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Ukraine's Zelenskyy says end of war with Russia is 'very, very far away'Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy says a deal to end the war between Ukraine and Russia “is still very, very far away."KYIV, Ukraine -- A deal to end the war between Ukraine and Russia “is still very, very far away,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said, adding that he expects to keep receiving American support despite his recent fraught relations with U.S. President Donald Trump.“I think our relationship (with the U.S.) will continue, because it’s more than an occasional relationship,” Zelenskyy said late Sunday, referring to Washington’s support for the past three years of war.“I believe that Ukraine has a strong enough partnership with the United States of America” to keep aid flowing, he said at a briefing in Ukrainian before leaving London.Zelenskyy publicly was upbeat despite recent diplomatic upheaval between Western countries that have been helping Ukraine with military hardware and financial aid. The turn of events is unwelcome for Ukraine, whose understrength army is having a hard time keep bigger Russian forces at bay.The Ukrainian leader was in London to attend U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s effort to rally his European counterparts around continuing — and likely much increased — support for Ukraine from the continent amid political uncertainty in the U.S., and Trump’s overtures toward Russian President Vladimir Putin.Europe is suspicious of Trump’s motives and strategy. Friedrich Merz, Germany’s likely next leader after the recent election, said Monday that he didn’t think last Friday’s Oval Office blow-up was spontaneous.He said that he had watched the scene repeatedly. “My assessment is that it wasn’t a spontaneous reaction to interventions by Zelenskyy, but apparently an induced escalation in this meeting in the Oval Office,” Merz said.He said that he was “somewhat astonished by the mutual tone,” but there has been in recent weeks.“I would advocate for us preparing to have to do a great, great deal more for our own security in the coming years and decades,” he said.Even so, Merz said that he wanted to keep the trans-Atlantic relationship alive.“I would also advocate doing everything to keep the Americans in Europe,” he said.
Cita de: AbiertoPorDemolicion en Marzo 03, 2025, 18:57:17 pmEste titular, tiene más influencia en la política local que todos los papers del Comisario de vivienda.Citarhttps://www.eleconomista.es/vivienda-inmobiliario/noticias/13247052/03/25/el-precio-del-alquiler-sube-un-11-en-febrero-y-marca-un-nuevo-record-donde-lo-hace-con-mas-fuerza.htmlEl precio del alquiler sube un 11% en febrero y marca un nuevo récord: ¿dónde lo hace con más fuerza?Y así será hasta que pase como en julio de 2007, cuando en el Telediario / el Parte salieron dos titulares. Que la vivienda ya bajaba, y que sin ayudas la construcción no iba a poder mantenerse.Ahí empezó a rodar la bola. Las elecciones de marzo de 2008 "hasta marzo no quiebra ni Dios", y los fastos de ganar la Eurocopa de ese mismo verano maquillaron la situación. Hasta llegar a aquel octubre negro donde el paro subió un millón de personas. Casi de un día para otro.Sólo ahí más de uno vio que iba en serio. Y muchos ni así lo vieron hasta que se llevaron un par de cornadas.
Este titular, tiene más influencia en la política local que todos los papers del Comisario de vivienda.Citarhttps://www.eleconomista.es/vivienda-inmobiliario/noticias/13247052/03/25/el-precio-del-alquiler-sube-un-11-en-febrero-y-marca-un-nuevo-record-donde-lo-hace-con-mas-fuerza.htmlEl precio del alquiler sube un 11% en febrero y marca un nuevo récord: ¿dónde lo hace con más fuerza?
https://www.eleconomista.es/vivienda-inmobiliario/noticias/13247052/03/25/el-precio-del-alquiler-sube-un-11-en-febrero-y-marca-un-nuevo-record-donde-lo-hace-con-mas-fuerza.htmlEl precio del alquiler sube un 11% en febrero y marca un nuevo récord: ¿dónde lo hace con más fuerza?
