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  • The year in space: Here are the top space stories of 2025

    STARTS RIGHT NOW. AND SPLASHDOWN. CREW NINE BACK ON EARTH. BACK ON EARTH. BREAKING AS WE COME ON THE AIR AT SEVEN. WE JUST HEARD IT. HAVE SPLASHDOWN. NEEDHAM NATICK. SONNY WILLIAMS AND FELLOW ASTRONAUT BUTCH WILMORE ARE FINALLY BACK ON EARTH. MONTHS AND MONTHS AND MONTHS AFTER. ORIGINALLY SCHEDULED. AND TAKE A LOOK AT THIS. THIS IS NEW VIDEO INTO US JUST FROM A FEW MINUTES AGO. THAT IS SONNY WILLIAMS BEING HELPED FROM THE CAPSULE ONTO HER FEET ON THE SALVAGE SHIP THAT EIGHT DAY MISSION FINALLY COMING TO AN END AFTER 286 DAYS. THANKS FOR JOINING US TONIGHT, EVERYONE. I’M ED HARDING AND I’M MARIA STEPHANOS. WE DO HAVE TEAM COVERAGE OF THIS LANDING. SONNY’S NEEDHAM NEIGHBORS WATCHING ALL OF IT. LET’S BEGIN WITH OUR DANAE BUCCI OUTSIDE OF THE SUNITA WILLIAMS ELEMENTARY SCHOOL. IN THE SENSE OF PRIDE NEEDHAM FEELS FOR SONNY WILLIAMS IS EVIDENT, AND EVERYONE IS LOOKING FORWARD TO HER SAFE RETURN HOME. WE’RE BOTH VERY, VERY EXCITED TO HAVE HER BACK ON HER SAFELY. SONNY WILLIAMS HAS BEEN IN SPACE SO LONG, HER MOTHER, BONNIE PANDYA AND HER OLDER SISTER DEENA ARE ANXIOUSLY WAITING FOR HER RETURN. I FEEL LIKE, YOU KNOW, WE’RE A VERY ADAPTABLE AND WE WERE LIKE, GETTING USED TO SEEING HER EVERY WEEK ON THE SPACE STATION. IT’S BEEN AN UNEXPECTED NINE MONTH OUTER SPACE MISSION FOR THE NEEDHAM NATIVE. MY FAMILY MIGHT MAY BE A LITTLE UPSET, MAYBE A LITTLE CONCERNED, BUT USUALLY ASTRONAUT FAMILIES KNOW WHAT HAPPENS AND KNOW THAT THIS IS SOMETHING THAT COULD HAPPEN. THINGS GO WRONG ON ALMOST EVERY MISSION. NO ONE KNOWS WHAT SONNY IS LIKELY GOING THROUGH. MORE THAN RETIRED ASTRONAUT CHARLES CAMARDA, AND YOU’RE JUST ANTICIPATING SEEING YOUR FAMILY AND YOUR FRIENDS AND TELLING ALL THOSE GREAT STORIES. HE WORKED ALONGSIDE SONNY AND HER PARTNER BUTCH WILMORE FOR YEARS. BUTCH AND SONNY ARE THE TWO MOST POSITIVE PEOPLE IN THE ASTRONAUT OFFICE. THEY’RE ALWAYS SMILING. THEY’RE SO EXPERIENCED, THEY’RE PROS. BUT BEING IN SPACE FOR NINE MONTHS CAN HAVE A HUGE IMPACT ON THE BODY. THE HEART DOESN’T HAVE TO PUSH AGAINST GRAVITY, SO THE HEART GETS WEAKER. MUSCULOSKELETAL CHANGES, SO THE BONES BECOME WEAKER IN SPACE. DOCTOR LUCA PIZZA IS ON MASS GENERAL SPACE MEDICINE DIVISION. HE SAYS AS SOON AS SONNY AND HER PARTNER, BUTCH LAND OFF THE COAST OF FLORIDA, THE TWO WILL BE MET WITH A TEAM OF DOCTORS. SO THE BODY’S GOTTEN USED TO NOT PUMPING THE BLOOD SO HARD IT’S GOTTEN USED TO NOT HOLDING THE BODY UP AGAINST GRAVITY. IT’S GOT TO RELEARN ALL THOSE THINGS. DOCTOR SAYS IT WILL TAKE MONTHS FOR BOTH BUTCH AND SONNY’S BODIES TO ACCLIMATE BACK TO EARTH. WE’RE LIVE IN NEEDHAM DANAE BUCCI WCVB, NEWSCENTER FIVE. AND A WATCH PARTY IS STILL GOING ON AT THIS HOUR. RIGHT AT SONNY’S HOMETOWN OF NEEDHAM. PEOPLE THERE CHEERED. WE COULD HEAR THEM FROM HERE. SO EXCITED TO HAVE THE WILLIAMS BACK HOME. OUR SONNY WILLIAMS BACK HOME. OUR JOHN ATWATER CONTINUES TONIGHT LIVE AT THE COMMON ROOM. JOHN AND MARIA. YEAH, SO MANY ROUNDS OF CHEERING TONIGHT. THE LATEST JUST A FEW MINUTES AGO WHEN WE SAW SONNY WILLIAMS EMERGE FROM THAT CAPSULE ABOUT AN HOUR AFTER SPLASHDOWN. SO IT’S BEEN A LOT OF EXCITEMENT HERE. YOU CAN SEE DOZENS OF PEOPLE HERE STILL AT THE COMMON ROOM TONIGHT. THEY ALL CAME HERE TO EXPERIENCE THIS TOGETHER BECAUSE, WOW, IT HAS BEEN JUST A NINE MONTH ODYSSEY FOR THESE ASTRONAUTS UP THERE IN SPACE, ONLY SUPPOSED TO BE UP THERE FOR EIGHT DAYS, BUT IT TOOK A LOT LONGER TO GET THEM HOME. WHILE THEY ARE HOME TONIGHT. AND YOU CAN SEE ALL THE CHEERING HERE IN THE COMMON ROOM HERE IN NEEDHAM SONNY WILLIAMS HOMETOWN. WE SPOKE WITH A KINDERGARTEN TEACHER OVER AT SUNITA WILLIAMS ELEMENTARY. SHE AND HER STUDENTS HAVE BEEN FOLLOWING THIS JOURNEY, AND SHE IS SO RELIEVED. TONIGHT. I WENT TO HER FIRST TWO LAUNCH ATTEMPTS THAT DIDN’T MAKE IT, AND I DIDN’T GET TO GO TO THE LAST ONE WHERE SHE DID GO UP. BUT I’VE BEEN WATCHING AND FOLLOWING MY CLASS WATCHES AND FOLLOWS. THEY WERE SO EXCITED TODAY AND NOW I’M LIKE OVER THE TOP, OVER THE MOON AND SO EXCITED. I JUST CAN’T BELIEVE SHE’S BACK. CAN’T BELIEVE SHE’S BACK AFTER SO LONG. THERE WERE TEARS IN THAT TEACHER’S EYES BECAUSE THEY HAVE BEEN FOLLOWING THIS JOURNEY. THE SCHOOL REALLY ALL OF NEEDHAM SONNY WILLIAMS, OF COURSE IN CONTACT WITH THE STUDENTS HERE IN THE SCHOOL DISTRICT, AND THEY ARE JUST LOOKING FORWARD TO THAT DAY WHEN SONNY COMES BACK HERE TO NEEDHAM FOR A

