Change in Itinerary for US Vice President JD Vance Brings Cautious Relief for Greenland and Denmark 

US Vice President JD Vance, joined by his wife Usha Vance, speaks at Vantage Plastics in Bay City, Michigan, on March 14, 2025. (AFP) 
US Vice President JD Vance, joined by his wife Usha Vance, speaks at Vantage Plastics in Bay City, Michigan, on March 14, 2025. (AFP) 
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Change in Itinerary for US Vice President JD Vance Brings Cautious Relief for Greenland and Denmark 

US Vice President JD Vance, joined by his wife Usha Vance, speaks at Vantage Plastics in Bay City, Michigan, on March 14, 2025. (AFP) 
US Vice President JD Vance, joined by his wife Usha Vance, speaks at Vantage Plastics in Bay City, Michigan, on March 14, 2025. (AFP) 

Greenland and Denmark appeared cautiously relieved early Wednesday by the news that US Vice President JD Vance and his wife are changing their itinerary for their visit to Greenland Friday, reducing the likelihood that they will cross paths with residents angered by the Trump administration’s attempts to annex the vast Arctic island, a semi-autonomous Danish territory. 

The couple will now visit the US Space Force outpost at Pituffik, on the northwest coast of Greenland, instead of Usha Vance’s previously announced solo trip to the Avannaata Qimussersu dogsled race in Sisimiut. 

President Donald Trump irked much of Europe by suggesting that the United States should in some form control the self-governing, mineral-rich territory of Denmark, a US ally and NATO member. As the nautical gateway to the Arctic and North Atlantic approaches to North America, Greenland has broader strategic value as both China and Russia seek access to its waterways and natural resources. 

The vice president’s decision to visit a US military base in Greenland has removed the risk of violating potential diplomatic taboos by sending a delegation to another country without an official invitation. Yet Vance has also criticized longstanding European allies for relying on military support from the United States, openly antagonizing partners in ways that have generated concerns about the reliability of the US. 

Danish Foreign Minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen told Danish broadcaster DR Wednesday that the Vances' updated travel plans are a good thing. The minister said the change was a de-escalation, even as he said the Americans are treating it as the opposite, with Vance suggesting in an online video that global security is at stake. 

Rasmus Jarlov, a Danish lawmaker and spokesperson on Greenlandic Affairs for the Conservatives, wrote on X that the new schedule means the Vances will avoid any confrontations with Greenlanders. Jarlov noted that, after all, a vice president visiting an American military base is not controversial. 

Vance is allowed to visit the space base, said Marc Jacobsen, a professor at the Royal Danish Defense College, because of a 1951 agreement between Denmark and the US regarding the defense of Greenland. 

“What is controversial here is all about the timing,” he said. “Greenland and Denmark have stated very clearly that they don’t want the US to visit right now, when Greenland doesn’t have a government in place,” following the election earlier this month. Coalition negotiations are ongoing. 

Ahead of the vice president’s announcement that he would join his wife, discontent from the governments of Greenland and Denmark had been growing sharper, with the Greenland government posting on Facebook Monday night that it had “not extended any invitations for any visits, neither private nor official.” 

Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen told Danish national broadcasts Tuesday that the visit was “unacceptable pressure,” while the Danish foreign ministry said it was not involved in the planning. 

Usha Vance's office said Sunday that she would depart Thursday for Greenland and return Saturday. She and one of the couple's three children had planned to visit historic sites and learn about Greenland’s culture, but her husband’s participation has reoriented the trip around national security, her office said. 

The vice president said he didn’t want to let his wife “have all that fun by herself” and said he plans to visit the Space Force. Vance said that other countries have threatened Greenland as well as menacing the United States and Canada 

Vance said leaders in Denmark and North America had “ignored” Greenland for “far too long.” 

During his first term, Trump floated the idea of purchasing the world’s largest island, even as Denmark insisted it wasn’t for sale. The people of Greenland also have firmly rejected Trump’s plans. 

Dwayne Ryan Menezes, founder and managing director of the Polar Research & Policy Initiative, said that the Trump administration’s “intimidation” of Greenland could backfire. 

Menezes said if Trump was “smart enough” to understand Greenland’s strategic importance, then he should also be “smart enough to know there is no greater way to weaken America’s hand and hurt its long-term interests than turning its back on its allies, the principal asymmetrical advantage it enjoys over its adversaries.” 

