Kharkiv Mayor Igor Terekhov told British newspaper The Guardian that Russia has changed its tactics and is now trying to destroy the city's power supply and terrorize its 1.3 million residents by shelling residential areas.
According to his assessment, the Russian army does not have the resources to capture the city in the short term, so they decided to simply make it uninhabitable by constant shelling, provoking mass evacuation of residents.
The $60 billion military aid package currently blocked in the U.S. Congress is crucial, Terekhov believes.
"We need this support to prevent Kharkiv from becoming another Aleppo," Terekhov said, referring to the Syrian city, which 19 years ago was bombed by Russian and Syrian government forces at the height of the civil war and was almost completely destroyed.
Memorial to the fallen Moldovan soldiers of the Transnistrian War in Chisinau. Photo: Alexander Moisseenko
Thirty-three years ago, a ceasefire brought an end to the Transnistrian War—sometimes described by locals as the Russian-Moldovan War. Although the tensions officially ended in 1992, its consequences continue to shape Moldovan politics, society, and security — especially in view of the upcoming parliamentary elections.
Finland is moving to withdraw from the Ottawa Convention, which bans anti-personnel mines. Prime Minister Petteri Orpo said the decision comes as a direct response to growing aggression from Russia.
The ruling Georgian Dream party has approved a set of controversial laws, including a “foreign agent” act aimed at NGOs and media. Critics say it mimics the U.S. FARA but is weaponized against dissent.
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The Russian capital faced one of the largest terrorist attacks in its history. The terrorist attack at Crocus City Hall, which claimed the lives of many innocent people, was the second largest after the Beslan tragedy. But unlike previous attacks, this incident is shrouded in a layer of contradictory facts and ambiguities that point to possible miscalculations by the Russian security services