Category Archive : News

The ongoing standoff has severely impacted travel, hotel, and construction sectors, an economic adviser has said

The US government shutdown is inflicting “far worse” economic damage than had been estimated and could cut fourth quarter GDP growth in half, White House economic adviser Kevin Hassett has warned.

The 38-day shutdown, the longest in US history, is hitting travel, hotel and construction sectors particularly hard, he told Fox Business in an interview on Friday.

”The impact on the economy is far worse than we expected because it’s gone on for so long,” he said.

The repercussions of the shutdown could slice 1% to 1.5% from US GDP growth in the October-December period, Hassett said, citing recent estimates from Goldman Sachs.

“We were going to have at least 3% growth in the fourth quarter… now we’re expecting something like half that,” he added.

Read more

FILE PHOTO.
Shutdown puts US national security at risk – FBI

“Travel and leisure is a place that’s really being heavily hit right now,” Hassett noted, warning that if the shutdown continues to affect air travel employees’ wages for “another week or two,” the sector could face “a near-term downturn.”

US airlines have canceled around 700 flights at 40 major airports around the country on Friday, following cuts recently announced by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), multiple outlets have reported.

Amid air traffic controller staff shortages caused by the shutdown, the FAA ordered a 4% reduction in flights on Friday. The cuts are set to gradually rise to 10% by the same time next week if the shutdown continues, according to the FAA’s emergency order.

In a fleeting glimpse of lucidity, the mainstream media has noticed a tiny fraction of the corruption and authoritarianism in Kiev

It’s that time of the great proxy war crusade against Russia again. Someone in the mainstream West has woken up to, if not the facts about the politics of Ukraine, then at least a quantum of disquiet.

The last major wave of the likes of the Financial Times, The Economist, and the Spectator suddenly noticing – all at the same time, as if on cue – that Ukraine has an authoritarianism and corruption problem (and then some) took place less than half a year ago.

Now it’s Politico – usually a steadfast party organ of Russophobia, Zionism-come-what-genocide-may, and servility to NATO – that feels vaguely troubled by the realities of the Kiev regime or, as the publication puts it, the dark side of Vladimir “I don’t like elections” Zelensky’s rule.

Not all of those realities, of course. That would be asking too much. Instead, Politico is homing in on one great scandal (out of countless ones) concerning one man and the anguish of a few “civil-society”-NGO types, both with good connections to the West. This time, the scandal concerns the obvious, shameless political prosecution of Vladimir Kudritsky, formerly a high-ranking and effective energy infrastructure executive and de facto civil servant.

Yet what about noticing the murder in Ukrainian detention of critical blogger – and US citizen – Gonzalo Lira? Or the vicious persecution of leftist war critic Bogdan Syrotiuk? Or the mean, indecent harassing of Christian clergy and believers for not saying their prayers in quite the right Ukrainian-nationalist-approved manner? Perish the thought!

In a similar spirit of extreme selectiveness, some Western outlets are now registering – a little and very slowly – the brutal realities of Ukrainian forced mobilization that feed the Western proxy war: Recently, a war – pardon, “defense” – editor of the ultra-gung-ho British tabloid The Sun has returned shell-shocked from NATO’s de facto eastern front, not because of the bloody and wasteful fighting but because the uncouth Ukrainians press-ganged his fixer.

Read more

FILE PHOTO: Vladimir Zelensky.
Kiev secretly preparing for presidential election – Politico

In a similarly traumatic experience, Hollywood’s Angelina Jolie had her local driver snatched away at a Ukrainian military roadblock. Yet violent forced mobilization has been an everyday occurrence in Ukraine for years already. So much so that Ukrainians have chosen the term “busification” (from minibus, a popular vehicle for mobilization manhunts) as word of the year for 2025.

For quite a few of its victims, it ends up even worse than for those privileged enough to work for Western movie stars and British propagandists. Roman Sopin, for instance, who did not even resist, has just been beaten to death in a mobilization precinct in central Kiev, as an official medical assessment of his cause of death implies as clearly as anyone may dare under Zelensky’s regime.

