What If Ukraine Falls? This is no Longer a Hypothetical Question – And It Must be Answered Urgently

Europe offers platitudes, Trump dithers, and Ukraine and its extraordinary people stand on the brink. NATO must step up

For 40 cruel and bloody months, Ukraine has fought the Russian invader. Since February 2022, when Moscow’s full-scale, countrywide onslaught began, its people have faced relentless, devastating attacks. Tens of thousands have been killed or wounded, millions have lost their homes. Ukraine’s industries, shops, schools, hospitals and power stations burn, its fertile farmlands are laid waste. Its children are orphaned, traumatised or abducted. Despite repeated appeals, the world has failed to stop the carnage. And yet Ukraine, outnumbered and outgunned, has continued to fight back.

Ukrainian heroism amid horror has become so familiar, it’s almost taken for granted. But as Russia’s president, Vladimir Putin, escalates the war, raining nightly terror on Kyiv and other cities using record waves of armed drones, as US support and peace efforts falter, and as Ukraine’s overstretched frontline soldiers face exhaustion, such complacency looks increasingly misplaced. A no longer hypothetical question becomes ever more real and urgent: what if Ukraine falls?

Answer: Ukraine’s collapse, if it happens, would amount to an epic western strategic failure matching or exceeding the Afghanistan and Iraq calamities. The negative ramifications for Europe, Britain, the transatlantic alliance and international law are truly daunting. That thought alone should concentrate minds.

It has been evident since the dying days of 2023, when its counteroffensive stalled, that Ukraine is not winning. For most of this year, Russian forces have inexorably inched forward in Donetsk and other eastern killing grounds, regardless of cost. Estimated Russian casualties recently surpassed 1 million, dead and wounded. Still they keep coming. While there has been no big Russian breakthrough, for Ukraine’s pinned-down, under-supplied defenders the war is now a daily existential struggle. That they manage to keep going at all is astonishing.

How much longer Ukraine can hold the line, on the battlefield, in the skies, and diplomatically and politically, is in serious doubt. It is short of manpower, ammunition and interceptor missiles. It can still strike back hard. Its occupation of Russia’s Kursk region, and last month’s destruction of strategic bombers based deep inside Russia, were remarkable. But such temporary successes do not alter the basic imbalance of power or general direction of travel.

Increasingly, too, Ukraine is short of reliable friends, though maybe that has always been the case. Putin has assembled his own “coalition of the willing” – China, Iran, North Korea and others – to support his war machine. The west’s equivalent, led by Britain and France, is in limbo. Deployment of a military “reassurance force” cannot proceed. Due to Putin’s intransigence and Donald Trump’s incompetence, there is no ceasefire to uphold and none in prospect.

Speaking in London last week, France’s president, Emmanuel Macron, and Britain’s prime minister, Keir Starmer, regurgitated familiar pledges of unflinching support. That’s easy. Effective military assistance is harder. Like other European countries, the UK and France lack the advanced weapons and materiel, in the quantities required, that only the US can supply.

Attempting to fill the gap, Friedrich Merz, Germany’s chancellor, proposes to buy US Patriot batteries and gift them to Kyiv. Yet like the EU as a whole and last month’s Nato summiteers, Merz’s priority is national self-defence. As he measures out missiles for Ukraine, he’s trebling Germany’s defence spending. The UK is doing much the same.

Trump, the US’s surrender monkey, remains Kyiv’s biggest diplomatic headache. His lopsided 30-day ceasefire plan was rejected by Moscow, his proffered US-Russia commercial deals spurned. After months of slandering Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, and sucking up to Putin, the “very stable genius” has concluded the Russian leader, an indicted war criminal, talks “bull****” and cannot be trusted. Well, fancy that.

Trump now says he will resume limited supplies of defensive weapons to Kyiv and may back additional sanctions. But this is not about policy or principle. His ego is damaged. His feelings are hurt. One flattering word from his smirking Kremlin bro could turn him around in a flash. Like all bullies, Trump instinctively favours the stronger party. Little wonder Putin calculates he can wear down Ukraine, outlast the west and win the war.

