948 Drones, One Message: Russia's Spring Offensive Begins
The largest aerial assault of the entire war struck western cities far from the front lines — a clear signal that Moscow's spring offensive is underway while peace talks stall.
The largest aerial assault of the entire war struck western cities far from the front lines — a clear signal that Moscow's spring offensive is underway while peace talks stall.
For the first time since 2000, Israel will hold Lebanese territory indefinitely. Defence Minister Israel Katz says displaced civilians cannot return until northern Israel is safe — and his cabinet colleague wants the Litani River as the new permanent border.
Eight thousand kilometers from Tehran, the Philippines is rationing fuel and bracing for inflation. The Strait of Hormuz blockade is now a Southeast Asian crisis.
Months before an Air Canada jet slammed into a fire truck at LaGuardia, killing two pilots, aviators were filing urgent warnings to NASA's safety database. "Please do something," one wrote. Nobody did.
Fabrice Leggeri ran the EU's border agency during the migration crisis. Now a French judge wants to know if his policies amounted to crimes against humanity — while Leggeri serves in the European Parliament for the far right.
At least six people were injured when an Iranian missile slammed into central Tel Aviv — one of multiple projectiles that evaded Israel's vaunted air defense systems. More than a million Israelis are in shelters, and the coordination between Tehran and Hezbollah shows no sign of breaking.
Mette Frederiksen was heading for defeat. Then Donald Trump threatened to seize Greenland, and Danish voters remembered why they hired her.
Kim Jong Un's declaration isn't just rhetoric — it's a formal policy shift that ends decades of denuclearization negotiations. The timing, coming alongside constitutional changes and a defense budget hike, signals Pyongyang has closed the door on disarmament for good.
Hours after Ukraine demonstrated its reach by striking oil infrastructure 1,400 kilometers inside Russia, Moscow made good on Zelenskiy's warning—killing two civilians in a coordinated missile and drone barrage.
A Lockheed Martin Hercules C-130 carrying 125 soldiers and crew crashed moments after takeoff from a remote Amazon border town. The death toll stands at 34, with dozens hospitalized and ammunition detonating at the crash site.
The world is safer from terrorism than it's been in a decade—unless you live in Nigeria, where deaths jumped 46% last year. The divergence reveals where jihadists are winning.
Trump claims 'productive' negotiations. Tehran calls it 'fake news.' Somewhere between those positions, regional mediators are passing messages — and global energy markets hang in the balance.
A military ruler who seized power after Gen Z protests now demands ministers pass lie detector tests. Young activists call it 'a joke and embarrassing.'
Fifty-seven dead, most of them students. A nation in mourning. And a courtroom so cramped that victims' relatives were forced to sit in the defendants' seats.
A Hercules C-130 carrying up to 110 soldiers crashed on takeoff from a remote border outpost. At least 57 have been rescued; dozens remain unaccounted for in dense jungle terrain.
Five of the six main bridges spanning the Litani River have been destroyed. For the million displaced Lebanese civilians, the message is clear: don't come back.
Nearly £900m in UK aid to Africa will disappear by 2029 — enough to build hundreds of schools and clinics. The money is going to defence. In Mozambique, Rwanda and Zambia, the Foreign Office's own assessment says children and people with disabilities will bear the cost.
Trump claims 'productive conversations' with Tehran. Iran denies any talks took place. The five-day pause gives both sides breathing room — but the Strait of Hormuz remains closed, and the clock is ticking.
Four volunteer ambulances destroyed by arson in a Jewish neighborhood of London. Three suspects on CCTV. A little-known group claims responsibility. The Gaza war has found its way to a north London car park.
The Socialist who brought France the 35-hour work week and civil unions never recovered from his shock 2002 defeat by Jean-Marie Le Pen. Emmanuel Macron praised his 'rigour, courage and ideal of progress.'