US Floats NATO-Russia Council Revival in Bid to Resolve Ukraine War
The United States has floated the idea of resuming the NATO-Russia Council as part of a broader effort to resolve the conflict in Ukraine
The Russian Foreign Ministry did not hesitate to dismiss Kiev's proposal that a nation-wide poll on "decentralization of power" be held on May 25 alongside presidential elections.
Desperate - and, above all, vague - as Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk's "rejected" offer might have been, the criticism it met from Russia’s side raises a peculiar question.
Namely: Would rebels in eastern Ukraine have put an end to unrest if they had been granted more regional autonomy at the beginning? Was it not self-government they were craving after?
We do not know if Ukraine could have seriously taken such a step back in end-March.
What we know is that on May 1 Moscow could have at least (silently) agreed in theory to the referendum proposal to later "find out" that pro-Russian rebels disapproved of it themselves. It could have told Kiev then, "Your citizens are against, so we are helpless".
Why did it have to directly interfere in Ukraine's domestic affairs (and intervention is something it claims to be refraining from), instead of leaving its language minority representatives to speak for themselves?
Maybe Russia does need the opinion of its blood brothers. But it also feels an urge to point them the way.
In an increasingly unpredictable world, the European Commission's recent recommendation for citizens to be prepared with a 72-hour survival kit in case of a crisis has sparked a heated debate
The upcoming emergency summit of European leaders on Ukraine is not just a crisis response, at the same time it is also a historic opportunity to redefine Europe's economic and political trajectory
In the 1994 Budapest Agreement, Russia, the United States, and Britain promised to secure Ukraine’s independence if Ukraine gave up its nuclear weapons
A year has passed since Alexei Navalny, Russia’s most prominent opposition leader and anti-corruption activist, was murdered in an Arctic penal colony under Vladimir Putin’s regime
The Bulgarian government has effectively abandoned its plan to enter the eurozone on January 1, 2026
On December 11, the Council of Ministers of Bulgaria approved the draft state budget for 2025
Google Street View Cars Return to Bulgaria for Major Mapping Update
Housing Prices Soar in Bulgaria’s Major Cities as Demand and Supply Strain Increase