But let’s get back to the few things Western media deign to notice occasionally: Already dismissed last year, Kudritsky is now facing the courts under transparently trumped-up charges. The reason is obvious to everyone. He has been too popular and far too vocal about corruption at the highest levels and the authoritarian power grabs of Zelensky’s presidential office in particular.

Kudritsky’s case – comparatively harmless, really – does raise many disturbing questions: why is it that the Zelensky regime has such a nasty record of abusing arbitrary financial sanctions and politically perverted legal processes, or lawfare? And haven’t we been told that this regime under its “Churchillian” leader is fighting for Western values of democracy and legality?

Are Zelensky, his sinister fixer-in-chief Andrey Yermak and their team preparing the ground for elections after a possible end of the war – that is, after losing it – by preemptively crippling domestic critics and rivals? Does this mean Zelensky, Ukraine’s most catastrophic leader since independence in 1991 (and that’s a high bar) is seriously considering not slinking away into exile but imposing himself even longer on his unfortunate country?

Or is all of this part of decimating whatever is left of Ukraine’s mangled society to continue the meatgrinder war for as long as the NATO-EU Europeans are willing to pay? If things go the way the bloodthirsty fantasists at The Economist want, then the West will shell out another cool $390 billion over the next four years. Apparently, they believe that waves of forced conscription in Ukraine will provide the human cannon fodder to go along with the Western funding.

Read more

RT composite.
Ukraine slaughters civilians, then blames Russia – again

Yet if Zelensky’s fresh authoritarian moves are really aiming at preparing for a postwar election next year, then that is a terrible sign, too. It would indicate not only that he is planning to damage Ukraine even further by his presence, but also that those postwar elections will be anything but fair and equal. In other words, in that scenario, Zelensky will try to stay around, and so will the authoritarian regime he has built.

To be fair to Zelensky, his authoritarianism has never been a response to the war, as his Western fans still believe, even when they are finally deigning to notice a little of his “dark side.” Zelensky was building an authoritarian regime – widely known and criticized in Ukraine back then already as “mono-vlada”long before the escalation of February 2022.

Zelensky is not a benevolent leader who has been forced to adopt dictatorial habits by an emergency. In reality, if anything, he has exploited the emergency for all it was worth to indulge his lust for unlimited power and extreme corruption. So, trying to take his misrule into the postwar period is at least not inconsistent: it has never been tied to wartime.

But behind all of this, there is one great irony and one bigger question: The question is simple. If Politico really believes that going after Kudritsky with lawfare and frustrating the “civil-society”-NGO crowd is “the dark side” of Zelensky’s rule, what, if we may ask, is the bright side supposed to be?

Indeed, where is the better side of real-existing Zelensky-ism? Is it the humungous corruption? The Bakhmut-style military fiascos, the Kursk Kamikaze incursion, and now Pokrovsk? The fact that the media have been mercilessly streamlined? The raging nepotism that makes sure that the poor fight and the sons and daughters of Ukraine’s gangsterish “elite” go on holidays and party? The personality cult?

Read more

RT
In case you still doubt Ukraine’s neo-Nazi problem

Or is it – and this brings us to the great irony – that Zelensky-Ukraine is allegedly in sync with “Western values”? And do you know what? It really is! But not the way that the propagandists of both Ukraine and the NATO-EU West want us to believe. What the Zelensky regime and its supporters in the EU really have in common is that neither care about either democracy or the rule of law.

