Ukrainian forces who have occupied part of Russia's Kursk region since last summer are under increasing military pressure and may have to abandon the territory, say analysts interviewed by RFE/RL.
Ukraine’s hold on territory in Kursk is more tenuous than at any other point since August, experts said. Kyiv still controls most of Sudzha, the local district capital, and other settlements. But ...
On March 2, a summit on aid to Ukraine was held in London, attended by representatives of 18 states and associations ...
Emboldened by President Donald Trump's suspension of military aid and intelligence to Ukraine, Russian forces have stepped up the pace of air attacks and redoubled efforts to take back captured territ ...
South Africa's rand was weaker on Monday as investors awaited a national budget speech later this week and markets kept an eye on U.S foreign policy developments.
Pyongyang has sent around 11,000 soldiers to help Putin's army repel an incursion by Ukraine's military into the Kursk region ...
Ukraine’s military and Russian war bloggers say Russian special forces walked inside a gas pipeline to strike Ukrainian units from the rear in the Kursk region ...
Russia has retaken about two-thirds of the territory Ukraine seized last summer in the Kursk region of Russia, but at a ...
British foreign minister David Lammy said on Friday that Japan could help Ukraine by ramping up economic pressure on Russia, ...
Two KF-16 fighter jets dropped eight bombs in a rural area near the North Korean border. Footage showed plumes of smoke and ...