For First Time, NATO Accuses China of Supplying Russia’s Attacks on Ukraine
The statement was a major departure for the alliance, which until 2019 never officially mentioned China as a concern.
By David E. Sanger
The statement was a major departure for the alliance, which until 2019 never officially mentioned China as a concern.
By David E. Sanger
In an open letter to the French people, he rejects any role for the far left France Unbowed party, setting the stage for a heated showdown.
By Roger Cohen
Vladimir Kara-Murza’s legal representatives said they were denied access to their client in a remote Siberian penal colony for six days.
By Valerie Hopkins
The specter of a second Donald J. Trump presidency injects new urgency into the NATO summit this week. President Biden and other leaders agree Ukraine should have an “irreversible” path to membership.
By Edward Wong, Julian E. Barnes and Helene Cooper
Demonstrators protesting mass tourism, housing shortages and high costs of living doused people dining at restaurants in the city with squirt guns.
By Reuters
The women died at the scene near London on Tuesday, the police said. The BBC identified the victims as the wife and children of one of its commentators.
By Claire Moses
Locals confronted visitors to the Catalan capital in a whimsical (but very serious) demonstration against mass tourism and housing shortages.
By Amelia Nierenberg and Rachel Chaundler
Britain gave Rwanda hundreds of millions of pounds, even though no asylum seekers were deported to the Central African nation under the agreement.
By Abdi Latif Dahir
Discovering evidence of deadly deluges of snow from the past could help protect people on mountains around the world, researchers say.
By Katherine Kornei
By welcoming visitors with glorious scents and a natural beauty that rivals Provence in France, the annual lavender harvest has revitalized the medieval town of Brihuega.
By Shaan Merchant
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