Skip to playerSkip to main content
  • 2 minutes ago
Europe Today: двенадцатый день войны с Ираном, Европа критикует отсутствие стратегии

Включайте новый флагманский утренний выпуск Euronews в 8:00 по брюссельскому времени. Всего за 20 минут вы узнаете о главных событиях дня.

ЧИТАТЬ ДАЛЕЕ : http://ru.euronews.com/2026/03/11/europe-today-iran-war-enters-day-12-as-european-leaders-voice-frustration-over-lack-of-str

Подписывайтесь: Euronews можно смотреть на Dailymotion на 12 языках

Category

🗞
News
Transcript
00:04Субтитры сделал DimaTorzok
00:30Субтитры сделал DimaTorzok
01:00Субтитры сделал DimaTorzok
01:02DimaTorzok
01:04DimaTorzok
01:06DimaTorzok
01:07DimaTorzok
01:09DimaTorzok
01:10DimaTorzok
01:14DimaTorzok
01:15DimaTorzok
01:16DimaTorzok
01:17DimaTorzok
01:23DimaTorzok
01:29DimaTorzok
01:31DimaTorzok
01:38DimaTorzok
01:43DimaTorzok
02:03DimaTorzok
02:06DimaTorzok
02:28DimaTorzok
02:36DimaTorzok
02:40DimaTorzok
02:45DimaTorzok
03:03DimaTorzok
03:11DimaTorzok
03:16DimaTorzok
03:20DimaTorzok
03:21DimaTorzok
03:46DimaTorzok
03:52DimaTorzok
03:54DimaTorzok
03:55DimaTorzok
04:06DimaTorzok
04:18DimaTorzok
04:24Субтитры сделал DimaTorzok
04:54Субтитры сделал DimaTorzok
05:28Субтитры сделал DimaTorzok
05:38ДimaTorzok
05:40ДimaTorzok
05:40ДimaTorzok
05:47ДimaTorzok
05:49ДimaTorzok
05:54ДimaTorzok
05:55ДimaTorzok
05:57ДimaTorzok
06:28ДimaTorzok
06:37ДimaTorzok
06:38ДimaTorzok
07:09ДimaTorzok
07:15ДimaTorzok
07:16ДimaTorzok
07:17ДimaTorzok
07:25ДimaTorzok
07:28ДimaTorzok
07:29ДimaTorzok
07:31ДimaTorzok
07:36ДimaTorzok
07:41ДimaTorzok
07:47ДimaTorzok
07:55ДimaTorzok
07:59ДimaTorzok
08:28ДimaTorzok
08:30ДimaTorzok
08:39ДimaTorzok
08:41Афганические цифры в Европе.
08:43Конечно, вы слышите индустрии, что Европе не имеет энергию секреты.
08:48Вы не можете быть компетитивом, если вы не имеете энергию секреты.
08:51Это экскурсия, или вы посмотрите на это и говорите, что это правильный момент.
08:55В этом моменте Европе не имеет этот уровень секреты.
08:57Нет, unfortunately, это очень очевидно, что мы не индивидуруем.
09:01Мы производим более 370 миллионов евро фоссий в месяц.
09:06Это не стабильный для наших климат, но не для нашей экономики.
09:11Мы должны использовать более домашний энергии.
09:14Городная новая энергия также будет более чемпионатом.
09:18Не только будет это помогать нам быть более индивидуруем,
09:21и поэтому будет хорошо для нашей секреты,
09:23это также будет хорошо для нашей экономики.
09:26Это не что-то, что может случиться в будущем, что мы ждем.
09:30Это что-то, что мы уже делаем.
09:32So, last year, we deployed a record of 89 gigawatts of new renewables.
09:37That saved us more than 30 billion euros,
09:41just these newly deployed renewables.
09:43And this year, we will do the same.
09:45So, we are moving in the right direction.
09:47But when are you going to see that manifested in prices, however,
09:49especially given this volatility,
09:51because the direction of prices has been up,
09:53certainly for the past week.
09:54The deployment of new renewables brings the prices down.
09:57This means that had we not had the renewables that we have,
09:59the prices would have been much higher.
10:01That's one of the reasons why we don't see the same effects now
10:04as we did in 2022.
10:06So, when prices are set for electricity, for instance,
10:09the most cheap energy bids first, and that's the renewables.
10:13Then, sometimes, if you don't have enough renewables in the system,
10:16and it's the fossils that set the price,
10:18the gas that sets the price,
10:20that's when the prices go up.
10:22Also on the renewables.
10:23And the less hours,
10:25the better we can become at having less hours of the fossil setting the price,
10:31the better, of course, it is.
10:33So, that's one of the reasons.
10:34I know it's a bit complicated,
10:35but that's one of the reasons why we are in a better situation now than we were in 2022.
10:39The Russian president has said that Russia is ready to intervene in this market
10:42to stabilize prices.
10:44When you hear that,
10:46what does that make you think?
10:47What does that allude to you?
10:48We absolutely do not want Russian energy.
10:51Russia is conducting a terrible war on our friends in Ukraine,
10:55and we do not want to help indirectly finance that war by buying Russian energy.
11:01Russia has weaponized energy against us.