    The year in space: Here are the top space stories of 2025

    Top 10 space stories of 2025

    Updated: 7:26 PM EST Dec 24, 2025

    Editorial Standards

    From private space tourism to secret moons to new images of our very old observable universe, 2025 was an exciting year in space. The privatization of space travel continued apace, with companies like Elon Musk’s SpaceX and Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin making strides this year. Despite privatization and looming funding cuts, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and its various projects and endeavors still managed to surprise us and expand our knowledge of our solar system. Check out the 10 best space stories from the past year:No. 1 — The space saga of Butch and SuniWithout a doubt, the space story that filled the most airtime this year was the tale of NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams. In June 2024, the pair signed on for a NASA mission to conduct a crew flight test of Boeing’s Starliner craft, which had previously only been used for uncrewed tests between Earth and the International Space Station. The mission was meant to last eight days — but ended up lasting more than nine months. The stranded astronauts became space celebrities and brought renewed attention to spaceflight during a time when space travel has morphed into a blend of public-private partnerships. The astronauts were eventually brought home on SpaceX’s Crew-9 vessel in March, marking a success for SpaceX but a blow to Boeing in the private space race.Watch video of Williams and Wilmore splashing down back to Earth in the video player above.No. 2 — Perseverance finds possible hints of ancient life on MarsNASA’s Perseverance rover has been roaming the Martian surface and collecting samples since 2021. But in the summer of 2024, the rover collected rock samples from a dried riverbed near the Jezero Crater with “leopard spots.” This year, scientists said those spots could suggest the existence of ancient microbial life on the red planet. “All we can say is one of the possible explanations is microbial life, but there could be other ways to make this set of features that we see,” a researcher told The Associated Press.However, this story is not over. More testing is needed to confirm what the samples contain, meaning they need to be retrieved from Mars and brought back to labs on Earth. A Mars Sample Return trip was hopefully scheduled for the early 2030s, but various factors, including President Donald Trump’s reorganized budget plan for NASA, mean that the return expedition is on hold indefinitely. For now, Perseverance and a potential secret to ancient life sit waiting in a rocky Martian desert.No. 3 — NASA probe takes closest-ever images of sunThe Parker Solar Probe, the fastest human-made object in the universe, is on a mission to “touch the Sun” — and it’s getting pretty close. In December 2024, the probe made its closest pass yet of the solar atmosphere, traveling at a speed of 430,000 mph. On Jan. 1, 2025, it sent back the closest images of the Sun ever captured, specifically of solar wind approximately 3.8 million miles from the surface.No. 4 — NASA’s Webb telescope discovers new moon orbiting UranusIt’s not every day you find a new moon. Using NASA’s Webb space telescope, a team from the Southwest Research Institute studying the rings and moons of Uranus made a stunning discovery — a small moon, only about 6 miles wide, had been “hiding” close to the seventh planet this whole time. The discovery joins the planet’s 28 existing moons, designated S/2025 U1. However, all of Uranus’ moons are named after characters from the works of either William Shakespeare or Alexander Pope, so it will have a colorful literary name in no time.No. 5 — Third-ever interstellar object tears through our solar systemThe astronomical talk of the town this year was definitely 3I/ATLAS. First spotted by the NASA-funded ATLAS telescope in Chile, the comet started as a rapidly moving dot appearing in the sky. After NASA and the European Space Agency retraced its steps, it was confirmed that the comet was actually from outside our solar system — only the third known such object. While it was only briefly close to Earth near the end of this year, astronomers stole a few glances while they could. 3I/ATLAS is currently tracing its long path out of and away from our solar system — so long and farewell.No. 6 — Space tourism, or Katy Perry in spaceSpace tourism also had quite a year in 2025. In April, pop star Katy Perry and TV personality Gayle King boarded Blue Origin’s New Shepherd rocket with an all-female crew, a first for space travel. The technicality here is that New Shepherd is a reusable rocket, capable of vertical takeoffs and landings, designed to deliver tourists past the Karman Line, which is defined as the edge of space. It is also where you begin to experience weightlessness in atmospheric travel. Perry was reportedly so moved by the experience of entering the thermosphere that she couldn’t help singing “What A Wonderful World.” In other news, Blue Origin also recently sent the first paraplegic person into space, and SpaceX’s Fram2 mission saw four space tourists make a three-day trip around Earth’s poles.No. 7 — A nuclear reactor on the moon? It’s less crazy than it soundsActing NASA Administrator Sean Duffy made headlines earlier this year with an ambitious announcement concerning NASA’s wishes to put a nuclear reactor on Earth’s moon in the near future. While it does sound like the setup for a supervillain’s lair, the plan is actually quite practical. The name of the game in space exploration in the 21st century has become about repetition and reliability — typified by the reusable rockets favored by private space companies. NASA’s upcoming moon mission, Artemis III, will require a lot of fuel and power, especially if NASA wants to eventually station astronauts there. Add in the fact that China and Russia have announced a joint space venture to place a nuclear reactor on the moon. Before long, the international powers will be in a new space race. The moon is also becoming a critical juncture in the effort to reach Mars — the rocky satellite’s low gravity would make space missions easier. In that way, stating a goal of putting a nuclear reactor on the moon is the first step to reaching Mars, another stated goal of NASA. And for a country — and a species — that put a man on the moon only 56 years ago, anything might be possible.No. 8 — India, Poland and Hungary: Welcome to the ISSIt was a celebration on the International Space Station this summer when three astronauts from countries never before represented on the space station arrived. The last time anyone from India, Poland or Hungary traveled to orbit was in the 1970s and ‘80s, with the Soviet Space Program. While each of these countries have their own space programs, these true newcomers to the ISS came via Axiom Space, a Houston-based company that charters flights to the station. Axiom is also positioning itself as a potential replacement for the ISS when it is retired and decommissioned in 2030, carving out a niche in the private space race.No. 9 — ‘Cosmic treasure chest’: Say hello to the Vera C. Rubin ObservatoryThe summer of 2025 saw the debut of the Vera C. Rubin Observatory, the largest camera ever built, located on a mountaintop in Chile. According to the acting director of the National Science Foundation, the telescope “will capture more information about our universe than all optical telescopes throughout history combined.” That’s quite a claim, but Rubin already has the legwork to back it up — as part of its debut, it spotted 2,104 never-before-seen asteroids. The observatory also released a dramatic video showing the scale of its capability: the cosmic pan displays about 10 million galaxies in the camera’s wide view, which is only 0.05% of the 20 billion galaxies the observatory will map over 10 years.No. 10 — Space is now a battlefieldAside from international cooperation and discovery, space has also become a new frontier for something else: warfare. In the Russia/Ukraine war this past year, Ukraine accused Russian operators of hijacking a crucial satellite, replacing its broadcast with film of Russian military parades. More recently, there has been chatter of a Russian anti-satellite weapon, which one U.S. representative likened to “the Cuban Missile Crisis in space.”

