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France Pushes for Nuclear Breakthrough as Iran’s Top Diplomat Visits Paris

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France is preparing for high-stakes talks in Paris this week as Iran’s foreign minister arrives for discussions expected to focus on stalled nuclear negotiations and rising regional tensions.

France will host Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi in Paris this week as part of renewed efforts to revive nuclear diplomacy, urging Tehran to resume full cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and to address unresolved bilateral issues, including the status of detained French nationals.

Paris Seeks Momentum in Stalled Nuclear Diplomacy

French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot confirmed that Abbas Araghchi will arrive in Paris on Wednesday for talks touching on a wide array of sensitive subjects—chief among them, Iran’s nuclear program and the future of negotiations abandoned after years of escalating confrontation.

Barrot called the meeting an opportunity to press Tehran to fulfill its obligations under the now-dormant nuclear agreement.
“This will allow us to insist that Iran meet its commitments toward the IAEA and rapidly restore full cooperation,” he said ahead of the talks.

Detained French Nationals Remain a Priority

French officials also plan to bring up the situation of two French citizens who were released from Iranian detention but remain unable to leave the country. Both are currently staying at the French Embassy in Tehran. Paris has repeatedly demanded their safe return.

Tehran Signals No Urgency for Talks with Washington

The meeting comes amid Iran’s repeated insistence that it is in no rush to resume indirect nuclear talks with the United States, despite the reinstatement of UN sanctions and intensifying economic pressure.

Earlier this month, Iranian leaders said reopening negotiations is “not an urgent matter.”

In an interview with Al Jazeera, Araghchi reiterated that Tehran remains open to dialogue only if Washington adopts a “balanced and mutually respectful” approach. He described US demands—including zero enrichment, curbs on missile capabilities, and limits on support for regional allies—as “unreasonable and unjust.”

“They do not seem to be in a hurry,” Araghchi said. “Neither are we.”

Iran Claims Regional Dynamics Have Shifted

Iran’s top diplomat also argued that regional politics have turned in Iran’s favor. Referring to the Israeli prime minister, Araghchi said:

Sometimes I remind my colleagues that Mr. Netanyahu—despite committing every kind of atrocity—has inadvertently proven to the region that Israel, not Iran or any other state, is the true threat.

Talks Collapse After Israeli Strikes on Iranian Nuclear Sites

The upcoming Paris meeting follows the collapse of the planned sixth round of US-Iran indirect talks in June, which ended abruptly after Israel bombed Iran’s nuclear facilities at Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan.

The strikes triggered a 12-day conflict that left more than 1,000 people dead and caused billions of dollars in damage before both sides agreed to a cease-fire.

A Deal That Never Recovered

The original nuclear accord—signed in 2015 by the US, Iran, France, Germany, Russia, the UK, China and the EU—offered sanctions relief in return for strict limits on Iran’s nuclear activities.

President Donald Trump withdrew the US from the agreement in 2018, arguing it was flawed. Since then, Iran has openly violated multiple provisions, claiming the deal was nullified by Washington’s exit and maintaining that its nuclear program is for civilian purposes only.

UN sanctions on Iran were reinstated in September through the agreement’s “snapback” mechanism, adding further pressure on Tehran as diplomatic efforts struggle to regain momentum.

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Europe

Ukraine Backs Multi-Tier Plan to Enforce Ceasefire

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Ukraine and its Western partners have agreed on a multi-tier enforcement plan under which repeated Russian violations of any future ceasefire would trigger escalating responses, including European intervention backed by US military support.

According to the Financial Times, Ukrainian, European and American officials have reached agreement on a multi-tiered enforcement mechanism designed to deter and respond to Russian violations of any future ceasefire agreement.

The proposal, discussed repeatedly in December and January, outlines a graduated response ranging from diplomatic warnings to direct military intervention backed by the United States.

Three Phases of Response

Officials familiar with the discussions told the Financial Times that any Russian breach of a ceasefire would trigger action within 24 hours, starting with diplomatic warnings and Ukrainian military steps to halt localized violations.

If hostilities persist, a second phase would involve forces from a “coalition of the willing”, including many EU states as well as the UK, Norway, Iceland and Türkiye.

Should the breach escalate into a broader attack, a third phase would be activated within 72 hours, involving a coordinated military response by western-backed forces with direct US military support.