Trump’s return to the White House has included a desire for territorial expansion, as he seeks to add Canada as a 51st state and resume US control of the Panama Canal. He has also indicated that US interests could take over the land in the war-torn Gaza Strip and convert it into a luxury outpost, displacing up to 2 million Palestinians. 



Russia Says Ukraine Attack Damages Oil Pipeline

 A satellite near-infrared image shows smoke rising from damaged oil storage tanks after a Ukrainian attack, in Primorsk, Russia March 29, 2026. (Vantor/Handout via Reuters)
A satellite near-infrared image shows smoke rising from damaged oil storage tanks after a Ukrainian attack, in Primorsk, Russia March 29, 2026. (Vantor/Handout via Reuters)
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Russia Says Ukraine Attack Damages Oil Pipeline

 A satellite near-infrared image shows smoke rising from damaged oil storage tanks after a Ukrainian attack, in Primorsk, Russia March 29, 2026. (Vantor/Handout via Reuters)
A satellite near-infrared image shows smoke rising from damaged oil storage tanks after a Ukrainian attack, in Primorsk, Russia March 29, 2026. (Vantor/Handout via Reuters)

Russian authorities said Sunday that a Ukrainian drone attack has damaged an oil pipeline near the Baltic port of Primorsk.

Russian air defenses shot down 19 drones in the Leningrad region and debris from one "damaged a section of the oil pipeline near the port of Primorsk, and the pipeline is being safely burned out," regional governor Alexander Drozdenko said on Telegram. He said there were no casualties.

Ukraine has stepped up attacks on Russian infrastructure targets in recent months.

Primorsk, which is between the Finnish border and the key city of St Petersburg, was also attacked in March when an oil depot was set ablaze.


Spanish PM Under Fire as Ex-Top Aide Goes on Graft Trial

Former Spanish Minister of Transport Jose Luis Abalos leaves the Supreme Court following his appearance for alleged corruption in Madrid on October 15, 2025. (AFP)
Former Spanish Minister of Transport Jose Luis Abalos leaves the Supreme Court following his appearance for alleged corruption in Madrid on October 15, 2025. (AFP)
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Spanish PM Under Fire as Ex-Top Aide Goes on Graft Trial

Former Spanish Minister of Transport Jose Luis Abalos leaves the Supreme Court following his appearance for alleged corruption in Madrid on October 15, 2025. (AFP)
Former Spanish Minister of Transport Jose Luis Abalos leaves the Supreme Court following his appearance for alleged corruption in Madrid on October 15, 2025. (AFP)

A corruption trial of a former right-hand man to Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez begins on Tuesday, a politically explosive case that has threatened to topple the Socialist-led minority government.

Jose Luis Abalos is a disgraced ex-Socialist heavyweight, a former transport minister who helped propel Sanchez to power in 2018. The case is one of several corruption affairs rattling the fragile coalition.

Abalos and his former adviser Koldo Garcia are suspected of having pocketed kickbacks for handing out public contracts worth millions of euros for sanitary equipment during the Covid-19 pandemic.

The Supreme Court in Madrid will judge them for alleged bribery, embezzlement, influence peddling, membership of a criminal organization and misuse of confidential information. The men deny the charges.

Prosecutors want Abalos to serve 24 years in jail. They portray him as the mastermind of a scheme of illicit enrichment. They have called for a 19-year term for Garcia, who they say was a key intermediary.

They argued in court that both men had abused their government positions and contacts to favor the interests of businessman Victor de Aldama, who has already admitted his role in the vast and complex affair.

Abalos has consistently protested that the investigation has been unfair.

"I feel like I am living in a fiction," he told the conservative daily El Mundo in November, shortly before his arrest. "I cannot believe the prosecutor's office is asking for 24 years in jail for me."

Garcia also protested in comments to an investigatory committee of the Navarre regional parliament.

"I am in jail without proof that I've committed any crime," he said, speaking by video link from his place of pre-trial detention.

More than 75 witnesses and about 20 experts are to testify during the proceedings, which are due to run through April.

- Succession of scandals -

The investigation also appears to have ensnared Abalos's successor in the powerful post of Socialist organization secretary, Santos Cerdan.

Caught up in another case of suspected corruption for public works contracts, he has been forced to step down from what is a key position in the party.

The fall from grace of Abalos and Cerdan -- two of Sanchez's closest allies -- has embarrassed a leader who took power promising to clean up Spanish politics.