    From private space tourism to secret moons to new images of our very old observable universe, 2025 was an exciting year in space. The privatization of space travel continued apace, with companies like Elon Musk’s SpaceX and Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin making strides this year. Despite privatization and looming funding cuts, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and its various projects and endeavors still managed to surprise us and expand our knowledge of our solar system. Check out the 10 best space stories from the past year:

    No. 1 — The space saga of Butch and Suni

          In this photo provided by NASA, Boeing Crew Flight Test astronauts Butch Wilmore, left, and Suni Williams pose for a portrait inside the vestibule between the forward port on the International Space Station's Harmony module and Boeing's Starliner spacecraft on June 13, 2024.

          NASA/AP via CNN Newsource

          Butch Wilmore, left, and Suni Williams pose on the International Space Station.

          Without a doubt, the space story that filled the most airtime this year was the tale of NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams. In June 2024, the pair signed on for a NASA mission to conduct a crew flight test of Boeing’s Starliner craft, which had previously only been used for uncrewed tests between Earth and the International Space Station. The mission was meant to last eight days — but ended up lasting more than nine months. The stranded astronauts became space celebrities and brought renewed attention to spaceflight during a time when space travel has morphed into a blend of public-private partnerships. The astronauts were eventually brought home on SpaceX’s Crew-9 vessel in March, marking a success for SpaceX but a blow to Boeing in the private space race.

          Watch video of Williams and Wilmore splashing down back to Earth in the video player above.

          No. 2 — Perseverance finds possible hints of ancient life on Mars

          NASA’s Perseverance rover has been roaming the Martian surface and collecting samples since 2021. But in the summer of 2024, the rover collected rock samples from a dried riverbed near the Jezero Crater with “leopard spots.” This year, scientists said those spots could suggest the existence of ancient microbial life on the red planet. “All we can say is one of the possible explanations is microbial life, but there could be other ways to make this set of features that we see,” a researcher told The Associated Press.

          However, this story is not over. More testing is needed to confirm what the samples contain, meaning they need to be retrieved from Mars and brought back to labs on Earth. A Mars Sample Return trip was hopefully scheduled for the early 2030s, but various factors, including President Donald Trump’s reorganized budget plan for NASA, mean that the return expedition is on hold indefinitely. For now, Perseverance and a potential secret to ancient life sit waiting in a rocky Martian desert.

          No. 3 — NASA probe takes closest-ever images of sun

          The Parker Solar Probe, the fastest human-made object in the universe, is on a mission to “touch the Sun” — and it’s getting pretty close. In December 2024, the probe made its closest pass yet of the solar atmosphere, traveling at a speed of 430,000 mph. On Jan. 1, 2025, it sent back the closest images of the Sun ever captured, specifically of solar wind approximately 3.8 million miles from the surface.

          No. 4 — NASA’s Webb telescope discovers new moon orbiting Uranus

            Astronomers using NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope discovered a new moon orbiting Uranus in images taken by Webb’s NIRCam (Near-Infrared Camera). This image shows the moon, designated S/2025 U1, as well as 13 of the 28 other known moons orbiting the planet. (The small moon Cordelia orbits just inside the outermost ring, but is not visible in these views due to glare from the rings.) Due to the drastic differences in brightness levels, the image is a composite of three different treatments of the data, allowing the viewer to see details in the planetary atmosphere, the surrounding rings, and the orbiting moons. The data was taken with NIRCam’s wide band F150W2 filter that transmits infrared wavelengths from about 1.0 to 2.4 microns.
NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, M. El Moutamid (SwRI), M. Hedman (University of Idaho)

            NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, M. El Moutamid (SwRI), M. Hedman (University of Idaho)

            This Near Infrared Camera image shows the moon, designated S/2025 U1, as well as 13 of the 28 other known moons orbiting the planet.

            It’s not every day you find a new moon. Using NASA’s Webb space telescope, a team from the Southwest Research Institute studying the rings and moons of Uranus made a stunning discovery — a small moon, only about 6 miles wide, had been “hiding” close to the seventh planet this whole time. The discovery joins the planet’s 28 existing moons, designated S/2025 U1. However, all of Uranus’ moons are named after characters from the works of either William Shakespeare or Alexander Pope, so it will have a colorful literary name in no time.

            No. 5 — Third-ever interstellar object tears through our solar system

            Hubble captured this image of the interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS on July 21.

            NASA/ESA/David Jewitt (UCLA) via CNN Newsource

            Hubble captured this image of the interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS on July 21.

