Saturday, April 18, 2026

 

Europe's defence cloud reliance risks US 'kill switch,' think tank warns

Most European defence agencies are dependent on US cloud hyperscalers, a new study found.
Copyright Canva

By Anna Desmarais
Published on 

A vast majority of EU countries rely on US cloud services for their national defence agencies, putting them at risk of a "kill switch" that shuts down service at any time.

Most European countries rely on US cloud providers for their military operations and are at risk of being exposed to a "kill switch," a new analysis found.

Brussels-based think tank Future of Technology Institute (FOTI) said that a vast majority of European countries depend on US tech companies for their national defence applications, either through direct partnerships or via European companies that use US cloud services.

These companies are at risk of a "kill switch," the idea that Washington will subpoena data stored in the cloud or impose sanctions on US cloud providers.

The US president can issue a subpoena for data under the CLOUD Act, passed during Donald Trump’s first term at the White House.

In particular, 16 European countries are at a high risk of being affected by a US kill switch: Croatia, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Germany, Hungary, Ireland, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia and the United Kingdom.

Seven more countries are at medium risk because they have indirect exposure to US cloud infrastructure through European contractors that built their cloud system: Belgium, France, Greece, Italy, Luxembourg, Spain and the Netherlands.

Cori Crider, executive director of FOTI, said the US used this kill switch in 2025 when Microsoft blocked the accounts of ICC chief prosecutor Karim Khan after Trump imposed sanctions.

In another example, Maxar Technologies reportedly restricted Ukraine’s access to its satellite imagery after the US paused intelligence sharing, Ukrainian media reported.

“A kind of kill switch risk from the United States is no longer some sort of theoretical discussion … this is a genuine, imminent risk that Europe doesn’t have the luxury to ignore anymore,” Crider said.

The researchers could not find enough data for Bulgaria, Cyprus, Malta and Sweden to determine how vulnerable their military cloud systems are.

Microsoft, Google and Oracle given most defence contracts

For its study, FOTI evaluated procurement notices for government contracts that are worth over 143,000 and checked national defence sites for references to “cloud,” “Microsoft,” “Google,” “Amazon Web Services,” and “Oracle”.

Microsoft is the largest cloud provider for European defence agencies, with its systems being used by 19 countries, the study found. Google and Oracle also received defence contracts.

The highest-risk countries are relying directly on services from US cloud companies that might not be “air gapped,” which means the system is physically disconnected from the global cloud infrastructure.

These systems remain vulnerable because they “require regular updates and depend on maintenance from the US service provider,” which puts them in jeopardy if sanctions are imposed, the study said.

One Swedish estimate said that US cloud software could be used for up to 30 days after sanctions, after which the licenses will expire, according to Tobias Bacherle, researcher with FOTI.

In the medium-risk countries, the immediate contractor for their cloud system is a European company that uses a US provider, the report said.

For example, Dutch parliamentary readings note that US hyperscaler technology built their current cloud, but that their cloud is not run directly by these companies.

FOTI’s analysis is a “conservative estimate” of where the Big Tech cloud providers are working, researchers said, because it is hard to identify every contract that implicates US technology, and many of the contracts are classified.

Austria the only one independent of US hyperscalers

Austria is the only country to have begun a government-wide shift away from proprietary cloud providers, according to the study.

The defence ministry has supposedly moved away from Big Tech companies towards NextCloud, an open-source provider, and LibreOffice, a Microsoft alternative.

Last year, the country’s armed forces also reportedly moved 16,000 workstations off of Microsoft Office.

“Austria seems to be the only case that is quite independent or as independent as it gets right now,” Bacherle said.

While the Netherlands is currently considered medium risk, the researchers flagged it as a potential leader for Europe’s sovereign military cloud solutions.

That’s because the Ministry of Defence has recently partnered with the Dutch telecom company KPN and French contractor Thales to build a sovereign defence cloud without US providers.

What do the US hyperscalers have in Europe?

Cloud providers Amazon, Google, and Microsoft have introduced “sovereign” cloud options within Europe.

Amazon created the AWS European Sovereign Cloud to “help customers meet their evolving sovereignty needs,” which stores data in the EU, is independent and is compliant with the bloc’s regulations.

