Ukraine reveals the rise of the non-aligned state
Zelensky left the G7 to a chorus of renewed Western support, but failed to convince the other leaders to choose…
ByReviewing politics
and culture since 1913
Zelensky left the G7 to a chorus of renewed Western support, but failed to convince the other leaders to choose…
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For Ukrainians, victory is inevitable – but in the country’s hospitals, it is clear that winning the war will come…
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Men at War, Luke Turner’s tender account of servicemen’s transgressive private lives, transforms our understanding of the Second World War.
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Tim Marshall’s The Future of Geography shows how great powers – and Elon Musk – are looking to the stars…
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New conscription rules signal that the Kremlin has no intention to give up on its war effort.
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Without taking the city Vladimir Putin cannot achieve his war aims.
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In the home of both the Confederacy and the civil rights movement, the past is never dead.
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Whether sketching in bomb shelters or escaping the capital with unruly pets, Ukrainian illustrators and artists bear witness to the…
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Ukraine’s national security adviser on German betrayal, the coming Russian onslaught and why the West is scared.
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Berlin is consciously and deliberately stalling on sending Kyiv battle tanks.
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They are the first senior government figures to be killed or injured since Russia’s brutal invasion began.
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11 January 1958: Robert Graves and the writing of the two world wars.
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From Kosovo to Ukraine, Lawrence Freedman’s book Command explores the catastrophes that occur when state and military strategy collide.
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The Russian president wants to draw this war out; the West must help Ukraine retain its current momentum.
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The New Statesman’s interactive map shows the size of Ukraine’s occupied territory when compared to other countries
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Kyiv’s counterattack in the Russian-occupied city of Kherson could push the war into a much more dynamic phase.
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Sergei Lavrov, the Russian foreign minister, is visiting the continent to counter accusations that Russia is weaponising hunger.
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It will be difficult for the West to sustain support for Ukraine indefinitely. This will be a gift to Putin.
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Figures show a large spike in attacks on journalism and civil society organisations since the invasion.
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The Kremlin has used the pretext of defending Russian speakers to threaten former Soviet states.
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