How the map of Ukraine has changed in three months of war
Russia is exercising military control over a fifth of the invaded country, but its capture of Mariupol can be considered a Pyrrhic victory
Russia is exercising military control over a fifth of the invaded country, but its capture of Mariupol can be considered a Pyrrhic victory
The Kremlin’s forces are reinforcing their positions around the Donbas area and continue to put pressure on defenders with relentless strikes
A study by Masae Analytics estimates that over 40% of infrastructure in the city has been affected by the bombing to some extent
Moscow continued its attacks in the areas of Severodonetsk, Izyum, Mariupol and Kherson while it worked on ironing out logistical issues and reconstituting the forces it withdrew from Kyiv
Two Ukrainian helicopters reportedly struck an oil depot in the Russian city of Belgorod, around 20 miles from the border
Moscow’s military leaders are being forced to divert a large number of troops to defend their own supply lines, according to British intelligence reports
Look up any place on this map to compare the scale of the devastation from the molten rock, which now covers more than 591 hectares
The 7.1 magnitude quake that shook central Mexico on September 7 is close to a 110-km long strip of land that has not registered major seismic activity in a century. Could that soon change?