Similar sovereign options from Google and Microsoft say that data will be stored and supervised locally to remain compliant with local laws.

Crider called these efforts by tech companies “sovereign-washing” because in the event of sanctions, the companies will be unable to update their software.

“These days, they know we want tech sovereignty, so there’s some kind of sovereign cloud on offer from basically every dominant player,” she said.

Euronews Next contacted Google, Microsoft, Oracle and Amazon about their sovereign cloud systems but did not receive an immediate reply.

 

Iran war energy shock drives nuclear power plans in Asia and Africa

FILE - Fishermen tether a boat on the shore near the Madras Atomic Power Station, a nuclear power facility, at Kalpakkam, in the Indian state of Tamil Nadu, Feb. 10, 2025.
Copyright AP Photo

By Una Hajdari with AP
Published on 

The Iran war has exposed the fragility of global fossil fuel supply chains. Now dozens of countries across Asia and Africa are turning to nuclear power as their answer.

The Iran war's global energy shock is pushing nations in Asia and Africa to boost nuclear power generation and accelerating atomic energy plans in countries that have never had it.

Asia, where most Middle Eastern oil and gas was headed, was hit first and hardest by disruptions to shipping routes — swiftly followed by Africa. The US and Europe are also feeling the pinch as the conflict drives up energy costs.

Countries with nuclear plants are increasing output as they scramble for short-term supplies, while non-nuclear nations are fast-tracking long-term atomic plans to guard against future fossil fuel shocks.

Nuclear power is no quick fix. Developing atomic energy can take decades, especially for newcomers. But long-term commitments made now will likely lock it into countries' future energy mixes, said Joshua Kurlantzick of the Council on Foreign Relations.

Hard-hit Asia advances on nuclear

In Asia, the war is pushing South Korea to increase nuclear output, while Taiwan is debating restarting mothballed reactors. In Africa, Kenya, Rwanda and South Africa have all affirmed support for future reactor builds.

Nuclear power harnesses the energy released when an atom's nucleus — such as uranium — splits in a process called fission. Unlike fossil fuels, it does not release carbon dioxide. But it creates potentially dangerous radioactive waste, one reason many countries remain cautious.

The war has accelerated a global "nuclear renaissance," said Rachel Bronson of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, as countries seek an alternative to the risks of fossil fuel markets.

Some 31 countries use nuclear power, which provides about 10% of global electricity, according to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). Another 40 nations are either considering the technology or preparing to build a plant.

In Asia, where energy triage ranges from increased coal use to purchases of Russian crude, countries with nuclear plants are trying to squeeze more from existing reactors.

South Korea is ramping up generation and speeding maintenance at five offline reactors, with restarts planned in May.

Taiwan and Japan are reversing policies that shuttered nuclear sites after the 2011 Fukushima meltdown, triggered when an earthquake and tsunami cut power to the reactors' cooling systems.

Taiwan is considering the years-long process of restarting two reactors — requiring meticulous inspections, safety checks and control system verifications.

In Japan, since the war began, Prime Minister Takaichi Sanae has signed a $40 billion (€35bn) reactor deal with the US, a nuclear fuel recycling agreement with France and promised Indonesia nuclear cooperation.

Japan restarted the world's largest nuclear plant, Kashiwazaki-Kariwa, in January.

Renewables make more sense than nuclear for energy affordability and security, according to Michiyo Miyamoto of the US-based Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis.

But historically high electricity costs, compounded by the current crisis, are swinging Japanese public opinion toward nuclear, she said

In Bangladesh, the government is racing to bring online new reactors built by Russia's state-owned Rosatom, hoping they will supply the national grid with 300 megawatts by this summer and ease pressure from gas shortfalls.

Vietnam signed a deal with Moscow in March for two Russian-designed reactors.

The Philippines, which recently declared a national energy emergency, is also considering reviving a nuclear plant built after the 1973 oil crisis that was never switched on.

"I hope we learned our lesson," said Alvie Asuncion-Astronomo of the Philippine Nuclear Research Institute. The Iran war is "providing a needed push for nuclear".

