News

Nayara Energy, an Indian refiner backed by Russia, has scaled back operations at its 400,000 bpd refinery due to recent EU ...
Russia is rapidly militarizing the Arctic, forging closer ties with China, and exploiting NATO weaknesses. The Arctic could ...
The EU must urgently tackle security threats, economic rivalry, migration and internal divisions to regain global influence ...
By Akihiko Tanaka, Emeritus Professor, The University of Tokyo From Aug. 20 to 22, the 9th Tokyo International Conference on ...
Russia’s PAK DA is a next-generation stealth bomber designed to modernize its aging fleet and maintain strategic parity with ...
Russia will celebrate the 80th anniversary of Nazi Germany’s defeat on Friday with visiting heads of state and a show of armed might in Red Square, staged as a display of global clout, grandiose ...
EU Ambassador Jovita Neliupšienė discusses China, Russia, U.S. ties and the 'existential' issue of security with Newsweek.
Russia’s immense size brings both advantages and significant obstacles, affecting transportation, economic development, population distribution, and natural resource management.
Russia's economy, retooled for war, is now showing signs of significant slowdown and heading towards a recession, despite initial resilience to Western sanctions.
Such a threat is hardly without precedent. In 2014, Russia shut off its gas supplies to Ukraine for months after annexing the Crimean Peninsula, causing economic and social disruption. Unlike fossil ...
These vulnerabilities were laid bare after Russia's invasion of Ukraine, which forced a Europe-wide scramble for alternative energy sources and accelerated efforts to expand renewables.