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Estados Unidos e Irão fecham acordo-quadro: Trump viaja para a Europa para cimeira do G7

Trump junta-se aos líderes do G7 em França após acordo de princípio entre Washington e Teerão que visa a paz e reabrir o estreito de Ormuz.

LEIA MAIS : http://pt.euronews.com/2026/06/15/estados-unidos-e-irao-fecham-acordo-quadro-trump-viaja-para-a-europa-para-cimeira-do-g7

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00:14Bom dia, 15 de junio de 15 de junio, eu sou Mave MacMahin e esse é Europe Today.
00:20O seu dia em dia com a análise europeia e europeia, aqui no Euronews.
00:25Coming up, World Cup Fever. German fans are on a high after their team's comfortable 7-1 victory over the
00:32Caribbean island nation of Curacao in Houston last night.
00:36Meanwhile, Turkish supporters are licking their wounds following a surprising 2-0 defeat to Australia, Sweden and the Netherlands also
00:44celebrating either victories and draws of their own.
00:46All eyes now on Belgium's Red Devils, who join the action tonight as they take on Egypt.
00:52And former World Cup champions Spain are stepping into the limelight too.
00:56We'll have all the latest from on and off the pitch with our special correspondent, Vincenzo Genovese.
01:01And we'll be live in Evian, where President Donald Trump will join the G7 after spending his weekend celebrating and
01:09announcing the imminent reopening of the Strait of Hormuz.
01:12In an extravagant, cage-fighting-inspired party that cost £60 million and attracted 4,000 spectators,
01:19the US president even got phone calls from all across the globe, from Ukraine's President Zelensky and Russia's President Vladimir
01:25Putin.
01:25But first, to developing news this morning that the US and Iran have confirmed they've reached a framework for a
01:32peace deal.
01:32Global oil prices have dropped amid fresh hopes that this could reopen the Strait of Hormuz and end the greatest
01:39energy supply crisis in recent history.
01:42For more, we can head now to Dubai, where your news is correspondent, Jane Witherspoon, is standing by for us
01:47this morning.
01:48So, Jane, a little glimmer of hope that a deal is within reach.
01:53Good morning. Yes, absolutely. After 108 days of war with Iran, President Trump has declared that a peace deal has
02:03been reached.
02:03Clearly in a happy mood after those weekend 80th birthday celebrations, he took to his truth social and he wrote,
02:27So that's the view from President Donald Trump. Pretty upbeat. But what about the Iranians, Jane? How have they been
02:32reacting to this deal?
02:35Well, of course, they have responded. Tehran has since confirmed that the text of the Memorandum of Understanding, obviously, this
02:42is still an MOU at the moment.
02:44They have said it will be signed and agreed upon on Friday in Switzerland.
02:50That said, it is pending following the verification of US commitments, including the lifting of the US blockade on the
02:58Strait of Hormuz.
02:59And of course, Pakistan and also Qatar have been very instrumental in negotiating this peace deal.
03:07It is hoped across the region that this will establish a framework for long lasting peace across the Middle East.
03:14Absolutely. The expectations are extremely high, but the devil, of course, will be in the details.
03:18Jane Witherspoon, thank you so much for that live update there from Dubai.
03:21And off the back of President Trump's announcement, the leaders of France, Germany, the UK and Italy have all called
03:28for the immediate reopening of the Strait of Hormuz in order to stabilise the world's economy.
03:33This as G7 meeting begins today in Evian on the shores of Lake Geneva, with President Donald Trump set to
03:40arrive later today.
03:41For more, we can go straight to our Europe editor, Maria Tadeo, who's following the three day talks for us.
03:46Good morning, Maria. So leaders are gathering and just this news landing. How have they been welcoming it?
03:54Yes, good morning, Maeve. Indeed, the news of this framework agreement between the United States and Iran has already swept
04:00the G7, which you see behind me in Evian.
04:03That is Lake Geneva. Of course, that is where the G7 leaders, including President Trump, will be gathering for three
04:09days.
04:09Yesterday night, already a reaction from the host, the French President Emmanuel Macron, putting out a video message at midnight,
04:17indicating that he welcomes what would be or should indicate the antifostilities between the two sides,
04:23but also reiterating that the G7 wants to hear the details and the fallout from this deal.
04:28Also, there will be leaders representing the Arab world, including Qatar and the United Arab Emirates, as well as Egypt,
04:35around the table.
04:36He also put out a statement alongside Germany, Italy and the UK, insisting that this is good news if a
04:43deal indeed is put to paper.