            The astronomical talk of the town this year was definitely 3I/ATLAS. First spotted by the NASA-funded ATLAS telescope in Chile, the comet started as a rapidly moving dot appearing in the sky. After NASA and the European Space Agency retraced its steps, it was confirmed that the comet was actually from outside our solar system — only the third known such object. While it was only briefly close to Earth near the end of this year, astronomers stole a few glances while they could. 3I/ATLAS is currently tracing its long path out of and away from our solar system — so long and farewell.

            No. 6 — Space tourism, or Katy Perry in space

            Blue Origin: Katy Perry, Gayle King, 4 other women

            Blue Origin via CNN

            The all-female crew of Blue Origin’s New Shepherd.

            Space tourism also had quite a year in 2025. In April, pop star Katy Perry and TV personality Gayle King boarded Blue Origin’s New Shepherd rocket with an all-female crew, a first for space travel. The technicality here is that New Shepherd is a reusable rocket, capable of vertical takeoffs and landings, designed to deliver tourists past the Karman Line, which is defined as the edge of space. It is also where you begin to experience weightlessness in atmospheric travel. Perry was reportedly so moved by the experience of entering the thermosphere that she couldn’t help singing “What A Wonderful World.” In other news, Blue Origin also recently sent the first paraplegic person into space, and SpaceX’s Fram2 mission saw four space tourists make a three-day trip around Earth’s poles.

            No. 7 — A nuclear reactor on the moon? It’s less crazy than it sounds

              Acting NASA Administrator Sean Duffy made headlines earlier this year with an ambitious announcement concerning NASA’s wishes to put a nuclear reactor on Earth’s moon in the near future. While it does sound like the setup for a supervillain’s lair, the plan is actually quite practical. The name of the game in space exploration in the 21st century has become about repetition and reliability — typified by the reusable rockets favored by private space companies. NASA’s upcoming moon mission, Artemis III, will require a lot of fuel and power, especially if NASA wants to eventually station astronauts there. Add in the fact that China and Russia have announced a joint space venture to place a nuclear reactor on the moon.

              Before long, the international powers will be in a new space race. The moon is also becoming a critical juncture in the effort to reach Mars — the rocky satellite’s low gravity would make space missions easier. In that way, stating a goal of putting a nuclear reactor on the moon is the first step to reaching Mars, another stated goal of NASA. And for a country — and a species — that put a man on the moon only 56 years ago, anything might be possible.

              No. 8 — India, Poland and Hungary: Welcome to the ISS

                It was a celebration on the International Space Station this summer when three astronauts from countries never before represented on the space station arrived. The last time anyone from India, Poland or Hungary traveled to orbit was in the 1970s and ‘80s, with the Soviet Space Program. While each of these countries have their own space programs, these true newcomers to the ISS came via Axiom Space, a Houston-based company that charters flights to the station. Axiom is also positioning itself as a potential replacement for the ISS when it is retired and decommissioned in 2030, carving out a niche in the private space race.

                No. 9 — ‘Cosmic treasure chest’: Say hello to the Vera C. Rubin Observatory

                This composite image combines 678 separate images to show faint details like clouds of gas and dust in the Trifid nebula (top right) and the Lagoon nebula.

                NSF-DOE Vera C. Rubin Observatory via CNN Newsource

                This composite image combines 678 separate images from the Vera C. Rubin Observatory to show faint details like clouds of gas and dust in the Trifid nebula (top right) and the Lagoon nebula.

                The summer of 2025 saw the debut of the Vera C. Rubin Observatory, the largest camera ever built, located on a mountaintop in Chile. According to the acting director of the National Science Foundation, the telescope “will capture more information about our universe than all optical telescopes throughout history combined.” That’s quite a claim, but Rubin already has the legwork to back it up — as part of its debut, it spotted 2,104 never-before-seen asteroids. The observatory also released a dramatic video showing the scale of its capability: the cosmic pan displays about 10 million galaxies in the camera’s wide view, which is only 0.05% of the 20 billion galaxies the observatory will map over 10 years.

                No. 10 — Space is now a battlefield

                Aside from international cooperation and discovery, space has also become a new frontier for something else: warfare. In the Russia/Ukraine war this past year, Ukraine accused Russian operators of hijacking a crucial satellite, replacing its broadcast with film of Russian military parades. More recently, there has been chatter of a Russian anti-satellite weapon, which one U.S. representative likened to “the Cuban Missile Crisis in space.”

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  • EU Leaders Think It Is Fair to Use Russian Assets for Ukraine, Polish PM Says

    WARSAW, Dec ‌18 (Reuters) – ​European Union ‌leaders agree that ​it would be ‍fair to use ​Russian ​assets ⁠to finance Ukraine, but there are many technical points that need to ‌be ironed out, Polish ​Prime Minister ‌Donald ‍Tusk said ⁠on Thursday.

    “We have definitely made a breakthrough, everyone agrees that it is ​worth negotiating and it would be fair to use Russian assets, but some countries will fight until the end to maximize their guarantees,” he ​told reporters in Brussels.

    (Reporting by Alan Charlish and Pawel ​Florkiewicz, writing by Anna Wlodarczak-Semczuk)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Photos You Should See – December 2025

    Reuters

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  • Poland Says Hungary’s Government Is Closer to Moscow Than Brussels

    Dec 11 (Reuters) – Polish Justice Minister Waldemar Zurek accused Hungary’s ‌Prime ​Minister Viktor Orban on Thursday ‌of being closer to Russia than Europe, renewing an argument between the two ​European Union members that Budapest has called an unjustified provocation.

    Zurek expressed frustration with Budapest in an interview with ‍Reuters when asked about two former ​Polish officials charged with misuse of funds who are being shielded by fellow-EU member Hungary.

    He referred ​to the ⁠case, as well as Orban’s talks with President Vladimir Putin and Hungary blocking funds for Poland for supporting Ukraine’s fight against Russian invasion.

    “It looks to me today as if Hungary’s leadership is closer to the leadership in Moscow than the EU leadership, and I say this with great sadness ‌and also with great concern,” Zurek said.

    “Orban, unfortunately, wants to blow up the EU from within ​and ‌his pro-Russian policies are completely ‍unacceptable to the ⁠majority of citizens in the EU.”

