Ukraine holding out in cities of Soledar and Bakhmut amid fierce fighting
Fighting continues in Soledar as Ukraine denies Russia's claim to have taken control of the city
Fighting continues in Soledar as Ukraine denies Russia's claim to have taken control of the city
If China pushes too hard, its own rhetoric may backfire if the US decides to send balloons or drones into Chinese airspace, said Julian Ku.
Troublesome ex-PMs ducking responsibility for ‘failure’, says William Hague
Meeting reveals military branch responsible for nuclear missiles for first time
Fed up with the traffic, afraid of street crime and hooked on Twitter, Taliban fighters who left their villages and rode into Kabul after decades of war are struggling with the daily grind of city life.
Wood stoves targeted by latest government environmental regulations
Former prime minister concedes she did not disagree with her then-chancellor – but was conscious of "market meltdown".
Kim Jong-un has not been seen in public for 35 days ahead of an expected mass parade in Pyongyang this week to celebrate the North Korean military’s 75th anniversary.
The former New Jersey governor hit back at the former president — but critics said he was much too late.
The Arkansas governor, who's admitted under oath to lying to the press, will deliver the GOP's response to Biden's State of the Union address this week.
The former president's son retweeted a not-so-kind caricature of Donald Trump.
A family of three was found shot dead in their Pennsylvania backyard last week. Police are describing it as a suicide pact, citing handwritten notes.
UN chief Antonio Guterres warned nations Monday that he fears the likelihood of further escalation in the Russia-Ukraine conflict means the world is heading towards a "wider war.""I fear the world is not sleepwalking into a wider war.
Ex-prosecutor Mark Pomerantz shared the story, which he got from interviews with Weisselberg's former daughter-in-law, in his forthcoming book.
Who is eligible for the £900 cost-of-living payments and how do they qualify?
ZURICH (Reuters) -Switzerland is close to breaking with centuries of tradition as a neutral state, as a pro-Ukraine shift in the public and political mood puts pressure on the government to end a ban on exports of Swiss weapons to war zones. Buyers of Swiss arms are legally prevented from re-exporting them, a restriction that some representing the country's large weapons industry say is now hurting trade. Calls from Switzerland's European neighbours to allow such transfers to Kyiv have meanwhile grown louder as Russia's assault intensifies, and parliament's two security committees recommended that the rules be eased accordingly.
The estimated cost of the Government’s energy support package has been halved in a boost for hopes that Jeremy Hunt can cut taxes in his next Budget.
Exclusive: Tories have implemented only six of 26 recommendations in landmark employment review
Vladimir Putin's troops are only gaining a few hundred metres of territory a week.
Head of president’s parliamentary bloc seems to confirm reshuffle of Oleksii Reznikov as Russians close in on Bakhmut
F-15 Eagles "supported the F-22, as did tankers from multiple states," the Defense Department said in a press release detailing the mission.