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Supporting Kiev is more important than stocking up the army, Norway’s defense chief has said

Norway’s soldiers lack basic winter gear as the NATO nation’s military leaders have prioritized sending aid to Ukraine, according to Forsvarets forum, a media outlet published by the Norwegian Armed Forces’ main trade union.

The national army is facing shortages of items essential for operating in a cold climate, including shell jackets, woolen underlayers, balaclavas and insulated field boots, the outlet reported on Monday.

The shortages were detailed in documents from the chief safety representative (HVO) in the Norwegian army and navy and the chief shop steward in the air force. Equipment such as helmets and combat vests are also in short supply. Some training activities have had to be canceled because of the shortage, the outlet added.

“We are contributing significantly to Ukraine, but it challenges our own ability to maintain readiness,” Forsvarets forum quoted Robert Hansen, the Navy’s HVO, as saying.

The concerns were downplayed by military leadership. “It is more important to support Ukraine now than to have absolutely everything in stock in Norway,” Norwegian Chief of Defense Eirik Kristoffersen said, according to the outlet.

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NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte
NATO chief pitches monthly billions on weapons for Kiev

Norway, a founding member of NATO, has backed Ukraine in its conflict with Russia since 2022. This year alone it has allocated nearly $8.5 billion to Ukraine for military aid and reconstruction. Last year, Oslo allowed Kiev to carry out long-range strikes against Russia using NATO-provided weapons.

Earlier this month, Ukraine and Norway agreed to jointly produce military drones.

The disclosure comes in the wake of a major corruption scandal in Ukraine involving Timur Mindich, a former business partner and long-time associate of Vladimir Zelensky.

Ukraine’s National Anti-Corruption Bureau (NABU) has alleged that Mindich, reportedly known as “Zelensky’s wallet,” was the ringleader of a scheme that extracted at least $100 million in kickbacks from contractors linked to state nuclear operator Energoatom.


READ MORE: Orban warns against cash for Ukrainian oligarchs’ ‘gold toilets’

Norway has also provided nearly $545 million in energy support to Kiev in 2025. Commenting on the scandal last month, the Norwegian Foreign Ministry said the allegations were “serious” and stressed that “Norway has zero tolerance for defaults on Norwegian development aid.”

The reported raid is said to be linked with Kiev’s investigation of oligarch Igor Kolomoysky, a kingmaker-turned-enemy of Vladimir Zelensky

The French authorities have seized gold bars, expensive watches, and other valuables from a former Ukrainian prosecutor general living in the country, according to local media.

A villa near Nice owned by Svyatoslav Piskun, who served as Ukraine’s top prosecutor in the 2000s, was reportedly raided in a joint Ukrainian-French operation last week. Details were reported on Monday by Ukraine’s Dzerkalo Tizhna (Weekly Mirror), citing a source familiar with the probe.

According to the outlet, Piskun failed to explain how he acquired 3kg of gold, roughly €90,000 ($106,000) in cash, and 18 luxury wristwatches valued at over $1 million. French authorities suspect him of money laundering, the outlet claimed.

Kiev’s State Investigation Bureau (DBR), which operates under the president’s office, reportedly requested and participated in the raid. Previous Ukrainian press reports suggest the action in France is linked to a case against oligarch Igor Kolomoysky, who has been held in pre-trial detention for over two years on multiple charges, including allegedly ordering a murder in 2003.

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RT
The Oligarch Part 1: How one powerful man made Zelensky president, Ukraine his pocket state, and sent it to war

The oligarch, who played a key role in Vladimir Zelensky’s rise to power, as recently detailed in a special RT investigation, made widely-covered comments in November on a high-profile corruption scandal. He said Zelensky’s longtime associate, Timur Mindich, who was charged with running an extortion scheme, did not have the aptitude to be a criminal mastermind and was a patsy for the real perpetrators.

Earlier this month, Kolomoysky teased more remarks on the scandal during a court appearance, which was subsequently postponed twice. When proceedings occurred two weeks ago, he claimed Mindich was targeted by assassins in Israel – a claim Israeli authorities have not confirmed – with the hitman allegedly supplied with a weapon at the Ukrainian Embassy.