Security Talks and Diplomatic Push

The plan was discussed by Ukrainian, European and American officials in Paris in December, with follow-up talks held in Kyiv on January 3 among national security advisers from coalition countries.

Officials said Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy also raised the issue of US commitments during a meeting with Donald Trump at Mar-a-Lago in December.

Meanwhile, envoys from Kyiv, Moscow and Washington are scheduled to meet again this week in Abu Dhabi for renewed efforts to end the war.

European Troop Commitments

The Financial Times reported that France and the UK have pledged to deploy troops and weapons to Ukraine as part of security guarantees supported by the US, under a proposed 20-point peace framework.

A European-led deterrence force would provide reassurance on land, at sea and in the air, supported by US intelligence and logistics, according to leaders of Kyiv’s key allies.

The US has also offered advanced monitoring technologies along the 1,400-kilometre front line to help detect violations.

Lessons From Failed Ceasefires

Ukraine’s insistence on robust enforcement stems from past experience. Russia breached multiple ceasefires following its initial 2014 incursion into eastern Ukraine’s Donetsk and Luhansk regions.

The Minsk agreements of 2014 and 2015 failed in part because international monitors lacked enforcement authority or western security guarantees, ultimately paving the way for Russia’s full-scale invasion in 2022.

Security Guarantees Still Conditional

Zelensky said in January that security guarantees negotiated with the US, with European input, were “100 per cent ready”, pending confirmation of a signing date.

Trump has proposed what Zelenskyy described as “Nato-like” guarantees, similar to Article 5, reportedly lasting 15 years — though Kyiv is seeking to extend them to 50 years.

Ukraine has also proposed maintaining an 800,000-strong army, supported by western weapons and training, as part of the security package.

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“Trump Hasn’t Changed His Mind on Greenland”

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Greenland Premier Jens-Frederik Nielsen says Washington’s objective is still unchanged, raising stakes for Arctic sovereignty even as U.S.-Denmark-Greenland relations soften amid trilateral talks opened after Davos.

Premier Jens-Frederik Nielsen told parliament in Nuuk on Monday that U.S. President Donald Trump’s position on the Arctic territory and its population has not shifted, even after the U.S. president stepped back from explicit coercive language.

Nielsen’s assessment crystallizes the dispute as a sovereignty test inside a tightening great-power competition across the Arctic, where security, minerals, and sea routes increasingly intersect.

In his address, Nielsen framed the U.S. stance as unambiguous: “Greenland must be taken over and governed by the US.” He added, “Unfortunately, this remains valid and unchanged.”

Those remarks followed Trump’s earlier calls for U.S. control on national security grounds tied to Russia and China, and a period in which Washington threatened sanctions against European governments that opposed the move.

From Threats to Framework

The immediate temperature dropped after Trump met NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte at the World Economic Forum in Davos in 2025. Trump withdrew the sanctions threat and said a framework had been established for talks covering Greenland and the broader Arctic.

Trilateral discussions among the United States, Denmark, and Greenland began last week, marking the first formal channel since Trump’s public escalation.

Yet Greenland’s leadership has paired engagement with firm red lines. On Jan. 13, Nielsen set out Nuuk’s alignment choices in stark terms: “If we have to choose between the United States and Denmark here and now, we choose Denmark. We choose NATO. We choose the Kingdom of Denmark. We choose the EU.”

“We Choose Denmark”

Economic cooperation remains on the table, but only under Greenlandic rules. On Jan. 22, Nielsen said resource development must meet local law and culture: “If you want to exploit our resources, you have to respect our legislation and our very high environmental standards, because that is part of who we are and part of our culture.”

He added a conditional openness: “But we are ready to discuss anything on mutual respect.”

Denmark has reinforced that position publicly. On Jan. 1, Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen described a year of strain from allied pressure, where they had to endure a great deal of threats and condescending rhetoric, even from their “closest allies of a lifetime.”

She also rejected the premise of acquisition in stark terms.

Talk of taking over another country and another people, as if they were something that could be bought and owned. That has no place anywhere.

Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen

Arctic Leverage, Alliance Limits

Together, the statements map a coordinated front across Nuuk and Copenhagen while keeping channels open in Washington. The dispute now sits inside a three-way diplomatic process, with Greenland asserting autonomy, Denmark anchoring sovereignty, and the United States pressing strategic interests.

