Invasion of Ukraine kicks off a rollback of Western advances since the fall of the USSR (Originally published Feb. 24 in “What in the World“) Ukraine declared a state of
Author: Monterey
Putin drizzles forces across Donbas in what could be but his first course (Originally published Feb. 23 in “What in the World“) Russia has invaded Ukraine. Moscow’s forces have so
Vaccines may offer long-term protection from acute infection, but “long Covid” remains a risk. And almost half the planet remains unjabbed. (Originally published Feb. 22 in “What in the World“)
Elected officials face a conundrum: how to protect constituents who would rather die than keep fighting Covid. (Originally published Feb. 18 in “What in the World“) The United States has
Hong Kong reaps the harvest of mistrust it sowed; Putin keeps NATO guessing about when he’ll invade Ukraine (Originally published Feb. 17 in “What in the World“) As Western nations
As the world convinces itself the pandemic is over, the market convinces itself Russia won’t invade Ukraine (Originally published Feb. 16 in “What in the World“) The U.S. is warning
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine may already be underway; Western politicians keep tiptoeing away from the pandemic (Originally published Feb. 14 in “What in the World“) Russia may have already begun
As Russia’s invasion force “exercises” around Ukraine, politicians bow to pressure to pretend the pandemic is over. (Originally published Feb. 11 in “What in the World“) Russia has launched the
As the Ukraine crisis stews, worries rise about China, North Korea—and Omicron’s cousin BA.2 (Originally published Feb. 9 in “What in the World“) While the crisis in Ukraine appears to
With 900,000 Americans and 1.6 million Europeans lost to Covid, the U.S. warns that Russian invasion of Ukraine may kill 50,000. (Originally published Feb. 7 in “What in the World”)