He took over from the main conservative Popular Party (PP) after it had been engulfed in its own graft scandal.

Separate corruption investigations into Sanchez's wife Begona Gomez and his brother David, who faces trial later this year, have piled further pressure on the government, one of few leftist administrations in Europe.

Both the PP and far-right opposition party Vox have called for Sanchez's resignation and early elections. They argue that the scandals expose systemic Socialist corruption that reaches the premier himself.

Sanchez has always denied any illegal funding of the Socialists and rebuffed calls for polls before the next scheduled general election, due in 2027.


In High-Stakes Mission, US Special Forces Rescue Airman from Iran After F-15 Crash

 A US Air Force Airman taxis an F-22 Raptor during Operation Epic Fury in the US Central Command area of responsibility, March 15, 2026. (US Air Force/Handout via Reuters)
A US Air Force Airman taxis an F-22 Raptor during Operation Epic Fury in the US Central Command area of responsibility, March 15, 2026. (US Air Force/Handout via Reuters)
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In High-Stakes Mission, US Special Forces Rescue Airman from Iran After F-15 Crash

 A US Air Force Airman taxis an F-22 Raptor during Operation Epic Fury in the US Central Command area of responsibility, March 15, 2026. (US Air Force/Handout via Reuters)
A US Air Force Airman taxis an F-22 Raptor during Operation Epic Fury in the US Central Command area of responsibility, March 15, 2026. (US Air Force/Handout via Reuters)

US special operations forces have staged a daring rescue of an airman caught behind enemy lines after Iran shot down his F-15 fighter jet, officials said on Sunday, resolving a major crisis for President Donald Trump as he weighs whether to escalate the five-week-old war on Iran.

"Over the past several hours, the United States Military pulled off one of the most daring Search and Rescue Operations in US History," Trump said in a statement, adding that the airman was injured, but "he will be just fine."

The airman, who Trump said held the rank of colonel, was the second of the two crew of an F-15 that Iran said on Friday had been ‌brought down by ‌its air defenses.

Reuters reported on Friday that the first crew member ‌had ⁠been retrieved, triggering a ⁠high-profile search by both Iran and the United States for the remaining airman.

Iranian officials had urged citizens to help find him, hoping to gain leverage against Washington in the war Trump and Israel launched on February 28.

Trump has threatened to escalate the conflict in the coming days with attacks on Iran's energy infrastructure.

Had Iran captured the airman, the ensuing hostage crisis could have shifted American public perception of a conflict that opinion polls show has already struggled to win popular support.

Trump gave no details of the rescue but said it ⁠was the first time in military memory that two US pilots had been ‌rescued, separately, deep in enemy territory.

US AIRCRAFT HIT

The rescue effort, ‌involving dozens of military aircraft, encountered fierce resistance from Iran.

Reuters reported on Friday that two Black Hawk helicopters involved in ‌the search were hit by Iranian fire but escaped from Iranian airspace.

In a separate incident, a ‌pilot ejected from an A-10 Warthog fighter aircraft after it was hit over Kuwait and crashed, the officials said, though the extent of crew injuries was unclear.

Still, Trump was triumphant.

"The fact that we were able to pull off both of these operations, without a SINGLE American killed, or even wounded, just proves once again, that we have ‌achieved overwhelming Air Dominance and Superiority over the Iranian skies," he said in his statement.

US air crews are trained in what to do if ⁠they go down behind enemy ⁠lines, measures known as Survival, Evasion, Resistance and Escape (SERE), but few are fluent in Persian and face a challenge in staying undetected while seeking rescue.

The conflict has killed 13 US military service members, with more than 300 wounded, the US Central Command says.

No US troops have been taken prisoner by Iran.

While Trump has repeatedly sought to portray the Iranian military as being in tatters, it is noteworthy that they have repeatedly been able to hit US aircraft, military experts say.

Reuters first reported on US intelligence showing that Iran retains large amounts of missile and drone capability. Until just over a week ago, the US could only determine with certainty that it had destroyed about one-third of Iran's missile arsenal.

The status of about another third was less clear, but bombings probably damaged, destroyed or buried those missiles in underground tunnels and bunkers, Reuters sources said.

The US and Israeli war on Iran has spread across the Middle East, killing thousands and hitting the global economy with soaring energy prices that are fueling fears of inflation.