04:46But they also repeated that they must see the reopening unconditional of the Strait of Hormuz.
04:51Of course, that is critical for the global energy market.
04:54And the Europeans have repeated, insisted and reiterated that they will not, under any circumstances,
05:00pay in order to pass through the Strait of Hormuz.
05:03The other big question, and the Europeans also made it clear last night in anticipation to this G7 meeting,
05:08is what's actually going to happen with the nuclear program in Iran.
05:12The French President insisting that Iran must never have a nuclear weapon.
05:16At this point, it is unclear what are the details of this agreement landed by the U.S. and Iran.
05:23But this is going to dominate talks today.
05:25As you say, Maeve, we are expecting the President of the U.S. to arrive tonight.
05:29He will be greeted by the French President, and then there will be a working dinner connected to the geopolitics
05:35immediately at around 7.30 p.m. for the Europeans, certainly the European part of this G7,
05:42but also Canada and Japan.
05:43The focus is the implications on the energy market, but also knowing specifically what is in this agreement.
05:49At this point, there are more questions, of course, than answers.
05:52Indeed, as you say, Iran to dominate those talks there in Evian.
05:55But what else, Maria, is on the agenda?
05:59Well, yes, there's also a very geopolitical, we should say, G7.
06:04It is also going to be a difficult G7 for Emmanuel Macron, the host,
06:08because when you're the host, you have to rally everyone around you,
06:11and you have to make sure there is unity around the G7 for diplomats that we spoke to with yesterday.
06:17They repeated that already the fact that President Trump is going to stay for three days
06:21indicate there could be a level of unity not seen in the G7 since his return.
06:26We should also note that on Wednesday, and that is a personal touch from President Emmanuel Macron,
06:31the U.S. president will also head to Versailles for a dinner.
06:34That was the way, perhaps, to keep him engaged for three days here.
06:39The big topic, of course, will be the war in Ukraine for the Europeans.
06:43They say that this is an opportunity to really talk about the conditions for a real negotiation.
06:48But we have seen overnight another real pounding of Ukraine, including a cathedral in Kyiv for the G7.
06:55There's also a question of technology when it comes to artificial intelligence.
06:59The CEOs of some of the major Silicon Valley companies, including OpenAI and Anthropic,
07:04with a ban over the weekend, shocking in the world of technology,
07:08from the U.S. government to non-nationals, basically a ban to use some of the top-tier technology
07:14from Anthropic to non-Americans, will also feature in a working launch.
07:19And then there's, of course, a question of geopolitical and geoeconomic imbalances.
07:23China very much in focus.
07:25For diplomats here, they repeat that they are not naive.
07:28The relationship between the United States and Europe, and therefore also a large part of the G7,
07:33has fundamentally changed.
07:34But they still insist the U.S. is a country that you simply cannot ignore.
07:38There is enormous diplomatic and military might behind President Trump.
07:43So in the areas in which you can work together to get agreements and get things going moving forward,
07:48you still need to engage with President Trump.
07:50Everyone else, the Europeans say they will push for their own interests.
07:54Okay, Maria, today, thank you so much for that live update.
07:57Now, moving on, as EU foreign ministers gather in Luxembourg today for talks,
08:01Russia has launched a round of ballistic missile strikes on Kyiv overnight, striking.
08:05As you heard there from Maria, the capital's historic Assumption Cathedral.
08:09That's one of Ukraine's most significant religious and cultural sites.
08:13This as both Ukraine and Moldova are set to formally open the first phase of negotiations
08:18on joining the European Union tonight in Luxembourg.
08:21For the latest, we can go straight over to Luxembourg, where our correspondent,
08:24Mared Gwynn, is standing by for us this morning.
08:27Good morning, Mared.
08:28At this moment, a long time coming for both Ukraine and Moldova.
08:34Yes, indeed, Maeve, as you just said there.
08:37Tonight, both Ukraine and Moldova formally opening this first phase of talks on joining the EU.
08:43Both countries did file for EU application in the wake of Russia's invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
08:49But then, Viktor Orbán's veto on the opening of talks with Ukraine scuppered that completely,
08:56held Moldova back as well, because both Ukraine and Moldova have been informally paired
09:01on their journey towards becoming EU members.
09:04The election of Peter Maggia, of course, in April changed all of that,
09:07and that's allowed for these talks to kick off here in Luxembourg later tonight.
09:11And I'm pleased to say I'm now joined by Moldova's Deputy Prime Minister for European Integration,
09:18Kristina Gerasimov.
09:19Minister, really good to have you with us on Euronews.