For allies following Arctic dynamics – including Türkiye, which tracks NATO cohesion and northern security shifts – the episode illustrates how smaller territories become focal points when climate change and geopolitics converge.

The chronology matters. Trump’s renewed push intensified in 2025, with public threats preceding Davos, a framework announced after that meeting, and formal talks opening last week.

Since the start of the whole Arctic saga, Greenland and Denmark have used successive statements to harden their negotiating posture: alignment with NATO and the EU, conditional openness to investment, and a categorical rejection of ownership logic.

The result is a controlled de-escalation in tone without movement on substance – a reminder that Arctic diplomacy is now inseparable from alliance politics.

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Former Duchess of York Sarah Ferguson Closes Charity as Epstein Emails Surface

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Sarah Ferguson’s charity announced closure on Monday after the U.S. Justice Department released over 3 million Epstein-related pages, including emails linking Ferguson to Jeffrey Epstein. The move underscores widening fallout as political and royal figures face renewed scrutiny.

Sarah Ferguson’s charity, Sarah’s Trust, said it will close “for the foreseeable future” days after the U.S. Department of Justice (DoJ) released a vast new tranche of Jeffrey Epstein records that included emails appearing to show contact between Ferguson and the late financier after his conviction. A spokesman for the foundation said the decision followed discussions spanning “some months,” but the timing places the closure squarely within the expanding institutional impact of the Epstein disclosures.

Document Dump Drives Fallout

Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said the DoJ was producing more than 3 million pages, including more than 2,000 videos and 180,000 images “related to Epstein,” reviving the case and intensifying pressure on political, financial, and social elites as the scope of the disclosures widens.

Among those materials were email exchanges that appear to show Ferguson communicating with Epstein while he was imprisoned for soliciting sex from a minor.

Even though solely being named in the files is not a direct indication of wrongdoing, Sarah’s Trust, through its spokesman, confirmed that the charity was closing. The spokesman said “our chair Sarah Ferguson and the board of trustees have agreed that with regret the charity will shortly close for the foreseeable future,” adding that the decision had been “in train for some months.”

Emails, Flights, and Meetings

The released documents outline a detailed chronology of post-conviction contact. Epstein was freed on July 22, 2009, after serving 13 months of an 18-month sentence. An email dated June 14, 2009 from a sender identified as “Sarah” asked Epstein for business guidance. On June 26, 2009, the same sender wrote: “I am alive… yes I did go to the first lady and she loved the Mothers Army. I am going to call you later Love you.”

According to BBC News, an email thread showed flight arrangements for Sarah Ferguson and two assistants from London to Miami, then to New York, before returning to London.

On July 24, 2009, Epstein’s assistant Lesley Groff confirmed British Airways tickets totaling $14,080.10, which Epstein approved.

Emails also point to a lunch meeting at Epstein’s Palm Beach home on July 27, 2009, at 358 El Brillo, with plans including Ferguson and her daughters, with a reply from “Sarah” saying, “Cannot wait to see you.”

The correspondence suggests at least three additional meetings in 2009, during a period when Epstein was under house arrest that lasted until summer 2010.

Other emails show Ferguson praising Epstein as the “brother I have always wished for,” congratulating him on the arrival of a “baby boy,” and seeking advice for Mothers Army, a company listed at Companies House under Sarah Margaret Ferguson with a registered address at Royal Lodge, Windsor Great Park.

Reputational Cascade Across Charities

The renewed attention follows earlier consequences. Previous disclosures led to Ferguson being removed last year as patron or ambassador from multiple organizations, including Julia’s House, the Teenage Cancer Trust, Natasha Allergy Research Foundation, Children’s Literacy Charity, National Foundation for Retired Service Animals, Prevent Breast Cancer, and the British Heart Foundation.

The latest DoJ files also included images of Ferguson’s former husband, Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, kneeling over a woman on the floor. Mountbatten-Windsor has “always consistently and strenuously denied any wrongdoing.”

Political Pressure Widens

The Epstein document release is now extending beyond royal-linked institutions. Today, Bill Clinton and Hillary Clinton agreed to testify before Congress as part of a House Oversight Committee investigation into Epstein, a decision that came days before a scheduled vote to hold them in contempt of Congress after months of seeking their testimony.

The development signals how the DoJ’s multi-million-page disclosure is intensifying scrutiny across political, philanthropic, and public life simultaneously.

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