3 dead in Russian strikes
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NATO, Europe
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Video from the Ukrainian military's first-person drones has captivated millions, but the footage offers only a narrow view of a robotics revolution that is reshaping combined-arms warfare.
Poland and other NATO members sent up fighter jets early on Thursday morning after Russia launched a barrage of overnight attacks on Ukraine
NATO warplanes roared into the skies over Eastern Europe after Vladimir Putin unleashed one of the most savage overnight bombardments of Ukraine this year. The brutal show of defiance came just as
Ukraine's Defense Minister Denys Shmyhal held a meeting in Kyiv with NATO Senior Representative to Ukraine Patrick Turner and Lieutenant General Curtis Buzzard, Commander of NSATU and SAG-U, according to Shmyhal's post.
Poland scrambled fighter jets and an early warning aircraft, and put its ground air defenses and radar systems on "the highest state" of alert.
Locally manufactured armored vehicles are proving more effective for some Ukrainian units than their Western-built counterparts, a report says.
NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte says pressure and sanctions are changing Vladimir Putin's calculus as Russia deals with heavy military losses in Ukraine as the war continues.
Romanian officials said the shift reflects Washington’s growing focus on the Indo-Pacific, though analysts warn it could embolden Russia to test the alliance’s resolve.
Drones, unlike shells, are precise. Second World War-style trenches have become traps. That’s why Ukraine tries to adapt by digging a new type of fortification with roofs and anti-drone cages. The Donetsk region became a testing ground.