Homegrown Ukrainian drones take the war
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US & China agree to 1-year truce on trade war
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Newsweek takes a deeper look at the more than two-year Sudan war, a conflict that the UN has called one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises.
Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro offered the U.S. his country's oil riches. For Secretary of State Marco Rubio, that wasn't enough.
Fasher, the capital of North Darfur state, in what the United Nations chief called a “terrible escalation” in the conflict.
Drone teams compete to ascend a scoreboard that rewards units for successful attacks. Ukrainian officials say the contest helps keep soldiers motivated.
Global automakers are bracing for a potential shortage of automotive semiconductor chips sparked by geopolitical tensions between the U.S. and China.
President Donald Trump and Xi Jinping agree on soybean purchases after China shifted purchases to Brazil, a move that hurt American farmers.
President Trump explained the order by saying other, unnamed nations were testing their own nuclear weapons, even though no country has tested since 2017.
"I didn't know the salaries the government pays were this high!" Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa joked after more than 100 loyalists arrived at his former rebel base, many pulling up in luxury SUVs.
In a bonus edition of our defence newsletter, Richard Cockett takes us back to 1066—and the Battle of Hastings
Exclusive: A paper by the Center for Freedom and Prosperity argues there are are strong economic benefits for the United States if peace can be achieved
Stellantis has set up a "war room" to address possible chip shortages stemming from issues at Dutch group Nexperia linked to the U.S.-China trade war, the automaker's CEO said on Thursday. "We are monitoring day-by-day the chip situation from Nexperia,