The ground war in Ukraine has stalemated and the crucial fight has shifted to the skies — missiles and interceptors.
Kyiv will rush to produce the systems domestically as Russia struggles to defend itself against some Ukrainian attacks.
National Security Journal on MSNOpinion
Ukraine just agreed to buy up to 200 new fighter jets from France and Sweden — the European resolve Putin never saw coming
France will sell Ukraine 16 Rafale fighters plus SAMP/T NG air defense batteries and radars, with Sweden readying 20 Gripens ...
Henry Kissinger often said that nuclear arms are “weapons in search of a doctrine.” After the Cold War, some strategists have ...
WASHINGTON, DC - MARCH 6: Rep. Jim Costa (D-CA) during a news conference on Capitol Hill on March, 6 2024 in Washington, DC. The bipartisan news conference discussed foreign aid funding for Ukraine, ...
A Marxist economist argues that the war in Ukraine cannot be understood without confronting the collapse of European ...
Along the forests and marshlands that separate the Baltic states from Russia and Belarus, workers are digging anti-tank ditches, pouring concrete bunkers and erecting rows of dragon's teeth - jagged ...
Ukraine has recently attacked Russia with a new drone strike deep inside the country. The targets were strategic and included a major oil terminal in St. Petersburg and a military factory in the ...
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Putin wanted to make Russia great again. Instead, Ukraine is the new rising power in Europe
Russia’s ongoing war against Ukraine is often, and misleadingly, characterised as a great power conflict. The narrative goes like this: Russia went to war against Ukraine because it felt threatened by ...
Russia has suffered approximately 1.4 million casualties and 450,000 fatalities in Ukraine for only marginal territorial gains, according to new CSIS data. In addition, Ukraine has conducted deep ...
Calls to replicate Iran's experience in the Russia-Ukraine war are becoming increasingly popular among Russian military ...
Ukraine says it can now hit military and energy targets deep inside Russia. Former ambassador Daniel Fried explains why he thinks Russia is starting to lose its strategic advantage.
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