Africa voices atomic ambitions

Soaring energy prices and power shortages are fuelling public calls for nuclear cooperation across Africa, where more than 20 of the 54 countries have long-term atomic energy plans under way.

With Africa seen as a growth market, nuclear nations — including the US, Russia, China, France and South Korea — are pitching small modular reactors (SMRs) as a solution to energy shortfalls.

These compact units are cheaper than large-scale plants, but projects can still take years. Kenya plans to bring an SMR online in 2034, having started the first phase in 2009.

"Nuclear energy is no longer a distant aspiration for African countries; it is a strategic necessity," said Justus Wabuyabo of Kenya's Nuclear Power and Energy Agency last month.

At a March summit convened by the IAEA, Rwandan President Paul Kagame said Africa will be "one of the most important global markets" for smaller reactors in the years ahead.

SMRs are seen as a solution to the continent's rising electricity demand, weak grids and over-reliance on imported diesel

South Africa, which has the continent's only existing nuclear plants, wants nuclear to rise from around 5% of its energy mix to 16% by 2040.

Loyiso Tyabashe of the South African Nuclear Energy Corporation said SMRs could "fulfill our strategic objective of positioning South Africa at the forefront of advanced nuclear technologies".

US and Russia vie for influence

The energy disruptions come as competition for influence in Africa intensifies between Washington and Moscow.

Russia's Rosatom is building Egypt's first reactor and has cooperation agreements with Ethiopia, Burkina Faso, Ghana, Tanzania and Niger, spanning major projects, research centres, uranium processing facilities and training programmes.

While only Kenya and Ghana have joined an American-led modular reactor initiative, Washington is trying to catch up.

The US and South Korea sponsored a nuclear conference in Nairobi last month, where Ryan Taugher of the US State Department said Washington is working with African nations to develop secure civil nuclear reactors rapidly.

Ghana, which aims to begin building a plant in 2027, is in the market for foreign suppliers.

The risks remain

Interest is building, but risks — meltdowns, mismanaged waste and the potential path to nuclear weapons — have not gone away.

Ayumi Fukakusa of advocacy group Friends of the Earth Japan said "nuclear is very risky" and will keep countries reliant on imported fuels such as enriched uranium.

Rex Amancio of the Global Renewables Alliance said governments should stay focused on building out renewables for long-term energy security, given that nuclear sectors take years to develop.

Bronson also warned that nuclear plants are vulnerable during conflicts, citing instances where reactors were targeted during both the Iran war and the Russia-Ukraine war.

"All of this comes into the mix of how we think about energy security," she said.

"Countries are now weighing those kinds of risks against the other risks — which Asia and Africa are seeing first and foremost — about what happens when gas and oil stops."

 

The rapid ascent of Anthropic: Inside the strategy behind an $800 billion valuation

Pages from the Anthropic website and the company's logos are displayed on a computer screen in New York, 26 Feb. 2026
Copyright AP Photo/Patrick Sison

By Quirino Mealha
Published on 

The AI firm Anthropic has emerged as a dominant force in the global technology sector, attracting investor interest that values the company at approximately $800 billion (€678.3bn), but what is behind the success?

Anthropic’s recent financial trajectory has stunned market observers, with venture capital offers now placing the firm’s value at $800 billion (€678.3bn), on par with its main rival OpenAI.

According to various reports, the company has seen its private valuation more than double in a matter of months, supported by a revenue run-rate that has reportedly climbed to $30 billion (€25.4bn).

As the San Francisco-based AI developer prepares for a potential IPO, rumoured to happen as early as next autumn, it finds itself at the centre of an industry-wide debate regarding the balance between rapid growth and responsible scaling.

The company’s latest model, Mythos, has become the focal point of this tension, as its capabilities have drawn both praise for efficiency and warnings from high-profile leaders regarding security risks.

In a high-level convergence of financial oversight and national security, US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell reportedly convened an urgent and closed-door meeting with the chief executives of the nation's major banks last week in Washington.

The summit, organized on short notice, was intended to warn Wall Street leadership about the profound systemic risks posed by Anthropic's new Mythos model.