All is not lost. With or without Trump, Nato could take a tougher line, as repeatedly urged here, by imposing air exclusion zones over unoccupied Ukraine and targeting incoming missiles and drones. The military position is clearcut, the legal and humanitarian case is unassailable. Russia frequently infringes the sovereignty of Nato neighbours. Putin’s attempts at nuclear blackmail, which so unnerved Joe Biden, are contemptible. If it only had the balls, Nato could put him back in his box.

Failing that, new US and EU sanctions targeting Russian oil exports should be imposed without further delay. Billions of Kremlin dollars held by western banks should be expropriated to pay for arms and reconstruction. Fence-straddlers such as India that refuse to sanction the Kremlin and profit from the war should be invited to read the European court of human rights’ shocking new report on Russian war crimes savagery – and told to pick a side.

Two outcomes now seem most probable: a stalemated forever war, or Ukraine’s collapse. Defeat for Ukraine and a settlement on Putin’s hegemonic terms would be a defeat for the west as a whole – a strategic failure presaging an era of permanent, widening conflict across all of Europe. For Russians, too, neither outcome would constitute lasting victory. Greater efforts are needed to convince Russia’s politicians and public that this war, so costly for their country in lives and treasure, can be ended through negotiation, that legitimate security concerns will be addressed, that the alternatives are far worse.

But first, they must give him up. The chief architect of this horror, the principal author of Russia’s disgrace, must be defanged, deposed and delivered to international justice. Putin, not Ukraine, must fall.

Source: https://www.theguardian.com/co....mmentisfree/2025/jul

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Best OpenAI Models for AI Applications

Consider this your complete guide to AI models and how to choose the right one. In this blog, we discuss how to use Open AI Models for building effective language applications through APIs. You'll learn about data preparation, model selection, fine-tuning, deployment, and monitoring. The guide also explains how to train AI models step by step. It's a helpful resource for anyone looking to implement AI language models in real-world applications.

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Trump Imposes 35% Tariffs on Canada Starting August 1

It was the latest of more than 20 such letters issued by Trump since Monday, after he repeatedly threatened to simply decide a tariff rate for countries as negotiations continue over his “reciprocal” tariffs

US President Donald Trump on Friday announced 35 per cent tariffs on Canadian exports, to take effect from August 1. Canada is the latest country to receive a letter from Trump addressed to Prime Minister Mark Carney.

“Instead of working with the United States, Canada retaliated with its own Tariffs. Starting August 1, 2025, we will charge Canada a Tariff of 35% on Canadian products sent into the United States, separate from all Sectoral Tariffs,” Trump said in the letter, which he posted on his Truth Social platform.

It was the latest of more than 20 such letters issued by Trump since Monday, after he repeatedly threatened to simply decide a tariff rate for countries as negotiations continue over his “reciprocal” tariffs.

Source: https://www.firstpost.com/worl....d/trump-imposes-35-t

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Trump Plans to Send Ukraine Weapons Via NATO Allies

President Trump is planning to sell weapons to NATO allies with the understanding that they will then provide them to Ukraine, three sources familiar with the discussions tell Axios.

Trump seemed to confirm those plans in an interview with NBC News on Thursday.
Why it matters: This is a major policy shift from Trump as he grows increasingly disillusioned with Russia’s Vladimir Putin. He had long rejected the idea of new arms packages for Ukraine in part to avoid becoming personally embroiled in the conflict.

Yes, but: Two administration officials denied the plans meant Trump would now be arming Ukraine.

“POTUS is sending defensive weapons to NATO. NATO can decide what to do with it. We’re not sending weapons to Ukraine,” one official said.
But Trump himself confirmed in the NBC interview that the arms would ultimately be bound for Ukraine. “So what we’re doing is the weapons that are going out are going to NATO, and then NATO is going to be giving those weapons [to Ukraine], and NATO is paying for those weapons.”
Breaking it down: The scheme was floated at the recent NATO summit and has been discussed with Ukraine and European allies, two sources familiar with those discussions told Axios.

One source said the sales could include offensive weaponry, not just air defense support.
The other source, a senior European official, confirmed such a scheme had been discussed but said their government was not aware of any final plan.
None of the sources provided details as to when or how the plans would be carried out.
Between the lines: Trump continued to allow some arms shipments to Ukraine that were authorized under President Biden, but had not approved any new packages since taking office.

