News

Ahead of a NATO summit, European nations need to take more responsibility for their own defense.
The Iberian alliance raises the tone after the energy blackout and demands "binding commitments" from the Macron government in a letter, which removed the connections with Aragon and Navarra from its ...
The taxis carrying tourists to the park fill the streets and the buses are stuffed with tourists.” In April Spanish Prime Minister, Pedro Sánchez, announced a plan to spend €1.3bn (£1.1bn) of EU funds ...
An EU official said interconnectors across the Pyrenees were ... Spain’s Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez has dismissed arguments that his country’s dependence on renewables was to blame for ...
Pedro Sánchez, Spain’s prime minister, scoffs at the notion of a big war: “Our threat is not Russia bringing its troops across the Pyrenees.” Steve Witkoff, Donald Trump’s envoy for peace ...
"We have never had a complete collapse of the system," Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez said in a televised ... interconnection through the Pyrenees mountains to split, leading to a failure ...
Spain's Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez said investigators were trying ... because it relies on just a few connections through the Pyrenees to France, meaning it can be vulnerable to failures.
Spain's Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez said investigators were trying to pinpoint the cause, and then would take all necessary measures "to ensure that this does not happen again." ...
“This cannot happen again,” Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez said Tuesday ... a small country in the Pyrenees mountain range between France and Spain. Authorities did not provide an ...
In 1996, floods hit a campsite in the Spanish Pyrenees, killing 87 people ... have blamed Spain’s socialist prime minister Pedro Sánchez, although Judge Ruiz has stated that the emergency ...
In mid-March, Spanish prime minister Pedro Sánchez confidently asserted to his European allies that Russia will not “bring its troops across the Pyrenees.” This sentiment echoes a European belief ...
On March 13th Pedro Sánchez, prime minister of Spain, proposed a novel way to boost his country’s defence spending, NATO’s lowest at a feeble 1.28% of GDP.