Ukraine Presidents Office/Alamy Stock Photo
Nearly two years into the war, Ukraine remains strong but faces challenges on and off the battlefield.
EPA-EFE/Presidential Press Service handout
The Ukrainian president has called for another half a million troops this year and his government has introduced strict conscription laws in an attempt to deter draft-dodging.
Stand by me: Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelensky will need to work hard to retain the support of his countries allies.
EPA-EFE/Cornelius Poppe
A round up of our coverage of the war in Ukraine over the past fortnight.
EPA-EFE/Sergey Dolzhenko
Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelensky admits there is no end in sight to the war with Russia.
Mikhail Klimentyev/Pool Sputnik Kremlin/AP
By the time Australia has its first nuclear-powered attack submarine, Russia’s Pacific fleet will have grown to 45 warships.
Pressure: Joe Biden’s package of military aid for Ukraine has hit a roadblock in the US senate.
EPA-EFE/Michael Reynolds
Nato is showing ominous signs of becoming war weary. It must maintain its support for Ukraine.
EPA-EFE/Maxim Shipenkov
Navalny survived poisoning only to be arrested and sentenced to more than 30 years in jail. Now he has disappeared.
The world according to Vladimir Putin.
PA-EFE/Alexander Zemlianichenko/pool
The Russian leader spoke to about 600 journalists and took questions from the public.
Russian riot police detain gay rights activists during World Day Against Homophobia and Transphobia in St. Petersburg in 2019.
Olga Maltseva/AFP via Getty Images
Far-right American Christians once viewed Soviet culture as a menace to their values. Today, some authoritarian-leaning admirers wish their country were more like Putin’s Russia.
Display monitors show the result of voting at the United Nations General Assembly on Dec. 12, 2023, in favour of a resolution calling on Israel to uphold legal and humanitarian obligations in its war with Hamas.
(AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)
In war time, the type of conflict determines what formal rules of war apply. But how to determine the nature of the conflict?
Russian President Vladimir Putin attends a ceremony to present medals at the St. George Hall of the Grand Kremlin Palace, in Moscow, Russia, Dec. 8, 2023.
(Sergei Guneyev, Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP)
Polls suggest many Russians remain supportive of Putin and the war in Ukraine. Economic realities and western double standards likely play a big role.
EPA-EFE/Andrej Cukic
Serbia’s nationalist government seeks re-election. If it succeeds, Europe may be poised for renewed war in the Balkans.
EPA-EFE/Sergey Dolzhenko
With the prospect of a second Trump presidency halting military aid for Ukraine, it is vital for Kyiv that the EU finds a way to unlock more funding.
EPA-EFE/Filip Singer
A selection of the best of our coverage of the conflict from the past fortnight.
President of the Russian Federation Vladimir Putin at the Piskarevsky Cemetery laying flowers at the World War II memorial in January 2014.
Akimov Igor/Shutterstock
Putin’s ideological propaganda leans heavily on Russian history
Vigil lanterns at the Bitter Memory of Childhood monument commemorating the Ukrainian famine.
Kirill Chubotin / Ukrinform/Future Publishing via Getty Images
Putin’s worldview echoes Russian phrase, ‘Who is not with us, is against us.’
Activist Sair Smedlja stands in front of the Crimean Tatar self-governing assembly (the Mejlis) which was closed down when the Russians occupied Crimea.
DPA/Alamy
A spokesman claims that Crimean Tatars who are arrested by their Russian occupiers are beaten and tortured.
Residents of Kherson queue up to meet Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky after the liberation of the city in November 2022.
Ukraine President's Office/Alamy
Venturing out onto the city’s streets carries danger. But there is little reason to go out anyway. Few shops and still fewer places of entertainment are open.
Andrey Vladimirovich Menshikov, mostly known by his stage name ‘Legalize’, but also for his membership in D.O.B and Bad Balance, is used to grating the Kremlin.
KabanDanish/Wikimedia
Vladimir Putin and his KGB men have steadily extinguished the artistic freedom the genre enjoyed in the 1990s, with Ukraine’s invasion adding yet another nail in the coffin.
Artstore/Shutterstock
Since 1947 the clock’s hand have been set at the beginning of every year.