Trump says Ukraine will get a license to build its own Patriot missiles. The catch: licensed production takes years, and Ukraine's interceptor stockpile is running low now. This isn't a quick fix for Kyiv's skies — it's a bet that the war lasts. Here's why that matters.
Here's what most people are missing about PepsiCo's inflation warning: the real news is that shoppers stopped paying. Sales volumes stalled and reports point to price cuts on iconic snacks — a sign the American consumer has finally hit a wall. Read the full analysis.
A fire tore through a shoe factory in China's 'shoe capital' of Jinjiang, killing at least 28 with workers trapped on the roof. The real story isn't one tragedy — it's how often China's safety pledges fail on the factory floor where the world's goods get made.
Two weeks after signing an interim peace plan, Trump says the Iran ceasefire is "over." CENTCOM reports hitting 90 targets, Iran says 14 dead, and strikes have entered a third day. A threatened naval blockade could pull commercial shipping into the fight. Here's what stalled.
Two 13-year-old girls were seriously hurt in an attack at a Bavaria school this week, and a teenage suspect was arrested at the scene. Here's what most people miss: the story isn't the attack—it's how fast it was contained. That speed is what actually protects kids.
NATO's 32 members just pledged bigger defense budgets and continued Ukraine support—which could ease the burden on US troops and taxpayers. But the Ankara summit was dominated by sharp US-Europe friction, and an alliance that spends more while trusting each other less is...
Here's what most people miss about cloud security: the platforms aren't usually the weak point — the setup is. One attacker reportedly used AI to chain cloud misconfigurations and stolen credentials into a full breach in 72 hours. The skill barrier just collapsed.
Eight explosions were reported in Bushehr, home to Iran's only nuclear power plant, per Iranian state media. The location and timing are what matter: the US and Iran are inching toward a peace deal Tehran hasn't signed, and incidents like this can harden positions fast.
A nuclear missile hidden under the ocean is the hardest kind to stop. China's reported Pacific submarine-missile test shows a more credible "second-strike" force -- the kind that survives an attack and hits back. That quietly reshapes the entire Pacific security map.
The US just crossed a line it held through five years of war: Trump will license Ukraine to build its own Patriot interceptors — the only weapon Kyiv has against Russian ballistic missiles. That's not aid; it's permanent capability. And Moscow knows the difference.