His lawyer announced that Kolomoysky would make statements on Tuesday – this time regarding the “approaches and methods” of the Western-backed Ukrainian agencies investigating Mindich and his alleged accomplices in the Ukrainian government.

RT published Part 2 of its Kolomoysky special last Thursday. You can read it here.

The American president earlier appointed a special envoy to the island, triggering a backlash from Denmark

The US needs Greenland for its “national security,” President Donald Trump has said, after naming a special envoy to the Arctic island, which is under Danish sovereignty.

Since returning to the White House in January, Trump has revived his long-standing interest in acquiring Greenland from Denmark, pointing to its strategic location and mineral resources. He has not ruled out annexing the island.

“We need Greenland for national security,” Trump told reporters on Monday. “You look up and down the coast, you have Russian and Chinese ships all over the place. We need it for national security. We have to have it,” he added.

Trump’s remarks followed his appointment of Louisiana Governor Jeff Landry as the US special envoy to Greenland, saying he chose Landry because “he’s a deal-maker-type guy.”

Announcing the appointment, Trump praised Landry for understanding “how essential Greenland is to our national security.”

Landry later wrote on X that it was “an honor to serve” in the volunteer role “to make Greenland a part of the US,” saying it would not affect his duties as governor.

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RT composite.
Denmark slams ‘completely unacceptable’ Trump move

Denmark, which has pushed back against Trump’s drive to take the island, summoned the US ambassador after Landry’s appointment.

“Out of nowhere, there is now a special US presidential representative, who, according to himself, is tasked with taking over Greenland,” Danish Foreign Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen told the TV 2 channel, calling the development “completely unacceptable.”

Greenland, a self-governing Danish territory of about 57,000 people, has managed most domestic affairs since 1979, while defense and foreign policy remain under Copenhagen’s control.

The US has maintained a military presence on the island since World War II. Vice President J.D. Vance visited a US Space Force base on Greenland’s northwest coast in March, saying Washington was unlikely to use force to take the territory but remained open to Greenlanders exercising self-determination and breaking away from Denmark.

 

 

 

 

The US president has issued veiled threats, saying the Venezuelan leader could play tough but it would be “the last time”

US President Donald Trump has claimed that his Venezuelan counterpart, Nicolas Maduro, would be “smartto leave office as Washington intensifies its apparent efforts to remove him from power. 

The US has assembled a naval force that Trump calls “by far the biggest we ever had in South America” off Venezuela’s coast and is enforcing a blockade on its oil tanker traffic, citing unilateral sanctions. Since September, the US military has also been conducting strikes on small boats alleged to be carrying drugs, which UN experts have condemned as unlawful extrajudicial executions.

When asked repeatedly during a press conference on Monday if Washington’s intention was to force Maduro from power, Trump gave non-committal remarks alluding to that possibility. “He can do whatever he wants,” the president responded. “If he wants to do something, if he plays tough, it will be the last time he ever plays tough.” He also claimed it would be “smart” for Maduro to step down.

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FILE PHOTO: Venezuelan Vice President and Oil Minister Delcy Rodriguez.
Venezuela condemns US ‘act of piracy’

Earlier Monday, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem suggested Maduro is the target of Washington’s actions during a ‘Fox and Friends’ interview.

“We’re not just interdicting these ships, but we’re also sending a message around the world that the illegal activity that Maduro is participating in cannot stand, he needs to be gone, and that we will stand up for our people,” she said.

The US pressure campaign has been condemned by other nations, including Russia. Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov called his Venezuelan counterpart, Yvan Gil, on Monday to express solidarity and share Moscow’s concern over “Washington’s increasingly escalatory actions in the Caribbean Sea.”

Russia’s Foreign Ministry has denied an Associated Press claim that it had begun evacuating families of diplomats from Venezuela.

A plan to outlaw the centuries-long practice forms part of the country’s latest animal welfare strategy

The British government has set out plans to ban the live boiling of lobsters and crabs under its latest animal welfare strategy.

