-
McIlroy charges into the hunt for epic major comeback win
-
Iran confirms squad heading to Turkey for World Cup preparation
-
Bolivian police clash with protesters blocking roads
-
Eurovision final kicks off with Viennese grandeur
-
Svitolina sees off Gauff to win Italian Open, Sinner in men's title showdown
-
Alonso set for appointment as Chelsea manager: reports
-
Spanish star Javier Bardem says 'narrative changing' on Gaza
-
Gujarat miss out on top spot as Kolkata stay alive in IPL
-
Charging McIlroy grabs share of the PGA lead
-
Rwanda genocide suspect Kabuga dead: court
-
No beer for City stars despite FA Cup win, says Guardiola
-
Modi oversees semi-conductor deal on Dutch trip
-
Americans 'should demonstrate like the French,' says Woody Harrelson
-
Vienna abuzz for Eurovision final
-
McFarlane eyes 'massive' Spurs clash after FA Cup final defeat
-
Scuffles from Europe to NYC as Swatch sale descends into chaos
-
Bielle-Biarrey helps Bordeaux-Begles avoid Top 14 slip-up before Champions Cup final
-
Man City still dream of Premier League glory after FA Cup win: Silva
-
Hearts broken as O'Neill summons Celtic's champion spirit
-
'Dance all night': Harry Styles kicks off World Tour in Amsterdam
-
Kane hits hat-trick, St. Pauli relegated from Bundesliga
-
Semenyo's magic moment fires Man City to FA Cup final win over Chelsea
-
Football back on war-battered pitches in Sudan capital
-
Opposition Latvian lawmaker tapped to form interim government
-
Kane hits hat-trick, St. Pauli are relegated from Bundesliga
-
Modi oversees semiconductor deal on Dutch trip
-
UK's ex-health minister Streeting says will run to replace PM Keir Starmer
-
Israel could wean itself off US defence aid, but not yet
-
Narvaez racks up second stage win at Giro d'Italia
-
Kim, Rose and Kirk charge into PGA hunt as McIlroy starts his third round
-
Whale that was rescued after stranded in Germany found dead in Denmark
-
Star Julianne Moore hates 'guns and explosions', warns women are losing out
-
No vaccine for latest Ebola outbreak, DRC warns as as toll hits 80
-
Sinner completes Medvedev win and passage into Italian Open final
-
Boycott over Israel takes some glitz off Eurovision final
-
Nicolas Maduro, locked in US prison, fades from Venezuelan life
-
Tens of thousands turn out for UK far-right rally, counter demo
-
Hollywood star Julianne Moore warns women are being pushed back
-
Litton's rearguard ton propels Bangladesh to 278 in Pakistan Test
-
Duplantis wins in Shanghai, fails to beat record as Warholm stunned
-
Alex Marquez edges out Acosta in Catalan MotoGP sprint
-
Maldives rescue diver dies in search for missing Italians
-
Trump, Nigeria claim killing of IS second-in-command
-
Israel strikes south Lebanon day after ceasefire extension
-
Mercedes Benz mulls diversification into defence
-
UK police brace far-right rally and counter demonstration
-
Israel says Hamas armed wing chief killed in Gaza strike
-
Cantona on the couch: footballer explores 'demons' in raw new film
-
Lewandowski to leave Barca with 'mission complete'
-
Pope Leo to visit France September 25-28
Prigozhin, Simonyan, Medvedev: the rise of the Russian hawk
The first one challenged Ukraine's president to a fighter jet duel. The second has threatened Europe with nuclear apocalypse. The third has said cannibals roam Ukraine.
Russia's warmongers used to be relegated to the margins of society but now they are basking in the limelight after the Kremlin ordered its army to Ukraine.
These are Moscow's fiercest hawks, whose rise points to a new military fervour in Russia:
- Prigozhin: the warlord -
For years, Yevgeny Prigozhin did the Kremlin's bidding from the shadows, dispatching mercenaries from his private fighting force to conflicts in the Middle East and Africa, always denying involvement.
That changed with the Ukraine conflict. The 61-year-old both admitted he started the Wagner group and then began recruitment drives from Russia's prison network.
His offer? Fight in exchange for amnesty. The catch? Deserters and fighters who let themselves be captured would be summarily killed.
When video circulated showing an alleged Wagner deserter being executed with a sledgehammer, Prigozhin praised the killing, calling the dead man a "dog".
"Do not drink too much, don't take drugs, don't rape anyone," he told a group of prisoners who had served a six-month term and were being released into society.
Unlike Russia's generals, who have been criticised for shirking the battles, the stocky and bald Prigozhin regularly poses for pictures alongside mercenaries allegedly on the front lines.
Most recently, Prigozhin posted from the cockpit of a SU-24 fighter jet and challenged Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky -- who has been pleading for jets -- to an aerial duel.
"If you want, let's meet in the skies. If you win, you will take (Bakhmut)," he said, referring to the longest battle of Russia's campaign.
The former hotdog seller from Saint Petersburg, who was himself jailed for nearly a decade during the Soviet era, has also tangled with Russia's top brass.
He clashed last month with the defence ministry over whose force had captured the town of Soledar in eastern Ukraine.
Prigozhin criticised the military's attempts to "steal the victory" from Wagner, pointing to his rising clout and the potential for dangerous rifts between him and officials in Moscow.
- Medvedev: the new convert -
For former Russian leader Dmitry Medvedev, the conflict has offered an opportunity to reinvent himself, shedding all traces of his liberal past to become one of Russia's most bellicose hawks.
The 57-year-old, now serving as deputy chairman of Russia's security council, was once famously photographed eating burgers with then-US President Barack Obama.
The picture now is very different.
"The defeat of a nuclear power in a conventional war can provoke the outbreak of a nuclear war," he warned ahead of a meeting of Ukraine's allies in Germany in January.
Medvedev has called US President Joe Biden "a strange grandfather with dementia" and referred to EU leaders as "lunatics".
And the Ukrainian government? "A bunch of crazy Nazi drug addicts," he said last November.
But Medvedev, once a regular on state television, is now mostly relegated to social media and his Telegram channel, which has more than one million subscribers.
"People often ask me why my messages are so harsh. The answer is this: I hate them," he said four months after the Kremlin launched its intervention in Ukraine.
"They are bastards and degenerates. They want us dead. They want Russia dead. And as long as I am alive, I will do everything I can to make them disappear."
- Simonyan: the information warrior -
Margarita Simonyan, the matriarch of Kremlin propaganda and the head of state-run television network RT, was already a vocal supporter of President Vladimir Putin before Russia's intervention in Ukraine.
Her rhetoric has since ratcheted up. The 42-year-old is a frequent guest on talk shows, where she launches tirades bristling with patriotic fervour and threats of nuclear apocalypse.
"Either we will win, or things will end badly for the whole of humanity," she said last May.
But the beginning of the offensive posed an immediate problem for Simonyan's network -- also known as Russia Today -- which was banned in most Western countries.
"Whenever they shut us down, we just used other (ways) to keep publishing... and passing on our message," Simonyan said in response.
Even though she routinely denounces this Western "censorship," Simonyan has also demanded that Russia ban foreign social media platforms -- a call Moscow has made good on.
"For 10 years I've been saying it: we still need to close everything, to ban it all, and to replace it with our own," she said.
In recognition of her work since the beginning of the conflict, Putin awarded her the Order of Honour in December.
"Thank you for slaying the cannibals," she told the Russian leader in accepting the award.
L.Harper--AMWN