11:03Russia has blackmailed member states of the European Union using energy.
11:07So, for us, we've said no more to this,
11:11and that is a standpoint that we will stick to.
11:16Now, the war in Iran has spread to Lebanon,
11:19where Israel has vowed to root out the Iran-backed Shia militia Hezbollah.
11:23Thousands of people are on the move,
11:25mostly from south Lebanon,
11:27from a war that has already caused almost 600 deaths in the country.
11:31In a last-ditch effort to stop the violence,
11:34the Lebanese government asked for direct talks with Israel
11:36to a U.S. intermediary.
11:38So far, the U.S. and Israel have rebuffed the proposal,
11:41albeit not officially saying the government should focus on disarming Hezbollah.
11:45Euronews' senior editor and Middle East expert Sophie Claudet
11:48spoke to Lebanon's energy minister, Joe Sadi.
11:51Here's what he had to say.
11:52This was indeed a very courageous initiative by our president,
11:58but as of this time, I am not aware of any response.
12:05But don't you think it's a little too late?
12:08As per the 2024 ceasefire agreement between Lebanon and Israel,
12:14the Lebanese government was supposed to disarm Hezbollah.
12:16This hasn't happened.
12:18And we've seen now what's happening.
12:20Obviously, I think everybody would wish that the implementation of this
12:27would happen much quicker.
12:28But this has to do on one side with the availability of the capabilities of the Lebanese army.
12:39It has to do with also the behavior of Israel during that whole period.
12:48But does the army have even the capabilities of disarming Hezbollah,
12:52which is a state within the states?
12:53Based on what the, I'm not, I'm no military expert, but this is what the army says.
12:59They do not have all the capabilities they need to do this by their own account,
13:07which is why, if you're in anger, there was a plan to do it in multiple phases.
13:12Prime Minister Netanyahu has been very clear in his will to completely root out Hezbollah.
13:17And I may remind our viewers that Hezbollah is not only a military faction,
13:23it's also a political and social movement that is deeply rooted in Lebanon.
13:28Do you think that Israel can root out Hezbollah?
13:30The military side of Hezbollah has now been declared illegal by our government.
13:36The political and prime minister did say that if Hezbollah was to date
13:43of that purely as a political party, then he would have no problem with it.
13:52But I understand that Lebanese authorities can live with Hezbollah being a political social movement,
13:59but Israel is increasingly showing signs that it cannot.
14:04And Hezbollah is an ideology. How can you defeat an ideology?
14:07The way forward is to show what the state can do, deliver basic goods and services on all fronts,
14:18health, social, education, etc.
14:22But for the state to be able to deliver this, it needs financial, it needs political willingness,
14:27which I think it has, but it also needs financial means.
14:30And unfortunately, Hezbollah dragging us again back into the war,
14:37it makes the availability of international funding that much more difficult and distant in time.
14:46Do you think if the Iranian regime was completely defeated,
14:49that would significantly weaken Hezbollah as a movement, as an ideology, as a popular movement in Lebanon?
14:56The lifeline, there is a financial lifeline for Hezbollah coming from Iran.
15:01They've said it so publicly.
15:02There is a military one probably that has severely decreased since the regime change in Syria,
15:10but certainly on the financial front as well.
15:13And so any reduction, any major reduction, both on the military side and the financial side,
15:21in terms of lifeline to Hezbollah, certainly would weaken it.
15:29And with the situation in the Middle East getting worse,
15:32and thousands now internally displaced, with some stadiums even turned into shelters,
15:36the EU Agency for Asylum is preparing for potential humanitarian crisis.
15:41Our Jakob Janis reports.
15:44War. War never changes.
15:47But while the news cycle obsesses over tactical maps,
15:51your reporter is looking at the people.
15:53President Trump has called the conflict
15:56A short-term excursion.
15:58But if he's wrong, Europe could deal with a refugee crisis of an unprecedented magnitude.