    Orban has accused Poland of making unjust and provocative remarks about its ties with Moscow, which he argues are in Hungary’s national interest. He says European Union sanctions on Russia over its invasion of Ukraine are self-defeating.

    Former Polish Justice Minister Zbigniew Ziobro, who faces 26 charges including leading an organised criminal group, is in Hungary and may seek asylum there, following the example of his former deputy ​Marcin Romanowski, who faces similar charges.

    Both men say they will not return to Poland because they would not get a fair trial under Tusk’s government, which rejects the charges, emphasising that its justice system is independent.

    Orban met Ziobro in Budapest in October and accused Warsaw of a “political witch hunt”.

    A Polish court will decide in the coming weeks whether to issue a European Arrest Warrant (EAW) for Ziobro.

    “When you have EAW, it’s an agreement between all EU countries that we respect and have confidence in our own national justice systems… Today we have a situation where Hungary says ‘we are granting asylum to Mr. Romanowski’, which ​in my opinion is violating this EU agreement,” Zurek said.

    “It seems that the subsequent issue will be to examine the actions of the Hungarian state. And perhaps Poland will be forced to expose this abnormal situation on the European forum, where Hungary is breaking the ​rules of the EAW by granting asylum.”

    (Reporting by Anna Koper, Anna Włodarczak-Semczuk, Justyna Pawlak and Kuba Stezycki; editing by Philippa Fletcher)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Photos You Should See – December 2025

    Reuters

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  • Russia to Close Polish Consulate in Siberia in Row Over Railway Sabotage

    MOSCOW/WARSAW (Reuters) -Russia on Thursday ordered Poland to close its consulate in the Siberian city of Irkutsk in retaliation for Warsaw’s decision to close the last Russian consulate in Poland after a railway explosion that was blamed on Moscow.

    Poland, a former Warsaw Pact member which joined the U.S.-led NATO military alliance in 1999, said two Ukrainians working for Moscow were behind a blast earlier this month on the line that links Warsaw to the Ukrainian border.

    Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk said the blast was an “unprecedented act of sabotage” and Poland’s special services said evidence pointed to Russian intelligence being behind it.

    Moscow denied that, saying levels of “Russophobia” were so high in Europe that it was routinely blamed for any incident without any evidence being presented.

    Russia’s Foreign Ministry summoned Polish Ambassador Krzysztof Krajewski and handed him a note explaining that the Irkutsk consulate would be closed from December 30 in response to Warsaw’s decision to close the Gdansk consulate.

    “The curtailment of the Russian consular presence in Poland under an absurd pretext is an openly hostile, unjustified step by the Polish leadership,” the Foreign Ministry said.

    Moscow said it wanted to issue a reminder that any attacks on Russia would elicit “an adequate, painful response.”

    Poland said it saw no basis for closing its consulate in Irkutsk.

    “We accepted Russia’s decision to withdraw consent, although we believe there were no grounds for it because it is not Poland that is organising acts of terror in Russia,” Maciej Wewior, a spokesman for the Foreign Ministry, told reporters.

    He said there were three employees at the consulate and they would leave Russia by the end of next month.

    (Reporting by Guy Faulconbridge in Moscow, Maxim Rodionov in London and Anna Wlodarczak-Semczuk and Pawel Florkiewicz in Warsaw; editing by Mark Trevelyan)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Photos You Should See – Nov. 2025

    Reuters

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  • Poland to Receive $51 Billion From EU’s Defence Investment Programme, PM Says

    WARSAW (Reuters) -Poland will receive 44 billion euros ($50.91 billion) from the European Union’s SAFE programme to boost its armed forces, Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk said on Wednesday. 

    The SAFE programme provides up to 150 billion euros in cheap loans to EU member states that request financial assistance for investments in defence capabilities.

    In televised comments at the start of a government meeting, Tusk said some of the funds would be allocated to the purchase of drone equipment for the EU’s Eastern Shield, which protects the bloc’s eastern borders with Russia and Belarus.

    The funds will also be used for space projects, the development of artificial intelligence in the area of defence, equipment for the military, border guards and police, and the SAFE Baltic programme, Tusk said.

    SAFE Baltic expands the activities that Poland’s navy and border guards can conduct in the geopolitically sensitive Baltic Sea region.

    “Thanks to our efforts, we will also be able to finance roads and railways directly related to the security of the Polish state through the SAFE programme,” Tusk added.

    Poland, a strong supporter of neighbouring Ukraine in its efforts to push back invading Russian forces, spends a larger proportion of its national output on defence than any other NATO member state.

    (Reporting by Anna Wlodarczak-Semczuk, Pawel Florkiewicz, Barbara Erling; Editing by Gareth Jones)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Photos You Should See – Nov. 2025

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  • Poland calls in Israeli ambassador over Yad Vashem exhibit

    Warsaw strongly objected on Monday to how Poland was referred to in a post on X regarding the Star of David that was put out by Jerusalem’s Yad Vashem memorial to the Holocaust over the weekend.

    The Polish Foreign Ministry said it was calling in the Israeli ambassador to protest, charging that the post was misleading. Foreign Minister Radosław Sikorski noted, also on X, that the Yad Vashem post had not been corrected.

    On Sunday, Yad Vashem wrote: “Poland was the first country where Jews were forced to wear a distinctive badge in order to isolate them from the surrounding population,” alongside a photo of a yellow Star of David Badge with the word “Jude” – German for Jew – written inside.

    It added that in November 1939, Hans Frank, as governor, had issued an order that all Jews aged 10 and above had to wear a white cloth armband marked with a blue Star of David on their right arm.

    Warsaw said that an essential explanation that Poland was Nazi-occupied at the time was lacking from the exhibition. Yad Vashem had also failed to mention that Frank was a German officer appointed by the occupiers.

    Sikorski posted on X: “Please specify that it was ‘German-occupied,’” in a remark addressed to Yad Vashem.

    In response, Yad Vashem chairman Dani Dayan acknowledged that Poland was indeed at the time under German occupation. “This is clearly reflected in our material. Any other interpretation misreads our commitment to accuracy,” he said.

    Poland and Israel have frequently been in conflict over how Poland is represented with respect to World War II.

