Biden in Bali for G20 summit: What to know and what to watch for
Presidents and prime ministers will wrangle over solutions to crises ranging from the war in Ukraine to soaring inflation, hunger, climate change, and the threat of global recession.
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Presidents and prime ministers will wrangle over solutions to crises ranging from the war in Ukraine to soaring inflation, hunger, climate change, and the threat of global recession.
The Ukrainian leader defiantly told CBS News that his troops were "coming to all the occupied territories."
Kherson is still without electricity or running water, food and medical supplies are short, and Russian forces still control some 70% of the wider Kherson region.
Top U.S. officials are cautiously optimistic about Russia’s withdrawal from the vital southern Ukrainian port city of Kherson that’s a gateway to Crimea. CBS News correspondent Chris Livesay reports.
Newly-liberated residents in Kherson are showering Ukrainian soldiers with praise after spending several months under Russian occupation. However, Ukrainian officials remain worried that Russians could blow up a nearby dam, causing harm to many civilians. Chris Livesay has more.
The artwork depicts a gymnast performing a handstand amid the ruins of a demolished building in the town of Borodyanka.
In an interview Friday with CBS News senior investigative correspondent Catherine Herridge, former national security adviser John Bolton said President Biden "overstated the gravity of the situation we're in right now" when he suggested that the "prospect of Armageddon" is the highest it's been since the Cuban Missile Crisis. Watch the interview here.
Western leaders are accusing Russia of deliberately sabotaging Europe's Nord Stream pipelines. CBS News chief foreign affairs correspondent, and "Face the Nation" moderator, Margaret Brennan, discusses the situation.
Russian President Vladimir Putin says his mobilization of some 300,000 reserve troops will be complete in two weeks. Russia has ramped up attacks on Ukraine, hitting more than a dozen targets across the country. CBS News foreign correspondent Charlie D'Agata reports from Dnipro, Ukraine. Then, Catherine Herridge discusses the state of the war with with Matthew Kroenig, a national security specialist who has worked with the Bush, Obama, and Trump administrations.
CBS News chief foreign affairs correspondent Margaret Brennan joins CBS News' Catherine Herridge to discuss this week's edition of "Face the Nation." They break down the Federal Reserve's latest interest rate hike and preview an upcoming exclusive interview with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
Russian President Vladimir Putin claims he will end his partial troop mobilization within the next two weeks, despite a week of increased missile attacks on civilian targets in Ukraine. CBS News chief foreign affairs correspondent and "Face the Nation" moderator, Margaret Brennan, joined Catherine Herridge to discuss the latest.
After Russian forces fled Kherson, Ukrainian soldiers were able to recapture it. Russian President Vladimir Putin claims the city -- the only major city the Kremlin ever managed to hold -- and the region still belong to him after he illegally annexed them last month. Chris Livesay has the latest.
The U.S. and China have each identified the development and production of computer chips as vital for economic growth and their own security interests.
Moscow said "all Russian servicemen" had crossed a river to leave the city, and videos showed the Ukrainian flag flying in front of the regional government building.
Russia says it's completed its military withdrawal from a key Ukrainian city, and Ukraine has moved to reclaim Kherson. CBS News foreign correspondent Chris Livesay explains what this means for the war moving forward.
Russian forces have pulled out of the key southern Ukrainian city of Kherson, and as CBS News correspondent Chris Livesay reports, Ukraine's troops were quick to move back in of the recaptured regional capital.
Ukrainian forces are reclaiming villages as Russia retreats from Kherson, which it held captive since the start of its invasion. Chris Livesay reports.
Russia says it is pulling its military out of Kherson, a key region in southern Ukraine that was illegally annexed in September.
Brittney Griner is being moved to a Russian penal colony. Her family and lawyers say they don't know where that will be located. CBS News senior foreign correspondent Charlie D'Agata joins "CBS News Mornings" to explain what conditions could look like for the WNBA star and how the move impacts her chances of returning home.
Moscow ordered its troops to withdraw from regions around the strategic southern Ukrainian city of Kherson in what is being interpreted as a major setback for Russian President Vladimir Putin, as a top U.S. general estimated Russia has suffered more than 100,000 killed or wounded since invading its neighbor in February.
WNBA star Brittney Griner has been sent to a penal colony in Russia to serve the remainder of her sentence for drug possession. Her lawyers say they still don't know where the penal colony she’s headed to is and that they and the U.S. embassy should be informed upon her arrival, which could take two weeks.
The vast network of labor camps was inherited by modern Russia: They used to be the Soviet Union's gulags, and there's little sign they improved since then.
A commander said the new missile would "be able to breach all the systems of anti-missile defense," declaring it "a great generational leap in the field of missiles."
Russia's military announced it's leaving Kherson, Ukraine. Its withdrawal is possibly the most significant and humiliating setback Russian forces have suffered in the 8-month war. CBS News' John Dickerson speaks with George Beebe, director of grand strategy at the Quincy Institute, about this major development.
Russia's military says it's withdrawing from the port city of Kherson in southern Ukraine, in what could be a major defeat for Vladimir Putin. But Ukrainian officials warn that it could be a trap.
The potential operations for Venezuela presented to Trump included options for strikes on land, multiple sources said.
Thousands of pages of Epstein documents released by the House Oversight Committee include emails and texts with close contacts that often touched on President Trump.
Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Tom Cotton of Arkansas told CBS News the threat is "severe and growing."
The government is starting to reopen after President Trump signed a bill to fund the government through Jan. 30.
Acting U.S. Attorney for New Jersey Alina Habba's office was violently vandalized Wednesday by a person who earlier in the day had been denied entry to the building because he had a baseball bat, two sources said.
Democratic Rep. Adelita Grijalva of Arizona waited 50 days before she was officially sworn in as the newest member of Congress — and she told CBS News "the emotions run the gamut of frustration, anger, happiness, sadness."
Federal Housing Finance Agency Director Bill Pulte has referred California Democratic Rep. Eric Swalwell to the Justice Department, sources told CBS News.
A spokesman for Sen. John Fetterman said a "ventricular fibrillation flare-up" led to him feeling light-headed.
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem announced that TSA agents with "exemplary service" during the government shutdown will receive a $10,000 bonus check.