Germany Arrests 2 in Spying and Sabotage Case Linked to Russia
The two men, dual citizens of both countries, were accused of being part of a plot to undermine aid to Ukraine by trying to blow up military infrastructure.
By Christopher F. Schuetze
The two men, dual citizens of both countries, were accused of being part of a plot to undermine aid to Ukraine by trying to blow up military infrastructure.
By Christopher F. Schuetze
Young migrants from the former Soviet republic were accused of an attack on a concert hall in Moscow that killed 145 people.
By Neil MacFarquhar and Eric Schmitt
The U.S., Europe, Russia and China worked together on a 2015 deal to limit Iran’s nuclear program. The arrangement’s unraveling and the spike in superpower tensions make this a dangerous moment.
By David E. Sanger
In “New Cold Wars,” David E. Sanger tracks the shifts in U.S. foreign policy as competition among the great powers re-emerges in the 21st century.
By Justin Vogt
The Ukraine aid package in Congress isn’t about the money. It’s about American steadfastness.
By Dan Coats
More than 100,000 people had to leave their homes after spring floods engulfed cities and villages in vast sections of neighboring countries.
By Ivan Nechepurenko
A snap general election has left the country’s governing party exposed to an unexpectedly strong challenge from populist forces.
By Andrew Higgins
The visit came days after the U.S. threatened new sanctions against Chinese companies if they aided Russia’s war in Ukraine.
By David Pierson and Ivan Nechepurenko
House Speaker Mike Johnson should allow an aid package for Ukraine to come to a vote.
By The Editorial Board
Recruiting convicts for its army has given Russia a manpower advantage. But it is backfiring in tragic ways when former inmates are pardoned and return home to commit new crimes.
By Neil MacFarquhar and Milana Mazaeva
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