Zelensky going after critics with individual financial sanctions to evade normal legal procedures and leave his victims not even a slim chance to defend themselves, for instance? That is exactly what Germany and the EU are now doing to the journalist Hüseyin Dogru, and not only to him. Zelensky using a perverted reading of the law to harass whoever does not submit or is a political danger to him? Bingo again. That as well is now EU practice, too. Ask, for instance, Marine Le Pen in France. Finally, widespread abuse of political office for self-enrichment and influence peddling? Bingo again: Less than a month ago, the Financial Times ran a detailed article on “scores” of EU parliament members who “earn income from second jobs in areas that overlap with their lawmaking,” raising “questions about disclosure of potential conflicts of interest.” How delicately put. And it sounds just like Ukraine’s Rada.

Here’s the real news: The “dark side” of Zelensky’s rule is all of Zelensky’s rule. And it is also what has become the new normal in an increasingly authoritarian and corrupt EU. Who has learned from whom? Kiev from NATO-EU Europe or vice versa? Either way, this is not a bug but a feature. And it must stop. Everywhere.

The summit that was supposed to take place in Budapest last month has been postponed

A meeting with Vladimir Putin is still possible, US President Donald Trump said on Friday, adding that he would still like to hold a summit with the Russian leader in Budapest.

Trump announced and then called off the proposed meeting with Putin in the Hungarian capital last month, claiming he did not “feel” it could bring an end to the Ukraine conflict. Both the Kremlin and the White House stressed afterwards that the talks had been postponed rather than canceled.

“There’s always a chance, a very good chance,” Trump told journalists when asked about the topic on Friday ahead of talks with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban at the White House.

The American president dodged a question about whether a summit with Putin could take place before the end of the year, but maintained he would like to meet the Russian president in the Hungarian capital at the appropriate time.

“If we have it, I’d like to do it in Budapest,” he said.

Read more

FILE PHOTO: Hungarian Prime minister Viktor Orban talking to journalists.
Putin-Trump talks in Budapest could happen any day – Orban

When asked about the main obstacle to meeting Putin, Trump claimed that both Russia and Ukraine are not ready for peace. “The basic dispute is [that] they just don’t want to stop yet,” the American president told journalists. He said that the conflict was taking a “big toll on both countries.”

Moscow has repeatedly stated that it is ready for peace talks as long as the situation on the ground is taken into account and the root causes of the conflict are addressed. Russia has rejected Western calls for a ceasefire along the current contact line, arguing that ending the hostilities would require a permanent solution rather than a temporary truce.

Orban struck a more optimistic note when speaking about the potential summit. According to the Hungarian prime minster, “there are one or two unresolved issues left in US-Russia negotiations” on settling the Ukraine conflict. “If they are resolved, a peace summit in Budapest could take place within days,” he told journalists en route to Washington on Thursday.

President Donald Trump has attempted to ban Americans from using ‘X’ as their gender in their passports

A ruling by the US Supreme Court has greenlit requiring that the country’s passports indicate the holder’s sex recorded at birth. The temporary order is being seen as a win for US President Donald Trump’s pushback on what he terms “gender ideology extremism.”

The decision issued on Thursday states that “displaying passport holders’ sex at birth no more offends equal protection principles than displaying their country of birth,” and that the government is “merely attesting to a historical fact without subjecting anyone to differential treatment.”

It follows months of lower-court proceedings, with US District Judge Julia Kobick attempting to block the policy, claiming it was discriminatory and rooted in “irrational prejudice.” In June, she blocked enforcement nationwide. The US Court of Appeals in September declined to put her injunction on hold. The Supreme Court’s stay permits enforcement while the case proceeds.

Read more

RT composite.
Pentagon tightens rules to keep trans troops out of army – AP

The policy stems from an executive order Trump signed in January titled ‘Defending Women from Gender Ideology Extremism and Restoring Biological Truth to the Federal Government’. It directs agencies, including the State Department, to require that identification documents reflect “sex,” defined as an immutable biological classification, and to remove the nonbinary “X” marker allowed under the previous administration.

Critics of the move have argued that the restrictions expose transgender individuals to harassment and violence when documents do not match their gender identity.

