The Prague Post - After Europe’s capitulation

EUR -
AED 4.263255
AFN 76.857149
ALL 96.551045
AMD 442.837866
ANG 2.07792
AOA 1064.5093
ARS 1721.534389
AUD 1.785871
AWG 2.092451
AZN 1.900418
BAM 1.954202
BBD 2.331993
BDT 141.86399
BGN 1.954529
BHD 0.437598
BIF 3413.68487
BMD 1.160861
BND 1.505347
BOB 8.000458
BRL 6.250189
BSD 1.157853
BTN 101.694838
BWP 15.524305
BYN 3.946073
BYR 22752.869654
BZD 2.328696
CAD 1.626819
CDF 2565.501803
CHF 0.92383
CLF 0.028027
CLP 1099.485738
CNY 8.272816
CNH 8.275103
COP 4512.265528
CRC 581.72429
CUC 1.160861
CUP 30.762808
CVE 110.174904
CZK 24.318
DJF 206.181393
DKK 7.469582
DOP 73.929544
DZD 151.034935
EGP 55.243033
ERN 17.41291
ETB 175.30894
FJD 2.639623
FKP 0.868169
GBP 0.871504
GEL 3.151773
GGP 0.868169
GHS 12.53375
GIP 0.868169
GMD 84.165062
GNF 10049.301507
GTQ 8.871745
GYD 242.201937
HKD 9.023039
HNL 30.413129
HRK 7.534569
HTG 151.506105
HUF 390.125228
IDR 19303.48818
ILS 3.821664
IMP 0.868169
INR 101.977724
IQD 1516.759657
IRR 48814.192255
ISK 142.205498
JEP 0.868169
JMD 185.78807
JOD 0.823059
JPY 177.470648
KES 149.599712
KGS 101.517454
KHR 4667.183372
KMF 493.366529
KPW 1044.74562
KRW 1666.635905
KWD 0.355989
KYD 0.964911
KZT 623.030512
LAK 25136.444466
LBP 103684.611057
LKR 351.402638
LRD 211.886728
LSL 20.109455
LTL 3.42772
LVL 0.702193
LYD 6.29785
MAD 10.72393
MDL 19.648932
MGA 5190.755217
MKD 61.613095
MMK 2437.279802
MNT 4173.672706
MOP 9.268421
MRU 46.39506
MUR 52.854252
MVR 17.772781
MWK 2007.658221
MXN 21.367324
MYR 4.90522
MZN 74.191181
NAD 20.109455
NGN 1694.555129
NIO 42.60736
NOK 11.593353
NPR 162.711941
NZD 2.019602
OMR 0.446349
PAB 1.157853
PEN 3.944774
PGK 4.893318
PHP 68.108927
PKR 327.732594
PLN 4.230968
PYG 8189.30313
QAR 4.220249
RON 5.083638
RSD 117.192383
RUB 94.527185
RWF 1681.225164
SAR 4.353484
SBD 9.546713
SCR 16.034941
SDG 698.246242
SEK 10.90238
SGD 1.50844
SHP 0.870946
SLE 26.908872
SLL 24342.667831
SOS 660.559822
SRD 46.084432
STD 24027.472652
STN 24.479981
SVC 10.130716
SYP 12836.10026
SZL 20.104559
THB 38.095976
TJS 10.721632
TMT 4.063012
TND 3.401418
TOP 2.718847
TRY 48.824756
TTD 7.857574
TWD 35.775751
TZS 2887.635138
UAH 48.521121
UGX 4040.695688
USD 1.160861
UYU 46.102299
UZS 14011.541946
VES 246.355692
VND 30582.875052
VUV 141.411811
WST 3.256272
XAF 655.421024
XAG 0.023882
XAU 0.000282
XCD 3.137284
XCG 2.086694
XDR 0.815133
XOF 655.421024
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.387218
ZAR 20.131542
ZMK 10449.132682
ZMW 25.617051
ZWL 373.796671
  • RIO

