Meanwhile in Europe

November 18, 2025: EU nears deadline to fund Ukraine, Belgium blocks Russian assets; UK launches tough asylum plan; German pension revolt simmers; UN OKs Gaza force; Denmark sets 2035 climate target.


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Today's November 18, 2025 . The most immediate challenge facing European leaders is securing financing for Ukraine before the final European Council summit of 2025 on December 18th. Commission President Ursula von der Leyen has warned that the stakes are extremely high, urging capitals to agree on a commitment to ensure Ukraine does not run out of money midway through next year, thereby denying Russia the "hope of victory".

The primary debate centers on the thorniest proposal: underwriting a reparations loan using a colossal €140 billion of frozen Russian assets. This plan faces significant resistance, particularly from Belgium, which hosts the vast majority of these funds and fears litigation or retaliation from Moscow, insisting the EU must equally share the risks.

Meanwhile, internal coalition pressure is rising in Germany, where Chancellor Friedrich Merz is battling a rebellion from his own center-right allies over pension reform plans that younger lawmakers argue are not generationally fair. While there are signs of possible de-escalation, members of the "Junge Gruppe" insist that "substantive changes" to the draft law are necessary before they will agree to it.

As Europe contends with these financial and political fissures, key developments are unfolding globally and in the UK. The U.K. Home Secretary, Shabana Mahmood, has unveiled a tough new asylum crackdown designed to tackle illegal migration, reforms which include steps aimed at "reprioritizing" the return of entire refugee families to safe countries and overhauling the asylum appeal process.

Mahmood’s allies are banking on the fact that this move aligns with the public mood, despite facing predicted parliamentary trouble from within her own party. Internationally, attention is focused on the Middle East, as the U.N. Security Council recently approved the U.S. plan for an international peacekeeping force in Gaza, though the resolution was promptly rejected by Hamas.

In response to the complex defense and security landscape, the leaders of Germany, France, and the U.K. are meeting tonight in Berlin to discuss crucial topics including support for Ukraine, European security, and the Middle East.

Finally, providing a rare positive environmental headline, Denmark has set the most ambitious 2035 emissions-cutting target of any developed country, aiming for an 82 percent reduction below 1990 levels, an effort the Danish Climate Minister stated is necessary to send a "bold and clear signal" in current times.

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Meanwhile in EuropeBy Meanwhile in Europe