EU warns Trump’s freeze of US-funded media risks aiding enemies

A flag and a sign of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty are shown at its headquarters in Prague, Czech Republic, March 17, 2025. (REUTERS)
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Updated 18 March 2025
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EU warns Trump’s freeze of US-funded media risks aiding enemies

  • The US-funded media have since focused on countries like Russia, China, Iran and Belarus
  • Trump has already eviscerated the United States’ aid agency and its education department

BRUSSELS, Belgium: The EU on Monday warned that President Donald Trump’s freeze on US-funded media outlets, including Radio Free Europe, risked “benefitting our common adversaries.”
Trump’s administration at the weekend started laying off staff at Voice of America and other broadcasters including Prague-based Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL) after freezing their funding.
“We see these media outlets really as beacons of truth, of democracy, and of hope for millions of people around the world,” said European Commission spokeswoman Paula Pinho.
“Freedom of the press... is critical for democracy. And this decision risks benefitting our common adversaries,” she said without naming countries, groups or individuals.
Founded by the United States during the Cold War to counter Soviet propaganda, RFE/RL was banned across the communist bloc, where regimes regularly jammed its signal.
The US-funded media have since focused on countries like Russia, China, Iran and Belarus.
EU foreign ministers discussed the freeze and ways to make up for it in Brussels on Monday.
The bloc’s foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said the EU would not “automatically... fill the void that the US is leaving.”
“We have a lot of organizations who are coming with the same request to us,” Kallas told reporters.
“But there was really a push from the foreign ministers to discuss this and find the way, so this is the tasking to our side to see what can we do,” she added.
Czech Foreign Minister Jan Lipavsky, whose country has been the home of RFE/RL since its 1995 move from Munich, said after the talks Europe should take care of the radio.
“I raised this question to see whether our partners see value in keeping RFE/RL running. We certainly do, and if we see value in it, then it makes sense to consider ways to secure its future, including the possibility of buying it,” he told AFP.
Lipavsky said earlier that the costs of running RFE/RL would reach up to $120 million a year.
His Polish counterpart Radoslaw Sikorski said Monday the EU could raise the budget of the European Endowment for Democracy, an NGO founded to boost democracy in the bloc’s neighbors, and thus help finance the radio.
Trump has already eviscerated the United States’ aid agency and its education department.

Iran, China and Russia have all invested heavily in state media outlets created to compete with Western narratives and to push out government lines to foreign audiences.

 


Afghanistan says it has released 3 Pakistani soldiers captured during October cross-border fighting

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Afghanistan says it has released 3 Pakistani soldiers captured during October cross-border fighting

  • Tension between Afghanistan and neighboring Pakistan has been high since deadly border clashes in October killed dozens of soldiers, civilians and suspected militants, and wounded hundreds more on both sides

KABUL, Afghanistan: Afghanistan has released three Pakistani soldiers who it had captured during cross-border fighting last October, its government spokesman said Tuesday.
Zabihullah Mujahid said in a statement the three, who had been captured during fighting on Oct. 12, were turned over to a Saudi delegation that mediated between the two sides and had traveled to Kabul on Monday. He said the release was decided upon in light of the start of Ramadan, the Islamic holy month of fasting and reflection.
Tension between Afghanistan and neighboring Pakistan has been high since deadly border clashes in October killed dozens of soldiers, civilians and suspected militants, and wounded hundreds more on both sides. The violence erupted after explosions in Kabul, the Afghan capital, on Oct. 9 that the Taliban government blamed on Pakistan and vowed to avenge.
The fighting was the worst between the neighbors in recent years. A ceasefire mediated by Qatar has since eased tension, although subsequent peace talks in Istanbul failed to produce a definitive agreement and relations remain strained.
There was no immediate comment from Pakistan on the release of the three soldiers.