Before Mythos, the company already found itself in a delicate position regarding its relationship with the state as it resisted allowing the US Department of War to use its models for offensive military purposes.

The stance cost the firm lucrative contracts with the Pentagon but that did not stop Anthropic from successfully expanding its business.

The shift from research to enterprise workflows

The driving force behind this $800 billion (€678.3bn) figure is a fundamental transition in how Anthropic approaches the market.

While its early years were defined by a research-heavy, safety-first philosophy, the current growth is being propelled by aggressive enterprise adoption.

Large-scale corporations are increasingly turning to Anthropic’s Claude models to automate complex internal processes, a trend that has significantly boosted the firm's bottom line.

Unlike competitors such as OpenAI that have sought broad consumer appeal, Anthropic has focused on becoming the primary infrastructure for professional and technical workflows.

Speaking to Euronews, Ben Barringer, head of technology research at Quilter Cheviot, suggests that this specific focus is the reason the market is willing to accept such high premiums in valuing Anthropic.

"Anthropic differs from OpenAI in that it looks to sell to enterprises more than it does to the end consumer, so the business models are very different," Barringer noted.

In a way, a comparison can be drawn between Anthropic today and Microsoft last century, when software businesses first appeared, as they both focus on enterprise applications.

Anthropic is aiming for their AI models to be just as used by companies, and difficult to switch away from, as the Microsoft Office suite is currently for firms. This strategy appears to be insulating the company from the volatility and added competition often seen in more consumer-facing tech.

Barringer further highlighted to Euronews that the valuation is "primarily down to its product set, rather than the values it is looking to exude," noting that the proliferation of AI agents has provided a clear path to sustainable income.

By introducing consumption charges for its most intensive enterprise users, the company has demonstrated a clear ability to monetise its most advanced intellectual property.

Mythos and the security paradox

While the financial metrics are strong, the technological capabilities of the new Mythos model have introduced new complexities.

Mythos is touted as a significant leap forward in autonomous reasoning, but its power has raised alarms in the financial sector.

Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan Chase, has voiced concerns regarding the potential misuse of such advanced systems suggesting that the capabilities of Mythos, particularly in identifying software vulnerabilities, could potentially be used to orchestrate sophisticated cyber-attacks against global banking infrastructure.

This "security paradox" is at the heart of Anthropic’s current dilemma.

The model is reportedly so effective at finding flaws in code that it is a transformative tool for cybersecurity, but in the wrong hands, those same features could be catastrophic.

This has led the company to implement strict access controls, a move that aligns with its safety-first branding but complicates its relationship with various stakeholders.

The firm is essentially attempting to sell its most powerful tool while simultaneously restricting how it can be used, a strategy that will certainly be under intense scrutiny during a future IPO roadshow.

Navigating the Pentagon and the public market

Anthropic’s ethical stance has also led to a standoff with the US Department of War.

Reports indicate that the company has resisted pressure to allow its most advanced models to be used for offensive military operations, citing its "Constitutional AI" guidelines.

This stance has created a unique dynamic where the company is arguably the most valuable AI startup in the world while being at odds with one of the world’s largest potential customers, the Pentagon.

This friction highlights the firm’s commitment to its founding principles, even at the cost of lucrative government contracts.

However, this perceived friction does not seem to have dampened investor enthusiasm for the rumoured IPO.

The market is currently experiencing a wave of momentum, with other major players like SpaceX also looking toward public listings.

Barringer noted that Anthropic may want to "take advantage of the momentum" in a crowded field of high-profile offerings.

An IPO would provide the necessary capital to sustain the massive costs associated with training the current and next generation of AI models.

As the company moves toward the final quarter of 2026, the question remains whether it can satisfy the relentless growth demands of public shareholders while maintaining the strict safety boundaries that define its corporate identity.

 

God in the machine: Would you take advice from an AI Jesus?


By Roselyne Min with AP
Published on 

From Jesus avatars to Buddhist assistants, AI apps offering spiritual guidance and interaction are gaining popularity, but questions remain over their use and ethics.

From Hindu gurus and Buddhist priests to AI versions of Jesus, developers are using AI to create avatars that can communicate spiritual ideas based on religious teachings.

