Russia, NATO
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Ukraine presents response to US peace plan
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Moscow, Russia and Ukrainian drone
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After the latest restriction on the internet, officials describe receiving “many” letters from children wanting access to the game-creation platform restored.
Negotiations on finding peace between Russia and Ukraine are inching forward. Follow Newsweek's live coverage.
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Ukraine targets Russia's shadow fleet in foreign waters as sanctions fail to sink Putin's oil sales
At least three oil tankers have been hit by explosions in what appears to be a stepped up unilateral effort by Ukraine to sink Russia's sanctions-dodging oil sales.
Russia is pushing to take over all of eastern Ukraine's Donbas region, where one resident tells NPR that she feels her "life depends on how our guys at the front hold on."
Roblox, the California-based platform that allows users to create and share their own games, stopped working for Russian users on Dec. 3.
Some Danes say they are worried about security because of what they see as the growing threat from Russia and concerns over the reliability of the Trump White House as an ally.
Zelensky has responded to the mounting pressure, reiterating that Ukraine will not concede land to its “aggressor.”
More detailed, recent assessments of Russian sabotage actions in Europe, another official says, are increasingly being considered in the light of a Nato 2023 Joint Threat Assessment — a classified report shared among the alliance’s defence chiefs — that Russia was gearing its military and economy for a possible hot war with Europe by 2029.