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  • Opinion | Suspicious Drones Over Europe

    Has the West absorbed the right lessons from Ukraine’s war with Russia? For the unsettling answer, look at what’s buzzing mysteriously in the skies above Europe’s cities. Drones were spotted this month in France, loitering around a gunpowder plant and a train station where tanks are located. Others were seen recently near a Belgian military base, a port, and a nuclear power plant.

    Belgium’s defense minister told the press the drones near military bases were “definitely for spying.” The provenance of other suspicious drones is less clear. Yet whatever their source, they’re a security threat. The Netherlands suspended flights in Eindhoven Saturday after a drone sighting, and similar episodes have unfolded this month at airports in Sweden, Germany, Belgium and Denmark.

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  • Polish PM Says Two Responsible for Railway Blast Worked for Russian Intelligence

    WARSAW (Reuters) -Poland has identified two people responsible for an explosion on a railway route to Ukraine, Prime Minister Donald Tusk said on Tuesday, adding that they were Ukrainians who collaborated with Russian intelligence and that they had fled to Belarus.

    The blast on the Warsaw-Lublin line, which connects the Polish capital to the Ukrainian border, followed a wave of arson, sabotage and cyberattacks in Poland and other European countries since the start of the war in Ukraine.

    Warsaw has said Poland has become one of Moscow’s biggest targets due to its role as a hub for aid to Kyiv. Russia has repeatedly denied being responsible for acts of sabotage.

    “The most important information is that… we have identified the people responsible for the acts of sabotage,” Tusk told lawmakers.

    “In both cases we are sure that the attempt to blow up the rails and the railway infrastructure violation were intentional and their aim was to cause a railway traffic catastrophe,” he said.

    Earlier on Tuesday, a spokesperson for Poland’s special services minister said everything pointed to Russian intelligence services commissioning sabotage on Polish railways.

    (Reporting by Anna Wlodarczak-Semczuk, Alan Charlish, Pawel Florkiewicz; Editing by Conor Humphries)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • NATO ally says “worst suspicions” confirmed after railroad bomb attack

    Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk said the “worst suspicions have been confirmed” and that a bomb had destroyed rail track after “an act of sabotage” along the Warsaw to Lublin route.

    “An explosion of an explosive device destroyed the railway track,” Tusk said, originally in Polish, in a post on X. “Emergency services and the prosecutor’s office are working at the scene. Damage was also found on the same route, closer to Lublin.”

    Poland is a NATO ally. Tusk did not say immediately who Poland suspects is behind the sabotage, but it has accused Russia in previous incidents, which Moscow denied.

    This is a breaking news story. Updates to follow.

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  • Polish president refuses to appoint 46 new judges

    Polish President Karol Nawrocki refused on Wednesday to appoint 46 new judges, escalating his confrontation with the liberal government of Prime Minister Donald Tusk.

    In a post on X, he accused the judges nominated by the government of questioning Poland’s legal and constitutional order and of listening to “bad whisperings from the justice minister.”

    “If the appointment is the prerogative of the president, he can also refuse this appointment,” he wrote.

    Nawrocki also threatened not to appoint any new judges during his entire five-year term of office, the Polish news agency PAP reported.

    The dispute comes amid an attempt by Justice Minister Waldemar Żurek to reverse changes to the legal system introduced by Poland’s former right-wing government led by the nationalist Law and Justice (PiS) party.

    The PiS was persistently at odds with the European Union, which saw the independence of the judiciary as being under threat, until 2023 when Tusk’s liberal government took the helm in Poland.

    Although Nawrocki, a critic of the EU, is officially non-partisan and not a PiS member, he opposes the efforts to reverse the previous judicial sector reforms.

    Government spokesman Adam Szłapka said Nawrocki had overstepped his powers by rejecting the appointments.

    The former head of Poland’s Constitutional Tribunal, Andrzej Zoll, also described the president’s confirmation of judges as a formality. The head of state had no right to review the nominations, Zoll told the Onet news portal.

    Meanwhile Justice Minister Żurek demanded that the president justify his refusal to appoint new judges. Such a decision should be an administrative act that can be challenged in court, he said according to PAP.

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  • How to Endure Authoritarianism

    A few weeks ago, I achieved at last a long-imagined pilgrimage to the home of the great Polish poet Wisława Szymborska, in Kraków. I have written often about Szymborska, who spent most of her life in Kraków and died there, at the age of eighty-eight, in 2012. Her poetry first fell on me, as it did on so many others, like an anvil made of feathers—striking but soft—after she won the Nobel Prize in Literature, in 1996. There was no literary shrine I wanted to go to more, to doff my spiritual hat and drink in the surroundings of the poet, who is beloved by readers for her unique mix of humor, more even than wit, beautifully amalgamated with sudden turns of pensive reflection. What’s more, I got to go there in the company of her former amanuensis, Michał Rusinek, and Michał Choiński, a poet and scholar. Both men teach at the ancient and hallowed Jagiellonian University (where Szymborska herself studied) and Choiński is also the author, as improbable as it sounds, of a long, original, ambitious history of The New Yorker, recently published in Polish for a Polish audience.

    Szymborska’s last home, where she lived for fourteen years, was a three-room apartment in a residential neighborhood about twenty minutes from the center of town. It seemed to me extremely modest, not to say student-like, though my Polish friends’ slightly censorious frowns when I volunteered this thought made me realize that, in the Kraków of the Communist era, it would have actually been considered rather grand. But certainly the room where it happened, where the poetry got written, was as modest as any college dorm room, with a small single bed next to the small desk where she wrote. (She lived there alone. She was married briefly, after the Second World War, then had a long love affair with the short-story writer Kornel Filipowicz; their collected letters, which should be available in English, have been a best-seller in Poland and were published in Spain and Italy, in translation.)

    In that little writing room, we spoke of the great poet—of her chain-smoking and of her love of silly puns, odd town names, and Kentucky Fried Chicken, which, when it came to Kraków, she delighted in, to the distress of her more fastidious friends. (There is, however, a stroganoff-with-dumplings dish named for Szymborska at her favorite restaurant in old Kraków. That is delicious.) Though the talk was of the details of a life, the shadow that hung above our conversation, as one had hung above that life, was intently political.