These apps are designed as tools for outreach, while others aim to digitise and interpret ancient texts.

“Every single religion, as far as I'm aware, is engaging at least with a conversation about what AI is and where it's going and the impact it's going to have on our understanding of what it means to be human,” said Beth Singler, a religion and AI anthropologist at the University of Zurich.

Among them is a tech company, Just Like Me, which has created an AI Jesus avatar aimed at reaching younger people.

On its website, users can start a video call with the avatar which is promoted as “your daily mentor for comfort, guidance and hope”.

The AI Jesus appears as a hyper-realistic, human-like figure shown from the shoulders up and speaking directly to the user.

As AI becomes more integrated into society, concerns are mounting over its impact on mental health and the need for guardrails and regulation.

But Just Like Me says Jesus AI offers a more "meaningful" alternative to doomscrolling, encouraging reflection and connection.

“If you have a conversation with Jesus or one of our other AIs, you have a friendship there, you have a bond, and they remember the previous conversations,” said Chris Breed, CEO of Just Like Me.

The US company says its AI model is trained on the King James Bible and sermons.

“It has a focused set of information and purpose that's about the spirituality and the guidance and mentorship,” said Jeff Tinsley, co-founder and investor of Just Like Me.

In Japan, developers are exploring similar ideas within Buddhism. Zen Buddhist priest Roshi Jundo Cohen has spent years training the AI avatar Emi Jido from his home.

Emi appears as a full-bodied, animated character, moving and praying in a Zen temple. According to her creators, she is not designed as a “master guru” but more like a child.

In 2024, he ordained the AI prototype Zbee over Zoom, after which it became the novice priest Emi Jido.

“Emi is supposed to be a Zen friend. That is someone who helps human beings in their Zen practice, but also just from a Buddhist and Zen perspective offers words of kindness, [and] words of wisdom,” Cohen said.

Ethical questions surrounding the creation of religious AI are among the reasons Emi Jido, a novice AI Buddhist priest, has not been released.

“If you give birth to a child, you don't just kind of throw them out to the world and then hope that they become good people. You have to like train them and give them values,” said Jeanne Lim, the founder and CEO of beingAI and who created the AI prototype, Zbee.

Lim says the goal is to make Emi available to the public for free in the future, once it is ready.

“Emi is at the start of the road that hopefully will continue for generations,” said Cohen.

Experts say there is a growing debate among religious groups about AI, but it is unclear how widely these tools are being used.

“It's unclear quite how many people are using this regularly or whether it's just a bit of a fad for a moment for some people, or for other people it's shaping their spiritual thoughts much further,” Singler said.

 

'Boots On The Ground': Massive Attack and Tom Waits team up for powerful ICE protest song

Massive Attack and Tom Waits team up for most powerful ICE protest song yet
Copyright Press - AP Photo

By David Mouriquand
Published on 

"Across the western hemisphere, state authoritarianism and the militarisation of police forces are fusing again with neo-fascist politics." Massive Attack have teamed up with Tom Waits for a haunting and incredibly powerful protest song, titled 'Boots On The Ground'.

British trip-hop icons Massive Attack and the legendary US singer-songwriter Tom Waits have teamed up to release a powerful, politically-charged new song, titled ‘Boots On The Ground’.

The haunting track is the first new material from both Massive Attack and Tom Waits in years. It takes aim at "recent ICE raids on migrant communities & the killing of civilians that protect them", with all proceeds from the song going to the American Civil Liberties Union and the US Immigrant Defense Project.

‘Boots On The Ground’ features additional vocals from Waits’ son Casey, and begins with the heavy breathing. Massive Attack then lay a tender yet menacing soundscape beneath Waits inimitable vocals.

We trim your hedges, we fight your wars / Wait in the trenches and we're fucked till we're sore / With boots on the ground, boots on the ground...

Other lyrics include: “Now who the hell are these federal pricks? / Hiding in the Senate like a bloated-ass tick / Air-conditioned fuckstick loafers / Sittin' in a room full of army posters” and “Cold and hot as Satan's hoof / Spinning on the world, I'm hiding on a roof / I kill a brown man I never ass knew / Choked on spit and then he turned blue.”