He has long opposed picking sides in the conflict, and many in his base are hostile to the idea of actively backing Ukraine.
Trump attacked Biden for months for throwing billions of dollars at an open-ended war.
Trump could argue he’s not repeating that mistake because he is selling weapons, rather than providing them as aid. But with Trump’s peace process nowhere near fruition, he is now preparing to take steps that would have seemed unthinkable a few months ago.
The intrigue: Trump is also considering a Russia sanctions package spearheaded by Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.).

However, a White House official told Axios Trump won’t sign it unless it grants him “100% flexibility” to implement and withdraw the sanctions as he sees fit.
Friction point: For weeks, when asked whether Trump had grown frustrated enough with Russian intransigence that he would consider new weapons transfers, senior administration officials downplayed the likelihood to Axios.

“He wants out of Ukraine, not into Ukraine,” one official said earlier this month.
But Trump’s frustration with Putin’s bombardments of Ukrainian cities changed the calculus. “Everything is a negotiation,” the same official said on Thursday.
State of play: The Pentagon froze a recent shipment to Ukraine that included much-needed air defense weaponry, but Trump reversed the decision earlier this week, citing Ukraine’s need to defend its cities.

He has said repeatedly in recent days that the U.S. would supply only defensive weaponry to Ukraine, which faced the largest Russian drone attack to date on Tuesday night.
What to watch: Arms shipments were expected to dwindle as Biden-era funding ran out, but Trump’s newfound willingness to sell arms bound for Ukraine could change that calculus.

Source: https://www.axios.com/2025/07/....11/trump-ukraine-wea

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Exclusive: OpenAI to Release Web Browser in Challenge to Google Chrome

– Web browser will include chat interface, enable AI agent integrations
– Launch intensifies OpenAI’s competition with Google in AI race
– New product is part of OpenAI’s broader strategy to capture data on users’ web behavior

SAN FRANCISCO, July 9 (Reuters) – OpenAI is close to releasing an AI-powered web browser that will challenge Alphabet’s (GOOGL.O), opens new tab market-dominating Google Chrome, three people familiar with the matter told Reuters.

The browser is slated to launch in the coming weeks, three of the people said, and aims to use artificial intelligence to fundamentally change how consumers browse the web. It will give OpenAI more direct access to a cornerstone of Google’s success: user data.

If adopted by the 500 million weekly active users of ChatGPT, OpenAI’s browser could put pressure on a key component of rival Google’s ad-money spigot. Chrome is an important pillar of Alphabet’s ad business, which makes up nearly three-quarters of its revenue, as Chrome provides user information to help Alphabet target ads more effectively and profitably, and also gives Google a way to route search traffic to its own engine by default.

OpenAI’s browser is designed to keep some user interactions within a ChatGPT-like native chat interface instead of clicking through to websites, two of the sources said.

The browser is part of a broader strategy by OpenAI to weave its services across the personal and work lives of consumers, one of the sources said.

OpenAI declined to comment.

The sources declined to be identified because they are not authorized to speak publicly on the matter.

Led by entrepreneur Sam Altman, OpenAI upended the tech industry with the launch of its AI chatbot ChatGPT in late 2022. After its initial success, OpenAI has faced stiff competition from rivals including
Google and startup Anthropic, and is looking for new areas of growth.

In May, OpenAI said it would enter the hardware domain, paying $6.5 billion to buy io, an AI devices startup from Apple’s (AAPL.O), opens new tab former design chief, Jony Ive.

A web browser would allow OpenAI to directly integrate its AI agent products such as Operator into the browsing experience, enabling the browser to carry out tasks on behalf of the user, the people said.

The browser’s access to a user’s web activity would make it the ideal platform for AI “agents” that can take actions on their behalf, like booking reservations or filling out forms, directly within the websites they use.

TOUGH COMPETITION

OpenAI has its work cut out – Google Chrome, which is used by more than 3 billion people, currently holds more than two-thirds of the worldwide browser market, according to web analytics firm StatCounter.

Apple’s (AAPL.O), opens new tab second-place Safari lags far behind with a 16% share. Last month, OpenAI said it had 3 million paying business users for ChatGPT.