La retribución media por consejero que ha desempeñado el cargo durante el ejercicio completo9 se situó en 404.000 euros anuales, lo que supone un aumento del 5,5 % respecto al año anterior. Sin tener en cuenta la referida retribución extraordinaria, la remuneración media por consejero no hubiera sufrido variaciones significativas respecto al ejercicio anterior. La remuneración media por consejero ejecutivo se situó en 1,8 millones de euros, un 7,1 % más que en 2022. El mayor incremento (+16,9 %) se ha dado en las sociedades que no forman parte del Ibex, ya que la referida retribución extraordinaria tuvo lugar en una de estas entidades.La remuneración media de los consejeros externos fue de 160.000 euros, lo que supone un incremento interanual del 4,6 %. Este aumento se explica, en gran parte, por la retribución de un consejero10 que anteriormente era ejecutivo, fue recalificado como otro externo y ahora recibe una remuneración fija en su condición de consejero y asesor estratégico.
Otro lunes negruzco…
Cita de: conejo en Marzo 03, 2025, 21:44:55 pmOtro lunes negruzco…Lo que me está sorprendiendo es que el dólar también está en rojo. Siempre que hay bajadas en la bolsa americana sube el dólar. Pero esta vez no. ¿Algo se ha roto ahí?Tampoco soy un experto e igual estoy diciendo una chorrada Saludos
Cita de: conejo en Marzo 03, 2025, 21:44:55 pmOtro lunes negruzco…¡Que todavía no ha acabado!
Is an Independent Europe post Trump possible?Does the 'London plan' lead Europe out from the Primrose Path?(...)Trump clearly wants to withdraw the U.S. from Ukraine. It’s less clear whether over the medium term he sees the U.S. fully extricated from Europe or not. For now, whatever disdain he has for both, he more than likely sees the EU and NATO as useful vassals provided that they foot the bill. Trump doesn't really care what happens to Ukraine now, whatever he may say in public. He now has every reason to abandon it and plausibly justify it. The spectacle in the Oval Office is sufficient.The balancing act challenge for the Europeans is to do enough to keep Trump ensnared in Europe while they begin to build up their own capabilities to 'go it alone'. They’re trying that now, but Trump is wise to this objective, so won’t be easily cornered. We have seen this already, as he dealt with Macron and Starmer with short shrift. However, without making a clean break with the Americans the Europeans are at risk of being permanent vassals with a security master whose commitment to unconditional support has wavered.The Europeans need to prepare for a post-Trump world.At some point, Europe will need to resolve the Ukraine war, and that means entering an agreement with Russia, despite not wanting to. Ukraine will have to accept this as well. At the same time, Europe - if it can be described in singular terms at all - will need to reconfigure its overall sense of its own geo-economic future not as a ‘fag end’ of a transatlantic power, but as an enduring bulwark of a Eurasian economic mass.To do this, European powers will need to address three core barriers:1.- The longstanding and chronic Russophobia must be addressed. Without doing so, it will be hard to deal sensibly with geographic realities. Russia is a neighbour, the Americans are not;2.- Military realities trump morality aggrandisement. The bitter pill of defeat will need to be swallowed. This may be hard, but look no further than Trump for lessons in how this can be done; and3.- Longstanding Eurocentric primacy as a civilisation disposition needs to be addressed, so that Europe can address the conditions needed for its economic revitalisation. This means coming to terms with the rise of Asia, and China principally, and embracing the opportunities this brings. The U.S. has no interest in bolstering the Eurozone; for Trump, the EU was created to ‘screw over’ the U.S.. Trump’s America will continue to strip-mine European industry and labour markets for successful companies and talented people. Vance’s speech at the Munich conference was a clear shot across the bow. The 25% tariffs are clearly aimed at hastening the hollowing out of European industry, even as Europe prepares to retaliate.These are major burdens that constrain the present ‘agency envelope’, limiting the field of possibilities for Europe as a whole, and for European nations individually. Those that succeed in addressing these barriers are likely to, at the very least, expand the array of policy options available to them. Those that don’t will be marooned in fighting a war that is debilitating and which, ultimately, drains the economic lifeblood from western Europe.An independent Europe post Trump is possible. The path laid out in London is unlikely to lead there.