The Trump administration, however, has said the change ensures federal documents “reflect biological truth” and prevents “inaccurate sex designations” on identification used for communication with foreign governments. Attorney General Pam Bondi has praised the Supreme Court ruling as a “victory for common sense,” while Secretary of State Marco Rubio has called it “a huge win.”

The State Department had since 1992 allowed sex designations to differ from sex assigned at birth with medical documentation, and in 2021, under former president Joe Biden, it added an “X” option. However, the Supreme Court’s latest order pauses that approach.

A closer look at the difference between explosions, experiments, and political theater

A few days ago, US President Donald Trump announced that the United States would resume nuclear testing. The statement caused quite a stir, prompting questions, clarifications, and a wave of interpretations.

But Trump’s declaration was likely meant to provoke exactly that kind of reaction – from both his supporters and opponents. The sensible thing, at first, was to wait for details. And indeed, they soon followed.

In the United States, nuclear testing falls under the jurisdiction of the Department of Energy. The next day, Energy Secretary Chris Wright explained that preparing the Nevada site for a resumption of tests would take about 36 months. His tone suggested that, to him, the idea of renewed nuclear explosions was little more than a PR gesture rather than a practical plan. In other words, the Department of Energy was not preparing for any actual tests.

Before going further, it’s worth clarifying what “nuclear testing” really means – and how easily the term can be misinterpreted. A full-scale nuclear test produces a genuine nuclear or thermonuclear reaction, releasing radiation, shockwaves, and other destructive factors associated with a nuclear blast. The power of such explosions is measured in TNT equivalent, from kilotons (thousands of tons) to megatons (millions of tons). For example, a 20-kiloton bomb has an explosive force equal to 20,000 tons of TNT.

Traditionally, nuclear tests involve detonating warheads at designated locations. Underground detonations began in the early 1960s, as awareness grew of the dangers of atmospheric testing. That led to the 1963 treaty banning nuclear explosions in the atmosphere, in space, and underwater. Seismic stations could detect underground blasts from great distances, allowing US analysts to assess the Soviet Union’s tests and even infer the type and purpose of the weapons involved.

Read more

RT
Trump reiterates nuclear threat in AI-generated VIDEO

In 1996, the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT) was signed, banning all nuclear explosions. The major nuclear powers halted underground testing – but nuclear weapons themselves did not disappear. The US, Russia, and China continued to develop new warheads and delivery systems. Without actual detonations, they relied on mathematical modeling and so-called non-critical tests – experiments that remove fissile material from the device and use conventional explosives to simulate certain stages of detonation. These tests verify reliability in flight, impact, or activation, but without triggering a nuclear reaction.

Many media outlets have linked Trump’s comment to such non-critical testing. Indeed, both the US and other nuclear nations conduct these experiments regularly, since nuclear weapons development has never truly stopped. It’s entirely possible that Trump was referring to this form of testing.

Still, there’s another possibility: that no one briefed Trump on the fact that the US cannot conduct nuclear explosions without formally withdrawing from the CTBT. That’s a serious matter. If Washington were to move toward full-scale detonations, both Russia and China would respond in kind. They would have no choice – it’s a question of nuclear parity and political balance. Moscow and Beijing would inevitably declare, “America is dragging the world toward nuclear war. We must respond to maintain strategic stability.”

It’s also plausible that Trump was referring to flight tests of nuclear-capable delivery systems – ballistic and cruise missiles or bombs tested without nuclear warheads. He may have been told that Russia’s recent trials of the Burevestnik cruise missile and the Poseidon underwater vehicle were carried out without nuclear payloads, even though the systems themselves are nuclear-powered. But that’s nothing unusual – American submarines are also powered by nuclear reactors.

Soon after Trump’s remarks, the US test-launched a Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missile from Vandenberg Air Force Base. As always, the launch was conducted without a nuclear warhead. Around the same time, new images appeared showing a B-52H strategic bomber carrying the AGM-181A nuclear cruise missile, consistent with Trump’s emphasis on “renewed testing.” Meanwhile, reports emerged about progress on the new Columbia-class nuclear submarines – further evidence that the US is modernizing its strategic arsenal.

