24/06/24View in Browser

Single-handed manmade disasters

By Georgi Gotev

Climate change is a manmade disaster caused by mankind as a whole, but history remembers disasters of dramatic proportions caused by a single man. We are currently paying the price of at least two such disasters.

Captain Edward Smith’s crashing of the Titanic is a classic example of a man-made disaster—or blunder. It is believed that the ship sank because the officers on duty did not have the key to the ship’s binoculars, which was in the captain’s pocket.

Russia’s emperor Alexandr II’s decision to sell Alaska to the United States (for $7.2 million) led to regrets as gold mines and oil fields were soon discovered under the melting ice (not to mention that it gave the US a direct maritime border with Russia, with two mainlands less than three miles apart).

We can also speculate what would have happened if Hitler had not attacked the Soviet Union, his ally at the time, in June 1941 and had instead concentrated on invading further Western Europe, including the British Isles. The attack on the USSR was probably his biggest mistake. Happily enough, Nazism was defeated four long years later.

Vladimir Putin’s decision to launch a full-size invasion of Ukraine on 24 February 2022 is probably his biggest mistake, as the consequences of this man-made disaster could go very far – and not in his favour.

A Russian woman recently had the courage to go on social media and list the consequences of “Volodya’s” big mistake. It deserves to be carried almost in full here:

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Photo of the day

High Representative of the European Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, Josep Borrell, shields his eyes from the sun as he speaks to the press during a European Foreign Affairs Council in Luxembourg, 24 June 2024. EU Foreign Affairs Ministers will discuss the Russian aggression against Ukraine and the 14th EU sanction package targeting trans-shipment of Russian LNG in European ports. EPA-EFE/OLIVIER HOSLET

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The Roundup

EU member states approved on Monday a decision to use €1.4 billion in revenue from frozen Russian assets to send military support to Ukraine, after finding a legal way to circumvent a Hungarian veto.

Polish President Andrzej Duda voiced hope during a visit to Beijing on Monday his country could boost its exports to China, just as the EU is set to begin talks with Bejing on tariffs it threatened to impose on Chinese electric vehicles.

Incumbent Renew Europe group President Valérie Hayer has a high chance of being reappointed on Tuesday as the opposing ALDE party is failing to align its members behind their nominee.

Ahead of the legislative elections on 30 June and 7 July, French trade unions are divided over what strategy to adopt in the face of the rise of the far-right Rassemblement National (RN), while major employers seem wary of the promises made by the left and the right.

EU leaders are set to call on the new European Commission to present in-depth policy reviews by mid-2025 for reforms needed to fulfil the bloc’s long-term ambitions, according to draft summit conclusions seen by Euractiv.

The European Commission said Apple’s App Store is in breach of the bloc’s digital competition rules in preliminary findings announced in a press release, on Monday.

Look out for…

  • General Affairs Council on Tuesday.
  • Commissioner Iliana Ivanova meets with Nadia Calviño, president of European Investment Bank, on Tuesday.
  • Accession conference with Ukraine, and with Moldova, on Tuesday.

Views are the author’s

[Edited by Zoran Radosavljevic]

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