Lithuania officially withdrew from the international convention on cluster munitions on Thursday due to the ongoing Russian invasion of Ukraine. More than 120 countries have signed the convention, which prohibits the acquisition,
Both Poland and Lithuania share land borders with Russia and would become the front line, should conflict break out in the future
Europe is waking up to the need to invest in defense, and so are European VCs. But with a painful history of Soviet occupations, Lithuania didn’t wait for the third anniversary of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine to reach its third anniversary to commit 5% to 6% of its GDP to military spending — and fund
Russian shadow fleet bypasses sanctions, funding Ukraine war and posing risks, says Gabrielius Landsbergis - Anadolu Ajansı
As Europe plans to up its defense spending, Estonian, Latvian and Lithuanian services believe that Moscow could be planning to launch a 'possible military confrontation with NATO.'
Belarus said on Thursday that it's open to hosting the Russian factory, which would help expand Moscow's production outside its borders.
Lithuania has officially withdrawn from the international convention banning cluster bombs. This decision is a response to Russia's actions involving using this weapon. The Lithuanian Parliament decided to withdraw from the convention as early as July last year.
Lithuania on Thursday quit an international convention banning cluster bombs, citing security concerns over neighbouring Russia in a move that has drawn criticism from human rights groups.
Lithuania's controversial move comes at a time of heightened tensions in international relations over its neighbor Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
Lithuania will provide air defense systems to Ukraine, the country's president said on Monday, the third anniversary of Russia's war on its neighbor, public broadcaster LRT reported.
· 5d · on MSN
Trump's Ukraine play could free up Russia to set its ramped-up war machine on other countries
Trump warns Russia: Stop fighting with Ukraine or face sanctions
President Donald Trump posted Friday on Truth Social that he’s considering sanctions against Russia to pressure Vladimir Putin into a ceasefire in the war with Ukraine. Trump’s message on his social media platform appeared to be in response to attacks Russia launched on Ukrainian energy facilities Friday.
Vladimir Putin unleashes missile hell on Ukraine civilians – defying warning from Trump
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