Articles
Read Articles
Wednesday 15-May-24
U.S. Advances Arms Sale to Israel as It Delays Delivering Other Weapons
While Ukrainian officials and analysts said that a Russian advance across the border appeared to be slowing, President Volodymyr Zelensky canceled his participation in international events.
Ukraine Says It Is Engaged in Fierce Fighting With Russia in Northeast
Vladimir Putin’s message to his country appears to be taking hold: that Russia is fighting against the whole Western world — and winning.
Putin Is Selling Victory, and Many Russians Are Buying It
As a search for the assailants and the prisoner they freed stretched into a second day, the authorities said the assault was surprising given that the inmate was not high-profile.
Hundreds of Officers Pursue Manhunt After Deadly Ambush in France
The U.N. has begun citing a much lower death toll for women and children in Israel’s military offensive, acknowledging that it has incomplete information about many of those killed.
UN Begins Citing a Lower Death Toll For Women and Children in Gaza
North Macedonia tries to ensure diversity — and keep the peace — with computer-generated state hiring quotas. Fraud and bloat have tainted that effort.
Ethnic ‘Balancer’ for Government Jobs Becomes Focus of Ethnic Division
Kei Kobayashi, who earned three Michelin stars in France, has come home to build an empire.
First, He Conquered Paris. Now, a Japanese Chef Wants to Become a Brand.
Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, who is stepping down after nearly 20 years, oversaw astounding successes, but some Singaporeans want a different kind of politics.
What Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong Did for Singapore
FIFA tried to put a corruption crisis behind by changing its rules and claiming its governance overhaul had the endorsement of the Justice Department. U.S. officials say that was never the case.
FIFA Set to Roll Back Reforms Enacted After Corruption Scandal
Michael Cohen’s second day on the witness stand.
Wednesday Briefing
18.117.109.149 | United States | 337 |