On Thursday, Trump reiterated his intentions to resume nuclear testing, declaring:

“The United States has more nuclear weapons than any other country. This was accomplished, including a complete update and renovation of existing weapons, during my First Term in office. Because of other countries’ testing programs, I have instructed the Department of War to start testing our nuclear weapons on an equal basis.”

Since no nuclear powers are currently conducting full-scale tests, it seems the US will continue the existing practice of developing and testing nuclear-capable systems – without breaching the CTBT. In other words, Washington will not become the first to resume nuclear explosions, which would indeed mark a historic turning point. Perhaps Trump’s goal was simply to shift attention away from Russia’s recent advances in nuclear technology and back towards himself.

If so, it worked. The world is once again talking about America’s nuclear arsenal and its readiness to test. Analysts are poring over maps of old test sites and revisiting the history of nuclear detonations. Trump has played his hand skillfully – and perhaps it’s better that his game remains rhetorical rather than explosive. Every new level of escalation raises the risk of losing control. Nuclear testing, after all, is both costly and environmentally destructive.

This concern was anticipated by Russian President Vladimir Putin, who called for clarification of Washington’s intentions. What did Trump really mean, and were there any practical plans behind his bold words? Or was it simply another PR performance designed to command global attention?

For now, he’s succeeded in doing just that. Whether this show is over – or merely between acts – remains to be seen.

Northern European military heads gathered in Norway this week to practice a potential response to the alleged threat from Moscow

Several northern European countries, including the UK, Nordic, and Baltic states, rehearsed a military conflict with Russia at a gathering in northern Norway this week, Politico reported on Friday. Ukrainian Defense Minister Denis Shmigal reportedly also attended.

Moscow has repeatedly dismissed allegations of hostile intent toward Western nations and voiced concern over the growing military activity near its borders.

British military planners joined Nordic and Baltic defense ministers in Bodo, to simulate a conflict in a state bordering Russia, according to the outlet.

The drills in Bodo were conducted as part of a ‘Joint Expeditionary Force’ (JEF) of ten European NATO members – the Netherlands, Iceland, the UK, Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Finland, Latvia, Lithuania, and Estonia.

The latter five share borders with Russia and have been among the most vocal critics of Moscow since the Ukraine conflict escalated in 2022. All JEF countries are NATO members, with Finland having joined the US-led bloc in 2023 and Sweden following in 2024.

According to London, the meeting in Norway followed the conclusion last week of the JEF’s largest-ever military exercise. The two-month Tarassis operation held across the Nordic-Baltic region, involved over 1,700 British personnel alongside JEF allies.

Read more

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov addresses the 80th session of the United Nations General Assembly, September 27, 2025
Russia has no intentions to attack NATO, EU – Lavrov

British Defense Secretary John Healey told Politico that JEF nations could “best get NATO connected to take this (Russian aggression) more seriously.” 

Since the escalation of the Ukraine conflict in 2022, Western officials have claimed that Russia could threaten EU states, prompting a military buildup across the bloc. European NATO members agreed to boost military spending to as much as 5% of GDP, citing the alleged “Russian threat.” 

The push to boost spending followed renewed pressure from Washington. The administration of US President Donald Trump has repeatedly urged NATO’s European members to take greater responsibility for their own security and increase armed forces investment, arguing that the US bears too much of the burden.

Moscow has consistently rejected allegations of hostile intent toward Western nations as “nonsense” and fearmongering, condemning what it describes as the West’s “reckless militarization.”

The subpoenas will reportedly request materials related to the 2017 intelligence community report that kickstarted the conspiracy

US federal prosecutors are about to issue grand jury subpoenas to obtain records tied to a 2017 intelligence report commissioned by then President Barack Obama that kickstarted the Russiagate conspiracy, Reuters reported Thursday.