Perplexity, which has a popular AI search engine, launched an AI browser, Comet, on Wednesday, capable of performing actions on a user’s behalf. Two other AI startups, The Browser Company and Brave, have released AI-powered browsers capable of browsing and summarizing the internet.

Chrome’s role in providing user information to help Alphabet target ads more effectively and profitably has proven so successful that the Department of Justice has demanded its divestiture after a U.S. judge last year ruled that the Google parent holds an unlawful monopoly in online search.

OpenAI’s browser is built atop Chromium, Google’s own open-source browser code, two of the sources said. Chromium is the source code for Google Chrome, as well as many competing browsers including Microsoft’s (MSFT.O), opens new tab Edge and Opera (OPRA.O), opens new tab.

Last year, OpenAI hired two longtime Google vice presidents who were part of the original team that developed Google Chrome. The Information was first to report their hires and that OpenAI previously considered building a browser.

An OpenAI executive testified in April that the company would be interested in buying Chrome if antitrust enforcers succeeded in forcing the sale.

Google has not offered Chrome for sale. The company has said it plans to appeal the ruling that it holds a monopoly.

OpenAI decided to build its own browser, rather than simply a “plug-in” on top of another company’s browser, in order to have more control over the data it can collect, one source said.

Source: https://www.reuters.com/busine....ss/media-telecom/ope

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US Banning Chinese Investors From Purchasing Farmland

– US restricts farmland purchases by Chinese nationals and “foreign adversaries” due to national security concerns, says Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins.
– The Trump administration plans to reclaim farmland already purchased by China, citing threats to national security and the agricultural system.
– Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth will ban selling farmland near US military bases to “foreign adversaries,” including companies like Smithfield Foods.

WASHINGTON – The Trump administration announced on July 8 that the United States would start restricting purchases of farmland by Chinese nationals and other “foreign adversaries”, citing security concerns.

Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins said the move was needed to address what she called a “massive threat” to national security.

Foreign purchases of US farmland were being used as “weapons to be turned against us”, Ms Rollins said, unveiling the National Farm Security Action Plan along with other Cabinet officials.

“We see it again and again, from Chinese Communist acquisition of American farmland to criminal exploitation of our system of agriculture,” she said.

“American agriculture is not just about feeding our families, but about protecting our nation and standing up to foreign adversaries who are buying our farmland,” she added.

China ranks 20th on a list of foreign owners of agricultural land, holding 112,234ha at the end of 2023, according to the US Department of Agriculture.

Ms Rollins said the administration of President Donald Trump also planned to “claw back what has already been purchased by China and other foreign adversaries”.

Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth said the Pentagon would ban sales to “foreign adversaries” of farmland located near US military bases.

“As someone who’s charged with leading the Defence Department, I want to know who owns the land around our bases,” Mr Hegseth said. “It’s common sense.

“No longer can foreign adversaries assume we aren’t watching.”

Among the largest Chinese owners of US farmland is Smithfield Foods, which was purchased by a Chinese company, WH Group, in 2013. AFP

Source: https://www.straitstimes.com/w....orld/united-states/u

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Prince Andrew Free to Travel Abroad as FBI Ends Probe Into Royal’s Jeffrey Epstein Links

Prince Andrew can finally end his self-imposed travel ban after a leaked memo revealed that the FBI is closing its investigation into the royal’s Jeffrey Epstein links.

The disgraced Duke of York, 65, has left the UK once in the last six years over fears of an arrest, civil lawsuits or being subpoenaed.

Now, it appears as though the scandal-scarred prince — who has been kept at arm’s length from the royal fold — is able to venture out of the UK without fear of repercussions.


Prince Andrew can finally end his self-imposed travel ban after a leaked memo revealed that the FBI is closing its investigation into the royal’s Jeffrey Epstein links.

“He has been abroad once since the scandal erupted,” a source alleged to the Sun.

“He has always been very nervous about going abroad and felt he’d always be looking over his shoulder as he could be subject to civil action or at worst, being arrested.”

“Hopefully with this out of the way it means he can at least leave the country,” the insider went on. “What’s he supposed to do with the rest of his life? He hasn’t been convicted of any crime and can’t sit around doing nothing at Royal Lodge forever.”

