
-
NHL Ducks name Quenneville as coach after probe into sex assault scandal
-
'Great honor': Leaders welcome Leo, first US pope
-
What is in the new US-UK trade deal?
-
MLB Pirates fire Shelton as manager after 12-16 start
-
Alcaraz '100 percent ready' for return to action in Rome
-
Prevost becomes first US pope as Leo XIV
-
Andy Farrell holds out hope for son Owen after Lions omission
-
Roglic leads deep field of contenders at tricky Giro d'Italia
-
White smoke signals Catholic Church has new pope
-
Bill Gates speeds up giving away fortune, blasts Musk
-
LA Coliseum, SoFi Stadium to share 2028 Olympic opening ceremony
-
Trump unveils 'breakthrough' US-UK trade deal
-
Andy Farrell holds out hope for Owen Farrell after Lions omission
-
Trump calls US Fed chair 'fool' after pause in rate cuts
-
Stocks rise as US-UK unveil trade deal
-
UN says Israel school closures in east Jerusalem 'assault on children'
-
Itoje grateful for 'tremendous honour' of leading Lions in Australia
-
Cardinals to vote anew for pope after second black smoke
-
Arsenal fall short again as striker woes haunt Arteta
-
Inter turn attentions to fading Serie A title defence after Barca triumph
-
Elk could return to UK after 3,000 years as plan wins funding
-
Trump announces 'full and comprehensive' trade deal with UK
-
Putin and Xi rail against West as Ukraine reports truce violations
-
England's Itoje to captain British and Irish Lions rugby team in Australia
-
Gates Foundation to spend $200 bn through 2045 when it will shut down
-
Swiatek makes fast start at Italian Open
-
Israel's aid blockade to Gaza 'unacceptable': Red Cross
-
EU threatens to target US cars, planes if Trump tariff talks fail
-
Amnesty says UAE supplying Sudan paramilitaries with Chinese weapons
-
Bank of England cuts interest rate as US tariffs hit economy
-
Germany slams Russian 'lies' on Ukraine in WWII commemoration
-
Pakistan and India accuse each other of waves of drone attacks
-
Thrilling PSG home in on elusive Champions League trophy
-
Wolf protection downgrade gets green light in EU
-
Fijian Olympic medallist Raisuqe killed after car hit by train
-
EU parliament backs emissions reprieve for carmakers
-
Trump announces trade agreement with UK
-
Global temperatures stuck at near-record highs in April: EU monitor
-
Stocks rise as Trump signals US-UK 'trade deal'
-
Second black smoke, cardinals to vote again for new pope
-
Screams and shattered glass under Pakistan bombardment
-
Drone strikes spark civilian exodus from army-controlled Sudan aid hub
-
First responders in Gaza run out of supplies
-
Pakistan shoots down 25 Indian drones near military installations
-
Xi meets Putin in Moscow as Ukraine reports truce violations
-
Israel forces close UN schools in annexed east Jerusalem
-
Trump to announce 'trade deal' with UK
-
'Jumbo': the animated Indonesian film smashing records
-
Stocks rise on trade hopes, London boosted by reports of deal
-
Emirates airline group announces record $6.2 bn gross profit
RYCEF | 4.69% | 10.67 | $ | |
RBGPF | 4.34% | 65.86 | $ | |
CMSC | 0.05% | 22.172 | $ | |
RELX | -0.89% | 54.385 | $ | |
VOD | -1.46% | 9.265 | $ | |
BTI | -2.17% | 43.504 | $ | |
AZN | -3.84% | 67.48 | $ | |
RIO | -1.61% | 59.07 | $ | |
NGG | -3.44% | 70.16 | $ | |
SCS | 5.26% | 10.46 | $ | |
GSK | -0.61% | 36.945 | $ | |
CMSD | -0.13% | 22.38 | $ | |
BCC | 3.02% | 89.81 | $ | |
JRI | -0.28% | 12.99 | $ | |
BCE | 4.58% | 22.27 | $ | |
BP | 1.4% | 28.53 | $ |

US bares intel on Russia in risky strategy to prevent Ukraine invasion
The US government normally keeps battlefield intelligence close to its chest, but by revealing the secret details of Russian military plans, it hopes to prevent an invasion of Ukraine.
Since Russia moved tens of thousands of troops to Ukraine's border in recent months, Washington's unconventional strategy has been to let Moscow and the world know what it knows about the Russian invasion plans, rather than keep it secret.
"At long last, Washington is catching up to its rivals -- including Russia and WikiLeaks -- in the use of information to shape events," former CIA official Douglas London wrote recently in Foreign Affairs magazine.
With tensions rising, at the beginning of February US officials said Moscow was planning to create a graphic film of a fake Ukrainian attack on Russia, or on Russians inside Ukraine, using footage of damaged locations, "corpses" of people ostensibly killed in the attack, and actors playing mourners.
Pentagon Spokesman John Kirby is one of several officials who readily detailed the alleged plan.
"We've seen these kinds of activity by the Russians in the past and we believe it's important when we see it like this and we can to call it out," he said.
Officials would not say how they knew, and so far the ruse has not happened.
But for US diplomats and military and intelligence officials, that could demonstrate that their approach is working, making Russian President Vladimir Putin think twice about what he allegedly planned to do.
Days later, US officials provided reporters details of the more than 100,000 troops around Ukraine's borders, describing the likely Russian approach to an invasion and the expected casualties, and revealing a very specific map of the planned invasion routes.
And on Thursday Secretary of State Antony Blinken laid out the most recent picture of an invasion that officials say could come "within days."
"First, Russia plans to manufacture a pretext for its attack," Blinken told the UN Security Council.
This could be a violent event that Russia will blame on Ukraine," he said.
"It could be a fabricated so-called terrorist bombing inside Russia, the invented discovery of the mass grave, a staged drone strike against civilians or a fake, or even a real attack using chemical weapons. Russia may describe this event as ethnic cleansing or a genocide," he said, referring to a claim made by Putin on Tuesday.
For the second step, he said, "the highest levels of the Russian government may theatrically convene emergency meetings to address the so-called crisis. The government will issue proclamations declaring that Russia must respond to defend Russian citizens or ethnic Russians in Ukraine."
"Next, the attack is planned to begin," he said.
- Catching up -
Making such intelligence public is not how Washington normally works.
But officials say they hope it pulls the rug out from under Moscow's own deft, effective disinformation efforts and possibly deter an attack.
"The more Washington exposes Russian actions and intentions, the fewer face-saving off-ramps Putin has," London said.
He said revealing intelligence comes with big risks, like exposing valued sources and channels, or losing credibility if the information is wrong.
The US image suffered deeply in 2003 when secretary of state Colin Powell told the United Nations that the United States had "proof" of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, a claim that "justified" the US invasion but later proved false.
On the other hand, intelligence was made public to good effect when US officials leaked to media intimate details that linked Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman to the 2018 murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi, he said.
"In this case, the US government decided the price was worth it."
US officials say their claims on Russia and Ukraine might be proven wrong, and admit people might criticize them.
But in fact, it is their hope: that baring Putin's plans will deter him from following through.
"That's the best outcome possible. We will have saved thousands of lives," a senior US official said of that scenario.
P.Stevenson--AMWN