16:03And history shows that when a home becomes a battlefield,
16:06people move towards safety and existing ties.
16:09So where could they go?
16:12Currently, roughly 4 million Iranians live abroad,
16:16and most of them migrated during or after the 1979 revolution.
16:21In Europe, Germany leads with over 300,000 people,
16:25followed by the UK and Sweden,
16:27with each hosting around 100,000.
16:30In 2025, only 8,000 Iranians sought asylum in Europe,
16:35which is less than 1% of all applications.
16:39But with a population of 90 million,
16:42the EU Asylum Agency warns that even partial instability
16:45could trigger a massive refugee crisis.
16:48However, the agency also calls this scenario highly speculative,
16:53stressing it is too early for firm predictions.
16:56But you should know this isn't only about Iran.
16:59It is about the whole region.
17:02Iran is already one of the world's largest refugee hosts,
17:06a home to over 1.5 million of them,
17:09and many more with an undocumented status.
17:12Most of refugees come from Afghanistan and Iraq,
17:15and are now caught in just another war zone.
17:19And the ripple effect is spreading.
17:21According to the International Organization for Migration,
17:24over 660,000 people have been displaced in Lebanon
17:28because of the conflict.
17:30And right now, no one knows yet how or when the war will end.
17:36But for Europe, it seems that the consequences are no longer distant.
17:45And it is in this very context that MEPs are gathering in Strasbourg this week.
17:50European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen
17:52is set to address the Parliament this morning.
17:54For more on that, we can now cross over to the European Parliament in Strasbourg
17:58and bring in your news as Marit Gwynne-Jones.
18:00Good morning, Marit.
18:01So Ursula von der Leyen will take centre stage today
18:04at a very tense time for the European Union
18:05and also for inter-institutional relations.
18:08Tell us more.
18:11Yes, Maeve.
18:12Expect a fiery debate
18:14when the Commission President joins the hemicycle later this morning.
18:19For two reasons, really.
18:20Because firstly, members of this Parliament have been telling me
18:24in recent days that they feel that von der Leyen
18:28has been really overstepping her mandate
18:30in response to the conflict in the Middle East.
18:32That she's been wading into foreign policy when she shouldn't,
18:35encroaching on the role of the EU foreign policy chief, Kaya Callas.
18:40I remember that von der Leyen was the compromise candidate back in 2019,
18:43but her critics say that since then,
18:45she's been using crises like this one to accumulate power
18:48and to expand her mandate into a more geopolitical one.
18:51And in fact, von der Leyen did deliver a speech earlier this week
18:54where she essentially laid out a new vision
18:56for the way that EU conducts its foreign policy,
18:59saying it has to stop being a custodian of the old world order, she said,
19:04and that it essentially faces two choices.
19:06It either clings on, she said, to what used to make it strong
19:10or it adapts to a more power politics world
19:13by pursuing a more interest-based foreign policy.
19:16We've had quite a harsh response from socialist voices.
19:19The European Council President, Antonio Costa,
19:22saying yesterday that the EU still needs to be a standard bearer.
19:26Also, the Vice President of the Commission,
19:29Teresa Ribeira, another socialist voice,
19:31saying yesterday in response to von der Leyen's speech,
19:34she said it was not the most adequate manner to express herself,
19:38but yes, she is fully committed, of course, to the international order.
19:43We've also seen a response from the Spanish government
19:45saying that the EU has to uphold the rules-based order.
19:48So, Maeve, I think we can expect these tensions to really play out
19:52when von der Leyen addresses the hemicycle this morning.
19:55Indeed.
19:55Mary Gwynne-Jones, thank you so much for that live update there from Strasbourg.
19:59But that does bring this edition of Europe Today to an end.
20:03For more news and analysis, do visit euronews.com.
20:05Thank you so much, though, for tuning in.
20:07As always, take care and see you very soon on Euronews.
20:20Euronews.
20:22Продолжение следует...
Comments

Recommended