    Szymborska was not a political poet in any conventional sense, but she was one, and a great one, inasmuch as she struggled to articulate, with charm and with purpose, the way that people seek power and pleasure in their social lives—to increase their utilities, as the drier political philosophers say—while engaging with family, friends, lovers, and fellow-citizens in the daily struggle for persistence. Not all engagé poetry need be from the battle front: in “The Catcher in the Rye,” Holden’s little brother, Allie, who copies poetry onto his baseball mitt, is asked who was the better war poet, Rupert Brooke, who actually fought in one, or Emily Dickinson, who did not? The right answer, from Salinger’s point of view, was, obviously, Emily.

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  • Poland said its fighter jets intercepted a Russian spy plane flying dark over the Baltic Sea

    • Poland said it scrambled two fighter jets on Tuesday to intercept a Russian Il-20 spy plane.

    • Warsaw said the plane didn’t violate Polish airspace, but turned off its transponder.

    • It comes as NATO allies say they’re feeling increased pressure from Russian airspace violations.

    Poland said on Wednesday that two of its fighter jets intercepted a Russian spy plane in the Baltic Sea, as NATO remains on edge over air incursions that it fears are a way for Moscow to test its responses.

    The Polish Armed Forces said that the plane, an Ilyushin-20 turboprop-powered reconnaissance aircraft, was flying on Tuesday just outside Polish airspace but had turned off its transponder.

    Flying dark in this manner typically indicates that a military aircraft is conducting, or providing support for, a surveillance mission.

    The armed forces said in a statement that two Polish Mikoyan MiG-29s “successfully intercepted, visually identified, and escorted” the Russian plane.

    “Thanks to the high combat readiness, the professionalism of the pilots and the efficient functioning of the air defense system, the operations were carried out quickly, effectively and safely,” the Polish Armed Forces’ operational command wrote in a statement.

    The Russian defense ministry did not respond to a request for comment sent outside regular business hours by Business Insider.

    Poland shares part of its northeastern border with Kaliningrad, a Russian exclave on the Baltic Sea. The sea has been a particular area of tension since Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine, since it serves the coasts of eight NATO allies and Russia.

    Warsaw has especially been on guard against Russian activity near its borders as of late, after it sounded the alarm over a series of drone incursions on September 10.

    Several other European NATO allies on or close to the Baltic Sea, such as Denmark, have since also reported unannounced drones that forced airports to close.

    On September 20, Estonia also invoked NATO’s Article 4, which summons the alliance’s member states for consultations, over what it said were three Russian fighter jets violating its airspace.

    “Russia bears full responsibility for these actions, which are escalatory, risk miscalculation, and endanger lives,” NATO wrote in a statement shortly after Estonia’s request. “They must stop.”

    More recently, Lithuania warned that it has been receiving hundreds of helium-filled balloons from Belarus, a close Russian ally, which it accused Minsk of permitting to fly over on purpose.

    The size of the balloons poses a danger to aircraft, officials said, forcing the country to repeatedly shut its airports.

    Read the original article on Business Insider

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  • Malta Cuts Taxes for Parents in Bid to Revive Native Birth Rate

    VALLETTA (Reuters) -Malta announced tax cuts for parents of two or more children on Monday, in a government bid to counter its demographic decline.

    Finance Minister Clyde Caruana told parliament that the rock-bottom fertility rate of the Mediterranean island’s native population was the “biggest challenge” facing the country.

    “We need to encourage more families to have at least two children,” Caruana said in a speech on Malta’s 2026 budget.

    A report by EU statistical agency Eurostat this year showed Malta had the bloc’s lowest fertility rate in 2023, at 1.06.

    Maltese Catholic Archbishop Charles Scicluna in September said that Malta faced “ethnic extinction”. 

    Although densely populated, with around 1,704 people per square kilometre, almost a third of Malta’s population is made up of foreign workers and their families.

    Caruana said on Monday that parents of two or more children will, from 2026, each not pay income tax on the first 18,500 euros ($21,575) of their income.

    That will rise to 30,000 euros each by 2028. The tax cuts will be retained until the children are 23 years old.

    The scheme is similar to another announced in Poland in September which will remove tax on families with at least two children having an income of up to 32,973 euros.

    Caruana said in February that Malta’s native population is currently 406,000, of whom 24% are aged over 65.

    In his budget speech, Caruana said Malta is forecast to have GDP growth of 4.1% in real terms in 2026, broadly similar to 2025. National debt was projected to be stable at 47.1% of GDP.

    The deficit was projected to fall to 3.3% of GDP this year and 2.8% next year, he added. ($1 = 0.8575 euros)

    (Reporting by Christopher Scicluna; Edited by Alexander Smith)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • 2 Men Injured After Playing with WWII Artillery Shell While Allegedly Drunk

    NEED TO KNOW

    • Two men were injured in an explosion at an apartment building in Poland on Oct. 21

    • The blast was caused by a World War II artillery shell, according to Głubczyce police

    • Police also discovered another explosive wartime “souvenir” as they searched the apartment amid their investigation

    Two people were injured after a World War II artillery shell exploded inside an apartment building in Poland.

    At around 7:30 a.m. local time on Tuesday, Oct. 21, police in Głubczyce received reports that a window in an apartment building on Mickiewicza Street was “hanging unnaturally” as if an explosion had occurred, police stated in a news release.

    Upon further investigation, officers discovered that an object had exploded inside an apartment where two men, aged 62 and 65, and a 45-year-old woman had been drinking alcohol. One of the men and the woman had blood alcohol levels 12 times over the legal driving limit in Poland, CBS News reported.

    According to the police news release, both of the men sustained non-life-threatening injuries in the blast. One of them had to be taken to the hospital due to their leg wound.

    Głubczyce Police

    The apartment where a WWII artillery shell exploded in Poland

    Other residents of the apartment building and people living in nearby houses were evacuated amid the police’s investigation.

    Dogs trained to detect the scent of explosives assisted alongside bomb disposal experts from the Independent Counter-Terrorism Unit of the Police in Katowice at the scene.

    Preliminary findings indicate that the explosion was caused by a World War II artillery shell that detonated in the apartment, per the police news release. The owner of the premises allegedly revealed that they brought the object home after finding it in the woods “several years ago.”

    Another explosive wartime “souvenir” was discovered as police searched their apartment, which had to be secured and neutralized at a military training ground.

