage 2000 fighter jets to Ukraine
Ukraine's Commander-in-Chief, Oleksandr Syrskyi, reported that Russia has suffered significant losses in its six-month-long Kursk operation
Google has decided to scale back some of its diversity hiring targets, following an executive order from President Donald Trump
Teodora Georgieva, the head of the Bulgarian office of the European Public Prosecutor’s Office (EPPO), raised serious concerns at a legal conference in Sofia on Tuesday, accusing Bulgarian authorities of obstructing investigations
Bulgaria's Perperikon: A European Counterpart to Peru's Machu Picchu
Bulgarians Among EU's Least Frequent Vacationers, Struggling with Affordability