TimeGhost on MSN
The Soviet Union cut off Berlin in 1948 and turned a besieged city into a Cold War flashpoint
When the Soviet Union sealed off West Berlin in June 1948, more than 2 million people were suddenly cut off from food, fuel, ...
Less than two years after his release from a maximum-security Siberian prison in a historic 2024 exchange, Kara-Murza delivers a powerful plea to the international community to prioritize human lives ...
Throughout the Cold War, military planners on both sides of the Iron Curtain built weapons designed to deter the unthinkable. Yet several of those systems came dangerously close to coming active and ...
Dark Docs Official on MSN
The Dnieper East Wall - Hitler’s plan B collapses under 2.6 million Soviet troops
After the defeat at Kursk, German forces attempted to halt the Red Army by retreating to the Dnieper River and building the ...
In early February of 1943, Gene Grabeel walks toward a corner of a large, crowded room inside Arlington Hall near Washington, D.C. Around her, clutches of people huddle over tables and quietly rifle ...
The Iran War Is Roiling Wall Street -- but 86 Years of History Make Clear What Comes Next for Stocks
Although the Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500, and Nasdaq Composite have soared under President Trump, major geopolitical and historical events have led to periods of outsize volatility. The Iran ...
The following is a transcript of the Hon. Pierre Poilievre’s remarks from . These remarks have been edited for clarity. Check against delivery. Berlin, Germany – It’s an honour to be in Berlin, a city ...
A sell-off for stocks wrapped around the world and hit Wall Street yesterday, while oil prices climbed even higher on worries about the widening war with Iran. But the big moves that rocked markets in ...
Investors are wondering if buying the dip when war breaks out will work this time around as the conflict between the U.S. and Iran grows. The old Wall Street adage "buy the cannons, sell the trumpets" ...
In the wake of the U.S. bombing of Iran and its dismissal of European allies, an anxious continent’s best chance at security runs through its largest economy. In a world of great power politics, ...
Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s visit to Washington, long planned, is now likely to be dominated by discussions of the attack, which Europeans did not take part in. By Jim Tankersley Reporting from Berlin ...
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