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März 2026: Redaktionsprofil fuer Reuters. Unten: wie diese Quelle die meistbehandelten Akteure und Regionen im März 2026 einordnet hat. Tippen Sie auf eine Kachel, um zur Detailkarte zu springen.
Eine Kachel pro Entitaet (Land oder Person), die in diesem Monat oft genug behandelt wurde, um eine belastbare Haltungs-Analyse zu erlauben. Farbe von rot (feindselig) bis gruen (unterstuetzend); Intensitaet folgt dem Berichterstattungsvolumen. Tippen springt zur Detailkarte.
Coverage is mixed: many headlines neutrally report Russian statements and actions (e.g., #5, #8, #13, #14, #18, #25), but there is also critical reporting on internal repression (#3, #11) and negative impacts (#1, #17, #20, #21). The outlet does not consistently frame Russia positively or negatively; stance is neutral overall.
Headline 17 ('deepens its isolation at home') carries a mildly negative implication for Hezbollah's domestic standing, but overall the bundle treats LB as a neutral actor in a conflict, not as a target of editorial hostility or favour. The entity is LB (country), not Hezbollah specifically, though many headlines mention Hezbollah as an actor within Lebanon. Stance is toward the country, not the group.
Coverage focuses on Japanese companies, BOJ policy, and government decisions; no consistent positive or negative framing of Japan as a country. Headline 24 notes a shift toward nuclear power with a neutral tone. The entity is a country, so stance is measured toward Japan itself, not its officials or firms; most headlines are factual or business-oriented, yielding neutral stance.
Coverage is predominantly factual and balanced, but some headlines (e.g., #10 'Iranian strikes defy Trump') could imply Iranian aggression; however, the outlet does not use hostile or delegitimising language toward Iran as a country. The entity is a nation, not a single actor, so stance is inherently mixed.
Many headlines report Trump's statements neutrally, but the selection emphasizes criticism, setbacks, and allied opposition, indicating a skeptical stance toward Trump.
Coverage is mixed: some headlines neutrally report US actions (e.g., strikes, guidelines), but several emphasize negative outcomes, loss of control, and internal conflict, suggesting a skeptical stance toward the US government under Trump.
Reuters consistently treats the UN as a neutral, authoritative source for reporting facts and warnings, and as a diplomatic actor. There is no evaluative language toward the UN itself; coverage is factual and institutional. The entity is not lionized or delegitimized.
Coverage is largely factual and balanced, with no consistent positive or negative editorial voice toward Israel. Headlines 1 and 8 mention Netanyahu in context of war boosts and joint operations, but without explicit endorsement or criticism. Headline 6 reports Trump's instruction to Israel, which could imply a slight distancing, but overall stance remains neutral.
Headlines are predominantly factual and cover a mix of UK government policy, corporate activity, and diplomatic relations. No consistent positive or negative editorial stance toward the UK as a country is evident; the outlet treats the UK as a normal subject of news. The entity is a country, not a single actor, so stance is inherently neutral unless coverage is systematically hostile or promotional, which it is not.
Coverage is predominantly factual and neutral; France is treated as a normal state actor. Headlines about French far-right electoral results (14) are reported without editorialising. The entity is a country, not a single person, so stance is inherently diffuse; no consistent positive or negative treatment detected.
Coverage is predominantly factual and balanced, mixing EU successes (defence plan, sanctions, loan to Ukraine) with internal divisions (Hungary veto, German scepticism) and external criticism (US divide claim). No consistent positive or negative framing of the EU as an entity; stance is neutral.
Coverage is a mix of political, economic, and corporate stories about Germany. Headlines are predominantly factual, with no evaluative language toward the country itself. The entity is a country, not a single actor, so stance is inherently neutral. Some headlines quote German leaders critically (e.g., Ukraine hits back at Rheinmetall CEO), but the outlet does not adopt that criticism toward Germany as a whole.
Coverage is diverse across sectors; some headlines imply criticism (e.g., sanctions, crash investigation) but overall Reuters maintains a neutral, news-agency tone without systematic positive or negative framing of China as an entity.
Headlines are overwhelmingly about damage and disruption from attacks, but the outlet does not assign blame or use hostile language toward the UAE; the entity is treated as a subject of neutral crisis reporting. The president's quote in headline 22 is presented without skepticism, but overall coverage is factual rather than promotional.
Coverage is overwhelmingly neutral and transactional, treating India as a market and geopolitical actor. Negative headlines (e.g., hospital fire, stock declines) are reported factually without blaming the state. No consistent positive or negative framing toward India as an entity.
Spitzenstunde: 11:00 UTC