NATO boss seeks 40 bln euros per year for Ukraine military aid, source says NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg will ask allies to pledge a minimum of 40 billion euros ($43.37 billion) annually to fund military aid for Ukraine, an alliance source told Reuters on Thursday, as NATO ... 05/30/2024 - 5:17 am | View Link
Explainer: What are the security deals Ukraine is signing with allies? The Group of Seven wealthy nations signed a joint declaration at the NATO summit in Vilnius in July last year ... of military and security aid, support to develop Ukraine's defence industrial ... 05/30/2024 - 5:15 am | View Link
Russia Trying to 'Take Advantage' of US Ukraine Aid Timing: ISW The think tank said that Moscow was being given "time to reconstitute and prepare for renewed aggression against Ukraine." ... 05/29/2024 - 4:45 pm | View Link
‘Ukraine Has Gone Through a Terrible Period’: A Q. and A. With Frederick and Kimberly Kagan We’re at a crucial moment in the Ukraine war. After Congress’s monthslong delay in approving additional American aid — and the ... producing in-depth, real-time analysis of the battlefield ... 05/29/2024 - 1:00 pm | View Link
Trump again claims he could have stopped Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine Speaking during his first rally in New York in eight years on May 23, the former president also said he would have stopped Hamas’s attack on Israel and the ensuing war in Gaza that followed. 05/24/2024 - 1:47 am | View Link
Following former President Trump’s first criminal conviction—and his rambling against the outcome—he’s claiming that the possibility of being sentenced to house arrest or jail time doesn’t bother him.
“I’m okay with it,” Trump said on Fox & Friends Weekend, in his first interview since a dozen jurors handed down guilty verdicts on 34 of 34 felony charges for falsifying business records on Thursday.
The Fox & Friends hosts said they spent 90 minutes interviewing the former president at his Bedminster, New Jersey estate.
Democratic Rep. Adam Schiff tells CNN's Kasie Hunt that "they should recommend a sentence no greater or no less than any other citizen would get for committing those kinds of crimes."
GOP Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.), who previously called January 6 rioters “insurrectionists” who “should face the full extent of federal law,” is now singing a different tune: Many of those insurrectionists, he believes, should be “considered” for, and receive, presidential pardons.
On NBC’s Meet the Press on Sunday, Cotton said people “who did not attack a law enforcement officer, [and] who did not damage public property ” on Jan.
GRANBY — Few physical reminders remain in this unassuming mountain town 20 years after a rampage by an aggrieved muffler shop owner attracted worldwide attention.
Marvin Heemeyer — convinced he’d been wronged by town leaders — plotted for more than a year, crafting and installing a 40,000-pound steel and concrete enclosure atop a bulldozer.