NewsPronto

 
Men's Weekly

.

USA Conversation

The Conversation USA

The Conversation USA

The US isn't at war with Russia, technically – but its support for Ukraine offers a classic case of a proxy war

  • Written by Monica Duffy Toft, Professor of International Politics and Director of the Center for Strategic Studies at The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University
imageU.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, left, stands near a damaged residential building in Irpin, Ukraine, on Sept. 8, 2022. Genya Savilov/Pool/AFP via Getty Images

The United States and European countries continue to pledge their support to Ukraine as Russia’s invasion drags on into its ninth month – and have backed their alliance...

Read more: The US isn't at war with Russia, technically – but its support for Ukraine offers a classic case...

More Articles ...

  1. Why so many people have moved to Florida – and into harm's way
  2. Disasters like Hurricane Ian can affect academic performance for years to come
  3. Not all Asian Americans vote Democratic -- and the political leanings of different Asian ethnic groups vary
  4. A new type of material called a mechanical neural network can learn and change its physical properties to create adaptable, strong structures
  5. UK prime minister forced from office amid economic turmoil, chaos in parliament and a party in disarray
  6. Wildfires reshape forests and change the behavior of animals that live there
  7. How college in prison is leading professors to rethink how they teach
  8. Why the GOP’s battle for the soul of ‘character conservatives’ in these midterms may center on Utah and its Latter-day Saint voters
  9. Colonoscopy is still the most recommended screening for colorectal cancer, despite conflicting headlines and flawed interpretations of a new study
  10. HBO's 'House of the Dragon' was inspired by a real medieval dynastic struggle over a female ruler
  11. AI is changing scientists' understanding of language learning – and raising questions about an innate grammar
  12. 'Nobody said anything because they feared being benched' – how abuse is baked into American sports
  13. Experts grade Facebook, TikTok, Twitter, YouTube on readiness to handle midterm election misinformation
  14. How Bob Dylan used the ancient practice of 'imitatio' to craft some of the most original songs of his time
  15. Anxiety detection and treatment in early childhood can lower risk for long-term mental health issues – an expert panel now recommends screening starting at age 8
  16. Getting to 'net-zero' emissions: How energy leaders envision countering climate change in the future
  17. How the costs of disasters like Hurricane Ian are calculated – and why it takes so long to add them up
  18. Crippling civilian infrastructure has long been part of Russian generals' playbook – Putin is merely expanding that approach
  19. Soaring inflation prompts biggest Social Security cost-of-living boost since 1981 – 6 questions answered 
  20. Bees face many challenges – and climate change is ratcheting up the pressure
  21. It's taking more time to cast a ballot in US elections – and even longer for Black and Hispanic voters
  22. Jan. 6 Committee's fact-finding and bipartisanship will lead to an impact in coming decades, if not tomorrow
  23. Rainbow fentanyl – the newest Halloween scare
  24. Russia is enlisting hundreds of thousands of men to fight against Ukraine, but public support for Putin is falling
  25. What the Jan. 6 committee could learn from the failures of truth commissions to bring justice and accountability
  26. Male birth control options are in development, but a number of barriers still stand in the way
  27. Challenges to voters are growing before the midterms -- and have a long history as a way of keeping down the Black vote
  28. Black women endure legacy of racism in homeownership and making costly repairs
  29. 'Silent Spring' 60 years on: 4 essential reads on pesticides and the environment
  30. Quiet quitting and the great resignation have a common cause – dissatisfied workers feel they can't speak up in the workplace
  31. Body piercings may be artistic, but they bring risks of infection, allergic reactions, scarring and urine leakage
  32. Young immigrants are looking to social media to engage in politics and elections – even if they are not eligible to vote
  33. Good faith and the honor of partisan election officials used to be enough to ensure trust in voting results – but not anymore
  34. Genetically engineered bacteria make living materials for self-repairing walls and cleaning up pollution
  35. Who invented music? The search for stone flutes, clay whistles and the dawn of song
  36. The 5,000-year history of writer's block
  37. Headcovers have always been political in Iran – for women on all sides
  38. How to steer money for drinking water and sewer upgrades to the communities that need it most
  39. Nobel-winning quantum weirdness undergirds an emerging high-tech industry, promising better ways of encrypting communications and imaging your body
  40. Effort to recover Indigenous language also revitalizes culture, history and identity
  41. New satellite mapping with AI can quickly pinpoint hurricane damage across an entire state to spot where people may be trapped
  42. Our *Homo sapiens* ancestors shared the world with Neanderthals, Denisovans and other types of humans whose DNA lives on in our genes
  43. A Pennsylvania prison gets a Scandinavian-style makeover – and shows how the US penal system could become more humane
  44. Investing in indoor air quality improvements in schools will reduce COVID transmission and help students learn
  45. Census data hides racial diversity of US 'Hispanics' – to the country's detriment
  46. Hijab rules have nothing to do with Islamic tenets and everything to do with repressing women
  47. What is a bodhisattva? A scholar of Buddhism explains
  48. Nobel Prize: How click chemistry and bioorthogonal chemistry are transforming the pharmaceutical and material industries
  49. What is quantum entanglement? A physicist explains the science of Einstein’s ‘spooky action at a distance’
  50. Abuse in women's professional soccer was an 'open secret' – the 'bystander effect' and structural barriers prevented more players from speaking out