    0.8600

    70.62

    +1.22%

  • BTI

    0.7100

    51.85

    +1.37%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    79.09

    0%

  • SCS

    0.1100

    16.74

    +0.66%

  • CMSC

    0.0550

    24.19

    +0.23%

  • BCC

    0.9900

    71.97

    +1.38%

  • NGG

    -0.2000

    76.7

    -0.26%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0500

    14.75

    -0.34%

  • BP

    0.6800

    35

    +1.94%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.95

    +0.14%

  • RELX

    -0.8500

    45.95

    -1.85%

  • VOD

    -0.0800

    11.66

    -0.69%

  • BCE

    -0.1800

    23.86

    -0.75%

  • CMSD

    0.2300

    24.7

    +0.93%

  • GSK

    1.2800

    45.54

    +2.81%

  • AZN

    -0.0300

    83.4

    -0.04%


After Europe’s capitulation




“Europe’s capitulation” has become a popular shorthand for policy drift, budget fatigue, and messy coalition politics. Yet on the ground and in Brussels, the picture is more complicated. Europe has locked in multi-year macro-financial support for Ukraine, is funnelling windfall profits from frozen Russian assets to Kyiv, and has extended protection for millions of displaced Ukrainians. At the same time, gaps in air defence, artillery supply and manpower—plus energy-system devastation—continue to shape Ukraine’s battlefield prospects and its economy. The fate of Ukraine will hinge less on a sudden European surrender than on whether Europe can sustain, coordinate, and accelerate support while managing domestic headwinds.

Money and political guarantees, not a white flag
The EU’s four-year Ukraine Facility—up to €50 billion through 2027—was designed precisely to replace short, crisis-driven packages with predictable financing tied to reforms and reconstruction milestones. Beyond that baseline, member states agreed to capture and channel windfall profits generated by immobilised Russian sovereign assets, adding a new, recurring revenue stream to help service Ukraine’s debt and fund defence-critical needs. Accession talks have formally opened, giving Kyiv an institutional anchor point inside Europe’s legal and regulatory orbit even as the war continues. None of this resembles capitulation; it is a bet that strategic patience and budgetary endurance can outlast the Kremlin’s war economy.

Guns, shells and jets: the pace problem
If Ukraine’s fate turns on combat power, Europe’s challenge is speed. A Czech-led initiative has become a central workaround to global shell shortages, aggregating ammunition from outside the EU and delivering at scale this year. Meanwhile, NATO governments have moved additional air-defence systems to Ukraine and opened the pipeline for F-16s, but the timing and density of deliveries matter: months of lag translate into increased damage to infrastructure and pressure on the front. Europe’s defence industry is expanding 155 mm output, but capacity reached the battlefield later than hoped, forcing Ukraine to ration artillery while Russia leaned on its larger stockpiles and foreign resupply.

Energy war: keeping the lights—and factories—on
Moscow’s winter-spring campaign of missile and drone strikes has repeatedly targeted power plants, substations and fuel infrastructure, degrading a grid that already lost most thermal capacity and leaving cities to cycle through blackouts. The immediate consequence is civilian hardship; the second-order effect is economic—factories halt, logistics slow, and government revenues suffer. Every delay in repairing large plants pushes Ukraine to rely on imported electricity, mobile generation and EU emergency equipment. As the next cold season approaches, the balance between new air defences, dispersed generation, and repair crews will determine whether critical services can be kept running under fire.

Manpower and mobilisation: a hard domestic trade-off
Ukraine has tightened mobilisation rules and lowered the draft age to sustain force levels. Those moves are politically and socially costly, but unavoidable if rotations are to be maintained and newly trained F-16 units, air-defence crews and artillery batteries are to be staffed. The calculus is brutal: without people, even the best kit sits idle; without kit, personnel face unacceptable risks. Europe’s role here is indirect but decisive—trainers, simulators, and steady flows of munitions reduce the burden on Ukraine’s society, shorten training cycles, and improve survivability at the front.