09:21Firstly, can you tell us how significant a moment this is for Moldova,
09:26especially considering that the issue of EU membership does divide the population,
09:30as we've seen in recent votes, including in the referendum back in 2024?
09:35It is indeed a historic milestone for my country today, the fact that we are moving forward
09:40with the opening of negotiations by clusters.
09:43That means the beginning of a complex reform process meant to transform our society,
09:50democratic institutions, our economy, to prepare basically Moldova
09:54with the backbone of the reforms necessary for EU accession.
09:59This is also a strong signal for us that the EU is also getting ready to receive new member states,
10:08and that is always a very good sign.
10:10I want to ask you about this process which has coupled both Moldova and Ukraine on their membership bids.
10:17This has meant you being held back by the veto of other countries, including Hungary.
10:21This could come back to become another problem.
10:23Is it time now for Ukraine and Moldova to be decoupled so that you can progress based on your own
10:29merits?
10:30We're very grateful that this opportunity has been provided for us,
10:34unfortunately, by the tragic circumstances that Ukraine is still going through.
10:39Ukraine is still fighting for democracy and for the security of Moldova, of Europe as such.
10:45At the same time, the European Union enlargement policy is a merit-based process,
10:50which means that the reforms that every candidate country is conducting depends on their own merits.
10:58So we very much hope that we will be able, as soon as possible, to open the next clusters
11:04and continue with our own reform pathways.
11:07So that means being decoupled from Ukraine,
11:09because we know that Russia is very willing and able to capitalize on the feelings of frustrations in some populations,
11:16including your own, with the slowness sometimes of this process.
11:19So is it time now for Moldova to be separated from Ukraine in this process?
11:23Decoupling or coupling is one of the issues that Russia uses in its narratives
11:28against countries that would like to get closer to the EU.
11:32This is the time for both us and Ukraine to move forward
11:35and to be led to move forward with our reform paths.
11:38Finally, Minister, before I let you go, just one question,
11:40because I know several officials in Romania have been floating the prospect of unification with Romania as an alternative.
11:49Is this something that you could contemplate?
11:52Our only plan is to get ready for EU membership by 2030.
11:57This is what we have societal support for, and we're working hard to make that objective a reality.
12:02OK, Minister Gerasimo, thank you so much for joining us on Euronews.
12:06Remember, those talks on both Ukraine and Moldova and also in Montenegro are taking place in Luxembourg later in the
12:12day.
12:12For now, back to you.
12:13OK, Mary Gwynn, thank you so much there.
12:15And of course, to your guest.
12:17Now, the EU's tech chief has fired a warning about the risks of relying on US tech companies,
12:22especially in the areas of cybersecurity and defence.
12:24This, as European investors and researchers fear that Europe will be cut off from frontier AI models.
12:30Our Jakubianus has the story.
12:34Washington has just reminded Europe who really holds the power in the age of artificial intelligence.
12:39Winning the AI race will demand a new spirit of patriotism and national loyalty in Silicon Valley.
12:47And last Friday, one of the AI race leaders, Anthropic, pressed the kill switch on its most advanced models, Fable
12:535 and Mythos 5.
12:55And following a surprise directive from the Trump administration, citing national security,
13:00the company was forced to ban all non-US citizens from its frontier technology.
13:05And for Europe, this is a long overdue wake-up call.
13:08But will it actually wake up?
13:11Across the continent, research labs, tech firms and even some hospitals have spent the last year piloting these US-made
13:19systems for key operations.
13:21Now they have learned that their digital infrastructure can be unplugged overnight.
13:25And European leaders across the spectrum, from France's far-right presidential candidate Jordan Bardella
13:32to the European Commission's own spokesperson, Thomas Renier, are in re-agreement arguing that nations that do not develop and
13:40control their own AI models
13:41will remain entirely dependent on the choices of foreign powers.
13:46What's even more interesting, earlier this month, the European Commission announced its ambitious plan
13:51for European strategic autonomy in technology.
13:54Anchored by the new Cloud and AI Development Act,
13:57The plan aims to triple Europe's data center capacity, build massive AI gigafactories
14:03and push for the secure, open-source alternatives.
14:07However, Europe is currently trapped in a massive compute gap.
14:11While the EU scrambles to build infrastructure,
14:14the sheer scale of investment from the US giants dwarfs European efforts.
14:18And relying on moonshot projects alone might be simply too slow.
14:23Another option could be a coalition of the middle powers,
14:26by teaming up with nations like the UK, Canada and Japan.
14:30Europe could pull its fragmented computing power,
14:33creating a sort of AI insurance policy.