Prior to his controversies, Andrew was dubbed “Air Miles Andy” following his frequent globe-trotting adventures at the taxpayers’ expense.


The disgraced Duke of York, 65, has left the UK once in the last six years over fears of an arrest, civil lawsuits or being subpoenaed.

But his travels came to a grinding halt in recent years, with his only oversees trip being to Bahrain in 2022.

A leaked memo this week concluded that no charges will be brought against Andrew or any other high-profile associate of the disgraced financier.

The investigation also confirmed that there was no evidence that Epstein kept a “client list” — despite Attorney General Pam Bondi saying in February that she had the client list “sitting on my desk right now to review.“


A leaked memo this week concluded that no charges will be brought against Andrew or any other high-profile associate of the disgraced financier.

The younger brother of King Charles has strenuously denied claims against him and had previously insisted that he has no recollection of ever meeting Virginia Giuffre.

In February 2022, Giuffre and Andrew’s attorneys filed court papers stating they had reached an agreement in principle to settle the lawsuit she had filed against him.

Andrew admitted no wrongdoing but wrote in a letter that he regretted his association with Epstein, who Giuffre claims trafficked her to the royal and other rich and powerful men.


Andrew previously insisted that he has no recollection of ever meeting Virginia Giuffre
US District Court – Southern District of New York (SDNY)

In 2020, the FBI had asked the UK Home Office to assist it in bringing Andrew in for questioning, but the investigation was put on hold in 2024 for reasons unknown.

Andrew’s anxiety was kicked into high gear in January after it was revealed that he had kept in contact with Epstein for longer than he initially let on.

It emerged that he had messaged Epstein to say that they would “play some more soon” in an email sent two months after the prince claimed their friendship had ended.

Proof of correspondence between the pair showed that Andrew wrote to the financier on the same day a photo of the prince with then-17-year-old Giuffre surfaced online.

Andrew initially claimed he had cut ties with Epstein — who died by suicide in 2019 while awaiting trial on sex trafficking and federal conspiracy charges — in December 2010.


Andrew’s anxiety was kicked into high gear in January after it was revealed that he had kept in contact with Epstein for longer than he initially let on.

However, in late February 2011, Andrew wrote to Epstein, “Keep in close touch and we’ll play some more soon.”

Giuffre died by suicide in April. She was 41.

Source: https://nypost.com/2025/07/10/....entertainment/prince

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Medical Cartel Sues RFK Jr. for Pulling COVID Shot Recommendation for Kids and Pregnant Women

Despite overwhelming evidence of harm, the AAP, ACP, APHA, and IDSA are fighting to keep poisoning children, pregnant women, and their unborn babies.

In a disturbing attempt to continue pushing deadly genetic injections on the most vulnerable, the American Academy of Pediatrics, American College of Physicians, the American Public Health Association, and the Infectious Diseases Society of America have filed a federal lawsuit against Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. for withdrawing COVID-19 vaccine recommendations for healthy children and pregnant women.

The Cartel is demanding a federal judge reinstate COVID shot recommendations for children and pregnant women—and block HHS from enforcing or promoting RFK Jr.’s May directive that removed them.

They argue Kennedy’s directive violates “norms” by bypassing the CDC and its ACIP panel, and undermines their ability to push the shot to patients and secure insurance coverage.

The plaintiffs claim Kennedy lacked evidence. But that’s a lie.

In fact, overwhelming data fully justifies pulling these shots. In the next section, I’ll walk through the science these organizations are pretending doesn’t exist:

Pregnancy Harms

Solely based on the mechanism of action of COVID-19 mRNA injections (instructing cells in various organ systems, including the reproductive system, to produce toxic spike protein), it can be assumed that COVID-19 genetic injections are not safe for pregnant women and the developing baby.

More than five studies have shown severe harms from COVID-19 vaccination during pregnancy.

Chen et al confirmed that mRNA injections cross the placenta and reach the fetus. mRNA-1273 crosses within 1 hour, accumulates in fetal organs, translates into Spike protein, and persists after birth.

Read More: https://www.vigilantfox.com/p/....medical-cartel-sues-

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