Putin calls up Russian reservists
Russian President Vladimir Putin announced the mobilization of up to 300,000 military reservists. CBS News reporter Mary Ilyushina explained the impact this will have on the war in Ukraine.
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Russian President Vladimir Putin announced the mobilization of up to 300,000 military reservists. CBS News reporter Mary Ilyushina explained the impact this will have on the war in Ukraine.
"Russia will be forced to end this war. The war it has started," President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said.
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In a televised address, Russian President Vladimir Putin threatened to use nuclear weapons as he escalates his invasion of Ukraine. Putin said he would be mobilizing at least 300,000 military reservists to fight. BBC News correspondent Hugo Bachega joined CBS News from Kyiv to talk more about the rising tensions in the region.
President Biden is addressing the United Nations General Assembly in New York City. He is expected to discuss the ongoing war in Ukraine and efforts by the U.S. and allies to provide more aid. CBS News political correspondent Caitlin Huey-Burns discussed with Vladimir Duthiers and Anne-Marie Green.
In a rare address, Russian President Vladimir Putin announced a partial military mobilization in Russia. He also threatened the use of nuclear weapons. This all comes as United Nations General Assembly meetings are underway. "Face the Nation" moderator and chief foreign affairs correspondent Margaret Brennan joins "CBS Mornings" to discuss.
After suffering heavy losses in the face of a lightning Ukrainian offensive in recent weeks, President Putin has now announced he will draft Russia's army reserves in a so-called partial mobilization. CBS News' Debora Patta reports from near the Russian border.
Debora Patta visited a police station in Ukraine allegedly used as a torture chamber by Russian forces. Here's what she saw.
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Mass graves with hundreds of bodies, including those of children, have been discovered by Ukrainian officials in the Izyum after retaking the territory from Russian forces. Ukraine is accusing Russia of war crimes. Asami Terajima, staff writer at The Kyiv Independent, joins "CBS News Mornings" from Ukraine with more on what's being discovered in the recently liberated area.
CBS News correspondent Debora Patta is with Ukrainian police in the reclaimed town of Izyum as they investigate claims of gruesome abuse at a police station that residents say was used as a torture chamber during Russia’s occupation. Patta meets the officer in charge of the investigation and residents who say they were among those tortured.
Biden to urge "respect for the core principles of the international order" as Russia's war on Ukraine drives a "crisis in confidence" in the U.N. system.
"This is the aftermath of terrorism," a Ukrainian police chief tells CBS News. "Russia was trying to strangle the local people, to make them suffer."
Ukraine is accusing Russia of "nuclear terrorism" after a Russian missile hit near a nuclear power plant in Southern Ukraine. The strike renewed fears of a possible radioactive disaster.
A Russian missile has blasted a crater close to a nuclear power plant in southern Ukraine, damaging nearby industrial equipment but not hitting its three reactors.
Missed the second half of the show? The latest on Ukraine's top prosecutor pursuing a genocide case against Russian officials; Robert Pape warns of "violent threat" to U.S. democracy; and Major Garrett and David Becker's new book, "The Big Truth".
CBS News foreign correspondent Debora Patta reports on the horrific discoveries made by Ukrainian forces who have expelled Russian troops from wide swaths of land.
Andriy Kostin, the prosecutor general of Ukraine, says investigators are working with the International Criminal Court to pursue genocide cases against Russian officials. troops from wide swaths of land.
This week on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan," domestic and international crises test global relations as world leaders converge in London for Queen Elizabeth's funeral. Their next stop? The annual United Nations gathering in New York. Plus, Russian President Vladimir Putin faces a public rebuke from a key partner and the cold shoulder from another as Ukrainians retake more of their territory, uncovering horrors left behind by Russian forces.
With the tide of war in Ukraine turning against Putin and Russia, worries about a nuclear attack have increased interest in a fixture of the Cold War: underground bunkers. Correspondent Roxana Saberi looks at how builders of fallout shelters are finding a brisk business.
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