Refuge, resilience—and the long road home
More than four million Ukrainians remain under temporary protection across the EU, a regime now extended into 2027. Host countries have integrated large numbers into schools and labour markets, which improves family stability and builds skills but also creates a future policy dilemma: how to encourage voluntary, safe return when conditions allow, without stripping Ukraine of a critical labour force needed for reconstruction. The longer protection lasts, the more return requires credible security guarantees, jobs and housing back in Ukraine—another reason why European investment planning and city-level reconstruction projects will be as strategic as any weapons shipment.

Politics: cracks vs. consensus
European politics are not monolithic. A small number of leaders have advocated “talks now” and pursued freelance diplomacy with Moscow, drawing rebukes from EU institutions and many member states. But the broader centre of gravity still favours sustained support tied to Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity. That consensus is reinforced by practical security concerns: if Russia is rewarded for conquest, Europe’s eastern flank becomes less stable, defence spending must increase further, and deterrence becomes costlier over time. The debate, therefore, is not whether to support Ukraine, but how fast, how much, and with what end-state in mind.

Scenarios for Ukraine’s fate

Scenario 1: Sustained European backing, measured gains.
If macro-financial flows remain predictable, air defence density rises, and artillery supply meets operational demand, Ukraine can stabilise the front, shield key cities and infrastructure, and preserve manoeuvre options. Economic growth would remain modest but positive under IMF programmes, with reconstruction projects accelerating where security allows.

Scenario 2: Stagnation and a frozen conflict.
If delivery timelines slip and political bandwidth narrows, Ukraine could face a grinding positional war—no immediate collapse, but mounting strain on the energy system, the budget and demographics. A de-facto line of contact hardens, complicating EU accession and reconstruction while keeping risks of escalation high.

Scenario 3: Coercive “peace” under fire.
Should air defences and ammunition fall short while Russia intensifies strikes, pressure for a ceasefire on Russia’s terms would grow. That would not end the war; it would reset it. Without enforceable security guarantees and rearmament, Ukraine would face renewed offensives after any pause, while Europe would inherit a wider, more expensive deterrence mission.

What will decide the outcome
Three variables will decide whether talk of “capitulation” fades or becomes self-fulfilling: (1) delivery tempo—how quickly Europe translates budgets and declarations into interceptors, shells, generators and spare parts; (2) industrial scale—how fast EU defence production closes the gap between promises and battlefield need; and (3) political stamina—whether governments can explain to voters that the cheapest long-term security for Europe is a sovereign, defended Ukraine integrated into European structures. On each front, Europe still holds agency. Ukraine’s fate is not sealed; it is being written, week by week, by logistics, legislation and the will to see the job through.



Featured


Marhabaan, welcome to the UAE and Dubai!

Marhabaan, welcome to the UAE and Dubai! The "skyward striving" Dubai next to ancient desert cities. Mysterious Bedouins and magnificent mosques exist peacefully alongside futuristic cities. Discover wadis and oases, golden sandy deserts, paradisiacal beaches and Arabian hospitality. The modern and the ancient Orient united in a book for dreaming.On this journey to Dubai and Abu Dhabi in the United Arab Emirates, the fairy tales of 1001 Arabian Nights meet the modern Arab world. These cascading cities enchant with their sky-high skyscrapers, fragrant souks, huge shopping centres and the ancient cultural heritage of the sheikhs.You can choose to stay in 4- or 5-star hotels with breakfast and swimming pools. You also have more options to book excursions so you can feel the magic of the East even more. If you want to do something out of the ordinary, you can spend an extra night in an enchanting hotel in the middle of the emirate's desert. Experience your own fairytale from 1001 nights and look forward to a holiday with plenty of casual extravagance in two superlative desert cities!

