A Battlefield Break to Cheer Ukraine’s Soccer Team in Euro 2024
Soldiers huddled in a bunker with soft drinks and chips to watch Ukraine face Romania, only to suffer heartbreak.
By Maria Varenikova and Oleksandra Mykolyshyn
Soldiers huddled in a bunker with soft drinks and chips to watch Ukraine face Romania, only to suffer heartbreak.
By Maria Varenikova and Oleksandra Mykolyshyn
Peter Magyar, a conservative who was once a well-connected figure in the Fidesz party of Prime Minister Viktor Orban, has become an unexpected leader of the country’s opposition.
By Andrew Higgins
It’s summer and the temperature is rising. Here’s what you need to know to protect yourself and your vacation dollars.
By Ceylan Yeğinsu
Seeking more weapons for the war in Ukraine, the Russian president plans to return to the country on Tuesday for the first time in nearly a quarter-century.
By Choe Sang-Hun
The announcement of a hearing next week is the most significant movement in the Wall Street Journal reporter’s case since his arrest in March 2023 on espionage charges.
By Ivan Nechepurenko
Access to medical care and even clean water is limited, and the risk of infection is high, making it difficult for patients to get follow-up surgeries, prosthetics and rehabilitation.
By Hiba Yazbek, Bilal Shbair, Cassandra Vinograd and Abu Bakr Bashir
While in Moscow the fighting feels far away, residents of Belgorod, 25 miles from the border with Ukraine, have learned to duck for cover when the sirens wail.
By Valerie Hopkins and Nanna Heitmann
Already been to Miami, Honolulu and Sydney? These other coastal destinations are vibrant on land and on the water, reliably offering visitors great beaches and urban adventures.
By Lauren Sloss
Israel plans to pause fighting at a Gaza border crossing.
By Daniel E. Slotnik
Meeting in Switzerland, world leaders backed a joint statement urging more diplomacy, but were divided on how to engage Russia.
By Anton Troianovski
The assailants had taken two guards hostage and were killed, the prison service said.
By Anatoly Kurmanaev
A New York man was among several foreigners to have gone missing or been found dead in recent days as temperatures in Greece have soared.
By Niki Kitsantonis
At Saturday’s celebration in Rome, Pope Francis’ image was on cardboard cutouts adorned with flower necklaces. People came dressed as the pope, wore papal hats and said that there was never too much “gayness.”
By Emma Bubola
The shooting took place in Hamburg, in an area packed with soccer fans, and hours before the Netherlands and Poland were set to play in the city.
By Rory Smith, Lena Mucha and Christopher F. Schuetze
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After hundreds of years of enmity with Russia, Chechens are deploying to Ukraine to fight Moscow’s war.
By Nanna Heitmann and Neil MacFarquhar
To help honor 100 years of James Joyce’s “Ulysses,” an all-women Irish festival refocuses the annual re-enactment of the novel’s wanderings around the character of Molly Bloom.
By Roslyn Sulcas
Pro-Palestinian student activists at one Belgian university have borrowed from the U.S. playbook of encampments and slogans. The results, however, have been starkly different.
By Matina Stevis-Gridneff
Europe’s climate change-minded parties performed poorly in the European Union elections. Is the once ambitious European green movement over, or could its electoral crash launch a rebirth?
By Matina Stevis-Gridneff
Years before becoming The Post’s publisher, Will Lewis assigned an article based on stolen phone records, a former reporter said.
By Justin Scheck and Jo Becker
A core member of the anti-art movement Fluxus, he died by suicide hours after the death of his wife of 60 years.
By Alex Williams
Böttner, whose specialty was self-portraiture, celebrated her armless body in paintings she created with her mouth and feet while dancing in public.
By Cassidy George
A newly formed left-wing coalition called on demonstrators to stop Marine Le Pen’s National Rally party from taking power in upcoming elections.
By Catherine Porter and Liz Alderman
The Princess of Wales made her first public appearance since coming forward with her cancer diagnosis.
By Vanessa Friedman
Catherine, the Princess of Wales, took part in a parade on Saturday marking the birthday of King Charles III of Britain.
By Ang Li
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Political weakness, intractable wars in Ukraine and in the Middle East, and challenges from Russia and China combined to create solidarity behind American leadership.
By Steven Erlanger
Iran released an E.U. diplomat from Sweden and a dual Iranian-Swedish national, while Sweden released a former Iranian judiciary official serving a life sentence for war crimes.
By Matina Stevis-Gridneff and Farnaz Fassihi
Kyiv hopes to garner nations’ support for three points in its peace proposal, but it’s a hard sell, with China and Brazil declining to send high-level delegations.
By Zolan Kanno-Youngs, Anton Troianovski and Andrew E. Kramer
Catherine took part in a ceremonial parade to celebrate the birthday of her father-in-law, King Charles III.
By Stephen Castle
While not invited to the Group of 7 meeting, China was still a major presence, with the summit’s final communiqué referencing the country 28 times, almost always as a malign force.
By David E. Sanger
“Firebrand” focuses on his sixth spouse as she tries to outlast the ailing king and his treacherous court. “I thought of it as a thriller,” the director says.
By Roslyn Sulcas
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