Boots On The Ground Press


The song comes with an equally haunting video which will send chills down your spine.

The film was created by Massive Attack, made with work by US photo artist thefinaleye.

“The film that follows encapsulates his work across an epoch forming six-year period,” reads the caption. “From the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis on 25th May 2020 to recent ICE raids on migrant communities & the killing of civilians that protect them. From the brutal state repression of public protest, to the reality of American homelessness that includes nearly 33,000 military veterans.”

The video ends by detailing those who have lost their lives to ICE and the impact of oppressive retaliation to protest.

“As of March 2026, eight people have been killed by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents, or in ICE custody. Their names were: Renée Good, Alex Pretti, Geraldo Lunas Campos, Luis Gustavo Nunez Caceres, Luis Beltran Yanez Cruz, Parady La, Heber Sanchez Dominguez, and Victor Manuel Diaz.”

Check it out below:

Massive Attack’s Robert “3D” Del Naja and Grant “Daddy G” Marshal said in a press release: “It’s a career honour to collaborate with an artist of the magnitude, originality and integrity of Tom, but this track is arriving in an atmosphere of chaos. Across the western hemisphere, state authoritarianism and the militarisation of police forces are fusing again with neo-fascist politics.”

They added: “Seen within the American emergency, at home and overseas, this track contains pulses of callous impulse & abandoned mind.”

As for Waits, he revealed that he accepted the invitation to collaborate with the duo “many years ago”.

"Way back then, we sent them 'Boots On The Ground'," he said. "Their long release delay never worried me. Today, as in all of mankind's yesterdays, guarantees this song will never go out of style. Man's fiasco folly is a feast for the flies. Hence, the b-side of Massive Attack's upcoming 12 inch 'The Fly' features my appreciation for the winged nuisance."

‘Boots On The Ground’ will be released as an exclusive vinyl featuring the b-side Waits mentioned. Environmental considerations have shaped the physical release, with Massive Attack partnering with Good Neighbor on an 'EcoSonic' pressing manufactured from 100 per cent recycled PET via energy-efficient injection moulding. Recycled, FSC-certified paper stock and recycled polyethylene have been used for the sleeves and outer slipcases respectively.

Robert Del Naja before his arrest in London last weekend Screenshot X Defend Our Juries

The release of ‘Boots On The Ground’ arrives after Massive Attack recently made headlines.

Robert Del Naja was recently among 500+ people arrested at a peaceful London protest in support of Palestine Action – a move by police he called “unlawful” in a statement.

Before his arrest, Del Naja told the Press Association he wanted to attend the protest despite the consequences a potential arrest could have on his career.

He said: “Being a musician, obviously, there was a lot of trepidation around how we might not be able to travel and get visas,” adding: “But I thought ‘this is ridiculous’ and then the police making that U-turn to arrest people again, I thought that is even more ridiculous. So I’m going to hold a sign today.”

“If I get arrested, I feel very confident that if I stand up in court with the right guidance and say, ‘This was an unlawful arrest and, therefore, I don’t accept it’.”

He concluded: “I think that the actions of Palestine Action were highly patriotic because they were pretty much protecting our country from getting involved in serious war crimes and breaking international law. How much more patriotic can you be than that?”

It remains to be seen whether the band’s upcoming EU tour dates will be affected by Del Naja’s arrest, which could impact the band’s travel.

Massive Attack also joined 400 other artists in backing the No Music For Genocide campaign, which geo-blocks their work in Israel. They have boycotted performing in Israel since 1999.

The band’s last release was the 2020 ‘Eutopia’ EP, which addressed global issues such as the climate and cost-of-living crises. Their most recent full-length record remains 2010's ‘Heligoland’.

Tom Waits AP Photo

As for Tom Waits, 'Boots On The Ground' is his first new material since his 2011 album ‘Bad As Me’

Since then, he has primarily focused on acting, recently starring in 2025’s Venice-winning Father Mother Sister Brother.

There have been persistent rumours that Waits could be writing again, with the hope that the 76-year-old artist may tour once more.

