Ukraine

The five-and-a-half-hour attack targeted agricultural facilities and coastal infrastructure, officials for Ukraine’s southern defense forces wrote on Telegram.
"You gotta pay your bills," said the former president notorious for not paying his own bills.
A growing number of conservative senators are in open rebellion with his tactics, heeding instead the words of former President Donald Trump.
It is Putin’s first formal interview with a Western media figure since he began a full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
Seventeen Republicans joined Democrats in supporting the measure, putting U.S. aid to Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan back on track in Congress' upper chamber.
The move amounts to the most serious shakeup of the top military brass since Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
Republicans also struggled to coalesce around a U.S. aid package for Ukraine and Israel that didn't include tougher border measures.
“They don’t have the backbone, the guts, the spine to resist the blandishments of Trump even when they know he’s wrong," Sen. Chuck Schumer said.
Republican Sen. James Lankford, who spent months negotiating the border provisions the GOP demanded, said he may vote against his own bill this week.
After House Speaker Mike Johnson proposed separating out money for Israel, the White House signaled that won’t work either.