How a Tiny NATO Nation Tackled a Big Problem: Arming Ukraine
Luxembourg’s challenges in buying arms on the open market underscore the struggle to keep Ukraine supplied until sophisticated Western weapons arrive in the spring.
Luxembourg’s challenges in buying arms on the open market underscore the struggle to keep Ukraine supplied until sophisticated Western weapons arrive in the spring.
As the country’s leaders lay postwar plans, companies from around the world are jockeying for advantage in what could be a multibillion-dollar effort, although one loaded with risk.
Russia-Ukraine: One year on, global economy is feeling the consequences
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The war in Ukraine is entering a new phase. We explain each side’s strategy.
The three reports appear to be in conversation with one another, ever more detailed drafts of a most unorthodox historical record.
The Biden administration is escalating the war.
In the war’s first year, America and its allies have had it relatively easy. Will the West bear any burden to uphold a liberal world order?
Moscow is sending poorly trained recruits, including convicts, to the front lines in eastern Ukraine to pave the way for more seasoned fighters, U.S. and allied officials say.
Every year for nearly 20 years a groundhog in the Kharkiv region of Ukraine has been awoken on February 2 to help predict the upcoming spring. (Feb. 2)