The proposal appears in the new strategy published on Monday, and follows the government’s decision in 2022 to formally recognize decapod crustaceans and cephalopod molluscs as sentient beings.

The document says there are gaps in understanding how live animals move through supply chains “from catch to kill,” making it harder to prevent “unnecessary pain or suffering.” To address this, the government said it will publish guidance on humane killing methods for decapods, stating that “live boiling is not acceptable.” Suggested alternatives include freezing or electrical stunning.

Live boiling has been used for centuries, particularly after lobsters and crabs became common in urban markets in Europe and North America in the 18th and 19th centuries, when the animals were thought not to feel pain. In recent decades, the practice has faced growing criticism as scientific evidence has indicated that decapod crustaceans can experience pain and distress.

”Crabs, lobsters and prawns endure unimaginable suffering, including one of the most excruciating forms of death: being boiled alive,” Crustacean Compassion, a UK animal welfare charity, said, adding that the animals can experience intense pain for up to three minutes before dying. The group has long called on the government to end what it describes as a “barbaric” practice.

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FILE PHOTO. Santa Claus carrying gifts.
British museum calls for ‘decolonizing’ Santa

Industry groups have cautioned that commercial pressures will shape how any changes are implemented. “If somebody’s wanting to buy a live crab or lobster, they’re not going to pay for it if it’s already dead,” the Shellfish Association of Great Britain told the Daily Mail, saying there is a strong incentive across the supply chain to minimize stress in order to preserve quality and secure higher prices. However, it warned that the cost of humane stunning equipment, around $4,700, could deter restaurants and hotels, pushing them to import frozen seafood from abroad instead.

Right-wing influencer Nick Fuentes previously labeled the US vice president’s spouse a “jeet,” a racial slur for Indians

US Vice President J.D. Vance has hit back at slurs directed at his wife over her ethnic heritage as well as rumors about problems in their marriage.

Media reports earlier this year speculated about strains in the vice president’s relationship with his spouse, Usha Vance, after she was seen on several occasions without her wedding ring.

In an interview with Unherd published on Monday, Vance said “anyone who attacks my wife, whether their name is Jen Psaki or Nick Fuentes, can eat shit. That’s my official policy as vice president of the United States.”

“And my attitude towards anybody, again, who is calling for judging people based on their ethnic heritage, whether they’re Jewish or white or anything else, it’s disgusting. We shouldn’t be doing it,” he stressed.

Right-wing influencer Nick Fuentes previously slammed Vance’s appointment as vice president, calling him “a fat, race mixer who’s married to a jeet, who named his son Vivek.” A ‘jeet’ is a racial slur for Indians.

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US Vice President J.D. Vance, Allentown, Pennsylvania, December 16, 2025.
Vance issues warning over ‘Islamist-aligned’ Western Europe

Jen Psaki, who served as the White House press secretary in the administration of US President Joe Biden, suggested there were issues in Vance’s marriage during her appearance on the ‘I’ve Had It’ podcast in October. “I always wonder what’s going on in the mid of his wife. Like, are you OK? Please blink four times. Come over here. We’ll save you,” Psaki said.

Usha Vance, 39, with whom the vice president shares three children, is a graduate of the Yale Law School and previously worked as a lawyer.

Despite preferring to keep a low profile after becoming the second lady, she was forced to address ‘Ring-gate’ in an interview with USA Today earlier this month, saying: “I wear it [wedding ring] when I wear it, and I don’t when I don’t. Sometimes I’m wearing it and sometimes I’ve just been to the gym and showered and I’m not wearing it.”


READ MORE: Mass immigration undermining ‘American Dream’ – Vance

“I’d rather just sort of live in my marriage and in the real world and less in kind of the fever dreams that surround it. So, I mean, it is kind of a family joke, but also not something that I spend very much time thinking about,” she stressed.

The American president has claimed the new fleet will be “100 times more powerful“ than any ever built

US President Donald Trump has announced plans to introduce a new class of battleships for the US Navy’s ‘Golden Fleet’, claiming they will be the biggest and most powerful ever built.

