
Ukrainian families flee the front-line fighting
Holly Williams reports from 15 miles from the Ukrainian front line, where traumatized families are fleeing the fighting and their homes. She speaks to a U.S. aid worker who is helping those families.
Watch CBS News
Holly Williams reports from 15 miles from the Ukrainian front line, where traumatized families are fleeing the fighting and their homes. She speaks to a U.S. aid worker who is helping those families.
President Biden will continue with his international agenda Monday as he meets with key allies at the G-7 summit in Germany. At home, Mr. Biden and his party face fallout and pressure to act right away after the historic Roe v. Wade ruling. CBS News senior White House and political correspondent Ed O'Keefe reports.
CBS News correspondent Chris Livesay is in the eastern city of Kharkiv and speaks with another American who fought alongside two U.S. military veterans reportedly being held by Russian or pro-Russian forces before their capture on the battlefield.
A CBS News team sailed aboard a Saudi military ship to the coast of war-torn Sudan, where some Americans have waited for days to evacuate. Ramy Inocencio spoke to some of the evacuees about witnessing the horrors of war, being given passage to peace and having to leave loved ones behind.
In the Ukrainian village of Lukashivka, the local church was destroyed in the process of pushing out the Russian forces who had occupied it, but still, the congregation gathers in the bombed-out ruins. The local priest, Father Serheii, told CBS News' senior foreign correspondent Holly Williams that his Easter message is this: "Jesus was resurrected, and Ukraine will be too."
Ramy Inocencio reports exclusively for CBS News from the Kharkiv frontline, where Ukraine's 209th Battalion is holding the trenches that were previously occupied by Russian soldiers. Despite the challenging situation, Ukrainian soldiers remain resolute in their determination to maintain their position.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy is visiting Capitol Hill Thursday to meet with U.S. lawmakers about continued funding of aid to Ukraine amid the Russian invasion. President Biden is seeking an additional $24 billion in military and humanitarian assistance for Ukraine, but that may be a tough sell for some Republicans who want the funding in a separate bill from the government spending legislation. CBS News' Weijia Jiang reports.
CBS News' Holly Williams spoke with Moussa Abu Marzouk, a founding member of Hamas and a senior figure in the group's political wing. He said Israel and Hamas, a U.S.-designated terrorist organization, are close to a deal on the release of dozens of hostages held by Hamas in exchange for a temporary cease-fire.
As Gaza officials say the number of Palestinians killed there has tops 5,000, violence is also ratcheting up in the West Bank, where 250 Palestinians have been killed this year alone — the highest death toll there at least two decades. Imtiaz Tyab reports from East Jerusalem.
Holly Williams reports from Borodyanka, another heavily hit town outside Kyiv where cleanup crews are digging bodies out of wreckage.
Marijuana still carries the unmistakable whiff of stigma for those who use it. More than 50 years after the war on drugs began, Tony Dokoupil reports on what the stigma looks like and what it may take to change it.
Ukrainians are waiting at checkpoints along the U.S. border with Mexico after the Biden administration promised to welcome 100,000 refugees from Russia's invasion into Ukraine. Meanwhile, those seeking asylum from Latin American countries are blocked due to current U.S. immigration policy. CBS News national correspondent Manuel Bojorquez reports from Tijuana, Mexico.
Former National Security Adviser H.R. McMaster joins "CBS Mornings" to discuss the latest on the Russia-Ukraine war and NATO's announcement it will double its troop presence on its borders with Ukraine.
As the war in Ukraine enters its second month, Russia's invasion appears to have stalled in the face of a ferocious Ukrainian defense. The latest NATO estimates suggest Russia has lost from 7,000 to 15,000 troops in just 30 days. Holly Williams reports.
The U.S., G-7 and European allies are expected to announce further sanctions on Russia Wednesday. This comes in the wake of President Zelenskyy's passionate speech to the U.N. He called for an international war crimes tribunal after detailing the murder and torture of unarmed civilian Ukrainians. CBS News chief White House correspondent Nancy Cordes reports.
Hospitals in southern Gaza are overflowing as Israel continues its war with Hamas, wreaking havoc on civilians in the besieged territory. In Israel, relatives of hostages mark the beginning of the Jewish festival of Hanukkah. CBS News' Ramy Inocencio reports.
The Biden adminisration welcomes a two-day extension of the cease-fire between Israel and Hamas and is urging the release of all hostages. Meanwhile, the first of three U.S. military flights was expected to land in Egypt on Tuesday carrying medical supplies, food and winter items for civilians in Gaza. Nancy Cordes reports from the White House.
The war between Israel and Hamas continues to intensify as it passes the one-month mark. Author and former foreign policy adviser Dan Senor joins CBS Mornings to discuss his new book, "The Genius of Israel," and the latest on the escalating war.
Israel's military is preparing for a ground assault on Hamas in the Gaza Strip that is expected to include tricky urban warfare. "CBS Mornings" co-host Tony Dokoupil visits an army base where Israel is working to prepare thousands of soldiers to kick in doors and make split-second decisions.
More than 5,000 Palestinians have been killed in two weeks of war in the Gaza Strip, according to the Health Ministry in Gaza. CBS News producer Marwan Al Ghoul lives in Gaza, and told us about his fears for his family.
As Russian forces move tens of thousands of people away from the front line in Kherson, Ukrainians remain resilient — and confident that, despite ongoing deadly drone attacks, their country will be victorious: "We believe in it.'
Lt. Gen. H.R. McMaster joins "CBS Mornings" for a closer look at the escalation of Russia's war in Ukraine, strategies being used by both sides and what Ukraine needs from the rest of the world.
Charlie D'Agata traveled to Lyman in the Donbas, a city recaptured by Ukrainian forces over the weekend. The strategically important town was being used as an eastern logistics hub by Russian forces, but they were forced to pull back as Ukrainian troops began to encircle it over the weekend.
Charlie D'Agata heads to the frontlines in eastern Ukraine where he gets to see the first images of Lyman, a city back under Ukrainian control after Russian annexation.
A senior U.N. official says a deadly Israeli strike on a shelter for civilians in Gaza shows a "blatant disregard of basic rules of war."
CBS News reported that hours after Kilmar Abrego Garcia was released from criminal custody, his attorneys were sent a court-required notice of his potential deportation to Uganda.
Health officials in Gaza say an Israeli strike on Nasser Hospital has killed at least 15 people, including 4 journalists.
The U.S. military on Sunday intercepted a Russian spy plane flying in international airspace off Alaska, marking the third such instance in less than a week.
Some National Guard members in Washington D.C., likely fewer than 50, will be armed starting Sunday night, a military official told CBS News.
Trump officials sowed fear and confusion among CDC scientists, slowing their response to the measles outbreak in West Texas.
Important questions are being raised about 9/11 as evidence surfaces in a lawsuit against the Saudi government filed by families of the people killed in the 2001 terrorist attacks.
Mississippi's infant mortality rate nearly double the most recent national average of 5.6 deaths per 1,000, according to the state Department of Health.
Along with delivering needed supplies and equipment, the Dragon features a "boost kit" to help raise the space station's altitude.
Starbucks' tried and true pumpkin spice latte and other autumn inspired treats will be available starting Tuesday, Aug. 26.