NATO, Trump and Russia
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Russia and Belarus start military exercise near NATO border
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Drones in Poland and GPS jamming attributed to Russia have intensified a debate over whether the West should impose stiffer penalties for such “hybrid warfare.”
In its latest drone attack, Ukraine struck one of Russia’s largest oil-refining complexes, sparking a fire and causing minor damage. Watch
Ukraine war, President Trump has demanded NATO members that still buy Russian oil and gas end their reliance and find new supplies.
Ukraine insists on the return of children who were forcibly transferred from occupied Ukrainian territories to Russia, saying this a ceasefire condition.Fourteen-year-old Sasha from Mariupol in southeast Ukraine had tears in his eyes when European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen told his story during her State of the Union address to
NATO fighter jets shot down multiple Russian drones that violated Polish airspace during an attack on neighboring Ukraine early on Wednesday, as the military alliance denounced Moscow for “absolutely dangerous” behavior that ratcheted up tensions to a new level.
Welcome back to the Week in Your Words, where we take a step back and highlight some of your comments from the past week. Russia was once again in the news, after Poland, a NATO member, said 19 Russian drones crossed into its territory amid an attack on western Ukraine.
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France sends jets to Poland, the UK ramps up sanctions in a signal to Russia not to escalate
WARSAW, Poland (AP) — France said it’s deploying fighter jets to Poland and Britain announced fresh sanctions on Russia’s oil revenues and war machine Friday as European countries took steps to deter Moscow’s aggression after an incursion by Russian drones into Polish territory.
The Southern District Military Court in Rostov-on-Don (Russia) sentenced 48-year-old Ukrainian citizen Denys Demianenko to 19 years in prison in a case regarding participation in a terrorist organization and terrorism training.
1don MSN
Russian drones force Europe to defend itself, perhaps alone, after Putin ‘put down a marker’ to NATO
BRUSSELS (AP) — Since Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered the invasion of Ukraine in 2022, NATO has focused on trying to deter an attack on its own territory and avoid all-out war with nuclear armed Russia. Now the time has come for NATO to defend itself, and European allies might have to do it alone, experts and leaders say.