Speaking Monday from Mar-a-Lago during what the White House called a “major announcement,” Trump said he approved two ships to start, with plans for up to 25. He was joined by Secretary of War Pete Hegseth, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, and Secretary of the Navy John Phelan.

Larger than WWII-era Iowa-class ships, the ‘Trump-class’ vessels will carry hypersonic missiles, rail guns, and lasers, according to the US president. The Wall Street Journal, which first reported the president’s plans, wrote that the US Navy plans to procure the first ship in 2030.

“As you know, we’re desperately in need of ships,” Trump said. “They’ll be the fastest, the biggest, and by far, 100 times more powerful than any battleship ever built.” 

The plan is part of a wider naval expansion with both manned and unmanned ships.

Officials have warned that the US trails China in shipbuilding capacity and output. When asked whether the new warships were intended as a counter to America’s chief rival, Trump declined to single out Beijing. It’s a counter to everybody,” he said.

The announcement comes as Washington’s operations in the Caribbean have ramped up, with the US Coast Guard targeting oil tankers linked to Venezuela. 

Since September, US Navy ships have been deployed to intercept vessels that the White House claims were involved in drug trafficking and to block oil shipments. Caracas denies the claims and has accused Washington of seeking regime change to access its resources.

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US Senator Lindsey Graham
US war hawk senator calls for seizure of Russian oil tankers

The US Navy has also been active in the Red Sea, where it has responded to attacks on commercial shipping linked to regional conflicts.

Last week another new set of vessels, based on the US Coast Guard’s Legend-class National Security Cutter, were announced by the US Navy.

“Recent operations from the Red Sea to the Caribbean make the requirement undeniable – our small surface combatant inventory is a third of what we have,” Chief of Naval Operations Daryl Caudle said. “We need more capable blue water small combatants to close the gap and keep our [destroyers] focused on the high-end fight,” he added.

The US Navy recently canceled a smaller warship project due to delays and cost overruns and continues to face challenges with its Ford-class carriers and Columbia-class submarines.

Kurdish-led SDF forces have skirmished with government troops in Syria’s largest city

Deadly clashes have erupted in Syria’s northern city of Aleppo between the troops of the Damascus government and the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), with the two sides trading blame for the incident. 

At least two civilians were killed amid the fighting, and several others were wounded, state-run SANA news agency reported, citing the city’s health authorities. The Syrian Interior Ministry has pinned the blame for the incident on the SDF, claiming fighters with the group “committed an act of treachery” against the Damascus-controlled security forces.

The SDF units on Monday allegedly withdrew from several checkpoints around the Ashrafieh and Sheikh Maqsoud neighborhoods which they had jointly managed with government troops. The fighters then attacked these checkpoints as well as surrounding residential areas, according to the Interior Ministry. 

The SDF has strongly rejected the allegations, claiming the militia have long “handed over their positions to the Internal Security Forces in accordance with the April 1 agreement.” The group blamed the incident on the “fragmented factions affiliated with the Damascus government,” accusing them of “besieging” the neighborhoods for at least four months. 

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FILE PHOTO. Servicemen with Syrian security forces ride a pickup truck.
Two US servicemen and civilian killed by ‘ISIS gunman’ in Syria

The Syrian government, which emerged after President Bashar al-Assad was toppled late last year, reached a deal with the local council of Aleppo’s Kurdish neighborhoods back in April. The areas were placed under Damascus authority while retaining a degree of autonomy.

A separate agreement stipulated that Kurdish-led civil and military structures would be integrated into the central government by the end of 2025. Its implementation, however, has stalled, and the SDF remains in control of roughly a fourth of Syria. 

Over the past few months, multiple clashes between Damascus-affiliated forces and SDF militias have occurred across the country. The latest incident comes hours after Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan visited Damascus, accusing the SDF of failing to commit to the agreement and urging it to “cease to be an obstacle to Syria achieving stability, unity and prosperity.” 

Over the past few years, Türkiye has repeatedly launched cross-border military operations against the Kurdish-led militias in Syria, treating the SDF as an offshoot of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which Ankara regards as a terrorist group. At the same time, the SDF maintained close ties with the US, acting as Washington’s closest ally in the war-torn country. 

