
Warner critical of Trump move to cut off intelligence sharing with Ukraine
Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., wants to be clear: cutting off intelligence sharing with Ukraine “will cost lives.”
Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., wants to be clear: cutting off intelligence sharing with Ukraine “will cost lives.”
Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., issued a blistering statement on Tuesday on the “short-sighted decision” by Donald Trump to pause military aid to Ukraine.
Imagine that during World War II, at the height of Nazi Germany’s blitz of Britain, President Roosevelt invited PM Winston Churchill to Washington and humiliated him.
As a Virginian who fled Ukraine with my family just weeks before Russia’s full-scale invasion three years ago, I know what happens when the world hesitates in the face of authoritarian aggression.
The screed from Donald Trump accusing Volodymyr Zelensky of being a “dictator” is just the latest example of, the stuff we see and hear from Trump only makes sense if you realize that the guy is a Russian asset.
A Virginia Tech professor who has researched public opinion in Ukraine for a decade is seeing interest from Ukrainians to negotiate an end to the country’s two-plus-year war with Russia.
Diesel prices are at their lowest level since before Russia invaded Ukraine two and a half years ago.
Most wars do end in some fashion, but plenty of wars—and the wars in Ukraine and Israel appear to be among them—drag on indefinitely.
Xi Jinping’s balancing act with Russia and the West took on a new challenge with Vladimir Putin’s arrival in Beijing on May 16.
The April 24 edition of The News-Gazette features an excellent editorial praising the House of Representatives for overwhelmingly approving new military aid to Ukraine.