Trade and business at the Dubai Gold Souk

If Naif Deira is associated with a specific context, organization, or field, providing more details could help me offer more relevant information. Keep in mind that privacy considerations and ethical guidelines limit the amount of information available about private individuals, especially those who are not public figures. The Dubai Gold Souk is one of the most famous gold markets in the world and is located in the heart of Dubai's commercial business district in Deira. It's a traditional market where you can find a wide variety of gold, silver, and precious stone jewelry. The Gold Souk is known for its extensive selection of jewelry, including rings, bracelets, necklaces, and earrings, often crafted with intricate designs.Variety: The Gold Souk offers a vast array of jewelry designs, with a focus on gold. You can find items ranging from traditional to modern styles.Competitive Pricing: The market is known for its competitive pricing, and bargaining is a common practice. Prices are typically based on the weight of the gold and the craftsmanship involved.Gold and More: While gold is the primary focus, the souk also offers other precious metals such as silver and platinum, as well as a selection of gemstones.Cultural Experience: Visiting the Gold Souk provides not only a shopping experience but also a glimpse into the traditional trading culture of Dubai. The vibrant market is a popular destination for both tourists and locals.Security: The market is generally safe, and there are numerous shops with security measures in place. However, as with any crowded area, it's advisable to take standard precautions regarding personal belongings.Gold Souk is just one part of the larger Deira Souk complex, which also includes the Spice Souk and the Textile Souk. It's a must-visit for those interested in jewelry, and it reflects the rich cultural and trading history of Dubai.

Dubai: Amazing City Center, Night Walking Tour

During this excursion, we leisurely explore Dubai Downtown and Burj Khalifa in the evening, giving you the chance to witness the captivating transformation of the district as it comes alive with the vibrant glow of thousands of lights. As the sun sets, the illuminated facade of Burj Khalifa and the enchanting Dubai Fountain collaborate to produce a genuinely magical atmosphere.Dubai Downtown, also known as Downtown Dubai, is a distinguished and iconic district situated in the heart of Dubai, United Arab Emirates. It is a renowned neighborhood celebrated for its striking architecture, luxurious living, and exceptional entertainment options. At the core of Downtown Dubai stands the Burj Khalifa, a towering skyscraper that holds the title of the world's tallest man-made structure and serves as an emblem of modern Dubai.Burj Khalifa: The focal point of Downtown Dubai, Burj Khalifa, is famous for its groundbreaking height, reaching an impressive 828 meters (2,722 feet). Designed by architect Adrian Smith, its distinctive Y-shaped design encompasses a mix of residential, commercial, and hotel spaces.Dubai Mall: Adjacent to Burj Khalifa is the Dubai Mall, one of the largest shopping malls globally, featuring an extensive array of retail outlets, from high-end boutiques to international brands. The mall also provides various dining options, and entertainment attractions like an indoor ice rink and an aquarium, and hosts the mesmerizing Dubai Fountain.Dubai Fountain: Located just outside the Dubai Mall, the Dubai Fountain is a captivating attraction that presents a nightly spectacle of water, music, and light, captivating visitors with its perfectly synchronized performances.Emaar Boulevard: Stretching through Downtown Dubai, this boulevard is adorned with restaurants, cafes, and shops, making it a popular spot for leisurely strolls, dining, and people-watching.Luxury Living: Downtown Dubai boasts numerous upscale residential buildings and hotels, making it an appealing locale for those seeking a sophisticated urban lifestyle.Cultural Attractions: The Dubai Opera, an iconic cultural venue within the district, hosts a diverse range of performances, including opera, ballet, concerts, and theater productions.Transportation: Downtown Dubai is well-connected through public transportation, including the Dubai Metro, facilitating easy access to other parts of the city.In summary, Downtown Dubai is a dynamic and vibrant district that stands as a testament to Dubai's modernity and grandeur. It seamlessly combines architectural wonders with shopping, entertainment, and cultural offerings, creating a truly extraordinary destination.