    “We remind you that if you discover an object resembling an unexploded ordnance, you must not, under any circumstances, move, touch, or disarm it,” the police warned. “The area where it is located should be secured from access by unauthorized persons, especially children.”

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    Głubczyce Police Police at scene of the explosion

    Głubczyce Police

    Police at scene of the explosion

    “If you are in an open space or forest, mark the area so that no one enters it and it can be easily found,” the police continued. “Report the discovery to the nearest police station as soon as possible. Officers will secure the area and notify the bomb disposal unit.

    “Remember that very large projectiles can have a range of up to several hundred meters,” they concluded.

    Głubczyce police officers are working alongside the District Prosecutor’s Office in Głubczyce to investigate the apartment building explosion.

    Evacuated residents were allowed to return to their homes after a building inspector approved.

    PEOPLE reached out to Głubczyce police on Friday, Oct. 24, but did not receive an immediate response.

    Read the original article on People

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  • Vestas Shelves Plan for Polish Wind Turbine Factory on Low European Demand

    Vestas Wind Systems VWS -3.14%decrease; red down pointing triangle said lower demand in Europe has pushed it to pause the planned construction of a new factory in Poland.

    The Danish wind turbine maker last year unveiled plans to build a new blade factory in Szczecin, near the Baltic Sea coast, to support Europe’s build-out of offshore wind parks.

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  • Analysis-EU Scramble for Anti-Russia ‘Drone Wall’ Hits Political, Technical Hurdles

    By Andrew Gray, Supantha Mukherjee and Max HunderBRUSSELS/STOCKHOLM/KYIV (Reuters) -Just hours after some 20 Russian drones entered Polish airspace…

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  • As Russian Aggression Turns West, Poland Says It’s Ready

    WARSAW—For more than a decade, Poland has prepared for the worst-case scenario: becoming the front line in a war between Russia and the West.

    With an eye on growing Russian aggression in Europe, Warsaw’s military planners built out the country’s armed forces, turning it last year into the largest European military in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. It ramped up military spending to 4.7% of gross domestic product this year—the highest in the alliance. A multibillion-dollar spending spree has put Poland among the biggest buyers of U.S. weapons.

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  • Poland Says Cyberattacks on Critical Infrastructure Rising, Blames Russia

    WARSAW (Reuters) -Poland’s critical infrastructure has been subject to a growing number of cyberattacks by Russia, whose military intelligence, has trebled its resources for such action against Poland this year, the country’s digital affairs minister told Reuters.

    Of the 170,000 cyber incidents that have been identified in the first three quarters of this year, a significant portion has been attributed to Russian actors, while other cases are financially motivated, involving theft or other forms of cybercrime, Krzysztof  Gawkowski said.

    He said Poland is a subject to between 2,000 and 4,000 incidents a day and that 700 to 1,000 are “taken up by us, meaning they posed a real threat or had the potential to cause serious problems”, he said.

    Foreign adversaries are now expanding their focus beyond water and sewage systems to the energy sector, he said.

    He did not give exact figures for Russian activity and could not comment on Russia’s methods in Poland’s cyberspace. The information on Russia’s increasing involvement had come from intelligence from Poland’s intelligence agencies.

    Russia has consistently denied claims of such activity. The Russian embassy in Warsaw did not immediately return a request for comment.

    Officials in Warsaw have said Poland, a staunch supporter of Ukraine, is Russia’s main target among NATO states and has accused the Kremlin of repeated efforts to undermine national security. 

    “Russian activity is the most severe because it targets critical infrastructure essential to maintaining normal life,” Gawkowski said. 

    Along with the Russian drone attack on September 10, there was a correlated cyberattack on Poland, the largest since 2022, when the war broke out in Ukraine, he said. 

    Although the government saw from the early hours of the night that the drone attack was coming from Russia, false claims that Ukraine sent the drones to start war, flooded Polish cyberspace, Gawkowski said.

    He added that to do this, bots that had remained dormant for months, even years were reactivated.

    (Reporting by Barbara Erling)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Poland Scrambles Aircraft After Russia Launches Strikes on Ukraine

    (Reuters) -Polish and allied aircraft were deployed early on Sunday to ensure the safety of Polish airspace after Russia launched airstrikes on Ukraine, including regions near its border with Poland, armed forces of the NATO-member country said.

    “Polish and allied aircraft are operating in our airspace, while ground-based air defence and radar reconnaissance systems have been brought to the highest state of readiness,” Poland’s operational command said in a post on X.

    At 0210 GMT, all of Ukraine was under air raid alerts following Ukrainian Air Force warnings of Russian missile and drone attacks.

    (Reporting by Lidia Kelly in Melbourne; Editing by Jamie Freed)

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  • Russian Boat Seen Close to Polish Gas Pipeline, Border Guard Says

    WARSAW (Reuters) -Polish border guards said on Thursday they had seen a Russian fishing boat acting suspiciously near a gas pipeline in waters off the town of Wladyslawowo, amid anxiety over possible sabotage operations in the Baltic Sea.

    The Baltic Sea is bordered by eight NATO alliance countries that have been redoubling efforts to protect underwater cables and pipelines after a spate of suspected sabotage incidents, some of which the West has blamed on Moscow. 

    Russia denies involvement.

    “On October 1, a Russian fishing boat was spotted by the Border Guard reducing speed while performing suspicious manoeuvres in close proximity to a submarine pipeline belonging to Petrobaltic,” the Border Guard said in a statement, referring to the company that works in the area.

    “This incident occurred 18 nautical miles north of Wladyslawowo. After receiving a radio alert, the skipper sailed away from the critical infrastructure zone.”

    The Russian embassy in Warsaw did not immediately respond to an emailed request for comment.

    Interior Ministry spokesperson Karolina Galecka told reporters that the vessel had been around 300 metres from the pipeline.

    Earlier on Thursday, Prime Minister Donald Tusk mentioned an incident near Szczecin port – some 300 km (190 miles) southwest of Wladyslawowo – during a European summit in Copenhagen, without giving further details.

    He said there were Russian provocations in the Baltic “almost every day”.

    Tomasz Siemoniak, minister responsible for special services, said the incident that Tusk had referred to was separate from the one near Wladyslawowo.

    (Reporting by Marek Strzelecki, Pawel Florkiewicz, Barbara Erling, Alan Charlish)

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