Known as the Intelligence Community Assessment on Russian Election Interference (ICA), the report, released on January 6, 2017, was a cornerstone of the narrative alleging collusion between Donald Trump’s campaign and Moscow ahead of the 2016 election. Documents declassified earlier this year by Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard indicated that Obama-era officials had manipulated evidence to push the narrative.

According to Reuters, the subpoenas will seek “paper or digital documents, text messages and emails” related to the preparation of the ICA. It remains unclear to whom the subpoenas will be directed or whether they have already been issued.

The investigation is being led by Jason Reding Quinones, the US attorney for the Southern District of Florida, who took office in August and pledged to “restore impartial justice.” Trump has long argued that the previous administration weaponized the Department of Justice against him during his first term.

Read more

FILE PHOTO: Former FBI Director James Comey.
Former FBI boss pleads not guilty to Russiagate charges

The ICA has faced harsh criticism from former CIA Director John Ratcliffe, who described it as a deliberate manipulation. He accused then CIA Director John Brennan, FBI Director James Comey, and Director of National Intelligence James Clapper of orchestrating the Russiagate narrative to “screw Trump.”

In July, Gabbard released more than 100 pages of emails, memos, and internal communications concerning the preparation of reports on alleged Trump-Russia collusion, which she described as “overwhelming evidence” of a “treasonous conspiracy to subvert the will of the American people.”

Comey has since been charged with making false statements to Congress and obstructing justice over his role in promoting the Russiagate allegations. He pleaded not guilty in October, with his trial set for January 5.

The Russiagate saga deeply strained US-Russia relations during Trump’s first term, leading to sanctions and asset seizures. Moscow has repeatedly denied the allegations, calling them the result of internal US political infighting.

Trump has previously stated that all those behind the hoax should pay a “big price.”

The UN World Food Program chartered a vessel to deliver fertilizer to Bangladesh that had previously been blocked in Latvia

Russian fertilizer company Uralchem has donated 30,000 metric tons of potash to Bangladesh as a humanitarian gesture, the company said in a statement on Thursday. The shipment was conducted under the United Nations World Food Program, the company said.

Uralchem CEO Dmitry Konyaev said that mineral fertilizers play a crucial role in boosting crop yields and ensuring a stable food supply.

“Unfortunately, Bangladesh — one of the most densely populated countries in the world — faces a range of challenges that undermine its food system, from climate extremes linked to global climate change to constraints on the expansion of arable land.” He added that through what he called a “humanitarian consignment,” the minerals giant aims to “contribute to the sustainable development of the agricultural sector of Bangladesh.”

The new delivery marks Uralchem’s seventh donation in a series of humanitarian deliveries to developing countries since 2022. The company has so far donated over 220,000 tons of mineral fertilizers to nations facing acute hunger free of charge.

Notably, most of these consignments were shipped on vessels chartered by WFP from EU ports and warehouses and traveled to countries such as Malawi, Kenya, Nigeria, Zimbabwe, Sri Lanka, and now Bangladesh. The fertilizers shipped to Dhaka were previously “stored in Latvia,” the company noted in its statement.

Read more

A panel discussion "Business dialogue Russia-Africa" at the 28th St. Petersburg International Economic Forum (SPIEF)
Russian fertilizer giant to boost exports to Africa

Russian officials earlier noted that over 400,000 metric tons of Russian fertilizers remained held up in several European ports, including in Latvia and Estonia, since 2022, when Western countries adopted unprecedented sanctions against Moscow.

The goods were being released under the Russia-UN Memorandum on normalizing agricultural exports signed in Istanbul in July 2022 under the Black Sea Grain Initiative. The grain deal collapsed in 2023 after Moscow accused Western powers of failing to uphold their side of the agreement, particularly on Russian fertilizer and food exports.

