Creators Syndicate on MSN1d
The Russians Are Coming? Not Really.
Donald Trump's interest in rapprochement with Russia and his annoyance with Ukraine, embodied by last week's Oval Office shouting match, has corporate pundits and politicians freaking out. Trump's former national security adviser H.
SIR Keir Starmer has insisted Donald Trump would “have our backs” and defend Europe from Vladimir Putin. It comes as diplomatic efforts intensify following the US president’s shock decision to
Putin Won
But Trump’s slavish devotion to the Russian leader—his willingness to help Putin achieve his maximalist goals—is merely the capstone of an era. Nothing was preordained about Putin’s triumph. Twenty years ago,
Regardless of whether one believes the conspiracy theory that Donald Trump is a Russian asset, Americans need to rise up and demand he cease acting like one.
"Fox & Friends" cohost Brian Kilmeade on Tuesday lashed out at conservatives whom he accused of going soft on Russian President Vladimir Putin. During a debate about President Donald Trump's decision to cut off all aid to Ukraine,
Hankyoreh English Edition on MSN2d
[Column] The return of invasion
A world in which the taboo on invasion has been broken is very dangerous indeed.
Four decades after Ronald Reagan confronted the Soviets' "evil empire," Donald Trump has essentially switched sides.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has declared 2025 the "Year of the Defender of the Fatherland," but the soldiers whose patriotism he wants to champion could pose a threat to his rule when they return from fighting against Ukraine.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has invited Prime Minister Narendra Modi to attend the 80th anniversary of the Victory over Nazism in Moscow this May.
And his negotiations with President Trump about Ukraine are not just about Ukraine. Putin wants nothing less than to reorganize the world, the way Joseph Stalin did with the accords he reached with Franklin D.
Constitutions define the legitimacy of a state. But they have long been at the mercy of international power politics.
Alexander Vindman argues that U.S. missteps and naïveté created the conditions for Russian imperialism’s return.