Showing results for: russia (page 66)
“No military solution” on Ukraine: Progressives in Congress demand diplomacy
Jake Johnson
Leading progressives Pramila Jayapal and Barbara Lee call on Biden "to find a diplomatic way out of this crisis"
“Trump has it completely wrong”: Allies revolt after Trump endorses rival to MAGA darling
Igor Derysh
TrumpWorld in an uproar as Candace Owens, Madison Cawthorn oppose Trump's pick in Tennessee congressional race
Antiwar critics blast Pelosi over fast-track $500M military aid to Ukraine
Jake Johnson
This is "how the space for nonmilitary options gets slowly closed off," congressional aide tells The Intercept
U.S. troops on standby as tensions with Russia worsen over possible Ukraine war
Andrea Germanos
Pentagon says 8,500 troops are on "heightened preparedness" even as Antony Blinken vows "diplomacy and dialogue"
Trump’s new legal troubles mount — even as Russia probe officially runs out of steam
Heather Digby Parton
Donald Trump's no-good, very bad week
After a year of Joe Biden, how come we still have Donald Trump’s foreign policy?
Medea Benjamin, Nicolas J.S. Davies
Biden promised a new era of diplomacy, stability and American leadership — but has doubled down on Trump's failures
Oath Keeper returned to Capitol on Jan. 7 for “recon” as group plotted weeks of battle: prosecutors
Igor Derysh
Group stockpiled weapons, ammunition and 30 days of supplies at a nearby hotel with an eye on Biden inauguration
Where we are now: The dire state of America in 2022
Norman Solomon
Biden's first year: Assault on democracy, oligarchic class war and bloated military spending. Happy talk won't help
Welcome to the new Cold War: U.S. tightens the noose around China
Michael Klare
Biden hasn't just embraced the Trump policy of aggressive "containment" toward China — he's greatly expanded it
In a world that still traps animals, can science ever limit suffering?
Michael Schulson
People have trapped animals for millennia, seeking fur and food. Is there an empirical way to make the practice mor
The U.S. drops an average of 46 bombs a day: Why should the world see us as a force for peace?
Medea Benjamin, Nicolas J.S. Davies
The U.S. has dropped at least 337,000 bombs and missiles in 20 years — and now clutches its pearls over Russia
11 facts about Sir Ernest Shackleton
Kat Long
On the 100th anniversary of the explorer's death, here's what you need to know about his short life & great impact
The public health case for decarcerating America’s prison system
Eric Reinhart
The pandemic has illustrated how unsafe conditions in prisons boomerang back on the general population
Ex-Trump aide Peter Navarro says 100 House members were “ready” to carry out election coup
Jon Skolnik
Coup plot called "a well thought-out plan based on sound, constitutional law and existing legislative precedent"
Matt Gaetz’s no good — but not so horrible — 2021. What’s next?
Jon Skolnik
Matt Gaetz still faces no child sex trafficking charges – and he might never
Was Trump just the “warm-up act”? Canadian scholar warns of “right-wing dictatorship”
Jake Johnson
Canadian scholar of violent conflict says U.S. "flashing with warning signals"; democracy could collapse by 2025
All the space exploration missions to look forward to in 2022
Nicole Karlis
2021 was a weird year for Earth — but we're looking to the stars in 2022
What matters most: Not what happened already — but what we do now
Lucian K. Truscott IV
Ultimately the Detroit riots of 1967 made us stronger. That can happen again — if we have the strength to change
Madison Cawthorn’s bizarre Russia tale: Should we be concerned?
Sarah Burris
The Republican congressman told a story of how he met his wife — but new questions arise with news of their divorce
Code red, glacier blood, megadrought: The defining words of 2021
Kate Yoder
These 12 words captured the spirit of our overheating planet this year
It was a bad year for the world: But yes, there were 10 good things in 2021
Medea Benjamin
In a bleak year for domestic politics, there were signs of progress toward justice around the world. Yes, really!
PEN America, the “human rights” careerists and the betrayal of Julian Assange
Chris Hedges
Corporate money and Democratic Party apparatchiks have transformed PEN America into a servant of the ruling class
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