Minefields and Menace: Why Ukraine's Pushback Is Off to a Halting Start
| By Valerie Hopkins President Vladimir V. Putin spoke angrily of those who want "Russians to fight each other," but his former ally, Yevgeny V. Prigozhin, said the mutiny he led was not a coup attempt. | | | By Andrew E. Kramer, Eric Schmitt and David Guttenfelder The Ukrainian Army is encountering an array of challenges that has complicated the early stages of its counteroffensive, especially the large swaths of minefields. But its leaders are urging patience, insisting the main push is yet to come. | | | By Jonathan Weisman, Rebecca Robbins and Maureen Farrell Mr. Ramaswamy calls himself a scientist from the biotech industry, but his vast fortune stems from two huge paydays that speak to hope and hype in the world of finance. | | |
| U.S. By David W. Chen and Noriko Hayashi The tiny U.S. territory in the western Pacific Ocean is thousands of miles from the nearest state, and has no resident doctors who perform abortions. Court decisions could cut access to pills, the only legal option left. | | | Opinion | Serge Schmemann By Serge Schmemann Putin may emerge weakened, strengthened or vindictive. | | |
| By The Associated Press In a taped speech released by Russian state media, President Vladimir V. Putin said he gave direct instructions to avoid bloodshed during the mercenaries' brief revolt and thanked his military. | | | By The New York Times President Biden said the United States and its NATO allies had "nothing to do with" a rebellion by the Wagner mercenary group in Russia. | | | By The New York Times Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida proposed a series of hard-right immigration policies during a campaign stop in Texas. | | |
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