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No one knows what Putin would accept to end his invasion of Ukraine if he were presented with a real negotiation process.
This article was updated to include The New York Times' response to the criticism, sent to The Kyiv Independent via email.
Ukraine’s president proposed reviving talks brokered by the Trump administration, which seemed stalled a month ago.
New York Times journalist Nanna Heitmann spent six days in Russia's Kursk region near the front lines, where she was ...
After years of lavishing praise on the Russian leader, President Trump abruptly changed his posture amid mounting frustration ...
Thousands of people gathered in the streets of Kyiv, Ukraine, on Tuesday night to protest moves by President Volodymyr ...
Russia now controls more than two-thirds of Ukraine’s Donetsk region — the main theater of the ground war. Russian forces ...
There is a growing drive to make the country more self-reliant in weapons manufacturing as it faces Russia’s superior ...
The sport helps Ukrainian soldiers who have lost limbs in the war against Russia to heal and to master their prosthetics, ...
President Trump is formalizing a new plan to sell American weapons to European allies, who would pass them onto Kyiv. But he ...
President Trump’s approach to the war in Ukraine has changed substantially since the start of his presidential term. Maggie ...
If the plan is finalized, it would allow critical aid to flow to Ukraine as it endures one of Russia’s heaviest assaults of ...