Waits will release ‘Where The Willow And The Dogwood Grow’ on 29 May. It is a curated collection of covers recorded by Bruce Springsteen, Marianne Faithfull, Norah Jones, Johnny Cash and Solomon Burke.




RHETORICAL QUESTION

False prophet: Did Pete Hegseth really quote a fake Bible verse from Tarantino’s 'Pulp Fiction'?

Did Pete Hegseth really quote a fake Bible verse from Quentin Tarantino’s Pulp Fiction?
Copyright AP Photo - Miramax

By David Mouriquand
Published on 

US Secretary of War Pete Hegseth mistakenly presented the made-up scripture as genuine Bible verse - and he's being trolled for quoting the gospel of Quentin Tarantino.

Last year, we suggested (proved?) that the Trump administration may be culturally illiterate – especially when it comes to cinema.

Now, Pete Hegseth has added another stone to that dubious edifice.

The US Secretary of War, a Christian nationalist who has been referencing the Bible and Jesus Christ in several of his gung-ho / fire-and-brimstone addresses, quoted a fake Bible verse from Quentin Tarantino’s beloved classic Pulp Fiction during a prayer service at the Pentagon.

No, we’re not making this up.

Hegseth mistakenly presented the made-up scripture as genuine Bible verse – seemingly trying to outdo Samuel L. Jackson, who delivered the original lines in the 1994 film.

He set up the quote by saying it was a prayer recited by Sandy 1 - one of the US Air Force Combat Search and Rescue teams involved in the rescue of a US Air Force airman who was trapped behind enemy lines in Iran earlier this month.

“The path of the downed aviator is beset on all sides by the inequities of the selfish and the tyranny of evil man,” Hegseth dramatically recited. “Blessed is he who, in the name of camaraderie and duty, shepherds the lost through the valley of darkness, for he is truly his brother’s keeper and the finder of lost children. And I will strike down upon thee with great vengeance and furious anger those who attempt to capture and destroy my brother, and you will know my call sign is Sandy 1 when I lay my vengeance upon thee. Amen."

For comparison’s sake, here’s the iconic monologue from Pulp Fiction, in which Jackson’s character Jules Winnfield recited the fictional Biblical quote from Ezekiel 25:17 before gunning down a character: “The path of the righteous man is beset on all sides by the inequities of the selfish and the tyranny of evil men. Blessed is he who, in the name of charity and good will, shepherds the weak through the valley of darkness, for he is truly his brother’s keeper and the finder of lost children. And I will strike down upon thee with great vengeance and furious anger those who attempt to poison and destroy my brothers. And you will know my name is the Lord when I lay my vengeance upon you.”

As you can see, aside from a few military modifications on Hegseth’s part, as well as an added "Amen", it’s pretty damn similar.

Samuel L. Jackson in Pulp Fiction Mirmax


Sean Parnell, chief Pentagon spokesman, released a statement on X, writing: “Secretary Hegseth on Wednesday shared a custom prayer, referenced as the CSAR prayer, used by the brave warfighters of Sandy-1 who led the daylight rescue mission of Dude 44 Alpha out of Iran, which was obviously inspired by dialogue in Pulp Fiction. However, both the CSAR prayer and the dialogue in Pulp Fiction were reflections of the verse Ezekiel 25:17, as Secretary Hegseth clearly said in his remarks at the prayer service. Anyone saying the Secretary misquoted Ezekiel 25:17 is peddling fake news and ignorant of reality.”

For further reference, the Old Testament book of Ezekiel in the Bible’s King James version reads: “And I will execute great vengeance upon them with furious rebukes; and they shall know that I am the Lord, when I shall lay my vengeance upon them.”

So, yeah... No one is buying the Parnell's spin or "ignorant of reality" defence.

Hegseth has been trolled for quoting from the gospel of Tarantino – leading to accusations of being a “Fake Christian” and “clown”.

Check out some of the reactions to Hegseth’s blunder, which feels like an SNL cold open, including a nightmarish mock-up of the Pulp Fiction poster from Gavin Newsom:

Tarantino and Jackson haven’t responded to Hegseth’s recital. Yet. Maybe they'll get in the mood and go all "medieval on (his) ass"...