The problem with putting US nukes in Poland
From our US edition
Allowing Poland to host US tactical nuclear weapons would violate the NATO-Russia Founding Act
Michael Evans was defence editor of the Times for 12 years. He wrote a memoir called First With the News and is author of Agent Redruth, a new spy thriller which has a strong Russian theme.
From our US edition
Allowing Poland to host US tactical nuclear weapons would violate the NATO-Russia Founding Act
Nukes are becoming a big issue for Poland. One way or another, both the Polish president and prime minister want their country to host tactical nuclear weapons as a deterrent against President Putin’s Russia. In the latest, but by no means the first, statement on this question, President Andrzej Duda has revealed he recently discussed
From our US edition
Russia is not yet in control of the four regions it declared to be its own
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Britain’s fighter jets are running missions into Syria, dropping bombs on the Houthis in Yemen, patrolling over Estonia, Lithuania and Romania, close to Ukraine, and guarding our shores from interloping Russian bombers. And yet, the Typhoon final-assembly production line at Warton in Preston has effectively come to a halt. There are no new orders from
Warring parties often strike deals. Exchanges of prisoners, ceasefires to deliver aid, covert talks between intelligence services – and eventually, hopefully, peace. But since Vladimir Putin ordered thousands of troops across the Russian border into Ukraine on 24 February 2022, there have been no peace negotiations and no sign of meaningful compromise from either Moscow
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