14:36However, regardless of what the EU does, it better do it quickly.
14:41Otherwise, these sudden kill switches will become a regular feature of the continent's digital future.
14:56The tournament kept us all very busy, of course, this weekend,
15:05but especially our sports correspondent, Vincenzo Genovese, who joins us now to bring us up to speed.
15:09Yes, maybe indeed. Good morning.
15:11The party's on. World Cup is in full swing.
15:151.2 billion people watching the first opening game.
15:18Million of viewers for the weekend's games.
15:20Let's get straight to the results.
15:22Group B only draws Canada 1-1, Bosnia and Herzegovina.
15:27Qatar, Switzerland, the same result, 1-1.
15:30So no leaders in this group, all the teams at one point.
15:36Group D, we had some surprise.
15:38We had Australia beating Turkey at 2-0.
15:42This was the surprise of the weekend.
15:44United States, a very confident, a very dominant debut 4-1 to Paraguay.
15:49And so United States and Australia leading the group.
15:52Then Group C, Scotland beat Haiti 1-0, quite expected.
15:56And then Brazil-Morocco, 1-1.
15:59This was the most awaited game of the weekend.
16:02It was vibrant.
16:03Brazil was on the ropes in the first half.
16:07They conceded the first goal to Saibari.
16:09They conceded many occasions to Moroccans.
16:11And they were saved by Vinicius, by a brilliant curling shoot by Vinicius.
16:18But, well, the second half was more balanced.
16:20But the general impression to me was that Morocco at this moment is better than Brazil.
16:25And Brazil's coach, of course, under pressure.
16:26The Italian guy.
16:27Yeah, Carlo Ancelotti is being grilled.
16:30He's being criticised by the Brazilian press.
16:32Many say that the players he has selected are not good enough.
16:36But I'd say, let Carlo Ancelotti cook because he knows the job.
16:39And it's not uncommon in the history of the World Cup that teams go deep into the tournament
16:44after a poor starting match.
16:46And what about the other European teams?
16:48Well, we had Group F.
16:50We have Sweden defeating 5-1 Tunisia.
16:53We have 2-2, a thrilling draw between the Netherlands and Japan.
16:58And, of course, Group E, the Germany, the Côte d'Ivoire, beat 1-0 Ecuador.
17:04And Germany, another awaited match, beat 7-1 Curaçao.
17:10I would say an easy match.
17:11This reminded me of 2002 when Germany started with an 8-0 to Saudi Arabia.
17:16Indeed, it was an easy one.
17:17But, of course, highly celebrated.
17:18And we can actually get the view from Berlin now and head over to the capital
17:21and bring in our correspondent, Laura Fleischmann.
17:24Good morning, Laura.
17:24Tell us, what is the reaction there to Germany's good, very good World Cup debut?
17:31Good morning to you, too, Maeve and Vincenzo.
17:34And, well, there was a sense of relief to be felt here in Germany
17:38with this amazing success for the German national team.
17:41The 7-1 scoreline, of course, reminded us of the game against Brazil,
17:45the famous game where Germany also won 7-1.
17:49And after yesterday's game, there was a spontaneous car convoy on Kudam,
17:53one of the biggest boulevards in Berlin.
17:55And people were very happy about the success,
17:59especially since before there wasn't a lot of excitement about this World Cup.
18:03OK, Laura Fleischmann, thank you so much for that.
18:05Let's see if the Red Devils do that well.
18:06And there's such a buzz tonight in Belgium.
18:08Just tell us, what should we look out for now?
18:11Well, tonight we have, as you said, the Red Devils.
18:14We have Belgium against Egypt tonight.
18:17So Brussels is really bracing.
18:19We have also Iran debut at 3 a.m. against New Zealand.
18:22and let's see how will be their reception in Los Angeles Stadium.
18:26And, of course, we have also another group, Group H,
18:30with Saudi Arabia, Uruguay and Spain versus Cup Verde.
18:35Spain, to me, Maeve, is one of the most favourite teams.
18:38They have a good organisation, good defence.
18:40They are very confident after having won the Euro Cup two years ago
18:46after beating England, France, Germany and Italy.
18:50They have a star, a rising star.
18:52Not anymore a rising, a star.
18:54La Mia Mal.
18:55I will put Spain together with France as a top favourite,
18:59even head Argentina for this World Cup.
19:01OK, Vincenzo Genovese, thank you so much.
19:03It will be indeed a very exciting night tonight.
19:05But that does bring this edition of Europe Today to an end.
19:08Thank you so much for tuning in.
19:09Take care and see you soon on Euronews.
19:39Euronews.
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