
U.S. pushes Taliban on human rights 2 years after Afghan takeover
Afghan women's rights activists blasted the U.S. delegation for even meeting Taliban officials, demanding that the U.S. not "compromise our rights."
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Afghan women's rights activists blasted the U.S. delegation for even meeting Taliban officials, demanding that the U.S. not "compromise our rights."
Ukraine marked its Armed Forces day as the fight for Ukraine's strategic eastern region intensified. CBS News correspondent Imtiaz Tyab reports from a memorial in Bucha, a Kyiv suburb where hundreds were killed.
Ukrainians are packing out bars and clubs across the country despite the ongoing war with Russia. Charlie D'Agata spoke with young Ukrainians who are defiantly partying on.
CBS News meets young Ukrainians defiantly enjoying life just 20 miles from Russia's border, and Kyiv has more bars and restaurants than it did before the war.
Nearly a thousand people were killed in the Ukrainian town of Bucha while it was occupied by Russian soldiers. One man saved lives by driving more than 200 people from the town to safety, even though he could have fled at any time. Now, a new film is honoring his courage. Ramy Inocencio is in Ukraine with more.
"Putin has miscalculated the mood on this continent," one South African expert on government relations tells CBS News.
North Korean media focused on the Russian envoy, who was quoted as saying the two sides met in a "cordial atmosphere overflowing with militant friendship."
U.S. Marine veteran Trevor Reed, who was once detained by the Russian government, has been injured while fighting for Ukraine. Nancy Cordes is following the story.
Trevor Reed, released in 2022 in a U.S.-Russia prisoner swap, was injured recently while fighting for Ukraine in the east of that country, CBS News has learned.
U.S. Marine Corps veteran Trevor Reed, who was released in a prisoner swap with Russia brokered by the Biden administration in 2022, was injured recently while fighting for Ukraine in the east of that country, CBS News has learned. Senior White House correspondent Weijia Jiang has the latest.
As the Ukraine war claims thousands of Russian lives, Putin's military is moving to ensure a sufficient "pool of people to draw from."
Russian defenses say they shot down and destroyed two Ukrainian drones that attacked Moscow earlier Monday. No one was injured, but Russia has vowed to retaliate. Julia Ioffe, a founding partner and Washington correspondent at Puck, joined CBS News to talk about the situation.
CBS News projects Republicans win control of House; more cases of RSV, the flu and COVID spreading in schools.
South Korea reacts to North Korea warplanes near border; Brooklyn Nets guard Kyrie Irving suspended after tweet about antisemitic film.
January 6 commission bill faces Senate GOP opposition; CBS announces fall primetime lineup
President Biden meets with Republicans on infrastructure; Class of 2021 prepares for graduation
Israeli-Palestinian conflict marks deadliest day; Rediscovering pop icon Dionne Warwick
Charlie D'Agata is given rare access to recaptured territories. Vremivka had a prewar population of 1,300 — now the ruins have a population of 15.
In the month since Ukraine launched its counteroffensive against Russia, soldiers have engaged in a long and grueling push to try to regain ground. Some soldiers have managed to find a brief, welcome reprieve with a front-line soccer game. Charlie D'Agata reports.
Some soldiers have found a small but welcome reprieve from the constant strain of battle with this soccer game.
CBS News has learned that injuries and fatalities to Ukrainian soldiers from Russian landmines have now surpassed those caused by incoming artillery. Charlie D'Agata reports from Ukraine.
CBS News' Charlie D'Agata revisited the deputy mayor of a frontline Ukrainian town that has suffered constant Russian bombardment, and heard about a strike that destroyed the "last island of hope" in her community.
Russia continued its heavy bombing attack Thursday on the Ukrainian Black Sea port cites of Odesa and Mykolaiv. The attacks come days after Moscow suspended a deal to allow safe passage for civilian ships carrying Ukrainian grain out of those very ports. Charlie D'Agata has more.
Russian aerial bombardment hit Odesa and Mykolaiv again on Thursday in the third straight day of strikes against the Black Sea port cities in Ukraine. On Monday, Russia backed out of a deal allowing safe passage of Ukrainian grain shipments through the Black Sea, and the U.S. State Department has warned that Russia is "using food as a weapon of war." CBS News' Charlie D'Agata reports.
"Russia is using food as a weapon of war, not just against the Ukrainian people, but against all the people in the world," the State Department said.
The Trump administration has picked HHS Deputy Secretary Jim O'Neill to lead the CDC, after the former director was fired and senior leaders resigned.
The family of one of the victims shot early Wednesday morning at Annunciation Catholic Church in southwest Minneapolis spoke out for the first time Thursday afternoon.
The Trump administration is preparing to launch major immigration enforcement operations in Chicago next week employing tactics that sparked protests in Los Angeles, sources tell CBS News.
One of the young victims of Wednesday's deadly mass shooting at a Minneapolis Catholic school remains in critical condition Thursday, at the same hospital where her mother works as a pediatric critical care nurse.
Robert Primus, a Democrat who was nominated by President Trump in his first term, posted on social media that the firing was "legally invalid."
The Trump administration is trying to fire CDC Director Susan Monarez, and several top CDC officials also resigned Wednesday.
A woman was hospitalized with serious injuries after a bear attacked her outside of her home in southern Alaska on Tuesday morning, authorities said.
A judge has ordered a new trial for three former Memphis police officers who were convicted of federal charges in the fatal beating of Tyre Nichols.
South Carolina officials asked the Supreme Court to allow the state to enforce a measure that makes school funding contingent on compliance with a rule on transgender bathroom use.