The most violent criminals get a Kremlin pardon if they agree to fight in Ukraine.
The unresolved speaker fight could determine whether the government stays open—and the future of U.S. support for Israel and Ukraine.
American leaders keep overestimating their control over events in the Middle East, Ukraine, and around the world.
The president of Ukraine is easily found on social media, but rarely submits to journalists’ questioning.
The president should spell out what he is ready to do if Putin strikes again.
Supporting and arming Ukraine, and accelerating the collapse of the Russian military, is the most realistic way to end the conflict.
If the Kremlin is taking its cues from Alexander Solzhenitsyn, Eastern Ukraine is only a first step to "rebuilding Russia."
Images from the past month showing scenes from Kharkiv, Vinnytsia, Kyiv, Donetsk, Mariupol, and more
An outdated view of warfare helps explain why the U.S. was slow to supply long-range missiles.
Interpreting the meaning of an election conceived in chaos