All features
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Estonia watched Ukraine for four years. Now it’s spending €500 million on lessonsEstonia is preparing for what comes next. -
Norwegian Kongsberg’s answer to mass Russia’s Shahed attacks: mast, camera, and 70 mm rocketNorway just mounted a drone killer on Ukraine's own armored vehicle. -
Germany will pay for “hundreds” of Patriot missiles for Ukraine as strategic partnership signedGermany to provide IRIS-T launchers, invest in deep strikes, jointly develop mid-range drones -
Russia works on giving Putin legal pretext to invade any country with Russian citizens in it"Russophobia" Is now officially a reason for Russia to intervene. -
The €35 billion Hungary lost while Orbán picked fights with BrusselsTwo pots, €2 billion already gone, and a deadline in August. -
Magyar’s victory: what it unlocks for Ukraine—and where it stops shortHungary's new prime minister can now rewrite the constitution. He's made clear he won't rewrite everything. -
Ukraine spent a year beating wartime inflation. A different war just reversed it.Fuel costs surged 23% in March as the Middle East war pushed prices past the central bank’s forecast—and a rate hike is now on the table. -
Ukraine is becoming a space powerThe Ukrainian main intelligence directorate has completed at least two space launches since February 2022, according to one lawmaker. -
Soviet power nearly erased Ukraine’s Easter. What’s being rebuilt exists almost nowhere else in EuropeSpring ritual games survived intact only in Ukraine, Lithuania, and parts of Serbia. This year, they were brought back from the dead in central Kyiv, -
Estonia’s Orthodox church that declared independence from Russia is still run by Moscow, intelligence report saysThe Estonian Christian Orthodox Church adopted a new name and new statutes in 2025 — but Estonia's internal security service found the changes cosmetic, with Moscow Patriarch Kirill's oversight departments still directing its activities. -
Five years after Belarus’ stolen election, Ukraine is still catching up on TsikhanouskayaZelenskyy met Tsikhanouskaya in January—Ukraine's first presidential-level contact. Two months on, the Kyiv visit and special envoy remain undelivered. -
Trump and Vance showed Europe’s far right how to weaponize Ukraine. Don’t expect them to stop.For the White House, Ukraine is now reduced to a cheap punchline—lies and stereotypes they throw about—to aid the MAGA-European extreme right-Putin axis. -
Ukraine launched two rockets into space from its territory during war, plans to make own space forceMP boasts of missile defense, hypersonic strike capabilities -
Mark Dixon: “We must declare the Economic World War on Russia”Four years into Russia’s war on Ukraine, Mark Dixon thinks the West is losing the economic fight—not because the tools don’t exist, but because they’ve never been used at full power. -
The 10-point plan to wage the Economic World War—to harm Russia and help UkraineThe domino effect of a rich Russia risks tipping the balance between whether democracy or autocracy prevails, and whether the future human race lives in freedom or under servitude. -
Oil jumped 8% as Trump’s Hormuz blockade undid the ceasefire crashTalks collapsed in Pakistan. A naval blockade replaced a truce. For Russia’s war revenues, the brief window of relief is over. -
Russia spent $130 billion extra on sanctioned goods since 2022 — and it still couldn’t find replacements for some of them, Latvia saysLatvia's intelligence service assesses that Putin likely receives sanitized reports burying the economic losses — making him even less likely to change course under economic pressure. -
Trump’s and Putin’s ally Orbán ousted after 16 years as Magyar wins two-thirds majority and promises Hungary’s return to EuropeMagyar's supermajority gives Tisza the votes to reverse the constitutional changes Orbán made after winning his own first two-thirds majority in 2010 -
Ukraine tips drone war in its favorUkraine innovates fast, Russia scales hard. Ukraine is starting to do both. -
Russia’s An-series military transports were designed in Kyiv — and Moscow’s leaked documents show 143 of its 368 military Antonovs need urgent repairInternal Aviaremont files obtained by Dallas show Russia's primary repair plant for Ukrainian-designed military transports has spent all its government contract advances, cannot source parts, and was borrowing money to pay wages as of January 2026.
