
Russian missiles hit fuel depot near Lviv
CBS News' Imtiaz Tyab reports from Lviv in western Ukraine, where nerves were rattled by a Russian strike on a fuel depot just two miles outside the city.
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CBS News' Imtiaz Tyab reports from Lviv in western Ukraine, where nerves were rattled by a Russian strike on a fuel depot just two miles outside the city.
This week on "Face the Nation," we’ll have the latest on the war in Ukraine as Russia’s assault on grinds on into a second month, plus another look at the bombshell report of the text exchange between the wife of a Supreme Court justice and former Trump chief of staff Mark Meadows.
CBS News national security correspondent David Martin and Michael Morell, former acting director of the CIA and a CBS News national security contributor, break down where the fight in Ukraine stands at the moment and where it might go next.
President Joe Biden wrapped up his European trip Saturday in Poland with an address to the world about the war in Ukraine. CBS News chief White House correspondent Nancy Cordes is traveling with the president and breaks down the key points from his address.
The Hromovytsia Ukrainian Dance Ensemble in Chicago is offering remote dance lessons to Ukrainian children displaced and distressed by the ongoing Russian invasion. Adriana Diaz has more.
Moscow announced a deadly shift in focus — it is now taking aim at Eastern Ukraine. A recent missile strike on a fuel depot sent black clouds of smoke into the sky. Imtiaz Tyab reports.
Russia's brutal assault on Ukraine is spurring thousands of ordinary citizens to sign up to fight. Holly Williams visited a military base, where they are training the recruits.
The theater in the besieged port city was apparently being used as a bomb shelter by about 1,300 people when it was destroyed by Russian fire.
Lawmakers approved the $8.6 billion, 5-year host-nation budget amid rising threats from China, North Korea and Russia.
"We will fight till the end — as best we can," she said.
Alex Kalemba left Cincinnati for Ukraine as soon as Russian tanks started rolling over the border – one of many foreigners and civilians standing up to Putin's invasion.
Ukraine says it destroyed a Russian warship as its military continues to hold its ground one month after Russia invaded. But its fierce defense could not stop the decimation of Mariupol. Debora Patta reports.
President Biden held a press conference in Brussels to talk about the conflict in Ukraine. The president said that NATO has "never, never been more united than it is today." CBS News' Tanya Rivero and Meg Oliver are joined by Thomas Pickering, the former ambassador to the Russian Federation and former ambassador to the U.N., and CBS News White House and political correspondent Ed O'Keefe.
NATO says as many as 15,000 Russian troops may have been killed in a month of war, but with Putin's forces bogged down, it's Ukrainian civilians paying the highest price.
The Insider says Baulina, who had previously worked for Putin foe Alexey Navalny, "died under fire" in the Ukrainian capital.
"This is a grim milestone that could have lasting consequences for generations to come," said the executive director of UNICEF.
The U.S. has assessed that Russian troops committed war crimes in Ukraine by bombing schools and hospitals and killing civilians. Debora Patta reports.
President Biden arrived in Brussels for an emergency NATO summit as the U.S. and its allies ramp up pressure on Russian President Vladimir Putin to stop the war in Ukraine. Ed O'Keefe has the details.
Ukrainian cellist Denys Karachevtsev performed in front of a building that was bombed in his hometown of Kharkiv, which has been under fire from Russian airstrikes.
Female students showed up at schools excited to get back into classrooms after the education ministry suggested a return for all. The Taliban quashed their hopes at the last minute.
Born just a day — and a few hundred meters away — after a bomb hit a hospital in Mykolaiv, Ukraine, a baby girl named Katya is offering new hope amid the war.
Almost a month after Vladimir Putin ordered his troops to invade, here are some of the latest major developments in the ongoing war.
After Ukrainian forces launched an aggressive counteroffensive to retake a strategically important town near Kyiv, Russian troops responded with a barrage of airstrikes on civilian targets in several cities. Holly Williams reports.
The children of World War II know all too well the lasting effects the trauma of war can have on kids. For some, seeing families in Ukraine suffering has brought back painful memories: "I feel so bad for those people now. Seems like I go through it again."
References to "Nazi battalions" appear in virtually all Russian news reports about the war in Ukraine. Here's why.
Conservative activist Charlie Kirk was shot and killed on Wednesday while speaking an event at Utah Valley University.
Mr. Trump said that NATO's commitment to winning the war in Ukraine "has been far less than 100%."
No information was provided on how many people are being held in each country, who they are or why they were imprisoned.
"No Other Land" director Basel Adra said Israeli soldiers raided conducted a raid at his West Bank home on Saturday, searching for him and going through his wife's phone.
Venezuela's foreign ministry said nine fishermen were "illegally and hostilely" detained on Friday by the USS Jason Dunham.
The United States, Israel's closest ally, reiterated its opposition to the New York Declaration and the General Assembly resolution endorsing implementation of a two-state solution.
Fourteen animal shelter workers were evacuated and went to the hospital. The shelter's 75 dogs and cats were relocated or put into foster homes.
Missouri is the third state to seek to redraw its congressional maps ahead of next year's midterms.
The Justice Department filed a $125 million lawsuit against Uber, alleging the company discriminates against disabled passengers.