What the Crimea airbase attack means for the war in Ukraine
Volodymyr Zelensky has vowed to recover the Russian-annexed peninsula as Ukrainian forces ready their counteroffensive.
ByDiscover the latest New Statesman content on Russia, exploring the politics, culture and economy of the nation. Insightful coverage and analysis of the war in Ukraine and Putin’s presidency.
Volodymyr Zelensky has vowed to recover the Russian-annexed peninsula as Ukrainian forces ready their counteroffensive.
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Public ownership is the only sensible response to surging energy prices, insecure supply and climate crisis.
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Leonid Volkov on how the war in Ukraine has given Russia’s opposition a new chance to shape the country’s future.
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The IAEA has warned of “potentially catastrophic consequences” after an attack on the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant.
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Poor policies, once adopted, are difficult to abandon, as the leaders of Russia and China are demonstrating.
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The return of shipments being able to leave Ukrainian ports is a positive step in the fight to stave off…
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A dispute over car number plates between Serbia and Kosovo has been defused but not resolved.
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Russian authoritarianism has added an extra dimension to its suppression of free speech: a sinister playfulness with fact and opinion.
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Moscow is exploiting the only significant leverage it has over European economies: energy.
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Commentators such as Jordan Peterson and Jürgen Habermas are ignoring the truth about Russia’s war.
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Thomas Mann, German identity and the romantic allure of Russia.
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Gazprom’s move to cut gas flows through the Nord Stream 1 pipeline threatens supplies ahead of the winter.
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Russia uses emotional pictures of children to legitimise its war on Ukraine, and targets children themselves with disinformation.
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A year ago Germany suffered terrible floods and the new government pledged climate action. It has not wavered.
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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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The tennis player knows she could be ostracised by her country.
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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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The Kremlin has used the pretext of defending Russian speakers to threaten former Soviet states.
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Now that open dissent in Russia is almost impossible, dissidents have fled to its neighbour – with uncertain consequence.
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The president has fled by military jet as protesters occupy government buildings amid the worst economic crisis in decades.
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