# Russia
Latest news and articles about Russia
Total: 23 articles found

Global Leaders Urge Restraint After US and Israeli Strikes on Iran, Warning of Regional Drift Toward Wider War
Israeli and U.S. strikes on Iranian targets on the 28th prompted widespread international alarm and calls for restraint. European leaders urged diplomacy and protection for civilians while Russia labeled the strikes "armed aggression," underscoring the risk of broader regional escalation and diplomatic fallout.

Global Leaders Sound Alarm as U.S. and Israel Strike Iran, Raising Risk of Wider Middle East War
U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran on 28 February prompted widespread international alarm, with European, Asian and other governments urging restraint and diplomacy. The strikes mark a dangerous escalation that risks entangling regional actors and external powers and raising instability in energy and shipping routes.

Beijing Pushes Back as Washington Calls for China to Join US–Russia Nuclear Talks
The United States has asked China to join trilateral nuclear arms talks with Washington and Moscow. China responded cautiously, reiterating demands for equality, security guarantees and an avoidance of double standards, while highlighting the technical and political obstacles to three‑party arms control.

NATO Conducts Major Baltic Amphibious Exercise in Germany as Europe Tests Rapid Reinforcement
NATO launched Steadfast Dagger‑2026, a large amphibious exercise on Germany’s Baltic coast involving about 10,000 troops from 13 countries, aimed at practising rapid reinforcement of the alliance’s eastern flank. The United States did not directly participate, highlighting growing European responsibility for regional deterrence and testing allied logistics and interoperability.

Russia, US and Ukraine Meet in Geneva as Diplomacy Reawakens
Delegations from Russia, the United States and Ukraine met in Geneva on 17 February for tripartite talks hosted by Switzerland. While public details are sparse, the format suggests discussions on humanitarian issues, security guarantees and confidence‑building measures, with major disputes over territory and sanctions likely to constrain outcomes.

US Warplanes Mass Near Iran as Diplomatic Talks Stall — A Wider China–Russia Test Looms
US deployments of A-10s, F-15Es and supporting assets to the Middle East have intensified after stalled Oman talks with Iran, signalling a retained option for military action. Tehran's consultations with China and Russia, combined with Israeli pressure and US economic tightening, raise the risk of broader regional and geopolitical escalation rather than a contained strike.

Why Iran Has Few Friends: The Three Contradictions That Keep It Isolated
Iran’s limited friendship network stems from three intertwined contradictions: its revolutionary export and proxy strategy, the trade-off between security confrontation and economic dependence, and transactional ties with major powers rather than deep alliances. Domestic factionalism and fragile regional detente make lasting normalization unlikely, with consequences for regional stability and global policy choices.

Munich Aftermath: Transatlantic Alliance Intact but the Old Order Is Dead
At the Munich Security Conference, warm rhetoric from the U.S. masked deep policy disagreements that have hollowed out the post‑Cold War transatlantic order. European leaders, while publicly affirming ties with Washington, are openly exploring greater strategic autonomy — including talks about a shared or independent nuclear deterrent — in response to perceived U.S. unpredictability.

Starmer Sends Carrier to the High North: Britain Reasserts Naval Muscle and NATO Resolve
At the Munich Security Conference, UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced a carrier strike group, including HMS Prince of Wales, will deploy to the North Atlantic and the High North this year. The move is intended as a signal of NATO resolve, a prompt to European defence cooperation and a demonstration of Britain’s post‑Brexit security role, while also heightening strategic competition in the Arctic.

US Signals Readiness to Re‑MIRV ICBMs and Re‑enable B‑52 Nuclear Role After New START Lapse
The U.S. Air Force says it stands ready to reintroduce MIRVs on land‑based ICBMs and to restore full nuclear capability to the B‑52 fleet following the expiration of the New START treaty. The move signals deterrence intent but also risks provoking reciprocal modernization from Russia and China and complicates prospects for renewed arms control.

NATO’s 'Arctic Sentinel' Risks Becoming Political Rebranding Rather Than New Strategy
NATO launched the “Arctic Sentinel” operation on 11 February to unify allied activities in the Arctic and the High North after tensions sparked by U.S. President Trump’s remarks about Greenland. Critics argue the move is largely political symbolism intended to placate Washington and repackages existing efforts rather than creating new military capability.

NATO Launches 'Arctic Sentinel' to Centralize Command and Boost Presence in the High North
NATO has launched "Arctic Sentinel," a multi‑domain operation led by Joint Force Command Norfolk to centralize allied command and strengthen presence across the Arctic and High North. The initiative reflects growing strategic competition in the region and a desire to improve coordination among Nordic and NATO partners in a challenging operational environment.