
No exit: Two proposals for peace in Ukraine that are doomed to go nowhere
Two proposals for bringing peace in Russia’s war on Ukraine were issued on nearly the same day last month.
Two proposals for bringing peace in Russia’s war on Ukraine were issued on nearly the same day last month.
U.S. Secretary of State Anthony Blinken told the international community Friday not to let Russian President Vladimir Putin’s crimes “become our new normal.”
Given the Russian government’s brutal repression of dissent, the level of Russian resistance to the Putin regime’s war on Ukraine is quite remarkable.
Even though Ukraine cannot join NATO, it makes a plausible argument that it is performing NATO’s mission: defeating Russian aggression.
President Biden surprised his top advisers along with everyone else when, at a fundraising event, he referred to “Armageddon” in the Ukraine war: Russia’s possible use of a nuclear weapon.
Russian dictator Vladmir Putin has backed himself into a corner in Ukraine. U.S. Sen. Mark Warner, D-VA, asked Wednesday on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” how the U.S. should deal with a cornered Putin, offered a quick one-word response: “Carefully.”
Something extraordinary is happening in the course of Russia’s war in Ukraine. Putin is taking a hit from all sides. Opposition to the war is coming from home and abroad.
A 40-foot ocean freight container of humanitarian aid set sail Wednesday.
The Wayne Theatre presents its monthly free Science Talk lecture on Tuesday at 7 p.m.
More than 500 children’s drawings were put together in a digital art piece called “The Nightingale of Freedom,” and the project was sold on the non-fungible token market to raise funds for Ukraine.