Meanwhile, Latvia’s foreign ministry in a statement said that this was the fifth shipment of “mineral fertilizers originating in Russia” and “owned by companies subject to European Union sanctions and stored in the territory of Latvia.” 
The ministry went on to state that the EU member “continues providing assistance to countries that have suffered as a result of the food crisis caused by the Russian war against Ukraine.”

An unidentified white powder was involved, according to media reports

Several people have fallen ill at a key US airbase that hosts Air Force One after a package reportedly containing unidentified white powder was delivered to the facility.

The incident at Joint Base Andrews (JBA) in Maryland on Thursday prompted an evacuation of two connected buildings, according to officials.

A JBA spokesperson confirmed to the media that “multiple individuals felt ill” after a person opened a “suspicious package” that had been delivered to the base.

As a precaution, the building where the incident occurred was evacuated and cordoned off and the scene was examined by HAZMAT teams, which detected no immediate threat.

Officials have not disclosed the contents of the package. However, CNN has reported, citing two sources familiar with the investigation, that the delivery contained an unidentified white powder and was accompanied by political material. 

An initial field test conducted by a HAZMAT team reportedly did not detect any hazardous substances, though the composition of the material has yet to be confirmed, CNN said.

Read more

Former US Vice President Dick Cheney.
Iraq war architect Cheney dead aged 84

Joint Base Andrews is the home base for Air Force One and other aircraft used by senior government officials. US President Donald Trump had been at the facility the previous day, although there is no indication of any connection to the incident.

The inquiry into the incident has been turned over to the Office of Special Investigations.

The US has previously faced scares involving suspicious powder in the mail. The most notable case occurred in 2001, when anthrax-laced letters were sent to media outlets and members of Congress, killing five people and infecting 17 others. The perpetrators have never been found.

Since then, authorities have remained on heightened alert to sporadic reports or threats of powder-filled envelopes sent to government offices, election facilities, and military installations, most of which have proven to be hoaxes or non-hazardous substances.

The restriction shows Brussels prefers “Ukrainian draft dodgers” to “solvent tourists,” the country’s Foreign Ministry has said

Moscow has criticized a new EU visa ban which targets Russians, prompting the Foreign Ministry spokeswoman to suggest the move shows the bloc’s preference for “migrants on benefits” over “solvent tourists.”

The European Commission announced the introduction of a complete ban on issuing new multiple-entry Schengen visas to most Russian nationals on Friday, allowing only single-entry visas instead, meaning they will need to apply each time they plan to travel to the EU.

“Apparently, the European Commission reasoned as follows: why does Western Europe need solvent tourists when it has illegal migrants and Ukrainian draft dodgers living on benefits?” Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova told RIA Novosti.

The restriction is part of a wider package of measures aimed at curbing Russian arrivals and, according to a European Commission statement, has been adopted in light of what it called the “weaponization of migration, acts of sabotage and potential misuse of visas.”

Read more

RT
EU states rebel against bloc’s anti-Russian visa plan – media

Limited exceptions will apply for close family members of EU nationals, including spouses, registered partners, and children under 21. Transport workers, such as seafarers and truck drivers, may also qualify for nine-month visas.

Russian tourists had practically ceased receiving multiple-entry Schengen visas even prior to the EU’s formal ban, according to the Russian Union of the Travel Industry (RСТ).

”Multiple-entry visas are now issued to a minimal number of travelers from Russia to Europe, most often to business tourists,” the RСТ said in a statement.

Since the escalation of the Ukraine conflict in 2022, the EU has made it harder and more expensive for Russians to visit by suspending a visa facilitation agreement and increasing application scrutiny.

As part of its 19th package, adopted last month, Brussels restricted the movement of Moscow’s diplomats across the Schengen Area, requiring them to notify member states in advance of any trips.

Although the European Commission cannot enforce a total ban on Russian visitors, it has urged member states to tighten entry criteria.

Some countries, like the Baltic states and Poland, have imposed outright bans, while others, including Greece, Hungary, France, Spain, and Italy, continue to issue visas and oppose restrictions on regular Russian travelers.