Trump, Russia and Ukraine
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What is Russia's current strategy in Ukraine?
Russia's large-scale invasion of Ukraine started more than 3 years ago - and Trump has been pushing to end it even at the cost of Ukraine abandoning its invaded territories to Russia. After appearing to press Moscow,
The answer may come from Ukraine, in the form of a radical new cruise missile —the FP-5 “Flamingo” from Ukrainian defense technology company Fire Point—and an unprecedented deal for Washington to buy billions of dollars of Ukrainian firepower.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky is expected to push Trump for additional long-range weapons capable of striking targets inside Russian territory when he meets with Trump in Washington at the White House on Friday.
A book by German political analyst Carlo Masala, "If Russia Wins," outlines how Moscow might make a grab for Estonia in 2028.
With President Donald Trump hinting he may supply Ukraine with Tomahawk missiles, the Kremlin expressed its concerns on Sunday, but also issued a warning to the US.
Domestic theatre: For Putin, confronting the West plays well at home. As Dmitry Medvedev, the Deputy Chairman of the Security Council of Russia, recently claimed, “Europe fears its own war”. For the Kremlin, that fear reinforces the narrative that Russia is the assertive power, and that the West is indecisive.
Poland has triggered Article 4 of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, NATO, after the country reported 19 “breaches” of its airspace by Russian drones on Wednesday.
European leaders and NATO allies gathered together in Denmark to discuss rearming. Newsweek's live coverage has ended.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky failed to convince President Donald Trump of his nation's need for long-range Tomahawk missiles during a Friday meeting.