Russia, drones and Ukrainian
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The Moscow Times on MSNMost Russians Do Not View United States as Top Enemy for First Time in 20 Years, Survey ShowsMost Russians no longer consider the United States their country’s main enemy, according to a Levada Center survey released Thursday, as Donald Trump’s return to the White House fuels hopes of a diplomatic thaw between Moscow and Washington.
1hon MSN
Ukraine launched a stealthy and significant attack on Russia last weekend. Experts say it’s going to change modern warfare, but the U.S. isn’t prepared
Neither Russia nor Ukraine has a clear path to victory. The Ukrainian drone attack last week and the Russian air raids on Friday don't change that.
Amid Elon Musk's escalating feud with President Trump, Russian officials have offered him political asylum and mocked the U.S. political climate.
Russia carried out one of its largest aerial attacks against Ukraine just hours after President Trump said it may be better to let the two countries “fight for a while.”
Icebreakers provide assured United States access and presence to the polar regions, the U.S. Coast Guard said.
Nearly 1 million Russian soldiers have been killed or injured in the country’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, according to a new study, a grisly measure of the human cost of Russian President’s Vladimir Putin’s unprovoked three-year assault on its neighbor.
Amid escalating tensions between Elon Musk and President Donald Trump, Russian lawmaker Dmitry Novikov has suggested that Musk could seek political asylum in Russia. Dmitry Novikov, First Deputy Chairman of the State Duma Committee on International Affairs (Communist Party of the Russian Federation),
A Ukrainian drone swarm costing thousands of dollars appears to have caused billions in damage—just as Trump advances a $175 billion missile shield critics call outdated.
Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelensky rejected Russian terms to end the war, while Vladimir Putin dismissed any meetings with what he called a terrorist regime.