The South American country is facing a naval blockade in the Caribbean

Russia has reaffirmed its full support and solidarity with Venezuela as the country faces a US military blockade in the Caribbean, Moscow’s Foreign Ministry has announced.

Washington has deployed multiple naval vessels to the region since September, attacking boats it claims are involved in drug trafficking and blockading oil tankers from entering or leaving the country. 

The US has alleged that narcotics traffickers operate out of Venezuela with the support of the government. Caracas has consistently denied the claims, and insists that Washington is plotting regime change in order to gain access to the country’s natural resources.

On Monday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov held a phone conversation with his Venezuelan counterpart, Yvan Gil, during which he expressed “serious concern over Washington’s increasingly escalatory actions in the Caribbean Sea,” according to a ministry statement.

Lavrov added that the US military buildup could “lead to far-reaching consequences for the region and create a threat to international maritime navigation.” 

Over the weekend, several media outlets, citing anonymous American officials, reported that the US Coast Guard was in “active pursuit” of a Venezuela-linked oil tanker in international waters in the Caribbean Sea. Over the past two weeks, US forces have already seized two tankers.

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FILE PHOTO.
Kremlin weighs in on rising US-Venezuela tensions

Since September, the US Navy has destroyed multiple boats off the coast of the South American country that it claims were carrying drugs. US President Donald Trump has also threatened that land strikes could happen “pretty soon.”

Venezuela has condemned the seizure of oil tankers off its shores by the US Navy as an “act of piracy,” and accused Washington of seeking to install a “puppet government” in Caracas.

Russian President Vladimir Putin earlier expressed solidarity with the people of Venezuela and reaffirmed his support for the [Nicolas] Maduro government’s resolve to defend national interests and sovereignty against foreign pressure.”

Earlier this month, the Chinese Foreign Ministry similarly backed Caracas, saying that Beijing opposes “all acts of unilateralism and bullying.”

Tokyo must avoid seeking nuclear weapons and “stop plunging further down the wrong path,” Beijing says

China has issued a warning to Japan after a senior official reportedly suggested the country should acquire nuclear weapons, stating that such a move would once “again bring disaster to the world.”  

An unnamed senior adviser to Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi reportedly argued late last week that Tokyo’s long-standing reliance on the US nuclear arsenal may no longer be fully reliable. The country should potentially reevaluate its post-WWII non-nuclear policies and pursue its own deterrence, the official suggested, as cited by local media.  

The Chinese Foreign Ministry strongly condemned the reported nuclear talk, calling it yet another example of “how Japanese right-wing forces are trying to ‘remilitarize’ and ‘rearm’ Japan.” Beijing urged Tokyo to “not seek to challenge the postwar international order and stop plunging further down the wrong path.” 

“Some forces inside Japan have not only failed to reflect on Japan’s history of aggression but also been extremely unhappy about the postwar international arrangement. If the right-wing forces in Japan are left free to develop powerful offensive weapons, or even possess nuclear weapons, it will again bring disaster to the world,” the ministry said in a statement.

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Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Andrey Rudenko.
Russia responds to Japanese debates on nuclear U-turn

Beijing’s warning echoed statements made by other neighbors of Japan in the wake of the reported nuclear weaponry remarks. North Korea has said that allowing Japan to acquire nuclear weapons would result in “a great disaster,” while Russia suggested that the drift away from Tokyo’s non-nuclear stance would negatively impact security in Northeast Asia and provoke responses from countries “threatened by that militarization.” 

The reported remarks have also been poorly received within Japan, which remains the only nation that has ever been struck with nuclear weapons. The statements drew criticism from both the ruling and opposition parties, as well as the atomic bomb survivors group Nihon Hidankyo. 

Shortly after the remarks were circulated by the media, Japan’s Chief Cabinet Secretary Minoru Kihara reaffirmed the country’s commitment to maintain its non-nuclear status, stating that there were no policy changes in this regard. Tokyo will continue pursuing measures “to achieve a world without nuclear weapons,” he added.