Section: The New York Times (USA)
Britain’s Drift From the Global Stage Becomes an Election Issue
On matters like Ukraine and the Middle East, even its alliance with the United States, Britain is ceding its reputation for “punching above its weight.” …read more Source: The New York...
Where Poles and Russians Meet, Ideals and Profits Clash
For more than a year, since the Ukraine conflict erupted, European nations have been having an argument among themselves about how to respond to Russia. …read more Source: The New York...
A Population Uprooted by Ukraine’s War Struggles to Get By
War has displaced about one million people in Ukraine from their homes, and some relief workers say not nearly enough aid is being provided. …read more Source: The New York...
Lost in Their Own Land
Over a million people have been forced to flee their homes because of the war in Ukraine. Many of these internally displaced people have struggled to find a new life. …read more Source: The New York...
U.S. Says Putin Is Adding Russian Forces Near Ukraine
Western officials are unsure if plans are underway for a new Russian-backed offensive or if the moves are an effort to wring concessions from the Ukraine government. …read more Source: The New York...
Russian Workers Take Aim at Putin as Economy Exacts Its Toll
Subdued for a time by a surge in national pride after the annexation of Crimea, discontent over unpaid wages and forced vacations has generated a wave of labor actions. …read more Source: The New York...
Russian Premier Says Annexation of Crimea Was Worth Sanctions Fallout
Prime Minister Dmitri A. Medvedev’s estimated that Russia had lost $26.8 billion but that the economic pressure was “the price we have to pay for our position.” …read more Source: The New York...
New York Times Coverage of Ukraine Conflict
Photographs of the Ukraine by Mauricio Lima, Sergey Ponomarev and Uriel Sinai were finalists for the breaking news category of the Pulitzer Prizes. …read more Source: The New York...
Letter From Europe: Competing Over World War II’s Memory
The echoes of World War II have never stopped reverberating in France. But perhaps nowhere is the divergence over the memory of the war more acute than between Russia and Ukraine. …read more Source: The New York...
U.S. Army Trainers Arrive in Ukraine
The Kremlin warned on Friday that the appearance of about 300 American troops could threaten the tenuous cease-fire in the country’s southeast. …read more Source: The New York...