The face-off between Russia and the West in Syria is giving both sides a chance to try out their new high-tech weaponry.
EPA/Russian Defence Ministry
Relations between the two countries, once cordial, have been strained by Russia’s intervention in Syria.
Putin talks, Russia listens.
EPA/Yuri Kochetov
To his home audience, Vladimir Putin’s strategy in Syria appears to be sound.
The Tsar Nicholas II and his son Alexei in capitivity in Tobolsk in 1917.
Romanov Collection, General Collection, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University/Wikimedia Commons
As the remains of the Tsar and Tsarina are exhumed, why their story continues to enthral.
EAP/Russian Defence Ministry
Despite a fierce exchange of rhetoric over Russia’s airstrikes in Syria, it makes sense for Moscow and Washington to coordinate their military intervention.
Mikhail Klimentiev/Ria Novosti
Why has Vladimir Putin stepped up his Syrian game so radically – and is it really all as sudden as it seems?
Julie Bishop says all options should be considered when it comes to Australia’s position on a post-civil war Syria.
AAP/Amanda Voisard
The real winners this week in international diplomacy have been Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin.
More jaw jaw, less war war.
Ad Meskens
Sanctions against Russia and China would only escalate cyber-attacks, when what’s needed is international agreement.
Who, exactly, was Catherine II, Catherine the Great, Empress of Russia?
Catherine II by Fyodor Rokotov. The Hermitage/ Wikimedia Commons.
Masterpieces from the Hermitage: The legacy of Catherine the Great is currently on show at the National Gallery of Victoria. But who, exactly was Catherine II, the Empress of Russia?
Time to reorder the flags?
BRIC flags via www.shutterstock.com
Back in 2001, a Goldman Sachs economist said Brazil, Russia, India and China would become the powerhouses of the global economy in the coming decades. Is that still in the cards?
Political goals for Russia’s gas giant.
Wolfgang Rattay/Reuters
What does Gazprom hope to achieve with its deep and generous relationship with football?
Ukraine takes a hit: shell damage in Donetsk.
Reuters/Alexander Ermochenko
Ukraine is waging a war of self-defence against an international aggressor. We should stop pretending otherwise.
The Face of War by Ukrainian artist Daria Marchenko.
EPA
While the case of Lyudmila Savchuk might have highlighted a major push by the Kremlin to control online opinion, the reality on the ground does not look good for Putin.
Radioactively contaminated territory around the Mayak nuclear facility in Russia.
Nikulina/Slapovskaya/Heinrich Boell Foundation Moscow
The nuclear deal South Africa signed with Russia is set to be massively expensive and comes with a fair amount of risks.
New Arctic map, with August 2015 Russian claims shown in pale yellow.
Maps depicting Russia’s old and new bids to the Arctic seabed are being misinterpreted to fuel fears about the nation’s expansion.
Virgin territory. Sunrise over the Arctic resources battleground.
NOAA Photo Library
The economic viability of extracting oil from the frozen north might be doubtful, but the geopolitical significance could be massive.
Fired up, ready to go: soldiers of the Donetsk People’s Republic.
Reuters
Months after the Minsk II agreement set out a plan for peace, Ukraine is slipping backwards into violence and recriminations.
Poland’s president Andrzej Duda taking supreme command over Polish armed forces on August 6.
EPA
Andrzej Duda’s Law and Justice party is more anti-Russian and eurosceptic than its main rival.
No place to live.
Stringer/Reuters
The US is making common cause with Ukraine, but national security concerns are affecting the human rights of the most vulnerable trying to flee the fighting.
Ukraine’s president Petro Poroshenko with Barack Obama in 2014.
EPA/Jacek Turczyk
Washington would do well to leave the Cold War rhetoric in the past.